The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 14, 1927, Page 4

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; ‘PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribun An Independeat foreign material Lowden would probably. have an excellent chance, although it cannot be depied that he is not so popular in the East ashe is in .the Middle West. Newspaper normal rate of 5; sing i i peed causing inexpressible damage ae THE Seed ab eS) ee, and destruction of life and property. | The great part forests play in the development! =. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. of our country, according to Charles Lathrop. Pack | N. D., and entered at the postoffice at | president of the Ameri pratt ‘a eres De Manan nn Prenton Ua be fact {hab Biae the atreeeee ot REMIT wate the steer ‘ab the oe " + rge D. Mann.... ..President and Publisher ‘act ‘om the streams of the national: ter 34 in the story of the ex- | Romorantir. fi B forests over 700 western cities and towns, with an ds eR Oy, NO th, revisiting | In Gievtes a black-mius- bi Subscription Rates Payahle in Advance aggregate population of nearly 2,500,000, obtain ran Secind A ELF’ anda cor. |tached paper ““boy” announces a i (ely 4 SAA fae yee, (std marck)...... 7.20 their domestic water supply. The forests include respondent for The Tribune. fresh edition of a Paris newspaper sil, . seeeee jean i ; by blowing musical blasts on o horn ADaily by tail, per your, 1,266 irrigation projects and 25 water-power plants, ¢HAPTER XXXIV a ” is “(in state outside Bismarck)........ 6.00. in addition to many other power and irrigation com- Movi’ Ada, Hore: eefaance “bt thel: Fish Fresh bt ; Daily ae aes of North Dakota. :: panies which depend on the government timber- Fiat a ‘2 the hi er of aj will’ want ee came tac tual cs ember Audit Bureau of Circulation lands for water conservation and the regulation of barge on the Canal du Cher, which| A sign on, the wall, at, Monthou- , Member of The Associated Press rain water run-off and stream flow. ism ated ast ie Eyed “of cade werner TMK pained in black ara ter anes is ogteiusivety pis : it Mississippi river sweeping ruin on its way Brown belt : oe i ed ‘ Rd Neuvet | *Ofticen = t ion ‘all news dis es | to the ocean gave Ameri srrible is + ‘rom Tours to Romorantin ihe 120. se eaited to it pr not otherwise credited in thie pe- Hecen 5 a ve America a terrible Forest-Week American ‘telephone line. is still in Autographed Scenery wl Wad ulio the local news of spontubibese’ ovigia | “°°: is lesson is one of the fourteen in the operation. It is ensity distinguished| In every town, variously dis- 'Bublished herein. All rights of republication of all Million and a half Forestry Primers the America from the French line on the other) tributed, treet ne names of i other matter herein are also reserved. Tree Association has just given to the schools of fine wie * asened OS: hoe corporals, sergeants and the well- i Forel America to arcuse the coming generation to the im- French are using it now. j known privates. One finds them } a ign Representatives portance of reforestation. We must plant snow- Near Romorantin the Q. M. C./| carved in the soft stones in the wall : G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY poling: ahd (eatnonteavall : Post Exchange No. 4 has been/ of a coener | buvetts and on the ' \CHICAGG DETROIT Ce eee ciece at cee hemuwauers adapted by a peasant asa residence | statuary in the feudal castles along Tower 7 Kresge Bldg. | of our rivers and streams as a result of this terrible cttet ‘i os Kees | ea ed ybpte Rap iat d = FA PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH lesson. In this lesson hve must have a counterpart RA aR lh eh Mastin thd rs PP ‘ i m bull ith the top of the} initi scrawled -in pencil in 1918, NEW YORE -'_-_-_ Fifth Ave, Bidg. in the fod of the Yellow river which the Chines: | body “removed AS a the back, a8 (i en Aue lau a cuter (Official Sty, State and Ccanty Newspaper), °"!! the River of Sorrow. Sie tofen his’ way'to market, | centuries—for curious tourists to i We must have forests at the headwaters of Mud, of Coutse. stare at—and maybe pay five francs ‘ i “First in Peace—” streams to help hold back the water for a time. de Heese na dis “shised Place Sows for the yes. ior ,; We have always known that the United States | hee the can in your own yard hold longer iby the river where the camp, once| | Aud