The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 4, 1927, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

—_— eG ammeme oe AGE FOUR Bismarck as second George D. Mann. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at ss mail matter. Se era ee 7 : . . | the over supply of princes and sublet them for the The Bismarck Tribune vite” Win nice boneee nay tases An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) month, a good count should find plenty of takers at not much more than his fodder and cigarets. Hands Across the Rio Grande In ancient times, when the ruler of a kingdomn wanted to get a half-Nelson on the affections of President and Publisher some neighboring monarch, ministers used to get ‘Daily by mail, per (in state outsid mail, per year, “Daily by mail, outside of Nerth Dakota...... Pa Member Andit Bureau of Circulation Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . r, (in Bismarck) je Bismarck). The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches @redited to it or not pei published here ether matter local otherwise credited in this pa- ews of spontaneous origin All rights of republication of all n are also reserved. = Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN = CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAY NEW YORK : PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT Kresge Bldg. BURNS & SMITH (Official City, oe Ki hthood Flowers What with bobbed-haired ba State and County Newspaper) gain dits, “feminine forgers, girl» go-betw adeadly variety of husband kill ig “that womankinc her new-found freedom of the ‘ th amendm equality with man a Man now ads shame, that wot sdeavor as well a ankind is hardened in her emancipatio sout grounds, and t pale and wa = When a Ma had carried this busine hough perhaps with his equal d. The charge th: is not wi valry grows old-fashioned judge, therefore, frees a wom- an who pleads guilty to the embezzlement of some § $20,000, solely because she is a woman, the hap- pening is so unusual $ iby telegraphic news ‘ and marvel at. + § “I come df stock, t se t is sent hither and yon e for the people to sce ” said the judge in handing ‘down his cpinion, “that never believed in punish- tment of a woman until she should become so de- praved that she was large.” “chivalry of the kind hood was at its floweriest. 3 dangerous to the public at Here is a gentleman of the old school. Here is that flourished when knight- Here is a throwback to the happy philosophy which held all women good <women just because they were women. Under its *teaching, no woman might ever see the inside of a house of correction unless she became recruited to! the ranks of the machine gunners. Tt would be pretty indeed for the wéftd to turn back once more to a ccd sludge advocates. His deci: in the symphony of the times—a symphony played uch as the Maryland ion is an optimistic note largely with the crashing cymbals of pessimism. “It is, however, a note doomed to die. Woman has gained her equality with man and as she stand< in any court of the land, she must be prepared Sto take its findings under the same laws and the same codes that mete out justice to men. Another Crime Cure * Of all the suave remedies recently advanced to curb the crime wave, that of the president of the *American Game Protective association strikes home as unique. The hunting instinct in man, says this official, 4, 1. th is inborn, even in the best people. To satisfy t instinct, man must humt. If man has no safety walve for his hunting instincts, he will start hunt- ng trouble or his fellow man and become a crim- inal. To remedy this, the game association offi- @al~Says that there should be public hunting grounds where men can get their hunting instincts worked out of their systems. The image of some great cpen space where psy- Cepathic specialists may send large blocks of hu- > manity to work off their hunting instincts is an image to tickle the fancy, and the philosophy that ten must be given a chance to hunt the cussedness out cf their systems is most pleasing. Under this! Fensoning the guardian of the hocse-gow and the keeper of the booby gentry who spend so = railroads’ business, ai ~ tailroads was of the * to the roads. he Versely, the railroad 4 make it best suited days of i ' érime prevention legislation i ne and all to play hide-and- t week to keep these 1 | where they belong. ~ ‘ 4 2 H 5 = fi “A committee from 1 y x 1 ; t hatch need never watch those many hours: of the week hunt- ing the furtive golf ball at large on the open range. _ They, it is assured, will never become criminals. 