The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 8, 1927, Page 8

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Shanes emt PAGE EIGHT The Bismarck Tribune An Independent New, THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1872) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., end entered at the postoffice at Bismarck second class mail matter. George D. Mann........ .- President and Publisher oq, Subscription Rates Payshle in Advance vaily by earrier, per year .........,... saily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck Aaily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)...... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Ansociated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for republication of all news dispatches eredited to it or not otherwise credited in this p: per, and also the local news of spontanevus origin published herein. All rights of republication of ali other matter herein are also resefved, Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg (Official City, State and County Newspaper) New England For St. Lawrence Seaway In 192% New England began a careful, business- like survey of the benefits which the St. Lawrenee Seaway would bring to the nation at large and to New England in particular. The results of this tudy have now been made public. Of itself and its work the committee says: “The w England Lawrence Waterway Com is an affiliation of separate committees rep- mitt resenti organized in November, 1923, for the purpose of conducting # comprehensive study and rendering an unbiased opinion respecting various conflicting aims and arguments which have been advanced from time to time respecting the feasibility and de rirability of developing the St. Lawrence river as a waterway for deep-draft vessels from the Lakes to the Atlantic Ocean, The committee has now completed its investigations, discussions, and considerations and herewith submits its final and unanimoys conclusions.” Then follows a careful survey of benefits, from which we quote as fully as’ space allows, ending “The committee looks upon the proposed expendi- | ture for developing the waterway as which exceptio, present time is laboring under a most serious and | difficult, economic handicap. It further helieves | that the net result of the development of such 1) waterway will incidentally be of considerable ad-} vantage to New England and the surrounding com- munity, both from a broad national standpoint ws} well as that of purely local self-interest, therefore, places itself definitely | cials of the Canadian government looking toward | the prompt consummation of a treaty which will make possible the undertaking of the enterprise, and urges upon all New England’s local and na- tional representatives the desirability of their full cooperation in every reasonable manner to bring this result about.” This clean-cut and emphatic declaration is credit to the entire committee, representative of New England, sober statistics of the U. S, department of labor, so the facts must be so, Once again there can be raised a great hue and cry over the disappearance of American family life | of the kind that flourished in that indefinite pe- riod known as the good old days. Front yard, back yard, side yard, cellar and attic are as out of date as the human appendix, and the great American kitéhen has devoluted into « kpbyhole of infinitesi-| mal dimensions. 4 Of course the reformers will shout that the mod- ern_woman is the cause of it all. She's too lazy to keep house, too intent upon her bridge and her novels and her makeup and what's going on at the movies this afternoon and evening. She has no time for children, or she has no time for the chil- dren she has. They run wild all over this state and the next and what is the world coming to, anyway? The question is supposed to need po an- swer. But is the woman to blame for all this? Hardly. Talk to any of the modern young husbands for any length of time and their ideas crop out ob- truaively. Would they fix a furnace? Not on your life. Would they cut the grass on the front or pack yards until their kinder were grown up? They would not. Would they lend a ligtle coopera- tion on voyages of discovery into attic or cellar for those annual cleaning-out expeditions? Not while they’re conscious. In the national passion for shirking domestic du- | ty, the male has been just as slothful as the fe- male. The “hard day at the office, dear,” has be- come an alibi tougher than shoe leather. Civiliza- tion is one or two too many generations removed frogs the farm, and the hack to the soil urge which used to ‘make -men want to hae in o garden has shriveled and shrunk to veritable non-existence. it, if you must, that the great American home in pot as it was, or that jt juat is not, byt pyt the on the gentleman of the house as well as on ys Loe nee Too Much Haig issimo who had charge of the Eng- (aang Atel andre glade 3 me name as a rather well-known brand of Scotch y: If a man in certain parts of Scotland got ft, he was apt to be labeled as suffering from THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MMA rh ‘to his work and waxing more eloquent each minute, | he suid Britain might not have won the war in’ 1918, had the Americans not come in, though it would certainly have won later even without us. That may go down with some British super-pa- | triots, but the more level-headed residents of the tight little island know that it ix bunk. Britain,‘ like France, had combed out the jast of ite man- In the fateful early days of 1918 when Lu- 0 dendorff let loose his avalanches of fighting Ger-' in and France went reeling under the shock. The echoes of it were heard clear back in Washington where the reporters were told by wrave-faced American governmental officials tha: if America did not get her troops over soon the war was over and the Germans on top. Haig’s boast, therefore, is a bit too much Haig. | of a piece with persistent Europe-wide propaganda whose object ix to show that American News Views mans, both Bri since our men did nothing, the least we ean do ix to quit clamoring for the repay- ment of our “dirty dollars.” . A French Tribute to Herrick H How Myron T. Herrick ix honored by the French | people, as a man and as ambassador, is reflected in an appreciation by M. Louis Forest, writing in “Lindbergh hax a keen eye,” young man grasps the essential at a glance. hen leaving us he said he was struck with the manner in which Mr. Herrick, the United States | ambassador, is received in Paris and in all circles.” “In fact, Mr. Herrick is one of the rare Person: | alities who are popular, personally popular. This; tall gentleman whose well polished hats have the | air of smiling in unison, inspires general s He has a rare quality; enthusiastic correctness. | His distinction has cordiality, and he doesnot fear | ive of the six New England states. It was! “Formerly, speaking of an ambassador, people | said, ‘He is persona grata’ | In our democracies there is no} One must please the man in the Persona grata is translate For the people, the American ambassador is a good seout. “I am not writing these few lines for the pleasure No; I am seizing the opportunity to show how important it is henceforth for a coun- try to have diplomatic representatives abroad capa- with the declaration that: ‘ble of making themselves personally sympathetic, Mr. Herrick has been among He has had the time to make him- He is not one of those ambassadors as we have already who only comprehend their functions [not so comfortable. A brick heated longer a court. ‘He is a good of the panegyric. Sa ‘ Daily Health | “But this is not. all, Service n the nature | us a long time. 5 of 4 capital investment of a national character upon | self popular. C ae ‘ ‘ vy BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN ly liberal dividends will be re-jand ministers plenipotentiary, tursed in the form of reduced transportation costa had,too many, cad the general benefit and prosperity of a large | when in leaving. They haye their return ticket in #ad important section of the country which at the | ti Afterwards, Faith Hathaway could steering wheel to close upon hers, ever quite account for all the hours of that terrible Saturday. | that after Cherry had been taken to the hospital in the ambulance, ac- both Bob and young doctor, she had gone, without} junch, to the shopping district to of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine When serious illness develops in he had sensed her thougt have our baby soon enoug When they arrived at the hospita t Cherry's condition ranted her removal pocket and—between two trains!” they learned tl i lone, while Bob hurried to a flor- to order enough flowers to make apartment, the telephone wir corner drug store are kept Editorial Comment FRIDAY, JULY 8,.1927 ick PRIVATE ples bok, b FRANCE 9.283% Editor's Note: ‘Thin is Chap- | ter $i of the ties of articies written by an ex-soldier who is revisiting France as a corre- spondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER LXXXI_ The farm: of the 4 There was Les Mares above Sissons, known to the Second Di- | vision as “The Blood There was the Fi rin in the Champag | i | ne de Nava-| here Gen-| eral Gow eth and | 42nd A howed thet Germans the fine ts of “The; ' Elastic Defense"— | There was Tronsol Farm, known! ino the 9st Div 1 and Chaudron Farm, between waich the 35th Division had a line. ex j many other farms, it the Madeleine Farm near | was the keypoint of & The American soldiers who come back to France with the Legion in September will find these farms; | changed somewhat during the past nine yeal With the exception per- haps of Navarin Farm, which was so badly churned by sheilfire that it ver be cultivated again. the buildings of the others; built and the fields are; ery spring, 41, Oma seven duting. the ploughing period, dozens of, unexploded = shells which have worked to the surface are uncovered. These are piled along roads that once were: jump-off lines, the grain soon | waves in the wind and everything is as penceful as if there never had been a war. Up at “The Bloody Angle” M guerite Jary, eight years old, pl along the road and in the or with her dog, “Finot.”