The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 18, 1927, Page 4

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4. PAGE FOUR — .. The Bismarck Tribune!” of so-called “trusts” is something strangely | {at variance with newer ideas on the subject of mass An Independent News; | di t Newspaper production and marketing, ideas which certainly bop THE STATESTOLDEST NEWSPAPER renee rcjuce cone uf manufacture and trameparte jtion and thus react for the consumer's ultimate Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, benefit. inarck, N. D., nH eth iad postoffice at) Just where does the beneficial combine end and George D. Bee ss fe a Prenitent bea Publisher the wicked “trust” begin? Who knows? And who } st cares? A decade ago the word “trust” was enough Subscription Ra Payable In Advance {to start a riot. It was the very personification Pree ES CACEHOES CHE JERE ara couc! ++ $720) of all that was evil and rotten in business. Yet Dail by fail per yeas, (in Bismarck)...-.. : during the past decade we have seen upon every ; (in state outside Bismarck)...... 6.00 hand the growth of the idea of consolidation and ~" Dafly by mail, outside of North Dakota 6.00 of combination, for the purposes of reducing over- Member Audit Bureau of Circulation head, production costs and of obtaining marketing Member of The Associated Press economies that surely react to the benefit of the The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to consumer. The hue and cry against the “trust,” the use for republication of all news dispatches therefore, has been gradually fading out until it sredited to it or not atherwise credited in tale pt is but the echo of what has gone hefore. Tee eras Nerein: All rights of republication of all People today aren't afraid of trusts, They are : other matter herein are also reserved. more afraid of congress. The people of today own | : —_—$———— Feretea a0) the trusts. A few years ago the “big fellows” orel ‘epresentatives owned the corporations and the businesses that ey LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ROFT composed the industrial combinations. Wall Street Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. was the big bugaboo. Today the common person ; PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH owns stock in many companies. He is a partner | ‘ NEW YORK oo ist ma Fifth Ave, Bldg. _in many enterprises. The profits come to him in (Official City, State and Cranty Newspaper) the form of dividends. He is no longer against | ——_———— | “trusts” if they tend toward an economy of pro- | wer At Last—The Solution jduction and an eventual benefit to the consumer. | 3 Inducing the free-born citizens of this glorious | Pn ORR Et oe eee republic to exercise their priceless franchise at the | Hard to Sympathize voting booth has been, fer years, one of the major New York’s new “clean stage” law, just signed problems of all who would lead America on to big- by Governor Smith, is about as stringent a bit of | Fy gér and better things. legislation as any state has passed in years. | City, state and national elections have presented J provides that any theatre in which is shown grave issues; but for some reason the Americano, » play or revue that is adjudged immoral may be in increasing numbers, stays away from the polls. nadlocked for a solid year. And this ‘has caused much muttering and wagging This seems a bit too steep. It is net. hard to sce of beards in high places. where it might work real injustice. But the solution has been found. To the great But it is pretty hard to arouse much sympathy § . city of Chicago, no less, the country is indebted for for the New York theatre owners. For years they 7 a way out of this difficulty. — : have been skating as close to the line as they could. H Just put on a good vaudeville show in connec- ‘this new law is a result of their own sins. We ? tion with your campaign and you will get a record’ gueht to be sorry for them; but somehow we aren't. : vote. pact : It’s simple. Chicago tried it, and proved it. Road Hogs H The recent mayoralty election in Chicago brought 74, regrettable accident that befell Henry Ford! . ‘ 3 cut a record-breaking vote. The embattled ee if it realty was, as police now seem to. believe, Le dkad te acer “ Ce a eed an