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‘PAGE FOUR - The Bismarck Tribune| An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Com; Bismarck, N. second class mail matter. President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)... Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Circulation aN 2 | i | en $2 js What a vengeance to wreak upon those from outside’ who have wronged them! Pity for Pessimists “Pity the foolish, blind pessimist.” pany, That was one of the life rules of Elbert H. Gary, i ., and entered at ‘the postoffice at|head of one of America’s greatest corporations, | m Editer's Note: United States Steel. 11 His was a life of optimism, the life of a builder. ‘And at the hour of his death the other day, Wall aah i fespondent for The Teibuie, Street carried out the principle that guided all) Judge Gary’s affairs. There was a feared moment when it was an-; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Who Said Elderberry Jam? ous = IES cae No city ascended trike. Here was an opportunity for the profes-| 3 [be done with the Member of The Associated Press | sional pessimists to clean up on an ordinary joyful - Rech Wiph off op The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to | *tock, United States Steel, seizing the depression { . stroyed ractically the use for republication of all news dispatches | of the instant and converting it into profits. This is chapter the concluding article of a ms, who, has “France as a tor- CHAPTER CXIX to greater prom: inence during the war than St. Que | tin. In the first place the name of nounced in the New York Stock Exchange that the | 3 Se the city was very difficult to pro- ! nounce—and still i { great leader was dead. It was the hour for bears to lab icy “dobkeuteen’t and then for that mat- and the invaders were dr: cota! Redd th ed Gye hd tala in thy But Judge Gary's associates had prepared for ! ine pinee ee De eat me Published herein, All rights of republication of ail that moment and mobilized their millions to fight placed. charges of explosives” that other matter herein are also reserved, | it. Blocks of United States Steel were offered and would have wrecked the editice hu | snapped up. Offers of General Motors met the rd ie been discovered, the Foreign Representatives ready response. Bankers and their agents on the popularity Na a G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY floor stood with a mighty array of martiajed money, . holes in the church pil CHICAGO DETROIT | ready to beat back a wave of selling that would f 4 y ,{ | But, other life is wi YVower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. | depress the market. sae sat St. Sane PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH No more dramatic conclusion could have been 1 prominent as, Verdun a NEW YORK - = = Fifth Ave. Bldg: | written to the life of the man who lived optimism Rhei i pes stent ceeing (Offieial City, State and County Newspaper) After High Returns * Americans are looking for investments that yield more on the dollar than savings banks will allow, acet g to Dr. John S. Noffsinger, secretary of =the ional Home Study Council, in an address at Washington recently. He cited the fact that in Blessing in Disguise The rain which fell early last week, while been a blessing in disguise. The chilly weather and the heavy downpour, which and who imparted to countless others faith in the Americans future of American industry. | Der Os ae h the devastated regi pradtrhtrhvew caret tender lettuce wiih it anas, tomato jelly, other towns in er, may be tried. Salads may contain apples or bai or boiled og: C Desserts may consist of simple pu was viewed with displeasure by some, seems to have , ; dings, custard, ice cream, gelat plain cake, and canned or stew 1925 workers pushed almost two billion dollars over | Made many wonder if there would be anything left ‘ a day, Prones are ¢ “ the counters of savings banks, but that in 1926 they | f an apparently bumper yield, has passed, and in- deposited less than a billion and a half. dications are that little if any damage was done. “The cry of our bankers for thrift and savings through banks is losing out to the plea of brokers|on the whole the total loss was small. who offer investments at a higher rate of return,”{ benefit to corn, potatoes, flax and late grains far -declared Dr. Noffsinger. “It is estimated that out| outweighed it. Harvesting was delayed a few of the national income of seventy-five billions about | days: of course, but there will be little decrease ir There were some reports of lodging of wheat, but And, the twelve billions were saved last year by individuals | the yield. _ and business enterprises. More than six billions A sauee w Another benefit is the additional moisture stored Com : 2 al ub IN of this sum were invested in new capital issues.| in the ground for next year. The warm days of the | ___ 000,000 while the remainder went chiefly to pay|early summer rains brought. shares in building and loan associations.” goodly way into the summer and with the normal This, of course, is an unwelcome trend for the| amount of rainfall next year there should be little banks. They will say, how foolish to take a risk ta|doubt that the crop will come through without dam- Savings deposited in banks accounted for $1,600,-|last month drew out much of the moisture which a sien ‘The additional rain . for life insurance, installments on real estate and| insures sufficient moisture to carry the 1928 crop « and NER. get six per cent on such small sums of money as a| ge by drought. ‘wage earner can save, when a sure four to five per si particularly pears and peach wi he most laxative of fruits and may be eaten every morning. They should be cooked slowly until they become quite soft discarded, , | or federal buildi ered that golf. sci Not to ‘mention ‘the Daily Health ai ended the® wort During the days that followed the wife who was determined to divorce! BY, DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Hathaway had ample cause to,be' sweetheart of hers, | Medieal Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine dispatch. Guess and the skin, if tough, should be [BARBS jee Pretty soon the only place to s an Indian chief will be A. conclave of osteopaths discoy- bles the. spine. abulary. Latest advices’ from. Los el Service indicate that Charlie aapitn ~ Ut “litagration.’ ! A radio station that planiied to completion of the portrait Faith’ him—spying upon her and this new| "dltor Journal of the American broadcast the sounds of an insane have to * { a FEGH Gs Geillitle Gt -alwnct cay bank ?--eia tha oe ets aa ae Bee | Hee she opened the front door] Some years ago the word “ays. |along with the jazz bands for a while t a Seat , as if his eyes had been! with her latchkey her face was so|pepsia” was one to ith. It tonger. logic of their reasoning cannot be questioned, Editorial Comment | pened to her worth sind beaiity by|whie that Cherry uttered a ‘Tittle | as the great Austeneall e, now r aek. a Five hundred dollars out at seven per cent for @ year will bring in thirty-five dollars, if the divi- dends are paid. Five hundred gdollars deposited in a bank and earning four and a Ei per cent, will Seventeen Cents an Hour (St. Paul Dispatch) Farmers and those members of the family capabie ! prow the concrete evidence of what an- other man saw in his wife, became almost as loverlike us he had been iek of dismay. scientific term “nervous indigestion.” | ¥ a transferred into thi When and if the sun explodes we ek may. aj ransferred into the possibly more G88 hours lhc ta ie thrilti at‘in the world is the matter,| In g recent consideration of this'sccording to an astronomer. . That'll MONDAY, AUGUSIYe2/1987 |, So firm are the offic: in this belief that the mayor recently wrote a long pi for the St. Quentin fi in/it he told of the public- ity received by the city in wartime and he deplored the fact that this h to a point where none thought to the city any more. his communication nh that. something immediately to re- store St. Quentin to its lost place in the firmament: of attention. So, St. Quentin, today. eal crisis. Once a city with a that was on the lips of mil- . Today, with its ruins erased and fine buildings rising up from the, curbs of every s1 it is for- gotten, But a few di linantars north Sofie cats oH nee ee The attle tours a O eims and Verdun. At 7 dock in the ever the ‘stores are closed. Lights from the Bar du Midi. Spaniard pla: in accordion accompanies him on the ture they wheeze out, and over again, is “Rainbow”. A sign near the bass drum reads: “Moublies la Rusiee . St. Quentin! ce @ name on every tol .” Now’ a city neglected. TRE END. at the’ Eltinge iy dramatic mystery play revolution. Chaney pl the role of inge, hermit-like peasant ‘who’ worships a girl of the uppertiasses and is con- tent tobe her slave*if only hei can serve her, Then Gytia ‘strange sturn of fate, she is placed absolately: in hig power. revolution about th The peasant becom: ler ang drunk with his power, al) but destroys the thing had loved. His love,ch: a bratality gnd then the unexpec' happens in @ most dramatic climax and the peas- ant pays with his life for a disaster he could not avert. As the strange mujik of darkened Chaney has a role rich in and ping opportun Hi pporting cast is one of ext: ordinary ability, headed by Barbara Bedford aa leading lady and Ricardo Cortez as the young officer whom she loves. * . PALACE-MANDAN Trella & Company billed for the Palace, stage on Tuesday evenii “Sensational Loop to yp Riders" are trick yells offering novel bal- neing and arcrobatic stunts and a ng Jeop-the Joep ride by two men, Fox, & Smalley do clarinet and saxophone numbers as well as clever’ during the first ecstatic days of theit | (ime? Are you il? Or is it—| condition, Dr. W. C, Alvarez points. be a good time to pay your debts,| bird imitations in their act which is marriage. His eyes rested on her| «>, . a, {out there is a tendency tq overdo boy: d two: or three ttiés a| qi 2 fet, iil, but I must see you] the use of bran’ and that nowadays| a y 1 he bring in twenty-two dollars and fifty cents a year! o¢ active work on the farm, earned as wages last | week he ‘insisted’ on her coming to| 20ne> Cherry,” Faith gasped, ‘her| one of the simplest ways of helping: irds.” clever comedy & Jerry Ross do- a difference of only twelve dollars and fifty cents,| year, 17 cents an hour. In this 17 cents was in-| neh with him, taking her to, the| xricouPs Shaking. , “Good night, Mr.| dyspeptie. patients..is to take away t e days. ing comedy, singing © and | dancing. S-cycrene bts . . "| Fraternity Cl inging ndrews. their bi ; bon rer Leper ons nareee y : 2 which is little enough to pay for the peace of mind | cluded house rent and food grown on the farm. Pbbsaeting ey there” aene one ow ten the nonplussed but still hase bacane nae 4 in abi ———<—$$—— He = AIOE @) an in Smussian azrobrath “aan ; of hetene a seeical five hundred is a ee That is the result of a survey made by the farm 16a a thoes ce : hy ae besty. Mapaetner Gre acedenee ne fee ine den Peet ‘Masters rik &, sis and. Gilda Grey in their “Song Ea A y at home to “mind” ‘ re je ‘ may be “ aoe almost on a minute’s notice i management section of the Minnesota Agricultural | paby, but ade frequently than bers ae furiously. with irritable digestive organs, how. ‘ and Ought oY Sim MeGill a nekessity demands. | Experim ent station. The survey covered one route,| Glenn Andrews helped her to” pas ell, of all the nerve! I suppose] ever, are likely to be upset by the'1 know '@ ‘thing . that'e’:most™ un-!<The Globe Trotter” embracing a number of farms, in Pine county and *Way the time. A Rose by Any Other Name another in the vicinity of Crookston. ‘A disturbing influx of criminals, frightened awey , fraud, according to a memorandum recently sent toward organization,” the memorandum declares. q “Gangs of professional thugs, evidently well sup-|to thaw the frozen assets of foreclosed or abandoned Plied with funds and legal advice, have extended | la ; their criminal activities into the commercial field The Pine county route showed a wage rate of lights weré.iblazing.in the’ living} from violent crime by various stringent laws pre-| 16 1-2 cents an Bea and@the Cevthiston “route. a7 ew ae ih Aiea scribing life imprisonment for fourth-time offenders+| cents. In the former case the entire family earned’ from the open . windows, between] 22% With. this thing tonight, and They must * ha become noticeable in the realm of commercial | $964 a year; in the latter, $1,027. The artisan who holds for $1 an hour and gets it | while Bob parked the car in. the out by the National Association of Credit Men. would regard his return to ‘the farm on that basis aw her sister dancing in the “Commercial crime is following the modern trend | as suicidal. Until that situation is remedied all the efforts | small body’ of his partner very close, you've been spying on me and sawW|use of bran, and to suffer wit One evening in early September| Hitt kiss met Well—what of it? I'm distention and Ray symptoms [hen Faith and Bob drove “home! "“¥ou're not. free,” Faith inter-| aie” ad cankot Yolerate. roughage: | sternly. “Let's go, to with irritable bowels should T know a reasonable’ : Handsome tN it was long after mid- ind witty, yet oo friend, common; ex (Envy, be silent and nd!) wemi (night, The sound of Jans focded| YoU! room. I-don't want. to worry| eat no coarse foods contal ber, | et menspek apis passlans amet by, whose fluttering curtains Faith, a8| Minutes “” (70M ‘he warage any tary peramioce: |: SS Eruemcieiae ee she walked up the path to the house) “When the two sisters were in ‘An equal mixture of. good humor Cherry's room, Faith closed the door And sensible soft aims of Glenn Andrews, ‘The: sandy-| sight wa warm roused teak whee] ite alee lets ing dow and closed it, pulling the shade| beans, -eabbage, onions, ‘green or red aa) and his chin was tucked upon the| 20W" to the sill. Gherry watched her/ peppers, melons, cucumbers and pea- tumbled redegold curls. One of Chere] S4anfally, her golden eyes strained) nuts, | Chewi “Has. she no faults then | (Envy ge Sir ; Yes,-she has one,.I must aver: ing gum js useful for|When all the world conspires to melancholy. gence a num- ber of songs with comedy talk Dick Talmadge, peer, of the comedians, wil be seen ‘on thi in “The Bi way Gallant.’ CAPITOL THEATRE When Allan Dwan was given the sighnment of producing the: Fox~ screen version of Be! " r, secured Philip Klein’ to scenario, ‘ Since his father, the late Charles Kiein, wrote the original play that tugged at the heartstrings of millions, the younger Klein was of im- nd will be unavailing. Fs ry’s tiny hands was clas: : cleansing the ‘mouth and exe: Pl er, t measurable’ help -in recapturing th: ped about | ™ . J ‘ b help apturing the There can be no restoration of. agriculture until] the back of his sleek head, the other|. jit wasn't 1 ha trie Lappe _ oy patent rhe epee te ios The ‘woman's deaf, and does not spirit of the drama. and have gone into business on a large scale. Their; the farm wage somewhere nearly approaches in entrance into the field was comparatively recent | parity that of the other industries. and their number has increased greatly since the | : ‘various new laws began to show their teeth.” In this comment is automatically suggested the ‘ proper remedy. If the criminals are afraid of 4 t Faith abruptly, leaving her a : ee | For lunch of dinger, he suggests past is eminently hai lee B. crimes were made more severe, undoubtedly many with a few Buffalo Bills and Kit Carsons scattered ite Id and sick.’ Sh bout} NEXT: Cherry makes a pathetic con- rr ie ” ‘ ve veteran character actor, Alec B., 4 of these criminals would be afraid to continue their |#>0ut in the great open spaces, at least one news-| to step upon the porch the (Copyri Ne oo to Fait Inc.) (ee ee nator ena oe nor veal those: wh did not come from Agee pe, aiecines Blasi. i . activities. paper is serving its readers in keeping with their | faint sound of crunching gravel came) ‘TOPYTIE'Y UNTN » in*) | chowder, ‘and meat, fish or chicken,|“the sticks” know | “The Return. of Peter Grim i While we have human nature as it is, strict laws,| Conceptions. Confronted by the task of describing flowering bush she saw the crouch. |@—=——— ae ariatie® Bm eat eit sah nt hoe’ tie lightest thegestion of ; win rent ty ging, nev ; ee ere, ait 4 ‘crime than,| the strange region into which the President has| ing body of' man. As she advanced|| .: Justajingle and lobster are delicate experiments, | “something hick." Ja fact “hick” an performance~as the Music i strictly enforced, will do more to prevent crime than| voosised for his vacation, this n 1 | steadily toward the bush the man and) had better be let alone. 0; fare twe of. the pet ‘ 4 all the missionary efforts in the world. The thug » this newspaper leaps out naif straightened, then begap to run. jionally. heir vocabularies, boarding house and in if . understands the tule of force, not of reason. If he| ito the picturesque West, and comes back with this] But Faith recognized him, largely| He found an oyster in hin soum Such as rice, potatoes}... ea alls of that day bri fa é ‘ ss 2 geographical gem: : intuition. She knew, as well as| At first he thought that swell. | sweet. potatoes, . stewed tomatoes, all Broadway. is stirred UP! in many humorous bits, in marke 4 can get away with a violent crime, profit well, and i it| And then he found the bloomin’ thing well-cooked cauliflower tips, aspar- nt by the announcement! contrast with the dramatic climax in i run little risk, he will commit the violent crime. Half way up the hill from Pierre to Dead- | it was Chris Wiley, spying upo ‘as etill within the shell. [agus tips and others, freed from fib- Ain ap the oe Master claims his * * . a own request, is at thes # =the criminal would be discouraged if the laws were} grave of Calamit: sig ea Mhaeise, pagiening Soniaht f y Jane. eae Bes Pe ae as Era femcamemcumnaci eel : s ‘: : There you have the unerring eye for the storied j HE DOES IT EVE : : 4 § U bi fide! i pide pe Mearealiatanal . p aM Is 1 MBrRER Pyrat tenn oat a hea” Ss St eat | fl [WY Me: Rh ears re i Mi the com ial field is a distinct mi te Paper's readers could picture; and no others, And \cE ™M SLOW" : ‘ ' ipa iggy Mater made more| Half way up the hill,” their graves! It must have “TILL MINES ALL Gone i ‘\} DEMON’ nN Bfocunoass ei |berned-—Pesimy xe ; i severe. bien wee ye someone who has seen the “hill” = pps SHE SITS RIGHT | : 7 Lawyer Bere: % Abe Seaihoritg 5 a g an is been deceived by the rarefied atmosphere RONTA ME TRYNA as 8 to: .any _ youngster ‘our own property is concern ‘ The Chinese Chaos that telescopes distance, Only the eye of a tender- MAKE ME JELLIS. ~ i ‘TT? m ia tm: She areet: S000 spetet, fae ered stibnvrrer eines is °9 . loot coul 80 deceived in South Dakota as to| [BI WHEN Z AINT LooHiNit: 4 New York youngsters “know little a: Beach Nace snd wenich Lanibersh. the pen. believe the two hundred mile stretch tof country \ SHE. SMACKS HER LIPS. L ree else etter” a on lB Z » een Pierre and Deadwood to be:.a single hill, , AN GoES + i" . fac }; variety, with perhaps, have not been able to realize fully |}, ; ESM AY, : A rriages and plent; . Sztie-ceharnel house of human agony that Clina has| ots tet, what happens sometimes to’ people who AIRYNA MAKE ME LOOK ‘ flak! The aott of eltcusen that have “Hurral—An- Seckin venture far from Boaton. AN’ GIT MORE JE KNow “WHAT \ arades do not play Manhattan. Nor 4 = i And as South Dakota has its two hundred mile y fe AA < ats lo. minstrel $ and’ other p: ‘ gPhantang, great rich province, is beset by the/ hills, s0, too, does it have its even wider spaces all 7 t ™t * of anarchy, Chinese are pitted against) about them. For the Boston newspaper gocs on to E @hinase, working oppression, havoc and banditry, looting and slaying and laying waste. ‘ ‘. fiierters from one army pass to another. Stronger forces beat down the weaker. Deserters pass back and forth with the tides of fortune and battle. It _ trlet. Boston Reads of the Black Hills (Minneapolis Journal) In Boston, where the inhabitants’ geography comes | Pride in stringent criminal laws, then, if the Federal statutes |£70m the movies and they know the people of the| woman among the feverishly gay or concerning fraudulent bankruptcies and commercial |©°untry west of New England are mostly Indians.| bored women at the dance, dropped depict the scenes for its readers: Even today, in that wild country, loneliness is appealing for the ranchers’ wives. Some- times one woman may not see another for six months. When a child is lost, which happens quite often in that wild, open. country, the signal to begin the search ‘is six rings.ea the telephone bell in every house in the broad dis- lock i i Ale: Mooki now Chris has evidence on which to| Among the items suggested by|Lady at ranch SF toupee Zoune face Was Hehe forthe’ Saby- "Ad if Chrs| De Alves for soft dit e's brea i irl in hi : ley takes Hope away fi me, including orange juice or grape- ip Decand athe -cis}' tn his stems bed hate you, Cherry! Iii hate ‘you!]|fruit; eoffee if desired, in mod IN NEW The happiness in Bobs love and| She's mine! You have no right to|tion.. or else chocolate, cocoa or te: Kee which hed buoyed her| t#ke a chance on having her torn| eggs;with ham or bacon, avoiding th Court. up all evening, making her a marked! {rom m Mitoast with -butter, and any smooth |New York is made w Cherry's, Red, her whole body shud-| rash. Graham, Bread. is permitted, | dents of the “rural inder Pope; On a Certain YORK m me!” She sank down upon|tous> parts of the bacon; bread o New York, Aug. 22.—Since most of| © f one-time res- sections, any but not coarse, whole-wheat bread. it recalls. the simple ¢; Klein remembered vividly’ all the details in ‘connection with David irfield’s triumph as the Music’ Mas- ter. Opening in 1904, the play for 635 consecutive performances New York before it was taken for a countrywide tour, and it had a suc- ful revival in 1908. ne of the most difficult problems fronting Mr, Da: to find ic Master in place 5 This was solved when he saw