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PAGE FOUR ° The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ee Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck’ as second class mail matter. George D. Mann.. «President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per year 7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)... » 7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) + 6.00 mail, outside of North Dakota + 6.00 Daily b; ‘ Member 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 Bidg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Who Said We Wanted You, Bill? Mayor William Hale Thompson of Chicago, de fender of Americanism in his own little puddle, has issued a statement saying he will not be a can- didate for president. To most of us, this comes as even more of a sur- prise than Mr. Coolidge’s statement. There had been sundry talk about whether or not Mr. Coolidge planned to seek a third term. Many seemed to think he would. So his statement proved a bomb- shell. But even more of a bombshell was Mr. Thompson’s statement, for we didn’t even know Big Bill had -=been-touted for that office. It may be that out in North Dakota our means of corhmunication are not as good as they are in the more thickly-populated _ cast. Maybe Mr. Thompson's friends weren’t good enough publicity agents. have to search a long time before you could find anyone who had heard even the slightest “pop” to indicate that the estimable Mr. Thompson had been boomed. It is true that Mr. Thompson would bring to the national conventions something new. There would + ; be no staidness, peace or quiet if he invaded the sanctum of the Republicans. With his varied bag of tricks, he would certainly introduce the element of novelty into the deliberations of the delegates. That attack on King George, for example. Thou- sands of us benighted souls who knew nothing bout the diabolical attack the king planned to launch on America until Bill squelched him, could &° learn all the facts. Mr. Thompson could very likely tell us that the Canadians have cannon, machine y Suns, poison gas and bombing planes hidden at all tthe strategic points across the border from. North . - PDakota. He could very likely explain to us that the reason we have hail storms is because Kine George starts them up in Canada. And he would have other stories to tell the people in other states. Yes, it is too bad that Mr. Thompson isn’t going to be a candidate. There must be somebody who likes him, or he wouldn’t have been elected mayor of Chicago. But who wants him out here, it is hard to say. If there is anybody planning a Thomp- son boom, so far he has kept himself securely out of sight. Abandon Air Hops? Hardly. The suggestion has been made that transoceanic hops, such as those made by Smith and Bronte and by Lindbergh, should be abandoned. Because of the element of risk involved, prominent men who would be likely to sponsor future flights have been asked to withhold their support. The result of the Dole races, as it now stands, would seemingly indicate there was something to this suggestion. Seven flyers were missing, one of them a woman. Whether they will be found or not still remains doubtful, although every effort is being made to rescue them and evéry invention is pene used to agcertain their location. It has been argued that airplanes, at present, are not fitted for such long hops. The successful flights have been pictured as more the result of fate and luck than of capacity to make the trips. And stacked up against the successes are the apparent failures, among them the flight of Nungesser and Coli. But regardless of the merits of planes nowadays, it is doubtful if the long trips will be abandoned. There are round-the-world flights being planned, and one has already started. There is a race to Tokyo scheduled for the near future—and Tokyo is nearly twice as far. as Hawaii or Europe. Despite the elenient of risk involved, American _ flyers are unlikely to abandon their efforts. Lind- started the ball rolling with his flight and\ have followed his lead. And in a way, it is f fine thing that we have so many men and women y who are willing to take a chance on losing ives to span the world’s great bodies of water. ‘whole nation is hoping that all the missing ic flyers will be found. It wants no accidents eaths. But