. She has a ready smile, and engaging, and she knows nothing about the battle that raged there in 1918, a That Rusty Barbed Wire Back of the barn on the Ferme de la Madeleine, Marie Therese and Madeleine Champenois, with t kid brother, Jean, play for hours with their rope swings while a herd of cows grazes in the luxuriant lot nearby. if A. rds of every farm in the are rusted corrugated-iron fields are fences strung wholly with rus, barbed wire. But the shell holes have been ploughed and drag- away. The fox holes been ed, y. who come back will er quite be able to reconcile the n peaceful landscapes with the scenes as they knew them in 1918. Tomorrow: “The Little Virgin” Jin connection with any maiGee oC” Ra | of the nose or throat. . {1 Ss | Ice bags for the throat cre also ustajingie i j useful. RRS TT GET TE eee To apply heat one may have a hot! said he, “My watch dropped on the i water bottle. This should be emptied, iy {of air when filled with hot water. {should be taken not to sti jpins through it. t |water bottle is more enduring but jin the oven and covered with a new |paper, a towel or a blanket is still) a good source of heat. builder who ‘struggles to meet his ulways staggered at the prices Man- hattan exacts for mere apartments, in its high rent belts, he perk price has just been reached at Fifth avenue and 77th street, where there rises an apart- ment house in which a 20-room suite like $900,000, Down payment of $22, 500 a room was paid and a mortgage taken. Up to this time the record had been held by an apartment taken And though his And though he twi sold the other day for something! 4),.) ‘3° The pigtail hangs behind h A Tragic Sto It stopped. What ¢an I do?” {In covering it with a towel, cere The jeweler snapped, “Did you ex- pect The meta The thing to go on through?” ———— | Old Masters | bOI eter co iat ——_+ i There lived a sage in days of yore, [CIN NEW YORK jit! scutes bai Sort cate se Rie lh | New York, July 8~—The home| Beeause it hung behind him. much, and sorrowed more, i : : dence is| He mushazupon this curious case, Payments on a modest residence is| Xe,musancupen this curious eases place, Ard have it -hanging in his face, Not dangling there behind him. ‘orts never slack, t, and twist, and ithful to his back, —William Makepeace TI | s. by Mrs. W.-K. Vanderbilt 2d, for/ Trains to Make which was paid about $200,000. and messengers beat 8 pa door bringing, piece by 5 , Ph things that are necessary for the|ing in the push-cart crowded streets cure of a patient in reasonable com-, Of the east side is an ice tea ven- purchase an emergency layette for She knew that she wandered, dazed, in the largest de- Then she had faint- she had waked in the rest room of the store to find r her, his dear face nted bower of Cherry's had directed that his sister-in. given the best room in the , and Faith found her in a big corner chamber, brilliantly light- ed with four windows, through which trgng June sunshine Cherry's baby. Movies in the Home (New York World) From Rochester comes the news that four-minute ‘ord as favoring the early entrance of this, movie films, made in quantity for home consump- kovernment into negotiation with the proper offi-|tion, will be the next innovation to reach the mar- ket. Heretofore, people who own their own pro- jectors have been restricted to brief films taken ema cameras, or pictures they Now it will be knows, things d hastily in emergency are not the best that can be had or! reaches almost to the ground. Its ner, now living at the Palos Vet certain| tip is decorated with tiny flags of ery {all nations and bound about it are! festoons of artificial flowers. As he known by the single name of L walks, the metal glistens in the sum|beiieves he can cover the 3,157 m ylike gold. He goes about on hot course at an average of 52 mile afternoons, getting his patronage day. He will stast in September. Bob bending o haggard with Not for Cherry “I didn’t mean to fain , cheerful tan, the high, narrow! the | bed and dres amount of sickness occurs in n-toned brown velvet | sighted pé@@son will have availabl in relationship to the fami! chest, the necessary apparatus, Fountain syringes can now be had made of rubber or of metal or of She was struggling to rise, hands pressed her back gently upon the couch. jk curtains flut- A nurse wrote floor, fresh pongee s tered at the window: Dusily at a little tab to the smoothly made-up bed. dn the bed Cherry lay | the moment, her small white hands folded across her brea lace yoke of a white crepe de chine with their own ci eould rent from possible to form a private film collection. fans can buy four minutes of Jackie Coogan or Charlie Chaplin as they buy four minutes of Mme. Jeritza or Fritz Kreisler, 4 neighbor four minutes of the finish at Churchi)l Downs cr of mountain-climbing in the Himalayas ease eesahras ne OPE jas they now borrow the latest novel, American Husbands Shirk Housekeeping | But if four minutes, why not forty? If pamphlet, Ferty-five per cent of the new human habita-| films, why not full-volume films? tions built last year were apartment