falstiehon, hangs, it round i “army was first in war. under a tree and you get the idea. Just look at the a d there is mu . mu «| ee unches 3 ‘ . ‘ m ps ucdup mud. branches, of the trees in the woods Aud of lute we are beginning to discover that tt| window pane the next time it rains and you will | At Pruniers a huge ‘pile| slong thé roads. ' “can be first in peace, too. | get a lesson in what Nature is doing all the time | of rusty tin cans in a wide field) “Many of the American Legion- ri Ma ,._| because man cuts the trees and puts no new ones j: +... On some of, these cans the naires will feel at home. down here, it For the regular army, working in* conjunction | in their place. ; bsedaeic iti 8 = Sleringsisaad OMORROW: The Chocolate ; with the national guard and the Red Cress, has i ed pot SUM eee .: : he : j ; *tborne the brunt of relief work in the Mississippi, Wh ‘i ; at is Good Luck? ev a an j > ; flood. If it had not been for supplies rushed to! What is good fortune, anyway? cess with “Helen of Troy” and “Galg-| one of the largest commercial apple . ithe spot by the army many refugees would have| when ere ay id ‘ | had,” has not been wooed far from|gtowers in the country. ; ‘ H i i i A y Op to consider you'll agree that it all the Columbia‘campus, at which uni- “4 { ptarved or died of exposure. If it had not been for| depends on circumstances. veraity he functions ‘as professor, | EYhe army engineers rhany of those who escaped!’ An Arkansas man, fleeing the flood, reached Over in, St. Mark's Place, on the| | Old Masters = ‘:.’ {would have been swept away by the rushing waters.| Kansas City th ry RE East Side, I next came upow Maxwell \-————___—_. it & a 'y the other day with every bit of prop- a done several 4 All of which brings us to the proposition that) erty he owned in two little pasteboard boxes, He nd many poems. And there,| You came to me bearing bright roses, the army is a pretty good thing to have around,|/had lost his home, his stock, everything—he was | ieecded, the Palashlent: Feat rin. tee| Yeu twmtgdnnamumene aston ‘ ar or no war. flat broke and the savings of a lifetime were gone. | national Litde ater prize con-| To set me-aside from the mart. fi During the last few years the army seems to have; But he announced, “I am lucky.” Why? Be-{ rea 4 gilli a, ornate nets Vastel weréaiva ona ton t Jost many friends. It has been the target for much cause he had escaped with his life. The other losses || yy tet her a thee: t0. ba oee acdiraette cance (ree and easy sniping by all varieties of radicals | seemed small to him. He was living, and that: was |! \ A h of the best to be done by a young | Enslaved and eneircted, I bore it, 4nnd_liberals; it has had a hard time getting Con- | enough, | eee Se OR TN : Monee ubbuprs Your. ie Monee ie wea eed obi dasha Gare. gress to vote enough money so that it could main-| It’s all a matter of cireumstances—good fortune. kj eriscope so that the dri , | ander her arm. 4 eled, : tain its efficiency of equipment and personnel; it ———e | e eo . Bove to-turn abd benelaicourice hise-| Rateeenlceth eeietee eee eee ee ee nnrns stay i has seen its numbers diminished, and has had to! A Wise Decision ing pede he Mp oy to ask a question.|eating in a little Village Punide: Bitter thoree to proclaim me your ( contend with wide public indifference whenever it) Tammany Hall, it is announced, will make no| o . incl aavabs ke oral pe eabaect Sr palo apie os rior proteited. effort to establish branches in other cities, | a t9e7 & WA SERVICE, INC. . ee ae But, after All) Maiihstian, Je a] ° “Amp howallt “Croweed” Situated as we are, that's probably inevitable.| This strikes us as a wise decision, Tammany| But Faith did not go to court the] ley—west, you know, the way the! different kings: of kewter “a noe | pretty big place and thousands. of é Ms ! We are at peace, and there isn’t much prospect that | doubtless isn't as bad as it has been painted. Even| next day. Churchill himself came to! car had. come. corroborates to China, send him to China! eget aeitine peeriar aataal g ° pI tention if flashed upon’ the average A THO j any foreign power is going to invade our territory | *® we imagine the rest of the country‘will be just | ded) batons Lereode rt be a - a Puan som ak See aénery The cick alse ha th be: ins Paaetuergr es ee een com Ger in the near futare. It’s hard for us to realize that | #8 well pleased to know that Tammany will remain | weakly resisting Aunt Lee Hathaway, got in his full and| tentions for is former subjects, Ho| Prats one of the things you vi : r we need an army at all, sometimes. | strictly a New York institution: to keep her in’ complete story of the mystarious) #nnountes hé is not intending to re-/to like about New Yorkecthat init me; t ye rae Gat woagustol But the army is pretty valuable, just the same.