4 The next thing we may look for,in the way cf) compelling seek three times a potent hunting passions down Motors and Railroads the American Bankers’ asso- ciation, examining the ccmpetition between rail- foads and motor trucks and busses, has discovered that motors have made but small inroad into the nd that the traffic lost to the kind found least remunerative i For the immediate future, this answers the be- Tief that the railroads are doomed—that the moto~! 000 a month for the shipping business of a single fuck and bus will make railroads as cbsolete as | distillery. One bootlegger acknowledged in court! ies the stagecoach. The automobile, rightly consid-|a yearly business of $4,000,000 with Detroit. Ac-| is a good feeder to motor tegnsportation. Each has characteristics which for certain kinds of traffic. in more congested areas, aware of this, gone into the motor transportation business bh ves, using the railroad terminals for their - mew motor business. Neither business has hurt _ @e other. If anything, both have profited. Royal Livestock Slumps hard-up European royalty, it to know just what prices regis- together and arrange for a wedding between one of the boys of the one royal house and one of the gifls of the other royal house. The two kingdoms were thus made friends, and the happy subjects ward, because such alliances staved off just one ty of war, which was all too frequent es anyhow. have changed considerably since then, and the recent wedding cf the dayghter of alles to a young gringo lad was all but Under the old courtly practices, diplo- ts would have tried to figure out a match be tween the senorita, and say the ung Coolidge heir, in order that the hands across the Rio Grande might be clasped with a little more real brotherly love. Presiden h, it is to be hoped that the wedding zed will draw the two countries a littl: Boosting the Old Home Town One of the things that always immensely inter- cst the condescending European who visits our shores is the intense | y the average Ameri- can has to his home town. He can’t understand wn patriotism. He can't fathom the reasons why every citizen of the place is a-booster of the burg on every and all occasion But it so happens that, as anum the French are very like unto furselves. Until re- cently the classic French stery in town-boosting was as follows: Marseilles, the great Mediter- ranean seaport, has cne considerable street, the Cannebiere. Compared with the wonderful boule- vards of Paris it is a poor thing. But a patri citizen of the southern town visited Paris and wrote back home: “It’s a pretty good town. It ‘has some streets almost as good as our Cannebiere!” But that is now beaten all to pieces by a tiny place in southern France called Cassis. All letters sent out from there are now postmarked: “He who has seen Paris and net Ca has seen nothing.” It is doubtful if any small tewn in America ever rose to such sublime heights. Dobbin Holds His Own | News that the horseshoe manufacturers are mak- ing more horseshoes than ever before, that the, horseshoe nail makers are making more kegs of | 3; nails, and the calk makers more calks can mean only one thing—Dobbin is staging a comeback. Just how to account for this is a bit difficult. As automobiles have’ increased by the hundreds of lized, as police have given up their steeds for mo-| toreycles, and as farms have become tractorized, | seemed that the day’of the last horse on earth was net far off. That the horse is holding his own a good tidings indeed. A world without horses would | ybe like a world without dogs—a sorry, lonely place indeed. Of all man’s friends, the horse has been one of the best. Beauty Drugs the Market A Denver divine’s recent complaint that the beauty contest mania is running amuck in America, and that we have need for contests of brain o ability is a point well taken. The trouble seems it we are surfeited with beauty. Being a/ practical nation, we must put everything to werk, j and the cnly thing thus far found to do with beav- ties to make them earn their right to a place under! the sun is to put them’ in beauty contests. As for. staging a pageant of brains, we are