The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 28, 1927, Page 4

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LTA arama eee Aut em ew meen 2 o—) see Rho’ * ‘PAGE FOUR ° " s 2 vestors. Where issues formerly sold only in gob The Bismarck: Tribune| lots to banks and big investors, the chaps with $100 An Independent Newspa ¢ i i 4 THE STATE'S OLDEST NE | to spend on a bond now cut some figure in the busi (Established 1873) ir SPAPER —<—<—<—<—<$_$—$ — —————________| investors today, and their buying power is some Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | two billion dollars. Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Berar eaceond class mail matter. | publisher |*@feguard these small investors that the need for | n Wall Street referee or dictator is seen. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by currier, per year .. ; 2 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). , Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily A mail, outside of North Dakota. I ioned bucket-shop methods of salesmanship; they . 5.00} can go in for modern merchandising methods and Ds ++ 6.00 | organize chain store systems; or they can go after LeogaadGeteslae telabbooh bes oa ‘capital like Armenian peddlers carrying satehels Member: of The Associated Press full of Irish lace from house to house, ane obey Fed is ciate tela Siipatehies | In determining the ethics of this bond salesman- ie use for republication of a! news ispat 1e8 | in n . i i if credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- ;*tiP of the future, the right kind of a dictator could per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin ; 40 much good in breaking down the foolish preju- published herein. All rights of republication of all | dices which are now held against all bankers by other matter herein are also reserved, half-baked demagogues preaching concentrated mis- Foreign Representativ. # G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY i CHICAGO DETROIT , Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. f PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH K : Fifth Ave. Bldg. The Sanish Bridge Another step forward for North Dakota was tak- en when the Sanish bridge bill was approved by ithe legislature in 1925. ‘Next month, a celebra- iM de pee lOiretonidt {tion is to be held to mark the formal opening of Dr. V. H. Stickney | the bridge. Dr. V. H. Stickney of Dickinson is dead, and in, When the new, structure is open for traffic, it his passing the Missouri Slope loses one of its! will mean that the “second state,” McKenzie coun- | , finest characters and strongest ‘friends, {ty, will have become to the fullest extent an in- | Coming to Dakota territory in_1883, Dr. Stickney | tegral part of the rest of North Dakata. The Wil- ‘Slocated at Dickinson, where he practiced until his|liston bridge gave an outlet to the county on the death. A native of Vermont, the raw country myst!north, The Little Missouri bridge will give an- have looked strange to‘him at fi but he threw] other on the south, and the Sanish bridge will in- himself into his work with enthusiasm and became | sure easier communication with points to the east. an enthusiastic exponent of the Slope country and} It is gratifying to note that the bridge’s open- | ‘fte~advantages, ; ing is so close at hand. McKenzie county, with its His friends were legion. On horseback he rodej area nearly as large as that of Delaware and relays over hundreds of miles to care for patients.|Rhode Island combined, has been too long cut off He .was ,ags intimate friend of Theodore’ Roosevelt |from the rest of us, and we welconfe the oppor- arldthe! phy t® bring into being the memorials to the| tunity te become better acquainted with our here- | lati preéMerit now erected in this state. |tofore “distant neighbor.” a comparatively short space of time Dr. ‘Stick- & ney saw Dickinson grow from a straggling cow | Poets in Pig Iron town to a thriving city. His enthusiasm for the, Aesthetic nincompoops bob up ever and anon to town and surrounding country helped to bring many chide the giants of industry because these giants immigrants. His faith in the possibilities of the have never heard of Aeschylus, Tagore, Bergson, Slope country never failed. ; Brahms, or any of their buddies. It is perhaps < Although he is dead, the memory of what he has | lamentable that we cannot all be genitisés of i i done for western North Dakota will never be ef-jsal knowledge, and discuss the fine :arts “with faced. As time passes, he will be honored more) same familiarity with which we talk of our and more for his ability, his sterling traits. Anljness, but the trouble with the aesthetes is that a greater Missouri Slope will stand as a memorial | there are very few artists, musicians, or literary