houses, and | 115,000,000, quantity production holds the only two out of every five families in the country |many seeming impossibilities, Obviously, now live in the one-family dwellings which used|ent an ambitious picture which it takes millions of to be dignified under the group institutional title | dollars to sereen can be paid for only through thou- of “The Great American Home.” These are the) sands of movie houses charging a quarter to $2 apiece to tens of millions of Patrons. But there good pictures that can be made for a few tens or| her eyes upon the disappo hundreds of thousands of dolla: lishing the less costly pictures to several thousand movie houses, why not publish the: of thousands of homes? ilm libraries.” “Buby expected by midnight, if ali Moxy well—and Dr. Atkins. thinks it Ni lie still until you The ear is out- The clerk telephoned quiescent for side the store. me at the hospital as soon as. you fainted—and here | am!” They can borrow from | back white coverle! | pushed damply These are now made so that they can d for the double purpose of (application of heat or for syringe. A rubber sheet saves the in times of illness. emergency, a piece of table oil cloth yard long can be substituted. _| In the absenee of both, several thick. 4g nesses of newspapers can be used | temporarily. A patient severely ill will require for body excretions, since the patient to and from the | bathroom is undesirable. varying widths can now be bought in any druestore and {a supply of these kept in a cardboard ———+ | box is as necessary as the medicine |chest in any family where there are. He made her r back from her st for half an hotr, his hands holding hers in their warm clasp, his love fill leaving hers, un felt bathed in a warm flood of lo “I want to go to the hospital key to] wait. blue eyes, never | had already claimed it, 1 her whole b voice came fairtiy, In a nation of) were never coming. I wanted to see to.tell you I'm sorry T've ever done to make “I'm all right now. can't imagine what made me faint. Bob’s blue eyes with sudden hope as they searche hers, “maybe you, too— TOMORROW: Cherry's baby is h she shook her head, that blotted ont the hope in his sui Pek EER aA rm sorey, Bob,| | A Thought Instead of pub- denly eager face As they journeved to the hospit: wait the birth of Cherry's And when ye stand pray'n7, for- m to hundreds | ,, ive, 4 ye have ought against any. Or when the costly pic- ture has had its first run, why not cheap editions for the fireside? At any rate, even in its present form—baby learn- ing to walk, daughter being married, a four-minuto “comic”—the movie is assuming an entirely changed social character, Formerly it took people away | from home; now it begins to join hands with the radio to keep them there, patient requires fresh air Faith's heart grew hot with rebel- heet or blanke: Everything came to Cherry She herself would gi i in the world while Cherry—who want a baby—was even now in the tortured throes of birth-giving. “Don't torture yourself, darling,” highly scented Bob said softly, bis hand leaving the | food. OUT OUR WAY | parade, dressed in gay costumes, The without draught, a may be draped over a clothes-hors never.—Syrus. placed before fde open. window) mn and be fully satisfactory for the pur- British food experts ate onions and u: A good atomizer ought to be avail- in her/able among the apparatus, as the [physician is likely to direct’ its use ' He Locked Up His Gems (Minneapolis Journal) Bandits in St. Paul, who had been at some pains rize themselves with the plans of a trav- eling jewel salesman, held him up in his hotel, betind The most colorful figure wander- jor. He carries, strapped to one shoul-|Los Angeles to New York in 60 d cer, a huge brass samovar that from the sweating push cart dealers. He pours out ‘his beverage with aia strict diet and under the co satisfactory. skillful tiltrof his back and straight- ubber requires care and attention when not in use the samovar with his hands. Crowds p bile home will accompany him on his ing process that he never touches run. 60-day Run From Coast to Coast Reilondo, Calif. July 8—U)— the record which a distance run- Sountry club near here e et. The runner, who prefers Levett isin rigerous.-teaining, Vf supervision of a physician. A trainer, ens up pgain when the drink is'a rubber, a checker and an autoino or it will spring a! poured. So expert is he at the pour- leak or be found unwotthy at the above the turned- | time when it is needed. A two-quart her bright cur!s|¢namel or aluminum can is durabl Levett ran last year from Los of youngsters gather about him, Angeles to San Francisco, about 500 watching this triek and hoping some day to see him spill a few drops. But he never doe: This is the season for street! shrines in the foreign colonies of Manhattan. ‘ First one saint and then another miles, in 12 day Surgeons Operating With Electric Knife Baltimore, July 8—(®)—A needle is feted on the crowded sidewalks. carrying a high frequency electrical Walking down Houston street the current, a kind of “surgical acet- other day F found St. Colagero await-vlene torch” known as the accusector, ing donations for some worthy cause. is being developed by investigation The saint of the poor ‘man is and experiment in Baltimore hos- Colagero, and his shrine is in a dis- pitals. trict where need cries from almost This little instrument, which opens every, window. an incision without touching the It is the custom for a shrine to flesh, by means of a thin blue stream be carried: about the streets, even of electrical energy, already is sup-* as in Europe. Sometimes a band planting -the scalpel, in the hands proceeds it, and troops of children of prominent surgeons. Opening a clean incision without drab background of New York seems dragging infection from-one part of to fade as these pageants pass and the wo Ent? another, automatic there comes to take its place the air cautery? Ys "the immediate stoppii of some medieval city of the old of the flow éf blood are advantages For several blocks the street hangs with pennants, and along the curb appear dealers in holiday candies: jclaimed for the electrical knife. \ TABLET FOR NUN Mexito City.—A bronze tablet was and toys, Lright candles and tinsel. junveiled recently in the village of It is also’ the custom that all-who San Miguel de Napantla in honor oi can afford it shall leave contributions Sister Juana Ines de la Craz. The $n the shrine. Dollar ‘bills are pin-'sister was kngwn as “the tenth ned to the raiment of the figure and Muse” because of her poetic writings within a few days hundreds of dol- in both Latin and Spanish. Among lars are fluttering in the wind. Those her works was “Le Inconsecuineia de who cannot aftérd dollars leave | jos hombres” (The Inconsequence of dimes, quarters \and half dollars at Men), which critics have called one his feet. it that one day, centuries ago, Colag- and gagged him, searched his person, ransacked his baggage, and were rewarded with a haul of only a moderate amount of expense money. His jewels, worth many thousands of dollars, they did pot get. They had been placed in the ho- WELL; 51SS TAY TAKIN’ If the increasing incidence of robbery of diamond salesmen the last few years is now inducing extra Precautions, the band of daring and highly. skilled /diamond thieves will be forced either to go to work or to turn to doormat stealing. There may be some understandable trade reason why salesmen have carried fortunes in gems ground with them in leather hand baggage, as carelessly a8 though the bags contained nothing more valuable than personal belongings, but the practice has al- ways looked foolish. Such nonchalance may fool | the ordinary purse-snatcher, but .it does not fool the diamond thieves, who apparently keep many of these saleqmen, wider espionage from the time they leave New York, When a gem salesman is held up, the loot some- ‘times amounts to enough to hire armed escorts for ten-such salesmen for the rest of their business lives, or finance armored cars for all the robbed firm’s diamonds for years to come. To say that the insurance companies are the losers in such robberies, or in any robberies, or fires either, is merely to indulge in a pleasant fic- ton. If they ‘are to ayoid insolvency, insyrance ./ slong. vod lene * British public read a speech eompenien must apjust their rates so es never to other dey, they no deybt had/he actual Josers.. By the theft of for the doughty warrior|/the public is inevitably the loser, heries, ‘the higher the premiums are added to the cost of doing business, and that is always reflected in higher price tags on ero went to the door of a rich man of Palermo, The saint was turned away, yet he gave his blessing to the! ander’s cat disappeared recently from the cat show at the Crystal Palace, “Why do you bless me?” asked there was considerable stir in many do quarters. Police were set on tue trail, households mourned and there rich man. . the rich man, “Who needs more the blessing of: lof the greatest poems ever written by The legerid of Houston strect has a woman. WELL! HERE'S PUSS! ~ London.—When Sir Claude Alor. the Lord,” answered the’ saint, “since|was tumult and shouting on all sides. you are rich of lands and so poor, Then, lo! after. many, days, during of heart?” Now we ,know ,.why Chamberlin and Levine Hew across. It to help dedicate that moiament - to} Lindbergh, | That eclipse in England,’ look: |. picious. be “the rs hand in that, too. . A newly marri the Baste anions name for a ‘honeymoon. A Indiansipolis widow’ is an expert wteeplejack, Maybe she got her practice balancing the fam:!y, budget. . ‘. . * A ‘eouple were 'martie’ over (he telephione. That's one way to pet couple joined in| at's “a good human family has ; 50,000 years, So >Now Mr, Orteig might offer a Prize for the best non-stop flight by an insurance salesman. ~ (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) --Ignace Ghabin, hangrhan for the late Czar Nicholas of Rus: in Moscow. He officiated a eutions, received $2,500 anni bonus. of $50 for gach hai an organ recital, Pussy crawled out GILBERT SWAN. |from among the pipes or the palace's big organ.

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