accident—serves as one more reminder of the: a M4 Eo hg noe ie gia pene menace represented by what is commonly called the remember nothing like it. oe “yoad hog.” 5 ee eaipaign thay reer fi ule eee The flash of temper that makes a driver swerve i) © outpouring of acne Ren ce ee in in front of the man who resisted his effort to After Judge Grimshaw had s SILT a aaa tah ied PASS him is a trait to which no motorist shoul: : : A cage containing two rats, which accompanied avecngiveenay a one candidate to the rostrum on all his speaking It may give you a feeling of satisfaction to “cut | his examination of the witness, Flo 1 y iz 5 New tours. in” sharply: i . , | in” sharply; but it may also cause a death. The playing by brass bands of such classics as |" ihn yi ue it mag alo came “Bye Bye Blackbird.” 5 Pass Pt Caustic remarks about the table manners of the J contestants. a. erasaaal “Cherry and Chris had a big Stirring references to George Washington, Ol | Editorial Comment Floceaue ony withes Glory and “America first.” | of black hatred toward Cherry, who 5 Stinging rebukes for the public and private mor- Clearing the Air had dared to call her a liar in the als of Benedict Arnold, who died some years be- | (New York Times) | the “red” ink’ $ ; fore Chicago was founded. — At the outset the federal radio commission can! 4 Cte A fervent appeal to vote in such a way as to a fs count on a public good rarely accorded to an discomfit King George V of England, who had, nearly as much to do with the Chicago campaign as the reigning Ahkoond of Upper Somaliland. There, then, is the answer. It is well known to 3 theatrical magnates that a good farce will’ outdraw 4 a serious problem play. There’s enough grief in t life, it is said, without going to the theatre to see more of it; the same, apparently, applies to the voting booth. Are there deep, momentous decisions to be made hy the electorate? Is there a clear-cut contest be- tween a demagog and gn able public servant? Are there questions to be decided that may affect our national career most profoundly? ‘squarely before the radio listeners. For it is their ease, too. Theirs has been the bitter experience of “chaos in the air,” and theirs is now the hope of restored order. They realize fully the enormous difficulties confronting the commission, and will be inclined to possess their sets in patience until it ean act. . Judge Sykes puts the public interest forward a: the commission’s guide. But he is under no illu- Fi ‘te bears in some of the controversies over wav: Forget ‘em! Bring out, instead, a cage full of pearent : sistance SeasAtns wrap one, or if possible both, of the lead- | nage ea RGR sera cames ing candidates in Old Glory (cheers); base your | P id EA fees sore may revue ee | campaign on the ex-kaiser’s moral obliquity, Ce av ple anaes iar pupeaniane dared neighbor finds o the high price of cocoanuts in Papeete, on the ; Particular ave It may not always be even so/ treachery of Judas Iscariot or on the heroism of Rea i eee nag of hae rong Pickett’s brigade at Gettysburg—on anything and i a hee hie shiek ae ae fhe Hs a everything that will get the voters’ minds off the ioe sical e wi . will avi Ms bee Nee a | issues. The rest will be automatic. | ip or favoritism. Under the eir- ay it back, fold hands, and await the cumstances the public will see, as clearly as does | aan ada Hie Judge Sykes, “the dangers in anything like ruth-| ee less, arbitrary or hastily considered action.” | ~ seen ares ‘determining how interference between stations ma: ; Hardly a day goes by but what the news recoPds pest be eliminated in the public interest. To thir the killing or maiming of someone by an “unload- i ed” gun. “I didn’t know it was loaded,” says the author of all the mischief after the weapon dis- charges, killing or injuring someone else. But it never seems to occur to him to make sure about it before he handles the gun. Guns are all right. They rarely ever injure any- one who knows anything about them, for the person who knows guns, respects them. The person who knows guns never leaves a gun where it ean| 4. be handled by another unless he is sure there is no > ammunition either in the weapon or nearby where | it could be obtained by curious persons. He never ipo listening public. ase commission will