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$ + done in the past. The fish in the sea, as the old The Bismarck Tribune| ‘i. ee tates THE on ee Cron pr vereten been caught. TATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Also, it is to be'noted that most of these elegant (Established 1873) r ty - stars of today were not born to their positions. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company,|They were picked from the mob which would eagerly Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at’ step into any empty shoes, and the elements of luck Swmarck as second class mail matter. | Mann..........President and Publisher Played no small part in their climb. They were $$. | given a chance, somewhere in the early days of theic Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | career, and on that gift rests much of their inflated “wily by carrier, per year ... $7.20 | fame. Others, given that chance or a similar one, :Jaily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) ; might do facia well, : a ‘sak by mail, per year, # in state outside Bismarck) see 6.00} a: Weabee “a ee enat Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota...... 6.00) Paris Refuses to Be Reno-ized _ lember Audit Bureau of Circulation Some years ago Americ: middle and wealthy Wise of The Amnuue P classes used to find Reno, Nev., the most important lember of The Associa‘ ress 1 i i ivore The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to| (vr ne mar. Tt was the city of easy divorces. the use for republication of .all news dispatches Gilded women went there, established a residence credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- in one of the hotels devoted to divorce-seckers, per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin | played bridge there for a few months, and then MON EET eno of all went gaily went back cast with a precious piece of | Paper—a divorce. Foreign Representatives Reno finally rebelled. There was dismay — in Hy G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Fifth Avenue and Park Lane. And then one bright acre bi qoETROIT | young thing, tired of her husband, found that Paris een eee: resge | was Paradise. It was easy to establish a legal resi- NEW york N= AUIS) See Ave. Bldg. |dence in Paris. The Paris courts were very lenient — *"|in the matter of divorces. Immediately the colony (Official City, State and County Newspa r) |of husband-shedders began to swarm the boulevards ‘4 ° | arid sip tea in the lounges of the swagger hotels. The Eighth Deadly Sin | But now there are signs that Paris refuses to be * With the divorce evil now established on such ajthe French Reno. The procureur of the republic} firm foundation that it merits the sobriquet of the) has issued a circular warning judges that French eighth deadly sin, some readjustment is bound to| divorce law should apply only to those who have a tome sooner or later in the correlated crime of ali-| real domicile in France and not to those who merely imony. There are, fortunately, a few innocent souls | rent a temporary lodging so as to procure a di- in the world who marry for love, but it is not hard | vorce between two ships, as it were. to seek and find people who marry for insuranc:| Here is a howling good chance to do big bus.- and people who marry for alimony. |ness if Latvia or Esthonia or Azirbaijan or some One factor which will do much to alter the status|of these cther newly constituted nations want to of alimony paying is the change which has come|get rich quick. : about in the independence of women. Divorced men} a argue, and with no small show of reason, that they | i He Knew Him When— f should not be required to pay alimony to childjes« | Tdol-8mashers have been busier than ever in the women who are perfectly able to support thent- recent years which have seen an increased popular selves. | interest in biography. You may read, for instance. } The situation in this matter has altered so much| i" some cf the most recent biographies of George from the situation that obtained ten or fifteen Washington, that he was rather @.eommon person, years ago that there have been several cases cit eas somewhat ‘illiterate and develd. aA real record in which disabl greatness. a aed their wives for cappOe etna eeands have "Against. such conceptions of Washington theré mony. In the most recent case of this kind to come| °° Many Lites ou perpape He abcde to notice, a Chicago bricklayer who was sued for| nificant is the characterization of him by Patrick flivorce by his wife, filed a petition that his wife, eld who sat with him in the Virginia House of if granted a divorce, be required to re kage =o a ‘i oe mony. The bricklayer in this case ial suffering Washington, said Henry, was, for solid in- from hernia and tuberculosis, while his wife, in ad- eee a sound judgment, the greatest man ition i 35 j .