at a loss to; know how it could be arranged, even in Boston. “And the Greatest of These—” Mrs. Peggy Ross, young mother of Colorado, i called ty the bedside of her infant daughter. “O: mcther-love can save the child's life,” s physi- | cians. Here again, from the bustle of the day's news, is demonstrated the power of one force which no scientific instrument can measure. In its utter! simplicity, it makes the massive structure of knowl- ed; m trifling and tawdry things indecd. Editorial Comment | The Spill on the Border (The NewYork World) | | Rum row begins to looftJike a mere trickle be- side the flood of liquor ‘bifftness disclosed by the Canadian customs investigating commission sitting | at Windsor, Niagara Falls, and other border towns. The high points in the inquiry thus far deal chiefly | with smuggling in the Defroit region. Some of! the testimony is startling. At the larger docks an, | export business of 2,500 cases of whisky a night | was not uncommon. One export firm controlled by Americans banked more than $200,000 weekly.. A dock owner at Ford, Ont., testified to receiving.$1,- | red, is a good feeder to the railroad, and, con-| cording to the auditor of the Canadian commission, | Partial returns show that in 1926 liquor valued at $20,500,000 crossed the border near Detroit; this | | was at Canadian prices—American prices would be; | Several times as much; and the estimate did not, | cover the unaudited books of fifteen companies, or a large unrecorded business. The ramifications of | the trade reached all over the middle west-and was | the chief scurce of supply for Chicago, ‘St. Louis! and other large cities. ae eee | All this is disclosed not by our vigilant prohibi- | tion service, bug by Canadian authorities who are! alatmed by the corruption and criminality which; our laws have bred. Our Volstead act made smug-| giers by hundreds. They were just as willing to! smuggle in both directions as in one. The Niagara Falls hearings are now showing how much Canada! has suffered from the illicit transportation of goods | within her borders. When it came to food and true could celebrate all over the greens-' se, could never be. As matters! er of things. | ‘thousands, as fire departments have become motor- | + . trol the joy-mad demonstratiors of| Pressing against his lips, wondered/nothing but hard luck stories. . . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - { SSS ¥ Saint “Simer e : f .++And more crowds at the piers. body, tears running down her cheeks,! Faith cr e. i the judge shouted for order, bangin; f 8 ia ee een menseel ab aes ap rig i ‘And bo . Broadway must be nen : completely through for the season.! into ihty cheer then, a chest of) 7 pyidan't Fath core, along, too7|the grinder will gets arent recep canecioin You'll want to see Chris alone, i tion from the kids of Lexington ave shakily to her feet, assisted by her| imagine, and Faith and T have a lo brother and sister. then flung her/| 7° talk over, haven't we, darling?” ) : rms above her head in a wild ges-{ Me added, turning to the girl he was| A big crowd of Italian youngsters ture of thanksgiving, as she cried engaged to h a smile of infinite| are gathered in the uptown tenement “Oh, thank you, God! u,| tenderness glowing in his blue ey belt staring at a huge drugstore pic- Mugen) ater fest “Of course Faith is to come,”|ture of Charley Lindbergh... . Ev- ‘And in less than half an hour she! Cherry said quickly. Faita,|erywhere you turn there is a picture gay Zi c ” going to the sifce four dramatic critics ladies and g papa eps Ba © congratulate hi: jailed within two days... . adjouraa ‘4 beer isis to put up its journs. 2 reporter heard des and go a run to reach the : . » There's ore of ‘ he way of mg ec a left on the avenue any dant. » The last of the ducal fam. v that .. Perhaps they . : into all this treub are giving up the ghost sinee Park es = J y.” she shook avenue announced that its “butter- Pig ge jatar ee lr 5 pyepecs | per-2 h and-egg” population had more money cated a qeigh Tg yes fi . e can’t goithan most other streets put together. het “thee ‘+t -Cherry ly. but I've got to] An organ grinder, seeming lost on Pere aceenehs. : He has no one! Park avenue, stops at. 79th street, Peet ey realy Christophers aay today. He's sick just, at the side of, Pitt Stitiman's Baa fi ve got to do the|residence.... But his tunes draw > Loe re mgangeneaieds -aatad hope Eve learned| nobody 'to “the window... ‘The aque ne . y if nothing else during these|house, like so many on that street, Sirdar? gee mara dreadtal weeks.” ob apptend-| ooh austere, and) abandoned. : eho’ the i “Good girl, Cherry!” Bob applaud-|One day I observe a butler pulling 6 Seams from day te os rel “Uf course I'll take you, but/down a2 shade... . Two blocks east vas legally free. Judge Grimshaw Bob. You wonderful people. Churchill | of Charley, and-a flock of admiring | summoned het e platform on} S8¥S yeu did. it all by yourselves.