if they are not found, the nation— :the world—will honor them as the greatest Pp “of ‘all, daring fate to c the ocean and up their lives so that aviation might progress. Don’t Laugh in Ocean Grove Ocean Grove is 8 New Jersey beach resort peopled ‘by some 40,000 residents during the summer months. It is in the north temperate zone, but there's some- thing about the air there that isn’t temperate at all- it’s positively bad. for instance, there was a well-defined rumor bather had donned his swimming clothes, put on his! street suit over them and gone to the beach where he Dua grad first to a bathhouse. But at any rate, you woulll | 1 Editorial Comment | : a es { | great things result. Cubs have caught, aided by Manager Joe McCarthy and led by one good pitcher, Charley Root. to be jolly pennant weather when misfits get together. ment to enter upon so important an undertaking. This is particularly true, because it holds power by an extremely narrow margin, and because the !Quebee Liberals form so large a fraction of its support. kance at a project that threatens its own supremacy as a port. bound grain of Canada forced to undergo trans- shipment at its own piers, just as Buffalo and New York jealously guard their present privilege of levying heavy tribute on American grain shipments. Montreal fears that the ocean ships to and from the inland ports may go sailing by. if the Seaway is built. the United States. Middle West, will insist on opening the ways for ocean-going ships to reach the Head of the Lakes. The New York-opposition has been driven into a cor- ner, and the Montreal opposition will fare no better. cil for completion of the Seaway was based partly on selfish consideration of what it would do for the six States of New England, but still more on broader consideration ‘of what’ it would do for. Middle West and for the,.Wa ern Canada, The favorable pol be long delayed for starting the negotiation of the agreement which will distribute such tremendous benefits on both sides of the boundary line. than, the charter is the camp meeting group that! rules under this yellowed document. Can’t it be shown to them somehow that charity is one of the Js. real essentials of Christianity? Can't it be shown that intolerance kills itself with its own poison? If it can’t, let ds weep for Ocean Grove. And hope that nobody slips on a banana peel there on Sunday. Such a breach of moral tone might give somebody a laugh. Making Speed Safe Ono of the rather unexpectcd advantages gained from the installation of automatic traffic signal lights now in general use has been a curbing of the speed mania on through highways. By timing the lights so that they operate progressively and per- mit traffic to move continuously at fixed speeds, they are serving the double purpose of making the slowpokes step on the gas a bit, and forcing the sixty-mile-an-hour drivers to slow down if they wish to avoid shifting gears at every light. The next refinement in this procedure is to in- form drivers at what speed the lights of a given system are set. If, at the entrance to every city and town having traffic lights, a sign were posted to inform drivers at what speed the signals changed, the menace of the speed demons would be materially diminshed. When Misfits Get Together When the baseball season opened the Chicagy Cubs were hailed most generally as a crowd of mis- fits, They might win a game now and then, the majority of sport scribes conceded, but nothing very good could come of this outfit. Now the Cubs are out in the lead and fighting like the very blazes to keep it. They stand an ex- cellent chance of taking the flag and meeting the New York Yankees in the world series.’ And the Cubs have no Ruths or Gehrigs,either. a When a fair ball club cates ae old'Tighting fire, And that Seems to be what the It seems Canada Holds Back (Minneapolis Journal) Ottawa asks for further delay in negotiating an agreement with the United States to build the St. Lawrence Seaway. This is the disappointing answer to the notifica- tion last November from the international engineer- ing commission, headed by Secretary Hoover, that after a careful survey it found the project both prac- ticable and highly desirable. The reason given in the Canadian note is that the Dominion’s advisory, committee must have time to study the Hoover report, since it