The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 5, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR lands was not appreciable until a recent survey by! ° 4 The Bismarck Tribune the Foreign Policy association revealed that Ameri- Gein. The Ma car Fak Mee OLDEST NEWSPAPER can investments abroad now total $3,000,000,000, in iB Ld bd ! - - i addition to the $11,000,000,000 worth of political ae cee — rE debts contracted during the war. : Published by ismarck Tribune Company,| ‘This remarkable rise has come about in 13 years.| 3! Bismarck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice St) stany of the American railroads were built on for- | 4 George D. Mann... President and Publisher|¢ign capital and American securities were listed | Lay regularly in the great foreign money markets for! eit Pay by carrion pen veas ‘able in Advance years before a foreign security was ever known to| E Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) ‘20 | American bankers. At the outbreak of the war the! Daily, by mail, per. yenr, Ra United States was indebted to Europe some $500,-| (in state outside Bismarck)....... 000,000. j i it Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota reer ho LAB RSA Ae dG Member Audit Bureau of Circulation governments are indebted to this country alone to; a an amount almost five times that sum. | Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches t credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights. of republication of ali other matter herein are also reserved. —— Making Brides Back Numbers The two upstart young society misses of New York who, an the same afternoon, served as brides- maids at two weddings several hundred miles apart by chartering an airplane to take them from one ceremony to the other should be spanked thorough- ly and barred from all functions for the remainder Foreign Representatives , G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY * CHICAGU DETROIT of this season and all the next. This is treasonjof Tower Bide, CYNE, BURNS & sume Bldg} the highest order against the most sacred tradition NEW YORK ~~ Fifth Ave. Bldg.Jof marriage, which hold that the most. important ey — Hattie J at any wedding shall be the bride. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Against such competition as flying bridesmaids, e what chance has a mere bride? It is only natural f The Business Forecast to imagine that all eyes were upon the flying at: a Despite numerous indications of a slackening of tendunts, and not’ the bride as the bridal party | q volume of business, many authorities in the busi-| passed down the aisle, and for this reason, the two | i ness world freely predict that the last six months) functions were, socially, complete failures. And if q of 1927 will see a continuance of reasonably favor-| social precedents are to be thus upset by lady Lind- able business conditions. A group of business ex-|herghs, what on earth will become of that humor- ecutives, widely representative both geographically jjecg guidebook of modern eccentricities, the book and industrially, have compiled a survey that seems} o¢ etiquette. to give grounds for this assumption. At the begin- ning of this y the same group of business leaders forecast satisfactory conditions throughout 1927 and now, at the mid-year turn, they say that nothing has happened to make them change their opinions concerning the last six months. Overalls Win Of course, they admit that there are unfavorable (St. Paul Dispatch) factors, such as the Mississippi flood, depression in| Quite a stir has been raised in San Francisco and Japan and the unsatisfactory weather conditions, |¢lsewhere on the Pacific coast over a pair of over- but even these adverse factors, they maintain, are|alls. The wearer of said overalls is an 11-year-old! not expected to cause a serious derangement of|bcy in a San Francisco grade school, who, because business. A plentiful supply of capital and sound|he wore the blue denims to school, was sent home fundamental conditions are enumerated as the en-!by his teacher. . Sees tae - couraging elements in the busihess outlook. Says the Portland Oregonian: “It -is said that The adverse circumstances, including the rather|his teacher told him to go to charity for other gar- ti TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1927 ‘f FRANCE 4% — in o gasal and very unmbsicai tone — the first verse. coulé mot be heard He fang, the second 0." fourth—which THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ad S_E2BZZE r’s Voice 2 BAZ Editor’s Note: ter. 77 of the series of articles written by an ex-soldier who is Franee_as a corre- apondent for ‘The Tribune. Ie was lost, to HAPTER LX ‘aks After all, to those who. were lucky,|verse. It, was lost, to the war isa series of reminiscences. That's why Sergeant Albert Pellowe another, hymn. The clamor lessened. the last verse with 9 few supporters. A third hymn—and when he came to the chorus the pate wae With him, le Wins! ‘Asa non-com in the ° lance Company of the tary Train of the 85th Wivisic Pesowe—who stood something like ‘As the last note died out in that American-built “40 Hommes and 8 Chevaux” Pellowe, seated there on k against the wall, candle-light from 'e followed with o lone journey, on January, 191 there were many real a, Mg it) been shifted from the Toul st: ty in Sarthe, tor tr the Scriptures. sermon—not a of 10 minutes duration. ‘And through it all he e ‘and the atten- thi e on e boxcars und the journey net aren requirelj tion of every sol a When he finished the silence continued for a full minute. everyone broke out in, a genuine in two rows,’ legs — packs swiaging from in the crossyeyms—that go of unwashed, natured ambulance drivers bumped talong for four days—and that fourth was was Sunday. Sergeant Pellowe Ipert Pellowe of the Methodist Diocese with an import- ant charge in Detroit, Michigan. many forceful ons in the nine ye-~- since the Munching fully beef and French bread stolen at the bakery at Troyes, the day 31 jut he never nreached a sermon under more adverse conditions than games| that one in the boxcar tl ight near Chaumont. is petcentage of converts may have Pellowe—who "wore a smile been’ negligible, he s soft-spoken under all con- v ditions — announced that he wes| remembered for the sincerity af con- victions that brought him what must hurch service. Ee eat wees cele have been one of the real triumphs the Stew” and Bread, messkits 1 nee tat Rememher That js were hurled. Dubbin. Sarde Yee | AT THE MOVIES , —$<$— —_—__————? average model, is little mere than a young woman trying to live on o salary that averages $30 to §60 a “Knockout » Reilly,” newest starring effort, will be shown for the last time at the’ Eltinge to- One of the most popular and beau- tiful models in a Fifty-seventh street shop—so exclusive that to enter it ou must either have a card or “be nown”—-is married he had fallen in love with Faith—| ried—not Cherry. But he had been that her copper-and-gold curls brush-|.engaged to Cherry first— ed his shoulder. She rose hastily, aghast at her value to that of a pound of beef- In some institutions the patients a struggling] «, Dix has an especially strong c: precarious condition in which agriculture finds it-]|ments more suited to his educational surroundings,| Frances Warren,. with her fine-|thoughis, tried to bunish them as she : self, has caused a distinct atmosphere of gloom tojand that ‘he, having failed to do so, she issued the | SPU”, pale hair, her rose-and-iy com-| stepped permeate many sections of the country within the|order of banishment.” three times a day, but if of it, it is given at 10 o'clock in the morning as chocolate malted milk, at 4 o'clock as an ege- nog, and at 8 o'clock in the-evening as hot chocolate. i the hot drink may serve also young radio engineer. this couple for some. yeai up to visit them I gen her sharing the little sho built in the attic, sitting on o-cha m< {fashioned out of a couple of boxes, ry of 4 young steel puddler who fights his way to ring fame at the 1 with whom he Bri but i} dignity and sweet gra- plexion, her demure cornflower blue| ciousness into the role of hostess. She h eyes, seemed content, as usual, to]‘smiled and blushed past few weeks. It was explained by the boy’s mother, who is the| Play second fiddle to’Cherry’s more} pleasure as Frances and Bill War- : Reger Fi »,| brilliant beauty and exuberant spir-|ren reiterated their compliments on Economists, however, do not see this slackening|Wwife of a disabled World war veteran, that the lad’s| jt, "Tt. was Frances who, when it] the new home and extended then on gation of ao gir good. ‘They see the lack of demand of industry for|and the best she could afford on her earnings of | *e#t beside Faith and talked in low, |:Wednesday. and darning stockings. dishes and’ is t of the volume of business as an evil but rather a/overalls were freshly laundered and respectable, her turn to be “dummy,” took a] invitation to dinner for the following | sedative, leading Cream may be given y lone, Teen "washing, miner, whose brother Pat la the, 4-- gowned in a gingham | Kenay! confidential murmurs—never Cherry,| But when the guests fuiids and the plentiful supply available as an in-|$50 a month. who had eyes only for the two good- as custard or as ice cre: and eggs are valuable as and she turned her proud, smiling te “hic. champ, an ie cau: di m that industry is reinforcing itself on a| This is a strange tale that emanates from .| looking men. But when Bob was| face to her husband, she saw tnat| Vitamins, proteins and f The story goes dat a young model, whose photograph ‘appentrs in maga-| zines in the most. gorgeous of rai-'4 Since these patients a he more often at rest than engaging{ lower interest basis and is generally retrenching|supposedly democratic commonwealth. Is there, ia Berta oe anny jennca "hts aehe shins ouitiae PEAGETIOL aha t_and grim. And ‘Knockout Reilly”,is a fast moving on™ saner basis. Hysterical prosperity, based on}California, an aristocracy of dress for school chil-j chestnut head against her knees, a8|-he remembered in sexercise, foods must be cooked so as to be easily digestible. “Meats,|ment, therefore, are seldom fried but more tion to a dressy dan: frequently thoroughly roasted. Veg-|had nothing to’ weal im, with sten¢ following on exciting had to turn’ down an invita- A pleasing love story ‘mo- ibecause “she’ tivates cvérproduction and careless expenditure, they point|dren that looks with scorn upon a pair of clean: if it gave him a quiet pleasure to| béfore her the ordeal’ of talking with ‘. i J b her. Merry: ot) is. far worse for industry than the present | blue overalls? Faith's. Makdi ine eae epee Cherry about her extravagance. and T One of life's. reputed to be one of the finest Dix steamed preferably in‘ little jokes, curtailed production and more conservative pur-| Happily, the matter was taken up by the higher] her sewing, and her large, wistful] ’ )*QMOK.OW: chasing. Thus we should not allow the atmosphere} school authorities and the boy was allowed to re- Peering chee cntie ee: of, gloom to remain, for the future is bright enough.|turn to:school in his overalls. But it will take a] He was hers-hers! Every lin y Edward P. Simon, a Philadelphia archi- = ‘ - y : ay sion of nobility; the very sligh tect, who is planning a new synagogue, school and Abolish the Carnival Nuisance sidedness of his strong, flaring-no a community center in that city. Mr. Simon designed (Minneapolis Tribune) triled nose; the crispness of his. g eden en-brown eyebrows, which almost mi Dempsey-Tunney fight was held. “Up to this point|summary action in revoking the license of the car-| deeply curved upper lip, which she|: aw, ,, care told him it made his mouth “pretty” Te result is that church building designing has|permanently. Four people injured represent ‘a se-| cheeks; the. little brown mole near re ble. food. is lagged far behind other forms. Today they come|vere casualty toll for one carnival to exact from Hie rage Cahrs he tlre aneaeesaes color in his dark blue eyes—oh, she % that date from the origins of present-day religions,|as 1920 the board of education protested against sab ree ens Coney Janene ae oe and, while the Gothic cathedral met the needs of|carnivals, declaring that they had a bad effect upon j “Come along. beloved brother. it® time, it does not answer the requirements ot|school children. An ordinance against carnivals was | L<t's dance! . : “No dancing for you tonight, young i “y passed the same year, banning them from the city.| adv. It’s bed for you,” Bob grinned | saratoriums tagay we must hear as well as see. Personal com-|came a dead letter, which was unfortunate, for, if| hands swinging in mradely fash-| 7 , fott must be taken care of today. What is neededjit had stuck, Minneapolis would have been spared | ion. ie ne roe { tolaeiape cats churches in exterior appearance. They are large] wisdom of that ordinance which was passed in 1920. it. This is disti bear t t! slows a profit. This is distinctly a modern develop- | the carnival in Minneapolis for all time. Thers|{0'her mind “ot tavonteate It wes | <a" (tee ment. No more do people build a church with a|never was anything to be said for the carnival at | sacrilege against their love—hers and | gested has made to date. cooking, rather than , boiled, sinee boiling causes much of the nu- trition to pass into the water and to; ‘be ‘thrown away. i’ IN NEW YORK ||! OO Recently an“al&timer” told’ me Yean't hat the “standatd, fee! Yor_modeliny Renee Adoree just “can’t séem to i get out of ‘the fin New York is it for actual. ~ She {display of gow Rotts Sena a Adoree ‘was in. Belgium at f the outbreak of the war, long.’ and by an almost