|, Tammany may be all right, but the rest of us, stayed ‘in ier bangers Faith toc Hob! And missed it}” Faith) you're not an CCCMEBERT SWAN. | kel ieee, ore Of wemeneatl Bam It not only helps in our wars with other nations; a oe all'the politicalumaghjnes we care for | Aunt Hattie cooked aid swept and sae) laying his hand against he: Sgt WAN. (@ . pes : it helps in our wars with nature. Let a flood, like! one pbovlar apg ences rier a peyote YE ia”! DS. ee ie, oe medicine isa trae , like | protesting girl’s chest with vill Glad you did,”!' Bob chuckled. | ai ‘i ; the oon one, or an earthquake or a great fire! rE | mixtures Eibiecaunes turpentine and aah {Banning got shy! goat on cross 7 ae Health ‘ friend—Sir W. Temple ea nt or a tornado, lay waste cities and countryside, and peppery inter- bee dagete! (o Unnads arBi ngl rapier i d . ; i : é bt | blows. But-Churehill, d to get| many stra rvice the khaki-clad soldiers will be moving about among} Editorial Comment |! the ‘ain't “gonna die;! my measurements of the funny ‘foot-| hattan i St Justajingle the ruins before the rest of the country realizes | , though the Lord knows this picking| Prints before the jury as exhibit B Many a writer. and artist, whose 3 } - on an innocent-child and hauling her, for the defense names reach temporary and’ perma-|__ BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN im an * ‘d i ow iqihiat hae. happened, lisinsdbenaatens { into court and devine her oe murder], ‘What did, you and Banning row] nent heights among the cognoscenti,| Editor Journal of the American He h siege eushaien ae is ‘ i out 2” itl ke recognizes tl made isa. 7 And when the flood is all over, and the survivors! (New York Times) Pee a ye nance ne tried te insinuate that 1, York highways, “Few of the wridlng| " <"the Health Magaaize "| YoU, ask ‘how did he take them— have all been cared for, let’s not forget what the! lowa is, the head and front of the revolt of “tho, Hattie snapped. at the ‘reporters,| might have killed Uncle Ralph my-|€eMtry. reach a very high’ state of Why, -he Bought 2 gots ; A : p ; army did. It isn’t a very big army, this Ameérican| farmiers"—that is, certain farm organizations, bank-| ,N°W,,°at Outs all of you! T got) Sie adie: mouivei sven Jkeow:. be ila MARA are, cinprely come ‘ , amy but it’s a mighty good as sias and, war or peacé,{ers and politicians—against Mr. Coolidge. The hands” fe drandsaninyalla cacy ae apbsaritrds ieee ‘There are a few names that seem News Briefs it’s always ready to serve us in bang-up fashion. | interstate agricultural conference in Des Moines las: | “YoU know. Bob,” Faith told her|# led courts of justice, | constantly to pop into the “among July was the harbinger of the present, meremenr | fweetheart wien he came that eve-| Churchill got my version of the Sat Uyalerti ty ar PIM! Pipa lds ; “Maude-Lee Mudd, 18-year-old In 4 ; é +} ning, “the most terrible thing about Urday night party at the Marlboro d ¢ “first nighter”| “a certain ‘amou fecrping:. i 5 Z \- A Blow to the Theatre ° ‘That was intended as a sort of side-show for Mr. it Is the fact that we're all getting Country Club, to off “gat theater open Edna Fi fo dtp ce gto bewagnpes obtains annulment of s : getting Country Club, to offset Aunt Alice's! 2t penings. Edna Ferber| necessary for the infant in ordi athoe kur. : fs d ® fa ¥ . ly: to be found: in: these e order to! ane marriage, then tukes another hus- The suspension of operations by the Neighbor-|Lowden, for whom Governor Hammill has long been| "4 t2,it—to first page notoriety, to damaging testimony against Cherry-| cugientes “And th a develop the. longs and usa'form of| band at Florence, Arizon hood Playhouse in New, York city, an axperiment.