The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 9, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR ,The Bismarck Tribune adent News; THE STATE? OLDuSy NEWSPAPER 5 (Established 1873) tunning the country, if they had lived up to expec- tations. If this was the only purpose why the scholarships were established, then they must be considered a failure. te But it is more pleasant to believe that Mr. imi pblished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | Rhodes expected something else to accrue to the iBismarek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at 'henefit of those studying under his endowment, It Corre second class mail matter. | ubtisher [it more pleasant to believe that he expected them Pedi imiee s _— |t» return to this country with a broadened outlook; a Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | with greater tolerance; with greater affection for **vafly by carrier, per year MMeeEy tual Gir pent (in Bua) 20 foreign countries. In this, his expectations have 7.20! - $a ‘1 ‘i been fulfilled. dail: i 5 | ; ‘ tet ide Rinid Bismarck). 6.00! Bit to think that the young men who are Rhodes Daily by mail, outside of North 6.00 | scholars must, because of that fact, become leaders ember Audit Bureau of Circul in American life, is to expect too much, Human = Member of The Associated Press {nature is not that way. Some of them may become “She Associated Press is exclusively entitled to| Prominent. Others, the majority of them, may ,the.use for republication of all news dispatches not. But they are most certainly filling a valued Setedited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- R <per. and also the local news of spontaneous origin lished herein. All rights of republication of ali matter herein are also reserved. matters not how limited, as couriers bearing mes- sages of tolerance and goodwill between Britain and the United States. { Foreign Representatives | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT | Why They Don’t Vote ‘Tower Bldg. YNE, BURNS & SMITHS BM4#:| Tho Natiohal Civic Federation is trying to find NEW YORK - - - _ Fifth Ave, Bldg./out why 40 million eligible voters failed to vote at -|important elections last year. It wants to know ‘__COftficial City, State and County Newspaper) | how to bring about a fuller participation in next 7 year’s presidential election. The Movies and Economy | As a step toward arousing greater interest in aug Phere is great outcry in the movie colony. Film| public questions, the federation plans to create com- = who heretofore have moved along unworried| mittees on practical citizenship in every community by salary cuts and contract cancellations, suddenly | o¢ the country. It points out that, despite the fact have become vocal. Against the “inhumanity” of | many of us bewail the inefficiency of our govern- the proposed cuts they are crying out. Instead of | ing bodies, we fail to get out and vote in “an effort buying three high-powered cars a year, they may to reform them. And the federation makes this de reduced to one. Trips to Europe may be less | pertinent statement: “Issues and men did not in- frequent. terest the voters.” | Atis hard for those outside of Hollywood to sym-| ‘That is just precisely the trouble today. How | pathize deeply with these distressed souls.|ean one become enthusiastic about a candidate who Their no doubt, aren't as elaborate as fan) does nothing more than make a few speeches? The ye ‘would make us believe; their expenditures | 914 ballyhoo methods of eagier days and the torch- | nots’ great. Nevertheless, the idea of slicing 4/Jight parades brought out a much greater percent- chunk from the stars’ wages doesn’t arouse a kin- age of the vote simply because they were novel dred :qpirit of bereavement in the heart of the aver- and interesting. Mud-slinging and violent perora- age man’s heart. |tions helped to do their part. That this method is j The biggest item in production of pictures is ac- not yet outmoded is shown by the success of Wil- tors’ salaries. Sets and salaries of directors are liam Hale Thompson's successful mayoralty cam- sother items and these, too, are due for cuts. The paign in Chicago. The bitter attack on King Progression of the movies has been marked by more George; the exhibiting of three rats in a cage—, and more lavish backgrounds against which the ac-|1abeled with the names of Thompson’s opponents, jtors may disport themselves. Directors are begin- the fanfare and parade made the campaign a per- ‘ning to be elevated into the “artist” class, with| sonal matter Yor every voter. jthe concomitant of greatly increased salaries. It is because we are running smoothly today that * Some stars and directors through vanity and am-|thore is this apathy on the part of voters. What is bition have increased production costs. Naturally,| there to get excited about? Major party issues are the ones with the biggest “pulling power,” the ones/ 54 closely related in most cases that they almost who are public favorites, want their films to be 45!h1end into each other. The calmness of the '20’s elaborate as possible. This is going to stop, the|is one of the penalties we must pay for success. Producers say. _ : Not until someone comes forth with an issue we The encouraging thing about the proposed plan|can fight about will there be more interest. Voters’ is that it should help immensely to stabilize the | committees, although n laudable attempt, won't do motion picture industry. Other large industries are the work. anit run on an “efficiency basis,” why not the movies? | As long as we can be sure of getting the kind of | : Pictures we like, with plenty of thrills, plenty of “chances to transport ourselves into other worlds, atk Editorial Comment position; they are acting, to some extent and it} thought Cherry would die in giving| down his pallid, sagging cheeks that’ birth to her baby were the blackest| needed a shave. that Faith had ever lived through.| too, sheltered in Junior’s arms, but| Ward the sweet gals who were for- Not even those days when she had] Faith could not sleep, and Bob sat| we'll not complain. This economy move doesn’t seem likely to stop them from continuing, even More Money For Less Butter : though it may prick a few bubbles in Hollywood. (Minneapolis Journal) The Federal Reserve bank finds that in the first five months of 1927 the northwest produced less’ butter than in thé same period last year, but re- ceived more money for the smaller production than for the larger. In butter-making, raw material prices reflect fin- ished product prices with peculiar precision. Espe- cially is this true in Minnesota, with its coopera- tives. And Minnesota turns out approximately four-fifths of the northwest’s aggregate, if we list Wisconsin as entirely in the middle west. The Federal Reserve bank’s finding that north- Selling Us to Europe , America has been fortunate in her choice of un- ‘official ambassadors to Europe. First there was Lindbergh, whose tact and® poise won a host of friends for this country. Then came Chamberlin and Levine, who helped to bring Germany and this country closer together. Now comes Byrd, and his _ actions so far indicate that he is a worthy member of the flying group. Like Lindbergh, Byrd has had little to say, but what he has said has been tactful and well-chosen. maierine ne eaaaences MEECS which - fin-| west butter production fell off three per cent in vol- iy agg oy eee oer ne pidge ie oP” | ume, but increased eleven per cent in value in the age Be fess Tue eating Mecctne tet Sve manie of the mean year, can be inter- sleet, Ss € preted, then, as notice that the farmer's cream fe a casienudle ae ele oP ee check ctaserente a Kobe ee: nee last year on aes “ ieee a smaller investment of lal an eed, ; man could sien Wages orsaue ae hac | This butter information in the Federal Reserve mares at re ae a Sager nt pal be. {eas Monthly Review will be bad news for a small eset ag aes es. oe Pee a ren ave “(group of gentlemen who have been running around sf ae Lae Alerts Bie Eishiviaes faw| 2 circles trying to convince the northwest farmer Udefbevghe, « few Chamberlins, a few Byrds on ha| 2nt,c?0 8 bis falrving see Ws pllEtt Je oan uns, # steadily growing worse, and that nothing can save ri Rae ec aerial at nee “ke | him except an unworkable plan for an artificially “home folks,” not like the hostile nation miles He Bore is out of the woods, by any Berne ah thee: have, aeseeapiished rioro ‘ie Sos sl tions is wider than at this time last year, that is ‘ment of official ambassadors, known only to of-/ 70, {8 that it is as wide a margin as he is en- titled to. But it is a sign that he is on the road ; ficial circles, could. to a reasonable return, not only on his dairying, indi | Ua but on other major products as well. He is on the : Let’s Fool Him /road to reasonable profits, and he is walking that Oscar Cornelius, observant automotive instructor! road bravely and on his own feet. And his prog- of Little Rock, Ark., says he can tell an automobile} ress would be measurably faster, were it not for owner’s character by the car he drives. the efforts—sometimes misguided and sometimes A. dangling license plate, muddy fenders, dirty | politically selfish—of supposed friends trying to windows reveal slovenliness. A dusty top, despite) thrust useless crutches into his hands, out into the street, to hide his terror \ Atreight o'clock Bob forced Fait! | to go to dinner with him, but ao each other, en. clean and shiny body, discloses the person who revels only in outward appearance. = he selfish, inconsiderate character disports it- melf by crisscrossing the packed boulevards. The “hot-tempered man or woman can’t leave that frenzy at home, but in some little way or other sets its ~ mark on the car to be discerned by the observant The thought is discomforting, to say the least. | “Not even our most private affairs are our own i today. What can we do about it? => Well, the only solution is to fool those prying _mechanics. Let’s keep our car shiny. Let’s drive Sstarefully. Let's not vent our temper on the inno cent car, only to have the garage man cast an in- “sympathetic cavemen of many of us. == Let's not divulge this to others. Let's avoid be F thoughtless and profane, and somehow we teturn to our former good-natured selves. The farmer is not as lame as these friends try to make him think he is. proffered crutches would splinter under his weight, and throw him clear off the road and into the ditch. Rlorida and Mississippi (St. Paul Dispatch) In Tampa, Fla., recently a mob stormed the county jail in an attempt to seize and lynch a con- fessed slayer. The sheriff, when trouble first threatened. took measures to cope with the situa- tion. When the mob became menacing he asked and received the aid of state troops, who were forced to shoot in defense of the prisoner and them- selves. Several persons:were killed, but the mob was routed and the law upheld. — : In Louisville, Miss., the. other day, a mob intimi- dated the. sheriff, in whose custody @roes suspected of murder. The sheriff, according to news dispatches, not only offered little resist- ance, but actually delivered the prisoners into the hands of the mob, which tied them to a telephonz pole, poured gasoline over their clothing and burned them to death. . A Such acts of the Louisville sheriff and a disgrace to that community, the nation. The failure of the Prisoners stamped him as a be entrusted with’ the office : re og But, even if he were, the) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Just What He Prayed For Three Months Ago KISSES THE WIFE GOODBNE AND TES HER ' HOW MUCH HES GOING TO MISS HER - NOT REAUZING THE Sa ( y ' 7_WwoRoAu!- Free “DH PLAY AT LAST — Wil \ DERIDES O TAKE ASWIM BUT SHUPDERS * WHEN HE THINKS OF THE DARING STUNTS HE USED =) yen) SOME FOIENDS TAKE HIM TOAPARTY BUT dE CANT COMPETE WITH . THE PRUSSTRE S QWEOYS WHEN ITCOMES ) HE BACKS HIS WAY INTO AN ELOOw CHAI AT THE 4 We SELF SERVE LUNCH SATURDAY, JULYi9) 1927 Editor’s Note; ter 82 of the ser! written by an ex-soldier who is revisiting France| as a corre- sppondent for The Tribune. ‘, CHAPTER LXXXIL To-the soldiers of the 28th and 77th American . Divisions, there was a region in the Argonne forest that was known to them. in September, 1918, as La Viergette. It was at a point in this region, which is on the {road from. Binarville to Aprement and not far from the only other road! that traverses the forest, known as “Haute Chevauche” (Hochacovochee) that the two divisions met and united to push the Germans out at Grand This is chap- of articles re, So much for the association. Now— zin,” a tiny “Image of white marble not over ten-inches high that stands on a pedestal ander the trees some- what back from’ the road. ‘The statuette was placed there ‘more than one hundred years ago by de- vout peasants of Apremont, Thus! that region of the forest obtained its name. ‘Tiny as it is, however, it did not escape untouthed dusing the Ar- Scarred By War ‘ La Viergette‘is “The Little Vir-|h gE PRIVATE foes back, “FRANCE 49.38 @ MA toves gonne drive. One machine gun uulet clipped off some toids of the white ‘robe at the waist, another severed a finger and perhaps a dozen erg were imbedded in the ped- estal. But, after the armistice had been signed, when the villagers of Apre- mont came up for the first time, tl found. their shrine, with its » just as they had remembered it from the days four years before—before the Germans came\in. And in a simple ceremony of gratitude, the lit- tle group knelt at the wayside, under the trees, and offered a prayer. So All May See “yt ey La Viergette is at the point of the’ e roads in Argonne where members of the American Legian may see it when they arrive in September. It still bears the marks of bullets—per- aps German—perhaps American, All along the roads the are piling wood that is being cut. But the pile, at ao ain point, takes a deep dip. It i: ithe point where La Viergette stan And the dip in the pile is made so all who pass may see, and bow their heads in reverence. TOMORROW: Iranie Duman- chin’s Tale. i panhandlers appear from every cor- ner to ask for dimes » When uc- cumulated, wi jard the up- keep of the ies, And even their old gone Chinese, ‘There is, little of the old Bowery left. GILBERT SWAN. Daily Health | |) Service - | theater has F Saint 2 Simer The, long, terrible hours when they! tears slipping slowly and regularly nibbling at lichee nuts and water- melon candy. But when the Bowery theater was in its heydey, the rough boys 6f the neighborhood demanded that their villains be villains, their heroes be heroic and their heromes be op- pressed, Feilows who would spill gore in every gutter betrayed their basie sentimentalism in their attitude to- Fay cried a little,| ever being “pursued.” And they wantéd their, endings to be happy. Dramas’ that ‘now grace the Broad- way theaters would have been smashed to bits by the fits of the burlies of yesteryear, courtroom beside the] at a distance from her, “his face turned sharply away, as if he want- ed to spare her the sight of his sat in the Cherry whom the state was prosecut: ig as a murderess had been ‘si packed with horror as were the hourg during which s at in the recep- tion room of the* hospital, waiting for the word that. would tell he: whether her adored sister was to liv or die, Bob waited with her foi long .stretches, then charged, hatlest and wild-eyed and haggard-faced, 1s five minutes past one that night when a young interne came hurrying into the reception room, a €) broad smile on his’ pink-cheeked:face. He paused before Faith, as if he recognized that hers wus the great- Something more than a centur: the Bowery theater opened its doo It had. been the Bull’s Head Tavern, fashioned after the. British pubs, and it Was @ gathering saat for drovers and horse dealers. Daniel Drew, who had come over from England to open is Pact Fi little daughter, Mrs. Hathaway. } , from his wife. She had never felt] “hvith rose und swayed. dist Be himself engaged in horse so helpless in her life, There wa8]-ro.0 Bob could spring fi f pe AE a : pring forward to| i absolutely nothing she could do, but] support her. “How is——Cherry’?” she | Cattle, trading. Mr Wae cakes pray ineoherently. gasped, her voice sounding smail and) Road. to. Ruin? ‘at 37 1-2 cents pe way. h 5 » the | Person, or two for six-bits, jc'We hope on over,” the| "Suddenly it became the salon of interne ussured her, “But—in cases| the drama in America, with Edwin like th : ‘You don’t think she'll get weil?”| Forrest making his first American F wailed, on a long-drawn note of fear and horror. “Of course we hope she will, but she will require the most careful nérsing and perfect quiet. She has been in great danger tonight and I don't want to mislead you—" _Bob clasped his wife’s sagging body tightly in his arms. His voice rang out loudlv. almost roughly: “Don't faint, Fait! Of course she'll get well. Don’t you know that noth- ing can break Cherry TOMORROW:. An peace and joy for Faith, the mother of a ate almost nothing but strong, biacl coffee. They had little to say to To Faith, the man sit- ting opposite her, smoking furiou: his blue eyes narrowed upon the cig- aret he held between trembling fing- ers, seemed a stranger. It was in conceivable that this was her hus. band. Her husband! The very word sounded strange and alien, Through the agony of her anxiety over Cherry darting tongues of doubt and suspicion. Of course he was wor- ried about Cherry too. Of course! But if he had been Cherry’s husband he could not have looked more strick- The first production introduced to the stage one Sandie Welsh, who be- came famous for his’ terrapin lunches in the basement of an old dime museum in lower Broadway where now: stands a skyscraper. He appeared on a bet .and never ap- peared again. x Not long ago after its opening a good old-fashioned thriller was put on. It was “Lafitte, the Pirate of the Gulf.” During the performance interlude or| 3 number of canon shots were Tired, The gun wadding caught fire and the theater Wag practically destroyed. Haetily. it was rebuilt. b About 1900 the blood-and-thunder begah to arrive, and the Bowery taught-the nation how to hiss vil- lains and whistle at heroics, Little “of the plug-ugly spirit remains on the Bowery today. Most of the plodders of that street are too low in - circumstances or too ‘sodden’ with drink to have much zest for conflict. Never since she had known Bob, except for those thtee blissful davs immediately following their mar-, — riage, had ie paw ab riod fe #4 that Bob had first loved Cherry, ha¢ even been engaged to her for a bret|| IN NEW YORK | time. Now she felt that she had gg, stolen Bob from her sister, that he, and not the reprohate, Chris Wiley, should have fathered the child that was even now struggling to he born. “Shall we go?” he asked .at last, rshly, abruptly, and she followed ou of the restaurant and back inbofthe hospital ‘where the intermin- New York, July 9—Down in the Bowery there is a venerable play- house where such styl f nuts in the gallery and tossing yewetables at the villains originated, “Today the sobsome troubles ‘of: “Nellie, the Beautiful Cloak Model,” able wait for news went on und on. | have given way to the shrill piping] The benches of. the tiny parks ‘Jim Lane and Junior and Fav join-| of Chigese players, garbed. in the| that appear here there are gen- ed them at nine o'clock. Cherry’s| silks, gold und sparklers of the| erally covered with figures whose father sat, a huddled heap of mis-| Orient. Chinatown ambles over to ery, in an incongruously gay chair,| watch its favorite thespians and sit: OUTOURWAY __ ne breaths betray a long sesston with bad gin. Gin parlors are many and {. MORE HOSS IS WINNIN'— BUT, MORE: LOSIN!. - ———— BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of Americ Medical Association “ of Hygela, the Health Magazine born .in manure and anything; it flies from pool and the garbage can to the hospital and the morgue and thence perhaps into.the home. It is a dangerous pest,.for it may carry typhoid fever, dysentery, or other diseases. It has no business in a healthful home. The common house fly cannot bite because its mouth part: structed for liquids only. It deposits its eggs in filth, or on any decaying ter, but preferably where: t! is a certain amount of sunlight. The stable fly biting fly will invade the home in rainy weath- er. People sometimes confuse the two types of flies. From eight to 12 days are required for the develop- ment of the fly from egg to adult. Simple measures for the control of flies can be adopted by anyone. They include the screening of all ane doors and windows, the proper dis- posal of all refuse so that it may not form a place of ‘breeding, the use of sticky flypspers, of poison papers| , id of fly ‘traps, and general cl liness in the home. The fly swatter, that deadly little piece of wire screen on the end of a stick, has achieved wonders in the past few years in con- trolling the fly menace. Because of the obvious fly, and, t, that, i general nuisahve, its’ relationship. to thd spread of disehsb may’ have been overestimated. The fly is inter- mittent feeder and is inactive for some time after each feeding. It has been shown that the dige: of the {ly constitute { medium germs and sites die before they | are transferred to @ fevorable pjace for their further growth, but the menace actually exists and the fly is best eliminated. In the great campaigns for better health, leaders have found that a phlegmatic and ignorant public hi jto be stirred into a fine moral frenz; before results can be .aceomplished, Through the creation of such a feel- ing came the magnificent warfares of recent years. that have serves largely to abolish the fly from civil- ized: homes, Today the intelligent man does not teed to be urged to efffiiinate the fly ‘rom his surroundings. Experience taught him that the proces: and well worth the ‘accomplis! ment, i¢ BARBS} s of tl on ae, OR za tl taxicab industry. “bout the only industries remaining 100-cu; ee-drinkers named ‘obably. ights Re y The 1 {ree for the newapay tranaoceanic flights. | na} !a Olson, and Miss SEE... HED genie also stopping at Ja tend the Stutsman county fair. Mr. Albertson and Mr. Brooker of Bismarck called at the M. T. Olson home Wednesday evening. John Gunderson spent the Fourth at Minot. Rev. Foss is the owner of a new ‘| Chrysler cou; Mr. and Mrs. W. Mabel Rosvold and returned Sunday afte visit in Minnesota. Hone ir, and Mrs. A. P. Roavold, mo- tered to Bismarck Wednesday morn- ing. Mr. Rosvold is suffering from an ab: s on his head. He remained there for medical ai Mias Thelma Rosvold, who has been in Bismarck for a few days, returned with her mother. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Ward and children and Mr. and Mrs, John Mount spent the Fourth at the Bad Lands and Killdeer mountains. Frai Sfferman of Jamestown and Harold Sherman of Richardton were home for the Fourth. Henry Arneson and family spent the Fourth in Jamestown with Fl- mer Arneson. Gladys Brechtel and Mamie Duck- stead of -Bismarck motored down here and spent a few days with De! Olson — accoi panied them back for a few day: visit. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Koon and fam- ily are visiting in lowa. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Knudson and, family motored to Lake Isabel! the: Fourt! Mr. and Mrs. Bert Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kuck of New Rockford are visiting their parents, Mr.-and Mrs. John Kuck. Hits r upper New- . J.D. Stewart with Mr, and Mrs. Charles comer. July 4. Mr. Mrs. A. Eisenbeisz an- nounce the marriage of their son Robert to ‘Ali » daughter of M. J. Olson. The wedding took place rk bere the Methodist parsonage in ‘Ste ae The ladles’ aid met at the home of Mrs. Carl Meland Thursday after- noon. Nels Meland payee ball with the Tappen team July 4th. jen Morganson, accompanied by Mrs. Ennis and son Edward, went over to the branch line Wednesday to visit relatives of Mrs. Ennis’. Mrs. Van Vleet is cooking at the Home cafe during her absenee. Kenneth McKane, barber of Ster- ling, is taking Mr, Koons’ place in the barber shop while he is‘ away on his. vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Koessel and Mr. and Mrs. A. Brushwein enjoyed @ weiner and marshmallow roast to- gether July 4th [Old Masters] Prithee tell me, Dimple-Chin, At ‘what age di Love begin? Your blue eyes have scarcely seen Summers three, my: fairy queen, But a miracle of sweets, hes, sly retreats, he little archer there, Hidden in your pretty hair. When didst learn a heart to win? Prithee tell me, Dimple-Chin! “Oh!” the rosy lips reply, “I can’t tell you if I try. 0 long I can't be: sk some younger |: —Edmund- Clarence Toujours Amour. Steadman: ‘The sufferings of this present ti ace not worthy. to he serena, wih Romans viliz8. i who neglects. the present mo- throws away all he has.— ADAMS =” rasants ‘

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