| kids. ... Already his exploit has which Bis desk soot roe son roon| You're a hero, Bob, and Faith's the| become aigame for the back love. both her trembling litle harden SFeatest Reroine since Joan of Arc.!Back fences and such become oceans as he coaprateiated hen ee ben « adore; you both + veer |t®, €F058 and tenement fire escape miraculous escape from further pers| Faith, watching Cherry's little! are dizzy ether heights to scale. secution at the hands of the jaw. {arms clinging about Bob's neck and) ee There was no further effort to con-, her lovely, childish little mouth| Listening in on Broadway, I hear tory of Just how much Cherry had changed,} Four shows lost $900,000 within a few y, had there been such an o after ll. Then horror at herself for} months. And three of them were ion for a vindicated defendant as|the unworthy thought sent the hot| musical comedies. Hence the a i Aren’t We Progressing? _ ; | IN NEW YORK i = New York, June 4.—Seattered notes | a ByAnne Austin evan: from a Manhattan ramble: | As Fasth:knaccuetee ees eae Crowds in the steamship agencies. | -|was the secretaryship to Governor “The Night o: ~? ADAMS © EA Sree 5 ¢ high estate, have paused there and raz in a beriee of prleoer y uncovered in solemn respect for the ter 52 in a series of eFiicy who is [bones thet rest under the tablet— | ten by a formerce ass corre- |the bones of “une soldat inéonnu"— | Spondent for. the Tribane. a soldier who died in the war whose Bil cement Seca identity was forever blotted out by | CY Lit a shell conceived in the genius of a | CHAPTER ten about the! fellow-man, af Much, has been “twa, soldier in| This is a humble deseription of the Biris, “It’s under the Are de Tri-|grave of the unknown soldier under omphe—in the “Etoile,” where the|the Arch of Triumph which was Streets reach out to the points of alerected by Napoleon in the heart of nt star, At the head of the grave|Paris. It is a description known to Mi he pavement, where | many. 5 putas pe tani. of inemorial tribute.| But down in the Bois la Prete, It_is fed by gas and every day,|near Pont-a-Mousson, there's a around 6 o'clock in the afternoon,|cemetery. It contains the graves of the supply of gas is exhausted, The| perhaps 20,000 French soldiers who flame dies, but a new supply is|were killed in the terrific fighting ready. : during the four-year struggle for n of one of the many vet-|the possession of the cross ‘on the crate otpeateations in Paris, includ-| summit of the hill in this woods. ling the American Legion, participate | This cemetery is in an out-of-the- in the ceremony of relighting that|way place. It is seldom visited. eet I ‘ANd Hear e ett at an | very day someone lays # nd_ nea! © main Siauth on enlareote of the unknown |path leading through between the | soldier. Individuals pay their re-|rows of crosses is a single cross Spects in this manner—organizations |The rain has washed much of the land even governments pay their] white. paint from it. But the in | tribute. scription, stenciled with black paint, | All Paune There is still discernible. The inscription | So many wreaths have beer placed | i A ‘there that a large room in the Arch 58 Inconnu. e ‘ lis filled with those which have been| It’s the grave of “The Unknown | saved—and only those wreaths which | Soldiers. have a particular significance are — lkept. Millions of people, of low and| TOMORROW: Touring. | Bs Daily Health | | you please. . . . What strange fancies the gals get out in Hollywood. nael | ‘Saw her dancing at a dinner club || ‘| jand, unless my eyes mistake me, her Service dancing partner was Vincent Astor. | Webi id Fields—remember - linen de reanited fora few minutes | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN vay fit show. | Editor Journal of the American Se ee Te ark who eurted With