revealed “‘differ- ences of opinion on important phases of the pro- posed development.” Canada is not to be blamed, of course, for making completely sure of her ground before she announces herself ready to make a treaty with us for comple- tion of the Seaway. has already had some eight months in which to study the engineers’ report and findings, and it ought not to take much longer to clear away her doubts, if they really rest on technical grounds. But her advisory committee But the probability is that the political situation is not just now favorable for the Mackenzie Govern- Montreal, like New York, is inclined to look as- The Quebec metropolis wants the east- But the larger vision will prevail in Canada as in The Prairie Provinces, like the The recent declaration of the New Engand Coun- We shall yet see a simi Flop i in East- moment cannot Pedestrians Should “Stop”. and “Go,” Too. (Duluth Herald) Chicago is planning to make pedestrians, as well as automobiles, obey traffic signals. A two-weeks’ “training period” is in progress, and after that the pedestrian who crosses a street against a traffic signal will be arrested and fined. That is right. and the only strange thing abous it is that Chicago has been so slow in coming to it. It must have neeed such a regulation for a long time. In fact the time is coming, if it is not already here, when this rule will have to be enforced in every community that calls itself a city. Certainly the time is coming very soon, and prob- ably it is already here, when it will be necessary to enforce it in Duluth. At certain times of the day, going the rounds the other day to the effect that 1/ traffic, both of pedestrians and vehicles, is very dense in the congested districts of Duluth on both Superior street and First street. Vehicles bey the traffic signals; pedestrians do not, ¢ Yet though when there is heavy traffic the pedes- sign is taking his life in his hands, there are nestle Wi Se 5 ma AT. ct ey rie Sei conan Sin a0ek, seninet ie st7- ned ae If C court against me. G just because I let‘a-man kiss won't ery si her frightened little ph ri Don't be so frightened! * 1 done any wrong. “THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE In a New Role fea- ‘of Youth” sta bit hes th ate ge, ford! eign emotion. kn a as love, faeries from = ittle Engl " i starts study. Sicehy y eee happen, ing, bat er meeting fer the fortnight; Months later; the: sci gestnst a background rovide by the ooming 0»! ingry ins, ie Toth ieee affection ea ‘more burst into bi pe ngrenting Pa Pathe \Review and the co \ggedy Roae” are also ig tales as that of the jotored in bomber shed in the water of Pearl harbor, mawaii, June 23. A full ac- count of the incident, with none: of, the thrills left out, has just reached the Se a Corps, ‘the ‘a member of a five- ship Yormation which took. off early in the morning, piloted by Lieut. Jr. and manned by on ‘the Program: [IN NEW YOKE] New York, Aug. 23—The phevom- ne of Broadway continues to’ be, lay titled “The Ladder.” For weeks on end-one could count the spectators in the audience and, Hardly was he yell in’ Ped air be-| it has been said, it actually has rung fore Lieut. Polk distoyered that his up curtairis on un empty house. Yet landing gear was. damaged—four!| it ‘ ‘on, come snow or humidity. bolts connecting a strut, tora a. wheel actual es to date can oniy Cyr and were in regres was to stimulate a bomb attack in northern Oxhu. picked up the bombing formation. They dropped the supplies on the end of a rope to one‘of the planes and then learned: it was the wrong one. The rope was lowered again anu had sheared off t it is likely to be Polk dropped meatngs king for a halt ‘million dollars. four new built: dont. . Givens is ever been and Philip Schnee! rest took, off in} hea r of on a street that a De Haviland with, the supplies and icmande quick action for money. -f0n, Lor, some 400 perform- slowly creeps ‘t on the at successes. i. actors jogen and yell paid Seeerd are well-c! the: package attached, but the fasten-| ‘Ip arems, that one Edgar B. Dav jog broke under the strain, and the of ‘Texas, holds the soletion. of th b ‘tiyst ery. From all reports out of the‘oil country D: 2 makes money faster than he c: pend it. baat a) sete: of his worldly goods his Ane Fone ln ee jappen i ones a Hee “arora Tiwhich one can vey att erformances in a theater, for ‘ada He became in reinearna- tion and #0 gold hime if on this theo- logical idea that'dates gack to the Egyptian mummi that he wanted everyone to kno out. And he is ing to keep his play, written around this. abject, the boards until a good fraction ‘of the nation—out of curiosity, if for no other reason— has atte Meanwhile, what's whore ate cation of. the meanwhile, mission. ‘Givens. 