miraculous escape, aid up to. got. across the border into England the company wit! [wa ‘appearing on the stage in Brus- ue) hen, recently, Renee part of -Melisande in “The tade,” a story of the great war. w she appears in the part of ® young circus on. Earth,” which come: ge ee ea ee long time to remove the sear of embarrassmen:| ‘Very, curve of his ‘face. was ‘inex- Daily Health New Church Architecture which the stupidity of a teacher inflicted upon the] fiir grew on ite “terheea- a utered | y. rehitecture; for religious edifices ts advo-|boy*wnt his mother Jon ti, Scone and rer oneiie aaa make as much Bier rene time does not jon that dot Fifth avenue and |tios ® week wor hase’ wW.ultra-exclusive us S7th street jtracts, reached, the world’s most carefully selected medels each day preen:them- | selvealike peacocks’ in the -interest them from beau- tifully upholstered, lounges, hefty, bejeweled matrons. :j creation’ and, mayhap, that a gown might | at the corners, giving him an expres: | = but! the time o ‘BY. DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN F cal In’ those glittering ateliers of. the American) fs Journal igned con- wit GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1927, NEA 'Sorvice, ine.) _———_— en ig 'S BRIEFS fo WS BRIEFS ||, of Lieut. J, Thad omendra: nen ai eaberg inde ee jury; in Teterboro ‘Field, HA Heigl N. J., ‘after ‘hoy motors to New York. pee eater 5 Five balloons take éff from De- ng distance air trophy in sylvania is portra; Detroit: News race. i eal, Association and of Hygeia, thé. huge sesquicentennial stadium in which the] The council is to be commended for its swift and] in the middle; the shortness of his| {, ‘He Health Magazi 7 ¥ PA ‘} ., ‘. ‘A 5 ht ‘largely in hygienic meas: f ifBour history,” says Mr. Simon, “Americans have|nival at which the ferris wheel accident occurred, | Petended to deplore because she ha Pematne rs pHi ie vot test ane : ritfcnlly connin { merely copied traditional models from the old world. |It should go further and rid the city of carnivals) the leanness of his sun-bronzed [$B of ezereise, of fresh aif and of lern sanatorium for the tubercu- is likely gto call on the ‘services n@Wwhere near expressing our life and our times. Minneapolis; and it is far from easy to see just} had named Wwilibeg waateriae Tor ti satiate the patient. may not f jeter 8 _tbpetite, the P haey becoming’ to.a young ogr architects to continue reproducing structures| rooted, and not without justification, As long ago| “Faith looks at you as if she could! dict or. te tndace the. patibnt 40 tae Set seen a ecial efforts on the of the manner in whi not primarily a t war picture, Heights, Frente betw. a, ther with a spect CAPITOL THEATRE ¢ coal fields of Penn- ed with thrilling in “White Flannels” fea- ering Jepie presser, ey aie 01 » which comes to the Ca: rs; Ansley ‘Theatre’ Wednesd, ee son, Floyd. | “White of high. pt arrives in power. : Peer in the man; pictures of the Tl is the. years 1914-19, To a large extent Mr. Simon is right. Religion |what is the compensating gain. over so many times, but not an item | gists Since = ; ai A * f it ev d. to catch at -her heart e ‘ie ha& been content to keep in old paths. It has asked] The popular prejudice against carnivals is deep- with the sheer Peery of possession, | Nave. ®, particularly For all such and sundry the models put on their Ritsiest tone. acquire that languid, floating walk, the very affectation, of which seems of the west the ener ‘hose in the rear of a cathedral cannot hear and|In some strange way, however, the ordinance be-| at her, but he rose as she tugged at! clnde caeanaie Racin ae mises his arms and stood beside her, their | Suite. vitamins of how to‘display' clot! ote nate Grand jury at Toces, Ga., indicts five men for flogging M Brown and 15-year-o) ” has a number 8, of immense ‘dramatic football. game has no successful football Orange juice is used largely for its value in’ vitami iggnot a better adaptation of the old style of church| this entirely needless accident which occurred Thurs-| Faith saw Frances and Bill -War- woll as’ for gts nourishment. 