Medical Associi ing? and of Hygeia, |them, has crossed the bar... . His | a pro- v reel nae Ae apeiled Wrong ‘the | :ociated with the eating of raw meat first time he appeared on stage and|is perhaps the most common type Sam never took the trouble to change | seen in this country. One clinic re- lit... . He decided to agree with the | ports seeing from 10 to 15 patients iprinter and Bernard he was to the jeach year who suffer from this dis- day of his death. ;order. Most of the patients were Broadway gasped when it learned,|foreign-born and of the type that upon the death of Maurice, thejeats more smoked meat, uncooked dancer, that he had been born in bee and raw meat than do Amer- Manhattan.... The whole town thought he came from abroad. ‘thé most common symptoms . GILBERT SWAN. aa yioes re Lodi fag peng oe yrii 27, NI ii .) |usual desires for , ex- (Copyright, 1027, NEA’ Herviee, Tne.) | Taocdiuaty flow of saliva, headache, >—____________o]irreguiar actions of the bowels and ry | Jitehing of the nose and of the other Introducing orifices of the body, |] Although it is a common supersti- the Governors _||.icn that persons with tapeworm have ~ 4, ravenous appetite, (3hose patients did not appear to suffer unduly with Baton Rouge, La. June 4--P)—A'a desire for food. The symptoms, |good detective story will bring in general, are rather mild, so that chuckles of satisfaction from Gover- jn many cases the patient himself {nor Cramel H. Simpson of Louisiana, was ignorant of the fact that he had almost any time when he is not 4 tapeworm until the physician dis- | workin, sf : covered the presence of the parasite |_ Plain-apoken and unpretentious, he accidentally. jalso belongs to the pedestrian class; th the treatment for tapeworm, it jand instead of riding up in-state to is customary to give the patient no jthe capitol, he may be seen strolling juncheon nor supper on the date pre- to work. " ‘eeding the treatment, but black cof- After 20 years as secretary of the fee, tea or water may be taken free- Louisiana senate, Simpson w: piece ly. At 6 o'clock on the day previous ed lieutenant governor in 1924 a © he iste "4 when Governor Faqua ‘died: I to treatment, he is given a large dose r t of Its, and at 6 o'clock October, Simpson became chief exec- the morning ‘ef the treatment day, gobs ee Na ag io, another dose. He is not permited to Farm relief is his administration take breakfast, but after having had hobby. an action of the intestines, is giver, Olympia; Wash, June 4—(@)— ®:¢F0B which has the’ specific prop- erties of killing the tapeworm. Twelve years ago Roland H. Hartley, “Since the head of the worm is the a lumber man, served a term in the : part which propagates and grows, Washington legislature and wasn’t ropes : much impressed with the legislative ;10rough examinations are made re A “ peatedly of the excretions of the or executive way of doing business, y ii ‘ He; said. th ohiiaalf. /anit deter te body to determine when the head hi been discharged. When this is everybody, “If 1 were governor—” ‘ 4 Two campaigns failed. The third, ComPlished, the patient may be con in Jas nmetiens failed. |The third: sidered as rid of his infestation. chair.and he immediately benen I eh At The Movies | —____________+ polish off the administrativ 4 ture. It The first two years were turbu- lent, culminating in @ recall move: ELTINGE THEATRE ment, growing out of a controversy! Ronald Colman has a “flaming” nthe school system, The clamor role! and din grew in volume, but four “The hero of “The Winning of Bur- months later it fizzed out. bara Worth” and “Beau Geste” who | The governor's first political job po "iveet greatest opportunity” in : Love,” brings Colman David M. Clough of Minnesota, whose and Vilma Banky to the Hitinge for jaanebtes he married. Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. took place in the next few minutes. | blood rushing into her face. « Dillingham’s | ® The role is that of a vagavond Press photographers snapped Cherry; Thank God, Cherry was free she .... He is said to have con- being ridden on the shoulders of the| ‘ld herself passionately. Che’ quarter of a million: to shouting, cheering mob, Cherry in| Would come home, would live with|the annual dramatic adventure. the arms of her family, Cherry shak-| her and Bob after they were married.