ness, for there are twenty. million of these small | | Such a market is worth protecting, and it is to! Three courses are open to the bond wholesalers: | $7.20 | ‘They can carry on business through the old-fash- | information. | SINGING SWEETLY, SINGING HOLY ; OM, HOLY, HOLY | it HOLY; OH, HOLY, HOLY. “ to him. \ladies and gents who can talk intelligently: outside SEE SEE TSS their chosen fields. This is just as. much to their Franco-German Treaties | ‘France and Germany have at last come to an agreement on a commercial treaty, says a recent dispatch. Within a week, reports are, the trade re- lations between the two former enemies will be discredit as it is to the discredit of the business man that he does not know the place of Robert Browning in the revival of romanticism. Just as.much creative genius can go into the pro- duction of a piece of pig iron as goes into the pro- ‘placed on a stable basis for the first time since the|duction of a piece of poetry. Artists seeking ‘to war. measure the intelligence of the world use a yard- There is every reason to believe, as do diplomats | stick of their own devising, and its units do not ap- of both countries, that the new treaty will have ply in all cultures. Questioned on some of the awe- real political results. Definitely estranged ever | inspiring beauties of modern scientific knowledge, since 1914, these two major countries of western |these selfsame artists would be found woefully Europe have at last come to terms—terms’ mor? | dumb: amicable and more reasonable than those which Editorial Comment | characterized the Versailles treaty and the treaties No Such Animal. of 1870, Under the new treaty, the maximum custom rates which have for some time been applied to importa- tions will be abolished. In their ‘place there will (Sioux City (Ia.) Journal) If Mayor William Hale Thompson of Chicago ac- tually believes he and Chief of Police Hughes have driven the criminals from that city he is far more be new and minimum rates, making for large ip- creases in the imports and exports of each country. leredulous than he ought to be while occupying an important official position. If, on the cther hand, France and Germany each has many products which the other wants and needs. The new treaty will insure their getting them. The bitterness of the war is passing. Trade treaties are a genuine aid in closing the breach. he realizes that his boast that he would cow the fe ge underworld in ninety days has failed, he must think : Mr. Bloom Says...... the public is credulous in a degree that would be Congressman Sol Bloom of New York has put! silly. : into words a thought which has been troubling] When Mayor Thompson took his seat he made his many ardent Democrats. He expresses concern|boast. Yes, he and “Go-Get-’Em Mike” Hughes over the two-thirds rule which prevails at Demo-| would accomplish a miracle. They would make the cratic conventions and makes an earnest plea for|criminals of Chicago pack up and leave, eager for ‘its‘ abolishment “for the seke of party harmony and| pastures new. The underworld would want a change cooperation.” in environment, so greatly would it fear the new “Mr. Bloom points out that, although this rule|regime in Chicago. Now, after three months, Mr. has been in effect ever since 1844, ‘‘a Democratic | Thompson says it has been accomplished, that crime candidate never was elected because of it, but only there has been reduced 65 per cent. It is as though in spite of it...and has cost the party a substan-|he had invited the public’s consideration of himsel? tial number of victories, or, at any rate, has de-| and the chief as magicians, prived us of our last chance of victory on a number| Some criminals may have left Chicago since.) ‘of occasions.” mayor made his boast. Vacation time appeals In this, Mr. Bloom will probably find support. | classes, and no doubt a good many of the hijack The delegates who sat day after day in the con-| gangsters, robbers, gunmen, and the like are en- vention hall at New York in 1924 should certainly | joying themselves at various resorts in the Chicago agree with him. Supporters of the party who sat/ district. But they will be back on the job later, as by and watched the battle being waged, and saw/ Mr. Thompson will see if he keeps his eyes open. the weak compromise which came of it, should| Meanwhile, if news reports are to be believed, the agree. underworld vacationists left others at home to carry In view of present conditions, it would seem an! on the work of crime during their absence. In Chi- extremely wiseything for the Democrats to take\rago crime is a business, cognizance of JMr. Bloom’s statements.. As it| stands, the stage is all set for another Republican, The Vanishing Hobo | dif he happens to be Coolidge there will be very (St. Paul