The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 2, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR | ~~ An. aateeneeeenenettnmemnncccnetinth tien, <n. ta The Bismarck Tribune ciently unique and yet so obviou: ly worth while that one wonders why other firms haven't thought to An Independent Newspaper ; P provide “personal financial counselors” for their THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER employes, thus cashing in on the idea that the un- (Established 1873) worried and contented employe means fat coffers for Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | the employer. Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the Postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann.......... President and Publisher i, Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per ear, (in state outside Bismarck). Daily oy mail, outside of North lember Audit Bureau of Circu Labeling Divorcees Here’s a cause waiting for ao champion. The cause is battle against “divorce rings.” Divorce rings, be it known, as sponsored by Paris, city of divorces, are gold or platinum circlets en graved with two hands, not clasped, but back to back, around a ruby or diamond or emerald or pearl or some other bauble precious enough to make a merry jingle-jingle in a jeweler’s coffers. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to | the use for republication of all news dispatches Battle must be done, for how can the cause of credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa-| Marriage ever compete with the cause of divorce, Per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin | when the former gets merely an engraved circlet Published herein, All rights of republication of all with possibly a few infinitesimal diamond chips other matter herein are also reserved. thrown in, whereas divorce gets a ring with a really | big precious stone and chic engraving in the shape Foreign Representatives 4 G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY of hands that are mad at each other, pd keep their CHICAGO DETROIT | backs turned? hing vite BURNS & sit Blds.| “Here's grist for the Sunday sermon and the anti- NEW YORK me nee z Fifth Ave. Bldg. | “iveree homily ! (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Heredity Isn't Everything ; A tiny item asks again the old question, which is mightier, heredity or environment? The news concerns the eldest son of the late mas- ter novelist, Joseph Conrad. Alfred Conrad, the son, York as legal adviser to the French consulate. | has been sentenced in old Bailey court, London, to Despite the impression, steadily gaining ground in|12 months’ imprisonment after Pleading guilty to America, that something in the nature of a “divorce | converting to his own uses $5,500 intrusted to him mill” is operating in the French capital for the | for purchasing manuscripts of his late father’s work, benefit of foreigners, especially Americans, Mr.| Joseph Conrad, the man whose “Lord Jim” is one Mancini declares that the processes of the French | of the most vital stories of the wages of cowardice courts are not much faster than our own, that re- and sin ever penned, certainly transmitted to his ports of divorces being obtained with Great case are | son no criminal faults. greatly exaggerated and that steps have now been| yp may encourage humbler fathers that the best taken to check minor abuses formerly possible under efforts of greater men do not always work with the French law. their children, either. He explains, however, that, in general, French courts take a more lenient view of divorce and that | their conception of abstract justice, especially where it affects an individual’s personal liberty, is far French Divorces That the American People have an entirely false idea of French divorces, is the contention of J. G. Mancini, 2 member of the Paris bar now in New H. C. L. Reaches a Peak No fact affects the majority of People as the fact ee Tribune corre: Chambord, has fixing valuation: As “The Grandmother of the A. E. F.” Madame Bazin has received thou- sands of letters from former Amer- ican soldiers who were billeted in ae ie. She k th hal lutter, |) from Philadelp! troit and hund: search, however, ‘was with She wanted to find the last communication she had received n Frank E, Payne, an orphan sol- she had figuratively objective. dier whom adopted in 1919, Letters were room in that search. Every box was Gisela and the contents Final! » after Madame Bazin, found the missive she wi called him, and bore a Honolulu a Scrawling in that he had just A French tug who had paddler English Channel. Legionnaire who rowed over for the convention, British new: ment of Lord disarmament conference. somebody over Bok peace. Cameras clicked in the Black Hills but the trout ref 8 broader than the American conception. For in- stance, the insistence of the American