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‘PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspa, THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Biamarck, N. George D. Mann.. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance the postoffice at “wily by carrier, per year ..... dee «$7.20 yaily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... 7.20 daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)....... 5.00 - Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. 6.00 ; Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ¥ Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches 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. ba Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) How About Selective Immigration? Edward C. Stokes, former governor of New Jer: sey, raised an interesting point the other day when he declared that a selective immigration plan should be instituted by the United States, in place of the present plan. He says: “I do not believe in unrestricted im- migration, but neither do I believe we should regu- late immigration by an arithmetical formula. What < wWe.need is selected immigration, based on quality, and nct quantity. We should be a little more friendly and a little more diplomatic, instead of insulting our friends.” : Therg}ifg merit in Mr. Stokes’ plan, but the in- i evitabi& question of its efficiency arises. Others +, have advocated placing of immigration officers in foreign ports to examine prospective immigrants and to ascertain, ag far as is possible, their fitness to,beccme American citizens. Such a plan would mean a vast outlay of money. It would also mean employment of a corpg of trained men who would “ not in any way be influenced in their choice of prospects. That is a pretty hard thing to get. The present plan, from its nature, must be cold- . blooded und mechanical to a great degree. It prob- * ably doesn’t tend to rouse any excessive amount of -, affection toward America, but it likely doesn’t stir * many to wrath. If Mr. Stokes’ plan could be suc- » cessfully carried out, it would be a wonderful thing. } In the meantime, the quota ‘system should work . well, even though a few undesirables may enter this country under it. It would be pretty hard for any immigration agent to weed out the undesirables ‘and probably just as many of them would come into the country under the selective system as come in“at present. j : j Without Set Boundaries & Limiting or the elimination of scientific and other titses to allow time for the daily teaching of American citizenship in the schools is the sugges: tion of a judge of the United States customs court. The judge says he would throw in the wastebas- ket geology, botany and biology if they crowded from the school curriculum American citizenship. That.seems to be putting it rather ‘strongly. We : certainty should ‘not deny the value’ instryction in good citizenship. It is a vital thing, and it de- serves a place in the schools. But botany, biology and other subjects have their value in a different kind of citizenship. It is a citizenship which is un- hampered by national boundaries. These subjects give us a kindred feeling with the past; they acquaint us with what has been and | ig ‘being accomplished by the great minds of all ; nations. To fit our students for the role of inter- national citizenship, which they will inevitably have to take along with their American citizenship, bot- any, biology, geology or the other standard sub- jects have a place, and an important one. It cer- tainly should be possible to make room on all school curricula for training in both types. ¥e Political Soothsayers e political season has begun in real earnest. Last week, the New York Republican State Com- mittee issued a bulletin which established this. Any Democrat nominated in 1928 will be beaten. If Smith is nominated, “he will be the most help- | * lessly defeated candidate in the history of the Dem- ocratic party.” The Democratas will be hopelessly rift in twain. These are some of the statements 4, the committee makes. * It is not hard to agree with some of the commit- tee’s statements, at least in substance, but their ~ positiveness is rather jarring. Just at present, it _, does look as if the Republicans are sure of gail + ing a majority for their candidate. What the next ~ year will bring is hard to tell. : - If Mr. Coolidge is renominated, the Republicans should wth, despité statements from the Democrats as positive as those of the committee that the northwest, split in two by the McNary-Haugen bill’: veto, will help in bringing his defeat. That's look- “ing at it from a Democratic viewpoint. To the * casual observer, this discontent and furor fails to 8 manifest itself. Mr. Coolidge seems to be fairly 4 satisfactory to the “section of agricultural discon- ; tent.” But what will happen if some other man ir nominataed is hard to say. *. That’s what makes these positive statements so : mirth-provoking. Memories of past predictions of *¢ absolute defeat for this man or that party run in . the minds of many. Most of us have learned to © maintain an attitude of detachment when it comes ete making