have the experience and testimony of the earlier conferences to draw upon. Three of on ence, held a little over a year ago. The commis- canes ova we retary Hoover’s experienced staff for expert as- sistance. Judge Sykes points out that it is unde~ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Making Up the Elephant’s Mind For Him | MONDAY, ‘APRIL 18, 19 ; SEENS 10 He (HEAR A SHOUING Guayrigth, 1096, by Margaret wate | people here are used to my culling i ‘WU Gervieo ~ THE STORY Claude looked down at her pity- “Well, you're golug to have her for a little while yet. Your case isu't nearly as bad aa mine, Polly. Mary won't want me fu help buy her trousseau, but she will want He paused a said, diffidently, “You will help, me some “other You've no’ idea, moment and things, won't you? Polly, how I've been hoping you'd take charge of the money aud—" “Spend it.” Polly snapped. 4 Claude nodded. His face, turned | 8” toward her in the faint twilight, looked strangely pleas It would be great to see some of it go for things women | Polly stared out ov and was silent for awhile. “You're rather wonderful, Claude I don't know that [ quite d. “Hy Jin tke.” the water C. M. Dabbs moved uneasily, “Oh, had been waiting. when th T've just gone along,” he told hi “doing what came uppermost. you that ate sighed, “I haven't hardly forgiven | Wontediy silent you yet for keeping Mary to your- | If. Polly rose, “Don't, ‘Claude, you can't understand.” Th Claude told ber, and bad ‘been from the moment “I've given a lot of | e to thinking that out, and It | Sus due.” came over me with a flash, Polly, | that in ‘your place I would have ‘ing. What did you | . \ the music auditoriums are planning to install elevated railways to keep done the same thi up with the new trend. NEA SERVICE, INC. “Sure I had,” the girl retorted de- and { . 1 attended the recital and said, after it was over, he felt as tired’ as if id done a day's work. . allet” expresses steel, accor ing to the leader. music is a steal, anyhow. cop on the corner now is letting’ his “Well,” said (. M. “It happened that way, and we acted euch ac- i cording to our natures; but if I j can make Mary happy, aud buy you pretty things now, that's | way wear t dant on trial for her life, as allowed to proceed with > Ei ness left the stand tt which Cherry sat, slow | California is a state where Okla- seemet p . He had toiled homa men are elected mayors. mich lineal - . * and grown rich, unspoiled. Claude | ye told ¢ | was neither meek nor humble. He | pare ; Was wholly master of himself, Even | while she determined never to ask the inevitable question, she heard A king is a maieWho-wedrs- medals tt coming from her own lips. and reviews tegons. ing with scorn. over-manicured hand upon her hip, threw back her head and surveyed Cherry wit! eyes gleaming with such venomous that Banning her by the arm and.hustled her away Who remembers the old-fashioned woman who used to eat three meals d wine on the table between all Richard “Rowan!” “In ull these years, there sauat This dd curtly, his face very red and ‘have been sume women—” | “You spoiled my taste for just , , Women,” Claude answered brusque- | ly, “and I hadn't much ume then, though | owu—I missed ‘em. | had | a whole lot to look after. | about it, some day, Polly, if you o*pally sear a. Bhe becamié aware | fF 8 ride, Polly, dear, Claude aud that Claude was regarding her hu- ee A Chicago dogtor advises ‘clothes for longer. life. t wants to live long in jai | At The Movies |i oo OO ELTINGE THEATRE Mary Brian, and Sam | Banning inquired with ehc-waea at Cn when we were elop' “Ked wine,” Flo amended with a ry slight, short blonde youth took the ith blushingly. After preliminary questions, “Your occupation?” “I'm an automobile mechani 1 by the Safety First *hauncey and West agency of federal regulation. For that reason | t° rl hee artnet ‘Tell you | {Judge Sykes did well to put the government’s case | seen Chert Chris lean over and kiss Cherry on \ the tip of her nose—" A ripple of delighted laughter in- terrupted the witness and crew down the ire of the judge, but he did not rage.) Hardy appearing hth | the movies at the Eltinge today and ; working there the eve nine of Thanksgiving Day, Novem-| other day about noon. scenes near Woodlawn cemetery the looked