1 lowered the rope, but it cevaloees that the nren in forward and rear kpits couldn't t the Packare, as they were recruits taking a fir: ride and stem lia wie with air work. Schneeberger climbed out on ite his slippery soled sho Monroy of the bomber walked out on the adjacent wing of Polk's plane. The two pilots finally maneuvered heir planes within arm’: th and wing, det and. Sergt. 2 Cherry was on her knees instantly, raised “Don't, Faith, darling! | haven't face jeac I swear I haven't! s really spying on me, he that could be used in I swear it, Faith! lenn kissed me—yeg, but they I’m not a fit mother for my baby} me. she Faith, dearest!” begged, tears streaming down, her own cheeks. “He'll Jie, Faith answered ‘dully. “He'll swear he saw more than—just a couldn’t you be careful?” humbl; once, Faith. like you. te: dreadful for me. You have' ized, snug in kiss. Oh, Cherry, Cherry! why “I suppose,” Cherry confessed her defiance conquered for oe a because ae at, can't be good. and discree And, oh, Faith; these last) o erible, -long-,.months Bob's love as are? —— you knew I did,” “Maybe I've renliged more _ than| ¢, answered fa tremulously, her love for her sister rushing up in a hot flood. “Poor. darling! If you've once known ‘love, it’ know that—now, ’s terribly hard to do without, I But what's to be done, honey? What are your plans?” her hands falling listless); sides, next week,” in heard before Ch heels, to her “The divorce set for she admitted. hurch- told me toda; My case will be thank God. If win—and I will win, Faith! I've Cherry sank back on. her al got to!—Chris’ suit will be thrown out of court, I suppose. Churchill has a lot of evidence against Chris. You remember Lola Gonzale: Chris has been keeping her in a little flat over re West Tenth, He dence if we fail to win on the gre ys there If the time, And red to use that evi- r about rch"! is pre ‘ounds of mental cruelt: wont cruelty ?” th asked ingly. “Mental cruelty—when an wived with Chris only one night?” Cherry’s small face hatdened. When I tell the judge what Chris di if in him.” and did that night, I'll get my vorce on mental cruelty all right, the judge has an atom of nidnhood i A knock on the door interrupted them. | of sandwiches, “Grand idea!” steps turned toward the kitchen. " Cherry begged in Faith) asked ‘abruptly. neck to her checks. | Faith. I-don’t kno to or not, and besides—he e' you?” Faith askes about .me—but he ha: thing about—marriage, foxes. in}.a muffled voice. Faith rose from the bed, and her arms flung about Faith's waist,| called out with forced cheerfulness: “Just a minute, dear. There’s some | ginger ale in the ice box and a plate You'd better eat something before you go to bed.” Bob sang out blithe- ly, and the two girls listened as his jon’t tell Bob—about Glenn and m whisper, her hands: fluttering te ‘to Faith’s shoulders. “Are you going to marry” Glenn Andrews if you get your divorce?” Cherry averted her face, but Faith could: see a flush spreading from" her “T—don’t know, whether I want hasn't told or that he. loves ‘The * bright head: went: suddenly, to , | Faith’s, shoulder, “He says he's mad yw whether he’s just Salting until Faith,- so Tn free, or whether he thinks—what Dygcjbeen through—makes. marriage many fry them! I never dreamed. that’ som agonize over just one ma to ‘say the words! low, haven't 1?” she sobbed. Faith’s arms strained her to her breast. love him, honey,” she tried to word of comfort into her lay failure Pve sunk pretty sister “And yet you. don’t ut voice. isn’t it that vou just want to prove your power? a while be so terrible, darling?” “It would be for me—under circumstances,” tically: Novt: The rubles—Job xxviii: Cera ‘The heart is wiser than the tellect.—J. G. Holland. she ent“? QUT OUR WAY I GOT IT wes! 1 GoT You WHILE YOR WAS.-ON TOR YOu KIN RELAX TORN LOOSE AN' RELAX ‘Would staying single the Cherry replied cryp- Faith issucs an ultimatum Cherry. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) (7 A Thought | —-——______——— price of agen is above th ice. ————________ BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the’ the Health Magazine Almost everyone who in the study of speech defects agrecs that the psychological -diffi- culty is probably primarily respon- sible in most instances, The . individual tendene; lying. sconstitutional His ‘home conditions, and the manner: of his reaction to The stam- them are. investigated. merer’s general health js ascerta well as his general. intelligenc " the number of years and educatii during which he has gufferet a consideration. The longer the di complaint, the ‘more vide adequate relief. begins to stammer jon: of - porek to e* child who is treated carly Man: that the child will outgrow its Sometimes: it, does through Tes own efforts constitut enormou! but these ef "Pradtiealy all. speciati: that the attempt to American) gear. Medical Association and of Hygeia, specializes stammerer,. there. fore, is now studied as,to any unde: f Mato of feur, ep cause of some state of fear, depre: sion or stragpla, and who is not re-|rescue-and found that lieved before’ the -sixteenth year, likely to constitute a much more d ficult case than the stammeéring chi parents comfort themselves witr the notion non. the | Po! nervous system and deprive the child | time sistance it should rightly eee amou: a millign or 30? Loud” yow! “from Broadway: was Pauline Lord and not Ket Cornell who got the Broadway favor- ite vote.” How careless of me! Saw . Rex: Beach, who - sometimes es lion hunting, tring to avoid i a lion by ‘those eves fol about the Al; And -H..L. ene jon, es aleaity, grinning from the fam-7 | Brian Marnie "hures, Raymond Hiteb- mat mon ned a tbe waters” As he flew over] ay te ‘é cook ‘ani ther celebs also the field to drop the ‘parachutes in BM order to prevent them om being R * spetied: by salt water, one: of New York's of.” utes ‘eayght in the ptopeljer of te Most of the left moter stepping it for-the rare gather the: fi ‘tite or another. fer in: av bad: wa; r nd “Hepple | who: haven't ‘ived,”bt ‘but. want. to, come und ‘reflected. sunshine. ‘over their teser cane, Tone (had lunch Bey Bokeh an{earnte Hurst. Wel, they id” eat in-the same din- eves parathute’ opened and he trowly feared being Rint off the plane and foulli ty eee il big et At 8000 or. fet in the a Monroy climbed down to the bomb: er’s. landing gear ‘and in an almost impossible ppaition amid a wind- stream of 90 miles an hour endeav- ored, with Private Cyr, to repelt oe They had ot di oo and a ‘slip: meant certain! | jeath. At noon they had t repairing’ attempt. decid give ae, tie now 6, speed. Decause - of ii ined, Polk had’ to innie Hurst”. . the! ine pro- wh ad Army and: navy. boats - leut. Polk and] p; s they they" talk about vit He) for Geen oar i¢ point is at ey rm and: Him ts their odd uy terest com- forts Mibsvig Judd Gray denies the te- rn eae 0 he has be invariably in the “desth cell. knit ers, with no "detiate to’ the “height of bay necaiet Ww may. be why is lending one’s reputation. cure stitutions in Lett preseril stants ‘ing i treatment ‘follows a defini’ for all, including speech gymnastic training, rest, a! methods are not as ied as an individual case. The routine methods have valucjof this war some good is coming. when it is found that. ie diffict ni ly one of , however, tl stitute a very small minority. e person and. of h' the reason for the speech bloek i: determined and released, the routine. systems of. speech instruction be more helpful. satisfactory. those in which each patient is stud-|with the production of : ftozen and ttainly, ‘commi: ily get them to The war in China.has interterted out of on and leafy ‘wa: the little house In a d bile eliness, shadowless In the schite ‘maagic , of the full moon-" Strabane ‘without the gate, we stood is Fearful toxbreek that quiet, and to that had been ours Writers are Suronesing varios Through does vets ot happy nights ie a tires a “ener ete He ‘have offered So, old rand: ghestly, like a house: of It sesmed, Pa over us there stole | That ‘ove ped _ we watched it, aide oat Of lovers, who had lived wich it walls, were sleeping in dried eggs. It seems that even out It infor i The old-fashioned . winter. we away when the ladies oe to ig- Most |nore it. “Let them pai ti on in France for "is ne be ane ogee