Dispatch) S -fittle argument about it. The Democrats will have} Not long Since, with the beginning of thé hav- to do some very effective work if they want to) vest season there came. to the communities of the - swing any votes at all. If they let their conven-| great agricultural area of the northwest what was | tign again become a sideshow for the country to'then regarded as the annual plague of hoboes— Idugh at, the only consolation they can have the|farm laborers who dropped off box cars, brake- day after election is that they furnished harmless | beams and blind baggage, in search cf work. Until amusement to a lot of us. employed they managed to sustain themselves by _—_——__————_ jungle camps on the outskirts of town, with the A Czar For Wall Street “ \“mulligan” made from the gleanings of neighbor- The movies having their Hays and the baseball|ing gardens and chicken-coops. During the day- Street must join the procession and have a dictator | and furnished a problem for the village marshal or of ethics all itsown. The question has just been | policeman at all times. raised by the M: ine of Wall Street. But they have vanished, with all their picturesque At first blush, the proposition might seem to bz’ rascality. Evidently President Coolidge noted their an attempt to nominate some unlucky banker for’ absence, last week, when he wrote to Secretary of Job of official goat. Against a dictator in Wall’ Labor Davis, urging employment agencies under his urled the vituperations of the| control to see that harvest hands went out to the the country who blame Wall| northwest in as great numbers as usual, for there personal misfortunes. Such a! is promise of a big’ crop. profession having its Landis, it is argued that Wall | time they lounged about the streets until employed | “Where's your book satchel?” Bob| “ sang out gaily when Che the dining room on Monday morning. | | “Myo book satchel?” she knit golden-brown brows. Then her! vivid Httle face glowed and dimpled; she spread the full, short shirt of hef ye} low-and-brown’ gin, eck; ta feta and. made a gitl cbtts: “Like it, Mr. Bo: is my fbus ness’ costume, in. which perform as the city’s most effjcient private seereta: Two eggs. strant+ bled with cream; please, Mrs. Lund! I'm going to neéd all my stren today, Going to be. a slave-dr Bob?) ) es at “You're mighty right T ami B chuckted. “One darn good thin you can’t al-bi to me about being late to work. I'll see that yop. ge there on time every morning, fqr I'll| drive you: down. ' Faith, “still subdued by the mem- ory of her ale intment of the day before, when si tried to turn aroets seoeth laughing face wonder: gnawed uldn’t he | it Cherry- ously indulgent? But—she wasn Cherry! No one could look at Cher- ry with bored eyes, or even with tol- erant eyes. Faith managed to smile with ma- ternal fondness upon both of them as they kissedy her rood-bye. first Cherry, then Bob—Bob’s kiss no more lingering than "s—but| t when they had gone, Cherry*fripping down the flower-bordered path to the car, her small body very close to Bob's tall, striding figure, she had to grope for the door, for her eyes ‘were with tears. ft was Mrs. Bundy's ; staccato exclamation that ‘Faith's head sung her swallow the hard lump inher throat. Iusband into un looked frong, one other, and a dull her heart. k at her as he looked y entered | with it!, Lawsy me, Mis’ Hathawa shu un in the sathe offi looking young man— bedroom, slamming the door behind ; er. I intend to} it ‘punished the slammer, for the | noise awakened Cherry's baby, which had been sleeping sweetly -| had given her her six o'clock bottle. Abbe bathed and dressed the in- Iw foe nameless except. for Cher. the: scenes that were being enacted at Bob's about, dressed like’ a chorus girl in the! “Sehool possession of Bob's offi business, offering him cri advice in her high, musica! d_ unsuccessfully] ti Cherry's ch of her dimpled. knees touching Bob's under the drawn-out leaf of the desk; Why] ¢ smili nterested, alert, humor-| familiar word; the intervals between would talk, bright, friendly talk, such as husbands and ‘10% case sto telephone her husband, so, ‘that she could interrupt, for ment at ort@red imagination was picturing. And Bob oT Id pl he no; ‘He evel eoreaed tee aed hoes She left the lemona out. 6N THE DEEP, SOLEMN WOOD, AT DAWN 1) HEAR. AVOICE SERENE AND PURE, NOW FAR, NOWNEAR, ‘SLOW i AGAIN AT EVENING HUGH, NOW NEAR NOW FAR + OH, TELL ME, ART THOU VOICE OF BIRD OR STARZ SOUNDING SWEETLY, SOUNDING SLOWLY, he | aA 71S increas nos Genem 4 INCHES. UPPER PARTS, T AND WINGS DARK CINNAMON-BROWN ; TAIL, REDDISH BROWN. UNDER PARTS WHITE. BREAST]. GPOTTED, SIDES BROWNISH 5 BELLY WHITE. *SWAMP ANGEL,” ITS VOICE - APPEALING TO THEIR HIGHER. EMOTIONS. AND NOBLEST ASPIRATIONS «° you've went and let her get away| Editor