The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 23, 1927, Page 4

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eee ee a PAGE FOUR > 4 iti meet with sticcess. The Bismarck Tribune|* pire is wiomal conceit nocd wo tin THE An Independent igo that flying over Mt. Everest will mark the cross- . Dee T tions ISTe tie! ing of an ultimate frontier, leaving nothing more for explorers to do. A flight over this five-and- Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | one-half-mile hump on the earth’s surface is but aj Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the ‘postoffice at| i ‘1 . ‘abi tN. thion wr ji ii | preliminary trial flight for # hop Geapeb. Messe heal ide a ana Publisher | cne of the neighboring starz That Commander T . Mann.... ; e soe 0 Byrd will live to see such star flights completed is ‘Subecription Rates Payable in Advance $7.20) 0PeP to doubt, but it takes a lange calibre dema-| Tally by mails er gear,” int Biamnarcic).. ..<°420, foeue to say that it will never be done daily by mail, ber far, (in state outside Bismarck)...... Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota...... 6.00 tions of explorers have more to wctrry about than oot | Columbus had in the days when the world was fiat, Member of The Associated Press | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to! s t che use for republication of all news dispatches The President Becomes a Sport — ia eredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa-| Regardless of the political ae ace , and also the local news of spontaneous origin | p:¢: ie in Coolidge has Published herein. All rights of republication of all Tifieance which Calvin ho question as to what the sther matter herein are also reserved. [ere cercone Foreign Representatives far different from the man he was when +2 emerged G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY from Massachusetts. CHICAGO DETROIT | That earlier Coolidge was a man who ha’ an eye Power Bldg. NE, BURNS & SMITH? BIE tor nothing but business. He had no hobh ies. in- NEW YORK - | - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. dulged in no recreations. “I like the theate,°.” he| — ________ ______ once remarked dryly to an interviewer, “but I ever (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | have time to go to any shows.” He never dan-ed. In society he was a fifth wheel. He didn’t ew7" Sing Sing’s Warden Looks at Life fish. The sporting instinct which is supposed ‘Phe warden of Sing Sing prison, having presided) be in every man was in Mr. Coolidge an undevel- over some 30,000 convicts and having seen over| oped ductless gland. 100 of them get the death sentence, should rightly! His years in Washington have slowly changed be a pessimist of deepest hue, but ‘tis not so. Mr. Coolidge and he is emerging today a better | Casting a speculative eye over the flower beds of | sport. That it is all political persiflage and pub- his domain, the warden has given out in formal in- |licity, as his bitterest enemies charge, is open to tertiew an uncquivocal endorsement of life just|doubt. Mrs. Coolidge probably had a hand in the as it is. Jemergence of the cocoon. That Mr. Coolidge wil Why the warden chose one of the hottest daysjever be a butterfly is doubtful, As an intermedi- of the year to start this metaphysical controversy | ate chrysalis, he is doing well... ia cy is hard t> understand, for when the mercury hovers | near the century mark it is no time to wax phil- We'll Welcome Him | osophical. Be these reasons what they may, the| Col. Charles A. Lindbergh is still maintaining his warden has put the issue on the table for the world! reputation for tactfulness and diplomacy. _ Witness at large in plenary session to discuss. \his action when Byrd, Chamberlin and their co-fly- The warden is no sentimentalist. He sticks tojers landed at New York Monday. Me went down cold facts to prove his hypothesis. “Life,” says he|to the bay to greet them. But he refused | to be in beginning, “is growth and acticn, while death) photographed. He accompanied them to their cars is stagnation and decay.” _Unassailable axioms} for the triumphal ride up Broadway. But he re- these, beyond all fault-finding. “Life at best is|fused to ride with them. Instead, he retired into short,” he says. True again, but hardly original.!the seclusion which has shrouded him for the last The argument doesn’t seem to be leading into paths |two weeks. , ; or pastures new. Looking further, the meat of the| Lindbergh hasn’t lost his head, it is certain. | He whole thing is discovered: “Life is worth living as| still is the same unaffected, modest lad. He didn’t a sporting preposition, if for no other reason.” want to do anything to detract frem the welcome Here is philosophical beefsteak for the thinkers |to the other flyers. So he kept himself in the to chew on at meal time and pick out of their teeth | background. at‘leisure. Life is a sporting proposition, a game,| North Dakota is going to be glad to welcome a dare. Twenty-three years with the seamy side|Lindbergh. We're sorry, out in the western part of'lifé have brought the warden to this conclusion.