up at him inqulringly, asked how many men.” “They didu't courtroom of spec When Banning dismissed the wit- ness, Churchill made h seat for further cross-e: ou have sworn that ‘ vibe Adit «it ) NU" | Miss Cherry was drinking wine, {sions about the diffieulty’ which the commission! you actually see the wi! | will face in deciding on which side the public in- | which the def ber 257” Banning asked. “Yes, sir.” The boy in the big chair “Now, Mr. Rowan, Spotting a restaurant nearby, the; mpany stopped for lunch. fidgeted nerv- | ¢o | the, company, jude laughed, too. “Well, you to yourself, Polly, now that Ned's come into the , story. You'd better try: to like bim. He's a nice boy, though his ways il you tell the | st when and under what cir. cumstances you saw this defendant ing Day, | took iA umbering about.twema including “won't have her alt' e of the location ¢1 bh if you did see her? TOMORROW: Rowan gives start- i damaging evidence Cherry, and Chris, black gowned waitri ind a long face tiptoed to Lyon. “Are you all she whispered. When the roars had subsided it was explained that the restaurant was frequented by folks on their | « way home from Woodlawn Ceme; netually | “I don't like his sudden. ways,” h to actually ed “How dare he iy, engaged to Mary!” Claude's slow smile stopped her. I guess Mary knows.” Polly looked at him, half angrily. “Were you playing for this?” “Oh, Jiminy, no quick look at her, sirl to myself a little while, but T kuow better than to interfere with young people when their minds are Then Polly suddenly realized. she said abything to about—when?” "No, bat-if-l know Ned, it will be Will you go back with her [to the White hor all parts of stand by? We‘can talk everything D ; over—later.”” : , Polly hesitated: and was con- le waited apxious- | “It! Have It Out With Polly Yet,” “1 pet ik to Mary, ars.” He Told Claude. Savagely., autiful] she said, and ®aw the keen blue earihad cores of serv-| eyes regard her with a curious look | bout it. After that, they’ré’ com- CHAPTER XV | ARY and Claud on their way’ to Clover Hollow. Venice was barely three weeks be- ‘A Service, Inc.) BARBS MUSIC HATH CHARM A New. York leader whose band| Wh plays with whistles, bells, mechan-. filming of feal pianos, riveting hamme! airplane propeller gave a ree The only things that lacks are a few boilers and the cats from the back yard.| . The resultant bedlam i: “Ballet Mechanique.” close observer, are “T got two eyes and I use ‘em,” the | girl answered flippantly. “What were Mr. W Cherry eating, Miss Ripley Claude gave a CAPITOL THEATRE wanted the terviewed - during “Broken Hearts of Holly- wood,” the Warner Brothers epic of Filmland, directed“ by Lloyd and now playing Theatre, Louise tured with an al rc Patsy Ruth Miller, Dougl: banks, Jr., Stuart Holmes and others, interesting viewpoint on causes of many of the “broken hearts, S0On. of Hollywood.’ I didn’t notice.” Miss Cherry wear on} this occasion?” “I don't know. di Flo confessed sulkily. “Had you been drinking > General principles must first be formulated in Unloaded Guns {this atleged red wine, Miss Ripl end hearings are shortly to be held in Washington. ! No formal radio conference is in prospect, but the | THEY’RE ALL ALIKE about the easy money involved in the! iness; the overnight suc. cesses, the tremendous wealth his one or that one, the scious that Cla its five members were members of the last confer- | ir sion is fortunate alike in having found a way to| set promptly about its work, in spite of the dereiic- | tions of congress, and in being able to lean on Sec- | homes, cars, luxuries, ants, but so few of these people thin! of at what costs or sacrific ‘Quite natural-that the sunny side ieture lease all, and quite bbs. were | Pic gkiaval TOee a Mitow road | 2UCh times I feet horribly in’ the if would be built around those who were in the public limelight, for who cures about the dark moments in no obligations, “political or otherwise,” except to leaves a loaded gun around. He locks it up. : When the man who knows guns picks one up he Speak Up For the Seaway does so carefully, with the muzzle pointed in a) (St. Paul Dispateh) direction where an accidental discharge would in- | jure no one. He doesn’t look down the barrel to i : ; i : ' i i or clean it with the muzzle pointed at his own stomach, or at anyone else’s. In other words, he respects a gun as a weapon of injury and death : and not as a plaything to dangle on the finger. | tion of the St. Lawrence seaway. How different the attitude of the one who thinks; The government Nasi, feces a deoarteent he knows guns! Nonchalantly he grabs the gun, | o¢ commerce, knows that direct marine transport i } the gun wheri it stands in the clothes closet, or in| cost to the producers. Criminal carelessness, and only too prevalent, peril or by the unceasing demands of the peop!e -§ {been shot with “unloaded guns,” handled by fools.