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emnenegeeg ancaN Nee gam mbm PAGE FOUR ~~ The Bismarck Tribune An Independent News) ir THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. Db, and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann...... .+»»President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance as the horse doctor. The dentist then had to apol- ogize for his calling. He was browbeaten by the ordinary run of pill doctors, he could not gain ad- |mittance to the semi-sacred gatherings of the coun- ‘ty medical associations, and his existence was sorry one indeed. Of late years the trade has been picking up. The | Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teach. ling now reports that there is one dentist to every |1,750 or so possible patients, while run-of-the-mine slid by carrier, per year ..... $7.20 | physicians number one to every 760 potential cus- a ty’ mall hat soap (in Bismarck). 7.20' tomers, and the percentages are gradually becom- 5 " i (in state ‘outside Bismarck)............. 6.00/in& more nearly equal. | mail, outside of North ot 6.00! ‘The pioneer attitude towards tooth carpentry was Daily by lember Audit Bureau of Circul: {more or less mechanical. You waited till you had |a toothache, and then went in to suffer. You wait- The Associated Press is exclusively entitled tojed till your teeth broke down, and then you went fn use for republication of all news dispatches |to the shop for repairs—bridgework, shoring, ecaf- oe ll ve ule Seer ee crore in this Asia bola) abutments, falsework, masonry or super- 5 local new: i | i i Published herein. All rights of republication of all 7t7ucture. Now. there is such a thing as preven- other matter herein are also reserved, jtive dentistry. You go to the dentist’s twice a ‘year and literally stop the toothache before it hap-| (Official City, State and County Newsp: pens. sane The big gain in prestige for dentistry has come; Labor and a Third Party {through the discovery that all sorts of maladies are Hugh Frayne, general organizer of the American/traceable to bad teeth. Kidney trouble, rheuma- Federation of Labor, spoke sfrongly and without 'tism, heart failure—these and other maladies ap- japossibility of misunderstanding in New York last| parently in no way related to the mouth, were jyeek. The subject of his speech is one which has|traced to tooth decay, and with this discovery, the EBeen argued by many. It answers the questions of high hat pill doctor found that it was necessary for "politicians. ‘him to call dentists in consultation. ‘Frayne said this: | The natural corollary to this is that the dentist | “The American Federation of Labor is definitely |has had to become more than a carpenter with some | @ppoked to any third party movement and is de- | knowledge of sapping, mining, masonry and gen- ~ termined never to surrender its independence to the | eral blacksmithing. He must now go to college,| Politicians of any group., We disugree with the/and not just serve an apprenticeship, He must | arguments made by those who are demanding that | know anatomy, and he must know materia medica. ‘a political labor party be formed by organized te-4 Anesthetics and the X-ray are now part of his tool-| ; bar of America and who say that until such a party |kit.""Where once he was a mere artisan, he is! * gé that existing in Great Britain is developed here | now a professtonatman who can hold his own with Member of The Associated Press 7 ‘of this country never will be success-| ee a: a, eH Seodin be grateful and pleased at this sound) statément. It tells the politicians conclusively that Sorgenized labor will never be made their tool; it! satisfies the bulk of us that class feeling and class discrimination, such as exist in Great Britain to-: day, will never come into being here. | As to the “success” argument put forth by the advocates of a third party,’ there need be little said, Despite all the propaganda which may be put forth, the fact remains that the labor movement of America has been more successful, made greater progress and has greater accomplishments to its credit than have labor groups of any other country in the world. The high standard of living enjoyed by Americaa labor, as compared with other countries, illustrates this. The American Federation of Labor has been and will continue to be, ys Mr. Frayne, an eco- nomic organization. Politics absorb the interest of laborng men in gther countries. Their standards of living show thi So the federation is wise to commit itself firmly to its present program. As it stands, it is a great é benefit to the country. As a political unit, it might | be ‘different. John Drew Passes John Drew is dead. This noted actor, who for so many years has been a leading figure on the American stage, has taken his last curtain call. For him, the stage will ‘no longer be set, and new actors will speak his lines. But the memory of him will remain. Jahn Drew deserves a place in the dramatic hal" of fame, not only for his