|a boomer. Mr. Coolidge hassisignpd his political | ssiuy Gherree pence te peeantnce aaldeii gid you yore there” */ Gharies and Kath 7 Hisedsn jenn t ht on ttsae Peatimesas wal |< isesia;*Ruuaay” Teh fel in the little theatre movement of twelve years’|death warrant” by refusing #> sfigy the McNary- ave sworn that the disgrace | found swevergwhave.e Onn vert’ get | Rot be harmed; . other: b governuibat' plane. cestrsiog e : rene, i 4 2 ind evetywl .” One very sel- hers may cry a]earth government plane ‘-earrying standing, is truly a blow to the theatre. Into the|Haugen bill, itself a prodadMof [Swa economics Sere cecal paloma hh and Bob find) om sees Edith, Wh villa tots! of wh hour during 24. Mothers! dispatches. £ w x : 3, ther, st. arton or Willa i patches. from ‘ashington to venture backers have poured half « milion dollars least in, name, Represehtative. Dickinson han! Bua is even a Hite bt proud, though | CCOBPFIEBL T9ET, NEA’ Service, In.)|SauMet ye nthanee Att guns Dr, S.A. Rose, hat’ tovtdie ap ins Rez, Fide, when it bursts | into in that time and the range of its influence was | been breathing fire and slaughter against Mr. Cooi- besa liland tre horhlglendaanecrmrverasal” 7 is an accident if you am- except at feedi im tenant George A, Finch, . \ wide. Founded as a settlement house venture, it|idge for some time. In 1928 “the farmers,” espe-| Dad's, vearee want, Eive ony toa ARBS | Hn pales at ie Seat" places ka ropers ey neciziere an t es¢apes in BA, Pg eae od grew from a center for the lower East Side com- cially the Towa “farmers,” are to have their revenge, | {ine headlines”, 0°" SV | VT) 4| great’ tBpoon Titer Anchologyet utd a The bealthy baby that cries may! White Hoi inces that gov- munity to an important factor in New York the-| The Iowa Republican politicins are seething with he drew chalr’ else. tothe bedi . {to live modestly: in a Chelsea board-| {tty prey nae tn Nandy, aunejcrnment is ready to do anything it PP eMli und x mecca for’ drama lovers thronghout| emotion. Perhaps they.can kesh tt up; but. they | sed ctencmed for Mar Heute, “Ola aie wees cxhibited in Sing| ing house. | Theodore Dreiser for) thirsty, ey pesause It can to Deevent | illegal combi the eastern states. It featured such productions! have still a long way t | Preston, the insurance man that 9 fala find put tats Worth Woe | Be Pate eetRicd a, basement in| nervousn: i 4 Thich might unduly increase. pri aye secicay P —_ Hitiese oe ig way to go and should be frugal) Cherry worked fo Fa she went Maer ind epi iedres worth while ay canes pee near the home spot as e uk,” “Grand Street Follies” and Gals- | of their Breath in an end: ji { ? < Ee; Ro koee ne) of Mayor Jimmie Walk d_ lat 6 ‘ 5 aise 7 sah . endirance comtast. | ines. tines Bslay ce, testified * lived modestly in a Sixth avenue flat Outlaw band in Jalisco, Mexi worthy’s “The Mob. Meanwhile, th 'y was a nice girl, that shi Mexico, at- , | while, there seems to be a goodly number’ gidn't try to gold-dig hams and that, Ke neo une man in Kansas reported | bujlding. Fortune came with “The| from two to f n{ tacks ranch and kills German mer- Classes for children were maintained as part of of heretics. That orthodox organ, The Des Moines | she quit o m accord, Pretty id a fine time” on the floating | American’ Tragedy” and Dreiser y telt how Wank food tee ett| chant named Schondube. ‘ f hei P ‘ sae a her own accord. Pretty Oe Riel weed apaene’ ca er may tell how much. food the baby , the theatre's work and the program included other | Register, fulfills its duty as a newspaper by re-; decent, of him, considering the fuct/| ed ! TE PRE Ne ceoeas ae a wnuldom | is getting. at en raing by welgh-| De Pinedo artives in New Oriea cio activities of equal .importance!- ‘The Neigh- cording dissenting opinions every day. An Towa | tis jahe pull ~atter: abe aes slapped]. gu * w a; ticed, I believe, into attempting the pee nae peters. pe tetinag jo from Pensacola. i reans Dorhood Playhouse acted as a clearing house for City woman holds that Mr. .Coolidge has shown! “Oh, it was sweet of him!” Faith| Portupal has taken, up ping pong | fer ns uenan (um Isat win-)sueh mill ax the baby, ma recurei-| Grand Forks t matters of an amateur theatrical nature over a himself the farmers’ friend by his veto. “There| Sw Net Cyet misting with tears.| again, But America is still getting|. “Christopher Morley lives a. quiet, ite clothing, “If: the amountt charagter slong. tehgioes dine Se wide territory and its influence toward develop-/™ust be many in Iowa who believe as she does,”| “A couple of detectives told of see- be a Fder trigls as the mout| scholarly life with his family in| necessary greens ny MSameeeit| order to promote better citizens was ¢ ment of the little theatre movement has been ex-|S8Y8 an Attica reader; and yet to see “in ‘The ing automobile tire tracks in the) ments cv wit MTMeodgre, Roosevelt, Jt, ia to be|MAY_be necessary to provide adai-| Seed” Ter sitd and significant. | Register the views of some of the big men in Iowa {fesh S80™, in the alley, when they| Handwriting is a key to charneter’| found: genezaliy: at. political ‘gather: | "q7),foet . jon the veto one might tifink all Iowa had a1 Ose sere arening, for the murderer.| especially on those pieces of paper, ings, but Kermit is seldom int Ifthe child: ip uncomfortable, the Three features contributed toward the suspen- |" ‘one jowa had turned | Oné set of tracks, they swore, turn-) marked. “Insufficient, Funda.” | Broadway or ballroom thronge or at|(scomfort may be due to indiges-| isiarcmant for Publions sion of operations; locati i ds endowment. | 2&8inst Coolidge.” “I am glad the president vetoed | a yond the end of the| + ne the political meetings. tion, to improper: adjustment of the bgmont, for Publicatien) perations; location, size and. endowment. | 983i" ee driveway and headed back up the al-| “New York taxicab h John E clothing, to soiled clothin ns BEM Ghires: tha ‘latter was geohably, the wort! i! farm bill,” writes another dissenter. A Fort!) i tee Sait Mork fanless, now, neve: Al: Jona Reagine, “Sp) met ebahigue: Published ta tela tla hee 50) j problem, It is unfortunately true that the move- | Dodge cynic is rather neat: OUT OUR W AY en g Fee Te aed meh ponte Charter tee of the igus ments that are finest and accomplish the most | If the Lowden movement fails in 1928 and - ae By Williams A tly fe peravine jie Funda. sa rit ne "t from an aesthetic point of view, are quite likely to! President Coolidge or some other representa. _ ~ - that” infants fay tt esaetiy feellse! nank of North Dakota. f be financial fail ee 5 get thirsty and ‘don nancial failures. This has proven true not, tive of Government-subsidized industries of the | } : DAT USS \/ HE'S GoT LON CHANEY receive «enough -fluid in the milk! percent titerece ns F488 _ only with little theatre ventures, but in many cases| East is the product of a well-controlled conven- | Yes NO HACCIOUNT./ BEAT WHEN HERS A stone, \A bottle of bolled water with|Sscrling Wiate Bank. : with individual theatrical productions of a higher| tion, what action will be taken by the good old T So. \ HE HIT DAT ! oougLe HeapeR ratiattee nas muPple should be) | Checking Aecount,” $200.00, 1% plane than the average girl and music show. party in Iowa? Will any of the officeholders be dls S FINGER ust e a ede. Pre iene AY rita A or. sitorles haves. , And: it is hard to find persons who will con-| in Washington or Des Moines who are now voic- i s' 003 % HARO ANUFF all: Macwees deena board. Hye ReMi e se pe DP> ay oR ‘ 4 tribute money to this sort of thing, despite the| ‘ing their protests dare say one word against I Bot. ITS | SO HE DUNT Sometimes it is The bese have Derk ppproved by {esos amounts some of them have. They would ie party or its system of government? 1 | ‘} TERR {BLE | KNOW WItH ool Board cr Townphi rather put it in other ventures. think not. They will remember what happened } a | | ON aa ih te it to Senator-elect Brookhart in 1924. They will ty " y The Lesson from the Flood | et on the band-wagon, dust off the old slogan, ic Ever watch the raindrops running down an un-| “Coolidge and Prosperity,” and make Iowa safe North’ Denoe washed window pane? They trickle around and, for the good old party. | che the Above fa corres: to over the Pgi Soon the glass is streaked because; ¢ ig instructive to notice that even The Sioux | ane ba a lirt managed to hang on. Cit; | . ty Journal, which is sound on the McNary-Haugen | turn to the map of the Unitedites and | view, isn't fervidl ect y hopeful: | imi that to be a window pane with’ all the i . , tributaries of the Mississippi river rushing into it It remains to be seen whetherMr. Lowden | and it in turn’ rushing to the sea. Agee Tas & coanes,ta in the. nema at the next | « w, is» pretty picture. Great industries, cities} |RePublican convention. If Mr. Ciptidge volmn- | 2 : eet tarily retires—which he may: do ‘and ou to | by river. ? ite “parks, do if the third-term idea is to prev: Mr. | <: &, the Governors Y 14 € : Bef Kittery. 5 the x inia’s tered tal cael

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