0 give a large numb London for ‘vii Fargo—Walter Gylés arid quence which por- ster with terrible college scenes of t the picture re- itself into an idyl of mother It is a picture that {and no son should mi ‘ t ‘om ‘Maurey, 17, of Jo Lake courage. . architecture, but a different architecture. day. night. inay Toa taea toons thet beldes table bot amet Churches are arising in New York that are not] The effect of the action is to demonstrate the | What were they thinking, Faith cream, butter, eggs and meat’ for: ed parse oe yee cealons un-!an abundant portion of the dict; | mod ar P P ge ‘ou! ey see too that errv| but not too abundant, si thai baildings, containing offices, the rent of which not} Measures should be taken which would make eva-| still adored Bob? Or did they think be Hateiet ase way, oholly deattoy. caly pays expenses for the churches, but actually] sicns impossible, and which would settle the fate of | that it was Bob who—but she could | any apontite. the, patient my hay jevertheless, milk is o It was|of the chéapest and most easi they could never brilliancy. And they are, visioned asthe most seduc- Buyers returning fford to possess, + tive of. creature: a pray et eve. * to. mid-west tow mie -whiapered en aut' of: the atelier, the |: ld miss youth and high ares 4 st¥eple right next door to a skyscraper, not if they| best. Its atmosphere has certainly never been | 3°b’s. It was she whom he had mar-j quart is nearly equal in nutritive; 11: miles southwest” of here, have been well advised. noted for elevation, nor has the influence it wielded | ~~ + Yet some concession must be made to appearance |on the impressionable young ever been admired by OUT OUR WAY a and we must admit that office building-churches| those entrusted with the responsibility of bringing . a certain amount of the atmosphere which is,|up the young. . _ age all, the chief charm, architecturally, of a] Minneapolis has always liked to believe that it | eBarch. was the right sort of a city in which to bring up = children. For the most part it has, and deserves, KE Ame Branches Out that reputation; but here is one instance in which That the United States is gradually becoming it has fallen down, The thing to do is to abolish the world’s banker has been made apparent fromthe carnival nuisance now, with the memories of ittered random observations for some time, but) this accident fresh in mind. Carnivals we can very well get along without. % Jos. Then his indignant eyes told her the truth and she dropped her own, mis- erable and ashamed. “So she’s been getting money from ked li is) y: ry telephoned just before six/his neck, then laid his lips softly] M41, was joing te ask you if you evening that she was to have/ upon her hair. She could feel the! she wouldn't ask Junior nd Dad for atthe Warrens,’ Frances War-| throb of his heart, pumping rapidly i being the only. intimate friend| and heavily. m she had confided the secret “I love you, darling Faith,” h der the library were Bot necept- pla: child. Immediately | at last. pa ; y,,and her father set Believe you do,” she quivered,| o¢;,Politi¢nl reasons: the | machine another ‘cent for T are aia anything, Bob told her sternly. “My lor_ the neighborhood movie thea-| smiling up at him with a pathetic] wi , evening indulgence for| attempt at cayety. . Mirlekes, daning! Well manage Fi had For an hour they played at being| somehow. but you've before, as 1s, alone in their own home, | ¢ ; ‘make up to the little ten-| And ‘when Bob was reading to| (oer 5, £004, stEe talking to, irl for the loneliness of her| he: rieh, cadenced baritone, a. y in the rather exclusive new sec- - by Browning, he h: gs op suddenly and catch to a show, darling?” ion on her Madonn: salad over an levies droop of her stay at home,” Faith] “What's the matter?” he demand-| to voice a little husky with|ed in quick resentment. Joy, not Hstening! You were thinking of fo: r of bridge. them. Who is it this time? Cherry, a fourth at the ile made as usual?” Faith sat ail nd in iho big couch, ber fingers 8 corner of P finge! in, nee Ore bus; ovey a eurment fir Cherry's wtending Fourth of Juy cel! ites Can Be Cured Without Surgery + An instructive book hi Kasota, Minn—Mrs., Ka eA 4. . GET THAT Doc — <reyRe AFRAID ASK TH! BULL [ [7 LEAN: OFF “TRUCK SO r “THEN CAN RUSH THAT RUSH AIWT T FONNY “THEM DONT THINK, OF . C\. CARRYIN' ITF " BOT. jour miles from THER AFRAID Ty’. \. NLL “TIN OF 1T-T0O. ‘HE~ “THINKS OF ALL THEM LUTTILE Tinas. “THEM Boys 16: IN. ior 8) jis book tells h from Piles che be" guickiy’ any core jcured without the use of fe, sors, “hot” tron, electricity 01 inement to bed and no The method has 26 ind in Wadena, Minn.—Everett | Eveland 19, was. critically injured a July celebration ‘was thrown from-a horse during. a' the, baby.” ‘mather: ho” hospital bills to pay. been a success for, cases.” The book is itpaid free to persons afflict- Pilesor other rectal troubles ip. this item and mail it with addi to Dr. McCleary, Tibia rds Msi

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