sterling ability as an actor, but also for the steadying influence which he exercised on the American stage. During these last frenzied years when the stage seemed to be turning topsy-turvy, Drew helped to set it right. Hifs work has been a guide to hosts of young actors. He died as an actor should, protesting that “this is only another part I am playing.” He will leave a gap in the American drama which will be hard to fill, but his memory will help to bring it. In his passing, America loses one of its finest gentle- men, one of its inspiring characters. Counting Noses in China Examine the average man’s ideas on the Ameri- can Revolution, and you will find that he believes all people in the colonies, moved by righteous in- dignation, united to drive the British from the American soil. As a matter of fact, nothing could bé further from the actual state of affairs. His- torians have long since proved that the participat- ing patriots made up a minority of the population. Another active minority had marked British sym- pathies, The remainder, which was probably the majority, wanted only law and order. The revolu- ‘tion, at all events, was won by a minority. Examine the average man’s ideas on the Chinese ‘Revolution, and you will find that he believes there are only two sides—the “southern” revolutionists Sand the “northern” imperialists. As a matter of fact, nothing could be further from the actual state Sof affairs. The two active belligerents in the rev- solution are minorities. The vast majority of mid- ‘dle-class Chinese, who are paying the piper and Sdoing all the suffering, want only law and order, “peace, and the privilege of doing business. The jrevolution will be won—or lost—by a minority. Birger and a Moral rae ‘of his acts for some time, has at last come to tria ithe Illinois gang | priced star heroine’s neck, of course, is entirely too : Charlie Birger, like many another criminal who succeeds in successfully avoiding the consequences r, who ruled Herrin with an siron hand, has been brought to justice, largely be- the pill rollers’ in any club of-the country. paar ice Ne Ren Two Kinds of Heroines Few people among the hundréd-snillions who go to the movies regularly ever heard ofKthel Hall until she was killed doubling for Dorothy Dwap in la wild west production the other day. A high-}: swan-like and precious to be risked in any such business as occupying an oarless boat adrift in a swift-running, boulder-adorned rapids, For this work the $50-a-week heroine is brought forward and given her chance. Ethel Hall was to be rescued by a valiant hero, Tom Mix, while the cameras were shooting at long range so that the double deception could not be pen- etrated. The rescue, however, failed to function until after the double had sustained a fractured skull. 3 But what, do you suppose, will be the emotions of hero Mix and heroine Dwan, whose names will be emblazoned in the cast of characters, as they THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, SUL¥42;11927- “f ERANCE 9.25% DAMS © mA boven This is Chap- ” News Views Editor's Not ter 84 of the written by an revisiting Fi spondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER LXXXIV a big and tremendously tm- ig the mental processes of Charlot nar¢| of Lachausee, France. What to know is whether or not the mem- bers uf the American Legion who Pin eit secenays, a:Rarivs dunt ike French style: Olive drab not exactly Charlot’s color. he had been called on for a sugg by the quartermaster’s corps he Cert have recommended a horizon pin’ Neither in the cut of a blouse of American make to his supreme lik- come over in September for their} ing. ir fits too hi conference in Paris are going to be in uniform. And the reason jor the question is obvious. Charlot, whose home is on the banks of Lac Lachausee which was just outside the American lines until a few days before the Armistice was signed, American army blouse. He acquired it in 1918 and has worn it every day since that time and just lately it bi showing signs of usage. if portant question that is puzal ” side of a,neat Charlot has proved that ‘no ‘Was ever prod! that h: staying qualities. And that that wins with him. Pick Now, if the membe: ican Legion come o' in uniform, Charlot figures he ought to be avle to pick up another blouse without much effort. If they don’t, he'll have to buy a French garment. Hence, he's a uszied as to what move to mi le won't move hastily, that’s sure, especially in o matter that involves the departur: ft francs. But "d like to have his question an- ewered. nd if any doughboy could cable him that he stands a good chance of picking * the replac ment in September, he’d be grat TOMORROW: The Private’s Sword. iB warment the same the puint mewhat frayed ig is all gone. Besid while it used to fit as well as the blouses of a second Neutenant, it’s a bit tight now and he can’t button the three bottom tons and still be as comfortable he likes to be. Needs New Coat Consequently, Charlot is in a quan- dary, which is a bad place to be in France or any other country, Within another year or so he will be forced to replace this faithful OD vestment with a new ¢ To go down to the She —$—_—___— BARBS Sir George Paish ‘tola the Bond lub of New York the world 'is‘fac- credit crisis. Won't they ever settle that old gag about who won the war? arrested for blowing a sute. holding down her cabaret job. | ty i A bridegroom sometimes couldn't stand it. “y The other day in a morning news- paper 1 noticed a couple of oe graphs about the death of ty Banks. She had developed tubercu- and death came in a sanitar- had t somehow, somehow she been struggting right slong . 5 a kid beautiful enough to win a prize frum the big parade of lovely professional beauties. But ‘that’s the way with Manhat- tan. Oniy those who rise to the top or slide to the bottom are noticed. The in-betweens just disagpear—or jie! id GILBERT SWAN. Daily Health rvi Three Ohio high school boys Were Good wine needs no dandelions. meets haps they were only cribbing. the bride with a vrays band, Do you soppose that all the Chi- nese really want, after all, is « little Peking? Raise your chin, but let cheeks alone. : on living; who never quite reach the top and never sink to the bottom; who never create a sensation and never get into a scandal. In Fifth Avenue, if you mention models, the chances are they'll say: “Oh, yes, you know of course th Alice Joyce started as a model, And see where she went—to the top of the movies, to a wealthy husband, and today there is no more chicly BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Kditor Journal of the American dressed woman the city. se Yes, and Mabel Normand . ghe| Medical Association and of Hygeia, went up and, then she RP See nit aieapueaual Ken- . A British judge has decided a wifet is worth 60 cents. The judge evi- dently never saw a woman on a shop- ping tour. ie. But when \he ‘was act#ally in: Faith took her niece and held the Cherry's room \in the hoSpital, all| small bundle to her heart. The tiny | thought of Cherry's bays was’ for| eyelids, in the rose-red little face, the moment wiped out/ of Faith’s| fluttered uncertainly, then a pair of | mind. She had eyes onlg for Cherry, | astonishingly large brown eyes gazed | and it was Bob’s warning pressure | dimly upward. | on her arm that prevgnted her from She has eyes just like yours, dar- the evangelict, says shi the saxophone away from clinch for the final fadeout; knowing, as they do, that one life was taken to make possible their em- brace? Editorial Comment Wild West and Wilder East (The Chicago Tribune). President Coolidge was entertained at Belle- fourche, S. D., with Mrs. Coolidge and given a parforama of the wild west where men are ‘men. We hope it is as wild as it seemed to be, with the gen- erous qualities which would fill a bad man full of lead and any worthy collection plate full of silver. We like the wild west of the west better than the frontier which has come eastward with the com- parative subsidence of the Wild Bills and the Kids and since any Indian can be a good Indian without being dead. The new east is undoubtedly tougher than the old west, but it lacks appeal. The champion hus- band shooter (concealed traps at unknown angles or at a hundred yards in a broken wooded country) will never satisfy the hunger for romance as did Little Nell of Bar Y X. Something of the better American life will be forever gone if the wild west ever ceases to be wild or loses the desire to be and reverts to mere masquerade of its former self with eastern dudes doing the masquerading. It is true that our eastern frontier has more imagination and it is more deadly, not only in its metropolitan as- pects, but in some of its sweet countryside. The machine guns and armored cars of the Herrin re- gion would give the Wild Bills no chance. They were all right in their environment, but they were not tough enough for the modern civilization of the east. Getting. the mails across the plains was epic, but it was nothing to getting a truck load down from Canada. Nevertheless, there was glamour in the west and these is none in the east. Or is it merely that we are too close to the one and remote from the other, seeing in the one something that never was and in the aqper too exactly what actually is? How Are Your Brakes? (Fargo Forzm) Mr. Frank Milhollan, a member of the North Da- kota Railroad Commission and chairman of the State Safety Council, calls attention to the fact that the commonwealth now has a law requiring both foct and hand brakes “in good working order” on all automobiles. f Prior to the taking effect if the new motor traf- fic law on July 1, the state had no statute making requirements as to brakes on automiobiles. The two of his compatriots “squawked.” Hi s trial offers occasion to point an Smoral. 1 he has held sway for so long Nesriy all indications. point to Birger being found ; chance, although a very smal! free. If he pays for his crime, fulfilling prediction made in old the matter of brakes. make oneself liable for severe punishment. It would be wel era and drivers to look their brakes over. + in new law, which designates uniform speed limits for the ‘state and makes specifications and requirements as to equipment of automobiles, is very specific in This is important, for faulty It has sometimes been said that a crim-|brakes are responsible for many automobile acci- escape the law just so long—but his time/dents. To drive without the foot end hand brakes will ‘come. So it has’ to Birger, even} in working order is to violate the law, and therefore, for automobile own- * good condition, they shuold be made so at once. Mi : n accident due to poorly-working brakes would be tim; if he goes free, his end will some time | costly in more ways than one. The him, even though it may be postponed a on’ ‘ally disappet _ Ai And please don’t forget’ Doris bi a i ‘on, or Eleanor Boardman, or Justine great medical problems | is tukin Johnson or Wanda Hawley | in large cities, but the disease is|the devil. And so it goes, But let me get to] still to be found in many rural com- which one. my story. running to the bed and crying out) ling,” Bob, hovering over thempas if her dismay and love.’ For the Bees he were the father, pointed out ea- that lay,.so tiny Qndet the smooth | ultingly. “ white counternane, would have wrung| “Isn't she—adorable?” Cherry tears from the eyes/of her worst] gasped, and Faith, tearing her guze enemy, The little heart-shaped face| from the miracle in her arms, saw was as pale and wan as, if Death, | that her sister's eyes were filled with which had hovered over her for}'tears and that ‘a faint flush of pride hours, had not made up his mind to} and happiness had stained the death- an her By : like pallor of her cheeks, “Faith? Bob?” Her’ voice was a] Bob went to her then, bending over ack | faint whisper, and ope tiny hand| her to lay his lips gently against her | Tulse, Oklahoma + wasn't. it?! fluttered upward from her breast,| forehead. Cherry’s hand went up|* -- and just disappedred. A most then dropped heavily, unable to sup-| weakly, passed uncertainly over. the | Unusual proceeding for a beauty: win- port its own weight. “Didn’t die,”| crisp waves of his chestnut hair, then | "¢?- i 4 ‘ she gasped, a gzin tugging feebly.at| dropped limply to the counverpane. | In 1925 it was Fay Lanphier! What the corners gf her ashen mouth.| “Sweet old Rob.” she gasped.|the dickens has happened to Fay? We are inspired to ask The imp next door still munities, particularly in the south-| has his. ern portions of the United States.| Dr. J. Lyell Clarke, one of the s tary engineers of the Illinois depart- ment of public health, finds much ill necessary to stamp out the breeding places surround- the villages of the southern part of that state. In the hill beeitoy an southern ilinois there were about three cases ¥ a1 by vers in for every 100 persons, ‘In | tories have just been. delive: in the river valleys and creek bottoms! New *Yorl just’ be malaria was found ‘to be highly en-|to welcome Chi berlin and All the nations are perfectly will- {ine to disarm—just as long as they don’t have to. & tie City will Pretty soon Atl probably be staging its annual “most beautiful bathing girl” stunt. Wha ever becdme of last year’s. winner? She touk her prize and went back to] Maybe the Bad Lands won't be so very bad when Republican nomina- tion time comes around. Three million new telephone Hi ing’ <r Levine. “Fooled "em.” “You'll let us—stay 2” There was one youngster who had! demic, averaging 16 cases for’ every Faith dropped to\her knees beside| “Stay? Of course, you blessed lit-| gone down from Philly, as. they call) 100 persons. ‘The worst infection was| | Well, Lieutenant Byrd hed to, de the bed, cuddling Cherry's limp hand| tle idiot! I'd like to'see you try tol Philadelphia here, But she was a) always found in the immediate vi-| something » “professional” . which means sales she was on the stage and had to be specially classified. She grabbed off the priez for professionals, And that was that, Oh, yes, her name was Katherine Banks. They called her Kitty. Well, that touch of success headed her for Broadway. She was o retty youngster of about with lots of dark hair, which has been trained to fall in curls and lots more of brown eyes. To all intents and pu dropped out of sight, lik other little peanties know the difference. appeariag with a chorus in a so-so supper club, unidentified, unrecog- nized. The prize professional beauty —yet—she was just one of the “in- betweens,” appearing in a pretty leave and take my nieee with you!” Bob scolded her, his voice husky with tears. And while Faith stood at the foot of the bed, Cherry's baby cradled in her arms, she saw her husband lay his lips upon her sister’s quivering moutn. saw Cherry's hands, electri- p Bob’s face and to held it against he For a brief moment, in which she seemed to b¢ spinning dizzily, her heart pierced by the rapier of jealous: Then Cherry's baby suddenly stretc! ed itself in a comically thorough yawn, It was then that Faith’s pas- sionxfor Cherry's child sprang full- grown into her heart, driving out, for the. moment at least, every torturing doubt of her sister and her hasbend:s TOMORKOW: Faith, the nurse. cinity of some lake, pond ca i al ‘ict + peer about a mile in wonder where the fish are going to every direction from Se peta, ome take theirs. 4 Lees deta ete Mussolini says his successor hasn't Country) club ponds must be.watch- been born. Perhaps not actually, but ed particularly, as these ‘artificial potentially he lives—and driv on pools have been found frequently to ‘eve road in the country on every be excellent breeding places for the Sunday afternoon. | mee malaria mosquito bites most! Grass widows aren't called that frequently at ae Ro ue ie fed - because they're green. sick person and then 3 a wel A new show in New York is called “5 infection. “The Bare Facts of 1927.” Som ut bathing beach against her own warm neck. “You are going to be all right. darling. Brave, wonderful little Cherry!” The special nursé, Miss Savage, whose broad, gentle, bespectacled face belied her name, had risen from her chair beside Cherry's bed, a fleecily wrapped little white Bundle cradled in her arms. ‘ “Look—at what I did!” Cherry's faint voice became little stronger with pride, as her tired eyes moved siowly to take in the nurse and the bundle. “Wanted—a girl. Wouldn't know how—to dress—a boy,” Faith laughed through her tears as she tipto around the bed, Bob's hand in hers, for the first sight of Cherry's baby. “It’s a fine little girl. Not quite five pounds, but she makes up in quulity what she lacks in quantity,” Miss Savage smiled, as she gently lifted the fold of blanket which cov- ered the midget face. In summer resorts where Pt tion is mixed, including people com- | Suppo: ing from all sorts of localities, the greater. $900,000 eae orth eth caned, to de-'for an apartment. Ought to be able he mosquitoes that carry the|to find a place for his saddle horse a pain organiam to ‘stock all,for that much, | ‘and ‘sluggish streams jety of fish that. lives on A New York doctor paid with tho var ‘Tt never rai but after you've “Oh, Cherry! Oh: Bob! She h | cheap joint and, so those who found , : washed your car. Bair gust “ike Cherry'st” Faith her there said, looking tiked and-un- |*"¢,larvae of the moedelie. | sstroi| (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Ine.) breath ecstatically. “Isn't she| New York, July 12.-—In Manhattan | well. * should include, seesrding sto, Claree w darling! Oh, I want to hold her!” . And with Cherry and’ Bob looking on, smiling at her, Bob with tears in his eyas, Cherry with a new light of mother-love dawning her wan face, OUT OUR WAY = t, 0, was that. The young- ster had been swallowed up by me- diocrity and she was getting sick over it. In order to make good she tried to break into a.musical show while By Williams they. a way of speaking in tefms of those who reached the top and those who reached the bottom. They keep forgetting about the peo. ple in ‘between—people who just the clearing of the edge: of willows, | cattails, At arp » in swim close to the: H ELTINGE THEATRE. ed on “the ay [Constance Talmadge willbe seen id toj al ht ,in The fish that has been foun H = “pal a ih he p tive in feeding on the “Venus mosquito larvae it min-| Moreno heading th rs, it The Movies | conn a. AGE CURLY, A LEATHER BELT On ‘EM, WELL UH- MP— we' RE ONIM “Two DAYS FROM HOME. | YES NES-LEATHER 16 LIKE. PLUM PuDDIND EM. WHY p1VE SEEN ‘EM TRY BY TH’ WAY is larvae is the little to) bryant affinis, also called the’ pla: . potbellied minnow. ‘This little fish Mi tages swims in the most shallow water’. phisto, Ratan ae devil, is that The Illinois state department re ‘ed by ‘émil Jan distine health rranging to send supplies nner i deena: CORA of these minnows to any: village a bs ished br capt . to any organization in the state that’ production, “Faust,” wi comes wishes ‘co-operate and will clean to the Eltinge for ‘ednesday. Jan- the banks in the mann eribed. |nings makes the evil one a ‘being ‘The draining: of small ponds. oF almost human in his every move, marshes and use of oil sprays; yet with a swiftness, a sleckness, ods suitable to areas where 4 devil; “that is. not in any it is riot necessary. to preserve the creature of this earth. — po id for dorarhsl re or for amuse-|"'g, ing Emil J in pent ee super production are Camilla Horn, ‘a: sereen “find” of the director, F. ‘W. Murnau (who made “The Last La ), Gosta Ekman, Sweden’s real actor, and Yvette Guilbert, distinguished French diseuse. CAPITOL |. Farrell MacDonald and Ai aeute are farniabing cea ts jues or. at the ig ike A theme. so as man, Or with such sorrow rife, tl n ‘Em. Fall, fell, thou withered lel! |." version of the story, “Will Auti sears not like ; ” ‘ would ‘Nor i suck Ie Howsri: | Worm.” | The vee comedians would wh y. hat ‘roles i whieh bid deg fomance ras ° ilon. e ce baa a REAT | Col ‘ahta “thle ® fos enviable track record ne Me varsity career, Com