|of the state, that he couldn’t visit us. But we'll Life to those of the warden’s belief is not some-|be at Fargo, some of us in person, others in spiri‘, thing to be lived for future glory, but a thing to be|to extend him a cordial greeting, partly because of lived for its thrill of the present. what he did May 21, but mainly because of wha‘ What life really is all about has been ‘a 'souree|he has done since then. of; argument since the human race began. That the warden of Sing Sing has found the answer in his} The Big Parade Frontiers stretch out into interstellar space for} + 5.00| millions and millions of miles, and future genera- | | presidency has made of Calvin Cirtides, He ix] Some of the old-timers still refuse to handle the factory products Push carts now sell automobile parts, and seem to do ¥ i iy them have prospered sufficiently to open a store in Cortland street ... Cortland street is the radio fan’s On her: short, swift journey down Ai’ eitiléen Tahe ot. the hall to Cheri y's room, hideous fears flitted like buts through Paith’s Had she made Cherry hate really leave the only home she had, taking ner baby —the precious, adorable baby with Had she cast her own sister— the little\ sister whom she had al- worshipped and 0 the world, penniless, burdened fear-flushed little face in her hands. “We belong together, Cherry. Mother would be terribly unhapp: u were away from me. v3 trusted you to me.” Cherry gave in suddenly, her effort Jat establishing her independence of the sister who had always been too kind to her succumbing to the mem- tion of the one name that had al- E-ways been able to stir her profoundly. h place with a dozen How do their ears stand it? . Panhundler asleep on three old mewspapers, right across from the Pennsylvania hotel rain falls, but he’s protected. The East Broadway block where all This is chapter 94 of the series of articles by a correspondent for The Tribune wl is revisiting France as an nce guard for the “Second A. i ey . Up in St. Juvin, which was known! the 77th ard the 78th, someone went to all the pains and trouble of erect- ments, along in the years around 1200 A. D. Three hundred years later the chateau was decorated with a tall steeple, some bells were hung, and it wes thereafter uscd as a church, ‘ Until 1918, which will probably register the| si credit now—and the church was shelter. The armistice came along. A So they | will give you a “good hand” and, vice versa, you -will automatically give them “good hand” or “Russian Juck.”” bargain has been closed, you can identical article purchased in another | ¥! window half the price you pald for it. GILBERT SWAN. ————_——_— Daily Health | Service the Health Magazine n” may take the lead, un- the condition concerned may be an ulcer of the stomach, un inflam- i the gall bladder, chronic ‘other complaints. Newspapers al with a. child to support? ‘That, you,' Bob?” Cherry's stran- the Yiddish newspapers are printed Faith, after a bit, during which whey held each other very tightly, helped her to replace the garments she had flun out of closets and When they had fin- 5 -Strange-looking characters an: nounce the results of the ball gam: and whiskered patriarchs smile haj pily at the news that Babe Ruth “It’s Faith, Gherry : ing, let me int! Iresser drawers. “Life is a sporting proposition” is cpen to grave| Stans, ent doubts. ‘The churches, material evidences of the be- Editorial Comm lief in life for a hereafter, a future reward and a Technical Uncle Sam future punishment, are still thriving in spite of the ravages of wrongdoing and the pestilences of perfidy. (Duluth Herald) 3 Uncle Samuel is getting to.be very particular, as he goes on. This is proven by a decision which he Soft Justice Gets It Again has made taking a homestead away from a Mon- Banks lose 150 millions every year through the | ‘#28 acunel ene nae disdiua honlenhenaassGarmniee embezzlement of dishonest employes, and one reason| The Macs pporapny ni e rene a " ie ee ne given for this amazing theft is that “extravagant elevated peainienon yw ee ee ee eat habits ushered in by increased salaries have played where for four years she lived for about four months their part in pulling many a banker from his perch 7 : é of trust.” So, at any rate, declared Banker Frier- coyotes, except when reeves came along to re- son of Chattanooga, who spoke before the ‘Ameri-| lieve her monotony and their own. ; ; | can Institute of Banking convention the other day. Peaivniy aneac pine oe, iyi alled ap 1 This is an interesting observation. The usual; 5 . belief was that the poor bank employe was the one did apg mepuEnyan suy, of she toupiyeaes to her eabin who fell into the snares of temptation and took the|UNtil the May folowing, pee aliathe, snow had bank’s money to pay off a mortgage on the old|Sone and the prairies and rough places were ablaze home. That embezzled wealth goes for high liv-|With wild flowers. a aaa ing puts the matter in a different light, and it would|. After four years of this the teacher, whose name indicate that the poor and underpaid banker “was |!S Leslie Helen Larson, “proved up” and demanded most apt to be honest. her patent. Hard-hearted Uncle Sam denied it, The real reason for the increase in banks’ losses saying that she did not live on the land baghies through absconding employes is the leniency of the |Months of each year. Of course she didn’t but she courts, as Banker Frierson pointed out, urged that her teaching time should be regarded Murder is not the only crime that the criminally-|%% Constructive residence, as she was only away minded can get away with today, and the plea for | temporarily when teaching. The land departmen: harder-boiled justice cannot be made too often, _| denied this plea. Kindly, sympathetic, forgiving jurists are as much | There was a time when the land department would to blame for the crime wave as movies, or jazz, or have had no trouble in ruling as the girl suggested, the automobile, or any other of the stock causes | Ut it’s different now. The old man is getting par- ‘ ¥ # .|ticular. In these days, one must do a lot to get by. gorse’ iy the softshearted and. soft-headed re In old days, the settler, the judge, the lawyer, the - land department—everyone—winked at each other and patents came easily. 3 " } To be sure it was pretty rothen, thea, but if When the Klondike and Alaska were opened, it! public morality was a bit nar A 5 Tah attairs, it was said that the last frontier of civilization had) wag high in other things, and after all is said the been crossed. When Roosevelt explored the Ama- country was developed as a rule in the best way of zon and discovered the River of Doubt, it was pro- which it was then capable. claimed again that this was the last frontier. Whea And lots of people would have seen no harm in Madame Noel crossed the Himalaya mountains and| jt i¢ enough of the old laxity had come back to penetrated the holy city of Lhasa, it was proclaimed give that school-teacher her claim. - again this was the last frontier. fs Both poles had in the meantime been reached, ii the Sahara had been crossed by automobile, clothes | Ranting 2 id Man haa of a sort had been put on the South Sea islanders, EO rae Siberians were buying flivvers, Siam had an Ameri Finding Work For Explorers majesty, and could call the world his own private | stories for the December issues of the magazines. oyster. It serves to remind us that heat ig not all that All this last frontier blurb, however, appears to|we suffer from. Also it calls attention to the as- have been mere rumor and guesswork. The last|tonishing change that has taken place in transpor- frontier, like the rainbow’s end, seems to be made! tation methods in 40 years. Then the bleak prai- @f elastic. It stretches even beyond the infinite! rie, offering no obstruction in trees, buildings or Smits of imagination. fences, was scarcely to be traversed and then only by sled or sleigh at no small risk. The children of the people who knew winter as a hibernation pe- tiod are not content to stay at home, immured for long stretches. They demand that they shall have means to travel and move about, regardless of the Every frontier that man has reached on foot or hhorseback, or by canoe, must now be crossed by air- plane. Commander Byrd, outling his work for the next / @ight years, plans to fly over the south pole, circw ' South America, fly into the heart of the Amazon elements. has made a home run surely is America! Lodging houses with signs “clean rooms 10 cents a night” Daj per looking young man entering a suspicious looking pawn shop in thc . . A “fence,” perhaps, and ‘tomorrow we shall read of a other society robbery ./.' . The curbstosé atiction ‘marke der the elevated the racket that: heard, so bidderi isished and Cherry was stretched wear- sty Thisl th Haly upon her small, green painted bed. Faith forced herself to return to her room, where } would find Bob awaiting her. She found him seated in her own low chair by ‘the window pon his knees, one of fingers held tightly in’ a miniature The quizzical smile with which he had been regardin~ Cherry's baby lingered as he*looked up at his wife. “Cherry's going to. sta} I know she would. isn’t it, all things considered?” She did not dare ask him what he There was a long silence, broken at Faith was about! to begin pleading again, the key tuened in the lock and r was opened a crack. didn’t want to see you—just y Cherry sobbed from withi she clung to .the doorknob. wanted to be all reudy to leav you'd know I wasn’t just—bluffing— “Cherry, darlimg!” Fai: The door yielded reluct- antly to her pressure and ia a mo- ment she was kneeling beside a hud- igure on the floor, t to leave me, didn’t think I meant— you.forgive me, Cherry? Oh, darling, I can’t bear this! e make signs’ with! their hands and the auctioneer un- You should hear th over an extra 20 cents soe Two rabbis in black duster coi in each summer with no company but the wandering ; that. TOM |ORROW: Cherry peneregne “I'm not angry “with you, Fait « And hailing g taxi . | she gasped. “I don't.hate y di IN NEW YORK tee eo New York, July 22—Random ‘no from an afternoon Didn’& you know thet But I thought it woyld be so much better for you—and and took my little bab; a “You shan’t take the ‘bab; “And I'm not going to let I'd not be\ happy an- other minute of my life if you did. Oh, Cherry!” She strained th figurt to her breast with a fiedce pas more maternal than i! “You ought to let me got had the strength of character to pro- “It's not good for your riage, having all of us here.' And it's not good for me to be dependent. That's the reason I wanted ito work. I can’t bear to live on Bob's gen- | erosity any longer. f me” she reiterated, with chil peration, her golden eyes s "s face hopefully but fearfully. ion’t be absurd, darling,” Faith begged her, cupping the beloved, OUTOURWAY _ A young fellow stops street and offers $15 for a suit priced in the window at take him up so fast th: The hot potato peddlers of the Even on scorching hot days their ovens crackle scurry around gathering you go either. reminds me that over fag tH Cherry | cent one is given half a bakes They have a number~of slang pressions as native to their as wisecracking is to Bro: refer, for instance, to “good their hands together as they It has an entirel; meaning from the “ by theatrical folk. preted literally, a change in bi If you are pleased iness will be prosperous for of the day. Yor iM the turning point in the day’s affairs The brass workers Side’s famous “brass-town” seem to have learned the uptown methods. . Pretty clerks now appear at od for | boxes may be seen in the bi . And there's a strange ity about the articles on di different windows when you! could bank o1 craftsmanship of any article It means, inter- [Bares] “t' FONNY, PART. Ves. eur: ‘OF. ITS THAT HE” HIS WATCH, Bur, Banged: CHOIS ALWAYS: Mi ANXIOUS BD LAFF. AT “TH BULLS JOKES WHE! {WE ANDS tT AINT! The state highway commission of North Dakota ¢an college professor for financial adviser, and ra-|has just ordered the erection of 443,000 feet of dio sets in southern Rhodesia were conversing regu-| snow fence. This is on a par with the popular be- ly with Schenectady. On the whole, it appeared | lief, not unsubstantiated, that fiction writers are it man had whipped the insects and his satanic| now sweltering at work on all the nice Christmas Last year, for all the good roads and snow plows they had provided to insure their demand, snow blocked them. The answer to that is 443,000 feet agnosis is no‘ ientific. high fever should be the reason for a careful investigation. make a comedy, ition indicates usually} A well-sclecte: that the person has hea a sudden conany Sarbanes ‘and. severe the st fis heade yy ned "pele! ‘and: spoteetion Helen ‘Foster, Alphonse Martel, Pa: fainted: Usually It iv'/a: man: over} trie rr, forty «years rated somewhat’ fat;| Grey. and Barbara Clayton, promi- who has had culties with his) nent in their roles. Justajingle | proms heard her call for help. he saved her life. He wishes that he hadn’ Teday the mri's his wife. | NEWS BRIEFS ; —————— y The -Associated Press) xplosion of bombs at the Georgs Unfortunately, ¢. person . with, Washington monument and in front these symptoms usually attempts to/of the Ford-agency in Buenos Aires treat himself with laxatives or by! are attributed to Sacco-Vanzetti sym- eating of health foods ur peculiar | pathizers. Letter of Aimee Semple McPherson more chronic. It is « wise rule to|to personal representative in Los An- je left city because of ntion with her dng any kind of medical trestment.! Minnie Kennerv, business manage: For this reason scientific diagnosis is| Angelus Temple. + 19d ote onsin senate at Bill to Srent of federal has turned le and *pometimes heart at one. time. or another. The attack concerned ia sometimes an N attack of heart disease and the in- vestigation. must) be made in this direction. ,. The conditions described as chronic indigestion are more -eften. inflam- mations of the gall bladder, but oc- casionally. ulcer -of the stomach vor chronic appendicitis, After a care- ful study is made with modern scientific methods it 1s found that 90 per cent of these cases ma: ascribed to: one or the other of the conditions: mentione; diets of one kind or another, and the condition tends to become more and find out as nearly as pussible exactly | hat is the matter before undertak- ‘dis receiving. greater and ler em- phasis among scientific physician: ODE TO HYMEN | a Getting @ divorce these days is ¢; becoming almost as easy as putting a tax on American goods in Great. Britain. . . . One of the chief re-' , quirements yee divorce is a yuod ‘idge.. Then all the Minneapoli to ‘take to court as ece of. whatever wasn’t trumps. . At Reno, you don't! ing pin or broken ever been married ar not. New. York A law passed the other day pro- hibits the shining, of shoes on. dyn-| day in New York. However, it’s all right to get a s ine on your nose. ‘ hii Nearly 50.per cent of the stock- ings ‘made inthe ‘Unjeed ‘States tal nn 1925 were of cotton, sa: ne | who has counted them. be an awful lot of men in this co: try, who never have felt the si It does seem no more right that the 1 hould ES with the taxi “eiep ae Hor isthe born and-tat That eoceeth i aot. tl eit Whose armour is his And simple truth “hi “|, Whose passions not Dis master are; Whose seoul repared. for SATURDAY, JULY 88; 1907 42 & FRANCE @ mA towns entered St. Juvin. that the ammu- nition dump ba The buck privates gazed on the ac- Plans for the task were considered. - may Bete ere a accident. jut—one dark nig! CHAPTER XCIV | ammunition “let_go.” The war played a lot of odd|the explosion wrecked all of that pranks. j church except the walls. , The job of removing the shells to the American divisions—the 82d,!was completed. And St. Juvin was without a chureh. 2 According to the natives the ex- ing a chateau, with frowning battle-| plosion was intentional. explained on postcards — “Before” ‘After” scenes that will available for pureh of the American Legion Of course, the villagers have They put an Dy built a new church. American army barracks on a founda- jide the former place Then St. Juvin was captured by! tion right alon Things arc going on some American outfit — none of of worship. But the St. Juviners can’t quite used as a storehouse for high ex-, reconcile themselves to the fact that losive ammunition. In all the shell-| their 70-year-old chateau and church ing to which the town was subjected | —their before its capture, the church went | should withstand ‘o ravages of four untouched except for a few minor] years of war and then go bloocy four scratches. So it afforded an ideal|wecks after the armistice was signed. A Shrine for Par- TOMORROW: month Inter, cleanup squads from ente, Bete eee At The Movies ELTINGE THEATRE * Adolphe Men; The chances are that, after the eery and Louise Brooks is the fea. ture at the Eltinge again tonight Walk across the street and see the/ ‘ure st the Elting Hamilton comedy also on the pro- gi A conglomeration of. girls, gowns and gayety will be seen at the El- londay and Tuesday when w picture, “Fash- ‘he Girl of the Hour” Esther Ralston’ ions For Wom Miss Ralston’ ———@/ tiful model who suddenly disappea from off the face of the earth a ft before the annual style show. iamodiate tells Sam Dupont, nt, that he will hi “double” for Celeste. i pO all of, the terms most misused] does — but she causes tw by the public in relation to medicine,| trouble! Raymond Hatton and featured. Fifteen of Hollywood's girls appear in a ‘bilious” supersedes it. The/-are term “dyspepsia” is well up in the| most same list. gorgeous fashion revue. The term “indigestion” is used when| details, see “Fashions For Women.” CAPITOL THEATRE Naughty Nannette, i mn, psycho-asthenia, hys-| ola Da j teria, or any one of a number of ith being one of the most entertain- frequently carry a statement that] ing pictures that FBO some individual has died of acute] The theme of th: digestion. Drs. Mi L, Graves and|two extra girls, in ¢ . Graves of Texas point out. that] feted about by the no patient dies of acate indigestion, and doing their best to help cach and that satisfaction with such aj other along. i Viola Dana, winsome, petite, and The appearance of sudden cramp inj always lovable in her portrayals for e stomach, or of vomiting, or of| the screen, is one of the extra girls. It has everything od picture entertainii thrills and suspense. the movies, buf- inds of chance, supports the little star and , Joe Young, Sidney de Minn.—Coroner’s jury * returned verdict of “unavoidable ac- cident” in crash of {rei id work car in which Washington.—The war department the Mi 3 O' field and Southern for a bridge over the Minnesota river near Savage, Mian. ws A St. Paul.—Winnipeg Boat club of gen have to exhibit » flatiron, roll-| winnipeg scored 96 points in. first qi lay's program. at Northwest Rowing lation regatta. .—Conduct of the affairs dent school district of was criticized in a report by state public ex- r} St. Paw of th Dayton, Ohio.—University of Day- ton accepted resign: Be: in, assistant coach, to allow to ‘take backfield coach job at FIRST COACHING SCHOOL Narthweateen will conduct its first ing school in August ley in charge. un- | summer hi ik. | with Dick Han!

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