too strong predictions. < - Bluff Still Works No, the value of honest-to-goodness American ® bluff has not passed. What an American young- * ster did the other night in New York harbor dem- onstrates that. : * Ensign Charles L. Duke of the coast guard was patrolling the harbor in a tiny launch. It was an black night. He noticed a boat creeping along i | had captured a cargo of alcohol valued at half a Published by the istes Tribune Company, | million dollars. |little judicious bravado turns the trick after allj else fails. It is an American characteristic, and| it is pleasant to see that it can have value. machine guns on them.” He had no machine guns,' of course, ' Single-handed, this youngster brought the boat in, When she was landed, a search revealed he He had kept six members of the| ‘ew at bay, with only three shots in his revolver. | Duke’s exploit shows us that the use of ~bluff) still is worth while. It is a characteristic we often} condone; but there are a good many times when a! But Is It Ingenuous? | On the surface, it is an ingenuous statement which a British spokesman at the Geneva naval parley makes. The fleets of Great Britain and the United States will never war against each other, he says, and he uses that as an argument for in- creased tonnage for his country. She needs it for protection of her commercial fleet and not for of- fensive purposes, his statement runs. “Never” is a long, long time, as many have dis- covered. These flat statements take on a tinge of doubt, for this reason, It is perfectly reasonable to believe that Britain actually does need these extra ships for the pur- pose the spokesman sets forth. It is possible she is justified in her requests. On the other hand, there is a country just across the Atlantic from her | which also has a flourishing merchant shipping | trade. If Britain needs protection, so do we. War with Britain is the temotest possible thing at the present time. It probably will be, for years to come. But to say that the interests of the United | States and her sister nation will never clash 1s | making a broad and rather dangerous statement. | We're good friends, now. What we will be 200 or; more years from now cannot be predicted. One | thing past experience has taught: naval parity is one of the surest ways of maintaining peace. | Editorial Comment | | When Rules Seem to Rigid (The New York Times) It must have come as a shock to every one to! read of the drowning of three young men within | sight of 1,200 prisoners at Sing Sing, restrained by armed force from any attempt to save them. For fifteen long minutes the thousand behind the gray walls watched the three in the rough waters of the Hudson. As the canoe turned over the prisoners made the instinctive movement toward rescue which would animate any normal group. Perhaps their eagerness was even greater because their position was not normal. But the guards stopped all that. Warden Lawes has said that they are not to be blamed. Perhaps not. They were under strict or- ders; they knew their duty and they did it. Still, one may question a definition of duty that permits of no recognition of a great emergency. guards are to be regarded as mere automatons, as the warden indicates, some speedier method of com- munication with a directing intelligence should employed. The routine of prison life may be worked out with mechanical precision, but it cannot be made perfect. Accidents to the machinery are certain to occur when the wheels and cogs are human beings. At such times it is of the utmost importance ta strike contact with common sense and lively judg- ment. “There was no boat to be had.” Not long ago a convict who attempted to escape pretended to fall into the river. At that time it should have oc- curred to’ someone in authority that a boat may come in handy wherever there is deep water and the possibility of drownings. The prisoners were willing to take a chance at a rescue without a boat,! and while some of them may have seen also + chance for escape, it was a risk worth taking if even one of the boys could have been saved. Direct Buying of Livestock (St. Paul Dispatch) R. C. Ashby, assistant chief of livestock market- ing at the University of Ilinois, informed the Amer- ican Cooperative Institute Monday that automobile trucks have killed cooperative shipping associations in 15 Hlinois counties, The statement concerns every northwest farmer who is interested in cooperative marketing of live- stock. The automobile truck is the instrument tha: has developed direct purchases of livestock by packers from the farmers on the farm. The growth of the practice is one of the outstanding and serious developments in the livestock business, and it is too early to say what its final results will be. The first perceptible results are advantageous. The effort required of the farmer in marketing his livestock is reduced. But the Ashby statement in- dicates that there are other factors of a more per- manent nature less pleasing to the producer. The death of the. cooperative marketing as$ociations is serious in itself. But it reflects a blow at the open market, a facility which brings the packers into) the most direct competition for the farmers’ live- stock. The subject is worthy of painstaking study by marketing expert: Mr. Ashby’s statement shows. To the Credit of Newspapers (Cincinnati Times-Star) It is denied by some, and asserted by others, that the religious issue greatly affected the recent may- oral ‘election in Baltimore. The Catholic Review denies that religion had an important bearing on the result. Some Protestants, who deplore the pro- jection of religion into politics,‘admit that the re- ligious issue was present. . We are not sufficiently familiar with the Balti- more situation to agree with either view.| But there is no question that the issue is present in many minds throughout the country. The political am- bition of Al Smith has- caused latent fires to glow more brightly. However, the matter has been handled so‘ well in magazines and newspapers that the issue has been discussed in dignified and calm manner. First came the excellent open letter by Charles C. Marshall to Al Smith, and then Al Smith's If the | *he found that she had slept nearly ‘had so terrified her the night before, " MONDAY: SUL¥14/2997 | So Many Talented Children She Doesn’t Know What to Do | . Editor's Note: This is Chap- ter 83 of the series of articles written by an ex-soldier who 1s revisiting France asa spondent for The Tribune. corre- CHAPTER LXXXIIE Iranie Dumanchin has 4 story of liant huntsman of the ALE. F, it he loves to tell. extraordinary nimrod was a colonel of infantry, stationed at Courcelles, near Langres, France, and the sad part is that Iranie has forgotten his name. Anyway, this colonel, early in 1919, jiscovered that the semi-mountainous gion was inhabited by wild boars, and decided to indulge in a bit of the sport that has been famous through the ages. So he secured a rifle, asked Iranie to be his guide and put 160 of his private soldiers on the de- The attack was scheduled for m. and the plan. of operatio: pped out by the colonel out with soldierty prect ‘The Feast t a a. carrie The colonel picked out an emihehce and instructed his 150 helpers to dash through the forest, beati about with clubs and uttering wil ls, Their drive Was to focus on location. The pi worked per- The men came on, pre bagee from all points of he compass. The colonel, very coo! and calm, stood with his gun in post- tion, As the circle of soldiers mar- nt a bigger practice. Besides that, There. are’ 6000, more doctors in ‘And, perhaps, a couple of thou- jay the same ‘thing. sand of them sa) TUBERT SWAN. | Service BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygela, the Health Magazine The most recent bulletin issued by the National ‘Tuberculosis association concerns the type of employment to be followed by people with tuber- culosis, after they have recovered form the disease, or while it is in an arrested state. When the person leaves the hon- pital or the sunitarium he must ad- just himself mentally and physically to the changed conditions of life. In the sanitarium he has been able to rest most of the time, but once in the routine of daily life outside the walls of the institution, the domin- ant note of his existence is work. He has not been allowed to leave the | dence is a door or two off their beat.'sheltering walls of the institution Finally locating the right dealer, I until his. ropustn his color, and learn that in addition to the price|weight have convinced the authorities ! of the newspaper | must pay 26 cents'that he will be able to -sustain the ith for delivery service fee. In}burdens of normal existence. dition, I later discover, that unless probably will appear I give the boy a tip now and then the]ordinary ubservers _m healthy | delivery serviee is most irregular. |than most of the people around him crisis ietod who have never suffered with tuber- This attitude of “take it or leave culosis. They will naturally expect | it” is extremely general. It took mejmuch of him, and he probably will three weeks and four milk compan-|try to meet their expectations. This ies to get a bottle of milk delivered|is a serious error. On the other. at my. door of mornings. The first}hand, the patient may still fear his’ company I dealt with told me flatly|disease and. be. confirmed in habits they could not deliver before 9jof rest so that any type of work wiil o’clock because the man on my reute [seem burdensome to him. This at didn’t get there .béfore that, and!tude of mind also requires read, they didn’t intend to change mat-,ment: ters. | ‘the patient who comes back to It is equally true that the laun- ne: as is more at the mercy of those with whom he deals. A newcomer invariably calls up one of the newspapers and asks to have a paper delivered at hi He is: astonished to find th is no such thing os a néwspaper | delivery system and, if he wished a paper, he will have to see some news stand in his neighborhood where such things are attended to. I personally have gone to six stan only to find that my place of re! After two doctors and a nurse had: eyes and his voice and his hands assured her that she could not see! caressed her, as if he could not get Cherry that night, and that there! gh of her, could not tell her in was no immediate danger, although} enougn ways that he loved her. Cherry was still unconscious, Faith She found, when she was ready to permitted her husband to take her} leave for the hospital with Bob, that home-and put her to bed. She be-| Jim Lane had already gone to pay lieved that she could not possibly go) his respects to his first grandchild, to sieep, but when Bob awakened her| and she was glad of the opportunity by accidentally dropping a hair brush|to be alone a little longer with her husband in his loverlike mood. It was a heavenly day in late June, a steady breeze tempering the heat of the sun. “Oh, it’s nice to be matried!” Faith e six hours, - “Have you heard from the hospi- to all talz’ she demanded feurtully, her face red with shame that she had been able to sleep while Cherry's Iffe| spoke suddenly, her breast rising on was in danger. *'la wave of exultation, “I love you, Bob strode to the bed and smiled| B down upon her, ‘almost gaily. Color had returned to his tanned cheeks and his eyes were bright blue again —not that fearsome slate-gray which “And T love you, beautiful!” he as- cured her, his hand closing tightly over hers, his blue eyes very soft with emotion. Te was, in ‘that gentle mood) that i ‘they arrived ut the hospital, to be aeighe nO i cidby the ‘head nurse, ‘pattering swiftly down the corridor on her noiseless rubber heels, that Cherry and her baby were awaiting them, Jim Lane had come, adored, and gone, she told them, and Cherry could see them for ten whole minutes, if they took care not to excite her. Faith paused in the threshold of herssister's room, trying. to realize that beyond that ‘closed door was a new life—Cherry's own baby—which would soon become one of the most important persons in the world, so |far as Faith Hathaway was con- cerned. Even then she felt. some premonition of what the child was to mean to her. TOMORROW: goes for the tailor, the laundry, theja long period ii itari 4 news-dealer and the dressmaker. turns to dally life, he should: have ———_ ; : + opportunity for frequent medical con- [IN NEW YORK | ey Pee oe ely eg | her hair bobbed by any-|that the effects of work on the fe 1 a reputation, milady must|Patient may be regularly determined call up and. make. appotntments,|and his activities regulated in. ac- sometimes weeks in advance. I know|cordance with these measurements, a dentist who can make an appoint-|It is a mistake to go along without ment only a month ahead. control, for the disease is insidious This morning a doctor I know was|and relapse may set. in and gain con- telling me: “I could go out now andjtrol before the patient realizes his make a dozen calls, but I keep office | difficulty, ‘hours from 2 until 6. I've got to - a [Old Masters J] get some rest and recreation. I “wurenns....|1 quake not at the thunder’ ks By Williams), i tremble’ not at’ news of wart could make $100 a day more in the mornings alone, but I’ve got all the swound not at the news of wrack; I shrink not at a blazing star; practice I need and want, 1 don’t fear no loss, I hope envy none, see a th telephonef at si and they told me Gherry*was-eoh+ scious and reacting normally. Placky little devil! One of her two special nurses answered the phone and said Cherry had begun to issue orders already. Doesn't like the placing of the turniture or the color of the rug, or something. Now smile, hon- ey! Everything's all right!” Faith closed ner eyes over sudden tears, and a shudder of relief relaxed her | fear-rigyd body. ‘“\\nd—the by 7" she whispered, pressing. Bob’s hard against her cheek. “Little but loud, they tell Ning its off right now for a sight of its Aunt Faith. We're going over to the hos- ordinary life after a long period in dry and’ tatlo little at-{a sanitarium must have work that tention to the desires of customers.|will be sufficient to provide a living! Outside the big established -stores,{for himself and perhaps for a fum- few concerns depend on regularjily, but which will not bring about w York is so large that;2 physical breakdown due to excess snes can rely on transient jof exertion, Whenever possible the | trade and tell individuals to take it|patient should try to return to his or leave’ it. They are well aware/old occupation, unless this has heen that if you are annoyed and go else-|such as to be directly associated with where you'll be met with pretty/the attack of his disease. If his much the same spirit, physical capacit; not up to what The large milk companies will tell|it was before his iil » the work you they have all the business they|m sometimes modified to meet can handle and you'll have to accept | hi their terms or go without. The same henever @ patient who has had pital—got a. nine-thirty appointment with your young niece and your sas- sy little sister, but you're going to have a three course breakfast before T let you out of bed, young woman,” She lay relaxed on her pillo smile quivering on her lips, her e: brimming with tears, her heart swell. erry's baby. New York, July 11—“You can have New. York!” remarked my friend from, Texa: “But I like a place where. you can get your pants back from the presser without waiting a week and can be sure of ~~ ing with love for the whole world while Bob gossiped with Mrs. Lundy in the pretty blue-and-white kitchen, overseeing preparation of her tray And later, as he sat on the edge Hof the bed while she ate hungrily afi 'the delicious breakfast he had! where servic brought her, she wondered how she! pressién’ is. th had ever doubted him, had even felt! last word in efficien that he did not truly love her. His|no place where the a OUT OUR WAY _ OH DONT ( sTHER dust FoR MEE-EE. LET TH NeIGHBor- HOOD ENUOY THEMSELWES. TLL BEAT ‘EM TO IT. SOME NIGHT AND GET | TH THRILL OF MY LIFE .* our"Taundry within-a d Manhattan is certainly’ hard-boil concerned, The im- New York has the but there is rage person OH HERB, Witt You PLEASE GET THRU WITH THE PAPER AS ,QvICKLy AS PossiBLE — “BEFORE WE HAVE A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN In THE FAMILY. not in, dind: in. neither want, nor yet abound— Enou, ft content is crowned. Ivester: A Contented AMind ?————___—__________» Commander Byrd reports he found & lot of fog over. nd. Was ‘it see gold’s dro; 3 I see e’en Midas gape for more; fog, or smo! | an : \ A ed isa thin lady in g ang We've decided that, these trans- atlantic flights ' 1g tg i” ‘Were all propagands' Now ‘that Ambassador Hi is home, he probably will inquiries about whether or not really did refuse cham- eae 4 ing for a divorce re at we f whether or not she po Fe ye the cam : peers ‘PRIVATE FRANCES? | which is showing at the Eltinge PAUL; ADAMS © MA toes rowed the boars began to scurry past and the colonel knocked off six in a period of less than ten mtnuzes, It was _a tremendously successful shoot. When the official barraye was spent, the men swept on up, picked up the careasses and the returned. That night the of- mess was a feast. The next day the word ‘spread around with the result that many of the soldiers who had participaied in the sanguinary drive shouldered their pieces and went out to get a few wild boar chops for themseives. The Chase Is Ended almost immediately, typewriters at headquarters began to click and or- derlies rushed around to the various billets with copies of an order which ‘they placed in conspicuous places., The order read: To Company Commanders: “Complaints have been made by the mayor of Courcelles about Amer- ican soldiers hunting in the viein- ity with no regard for French Hunt- img Regulations. Request that here- after no sojdier be permitted, tp hunt except by permission from the mayor and then accompanied by French civilians.” \ Yranie Dumanchin says the colo- nel's hunting parties never were in- terfered with after that. Tomorrow Charlot Keynard’s Probiem, Justajingle They started rowing ‘cross the sea, ‘Twas just to win a bet. The heat tipped over., Then ane sald “I think our plan's, all,“wet.” \~ Daily Health \l* 23 The Movie CAPITOL J. Farrell MacDonald and Arthur Housman, two of the screen’s most po} i ve prominent roles in “Love: Make's Em Wild,” at the Capitol theatre tonight, Monday, and Tuesday. Chief romantic roles were as- on to Johnny Harron and Sally Phipps. Others in the strong supnorting cast. include Ben Bard, Natalie Kingston, Albert Gran, Florence Gilbert, Noah Young and William Davidson. . This is a screen version of Flor-, ence Ryerson’s hilarious play, “Willie the Worm,” which con- vulsed Broadway. 4 Adaptation is by Harold Shu- MacDonald and Housman are at. their best in» “Love Makes 'Em Wild,” according to metropolitan critics. MacDonald, it will be recalled, leaped into fame overnight by his portrayal. of Corporal Casey in Fox films “The Iron Horse.” Housman will be remembered for his hilarious antics in “Whisper- ing Wires,” and numerous other production: ELTINGE THEATRE When a ¢! ing little Venetian madeap,. vivacious and -impulsive, is thrown by chance into the compuny, of a. romantic artist from America and neither cares to be deaf to the lure of adventure, ing is certain to such a combination excitement for a 1 stance Talmadge's fact, ough time in Con- sparkling 1 comedy drama, “Venus of Venice, to- night and Tuesday. “Venus of Ve the story in which Constance excels, is the portrayal of alias the “Water Rat,” the hoydenii e gypsy whose capacity for mis- chief seems to be a limitless quan- ity. 3 The role of, the lotta’ addiction to thievery surprising complications, prov interesting one for Antonio Moreno, type of ‘almadge lotta.” iN Featured on the vaudeville bill at * the Palace theatre, Mandan, Tuesday evening is Night in Spain” presented by the Royal Tropical tring Band, a recent importation from Spain. Their music with song . and dance numbers makes ideal en- tertainment. A number of novelties presented together with a nice stage setting and beautiful costumes. Lieut. Eldridge brings novelty in his sand pictures and with the addi- tion of a pleasing line of patter en- tertains his audience exceptionally well. “Why Walk” gives Day &/Rol- lins an opportunity to put..on a comedy sketch with the aia: oor} ancient one lung motoxeycle. Simpson & likable chap who does blackface singing and comedy 4 ‘The Aerial Flowers are man and OB ured onthe screen in story of the North woods. = lerrick have But their ideas were wrong. Fat, ' “