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either ations sued b sociati« In o flying ay trot st muniti routing will he ‘The capacl their in sev days. first,« machi: minut: cago t sD, the se Sma rying will t quirin and f cago | ute st at Be Bryar secon: and } day a Oth chane _ of th to st Ohio and J Cross PACE FOUR ~ The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bisniarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. + George D. Mann. President and Publisher “Subscrtption Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .... - $7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)... . 1.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck). sectesss GON Daily Br mail, outside of North cota. + 6.00 lember Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to| the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origir published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK -~ - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Altruistic Uncle Sam It is perhaps too early to puss any hard and fast ment on the success or lack of success which “@iatacterized the Geneva arms parley, but one com- ment by Seretary of the Navy Wilbur should be} ‘writ large in the copybook of principles which guides this government in future bickerings with) Othe? powers, “We cannot expect,” says Secretary Wilbur—“We {| movement of forces is slowed down. | quires “fuel,” too, but not so much. that Carol would not be the only one to rejoice it this came true. The young king, from all his actfons has shown he dotsn’t like the heavy restrictions which being ruler of his country impose on him. We'll wager a guess that he’d rather be a prince |again, with many of the bonds now fettering him severed, Horses in Wartime We ure wont to think of the day of the horse as being past. Some of us muse mournfully on the fact that the snorting automobile and tractor have succeeded the prancing charger which used to be such a common thing in earlier days. But for once the horse has won a victory. In Great Britain, he has been paid a tribute by military officers. There, they say, the horse is far superior to tractors in war maneuvers. Every tractor used in drawing a gun or supply wagon must be followed by a gasoline truck. Thus the pressure on the roads is just doubled and the The horse re- He needs little if any auxiliary transport for his feed. Despite our increasing mechanization, the horse still has his place. He may not be as plentiful as the auto or the tractor but there are some places where he serves better than any tractor or car can. New Things Needed Nothing new under the sun? The ladder manufacturers’ association of Amer- ica is working day and night in search of a skid- less ladder, one guaranteed to make anyone who stands on the top round as safe as the man below. In fact, there will be no man below, not if he is there only for the purpose of holding the ladder, for such man won't be needed, they say. The chairman of the skidless ladder committee eannot expect either Great Britain or Japan to scrap declares that it’s ridiculous to think that through new ships constructed since the former treaty for} all the years ladders have been used none has ever limiting armament, nor is it likely that we will again sacrifice new ships in such an undertaking.” The last clauses of that sentence—“nor is it likely that we will again sacrifice new ships in such an undertaking’—is the part that rankles. After the Washington conference this government in good faith scrapped thirty-two capital ships, nineteen of which were built and thirteen of which were under construction. Britain at the same time scrapped ‘only twenty-two ships, and Japan scrapped only six- teen. Generous Uncle Sam led the way and as usual, been perfected to a stage where it is safer than when the first ladder was erected. If you will think half a second you can enumerate fifty things which would mean “something new un- der the sun,” things badly needed, and so obviously simple that you wonder why they weren't invented long ago. Old Age The Only Disease Chicago’s health commissioner recently declared that someone should be hanged for ‘negligence every ‘he got a sock in the jaw for his benevolence. time ‘a death from typhoid fever occurs and thereby This Bird Seems to Have Quite a Family | : PURSDAY, AUGUST 9, 1927 back, abit“ = *SEDANCE 2 [edunt and fill a couple of g sacka with similar tiles—and mal a fortune. 5 went back this year reelles. He found je Murat de Lestang still ae still looking, for Amer- a. Idier in| But the chateau? That was gone. ere: jackage of| Only the chapel near the moat re: mained all wit fe of CHAPTER CVIIL Somewhere in the United States there’s. a wealthy gentleman who thinks purchased complete Louis fenrteeteval te. 'hie home jown for ' removal But he didn’t. He's shy ‘one tile. wt elt Bone lezera} je) ga cigarets, to Count de Murat de Le: junt De Murat de Lestan; e buek out to bis chateau.| The cou a te: there was achateau—of| millionaire and it-had been knocked rtee down and .was being shipped back, jiece by _pieee, far re-erection inthe inited States. With it of course, went the former soldier's dreams a fortune—for all the porcelain tiles had disap} peared. A keen disappointment. The buck did a littl aring. le kick around the moat énd the chapel fi an hour—very moody. Then he went away—feeling worse. And onty satisfaction he has now-c in the it. that the millionaire who ur-hase thinks he bought A, of Courcelles—complete. er idn't. celain tile that’ fits of the wallvof the hallway leading to the veranda over@he most. Tomorrew:,.On Montfaucon Hill. design. copped” Tt went to the States in a barracks bi The discharged buck showed it, furniture manufactu: ‘The raction of blankness of mind, is sociated with a slow rate of blink A state of, mental tension out an external outlet is ac ied by a rapid blinking rate. [sam —] They .say Lindbergh does not smoke, chew, drink or go'to parties. It is no wonde fly. The husband who wearte: forming-the daily. labors en to the tale of an Asi tribe. There are only 150 in this tribe, but eller: is usually the} it markedly different from any - other group. The women do all the ‘ work. The men sit home in luxury, Our aviators ate flying over the} with a few of the smaller household seven and our president is ‘rest-| duties to attend to, while their wives ing at Rapid City. i ors and get th stenance for the — family. Sciehce can predict an eclipse of oh yen the sun over a period of several wet te years in advance, but cannot pre- coulau the Rhodes cekelie Tak The worst best seller. dict a blow-out over the wi id. be adapted to fit this case? Why. The “get” in the hardest part of| p0t send over an, American or the buget. Foutine and let ’em reverse the Daily Health kingless. woman of today ‘order of things? two members of the tribe mi be rt a were siven an be ight into the American home When it conies to a probe, Senator) * see gh een tareand ara a wtney taser A bagel ep ate Oil eliminates friction; except in Winer’ y When an object is brought sud-|the. machinery of international | this suggestion, but whoever it is, in an’ blinks. Frequestiy he" bitnks|Feuatlonts ulde't forget. to. provide. return ithout any apparent stimulation. eeet Our daily work may pall an Two British physiologists, , but when far away from it. it as- Ponder and Kennedy, decided to fin sumes a@ romantic glamor no one The si T} is probably the daughter of the bare- he most emphatically brought out the realization foot boy of yesterday. that this one dreaded disease is now under almost complete control. For all this amazing progress, man’s knowledge of disease and preventive medicine is still in primi- tive state. A British scientist told the American Chemical Society the other day that one three-mil- American big heartedness in international dealing has on several other occasions suffered similar treatment. When America first entered the World War General Pershing conferred with British states- men on how the American army might best co- operate with the Allies. The British at that time practically insisted that American troops be sent over as replacements to British units, to fight = under the British flag. Pershing’s insistence that the United States troops fight under the United States flag caused much hard feeling for a lorg time. emer, craft By Dr. Morris Fishbein sitting at the foot of the Editor Journal of the American ely appointed dinner table, on Mr. Pruitt’s left, with George around the corner of the square table at her right, with Cherry as his partner, found herself the pivot upon which the dinner conversation semed de- lionth part of uni vitamin would athens eee ee a ermined to revolve. It was a new|a Madonna, That's what I've always sensation, one which caused her eyes | wanted to do with you. When can cure an advanced case of rickets in a rat indicating hate? titan + i imagined “AG ed that the curative powers of these new and myster-|to sparkle and her tongue to limber |1 start work on the picture?” out whether blinking is automatic! iwc ean ious life forces, still not definitely understood have "™azingly. “Well, I ike that!” Cherry pros] 01," conditiens, which brigg blinking Q ; “| She surprised herself . by tested, her voice breaking, It's my] Us conditions which bring blinking TO ‘ABIE’ only begun to be appreciated. clever things, making demur baby and if anybody is going to be|® aut. tly ‘blinking } a . Rose has breathed its The day tn which someone should be hanged when-|epigrams which kept the others | painted as Madonma with it, I'M] efor "the ctcention. o ee last breath. This American institu- be the one! And I have the duckiest tion. (isn’t it that by now?) van- laughing gayly and admiringly—all sak Saithe Sameera eet tants = ever a death occurs from any cause except old age! oxco, y- ,| found, althouy sudden illumin: . pt Cherry. For Chi t |lace scarf that I can drape over my seems at times to be not far distant. | . ad: fomepaeat ig hed from the stage this week after happy. The ‘spotlight had, for some | hi tion may produce a few rapid blinks | Editorial Comment | n instead, every individual has a noi Neen one ahs coum not é grew mal Sftntlee rate which is modified The Phantom at the Geneva Feast (The St. Paul Daily News) + 4 ‘ by external stimuli: - The rate: of hitherto socially negligible sister., > Georac, coatet pty je) si 4 blinking is mote) rapid)-whea the What was the real, the deep-down cause of the failure of the naval conference at Geneva? almost-constantly toward fixed ten Pe tones pete than To the casual observer it would appear to be be- ing her compliments, eve jsiduously than the wel ler plied her with deli foods. Across: the table, Bob tried gallantly to aakh ‘eoriversation-in; andlattering undertone with Mrs. Pruitt,: but |cnerey noticed that his blue’ eyes Loa straying to ‘Faith, seeking, er cause Great Britain and the United States could, terpiece, ". \°? °F the flower cen- not agree on a cruiser program. The actual reason| “! h was because the great war which was to end wars yoadentn, ine ate notoriously failed to complete the job and, knowing ‘tion, “Did she ever tell you, Hath: this, Brtain intends to keep her powder dry. way, that I hounded her for wi Physically, the British and American delegates met across the green baize table at Geneva. Their minds, however, never met at all. What the British delegation saw was not Hugh Gibson and his «, colleagues representing America but something be- He pace Mee i area ar codename Eo Geet anleny: on ae in. study brought tween, a phantom representing the fear of a new|came slowly, as a flush changed the|¢ able “difference bet . upheaval which beginning in Europe or the Orient |tan of Bob’s cheeks to bronze. women, It is. that driver from thi more than likely would spread around the world. | "Of course Id be glad to have a Old Masters | the attention of'women fe more intto-| tiver and, in moments when the roai i Pi . —_—_— of the city dies away toward mid- “Burope,” the Rev. Edmund A. Walsh, vice presi- |0% ruitt, if she spective and not so well fixed as ye dent of Georgetown university, said upon reaching es to sit to you. She’s pretty * that of men. Men and women were|night, you cain rains from) bi Flow d cold, rivulet, to ‘the sea, Washington after a tour of the old world, “Europe igy 4 y, of course, with the observed in a reading room. :It|the jaze-ba ‘Oh, you have a baby?” Andrews tribute wave deliver ait as | found that the women would} These are the roof wardens, oum- Merri eps shal » augh' is sitting on top of a volcano that is likely to erupt -For ever 4 fF 5 at any time.” sand: suns: will ed his sandy eyebrows inquiring- blink every five seconds compared rag viaoes for those ¢ in the * 'Cherry blurted] a+ ream on theé, Russia, Poland, Austria, Jugoslavia, Italy, France, ort -with 11.2 seconds for the men. ery .big hotel has one, every y baby,’ ou child that is about to burst)" A thousand moons will qu Rumania and the rest are all milling around, ill at 4 ‘The continual wandering of atten- | bi ig downtown fh Bien Ja vomen. econ nied bys pore a open peared Bd are airy. id and eyes, 7 beach : Paar aver and far ever. “ ‘ A count of th blinks or diifieue in | and sil ani ag i fF ne mee ease and patiently waiting for something to happen, the way she monopolizes it.’ if ae seen sia hur lea tae: , car the music is gay and the air is while Europe in general, Father Walsh declared, is ‘ even “more uneasy, nervous apd unstable” than OUT OUR WAY when he was there a few years: ee a Then there is the middle ea: that, WA 7 n the far east teeming with potential Britain HAD Anne : ‘ ’ WEAVING! Mm. Ar! “Oh, Cherry!” Faith cried involun- Then, remembering the oc- she smiled around the table. right. You are playing mother -to Cherry's infant while she works, aren’t you George cut in eagerly. “Great, I'll paint you Fo; from Septe desig place Red gene large type land desi: Euge Pr race plan Fe cont prize $154 tion Spol the When it is necessary to rai joney, Eyrope always “sees America rst. Eye-brow styles will soon develop into merely dotting the eye. F Too many farmers are intent upon raising money outside of their ficlds. Irish That experience, and the more recent experience at.Geneva prove beyond all doubt that the British “aré“good arguers. As French observer unofficially observed, the British maneuvered American del- egation into such a position that it would be pos- sible for the British to make slight concessions to enable the American deleg/ates to save their faces, yet ‘giving Great Britain a very definite domination 24. of the seas. We live and learn but it should be many moons Ni before your altruistic Uncle Samuel ever sacrifices 7 another thirty-two capital ships in the interest of disarmament. And 4s a sidelignt to that observa- tion—wouldn’t it have been nice had this country canceled all war debts in order to help England, France and Italy maintain their strength in cruisers. “You a Madonna” George bro! into a shout of laughter. Then Cherry's golden eyes flashed ligh' dining at him, he leaned toward her and, chucked her impudently under -|the chin. .“Listen, sweet. child, if -|I paint you as anything it will be as the typical flapper» or as ‘Jazz- itself. If mania, ” elf. @ person t to hold tl ith | eyes without blinking, he will find high above the streets. Here, pro- 1 Talth dyes shout. te interrupt with |in from ten to twenty seconds an jected agalitet sticky skies, may, be] since Cherry and Bob were both ‘so|2imost uncontrollable desire to seen the glaring contrasts of riches wiously. upset over the idea, when blink. At this time, if he will r and poverty. - {prions to her with sudden clarity | the position of his eyes and look else-| Through the tenement that thi one evening of social tri-| Where, he may avoid ‘the blinking, uae umph for her had already enhanced | Movement. | her immeasurably in her husband’s Pe yirecrons ae dite eyes, though of coutse he would not 200, sic0 stimulation of the hearing. |As humid nights turn the tenements ada fore posatly ee eeted a Whereas the average man will blink! into veritable steam rooms, the flight What harm could there be in every two and a half seconds, if he to the roof tops and fi ing him. interested, in letting him| becomes angry he is likcly to blinic ened E — fi realize that others ‘found her lovely| every, second. If @ perscn is excited becomes 2 poy bead iM hi fy sly to blink more, ie oe holds for a braap te Melaka ge si . Ivother words; *montal | breeze. Night afte: ing the baby’s picture made with apregitie ters meee penal eet eee het peat Se ea, attan omes & Cc! of rooftops. All the gay and all the ‘dolore 8 dramas of the city may be found ined lanes, poor lie in tiers stretched out old méttresses, old sheets, old newspay . ty often with clothing ‘still unremoved.|-- may assume a slamou' cy like that “The School for 1 hoping you'll let me paint the today. id th The Americal stamp of approv: All that remai monument in its , memory. or to be enough contributed to build a structure dwarfing the Wool- worth Tower. An even more logical thing would be to endo pe tuum. Regardless of what the critics say about it, it could be taken as bout the most prominent example of what was enjoyed in the 1920’ Some day, it may become the sul t of a college thesis. And why poaple be e set their on © serve as a model for me? te She’ absolutely the only girl in th’ that could tempt me to dip a brush into paint. Won't you help me to persuade her, old man?’ Faith gasped mentally, but her Determination Counts A blind man has just opened a law office in New York City. He is a very unusual blind man. He doesn’t look like one, he doesn’t walk like one and he in no way gives the appearance of blindness, yet he cannot see a thing. The opening of his law of- fice was the culminating event in an intense strug- gleto beat a handicap to a finish and to prove that sight is # convenience, not a necessity. Nineteen years ago, this lawyer Augustine F. Massa struck a dynamite eap.with a hammer. The resulting explosion destroyed his sight but not his determination and it has been the latter force which “has enabled him to override all obstacles. He attended the New York Institute for the Educa- tion of the Blind, was graduated, and entered Colum- - bia University. In 1921 as a wrestler he won a nol heavyweight medal at that college and was that same year a member of the wrestling team that went to Yale. In 1923 he received his Bachelor of Arts degree and entered the Columbia Law School with four other blind students. When he received his degree _ im law in 1925 the four others had dropped out. + S=—Aad added to the Randicap of lack of sight was out a consider-| Half way'across town the roofs are i dance ween. men and rally known that|the wit ‘T's IN A NAME, Now want to change the name of Mont, Blanc to “Mount Mussolini” A party of enthusiastic Italians hes made this woposal and it has been augui Srovea by: his excellency, the Fascist dictator. ‘The Italians forget one thing, And . that is that the hi; Gad Mont Blanc isn’t in Italy at all, but, in France. Another part of it is in Switzerland. No more by me thy fresh we By Williams | x. ctner signt 1 Ete you A . other noticed a beauti- ing ‘woman leavil tad the Mmm AA ! So COLL ty SOoTUN' Sm. PH, cannot tell what or when somethi ay happen in India with or without the meddling of Russia, while the future of China that land of native cun- an add Bast Bide tenement ning and foreign deviltry and intrigue is certainly —- the necessity of earning his own way through col- ee ¥ége. He had only $175 when he entered Columbia when he was graduated from law school he had $900. A large part of this money had been playing checkers against a number of per- ‘simultaneously in an ‘amusement park. ir, Massa swims, he dances. In fact, he has eed on crowded dance floors with girls who did he is blind and he has finished dancing their disco it. it Mr; sesahad azeady done is but ‘an in- of greater successes to come. Such deter- ion a fiterprise cannot but mark a man Spell for exceptional things and his experience should serve asa brilliant example to those’ of us, More fortunatem who do not even develop those assets we have. forebodingly dark. Back in England there are conservatives who fear the British empire is now in the ce, Her do- minions while still loyal are just naturally drifting away on the stream of time like sons and daughters coming of age. World ‘trade is falling off. Un- employment—armies of it—has become chronic. Social upheavals seem to follow one another more closely and to partake of a character which these same conservatives denounce as being increasingly revolutionary. y ,Should the world go on another rampage, Britain intends to be ready. Poised as she now is, a defeat would mean much. It might turn the balance against. her. Therefore, whether the blow falls in eastern Eu- rope, where Russia is; im central or southern Eu: and Rumanian Affairs of a political leader in Rumania ney é is, nominally or the Balkans, where the last holocaust took place: in India, or China; or on, or bordering, any of the seven seas, Britain intends to be armed to meet it. ‘The empire does not intend to take chances. Thus while Mr. Bridgeman and Viscount Cecil sat at the green table discussing 1 AAA! _- » ‘She would. leave this: gay roof for] : another on which slept. perhaps five, hee ten famili aia t if they could-sleep at all on a sultry nightt | There wre also tee Rages 4 sents - a «2. those very roots Cleans: ‘with ‘palms, - partitioned into little] » Cleanse. Thee gard in Walled im as garde fault —Paalns, in + -canop! and heag with \