courts on a stated term of residence is unknown in the French judicial processes. However, the increasing list of actions brought by Americans has caused the recent invocation of a six-months rule, which will hence- forth be enforced: i It is interesting to note that French divorces are only to be obtained for adultery, cruelty and convic- America’s after-war high cost of living has tion for infamous crimes. Insanity is not a cause. | reached its peak and is tumbling, say economists. Divorce by mutual consent is impossible in France, M. Mancini declares, all American conceptions to the contrary. He points out that there are certain steps which must be taken by the parties concerned in a divorce, which makes the Process not a particu- larly swift one at all. { Tt is fortunate that M. Mancini has taken the opportunity to advance the facts of the matter. We have indeed had the impression that divorce in France was a particularly easy matter, swift and oll tended by little difficulty. We are glad to have that impression corrected. of the increase or ‘the deacrease in the cost of living. The great majority of the People, therefore, will be interested to know that although the average cost of food increased from one to five per cent in 46 out of 51 investigated cities last month, 31 of the same cities showed a decrease of from one to five Per cent over the same period last year. right, with found herself the Europe, however, is still climbing to the peak, and ;the no relief can be expected for a long time. The longer a war lasts, the longer the people pay. aianety epigrams which Editorial Comment An Electrified Plow (St. Paul Dispatch) On a millionaire’s farm near Rochester, N. Y., except Cherry. happy. been Minnesoth farmer. A plow, drawn behind a tractor, ler Why People Borrow Money A recent bankers’ report, made after examination of several thousand loans to working men and wom- en, asserted that telephone operators and clerical workers lead the list among women borrowers, and firemen were first in the list,of men borrowers. Three-fourths of the meni seeking loans were mar- ried, according to this report, and 85 per cent had dependents, while only 18 per cent of the women loan seekers had dependents, Illness was the reason given most frequently for the request of the loan. Getting the winter supply of coal was a second leading cause. It is not difficult to find a reason for the high rate of borrowers among telephone girls. Most telephone girls are required to dress beyond their 4 is 3 means, holding, as they do, conspicuous seats in less cost. The experiment is almost revolutionary in most any office; and their pay envelope rarely takes | its possibilities for agriculture, this into consideration. Wes derived from the tractor’s generator, into the soil. ‘undertone The result is said to be astounding. Electric cur: terpiece. “I'm still hoping your portrait, Fai insects and their larvae and injurious bacteria, This would be a tremendous advantage, but when there is added to it the claim that it restores soil its value might well be regarded as limitless, In several counties in Minnesota quack grass has taken over many valuable acres. Such a contrivance would restore them to cultivation. The country has just spent $10,000,000 to stop the corn-borer with tanks of liquid fire. The electric plow, if it stands up to first experiments, should end it and wipe out the cutworm, the boll weevil and other pests at far into paint. gasped came Faith, sitting at the foot of the exquisitely appointed dinner table, on Mr. Pruitt’s left, with George around the corner of the square table at her Cherry as his partner, dinner conversation seemed de- termined to revolve. sensation, one which caused her eyes to sparkle and her tongue to limber She surprised herself by saying clever things, making demure little laughing gayly and reason which she could not fathom, hitnerto socially negiigivie sister. Georee, seated at her Fight, le: is i ji ‘ almost constantly toward Faith, serv- there is just concluding a remarkable experiment ing her compliments even more ue. which will have more than Passing interest for the siduously than thé well-trained bu eet her with delicate foo sida | A i } gallantly sends through its lays 103,000 volts of elecricity | h7O"" poesia i ee ine with Mrs. ekg! noticed that his if 4 i ept straying to Faith, seeking her rent kills quack grass and other weeks, destroys ‘out over the top of the flower cen- patteny. in a lull in the conyers 7 ion. “Did she ever tell you, Hatha- fertility and pushes forward the growth of crops, ‘war, ther’ eee a Pea Haths to serve as a model for me? absolutely the only girl in this town that could tempt me to dip a brush Won't you help me to persuade her, old man?” Fait mentally, face was still smiling and serene as she waited for Bob's answer. It lowly, as a flush changed’ the tan of Bob’s cheeks to bronze: “Of course I'd be glad to have a portrait of my wife, Pruitt, if she cares to sit to you. busy, of course, with the baby—” “Oh,, you have a baby?” Andrews raised his sandy eyebrows inquiring- | Daily Health i Service This certainly summer were it | worms, flagpole mans, His wife fired BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the Ai ical Association and of Hy the Health Magazi In order to find the cause of con- vulsions or fits in childre Cookston, Bri tarily. Then, remembering the oc- casion, she smiled around che table. | Med! “That's right. You are playing mother to Cherry’s infant while she works, aren’t you?” George cut in eagerly. “Great, I'll paint you as a Madonna. That's what I've always wanted to do with you, When can I start work on the picture?” romantic! are fishing. » Dre pivot. upon which c ish hospital specialist in children’s ases, examined 95 cases occurring in children ‘from six weeks eleven and a half years old, It was a new “Well, I like that!” Cherry —pro- Most of the cases occurred during tested, her voice breaking. “It's my|the first year of life and the num. New York babs, and if anybody is going to be [Ber gradully diminished an the ehit-| 2 painted as| Madonna with it, I'll|dren grew older. Fifty cases were! Snapshots—The be the one! And I have the duckies boys and forty-five were gir! Tace scarf that I can drape over. my kept n 20 per cent of the instances the others, admiringly-—all Avenue bulging have not bulged ariatiea! in the family was kno For Cherry was not | head uy oe town. 1 0 “You a Madonna” Geo broke| to be epileptic. In eighteen ca: The spotlight had, for some tg, . Aone Or iawhtes Main cae there was a record that. the chi | schoo! of classic switched “from her to her | Cherry's golden eyes flashed light-|birth had been ‘difficult, ‘and tal the umptieth wi ning at him, he leaned toward her| twenty-six cases there were present and, chucked’ her impudently the chin. “Listen, sweet child, if K-paint you as anything it will be as tHe ‘typical flapper or as ‘Jazz-! toucher tal deficiency. In four ca occurred only at night, the remainder they occurred both day| by ‘the pyramid’ man! and night. buildings) Faith was about to interrupt with] .The parents. were westioned , on the. twentieth a firm gefusal to pose for the picture, | closely, to shecial cael eer ae Hiner is mya a cee ‘onditions associ- since Cherry and Bob were both so ated in the mind of the paren mOOnErBONS Multa atts | doviause ante ciate ene king ‘her| it came: to her. with suddee clarity | Qecurrence of the fits, it was found inti or or fea’ already enfant | ered af mater Tnpettanse Sy 2 And What her immeasurably in her husband's parents, but that peasant excitement | service airpla sre Rowehof courte Ke would nt] aan important factor, Parte admit for the wor! at his ad- + when miration could Possibly be increased. large or pith, there seemed to be an What harm could there be in keep- anaes i ie fits, Pasay, Ral ing, him interested, in tetting ‘him |#,cild under one year of age hat a renlize that: others found her lovely | 2, kely to blame the fit ne eat an lesirable, too? . sear ap Panes, Dleture nade. with ae gee Meee likely to be of a much more serious nature, In} Yid many Pesan es the anely sped ae are manifestations oj epilepsy. in Next: Miss. Pruitt has a confiden-/ ther instances, they are definitely tial alk with saith about George! associated with’ a disturbance of tha and Cherry, nervous system that indicates a high (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) degree of nervous instability. Cer- ERENT TS tainly the occurrence of convi me ; sance who tells | A Thought ——— ei u'll let me paint George said augurated. ; done by electr: Jo She's pay an se es word “kibiteer this winter. . using this word me.” she said quietly. “And thank Bere her ou Ganree Voata cs ane shows you how She's pretty in a child is a matter for prompt and | Stance. careful in ion. " In the e turning from Women,, whether they have dependents or not Villages Need Teamwork ly at Faith, és i * 4 ‘It's my baby," Cherry blurted] So téach us to number our child, preferably _b thi lpay, woe would naturally be forced to borrow the same as (Princeton, Minn., Union) out like a child that is about to burst | that we may apply eur hearts, serious than a warn beth ae hhysi- men with dependents, since the responsibility of The words, cooperation and teamwork, have been | itto tears over being ignored. “ But | wisdom.—P% ims xer12, cian should be calted immedlatel e men is considered when their wages are fixed, Mfoctions, so overworked for the past seven years that they have almost lost their value, but the qualities and conditions that are covered by those words are I'm afraid. You'd the way she “Oh, Cherry! whereas women are generally regarded as responsi- ble to themselves alone, and the wages fixed ac- cordingly, Faith has alignated eg Care should be taken that the child does not harm itself during the in- terval between calling of the physi- cian and arrival, th Full oft we sce cold wisdom wait- ing on superflous folly, — Shakes- - peare, ster here essential to the economic Prosperity of any village or small city in this state, and Princeton is no ex- ception. Princeton in the past has had a state-wide reputa- tion for the solidarity of its People, and that repu- tation is worth maintaining. as While competition is keen in the villages’as in the cities, it would be well for the merchants and business men here to remember that their hardest competitors are not in Princeton. but in the cities 30, 50 or 100 miles from here. The individual who has sufficient business judgment to be a strong competitor realizes that it does not Pay to abyse or depreciate a man engaged in business in the same block. That sort of Play always reacts, and worse than that it injures the whole community. Fortunately the world is so constituted that most of us cannot greatly better our own conditions with- out bringing someone else up with us. Probably no merchant in this village can greatly increase his own trade without in a small measure increasing the volume of business that goes to his competitor in the same black with him. Of course, the queen will receive a hearty wel-| A rather discouraging corollary of this fact is come if she returns. For her country’s sake, she| that some individuals Profit by the situation and deserves it. But if she is wise, she will avoid social| tide free to a fair degree of Prosperity on the ini- contacts as much as possible. There was too much | tiative and generosity of the other business houses scrapping to make the trip all it should have been, |in the community. But grafters show their colors iid in the course of time and do not profit in the end, because the average individual likes to’ show his appreciation of fair play. Community action is needed in Promoting pros- perity and increasing the volume of business done in any village. The business men if .many com- munities in this state have come together and are boosting their town, and they are getting their re- ward. The finest thing that could happen to Prince-. Another Visit From Marie? Queen Marie says she is to visit the United States again after her period of mourning for King Fer-| dinand is over. Just a short time before she said this, she pleaded with the People of America not to forget her in her sorrow. Tt is not likely the people of America will forget Queen Marie. The turmoil and clamor which sur- rounded her passage across the country still ring in the ears of many. The bitter fight for recogni- tion which many put up and the arguments which punctuated her tour are well remembered by many of us. It cannot be denied that Queen Marie was a big drawing card in this country. She gave some of us a chance to see what a real queen looks like. But the unsavory side of the trip lingers longest in many memories, The commercialization of the whole thing jarred on some. The theatricalism of it palled on others. We (1144, re ess iN Spending Means Thrift ste at wi iN Gog YOU PULL THEM OUT OF’ A BOG AND SANE THEIR LIVES AND THEN THEY GO FOR YOU. PsHAW CURLY, Do “OU PUT ANY SfOcH IN THESE STORIES ABOUT ANIMALS LICKING er we Se GRAT (TUDE ? A IROCLE’ AND THE Lion NO ia PP Warners ah Si a4 may | wrie ' - i me ION IN’ O' TE Before ¢ Heme 2 Beth AGH OUT WHEN MACE FER me a oe NEARS An’ es ay My and Anita® Loos, Rosalie Stewart organized =the there. . . been dramatized Cormack. , ing Fords. . .. Thus do the fob gore) to get visiting France American Legion, CHAPTER Cll ¢ Marie Bazin of St. Dyc- near the at him with an old- fashioned revolver, a Chicago may testified in a divorce action. Don’t cheer, boys. Soleirringeh apy ae che a, “it IN warfe chairs and barely able I - NEW YORK to reach the telephone when stand- ————________» under|”0t only convulsions: but also men- flimsy drapes, were out dancing s the fits! one of the “step back: whereas inj ever you call those lea of something a bit wit Dee, Maclane; ‘the four-foot béll- 30 in hotel. . . . “And what's crowd the ‘liitle deliow opened st the Eltinge yesterd ity. ling, ey once wi , ei to the national slang 0” the edge of his h ful run in Atlantic City yesterday. ne aealbier is from the | Th ‘4 nd rally 0 - der the influence of an exclusive ! teipatings Bitarioe weatleotenndeiss eastern finishing school into a gor- the while. 's “The Letter,’ id still prefers her to blondes. watomhessns ‘Maine, the; has bee: most flourishing sub- Broadway this summer. - Samuel Shipman and 4 ing eight John 14 mer, “! itney Players” on tour iy Little Joe eI ‘TUESDAY, AUGUST.Q,49271 PRIVATE fois back, SE? TRANCE 9. ie, Editor's Note: This is chapter” 102 of the series of articles by a cured a good job as a cook on a Pa- cific liner and was “going good.” 8] lent who is re- | He Get his love and said he scout for the - But that made no dif- eet begd ae ee letter Chateau de/ from him and she ex! ited it with for When it was handed se Orn Orem Tet ane deared (ep tes Th! i she began replacing the treasures in the boxes. As she worked, a particularly dis- tinguished-looking letter fell to the red | floor. She reached down, picked it nd, after an instant’s scrutiny, red it in with a pile of post- » Apparently, it meant very lit tle to her; certainly it had. no sig- nificance as compared to that missive from “Frankie.” It would have been neglected if Madame Bazin's visitor hadn’t extracted it. were succinct. “Tres content de notre visit a Chambord.” The date of the letter was Oct. 30, 1928. And it was signed by J. Pier. pont Morgan, of 12 Grosvenor Square, London. , Bazin, the 84-year-old ‘grandmother of the A. E. F.” in St. hes her own system for fixing ions. TOMORROW: Signs of German Occupation. presented letters Baltimore, De- red of cities. Her definite strewn all over the attered. hour, rkling, looking as she a full hal her eyes 3; pen says Edsel Ford is backine antarctic flight of Com: der Byrd. Two women and three men found guilty at Florence, Alabama, in con- nection with flogging of Mrs. Bertha A. Slay. . picked up a canoeist his way across the Probably some falls 200 feet outside city, ringing death list in accidents in it area apers ureed during past egiht days to seven. Ifour to the New York Times says Standard Oil company of New Jersey will he divided imps, mark- ing first di orid wine interests s: dissolution of 1911. —__— —_——— { ‘At The Movies | ¢—_—_—_—________—_. CAPITOL “Wolf's Clothing,” starring Monte Blue and Patsy Ruth Miller, kept everybody happy, who witnessed its first showing at the Capitol theatre yesterday, An exciting story of a wild night in New York on New Year's eve, it is replete with thrills Maybe there was trying to would be a dull not for the airplanes, sitters id Still- The poor deyils H. | (Copyright, 1927, NEA Seriyce, Ine.)|®nd fun. One sequence in which all of tht ing on a table is enough to make olf’s Clothing” worth seeii Aug. 2. ‘Cradle Snatchers, windows of Fifth ee Bonga oe lie ay " shouting wi laughter during a two with faces an they pyears’ run, has been transferred to sine’, Lindy came to 2hg' screen. and local audiences are And all because &| promised a mirth-fest, when this pic- dance has opened on|ture: has a howing at the Capitol -|theatre commencing tomorrow, Wed- loor of a new sky tet i Soak enc tsd | Mies atbey. ot thisé, audalé-aged msbendss mike tell oe — they uc! unting — but their wives ing. off soning, law find out it ts chickens they're hunt. + Grecian dances !ag—blonde ones, story roof of a:sky- |: : ELTINGE A galloping romance is the way meone has described “Naughty But ice,” with Colleen Moore, which or. ager for today and W. efind the dining Femall Peer between New York and Boston that Arthur Lee has ine Fost ee allop seems - » ooking i: fr. compet, for it gathers momentum with each until it has everyone sitting it. Hise 's ae way it affected the audience tha Bd kre ee er ori gab ree ay ogee xpects to add thi story tells how a shy, green translated little Texas wallflower bloomed un- . % The fellow who geous wildflower. Those responsible to play ‘your bridge ba ind, for instance, or the golf nui- comedy situation: e you how to take your Dag many Goring oc in a deft, de! Saw Katherine Cornell re-' The skill and charm. with whid) Ea ro} ‘« She Miss Moore has invested her role -sees_the- picture because she has ‘Mived Trought, to the ‘characterization of hing “Berenice Summers” all the vivacity, h- insouciance, wilful youthfulness and ill sympathy in scenes of dramatic in- tensity that have made her known d loved wherever motion pictures exhibited. From the moment Colleen intro- duces Hallam Cooley, a total stran- ti tor"ehe parentete Te in'ghetie GE qr tad Whe best Seton, cn rantt ceialn to. appeal to svervone, who a} al Luni sheet ug! AO scilaais ane aa thal Water erewe baer: sill! yo gen wilt aries! — Old Mas mal HERE 1 BEEN teocane than $10: openi there was Lew Fields * who says her“hus-) What does the poor man’s son in- herit? tell me, Stout muscles and ssinaey Reeth) > 3 and Martha Hed: toil and art; kewood . Players to me, to hold in fee. ms producers and play- put Russell Lowell. in up there experi-|- tl Coolldge versus fly- - ~ who Fetarns, with a new hat and lots of ideas. . . . WA that Hergesheimer’s tb a age etter tells mel te bought himself @ pony and hopped -He right on, and then competition Broadwayites find it very far away fro ety aga nt tae , yeaa ne, authorities investi. ie losion -of art The content. v. Two Chicago flyers killed as plant ~ ands, he does his part... 3 threw his hind feet up; bay Beh Ag Hemel ae, vane 3

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