| in the assembly.’ ‘ ue Rdiay tree ee EME | Atlee all, Patrick Henry really knew the man— Not all cases are as involved as this, nor as clear-| 24 8@w him in action. a cut, but the existence of this and similar suits in- dicates that the day is not far distant when the 8, Precedents of alimony paying will have to be re- Editorial Comment vised to meet changing conditions in society. One other Chicago case calls attention to an- Good News For the Northwest . othe® phase of the alimony evil. In this second (Minneapolis Tribune) ‘ case, a divorced dentist, paying alimony to his firs:| Had government meteorologists actually “manu- shas married again, and has in his second ven- | factured” the weather of the past few days accord- ture apparently found happiness. His first wife is|img to farmer specifications, they could scarcely childless, but continues to draw alimony from her| have done a better job of it. There have been rain: former mate. Wife No. 2 objects, and has issued where rains were needed and good hot “growing’ an ultimatum: rather than permit her husband to weather where grains had shown a tendency to be Pay further alimony she will have him go to jail.|>ackward. The elements have adjusted themselves She has organized an anti-alimony leagye and is|#t@ciously to the northwest’s desires, and the crop attempting to rally to her standard the thousands | Utlook, as a result, remains uniformly excellent. of husbands who labor and work to earn the mil-| _OPtimism which is based on first-hand observa- ance the ledgers of matrimonial profit and loss. ing the northwest. There is common agreement a re that almost ideal weather is favoring crop growth | particularly lifelike little doll, chosen Our Naval Weakness in this territory, and that an unusually generous Discussion of naval armament limitation at Ge-| grain harvest impends. Corn in Minnesota and the neya has had one notable effect. It has enlight-| Dakotas, delayed earlier in the season by cold, eried” many Americans who once believed that our damp weather, is responding valiantly to the high- navy enjoyed a real 5-5-3 parity under the Wash-|er temperatures. Small grains are flourishing ington treaty, as to our actual disparity. It has generally throughout the area covered by the re- awakened many to.a realization of our weakness| port. Black rust is reported making small head- and to a realization that the only cure for this sit- way in the grain fields, and there is good reason to uation will be by an energetic building program | believe that it will not’ constitute a serious problem and not by the complacency of the other powers,|in 1927. Conditions have been excellent for early which by virtue of their new construction have put wheat; hayfields and pastures are described as lux- us in a position of marked inferiority. uriant; abundant grasses are making for healthy, It is in the cruiser class that we are so out- | well-fed livestock. classed. Under the terms of the former treaty the| Altogether Minnesota and the northwest have cruisers were unlimited. Being more farsighted| good reason for anticipating a bumper season. Not than we, Great Britain and Japan built many of|every year does the report come from Minnesota them, while we did virtually fhothing in that line.| that “all crops are progressing rapidly”; or from Today we find that these two other nations have| North Dakota that “conditions on farms could not plenty of cruisers. Now, when we talk disarma- | be better”; or from South Dakota thet the crop out- ment, they are not willing to scrap all this new|look “is the best in 15 years.” It is gratifying to construction and it is easy to understand their at-|know that the weather has been moulded so excel- titude. It will be necessary for us to build, not|jently to the farmers’ needs; and more than that, it for them to cease building, in order for the United| ix gratifying to know that the northwest, because States to assume a real 5-5-3 parity in regard to| it is embracing the principles ‘of_diyersification, is cruisers. not wholly dependent on the weatheg, or on any one Present indications, therefore, are that the con-|crop, for its farm prosperity. In its herds struction of many cruisers by the United States in/ the northwest has a constant, dependable source of the very near future is an unavoidable result if we! wealth; when grains respond to the blandishments are to stick to the 5-5-3 principle, and there seems) of nature, as they are responding in 1927, the north- moreason at present to‘depart from it. Having so| west is doubly rich. The new agriculture, fortu- far maintained a navy it would be folly indeed to nately, is not a serf of the weather gods. retire from the i Sen ge aan ee ai bala sea as far as active armaments are Where, Cent ral Wins As long as private citizens need policemen on the és aul