Journal thought you had better sense! A- the yprettiest girl in’ town with the best-| somcho h, uifable to .bear more,| cupation and ha the living room into her But like most slammed doors, ing in the f ince Faith ing arrangenpnts for affectionate epithet, “Midge! ith tortured'herself with picturing office, Cherry fluttering baseball. Days” number, taking es and his 3m and laughter- Bob. dictating, with drawn very close, one ed voi: Usually, however, park and spending herry's. lovely face glowing and] fishing ought, to or frowning over some un- yrd;, the of scene and #3, during which the two of them ortant the 8 did nottseem | f ne the oe fable to indulge in At eleven o'clock she made an ex- of a household .to 3; away from his fami! The broker who ast, the scenes which her annoyed, abrupt, Service <u _—_. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN of i moving picture cm porinm. e fore, probably desirable for the fen his vacation y. , atte cuperate in a hotel i in touch constantly with his ticker will probably return from his vaca- tion more tired than when he wént The type of vacation that a per-| for them. ses: ought to be ‘such cause him to forget his usual oc- will The ‘desk work- Se er and clerk will probably enjoy most of all somé time spent out-of-doors in moderate muscular exercis Walk- e indulged in ‘accord- the individual's strength. Golf| good {f'you enjoy it and if the are made to order fo playing are not themselves go difficult as to be dis- i amon; turbing.:: Teapi#ts-usually too vi 10 to! their ous for the person unaccustomed to clothes and contrive all sorts of hot exercise and the game is true of weather games, seems to prefer he sitting on the bleachers in the ball evening in a For him. 1, sinee he is coneerned primarily. ith a rest’ Unqus ably, the mental variation is ical. It is, tl 3 to re- which he keeps old Mosaic law of rest in every observer. thu: jus made a lemon pi: . ‘man is likely to afternoons a week kk for one or ti for golf and; to take in addition two weeks or nm out OUR WAY IN AN GITA id..be a personification of| A trip just made through southern Minnesota by a new face for all the|H. S. Jones, secretary of the. Minnesota Farm Bu- riding the steam roller of | reau federation, indicates that the shortage of la- bor is not as great as feared from the disappearance if the hobo from the trains and towns and jungles, Instead, five or six of them club together, buy a CANT I EVEN GO Book WITHOUT HAMIN’ Mie BACK? WHUTS LiBuRY (NELL WEN He Sees > E CHEWIN' HE THINS "By. Williams] = M_EATN AN'ALLERS. ID - AN' NO GOIN ON BEHIND | CRIES FER SOME. SO $2 TIED A STRING ON MY, GUM SO'S I COULD GIT IT BACH IF HE SwaLLeRED IT— HE O PULLS SO GACY, | he nm re rollii Editor's Note: This is chapter 98 of the series of articles by a correspondent for The Tribune who is revisiting France as an advance guard for the “Second A. E. F.” CHAPTER XCVIII The boy must have been an artist. For, with an ordinary flat brush and a can of heavy black int, hi di id some fingers’ on ne wal “ha ance, tl show true talent, and that will live as long |" a-welrd and unusual effort — advancing line of German so! In threes, the figures are — one erect, the second kneeling, and tite third prone. There’s no detail, but every figure e~>resses the atti- tude the artist. wished to It require: only thé slightes ste of Lei! ination 4 eS rst figure in the act of pu the trigger of his piece and to feel that the other two figures are com- ing oA with the same ii ition. And all this was done so mie Is as nm could stand a hundred” away and Lm decreed life-size ag fase ‘almost os real he ‘ired at later on ‘at the on s. wall, ‘with these realistic figures, borders 2 wood across: from the French harracks in the Avenue The ong Approaching from the depot, one in- eatehes the unusual scene. For a moment it is rather mysti y ing, though 7 figures are so easily ‘preted, it the mystery van- es with the explanation that any extemporaneous artists of E. F. were numerous. Some did their work on ambulances.. One, a chauffeur of ths 2nd Divisi: placed an Indian head in the side of his truck a job so well .J adopted as the insij vision, work streets Others us ate Ait ith villages wi “42nd Street” — “Rue Market’ vard Woodward.” . the fia! that ‘wer: any. wit crude: bof thick paint, But outstanding effort is the’one that still remains on the well at Chaumont and will be there long years after the Amer- icgn Legion line of ad- ne! rs daubed by an artiat with rare skill that he and ‘his: buddies might have some realistic targeta to shoot at. TOMORROW: A War Author. ty When nickin, tion, matters of hea ered: to. wpter good sanitation, pure milk and a good food supply should be~considered [BARBS } Nature is making ofl, says a Ger- man scientist. But we'd like to ask the Dame why she makes more cans than oil. ene Major crimes in Chicago have in- creased, says the city crime commis- mn. Mayor Thompson says he prom. ised to reduce crime and it has beew reduced 66 per cent since he assumed oftice. Well, what would he be ex- pected to say? | Standardiz but we sometimes wish the movies weren't so de: ily in earnest about it. Tickets. for the Dempsey-Sharkey fight, that sold for $27.50 were re- sold for as high as $200. What ® triumphant “{ told you so!” Mr. Barnum could enjoy these days! In one New York town they barred a hot dog stand on the-ground that mall boys do net know what is good Re @ about wars, di- gal wars, mort- all stones, we're begin- ink some of the large boys ;vorees, murder: gages and ‘nine to tl | don’t, either. New. York, July 28. New, York's rs. Whatever the suffering the. pid it is the signal ‘for the small bo: i young: it By the very nature of things a) swimmin’ manaal laborer might find a vaca- tion spent in a hammock with a good book an ideal form of recuperation.| quires ablie arges. rm of jay Nncinadlen and ‘ork. To swim in must be quick at dodg- ing tugs, barges and’ fer rivers fre not always clean, But neither are the kids. Now und then e medical board writes of germs es is New effort in the river o1 The youngsters’ of . the public fountains are typical of the city streets—most of tl newsies who have toased their papers aside for the moment, or bootblacks. On the a swimmer the other ‘morning., A found in turn to jump in the Hall Square is a read Mecca. re they the statue of Civic ¢ litthe square into is undress in Hress and aS 4 . jousands, ig, way’ 4 Wall Street, stop to woe ee chi - sistatfolios tha Woreereerts fa" z e children of jin fallowed the Pied th should be con-|. . jon is a handy thing, ; °° | Piper. They roll in the streets hen firenren turn on the water mains, 2 y sail little boats down the gut- ers. At night there is the great adven- ture of sleeping on the fire eate or the roof, on the old folks . yem and on adolescents . . but the kids! Oh, boy! They signal from fire-escape to:fire esca ‘rom rovf'to roof, |i Theyo ew ea: slaps and. finally,jas»ithe humidity envelops them, :theyfall (hse a stu- por and sleep, There ig little rest for the | Mbit They sit all night upon top: the roo! s or in the streets. The tenements are emptied and. the streets are a flood of veople, all seeking ‘a vagrant breath of air. And babi Where do they all come from, so hot and restless and il} tempered? Many tenement dwellers flee to the battery or to the beaches. The long day beside’ the pushcarts has been too mtich for them. They must get away.or perish. All day long they seem caught in a kettle which fairly ‘boils their pushcart wares . old old women, standing in . standing and sitting Old man ini i shi etree ining, mopping their brows. . Wi ll the city steams and compiains. . What iron ts in their veins! What infinite capacity for discomfort and resistan: Standing throughout the day to buil@ uo their little fortune: ~ . And the heat closing in damper hotter. ILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1927,.NEA Service, Inc.) | Old Masters Innocent eyes not ours And made to look om flowers, Eyes. of small birds, and insects small; lorn after summer morn |The sweet rose on her thorn ns her bosom to ‘them: all. > The last and ‘least of things That soar on quivering wings, Or crawl among the grass blades out of sight, Have just as clear a right long past their fourscore. uncomp! To their appointed portion of de- “light As queens or kings. , ‘7-Christina G, Rossetti; Things Wait Upon Thee. A Thought | ‘Take therefore no thought for the morrow —Matthew, vi, 34 All :Tomorrow may bring the final reckoning.—Spurgeon, . Gasoline Now le A welcome announcement is the fact that gasoline may now cost only lle, It is estimated that this rédue, tion would, effect a saving of miiS Hons lollars for the American + This amasing reduction jis brought about by a mysterious little device that is easily installed on 1041, 4668" W. Wianehage S13 * A inne! jt Milwaukee, Wise., i proud of this invention that for a limited time he ewners, wha’ wil elp trirodcce %e A 0 wi intr it. He algo needs men eve here and offers profts of $75 to $150 a week to men who will handle local busi- ness. Write him sf once fer his free sample offe ss sample, offer, “ead yaier,ymaking We . Keep whistfin’! Is the. eep whistlin’! ae ee each fe! whistlin’! le awful hard? ke = ge eynces seem but eep whlatlin 2 _ginifiese tu vend fo Aon Keep Whistlin’! ———____ : 3 _ (By Florence Borner) in ee Aig whist mee! Ee most everrthing go wrong? x elie! acids and. pine, \ the countersign, Goodness, sa ee, weather fine? ca veward? Burdens ain't’so hard to bear does his share, - ~ and square, slim, 4

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