The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 13, 1927, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

. ei eH 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 cntered at the postoffice at \ drownings are sure to show a still further increase, mail matter. Bismarck as second cla % President and Publisher Subscription Rates P: Daily by carrier, per year le In Advance credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- .,per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin | “published herein. All rights of republication of all) other matter herein are also reserved. ' Foreign Represeniat ives - G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY i CHICAGO - DETROIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK - : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. Fee A lice eS (Official City, State and County Newspaper) England, France and Money It is not necessary to hold a brief for England nor against France, but it is just a bit boring to hear the French rave because we want them to pay their debt to us while England is kepping to the letter of her bond and forking up to our treasury, but the same contrast in money matters and morals is as evident in small things as in big. : Here are two examples: When you pay a bill of over three pounds sterling in England, the tax authorities require that a ttvo- penny stamp—about fotr cents—be put upon it to make it legal. When you pay a bill over.a certain amount in France the taxing authorities require , that a stamp be put upon it. But note this differ- ence: In England when you pay your hotel bill, if it is three pounds, you pay three pounds.” The hotel pays for the receipt stamp. In France when you pay your bill for the equivalent of three pounds, you pay that, plus a small amount which is noted on the bill as a “timbre” stamp. The Frenchinan smakes the customer pay for the stamp. If you ask why the difference between his picayunish way of doing business and the English way, he shrugs his shoulders and exclaims: 7| In faet, this form of accidental death has a dis- 29 | tinct seasonal aspect, July, August and September | show that although the general tendency of the’ mortality rate for accidental drowning has been downward during recent years, the rise in 1927 makes it very timely that attention be called to the fact that with the coming of warm weather the; with ydung men and boys as the principal victims. Daily by mail, per yéar, (in being the peak months, becduse of the increased in- ee ee ontet S Blamiatek) ....-. , B.0y|dulgence in water sports at thé various summer 2 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ciate 6.00 | resorts, Too many of thesé d@aths, we are con- | } ember Audit Bureeu of, Circulation | vinced, come from a desire to “show \off” with the PUFF AT HOME Member of The Associated Press | result that the swimmer underestimates his prowess, — W) (Cg The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to/ “RO- WERE Cal ig ia’ for republication -of ‘all Nate dispatches |r the depth of the water or thé swiftness of the ; S_ GOING TO HAWAIT current, and in the end, pays for this grandstand | A D-TUS BUS WONT play with his life. . ND UPONDER ANY What is needed is a wider application of the anniot EXTRA WEIGKT principles and practice of water safety which are advocated by the Life Saving Division of the Amer- ican Red Cross. These are now being very widely taught in thousands of summer camps which are |‘ attended by boys and girls and in the end will go far to reduce deaths from this cause. Meanwhile, however, some effort, should be made to reach the young persons beyond the camp age and some way found to warn them of the danger of | being careless while in or near the water.. { What the Dole Races May Do The Dole air races have been temporarily post- He 3 poned, but they are due to be held within a short LADIES witt time and there will be plenty of ambitious aviators HAVE LEARN taking part-in what promises to be an epoch-making flight. It is not so much the fact that a large sum of money is being offered to the aviator who first reaches ‘Hawaii in this race which makes it impor- tant. The major thing is that it will prove pretty conclusively whether or not flying to our Pacific territory is