| Moral: be careful what show you ng hands with the beaming jury,| And after a few months there would| invest in... Broadway may be a Cherry shaking hands ‘with Church-| h [paresis nt apie sapoe Cae et making a speech of thanks [losses are twice as quic! « Near thousands ther milled about{ The end of the first phases of|a million dollars om four showse | SAINT AND SINNER. . Try to figure out the sum total of Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)|the couple of hundred shows that lay—— SS - jclose up their tents each season and ly in} ;According to the estimate of one| withdraw to the storehouse... - a voice of heartbreaking sweetness, | Specialist there are 14,000,000 bobbed : eet “let me go for a little whe, Take heads in America from which 35,000 Maridn Davies is in from Hol ms HN jtons of hair have been sheared. |wood.... And with a lornsette, if i “take WE OUR IAM cu sss a tcc Yj XT MAKES my BLOOD n G7 BOIL~HURRY UP JoB Z| THEY TOLD ME ~ RUSH IT~ WERE WAITIN'ON FT.” WHY, I SWEAT BLOOD TO GET AT JOB OuT For’em eee: Tv he WEEKS LATER STILL LAVIN'THERE, RUSTIN—"“Rwo WHOLE WEEKS AGO MIND ypsy prince who, sceking revenge | BARBS for the murder of ‘his bride, falls in ‘ @ love with the woman he has sworn ;to destroy. ft offers the English | HAIL THE EQUATION! ctor 9} tunities for elemental |__A super-Newtonian equation to de- a love and anger, hate jfine laws of mation is on the verge ieéatie, and he has made the jof being worked out, says a scientist. most of the chance. But we have a feeling that it won't “The Night of Love” tells a glow- be a bit of help to the lady who ing tale of a wronged Gypsy prince, strips her gears... . Jiggle an atom Montcto, whose bride is taken from here, the law states, and every other him by the lord of the domain, the m in the universe somehow jig- cruel Duke de la Garda,—and of the In other words, poetic reve of that gypsy prince » done with suffi- turned bandit. For when Vilma je on the second floor, Banky, as the Princess Mi | will chase the sleep particles clear France, is forced into marriage with joff the first floor and may result the Duke de la Garda, it is Ronald jin shocks on the i Stub Calman, as the gypsy Montero, who |your toe and Mars ‘feels it, accord- abducts her on another and differ- jing to this equation. * and no ent first night. But into the heart of doubt. bears about it, as well. Montero, even in his hour of revenge, 4 o |comes love for the Duke's brid |. Never cross ‘a ‘bridge partner be- mald Colman’s sincerity and pero zal plant instraments are re- dromatie ability, ren for ae high mov ‘rom sight. jesteem on bot! English an te VAmerican’ stages, and. also carried Bele ist Lindberah’s Across Du Re aie to success saleee. the ee ie onl form 0! Ye enter- ire \camera. establishe ‘pement left is our murder trials. yhimsct as one of ‘the most sincere i performers on the screen. America is a country where the | jthe state department, the ‘senate, the CAPITOL THEATRE: weather or the market.are usually) Marie Prevost did a great deal wrong, but, the people always right. iligyriog” before’ eventually reach- ng liom in the pictures, F imal soon ie hades PS bee ett f his. bathing b simultaneous bri a nett as one eau 00,000,000,000,0000000, to." 1n°” Taare Mies, aeveral nonce nee. Ue why perfect bridge hands are good, ing an apprenticeship with the fam- stories every day in thi k. | ous com producer as an induce- Koare i oe ue oy i —_ for on dicot Spsinees naan 4g erica fe, the navi some it to the seaside, she war on the coast, proved.” Now wel ereduated to comedy bite. gan step out and buy a straw hat. Her climb was steady. from then. | ii Ne ‘a ° : bts jaa Narre attracting ae ee n opponent of vacci ¢ larger produce! e+ let any made deg bite ty ‘Now % sieved a long time contract the’ just... ‘ letropolitan Pictures Corporation. ; : Her new starring vehicle, “For Wives ly” adapted for the screen pom ee and With fore cloth smeothed by careful | £e3t4 ; 4 4 : A cast of well-known screen play-| The night’ serene pavilion stands,|ers headed by Victor V, reont will And many cressete hang on high 4 ig ti i Against its arching canopy. mien ga ge eo 4 vi the big re at the Capitol theatre on lay next.’ e story is in satan ce: Peace to hla children’ God hath| mosphere. Wines a continental sent, director, We at i ey my Wheg’ vind acroas the desert Arthur. Colton: ‘Allah's: Tent, ——— alo w

Other pages from this issue: