The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1927, Page 10

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PAGE TEN The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Estabfished 1873) | — | has a good chance of gaining the presidency should the south stand behind -him. It is-an illuminating commentary on the political loyalty of the southerners that they would back a man whose ideas are diametrically opposed to theirs THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ * “Let's Give Published by the Bismarck Tribune’ Company, | simply because he happened to be a representative of | at Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice | Bismarck as second class mail matter. ‘ George D, Mann..........President amd Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, | (in state outside Bismarck)............. 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Circulation $7.20 ++ 7.20 smarcke) 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 Bidg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, 8URNS & SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Trade to Cure Unemployment One of the favorite topics for conversation among the parlor socialists has to do with the thecrem that machinery is enslaving man. We will, say these pale pinks. be devoured by the very machines we! shave set to work for us and the editors of the futur- istic little magazines of dissent echo the wail. ‘Writing for the Journal of Wall Street, Secretary of Labor Davis presents the case of the machine in wlight which at first blush might seem to uphold this theory. At the present time, says Mr. Davis, the machine is creating unemployment. With con- sumption of all products at a record mark, produc tion’ of most manufactured articles has been in-! creased, but the efficiency of the machine has made it possible to do this record amount of work with a smaller number of men than was needed when machines were “tess efficient:.and more workers therefore employed. This surplus of workers over jobs is not actually | critical, though it is estimated that present produc. tien is being obtained by 7 per cent fewer workers | Editorial Comment | the party they supported. The loyalty is a fine thing, but regardless of Governor Smith's qualifica- tions, it would indicate supineness if a group of states should support him when they disagree with him—as they have often said—so heartily. Nicaragua’s Next Hope Brigadier General Frank R. M’Coy is on his way to Nicaragua to supervise the 1928 election which, according to President Coolidge’s guarantee, will be fair and square. The sclection of General McCoy for the Nicara- guan post is well advised. He was commander of semi- pecially in Spanish-American civil, diplomatic and foreign service, and es supervision, } the Rainbow division in France, but his experience in | ilitary capacities in} | mix-ups, qualifies him for the Nicaraguan election | Over twenty years ago. in the Philippines, he was/ responsible for the capture of the famed Datto Ali, | Moro chieftain, He s preliminary organizati rved with Mr. Taft in the! n of the Cuban governmeni | in 1906, and has at various times been sent on mis-| sions of state to South America, Central America ! and Mexico, He was supervisor of Red Cross relief after the Japanese earthquake, and chief of staff for , the Harbord Mission to Armenia, No cone envies General McCoy his job in Nicaragua, any more than General Pershing was envied his ap- pointment as chief of the Tacna-Arica Arbitration Board, but if order and peace are to come from Nicaragua and a peaceful eleetion assured, it is probable that no better man could have been picked for the task than McCoy. The President’s Power (Time) To U. S. Chief Justice William Howard Taft re- cently came a mattet whose acquaintance he had first made as U. S. president in 1909. This was the the Lad a Rest ence, . .. And somehow they laugh when he talked: . Rid lous, isn’t it, that Eddie Foy, should hive ‘to bring tears? u-| scale for determining whether the FRIDAY, AUGUST 19, 1997 Sk PRIVATE es dak, ditor's Note: This is chapter 7 of the series of articles by Paul Adams, who. is revisiting France as a correspondent for the Tribune. CHAPTER CXVII While ion regarding French superstitions might not avert [such harrowing catastrophes as the f large 10-sou clackers by th f benefit in matte: | nportance to the Legionnair: {who will spend some time in Paris tin tember. There are numerous isigns of good and bad luck. But only ‘three are vitally important. These you are dining with a mflemoi- selle or your wife do not ask her to s the salt. If she does, a fawily ow is sure to ensue. It does not jnecessarily follow, however, that it ii ntial to pass the salt to insure Every family has its own While traveling, if you imagpie, you will encounter bad luck. {If you see two, at the same time, you ill have good luck. If you see one, in and then two, double, you jwon't have quite so much bad luck. 'A magpie is called a “pie” in French and is a beautiful bird, of black and | white colorings, with a long tail. | | Watch your “pies.” see one ; PAUL» © mA boven No superstition should be regard- jed With greater awe than the one jconcerning the general consumption jof coffee and rum. And this state- | ment is made on no less an authority than the chief gendarmes of the vii- lage of Montdidier. The gendarme accepted an invitation to a “cafe avec rum” one morning. The proprietor jof the cafe poured the coffee in one set of glasses and the rum in an- jother, and smaller, set. The pur- | chaser of the courtesy lifted his glass jof coffee—without adding the rum— jto toast the gendarme. But the | gendarme refused firmly to offer his s for the clink. 3 urquoi?” demanded the pure chaser. “Parce que,” answered the gen- jdarme. “To clink glasses that con-- jtain only -coffee is a sure sign of imisfortyne. To insure favorable hap- |penings’ for the day, the rum must be added first. Then the clink will | bring good health ‘and good luck.” So-in the absorption of the cafe rum, always pour the rum into the | coffee before clinking glasses. Never make the mistake of trying to nego- | tiate a healthy clink with coffee only. One touch of coffee glasses and the day is sure to be wrecked. But with the rum—Voila! C’ est bien! TOMORROW: Back to a 1918 Billet. “The sweete: memory * * Broadw: every now a handy told has needs to he nd_ then, of forgettin; GILBERT SWAN. GIL that such | Daily Health Service BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the “American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine “Dr. Thomas D. Wood, professor of | health education in the Teachers ge of Columbia University, and m Lerrigo have developed a behavior of a child in relation to jits health is normal and similar to st, thing in life .is| than would be employed were machine production efficiency what it was in 1919. jease of Vuco Perovich, convicted of first degree | It does raise the) TU"der in Alaska in 1905. After respites and ap- ! memory. the behaivor of other children of its j age. “The sweetest thing in life is < / | The scales-also permit a.decision demanded damages of 10 cents each vn the 400 eggs which did not hatch. The explosions of dynamite, she contends, produced vibrations ‘which killed the unborn chicks, Poultry ex- perts agree with her. But attorneys on neither side have been unable té find precedents isi - A Thought | } My punisKment is greater than I can hear.—Genenin iv:13. ” The-only effect of public punish- mentiis to show the rabble how bravely it can be borné—Landor. [ Justajingle J She started out to sing a song, And warbled just. one note, And then she stopped quite suddenly, Bob Hathaway apparently made no be. brother-in further effort during the next few itols?” Cherry weeks to discourage the swiftly de- Bob's sleeve. Veloping affair between Cherry and Faith shrank a step away from Glenn Andrews. “To Faith it seemed George, who had straightened abrupt- that the two—her sister and her hus-! ly, but in her face there was no flush band—had come to a sort of armed of guilt. Instead she was quite pale truce. Cherry was friendly toward and calm as her brown eyes rested him, in her sprightly, casual manner,’ steadily on the loyering face of he but she no longer made love to him|nusnand. He stood in the doorwa *Cause someone grabbed her*throat, HUNGER THREATENS ICE CREAM. VENDERS By NEA Service London, Aug. 19.—This has been a cold summer in England such a jeold one, in fact, that venders of ice Swords or pis-! ? There was a funny looking kid! Telative to the child's success in giggled, plucking at running around Ninth Avenue 60/ health understanding from year to years ago, or something like that,! Year. Safety habits should natu- And one day he started following! ‘#lly have been established by the a fiddler. The fiddler was making} time boys and girls have completed! the rounds of the bars. The fiddler} the sixth grade. Certainly the child let the kid come along and the kid,| teepe spa rtaai seen ae ae shell rae ai a uportance of sleep and rest, o e shine, of cleanliness, of the care of, TuPte! There are more than 900 jPeals, President Taft saved Mr. Perovich from the jgallows by commuting his sentence to life im- | prisonment. question of whether or not “motive power and auto- ic machinery are going to bring chronic and unemployment.” | To the layman, there is apparently no limit to the! which automatic machinery can be made to do, and if super-machines keep coming, requiring ° Whereupen Mr. Perovich grumbled, protested. He preferred a death sentence to a life sentence. And, in 1925, a Kansas district judge ruled tha: the presidential right to annul a sentence (by par- 's standing along the brass rails.|* *, the services of fewer ‘and fewer workers. the ulti- | mate situation will be that the machine will have brought poverty. | ..Those who argue that machines are enslaving| would solve the problem by limiting production and, dismantling those machines which create unemploy- | ment. They would go back to the old guild syst: 68, better still, go even further back to the day when every man was his own hewer of wood and drawer of water. This is of course arrant nonsense. The Department of Commerce Year Book, just pubrshea, declares that the record prosperity of the current year can be traced “to increased efficiency of both industry and trade.” The hope of the machine-unemployment situation lies “in the possibilities for the increasing efficiency of trade. Potential foreign markets to consume the increasing output of our efficient machines have barely been scratched, and it is not meyé empty prophecy to predict that the development of these foreign markets can more than make up for sur- plus machine-age production. An Industrial Platform If the National Association of Manufacturers has | its..way, the Republican and Democratic parties are going to feel uneasy up to and including their con- ventions next year. The reason is that this group has decided to draft a platform of American in- dustry tobe presented to the parties’for their ap- . proval and adoption. ‘Twice previously, the associfition has . prepared platiorms and presented them to the parties. Twice previously, ‘the parties have accepted, them with outward rejoicing and inward ‘muttering and have proceeded to table them cheerfully. ‘But this year the manufacturers are getting restive and, by placing some of their leading lights on-the committee named to draw up the platform, have insured that.a little more attention be paid to ‘There ‘has been some condemnation. of this prac- tice: By some it is claimed that the manufacturers | ate trying to coerce’ the parties and-have them do only what “big business” -desires. ‘But the fact that so little attention has been paid to the earnest work of the industrial group would indicate) that this fear is’ unfounded. It is a questiorwhether the Democrats and Repub- lieans, instead of sedulously “avoliling the recom- méndations of the -association’s committee, should ngt. instead:take: their-proposals under consideration and make an earnest effort to incorporate as many ofthe planks as possible into their own platforms. After all, industry, with agriculture; is the bigges:' thing in this country. It would seem only logical that ‘Who-know most ‘about it-should be allowed their recommendations: and-have them car- riéd out as far as is’ praetienble. b * | _ The South and Smith ‘Clarifying the. politieal- situation, in the south wa -etatement of Clark Howell, editor and publisher | Constitution, made here Wednesday. ‘of a -good- share-of the- southerners, will remain: solid. in ‘ foriAl Guaith if he' is given the Demo- don) did not inélude the right t alter it (by, com- mutation) without the prisoner’s consent. Thus mercy became high-handed, clemency a usurpation. Furthermore, since Mr. Perovich was being illegally under the guise of sisterly afection. And for this Faith could not help’ be- ing grateful | clenched at his As for Faith herself, she had tried! _“The~picture valiantly to make use of the “great- est gift” which George Pruitt, had held, his detention could not continue, so he was released, under a habeas corpus writ. At large, Mr. Perovich opened a barber shop, has spent the lastj two years law-abiding wielding shears and razor. Meanwhile the Kansas decision was appealed. Last week it turned up before the supreme court, the chief justice of which is, of course, the same Wi!- liam Howard Taft whose 1909 action constitated the point at issue. Dignified, fair-minded, Chief Justice Taft took no part in the court’s delibera- tions. ‘But the court upheld him, reversed the Kan- sas decision. It held that the pardoning- power was part of the machinery of the law, that this machin- ery operates without regard to the consent of those affected. It held also that changing a death sen- tence to a life sentence was a legitimate part of! the pardoning power, since a life sentence is com- monly: regarded as less severe than a death sentence, therefore, to some extent, a pardon of it. i Vuco ‘Perovich, though still preferring gallows to cell, prepared to return to prison, As ‘Associated Justice Holmes read. the decision upholding the 1909 ruling. dispatches reported that “Chief Justice Taft-smiled broadly.” The Weather (Minneapolis Tribune) Out of the unseasonable weather which appears to be fairly general throughout the United States may come a new school of weather science. At Present there are two schools, in rivalry so heated, that they might well be engaged ‘in theology: rather than meteorology. The official school of the United States is of course that of the United States weath- er bureau and in opposition to $a ‘Mr. Brown, et al, who are in the weather forecasting Business on a commercial scale. The weather bareau ‘and Mr. Brown hold each others’ theories in, supreme scientific contempt. Mr. Brown, loosely speaking, relies upon the sun as the dispenser of weather,. good, bad and indif- ferent, and on the temperament: and.general dispo- sition of Old Sol, to say nothing of his complexion, Mr. Brown deduces prophetic conclusions, months in advance. To all of“which the weather bureau, with civil serivee fervor says “bosh.” According to ‘the -weather; bureau weather is a day by day Product..in-which the sun has.no controlling inter- est;:consequently any long distance predictions are guess ‘work, The weather bureau admits that if ene makes an industrious business of guessing about the weather over a sifficiently lengthy period, the laws of chance will see ta it that-a certain-number of:guesses are! fulfilled by events. But the idea of giving such guesses any scientific recognition is absurd. i Mr.’ Brown and certain others who hold to the Sun‘theory, seam to have the best of the popular yargument so far. They went on record-a year ago for;Onseasonable weather for the summer of 1927. The aun gave them the\tip. The weather bureau ‘rather: hooted the idea, maintaining that the atmos- 'pheric blanket that the earth. neutralizes- all solar vagaries jand | ‘of. temper. the westher has: | of inferiority given her. She tried, as he had made! come and look wer promise, to walk, talk, act, think | ©! like a woman who knows that whe | side. is beautiful, lovable and beloved.; Perhaps George's presence in her home dided her more than she knew to play the role. For in George's eyes always there glowed the steady flame of his love for her. Sometimes when her courage faltered and -she would have sunk into the old slough to Cherry, George seemed to fling his tenderness’ about her,:as if it were a radiant mantle. But he asked nothing in return, ex- cept the privilege of painting her. And when at last he permitted her | to look at the picture he was paint- ing it seemed to Faith that he had painted not only her and- Cherry's child. but that radiant mantle of lo and tenderness with which he had so unselfishly enveloped her. He hadj scant courtesy. made her look even more splendid,| physieally, than she was—a tail,! NEXT: gracious. queenly woman, with great, Cherr; serene, benignant eyes, and strong,| noble feature: woman in whose arms there was inevitably a child. “You've made me a saint, George, and I'm ‘the -weakest of sinners,’ Faith cried, in a low, choking voice. “I've painted you as I see you,” George replied :gruffly, for he could never look on her tears unmoved. “the thing is good, Faith. I have bells. you to thank for giving me buck mv{ lights belief in myself as an artist.” And/ slight -bi he raised her hand to his lips. George had worked late, putting finishing touches to the. picture, but neither of them realizéd quite ‘how late it was, until Cherry’s: high, mocking laugh rang out. e “Whoops, my dears! What a touching scene! I'fear we are not wanted here, Bob! Which shall it agree with me barrasted, it's a perf Hurry, Bol on my bab Juan kige thing in life is d This. was to the sun parlor, slightly forward and down, his hands Faith said unhurriedly. seen it for the first time. | Cherry, who had darted to George's “I was just thanking \having given me back my faith in jmyself ‘as an artist. been wasted,” George said, in his us- ual friéndly manner, entirely unem- “You talk like darling!” Cherry gtggled. ‘But oh, Just look at the curls head! Isn't she too ‘adorable? like a saint, Faith. are a saint, you know, although rath- er a naughty ‘saint, letting this Don your hard!” “Let “me see, Cherry,” Bob satd| grimly, thrusting her Harmony baby is named at last.” {IN NEW YORK | —_—__________- New York, Aug. 19. An old man was sp. moment he had dropped’ hi The stern glare of the font. easily penetrated his of make-up and revealed tell-tale signs of age. doned “his grease paint box. all, ‘what'-was the use? plenty of youth and beauty and illu- sion on’ the program. no building. This was a memory try- ing to recreate itself. Eddie Foy, at 71, cor his head thrus pennies and __ nickels ked ‘on the floor the kid would pick them up and, at the day’s end, be doled out his share. He would r with them to help a strug- ing family along. The family moved to Chicago. The father died and everyone went to work. They lived in a funny, tum- bledown house on s The kid, when he wasn’t working, practiced tumbling in the back yard. When he was 18 he had found another acro- batically inclined youngster. In Dodge City, Kas., one day appeared the team of Foy and Thompson, “The sweetest thing in life is memory. ~ les. finished. desr.” “I've just Won't you at it?” She ignored Faith for T hope you wili that her time hasn’t a book, George, love of. a” picture. Two kids with dancing shoes as their only properties. But the dance halls of ‘the west didn’t care. Min- camps busting * * * the Pacific st enjoying Bonanzaxdays * * * Chicago again * * * the musical stage and then years of trouping *** success * marriage * * family * * * and time ticking away! Year upon year of building up, one of the greatest followings a comed- ian ever had. And then the “Seven Little Foys.” Pa and all the family j tripping the boards. on. And the family breaking up. And finally an old man in_a little cottage outside of New Rochelle. kids all gone, not a great deal of money left, sitting down to write his memories Not much left but memories. * * * Then a brief come-back, The spot- light again * * * And Wilton Lack- aye, that prand-old-man of the stage, stepping up to present a watch * * * What an apt gift * * * A watch! ** * Ticking away the few remaining years. He makes a comic crack * * * But few laugh * * * All around are misty eyes. * * * The orchestra has stopped An old man is speaking * * * old fellow on his 7ist birthday The little lamb! You look But then you aside with is restored and i The sweetest memo! . ing. For a cap and He had aban- After There was effort at illusion . . Old iz back just | An OUT OUR WAY [PORE WES! HE, REMINDS ME OF WHISKEY . AN' WHISKERS. “THEY. Bot WENT OUT TGETHER BUT ONLY ONE OF EMS BACK, HE_REMINOS ME OF : A BULL MOOSE, ONE \/ PoRE WES'LL DAY HES ROAMIN' | AROUND WILD AN TH NEXT HES MOUNTED. ONW WES IS MOUNTED ONE MINUTE AN TH’ NEXT HES ROAMING Age creeping’ thé teeth, the ears and the. eyes, As a child grows older, it will’have to consider the problems of temper- |ance in relatign to stimulants of -all i kinds and pethaps learn something about first-aid and home nursing. In developing these functions i ; child, both the school and the home ll have a significant part. The distinguished educators feel at _a child should, before it enters kindergarten, have ‘learned to drink a quart of milk daily in addition to other foods, to drink water several jtimes daily. to eat at regular times, {to eat slowly and chew food well, to ‘wash the hands before ‘eating, © to use only an individual drinking eup or bubbling fountain, and not to ex- ‘change food with other children, or eat it after picking it up from the , #round, the fioor, or the street; It should expect to eat whatfs set before xpect to have set before it only the} things that are known as good foods ,for children. A healthful child knows at this time how to play with other children and is willing to take turns in games of all kinds, It can stand erect, sit straight, use the feet alternately in going up and down stirs, throw and eateh a ball, lift, carry or pile blocks, carry q small pail of water without | spilling, and play happily. It should not be afraid to sleep in the dark and should know the importance of hav- ing the windows open, If its mentality is right, it will be relatively obedient to its parents, attend to its bodily functions with- out ‘undue curiosity or handling and be considerate toward babies, pets and -weaker living things, It will have enough of a vocabulary to ex- | press its needs. t BARBS | Lindbergh has been made a po- liceman in Chicago, -Just what is the honor of being a cop in that town? i] ‘ The wheat crop,.in such _ states, as South ' Dakota, is fine, but the latest national corn forecast wasn't so good. ‘Unfortunate that Mr. Cool- idge couldn’t get around to some of the corn states this year. A little present often smooths over fa terrible pai ™Now that rubber socks have been produced, inner tube patches will be the bachelor’s ‘best friend, Break into song if you will, but keep out of strange flats. Cool waited till Wall Street was closed before “choosing” not to run. It was also considerate of him to, wait till the straw hat season was nearly over. The Russian anarchist. who was captured in a New York barber sho! probably thought that was, place police would. ever look for him. (Copyright, 1927, NEAServiee, Inc.) {oir ares] I see the rainbow in the sky, / The dew upon the grass; I aoe em, and 1 a not why G immer or they pass. With ‘olded arms I linger not Te call them back; "twere vain: In this, or in some other spct, I know they'll shine again. i Walter Savage Landor: Resigna- tion, COUNTS CHICKENS ‘ ‘ee big bod hare \sage, Ia., - 19.—In front of t! ¢ Mrs, William. Soy worked s - | home..at : township road gang. . Day after day, eharges of dynamite, they blew ‘out rock and earth to.cyit the road to ‘a: lower level. = i Worried. Mrs. Soy Watched her large. incubators, from which | 400° Niby come, aad net por eee enol wee broken. .. Several {ino chieka,...Mra. , it without fussing, and tol! such peddlers in London, and the i: pending ene of 900 persons i a big enough problem to bother-God about. 4 At least, so said “Signor Pomps, leader of those who seli ice cream. So Signor Pomps arranged a special high mass to celebrate at Clarken- well as an act of supplication for warm and sunny weather so that other people would suffer from the heat—and .byy ice cream, But on the morning the mass was to be held, only half a dozen of the 900 venders appeared. The reason was that fhe sun came out bright and hot that day and most of the peddlers were busy at their trade. NOTICE o Os Notice is here! axe executed and de- James Mullins, a single , morteagor to Bismarck Bank, & corporation, mortgagee, dated the 2ard day of ‘September,’ 1921, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh in the State of North Da- kota, on the 23r] day of November, 1921, and duly recorded in*Book 171 of Mortgages on page 128, which mortgal ‘as on the 21st day of Novi 1921, duly ‘assigned by Bismarck Bank at Bismarck, North Dakota, to the Bank of North Da- ta, which assignment was duly recorded in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of Burleigh County, e 29th Gay of at 9 a. m. in Book page 271; and. thereafter assigned by said assignee of Mort- Zagec to L. R. Baird as Receiver of Bismarck ‘Bank on the 27th of Feb- ruary, 1926. which assignment, was, duly ‘re orded in Book 175 of As- signments on page 301 in the office of said register df dedds, will be foreclosed by sale of the’ premises in such mortgage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the yy Court House at: Bismatck, at the the same are described as follows, to-wit The South Half (8%) of Sec- tion twenty-two (22) Township One Hundred thirty-eight (138) North of Range seventy-seven (i7) West of the Fifth Princi- pal Meridian, ,and containing 320 acres more br less according to the Governorment Survey thereof. There will be due on such mort- Gage at the date of sale the sum of Six Thousand Fight ‘Hundred and, Ninety-five and 13/100th Dollars ($6895.13), together with. the legal fees-and costs of foreclosure. Dated August Sth, 1927. L. R. BAIRD as Recetver of Bismarck: Bank, Bismarck, baat Foie of Mortgagee. nee 2UGER ‘& TILLOTSON, ESTE Bi og lortgagee, Bismarck, North: Dakota. (8/5-12-19-26-9 /2-9) he

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