a feasible thing at all times. There will be all types of planes entered in this race, as well as pilots of varying degrees of ability. If they can make the long hop without disaster, it will show that flights to Hawaii can not. only be made regularly D TRAVEL Licht “Since the Ladies Are Taking to the Air a scout f village for many a day. the 26th and demption, Its a few steps w that runs from Véi Meuse to Haumont. crumbling ruins of is on the tae eee iver Haumont:| there are the villages-that-wer i ber, pres cae eee abicaas swept up|and bees buzz~ around the flowe: that hill and shoved the Germans|is an experience that should not | back towards. Etrayes Ridge and be-| missed. A heap of stones—a faint ‘ond. And a little later on thejline that marks the village street French authorittes decided that Hau-|—the custing equipment of war— mont, as a village, was beyond re-|a bird singing— a snail moving SATURDAY, AUGUBT16 41997 Editor's Note: This is chapter 112 everything erates with rank el ag eens “Tribune corr machine “gun nes! nd desolation, France pondent, who 1s, revisiting agion con-| Rusted helmets, and fifles ate scat: by Paul} vegetation—a si mnerete German That's all’ thereis to Haumont. tered about—i 8 there elie tag Benpenet: are a 5 en Ae alli one iB CXIT ruin topped by s monumental pile Nothin; ey deeper than | of stones investigators recently found fat was, ‘To gaze on the} the remains of two Amerigan and two fuine of u once-thriving town, where| French soldiers.’ Near another ruin there were joys and sorrow! romances before the war came produces emotions that are difficu! to describe, but that are nd|there’s a deep |. A stone to: ng o the yawning mouth’ drops, It} no splash of water, only a dull thi remembered] and one wonders what strange crets that well might divulge. 'Haumont is one of these villages} Around Verdun, around Rheims, hill| and up in the north around Ypres, 1918,] contemplate one, tterfli er a broad leaf—ruin, deso- from the tond|{ation where, in those other days, jun to Dun there was life, happ' and human American -| endeavor. the town and who| And the feeling of depression that tir come ora to France with the|comes as one turns away to Fe -American Legion in September. will| down the hill is one that wil find it easy te reach, even th is off the beaten path. rowtoRRO back never even though it] be forgoten. the hou: Xammes. girder. It switks heads of crowds that which would halt me would be the! fetiow ‘swinging digaly hundreds of feet abuve Firth avenve on # sidel ———_—_______——_ | CHURCHES | right over thé ive it no heed.| TRINITY ENGLISH LUTHERAN ‘CHURCR What, think I, if it *“ould slip from that iron grip and fall? Or! should] Avenue C and Seventh Btreet 1. G, Monson, Pastor. stare at any of the hurndeds of fel- lows nonchalantly lunching on the nday morni top girder of a rising. skyscraper, or pie: ristian Faith: at the funny looking dowager with a fluffy French poodle, Or at a/ yw, ices until Metin.” hundred other things that everyone/19,_ in New York seems to accept as com- monpla By Dr. Morris but that they can be made without much danger. It would be a fine thing if all these aviators would succeed in reaching their goal, regardless of who comes first. It would be, very likely, of the greatest Fi influence in securing either regular passenger: or} “But Monsieur the stamp is yours. You are tak- ing it away with you on your receipt. It is for Monsieur to pay, not me.” Example number: two: England exacts of an American the equivalent of ten dollars for a year’s “23 .visa on his passport. France asks for the equival- ent of two poynds ,sterjing.- Now your passport may bean old one, running only for one month. Then you get-a new one. The British passport authorities cheerfully. ttansfey, the unexpired 11 months of your visa from your old to your new Passport. They say ‘it is only business. As one Briton explained to me: : “We sold you a year’s visa. We took your money. It is only right that we should give you value.” not transfer the unexpired balance of your yea > visa to your new passport. Whey merely shrug their shoulders, say they are very sorry and—“Two * pounds please.” It is nothing less than’a hold-up, but as one American clergyman who toured France this spring declares, “France is making Americans ‘pay as much of the French debt as she ‘possibly can.” Apologizing For, England , Without trying to belittle the abilities of Prime += Minister Stanley Baldwin of Great Britain, and with no intention or desire to throw cold water on his + visit to Canada “to sell the Empire to the Domin- ion,” -it must be admitted that one reason Mr. == Baldwin gives for Britain’s desire to delay disarm- ament is somewhat thin and shoddy. Speaking before 1,000 members’ of the Canadian Club of Ottawa, the prime minister explained that “England is trying step by step to encourage dis- 2 armament, but insofar as we are successful in our efforts towards disarmament, we will for the time bring increased suffering to the business districts = tories, that these mills have suffered heavily since = war, and that disarmament would now make “~ of England, Sheffield, the Tyne, and the Clyde.” {He then went on to show that in Sheffield the iron and steel industry has vast~armor. plate fac- mills idle, throwing many people out of work, ating unemployment and industrial distress. = "If justice to the British, it is of course ad- == mitted that unemployment in England is critical, = and that any effort to bolster up industry'is praise- = worthy. What will strike American economists as CMR tia sapiag to provide Isbor for the poor, who were queer is the theory that building battleships will = relieve industrial depression. Battleships are paid for by taxes. The people pay 33 the taxes. The more battleships built, the higher ~, the tax'rate, and the higher the tax rate the $2 greater the industrial depression. The thing is.a az, Vicious circle which gets nowhere. It is the old “imake-work” fallacy which was born in the Prench =3 hired by the government to dig holes and then fill them pennies, and sometimes nickles and| Dr, Felix Deutsch clicking through the| examined the hearts io Aiba a Editor JoJurnal of t! Medieat Association end of Hygela, | ZION EV.. LUTHERAN. CHURCH @ towsled hat into which fall spare the Health Magasine. e and Dr, Emil! _ Fourth Street and Avenue A dimes. All ; orid that is New|Kauf of the heart station in Vienna| Sunday services as follows: GILBERT SWAN|. ST. GEORGE'S EPISCOPAL Corner Third and Thayer —_ + Rev. ee! Davenport, Rector | Daily Health | ; \~ Service No‘il o'clock service, on°Sihiday. 53 in St Ninth Sunday after ¢ommunian,~ The’ sessions of tke church ‘school Fishbein are discontinued until September. American (Missouri Synod), of participants} 9 m. Sunday school in charge in every form of sport including not| of M je, superintende: notfee her, They| only those whi exercise slightly for! 10: m, jorning Services in mail service by plane to the Islands. ’ h hi ft ‘Or oth leasu! hit caike a Teneci hy 3 a ft wening when Che! it G often, Or others| pleasure, mpert fencers,| English. Sermon theme: “The Zeal Another thing plane service would do for Hawaii bso dime hone from. the ee can “teally, aac ie eineat te denli ah ict eer. fgiecs ght be “ayy ea he vc) inherits ate a Apostle Fr Our Zeal. ‘ would be to weld it closer to this.country. Hawaii been’ quarreling. They. were net| owe © erest deanie Geen He wet lonely read, and there were but the|men, skiers and weight lifters, ' Ssh dura is technically an American possession and it is|employer and secretary now; neither) wonderful during th governed by American citizens, but there are a large number there who are more interested in the Orient than they are in the Occident. This service, bringing the United States within a few hours of ‘They were merely a man and @girl | demanded, ‘who both liked and hated each " Durin ihe aif you' vised Ray that anor id ee say, i offered to h ngling al over Ty's be-| cc fees, ¥ havior of the night be! ued ‘Ba bechus season lene i} hi in| i » Hawaii, would do much to insure the strengthening now she was glad that she had some with ‘me! "Well, tig cht it tet old of our hold there. It might even be possible that | (wing {0 tell her husbanih which »things! I've got to dress for a date.| . He was f them, tears would come to the| A previous investigator mamed| There will be no evening services, were they brother and sister-ingaw.|. “Why not spill { Sling ” vy eyes of the Careless one and he would|Herxheimer found that skiers ha rittle, 2" Cherry give her his last collar button. the largest hearts. followed by mari FIRST chuRcH OF CHRIST, 5 ENTIST hattan offers, I il to marvel] weight lifters, and el) But it was ies the ski runi Recent investigators’ compared wile — thon runners, long distance runners, With all the ing sights Man-| middle distance runners, swimmers, Cor. 4th St.-and Ave. C. r fa a mn finally boxers.| Sunday servic 11:00 a.m, which draw ‘a crowd|Later he found that bicycle riders| Subject: “Soul. T have seen gath-!had even greater enlargements than! Sunday school at 9:45 a. m. Wednesday — evening testimonial him out of his mood f f P ting at 8 o'el it would hasten the establishment of the Island|straction over Cherry's new affatr. | two Desutifal Lane sisteral You with | {iP ying 2 6 AI ee | sheaf the noes wanes seat el readin oom ta open_in the ar “! * » She waited until it 5 Q e' chure! uilding every Ti 4 group as our “Forty-ninth State. Pca Artistry tp fathers P | sand: : Lthate 1 igo ‘The car was: ba red from hard j hearts at normal men. They ‘also Thursday and atidss, Toscept tent -_—__ husband, her sister and ‘herself, |! ‘and haughty Seima| Use and carrie the dust of many! found the greatest changes among holidays, from 2 to 4 p.m ‘ waited upon deftly by Mrs. ‘Lat states. A couple of sun-tanned , skiers, followed in order by oarsmen, yet Campaigning For Premiership |hovs bread, homely face sl warh{ GO Cherry!” Fath wailed, | Zoungeter, aves above on camp! biel, nisi, aminmers, weeaery, THE FIRST RV ANGBLICAL, CHURCH André Tardieu, who was high commissioner for (hat look, of grim disapproval swith |, ocking his chate Ofer Hy canent?| Woman at the wheel looked a bit players and boxers showed relatively T° easy tevin ful ‘moment Faith thoi flear,” she.said, in her consumed with ambition. He dreams of beirig pre- mier of France when Poincaire gets tired of the job Ished.” ndjerked or is let down by parliament, and there is probably| “I don’t like it,” Bob cut in almost she seer kiss his lips. of the’things he did in New. what she owes us, my words!” Jim Lane. sj France in the United States during the war and who order for luncheon for herself and|Cherry just as she was darting out Not ‘so the French passport authorities. They will|is now a member of Poincaire’s‘cabinet, has been George. of the dining room, an i ying some rather nasty things sbout us right in! “George Pruitt was here), toda: Sas notes ae) strike the Pie It. yy | Tulea, for ins poe, might, draw a no better way to win the affections and the votes of | rudely. “The man is in love: with|;,°%$ eect apehing rg swan self-conscious at the attention at: tracted.’ ‘apparently non fora dread-| "A cai, from New York. landing in| They fo our country. couse, his chief yammer s that’ne “contralto, “He e ihing’ Tittle But in| Crowd, thedgl Ptoybtvit. Uncle Sam actually, expects France to pay back luncheon”—she hurried a bit /1 hig ea wie ie ae ae hy “two policemen ‘en. dotplatted onthe ot some. of the billions we loaned her.: Soum gathered on her hasbandi at whip as he commanded her: “Apolo. faced. th slearing the sidewalk and.|tain climbing involves the constant) Evening. servi A + y ie window i ea: ie | Unless you understand something about Tardieu, heey ns oe pagal pee iy’ yrs pen apie then,| 2 near-beer: emporium a trick keg. at high vaititudes. you may not understand his outbreak. Tardieu i® hopes to exhibit it, along with, some|!™ suddenly about so that she| 2nd gl the keg was flowing end- | small some connceale: look on. leasly into: the gl: i, thanks t striking o Od tion and. ws ts W y i asly:into the glass and, thanks toja striking observation and w 3 lay. againet his tense arm, she twined tj outlet, the glass! plained is4 the fact that ov. haps sdnesjay Prayer Service.- I ad] ‘ — {when the new public: libpary.cib‘4in? theglneers ate yee pe phy mie Led seenjed never to get filled. Close to] seldom occurs in boxers. Exhaustion FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH ittle change in the heart and fencers CR. > Pastor Sunday . mornii Worship, 10:00 Mant!” 2. ‘hey found that bicycle riders did 1” not stand at the head of the list, but) “at: enect: ane a. m. Sunday School, B.C. cami ter the rowers and skiers. ! Lark! erintendent:. the skiers are! 7:30'p, m., E. L. C. E, Topic: “Mod- n the grounds that moun-'iern ‘Prejudices to be Overcome.” . 8:00 p.m. Subs of the and, of course | ject: Present Ci The relatively dea cnant in the Church.” ecial Music ‘And even as|2 thousand persons were crushing to quickly leads to the end of the fight- | Corner rpeiery Street and Avenue B ter down or quitting. j his daly cena ey to tell the Gorman to iheap’s even he cast See all io lip that clang, ap mue! Cherry's. “oat + ag peter Pt ae nat “ne Fa laces that France does not ex; 0 us ing.’ ‘ i Gale d poet No Pay US ™ENe good won't” come of it, mark| NEXT: ‘Faith determines to fight. | Wiese Vick Uitte X-ray fakes, which, Jercise, are previous wholesale groceries.” + . county, Michigan. They still attract ly. “It’s like a movi Kk last step of the 42d street sub- Not A Tin Saint, Yartings ee” = plat after da Ml army could ‘ (Grand Forks Herald) " Color swept over. Faith’a neck .and | ebon gathering arou wagon whe 4 Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh has done nothing | torn words, \When cio did apeak, nek/ stands ah East Side Apolle.’ slowly more thoroughly in keeping with a natural, whole- stygian: frame, Only her] D’s.to demonstrate the virtues of a some and unspoiled character than when he smoked i in her throat, i fi Le nati ysical culture book. H a cigarette at a dinner the other evening as a pro- | going oO test against the effort whicch is being made by a son wet ee ae: few well-meaning but misguided people to make of him a “tin saint.” The story as told in a press dis- patch is that when the young aviator learned that a group of zealous persons were urging the boys of the country to “follow example of Lindbergh and not smoke cigarettes” he rebelled, and declaring his determination not to be made a tin saint, avowed his determination to smoke a cigarette in public in order to avoid that fate. . Lindbergh is not the first person who has been goaded into the commission of a desperate act— which is how some people classify cigarette smoking —by the unwise exploitation of their virtues by those who should know better. Many a schoolboy whose perfectly natural good béhavior hasfesulted in his being held up as an example to the rest of the school has delibreately plunged into juvenile wicked- ness in order to rid himself of the odium of being “teacher’s pet.” Wholesome human nature loves fellowship, and the individual whose goodneas, real. or imaginary, sets him apart from his fellows and having| world. OUT OUR WAY | i , to forget in # day} in many la a ther ‘week. ymbolizes all the Pap Tas milan 20 faces’ OF poverty. and distress the ‘ think of hobbles in just ore — my portrait, painted with her, .s the & o'clock rush-begins, extending} Yet, were 1 to stop and gawp, that ey fs, ealy as’ to ussian or found to be bind off + we by § ee vanadate ees a ing through somebody being knocked C. A. Stephens, Mini pI yensons for enlarge- ibjects A woman recluse in California wrote her will on a corset and it was 1s, worshi Jesus Ki 3 “9 A eart, outside vk oe ‘Sunday school, Fred Miller, illne: ich tel the heart, and| “"%00 pm Seniot B. Y. P. U. TOMORROW: Can enlarge hearts] “Ho%,'? Honor G poke. “aud- bones, “of one’s han rémember | the. psychic: exeitemennt invariabl denly and harshly. “Better tell that boi ‘ xettemennt invariably} Mary Stephens, Jeader. brash young man to stick to. his IN NEW YORK | tis" stietaing Siete Bee sstoctd with competitive sport. | a0) Bwana rahip. Subject: Sanaa jeahenennneemmmmmnee eae, 2 7 8:00: Wed ‘iabing: Inesday evening prayer 2:30 Thursday, afte: the sid will meet at the pars? The prayer meeting m_ will vor by the Sina 7 Gui ave an interes roger the eof, the church arb reminded of the posting of the aid at the parsonage next Thursday afte noon at ‘y t MeCABE METHODIST EPISCOPAL RCH Redecoration o oon church auditor- a now completed and divine ser- vice ‘will be ‘conducted in thd sanc- tuary next Sunday as fol 20:30 a, m. Morn! hip. The r will deliver a brief sacreamen-. dress and Holy Communion will Sai det tear at naan Sek gee dee den,” by Wilson and Mrs. “3 a sing 4 solo; 3 3 q School. cou! : rH alts J y ght-the old way “In 5 it ‘Huber mil, sles 2 By bias aes them/ at 8 p,m. ene evening, Sy : the * ‘3

Other pages from this issue: