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PAGE FOUR ° The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice Bismarck as second class mail matter. ‘| George D. Mann.......... President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year - $7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) -» 6.00 Daily bv mail, outside of North Dakota. -. 6.00 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is éxclusively entitled to — +» 1.20 | he words, “Let him who is without sin cast the first stone.” | There is no room in this country or any other! count#y. for men and women with ideals of cruelty to their fellows. | That Baseball Tournament | The Association of Commerce made a_praise- {worthy decision Saturday when it decided to spon- jsor the Missouri Slope baseball tournament, open ito teams all over the Slope country, to be held next | | month. This tournament will give baseball fans a chance | to see Bismarck from a different angle—as a sports| | center of the Slope country, | Baseball is a leading sport in the Missouri Slope country, perhaps more so than it is in other parts} jof the state. There are countless teams through- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WHO_IS KIN G? Editor's Note: This is Chap- ter ¥7 of the series of articies by a correspondent for The bune who is revisiting France as an advance guard for the “Sec- ond A. E. Fr” CHAPTER XCVIf Standing at the main pier of the Pont d’Almain Paris, where he stares rather fiercely at the pa the boats that nly the statue of one of Napoleon's guards— a Zouave with a mission in life that is mighty peculiar for one who rep- resents 1g ich ‘romance. she quickly slid into ntission that he now of the ignominy, he has never given a sign that he was hurt. Mais, non! True to the tradi. tions of the guards, he has accepted his fate as he found it. He has stood there all these years, one hand on his hip and the other resting on his musket quite unconcerned. In fact, his attitude is a bit nonchalant. It would seem that with all his just cause for resentment, he rema.ns oblivious to the odium of it all. On author.{ative information—this from the commissioner of streets and bridges—the Pont d'Alma will be re- i i s the use for republication of all news disnatches | out this territory, but heretofore there has been no 17, With all, his ‘peetgntions wh *{a | constructed. this. yout, Ths arehea: 4” * credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- | organized tournament which they could enter to de- just a gauge. For when’ the water| will be raised and the bridge will be per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin | cide their championship claims. gets up to his shoe ‘tops, as it does| widened... The changes. will be com- published herein. All rights of republication of all} It is to be hoped that t hich sometimes during the spring floods| pleted by the time the American ' other matter herein are also reserved, ee ee eee cuee Overy Veal Witch CBl pon of the Marne and other tributaries.| Legion arrives in September. sibly enter will take part. The tournament is in- the skippers of the tugs and b: s] It is also understood—this is but rs P Foreign Representatives a rumor—that the Zouave will also | PAYNE COMPANY | tended to give every town an equal chance. It lay to, because they know there's be given an opportunity to change his H h to puss under G. LOGAN should be a decided success, and it deserves the pes “And if it should ever get up| attitude. Not that he will register CHICAGO DETROIT | Patronage and support of every one of us. ict mouse pf it ia in( displeasure at ie ee ness of his Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | Eventi SAE 1910, all of Paris will interpret that| station in life! | Mais, non! Just PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH | situation as a reason for fleeing to} that he will s! is weight from his NEW YORK -- - Fifth Ave. Bldg. The “Miracle Man” the hills. sf right leg to his left, and get him- ‘ (Official City, State and County Newspaper) “Made in U. S. A.” People whose memories go back more than ten! years may recall that in the years before the war | this country was virtually flooded with German hardware, cutlery, cooking utensils, chemicals, ant! German manufactured goods of all kinds. | German foreign trade was then at its height, and | jing back in retrospect on the last 15 years of this So von Hindenburg is nearly 80 years old! Look- man’s life, it doesn’t seem possible that the same man who led Germany through battle could have. in{ such a short space of time, dragged her from the slough of despond which defeat brought and set her once more on firm footing. i The German president has, by his work, upset precedent. It has been the case, far too often, that when leaders in wartime are elevated to command- om old residents along the banks of the" Seine it was learned that this guard—"The Gauge of The Seine”— has been on duty ever since the Pont d’Alma was constructed, which was in 1854, Originally intended as a sort self into a comfortable position to ly the passing mariners of the eights of the flood waters of the Seine for the next few centuries or so. TOMORROW: A. E. F. Art. | Service Se BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN {Daily Health {j, At The Movies | ———_« ELTINGE THEATRE Take out the big bum!” “Kill the upmire!” the aggressive German merchants had tacked on to|ing positions in peace, they fail miserably. Not so| an bs eu eehatuni inten ‘ all their wares the familiar sign of “Made in Ger-|in this case. Hindenburg has governed his coun- Editor, Journal of ti These, Soa. sil CaN. ther ertren- .” Almost every household had one article|try well. He has done miracles with it, miracles soclatiemaith sions which make b tie: game ie i A ‘ a “ . it is, are included in'WeMade Beery's.... which bore that stamp, while shops and factories that possibly no other man could do in this age. When men work too hard in heavy|current starring comelly:! “Casey! at \ depended upon German products to a great extent.| We hear little of Hindenburg nowadays. He goes clothing in conditions. where the| the Bat,” which arrivew-at!the Etinge Tariff walls were raised against this influx, but|about his work quietly but surely. He is ever on temperature is high and the humid- ip Blak ace Dbl eme fore otelae A in spite of every effort made to check the imports,|the watch for things which may benefit Germany. sie eath ine heat Tl nan who. suddenly finds hiraselt theyj still came gn.yfor the goods were usually well | He is likely to go down in history as one of the cine (hie oxteranl ‘températere is}¢atapulated to fame and fortune madg: and could be depended upon to give their|“miracle men” of the twentieth century. high, the loss of heat from the body digex im ie ae haueeneeet: money’s worth in service. These conditions ob- | Lifts See Tica Tmagine if you will (it isn’t dif- tained all over the world. German goods were the| More Hokum to Expose i ation from the surface of the body pat Ret te Boel standard of the market, everywhere. ; In the general mania for reformers to attempt | ~~ -—->_@ | is hindered, laughs as Wallace hits a home run ‘The war stopped this importation of German ar-| reforming, it is surprising that no righteous grou! “Where else in the world is this|, When the heat regulating mechan-|with one hand. Think of the roars pol : : 2 group ible?” ism breaks down, the temperature of/ that'll be fortheoming as he climbs ticles, and America, thrown upon her own, had to/of yogi and swami chasers has ever gone after the 4 fon mY eee the body ri "This stimulates the! on the stage of the ofa Casino Thea- develép tools and chemicals for home consumption ladies and gents of the fortune-telling fraternity. ot you seek ie, you|chemieal changes goin on in. theltre and. inakes ‘a personal ‘appear- : 5 ‘ ig 3 witaleg Maite ea anic: FO" body and still further increases the|ance. "Then comes trip to Cone and for foreign trade as well, for Europe was too They flourish unlicensed all over the land, fleecing mornin PL Sold elas treed production of heat. Thus, the tem-| Island and yout euae ee an busy making shells to bother about providing the|innocent millions of their hard-earned simoleons. olitan, “ P| perature continues to ee and = wild waves are saying. A morning Fest of the world with needles and pins and dye-|Fortune telling with cards, with crystals, with) pyery woman who is a wife and(teat-dried grass, was lumpy.anc very| ;-The art of the world comes to|cremicel changes continue to be ill rend fiachia tea bie meee ria stuffs. After the war, of course, Germany was) wishbones, by reading the stars, reading the palms,| who thas tried to recapture sweet-|hard. She suddenly found herself | 7th street and jute Gif on Madi-| Some men do not perspire as easily! Ford Sterling enacts, Beery's Col- too crippled to regain her world trade, and the/and reading the bumps on the head goes on un- oer days elt mie without sie pi Pa ee panel not stretch | [00 all thevshows: fe ciate x8 Pod as others 80 pape ES Me umbus by ‘idiscover AL é | te i Pam peer told, that Faith's heart was pricked| his hand out languidly to press ners,| to¢.2) the h and burning, and the failure of fluid] Pitts isthe Centerville belle and United States gained good control of many world {checked through man’s—and woman’s—insatiable| with pain a hundred times "betore| av if he felt thor the occasion carved Sha dione een at filmdom | to evaporate from the surface tends| Sterling Holloway, Beery’s villainous markets. Goods stamped “Made in U. S. A.” took|sucker complex. that Sunday was over. There is {for demonstrations of love. If he prised the ay oa ge c to aaa still further their body manager. { the place of goods stamped “Made in Germany.” If we persist in superstition, it seems but reason- cee seURe ye eros ee ecient he On LY apartments or in actor's boarding| “(runt {iood vessels on the surface CAPITOL THEATRE i ” But now the tide has turned, and American con-|able that the state should profit as well the | divine traffic officer, leading from| But she jerked her thoughts up paeeeey ortoe the agencies for the/ of the body are dilated the blood] Lots of friends and no money to suls and commercial attaches report that foreign|quack readers of the future, A good stiff license fomenee. oene area i 2] sharply, returned | the lever aaa) walk along the heart of the nation’ Precteresce. ait the airehlationvotlae gan. aay Me cary ccatees a manufacturers, finding their way about, are resent-|fee act would do the trick nicely; and in short ov- path leading from marriage back 4o| Peps ree ee ardently Hae] clothing industry or find costumes; the blood in the brain. from ghetto to golf links, as told in ing the inroads which American goods have made|der should drive all the experts in futurity to the| romance, it is a dim, little trod path,| her tears, They bad. scarcely talked Torey: opcasion; (find anything you, All of these things produce a com- ionaires,” which comes to the in fofeign markets. Propaganda, advertising, pleas ; tall timbers. Of all the malignant parisites on the Lachlan and Winding, along] at wall, except trivialities about the| pagne; run the. gamut of the “night rier Ee ee eins be tg Sergi Avnmeend of patriotism, and even legislation are being raised) human race the genus fortune-teller is the most| handy ard ives hice ‘het ull hus"| heat the need OF rain ubon the crena:| fesorts from Chinese restaurants to[” When’ heat-stroke occurs, it is| Meyer (played by George Sidney) in am active drive to induce people in other lands| virulent. In the short space of. five months sehen “tan true tack ie petra aoa May epeenelt ey be Penile jate fhe. and his ives Esther (Vera Gordon) to boyeott American made goods. England, France, ae Enis cary muchomartied. Chale ferhad taken her into his arms just) engage almost any stage star, scenic! there, the body may be cooled by!on the ‘Hast “Side, ot Ne You. ‘ Ttalyz Belgium, and all the British dominions are Ranaciiac: a sp efore lunch was spread, had mur- | designer, costumer, musician, painter rubbing it with ice or by exposing it| Working side by side they keep the joneymoon had lasted oniy three] mured, “1 love. you, my darling id f 4 . } included in the list of nations warring on the ' days, for after that blessed period of ; i or jazz bend. worth talking about; |to the movement of an electric fan.|wolf away from the door and the ” but the thrill had been lack- ing from: his voice, from his eyes. He had: turned rather too quickly, aftér 4 too. perfunctory embrace, to the luncheon hamper. When she looked at him again he was asleep. She sat up then, careful not to disturb him, and for two long hours nursed her disappointment, as she faithfully fanned him with a folded, newspaner, to keep the midges Editorial Comment New Citizens (The Duluth Herald) Notwithstanding the rigid laws limiting immi- gration, the United States makes about a quarter of a million new citizens every year through the process of naturalization. enter the offices of Americ: film h time, it is necessary to! gefullte fish i i : Kings:vandfigd “them, laylug thelr, cep that hecteesoribun body | "Bu pees ae 4 see that the temperature of the body}, But ‘Esther has a sister, Rebe plans for production or organizing a! does not fall too rapidly. iit seems (Louise Fazenda), whos» idea of life selling camapaign—all -in. 20: short, low, hot applications. should Ye placed: is to -keep a wolt-hound on a leash blocks that can be covered in a few around the arms and feet to restore and caviar on the table. minutes walk, the circulation and to keep, the | Hounded by these two women * tient warm. ‘ ‘ Meyer invests all of his savings in It will not be long before this belt| The temperature usually remains stocks, which, to his surpr' is even more compact. Already 37th ; more or less stationary and then falls him back such huge sums, street is rather, far aw>- 1 rapid Competent medical advice himself in the million: 1 nd, ly. walked along: Broadwa; the other should be roadway being alone, the family—Faith's fame ily—had descended upon them, clam. orous with demands, freighted with problems which had required all of Faith’s patience and most of thé time which should have gone to the tending romance’s sacred fires. { ‘And now that she had taken a day off in which to be nothing and no-| body but Bob Hathawny’s sweetheart, | “Made in U. S. A.” hallmark. The solution of the whole matter, of course, is something beyond the power of any ability to ad- vertise against American goods. If the American stuff has quality in it, and is put on the market at the right price, it will naturally sell over competi- tion.” The situation does not warrant the exporta- secured immediately, as it’ Gone is the peaceful hu tion of lead hatchets and pewter razors, for the she found, to her amazement and! sid the flies from his belpved face, may be necessary to give drugs in his East Side d Pies et world market will be won.in the long run by the! This, with most of the newcomers, is merely car- fret Fa beee tae uR nin: “that| She was glad when he dwoke, and thebterta y alat" street sing leveled | order to- stimulate the heart and the comforting love ‘of his wife's’ East Hasepoads products. rying through an intention long cherished. When Rot okuow what to! do with | {MPUREAEDE TRH. AY BANE y > | OY te ereenara ts, tang. Way can | OUNMG SEU sock tuat there is | hei Peasohy Akoad © talovet com: , thees first left their native lands it was with the, "ef, day- : _-| TOMORROW: Faith's struggles, | 370 Ut usually an accumulation of acid in edy and pathos that puts “Million- { oe fj , She had determined not to talk of | ago red i The Martyr Complex intention of becoming Americans, the family, the house, financial trou- | “pretty far uptown” when Fanny Dav- the system in connection with heat. aires”. up at ihe See smene: atérlas i 4 ' ; p 4 \o—____________._. \presei ® Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti are still} In May, last, 20,926 persons took out final pa-| bles, the baby, or of anything att IN NEW YORK onper: ies seit el, ma inline al i - Pe ehion ne pl ing rapes besides “Mr. Sidney, { on a-hunger strike, so dispatches inform us. pers in the United States. These were distributed See ki alee san wie os u e @| let” with Modjeska 4 Ophelia Elsie} Victim of heat-stroke in order to Miss Gordon and Miss Fazenda, are } What the reason for the strike is, they do not|throughout the states, only three states, Nevada, sweetheart. But when she Janis made her. first big hit there | counteract the eff - nr ea ag Costas ase. MeERAN Slat 4 say, but it is presumed that the two are protest-| Vermont and Virginia, having none. This process nd sweetheart topics to talk| New York, July 27.—Visitors are| and Lillian ‘Russell was to be seen . ; " : A Phare WAlage on, she was aghast to discover that| invariably amazed at the manner in| there in the days before she attracted ing against the treatment they are being accorded.|of naturalization is taken very seriously now by all| she had nothing to say. She could | which New Yorke manages to pack its| the attention of the world. The list Just what grounds they have for protest now it is|concerned. Matters are much better than they| ot forever exclaim over the scenery | assortment of varied enterprises into | Of famous sectors £. play Ny - Fined hard to find. An impartial committee and an im-|used to be, and this is gratifying, oe BRS me pends giepked Bae oe Peers yap coun Menten. selon se Sige ncedbbiaunmilan partial governor are investigating their case to see} The immigrant does not consider his admission| ‘Happy, dear?” she asked tremu.| revue fame—who was born in Paris,| When “Ben Hur” was put op with Py Pree aie mer Seach if their conviction on a charge of murder was just. |a matter pf form. He has passed an examination.| ously, for, the fifth time that day, | naturalized in London and has tived| a Teal chariot race it, was thotght/ Sis, ‘syol4 “indulgence in alcoholic Carolina, Dec.'38, 189% was addressed 4, They are being well treated. He has studied and prepared himself. He feels| ashing and for letting Mae ghee tee artlat bags fied ainost ‘bagthing ob:| been said and “Little Lord Fauntle- an res le. bars seed boul be se-| States” As Prey, coo] ae Granted, there may have been injustice surround- | when admitted that he has taken a long step ahead,{ tT, her anxiety, tainable on this earth in the tf pra nt foray i pRlee. Sid rand jected according to. the occu, follows: | “Sir, Having concluded to ing their trial. If the testimony of reliable peo- /and he is right ‘alle iete"emohatic, war not slaha:| with boundaries aet at Eighth avenue Eger hale | cos ar ay. go [SPtaet feos te Bodie on Tatas aczane ot 8 deat nthe Gena, te Ple is to be believed, the judge, before whom their} The federal government carefully supervises the| rated with assurances that it was|on one side and Tea ‘avenue on| Of late years it slid back, like so|0f heat from the body, Jegislatare® of we ae re case’ was tried, showed decided prejudice against | work through its agents. It aids those of good in-| happiness enough to be alone with : mnee of Eeoadwar. inte fhe, moe with resign the offiee of Vice Pre v them. The district attorney, who prosecuted them, |tentions. It exposes fraud. It impresses on the “They were stretched upon a quilt| on my ent AUinie settvity with, Boot Jos" Jefferson and a dozen BARBS | Proes cathe e United pega ld H a piorted » have used unfale Behe. es es ot applicant ne fact that the government ee A ie rice rahe, SBana ROK. gui CHeperioe, more haul (8 aaa of 's must have sighed and passed Petey vine vie re ie aed the ut all that is past now, eir fate is in the | at ‘ashington is weighing him and is disposed t°| the heat. The ground ered with Fa ee iad! 4s GILBERT SWAN. FLYERS HOME: NEW YORK! wrong initial in name of the 5 s rete nage “4 . 5 ly occupied,” he points out. {secretary of state, for Edward Liv- hands of a committee, which is sifting the facts, | welcome him if he is worthy. - iad sclne A WILD, says o headline. Finally, the) ¢ ‘eld that : J ’ sebbstses Sea Ria ais Pod it of fic No of: a rer in Europe, there have been minor demon-| Then the local governments, the courts and the OUT OUR WAY a ee ike Yen! ficial notice was ever taken of Cal- stretions lately beqnuse the two men are thought | Americanization societies take a hand. They aid By Coolidge wore chapas-he's the cow-' houn's letter of Temenetn. SMa persecuted. Bombs have been exploded with the |the candidate for admission, they hold classes for ee - z i ‘i TT iin Ean fae aa we ie wondering ment of state to snk, waiathae ie nad ‘ evident purpose of. intimidating American officials. | study, they point out that American citizenship is " ey i . sete. a Of Reales ste eee Paine INT : o i * Violent speeches have been made. ‘ | @ great distinction, and finally they greet the suc- WHY Al LouT PLAYIN? The ‘Ro! Zodt 1! Society of] of state on Jan. 4, 1833, sent the let- -. \ Why? The American people are watching this \ cessful candidates, OH , coz ITS NICER. ino Ireland aska/for “mote accommoda-| ter, accompanied by one ‘of his own, F case to see that the two men get justice. There | No longer is admission a formality rushed through COOLER 'NI EVER THING: 7 yea es a Aa openieno fansite, Hugh Le Whites eee q will be no-prejudice, no unfairness now. between times when the court has nothing else to do. RIGHT HERE. - "Grass Cu ? t 400, 6 dent pro tempore of the senate, pre. i If Sacca and Vanzetti want to put themselves in | The result of all this will be to make American OH YES, ALL DONE’ WITH Tue 2 « > sided over that body for the rest of the position of martyrs they are going about it in | citizenship harder to attain, but for that very rea- L wy, Joss-— vd army is Boing ta maiko at bi Poesia’ with an oe sates. no the; wrong way. Whether convicted or freed, they |son a prize to be earnestly sought and when won} Awl py / ton ipsa h, That “Tram; Tramp,| C: iy can hardly be called martyrs with the decision of | to be kept without stain, , Tram) ms Rew e changed to h a an unbiased committee before them. ° OY L ‘ ais date a the same day he 4 Combi ts ~ senator and his i He Will Help : anges fanhnee f l A EK a OP, fis coca aa In the choice of John F. Stevens to aid R, E.| A committee of the national association of credit . \ ay ) A 7 Kennedy, state engineer, in mapping out the Mis- | men comes out with the interesting proposal that 4 » : . y souri river diversion project, the Greater North Da- | the federal trade commission and the Clayton acts 4 s ys : ye kota association has acted wisly. be repealed as a step toward smoothing the way 3 4 ‘ : ¥ A y, git \ Mr. Stevens is one of the leading engineers of |for large combinations of business in this country. ‘ ‘ i hy, (By “es the! twentieth ‘century and with the aid of Mr. Ken- |The argument advanced is that if this country is ied a os hee i ‘ medy, the most feasible and least expensive route |to compete with foreigners for world trade some : ar ¥ \ (\s r for diversion of the water should be planned. In |of the fetters which now bind American business "% Z| - We building great projects for the Great Northern rail- | concerns must be loosened or cut entirely. | ie Gye ‘ BC, way; in working on the Panama Canal project,/ The American public has revised considerably its Le hi) attitude toward big business in the last decade. / q rn ' and in planning other important engineering deve!- wits, Mr. Stevens has proven himself a capa- The antagonism and fear which formerly prevailed has largely given way to friendliness and tolera- r Bt at, fe. deol iF the nagnla ax, or 2 bhsreipiee vor that; it wants reasonable safeguards against monopolies, 4 Then there are the .small business concérns of