The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 6, 1927, Page 4

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«: PAGE FOUR s The Bismarck Tribune (“""" slits wake i wren aan aE 4 « An Independent Newspaper |judge whether the physician called in is good or THE STATES OLDEST NEW SPAPER er many Americans have died and have suffered - |long illnesses without necessity when adequate by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | medical assistance was near at hand. By provid- and entered at the postoffice at! ing the ill person with an English speaking physi- . Published Bismarck, N. | { of Bismarck as second class mail matter. 5 ie} F | 4 George D. Mann..........President and Laila pee tad waste motion and much overcharging al i h - * avoided, i ‘ Daily tearen Rates Payable In Advance. 4), The American Hospital at Neuilly is to be high- ee | Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). .. 7.20 ly congratulated on this new manifestation of the} | Daily by mail, per year, \spirit of helpfulness which has characterized the | ie (in state outside Bismarck)............. 6.00) institution since its inception. Americans who have Daily A mail, outside of North Dakota...... cnitics Avdit Barean of Circulation | visited France have only good things to say about | | this remarkable institution. | The Liberty Loan Bonanza i Member’ of The Associated Press ‘ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to! i the use for republication of all news dispatches | » ee ; & eveditad to it on’ not othambiie chedited in t Redemption of the Second Liberty Loan will plac per, and also the local news of spontaneous beta some two billions of dollars in liquid funds at the published herein. All rights of republication of all | disposal of thousands of investors within the next ; other matter herein are also reserved, |six months and, judging by the past, the confidence 4 ae }men will reap one of their richest harvests. It is (Official City, State and County Newspaper) sate to wager that within three months of the end Tame Living jof the period of payment for the expired boiids, ; “Tame living is intolerable to healthy human be- | smooth, suave crooks will have gotten away with At \ ings,” said Rev. Ralph V. Sockman, a New York /half of the two billion dollars. ~ . minister, in a sermon recently. Thrill and novelty | History repeats itself, and when these small in- are scught by everyone, he explained. Some see | vestors get back their money from the bonds some it destructively, in the belief that they can find sar- of the redemptors will buy fake oil stocks and will! isfaction in immoral practices because they thin) carelessly invest thousands and millions of dollars that a virtuous life is tame and sting. How/in the thinnest of “get-rich-quick” schemes, Va- refreshing a viewpoint in a mi He admits, | rious agencies throughcut the country, including the ‘off-hand, that the usual motive for wrongdoing | Better Business Bureau, Inc., have been sounding | springs m a basic trait of human nature and ts warnings for some time, calling attention to the simply misdirected energy. fact that the victims slated for fleecing by the con- Thrill and novelty are the things that have! fidence men will not be ordinary victims, but will; spelled progress for the world. were done under their influence. Men schemes that will seem water-tight and “perfectly | crave the stimulus of adventure, cf novelty, of risk secure.” So they will be—for the promoters of the and thrill. As the world becomes more civilized companies and the fly-by-night stock salesmen. i and settled, men hi It seems too bad to be everlastingly “sounding | isfaction of those’ desires | warnings,” yet this is an occasion when it should} The kick to be gotten out of doing new and dan-|be done in order to save the amounts represented gerous things is not usually obtained from doing|in the redemption value of the liberty bonds. Un- immoral things, it must be admitted. When a Per- less these funds are well guarded they will take son does something new and strange and danger- | wings and depart. ous, he experiences the stirring of the soul thai provides a real thrill, but when he misdirects this| that is to take the money, as soon as it is paid by | spirit of adventure into unconventional excursions |the government, and place it in a bank where the into moral filth le merely provides a philippic for the | money itself will be safe; then to resolve to mak: senses. The reaction is there, but it is not a reac-/no “investments” until you consult your banker tion of complete satisfaction, nor does it contain! about it. If the salesman who wants to sell you steck those precious elements of exaltation of spirit objects to your banker passing on the propositio: “which are to be found in clean, straight risk. | it will be because his scheme will not stand search- At present there is a popular chorus of denun-|ing inquiry and it is time for you to tighten the ciation’ of Puritanism in all forms and we are con-| purse strings. stantly hearing the suggestion that the practice of ancient “vices” is a virtue for our emancipated age. This restlessness is a reflection of the urge to do new and risky, strange things, but the energy thus represented is being sadly misdirected. e to look farther for the sat-| Eiderdown Looks Up Man is a pretty dumb individual most of the time, but now and then there are signs which re- veal a glimmer of hope for ultimate intelligence. | Gcod news, for instance, comes from far off Labra- Modern education is certainly coming in for J its best t> save the eider duck from extinction. As great deal of criticism these days, much of it justi-| 9 result, in a generation or two, it will be possible fied and much of it unjustified. There are appar-!to buy real eiderdown quilts of the kind that went! ,ently two opposing forces—one side, which thinks | down in cradle history of the cradle of liberty. that modern education is the finest thing that ever! Blame for the virtual extermination of the eider struck the world, and the cther side, which believes | ducks rests largely upon the famous Yankee traders 4 that modern education is wrong in spirit, applica-| wye made voyages’to Labrador for the purpose of a - ; tion and result. Somewhere between these two ex-jclubbing the ducks to death and plucking their tremes lies 2 middle ground and that is the place feathers. The ducks, naturally, went the way of : to find, for there is much to be said on both sides.|the quail, the wild turkey, the buffalo, the virgin ~ A New York minister recently said that modera| forest. We have paid dearly for our forefathers’, legislation and modern educational methods ten1| prodigality, and just now we are beginning to cor-, to preclude free will in our lives and force us into] rect their errors. a fatalistic attitude. “We say to the student who | graduates from college,” the minister said, “that he is so completely classified that he does not need | H | i God's direction in choosing his vocation, but that Editorial Comment j he must helplessly follow out a program wrapped 4 up in the build of his brain, the shape of his nose, | Seniolen tah -hevaite | the family characteristics and other signs.” . Announcement from Washington that. the ce But this is an unfair indictment, at best. For) wont is going in for teaching salesmanship to book |: one thing, it is to be doubted that God ever aids) soiters is a bit disturbing. There is a common im-| a ona nie ies pr gait po ak port | pression that some of them are fairly well skille1 | safe to say that the majority of persons are square ea Cee ae oes re pegs in round holes. If there were any divine di- gilding the lity. As soon fies ie cae aang a reeset ctoles nt vocations: this would not be 80. |ficials establish a course on lot selling for real! It is quite as silly to say that every person’s life | estate aaents. ‘The profeaniin of theca who call is mapped out for him in advance, but it is al80/boo45 from door to door is tanemie foe bye true that modern education does sometimes give /rhere was a time in a b i you a ee : . that impression to students and it kills their ambi- I ghagl have thee Wawa, eee ee ie eh 2a. Se ae cnven en Des ieee fices on pretenses that were more imaginative than severely until we find some middle ground where ees pated esi on nee nif j we can contemplate the situation dispassionately. | Livsician’s office and asked if he might pers ei The Right View of Education him. “Professionally?” inquired the wary nurse. To hear many school-teachers talk shop, it would |“Yes, professionally,” was the reply. That physi-| ! appear that theirs was the dullest and dreariest and|¢ian happened to be a man who disliked being im-| most uninspiring job in the whole world. There|Posed upon. When he learned the true object val i are, however, a few who sanely view the profession |the call, which was to sell a set of books, he sternly as pretty fair pay and short hours with a long va-|bade the offender strip to the waist, examined his ation, and they work at their trade as though it! lungs, and charged him $10 for professional services were more than humdrum slavery. The real teach-, rendered. ers in this latter class can now be found in summer| Let us hope that standards are higher nowadays, schools, brushing up a little on this or that, getting | 8nd that book salesmen on the road would not stoop eady to deliver knowledge as best they can.|to such practices. They and their brethren of the Whether these teachers regard mere knowledge as |Small store are in for a lot of new competition, the supreme end in view, or whether they regard | Particularly with the literati who have themselves knowledge as a mere means to an end should be of |!ately become book agents of a very highbrow or- i importance. As Judge Kavanaugh of Chicago re-|¢er. In fact, it is partly because of this competi- } cently told a middle western teachers’ convention, | tion that vocational training for book sellers has * it is necessary to teach other things than those |become the vogue. At their annual convention in a fe in textbooks. Acquisition of a sense of re-|this city last month several book sellers sKarply tg ility and a knowledge of how to deal with | Criticized the various literary groups organized to % ; success and failure are more essential in life than /Tecommend books to lay readers. They maintained * " knowledge of the binomial theorem