PEP streets to guarantee to some extent their safety,| The Workmen's Compensation Fos of , Nees just so long will the United States need modern | Dakota seems to be constantly in troul gk the warships upon the seven seas to protect our in-| Young ladies of the state. Last spring it allo terests. compensation to a school-teacher who was. frozen when starting a fire in the school stove, and re- Movie Strike Potentialities fused it to another who had her knees frozen on It would. be intevesting to see just what would| the way to school, charging the bite to silk stock- happen should some of the enormously overpaid] ings. ‘ and vastly overrated movie stars rise up on the hind| The present occasion is one in which the board legs of their temperament and refuse to take the|refused compensation to a telephone central girl salary cuts which the movie magnates have just|who claimed injury to her hearing, in buzzing and put into effect. A star strike would be something| ringing noises in her ears, due to the use of a tele- that would provide the newspapers with many at- phone head set. She appealed to the court and tractive and mesty pictures, headlines, and columns,/the district court upheld her. The board appealed furnish ordinary folk light conversation that|to the supreme court and this week the highes. consume many hours which otherwise might|court upholds the central girl’s claim and orders . have to be put in dull work such as can be had any compensation paid to her. superabundance. The circumstances in North Dakota. differ from movies, how-ithose in Minnesota. There the state is the insur: » there are|ance company and the board is the insurance agen- brought |cy, collecting premiums and:paying losses. No in- -|dividual or private indemnity company., operates without the consent of the state or the board. Hence or the rather dictatorial at times intervenes to prevent @ leave-over Tene tab socialistic well, mainly in the state. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Robinson Crusoe ‘Byck P & FRANCE 9.2% This. is Chap- ries of articles written by an ex: revisiting France spondent for The tT CHAPTER LXXXV It is possible that there may have been some funnier outfits in the grand guerre but Ambulance Com- pany No. 339 of the 310th Sanitary Train of the ‘80th Division, must at least come close to winning This was an eniisted rave, fearless boys who refused to wait for the draft: lected in 1917 and shipped to Krance in August, 1918, It was scheduled to take part in the Metz drive and equipped ‘with hatchets were all set for the great en the armistice caught them in Bois L’Evenque. the members, Ex; Socially, this ‘outfit was supreme. In spite of 9 o'clock closing orders no worth-while place remained un- In Cosnesur-Loire, Pouilly, and later on in Cote and down in the LeMans " the riots were perfect. The officers— all medicoes--were agreeabl snuff-up soldiers, and things were Along in March, 1919, the 27 regu+ lation ambulances were received, trifle late for duty, but, nevertheless, handy. And the gang, in which there were many great boys, continued in an even stronger tone. Stories of this outfit were innum- » Perhaps, which frable but the bei illustrates the true character, con- WEDNESDAY, JUTAY! £8) 1989 17 cerned the morning in April, 1919, when the boys arrived in Brest. It so happened that they came in on the day Josephus Daniel eretary of the navy, dropped ove: a visit. ‘The company was marching up the hill towerd Pontanesen, slogging lee § in route step laden with the trophies of the chase when a flock of official blue cara with many gold stars, whizzed by. Suddenly, one stopped. He i? An officer jumped out— solonel, or in by a corporal. Farrather Ue lieutenan: he demanded, angri “And what the h— kind of an out- fit do you call this?” At the time the inquiring officer pointed to a private in one of the ds. And, believe it or not, that sword buckled to his oelt, & venir he had picked up on one of his raids. The lieutenant. in charge stut- tered an explanation, or tried to, rather, but the irate officer cut him ‘March ‘em at attention,” he yelled; “and tell that private to throw that sword in the creek.” The orders were executed. And the private, who could see no reason why he shouldn't sport a sword along with the hatchet he had catried through the war, went on kitchen police for two weeks before the out- it, after a daily bath at the Ponten- ezan delouser, drove home in some fringed-topped surries and was demv- bilized. TOMORROW: Signs of the A. E. F. « ‘ es | Daily Health Service . BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Med- ical Association and of Hygela, the Health Magazine more study is placed hy cancer, the more it becom: ent that until recent time tistics have been unreliable, In mos I have it |¢F hospitals post-mortem examina- tions are made on a girl companion,or