| normally functions at a distressingly slow rate. Can we never learn our lesson? So unless the spurs’ of popular demand are con- com jtinually applied, there is likely to be many a tem- J A Fertilizer Trust? per-trying delay, many a weary year, before there H The government is about to try 39 fertilizer|is any chance of real digging; many a weary month charges of operating a in| before the country even knows for certain that it federal statutes which prohibit such | is going to have a seaway. It would pay the north- “It is understood that the government is| west, speaking through its agricultural, business criminal proceedings in an effort | and civic organizations, to keep the imperative need ‘believes to be a national com-| of haste in the St. Lawrence matter squarely be- 5 r yfore the new congress, whén it meets for its long have been breaking the Jew | lansion next winter, and squarely before the admin- i ee caine hind them, but as Mary confided, to her father, !t seemed more like yeare, on fe Ahough Venice de «gaxe ber anjodd little | civ he will steal tn edintely. n to those two, Ig 4 RA the only women he really loves— dn’t mean | #24 who adore hin. Ten to one, * reed that,| Polly, when we come back, my ’ In'& possibly, | Mary will be on his knee, with Aunt Peare the tx ; ja Polly bad ell iu out of fry or ta Ned's, | 42d present.’ She sat there waiting life, about the alleys and byways. to travel on the For Pity’ sake! ; WHY TURN ON ALL TAAT Noise For ME? IC wanr ro steme! IF You tike ‘T S0-STay HOME AND ENJOY iT" | a | PALACE MANDAN Jack Waller & Company at the Palace theatre, Mandan, on Tuesday present an exceedingly well staged revue of the popular kind. assisted by four young ladies includ- ing the DeMarr twins who are par- ticularly pleasing, entertains with instrumental music. Andree & Francis are two girls do- ing the comedy dances which are The various numbers are introduced by Jack Waller in a hu- Among the other acts on the bill are Friedlander Brothers “Eecentric Musical who have a very interesting musical turn in which they use a lar and novelty in- ld: Powers, comedy We commend to the attention of other organiza- | _tions throughout the northwest the resolution | i see if it is loaded, he doesn’t start to take it apart adopted by the members of the Land O'Lakes | Creameries, Inc., at their annual meeting in Min- | neapolis, urging the federal government to speed | up the preliminary steps looking to early construc- | ¢ look, anid . fram \ her head, on’ bis:shout exactly tit. song, dance and. inbed | the Mlustrious,.Dabbs family, past in Mary’s | Hillsborough road and turned bis fe back re- | Cal toward the open country. © house, ‘and acqui- waying the muzzle wildly in circles so that service between Duluth and the principal Europea” | : evefyone in the room is in range, and then begins | norts will mean a saving of from six to eighteen! ing the: hammer and pulling the trigger. He cents a bushel on all grain and grain products pro- | i stan@s the gun against a table where it can fall’ quced in the northwest, and a corresponding freight | . to the floor and be discharged, he leaves shells in| saving on all other exports, without any oftsettine | Quer isn Herel: WeLto SLES. WAVE SOME During all nad rennined ee Graham & Golden are report- ied to be one of the j , the pistol as it rests in » bureau drawer. But save when spurred by imminent nationai| f talking ‘and singin; ether ant A lives ant To overcome evil with good is seit Mra. , sh il nowledged Sh ai tried to. arrange the! She still called ‘ofl.: While she teams seen here ‘heir “Raceology” is snappy talk and song put over/ with the best < Down” furnished by Ardell Bros. is a display of fast modern athletic pecomaplliGapants, shreee! h ae at the rapez and rings. George Walsh is {featured on the screen in “A Man fis Service furnishes the basis for the sere which was written by H. H., asthe mortality figures testify. Hospitals and | themselves, the cumbersome, ponderous and some- | morgues and cemeteries are full of folks who have| what archaic machinery of federal government | be cour Justajingle | “While I refuse to enter the cér’s shop,” she told Mai finality, “I cannot ig « a EN - When Mary ul and especially Peace ea yee TUTTL JONEER DIES Tatsle Lnawine Frank, 78, last Sunday at ‘hia home here of mas FiasT , CHANCE aT A R&S, att Oay. here, where he. would see fer depart from “P , Valley, Clover Hollow and Mary. ] Mary must be content that Loren : Rangeley knew. and that ther | would be no divorce. ‘That was | as Volly Johnston was pre- pared to go. at present. y q * Claude had dlagnosed Polly's at- titude as a violent attack of Jeal- cus sulks from which she might presently emerge, If curefully han- died. To Mary's surprise he hud refused to make the announcement. “They wouldu't understand, daughter, aod it would make It hard for your mother. Just let's go on quietly as we are now. The Ned ‘sou,’ half the time, so they | won't think anything, now that } you're engaged, if 1 call you ‘daugh- | ter’ once lo a while.” 8 Rolly knew that she was behav- ing abominably and ungenerously, but could not bring herself to de® otherwise. She had looked so re- Meved at this that Mary reluctantly agreed. Ned, siniling noncomimit- tally at Polly, had put tis hand on Mury’s shoulder and said: “But Claude won't mind in ‘the least our telling Aunt Lyddy every- thing, and just how we feel about 1 it. Then he had taken Mary awa; ved Polly Johuston severa awkward moments. Every day Mary came to her fa- | ther's store and visited with Aunt Lyddy. When Polly Johusgton ac- companied her, she either drove about and returned for Mary, or re- ined seated in Mary's new cur, which, with. @ chauffeur and a houseful of competent se rived at the Whit@house. Ned ia- variably came outside and talke® with Polly, doing his best to amuse her while Aupiy ane worshiped * Mary. The wo had been un- first, abd-then became voluble, requiring all of Aunt. Lyddy'’s ejaculations from “Trumpets of Satan” to “Peter and | Paul.” The two were fast friends, ; Aunt Lyudy’ discovered that Mary gave her father far more than “his Of Polly Johnston, Aunt Lyddy » and never addressed compelled by what she called “witnesses to goud manners.” Mary, disappointed: and unhappy that her mother could not accept | Claude and his money as simply us | it was offered, tried hard to make a sinvoth path for both of them, It ing work, and it told on? | Mary. Ned, watching her anxious- | ly, wondered at Polly's hardness of heart toward the girl she adored. UW have tt out with Po yet,” ‘laude savagely, life of patience and his sage, Jealous, Ned. Jealous becnuse Mary loves us, You can't argue with a | Jealous woman.” afternoon, Mary looked paler than usual, Mary's beautiful mother had been impossible today and Mary was glad to eseape with father in the car, while Ned took Polly fn his,. Ned surveyed Polly calmly as he her his haud, “Ill take you Mery have important: business ut Clover Hollow, as you probably ow unless you closed your eure while Mury was trying to tell you ' and ing home here for,tea-and Mary | und Aunt Lyddy will probably go over the family album, sorting out ft Claude in his youth. At way, don't you?” Polly looked at him with equal calm. She could understand Ned. “And Claude?” “Claude will probably come back and pretend to be busy in the shop, though it’s a dull day; but pres- Lyddy. feeding: them ehocolate cake nt and retailing to them anecdotes of Folly sighed. Ned forsook the (DU BB CONTINUBL.» A THOUGHT. | Je not overcome of evil, but over- ied | ceme evil with good-Romans xifs21., evil with evil is evil, and tennia ball flew out of sight. Qne lad sald; “What's the score?” The sther. answered, “What's the diff, q ‘e can't play any more?” ——————_——-- ‘gro CO-EDS RPURNED THEM with’ Edmonto To adverti: are: | thelt ifreedo Aree thnaitties of dress, men students of the Univer- the sity of rte

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