or the extrac-| that it was ridiculous to try to choose the twelve tion of cube root. best bom of the gd frees the Sinersnds published —_— annually, an at only way for. the public to . Americans Abroad ‘ make a discriminating Shales was through patron- Americans traveling abroad this summer will | izing the retail book store. ‘ ; have: the assurance that medical care of the highes:| It is right at this point that, My. Barnhart of the will be available to them in all the large cities | federal board for. vocationat éducation comes for- through a new extension of the Ameri-/ ward with his program. It seems that England has Neuilly, Paris, the joint adminis-| an institute of certified grocers, membership in the medical center at New York) which is “comparable to the kind of certificate a German boy would get who graduated from the Book Sellers’ School at Leipsic.” The / vocational board apparently succeeded in applying something of the same stimulation to the retail grocery busi- ness in this country, with the laudable result that All great deeds |be victims of very elaborate and high-sounding! , There is but one safe method of procedure and This Modern Education! jdor, where the Newfoundland government is doing | { }like a dream, doesn’t it? THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Looks ag if Johnny Had Something in His Boot 0: \ N= IF INSIST F Saint “Sime Everything seemed to go wrong | that Saturday morning following} Cherry's impromptu bridge _ party.| Mrs. Lundy was not on hand at haif Past seven as usual to prepare break: . Faith, taking her place, found | that the cream was sour angethat was no fruit in the ice box, drinking black coffee, was ob: | vio brooding over the rejection | cf his plans for the new public li-| brary. Joy appeared at breakfas| dened eyes and nose, that advertised | one of her frequent ‘colds. | Poor old | Jim Lane, sensing the general und happiness of the family, seemed td| try to shrink into nothingness inside his rumpled, Aaa spotted ut day” su a”. hi toast in his coffee, and Faith, flushed and miserable over the inadequa- cies of the breakfast, flinched us she saw her husband’s ‘quick, frowning glance at her father. When Bob and her father had left, Faith prepared as tempting a tray as possible for Cherry, who no longer, made any effort at all to leave her bed before noon. When Faith carried the tray into Cherry's: room, she found her sitting up in bed, with a huge scrap- book opened across her hunched knees. It was the book into which she had pasted hundreds of columns of news and feature stories about herself and the trial in which she had played the leading role, as de- fendant an the charge of murder. “Hello, darling!” she called to Faith, “I was just looking over this serapbook on the trial. It all seem; i It’s hard to realize that just a few months be- fore I was the most famous girl in| America—my name on everyone's tongue. And now—buried out here on Serenity Boulevard, with searce- | ly a friend to my name! Page Dad to say for me, ‘Such is life!’” Her musical voice had a bitter edge to it. Faith adjusted the wicker. tray rack, across the smli body and poured the coffee, mufmuring apolo- gies fer the absence of cream and orange juice. After Cherry had eaten a piece of French toast with strawberry jam} and had listlessly sampled the cod- dled egg which Faith had been at| | ous courage | denly. her arms threshing about wild- such pains to prepare for her, Faith clenched her hands over her traitor- and broached the subject had given her no peace since it the day before, and espe- ince she had learned from Boh that not only Cherry's father and brother had been giving her money but that Bob himself had been “shell- ing out” without telling his wife about it. U Cherry listened to her halting ap- proach with widening ‘eyes ‘and ri color which spread in mottled patcnés over her puffed little face. Faith's heart almost failed her, but she ploughed steadily in through what she had to say, softening it, while her eyes beseeched Cherry to’ under- stand and to help her. “You see, da@ing,” she concluded, her voice trembling despite her ef- forts at calm, “we all want you to be as comfortable and happy as pos- sible, but Junior and Bob have other responsibilities, and poor Dad has vervs very little for his old age- Shut up!” Cherry screamed sud- ly, “I won't listen. I won't be hu- miliated like this, I tell you. I won’t T won't! Oh-oh-h!” Her small body heaved beneath the covers; the wick- er tray was dislodged, and went slithering to the floor, but not before ‘the coffee pot had overturned on the pale blue satin coverlet. * Then the shriek of anger turned to a scream of pain. A great fear dawned in Cherry’s golden her hands clenched in a agony. It was with a vision of Cher- rv's hodv thine across the bed that Faith ran blindly to the. tele- vhone, to call the doctor and her husband. TOMORROW; Frantic _Prepara- tions for the coming of Cheray’s: baby. ' oS |. A Thought | Be content with such things as ye have.—Hebrews vill 35. , Contentment is not happiness; an CERISE NE | + Daily Health | Service | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine Fer many years it has been known that the best milk for the baby is that of its mother, and that if its mother ‘could ‘not nurse it, the milk ef some other human mother was next most desirable. it for the baby to get this directly from the mother who was the source of supply. About fifteen years ago a notice appeared in a medical journal to the effect that a few ounces of, human and taken aboard a ship which was being used asa floating hospifal,.in order that it’ might We given’ to babies. who were very sick. “Since ithat time the subject has had much attention in medical literature. _In- deed, the matter has progressed so far that several communities now have organized regular bureaus for the collection of mothers’ milk and its redistribution to sick and to well babies, One such bureau in Detroit maintains a regular list of mothers who are willing to furnish milk, a laboratory for the study of the milk to make sure of its safety, and a supervising staff to administer. the distribution. " The mothers who provide the milk are paid a considerable sum for their supply, and it: is reg¢orded that cer- tain of these moth are receiving all the. way. from, $2500 to $3500' a year for their milk, Several mothers, are jisted daily output was betweeff three and four quarts daily for a period of several months. The milk is obtained by the use an electric pump. The amount paid is 10 cents per ounce when pumped at home and’ 18 cents per ounce when thé mother comes to the bureau. The purchaser pays 30 cent: an ounce, ‘and the milk is supplied free for sick babies. whose parents are un- able to pay for ,it. In the .period of 10 years, since the organization of. the bureau in Detroit, it has binaled 668,347 ounces of human milk. The valve of thie method of feed- ling for sick babies has been so definitely established that bureaus oyster may be contented.—Bovee. will, no doubt, soon be available in {every large eft OUTOURWAY WAITN F TAKE Me _ AN' YOU HAFE T it BUDOY ? WELL, JusT ME WHERE THER AT b ER SOMEBODY IN. AN! SHOW WONT. WAIT By Willams 2D a “Lift” AK milk had been collected in a bettte| a yy. Indeed, attempts; WEDNESDAY, JULY 6, 1927 ,, gck PRIVATE oes back b FRANCE ADAMS © mA boven This is chaps keep his boots always ready for in- ‘ies of articles spection. t . written by an e: idier who is revisiting France as a corre- spondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER LXXVIII Editor's Note: ter 18 of the CHAPTER’ LXXIX It is just possible after all other causes that have been reviewed, that a heavy downpour of rain won the b war. Hey, you! Soldier! "Member| WAT dn the alent oe that Dubbin? July 12, the 1st and 2nd American dust what it was no one ever} Divisions, the Moroccans and a di- vision of French were concentrated in the Forest of Retz near Villers: Cotterets. They were to go over the top on the morning of July 18 ft 4:85 o'clock in the great coun- ter-offensive suggested by General Pershing, ordered by Marshal Focky and executed by General Mangin, the attacker, who directed opera- tions from an observatory in the top of a tree three kilometers from Vitters-Cotterets. Foch’s Aggressive It was a surprise attack. The Germans had fallen down in their thrust across the Marne and had rightly knew. But it was a kind of jerease that came in little round [boxes and two boxes to = pack was [regulation. It's purpose (very much lalleged) was to. waterproof the hob- nailed hikers. It came about as close to that purpose as the driver of a horse-drawn hack does to picking up a fare at a railroad station in a small town nowadays. But, boy! How those Sears-Roe- huck officers used to yell about it! On Saturday inspections! Standing at attention, the poor private shiv- ered. been beaten by General Gouroud's “What! No dubbin on thos¢/“Elastie Defense” in the Champagne. ig A Von Hutier and the German high from the ‘officers. command were taking their bréath I-I-I-I-I—” the soldier would| preparatory to rushing up more stamm “shock divisions. But Foch took the “Take the fellow’s name, sergeant.| initiative. The order went out on Give him. plenty. And he'd draw about two weeks on K. P. Dubbin! uly 15. That night the 1st and 2nd_Divi- sions rode in French trucks, Orders were received in the afternoon to move up—and that night—the night of the 17th of July—it rained. German airplanes, which on the > night of the 16th had made it neces- sary ‘to march through the fields in- stead of on the roads in the stretched out like ribbons in the moonlight— detected nothing. Three divisions of troops and all r the material of war went along It may have been justified| through the heavy thunderstorm and moral effect. And it may| the downpour—and the German air- have been vindicated in the shine it men were unaware that 67,000 sol- roduced for those joke inspections. diers, 5,000 animals and 4,000 ve- jut, after that, nothing. jhicles were concentrating for the Dubbin! great drive on Soissons which was Two boxes to a pack. Get your the first of the series of German supply from the supply sergeant.| defeats that brought the war to a Rub it in hard. Brush un a polish.! close. Beat Richthofen to It And stand there, you bum, while The First Division was in posi- some second lieutenant — whose boots have been polished with real!tion in plenty of time. So were the polish. by two or three orderlies—| Moroecans. But the 2nd failed to picks that flaw in your toilette, arrive, The barrage was due to cut Dubbin! . Dubbin! Whoa" got the} the night at 4:35. The attack could Dubbin? not be halted. Finally, just before Usually there was only one box! the zero hour, the 9th and 23rd In- for a squad, fatitry appeared. The last 100 yards, No one ever took it seriously ex-|through the woods was done on the cept the officers. ¥ run, the line was formed the bar- jut it was Dubbin, rage shrieked and the drive was on. less. So— Who Sold ‘Em That? It rained the night of the 17th of And it is quite probable that/July on the Soissons plain. The many an’ infantryman, having just/ next day’ it was clear and Baron completed a job of bayonettine a| Richthofen’s “Circus” of airplanes machine-gun nest of the enemy, was appeared and drove every allied severely reprimanded because he a | plane from the sky. Had that night forgotten to Dubbin his shoes, been clear Mr. Richthofen might Dubbin! ‘ have been on the job. If he had— It would be a. réal pleasure to, well—he wasn’t—so that's that. But, know iust who it was that must have) who knows, maybe that heavy down- sold those millions’ of boxes of that] pour of rain. won the war. gigantic hoax to a war-enthusiantic) —_— . [ae pala at a handsome profit.! TOMORROW. Le Retameur Am- joubtless he has'six valets now who; bulant. ~ Moral Effect? Of all the products that were foisted on an over-ripe and over- enthusiastic war - obsessed govern- ment that was supreme. To its credit it may be said that it would keep out a fight mist—a very light But as for the mud and slush of France—well—it was about practical as so much pulverized mist. neverthe- e already being made to collect such milk for purposes of ‘dryin nd canting, “since its. yalue is far superior to that of any other type of artificial feeding. - | f BARBS | ‘The movie salary cute are a ter- ‘rible blow. Some of? the stars may even find they can’t afford divorces now. of Ainerica. Agents comb the office buildings and’ shops New “York picking up bets of all sizes from all sexes, but’ the “big book” is kept across the river. Across the river also is the big open gaming house where bets of any size are taken on crap games. Broadway has a crap game or iwo of its own, and almost legendary figure in these games is “Nick the Greek,” who floats 14 si regular i tervals with a big bank-roll and sel- dom: lasts jong. disappears— just where nobody seems to know— and comes back with a recuperated fortune to start all over again. GILBERT SWAN. | 4 i The snake i# to he the prevailing note in women’s apperel.in autumn, says a style dictator... Won't the: ladies ever forget that varmint? i Buffalo. meat has “no appeal to | Old Masters President Coolidge. .Thua he loses the vote of all the. buffalo meat eaters of the country, who are the| A little fairy comes &t night, People who never. tasted a buffalo} Her eyes are blue, her hair is steak. 4 brown, With silver spots upon her wings, Mohammedan priests. in the Cau- And from the moon she flutters casus have banped the radio as “the down. .: | devil’s work.” ‘We'll have to join them in the belief that some of the She has a little silver wand, announcers do play the devil with it. And when a good child goes to 2 Skirts of rabbit fur are to be a| She waves her hand from right to” fashionable novelty next winter, ac- left cording to @ dispatch. The story} And makes «@ circle round its head. And then it dreams of Conan Doyle. .xefuses to revive things, ! Sherlock Holmes. Too bad. We've ot <puptains filled with fairy always wanted to find out why ish, mpvie comedians stand still. whi And trees that bear delicious fruit, And bow their branches at a wish. [tne hose is being squirted on them. : /—Thomas Hood: Queen Mab. | IN NEW YORK = Oe New York, July hub of the East Sid ‘fare upon which per cent of migrant women ‘make. their first ac- quaingance with American finery. Bee ee gt oe Ayaint aan and colorful peasant costum e Reco ayes ald sountey are, changed j0.the s180-| . New fork, Jur GU te Aabeled fashions. o! ica, nist 8S! York World’ tod: y save aay ' iprosperit~ a a » wealthy donned after the thrifty stranger to f the Otis Ele- ‘our shores has laid aside a nest vator company, was m: All about are some of New Yor! : aie Ae a ihe ere Avariers, yap the geicee bot orted as seeking i ma iment i: Heed: the atyloe pop Imitetions |i” ‘his $515,000 estate, " Mian Nesbit, of the up-to-date , @ second. cousin, was adopted by Otis It is frequently the case~ that’ os a child of 12 and nursed him foreigners move to the Bronx or to|!” his final-years. more comfortable quarters on the a py 4 Fold first iin of 2 x inery on these shores was gaine. ER F Di fon street, and so they retut Something like 32 toria Ferry, They Wondered how poor a re i‘ owners, inal one Of thom suggested. gett g 28 of tele failed to tell how many skirts can be thade from one rabbi ; Aan pleasant | Justajingle | : The sign said stop, but on he went, The brakeman pulled the iever. é The train, however, came too fast, And now he's stopped forever. New veri- ars ago four cree ea

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