two. from M. MeIntyre, of the Cunard] unusual conditions, line, that 140,000 female passengers | ble by fi were carried on their boats last sea-| termine exactly the cause and extent son, this being something like 65]0f various afflictions that may be per cent of the total. ersons dying of Pind it is possi- it-hand investigation to de- Tey Her baby was exuctly three weekg baby, spoil it and her, j old when Cherry came home from the hospital. Ten-year-old :Jpy, at the suggestion of Dr. Atkim had been concerned about her health, had been packed off, jubilant, ‘to a camp in the mountains. Place of her bed in Cherry’s room stood a beautiful little crib, painted a pale green, with tiny clusters of tien ‘recently pre- laymond Pearl and Agnes L. Bacon of the statistical di S| partment of the Johns Honkins Ho: found that some form The ultra-modern ship makes elab- cater to milad; On board the new French \liner He de France, which recently | 5: spoiled Cherry flugbed@.but’ with Cherry the lids droopine with @ver h€r™golden eyes, she I ce lignant tumor existed in ap- iden voyage, are “side-| proximately 12.2 per cent of 6670 ic most | persons whose bodies were examined e x In other words, one ing home it becomes possible to|out of every &2 persons in this group a malignant tumor at death. found that malign all kinds tend to occur a little‘more es, 4) frequently among women than among pee |. At The Movi —_—_—_—_— wanted the baby) It had been a pos- itive agony to give the child back to the nurge at the hospital. The arms ached in inessand almost teri for the. feel of the ti » at with the infant he red-gold floss Jong enough to ing engl, Faith felt all the shopping neglect- also has a built-in pla; ground for children that includ merry-go-round, walk cafes” to give the atmosphere Cherry surveyed her changed room with shining, golden eyes, then grin ned a little ruefully at Faith “f 1 hat in the world I’m going to do with this little red-head- It she cries during perfectly helpless. ‘the baby didn't sleep with n en. ys According to government figures he Paris streets and the “larg-|for this district, the “percentage of ing room afloat,” which ac-jdeaths from cancer to all deaths is here is 8} approximately twice as great in white urch {men asin colored men. Paintings of the Paris ultra-modern} of the: Metropolitan Life Insurance Twin beds| company confirm this view and Bal- nd Mesner timore invegtigators. believe. that was alr show an enchan an almost. fier all she could do to keep fr ing the baby from its mot! was passionately grateful to for her helplessness, But there:was|give into her own hands the sole infant, during the nights Heast. There was: only ft jf regard to Bob. Of course he would not like it just at first—h ing the baby in their hitherto s: private bedroom, the only privacy y had managed to keep after the arrival ofthe family—but he would get used to it; he’ would love the baby, too, already loved it with jr dulgent amusement. job, with rather a grim face, carried the crib from ed brat of mine church chapel artists decorate thé room: take the place of berths and gold decorate the {is a waterway along Ww! along with fotty-'leven other cham pion little squealers. no chance of my getting somebod: Mi that hair of hers!” 1 She was holding nee on i Z fi i i i -}lap, and to Faith, i it! lions of dollars now paid over the counter to bal-| tion runs riot through the reports of railroads serv. iP, and ot sien “ Leet ibie “ike girl playing with a doll—a h alignant growths in the negro may be rowed and a shooting gallery to| indicate a lower: susceptibility that keep wives in practice in case thev|is of race origin and that reflects a rhear reports of hubby’s goings on) real biologic di! when they return from abroad. There] ored from white. is a room done in marble from the All lighting is indirect. tiation of col+ On the other hand, it was found through post-mortems that colored persons, with mal This is but a sample of the future/to die at an earlier of, traveling. Comfort and grandeur|erage, than do white heketofore unknown upon the sea is it tumors, tend because of its copper-and-gold fluff It was also found tl m going to keep Faith decided s jays as though in a float- There are those who still}/there are degrees of variations in insist on the sense of really beinzjages of persons at sea and haunt the small their atmosphere. il you're strong: | hi TOMORROW: The_ baby brings complications into Cherry's life. (Copyright, 192’ 1 ships for} nant gro f7— BARBS 1 with as little |® —————_# FOREIGN ACES OVER YANK HOPS, Have those boys been carrying some- thing overseas besid “II feel so helpless. Did you ever see a more beautiful baby in all your life? in is getting to be I do believe she’s going to have a complexion just like t, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) a | IN NEW YORK | —_—_______—__~+ —That partic- New York is eluttered with peren- jal_ travelers. There men who go abroad preparation as salesmen who jump between Chicago and Manhattan. And there are employes of certain as white as milk. New York, July 13. ays @ headline.) gh, -| ular hollow-square. the Wall Street dis! ropean passports are gins to resemble Broadway on the ight of a big winter premier. line forms on the right and keeps the clerks exceeding the pen and ink speed limit until after closing time. women apparently ,make up the majority of those who plod European pavements during the jurely this becomes . She taps the four ‘corners of the globe alone, or with ones of the! world through ship con- ‘ ( On the Leviathan Ahere is a chief aren't you, ou precious? h called Bob from the living room, where he was browsing through the Sunday paper, move the crib from Cherry’s room to he gave her one long, level look, then shrugged his should- It was a look that said words, “I might have You're going to be this baby’s slave, spare Cherrf all the bother and worry of raising her OUT OU. La are so many more: divorces in Holly- Snes ed tas meen is that they marry oftener out For most any polit days we recommend the sage advi of Bernt Balchen;..who piloted the veda ship. He seems to know his fog. handled’ them by the thou- sands, seen ir shipboard roma come \and go,Avatched them in them his frjends. GILBERT SWAN. RAWilliam ALF PAST EIGHT. A. DO You Hi ME ?, expected this. Nordic supremacy! The three bo; who got into the finals of th tional marble contest at Atlantic were Thaddeus vich and Julius Wiczalkoski. New York traction interests paid $200,000 for publicity. Barnum would e were alive to- lag, Joe Medvido- 7 NEL SIR-WE PUT ALLT WOMEN AND CHILOREN INTO TH! ZZ Pare aren «abate AND. LEFT” ZAMAN WITH STRICT ORDERS “TO BLOW IT UP IF TH INDIANS BROKE//Z\, have passed since he uttered his sage | Old Masters | ‘Tis time this heart should be un- it hath ceased to mov Yet, though T caneat be belo the United States is esti 2 4 ites is’ estimated at Da: comes [<Tustajingle | ing with the pup. they were married, she says, but parted forthwith. St. Lor ‘We stem to be as pop lar as ever. The Chamber of Co merce is getting 300 letters daily by ie mail in response to its offer of ictures of Lindy and the Spirit New York—Tony Lazzeri of the | Yanks .is to show ‘he can be a whole ball team by hi if, Fans are to honor him in a league game in Sep- terhber and he is to play a different | Position each of the nine innings. New York—A de luxe stowaway is getting a fine view of England from a gaol window. Daniel David Klein swam in the pool, ate in the first lass dining room and slept in bath- rooms of the Majestic for three days then the liner ar- 3. coming back in ‘in room. _o ks CAPITOL THEATRE “The Sap,” William A. Grew's play in’ which Raymond Hitchcock seored a hit during a long New York run, and which, in the hands of other stage companies, has since been repeating its triumphs ‘the country, has’ been picturized and “th open today at the Capitol Thea- ree ‘i i over The part which Hitchcock played, and which Edward Everett Horton took during a notable run at the Majestic Theatre, Los Angeles, is played by Kenneth Ha: jan.” “Wienie” Duke, the-oddly humor- ous little drug store — proprietor, featuring Kenneth Harlan, is the first straight character part which Heinie Conklin has enacted in ten years of moving picture experience. Although he has’ been worki: steadily in - pictures during that time, not once has he essayed any but grotesquely comical parts of a slapstick nature. Mr. Conklin pre- fers straight character parts and believes that his part in “The Sap” is the best he has ever been given. The cast also includes Mary McAli: ter, Heinie Conklin, David Butler, Eu- lalic Jensen and John Cossar. ELTINGE THEATRE Goethe's “Faust,” glamorous, viri! d_tregic is featured seen at th Mephisto, screen player, from Europe, is M: « erite, the. pathetic lovable girl of juman quality who suffers is re- deemed by love. If you want to laugh and thrill a ternately a good place to do both at the Eltinge, where “Rookies,” a new feature comedy is being shown Thursday, Friday and Saturday. The picture, which he of Uncle Sam’s military training camps for civilians. ‘ Karl Dane, one of the heroes of “The Big Parade,” has the role of a sergeant and George K. Arthur, famous as a film come- dian, is seen the greenest of recruits. The complication arises when both fall in love with Mar- celine Day. Lo TT O’Brien and ha Prominent roles the picture one of Director Sam Wood's thrilling comedies. It is an original story from the pen of Byron Morgan. Professor Michelson, president of the National Academy of Sciences has announced that tho exact speed of light iy, 186,284 miles per second. ——— aphid SRO NSE nerd tts ne’ rs country, The ‘number/of families, in