The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 29, 1927, Page 4

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A. Renee ten ee PA M The , =< Btinding at a bar somewhere ahd forgetting to vote ‘hoo oon nr Me ie im es ----CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. = PAYNE, eae & SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. mt ~—Restating the common law of the land is a gigan- PAGE FOUR : Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published ii the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. and entered at the postoffice at pace as second class mail matter. George D. 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, outa of North Dakota. ember Audit Bureau ef 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 spontdneous origir | published herein. All rights of republication of all; other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ne doh eshte inant Aue. oh Recasting the Common Law tic task and will take at least ten years to accom- plish, in the opinion of George W. Wickersham, president of the American Law Institute, who be- lieves it to be the best and only way to clarify and modernize the common law. He points out that the defects of the. ‘common law as it now stands are its uncertainties and ambiguities and this he attrib- ut@e-chiefly to a lack of agreement among American lawyers as to the fundamental principles and intent of=the common law. He believes that a lucid state- megt of the age-old fundamentals would be a great hefE> st And 0 it would, no doubt.’ It would be a splendid step in the right direction. There would be at least something done on the great task before this gen- eration—that is, to make the law really a guide to civilization and not the drawback that it is at the Present time. Under present methods of jurisprudence justice is always delayed, rarely satisfactory and full of loop- holes through which the ends of justice and equity are continually being frustrated.‘ We need, not only a restatement of principlés, but a weeding out of all that is useless and unnecessary, and that is plenty. It is safe to say that 75 per cent of the laws could be scrapped with great benefit to the entire country. Legal procedure is encumbered with the inherit- ances of the days of pomp and circumstance, when. everything was surrounded with form and flourishes, when simple speech was unknown and when delay was considered to lend majesty to the law. Today’s needs are vital and they are pressing. We need a new system of jurisprudence, incisive, brief and simple, something that fits our day and age, not a legacy from an ancient time. The John Jinks Party The National League party in Ireland says John Jinks has been fired. John Jinks, the deputy from Sligo, says that isn’t the case at all—he has quit. Be that as it may, the Cosgrave government still is supreme in Ireland, and for no other reason than John Jinks, himself. : John Jinks was expected to vote against the gov- ernment. He was a member of the National League party and that’s the way the party stood. The vote of John Jinks was needed to break a 71-71 tie in the Dail. Republicans, led by De Valera, and Labor- ites, led by Tom Johnston, had counted on John Jinks’ vote to break the tie and place Johnston in office, with De Valera his right hand man, When voting time came in the Dail, John Jinks was not there. He had heard the debate. He knew what his constituents wanted, party or no party. So he had just slipped out of his seat and left the hall. Then the fun began. It was thought John Jinks was kidnaped. Some accused the red-faced saloon-keeper from Sligo of entirely. They said everything. But the plain facts of the case were that John Jinks decided to quit the National League party and support Cosgrave because his constituents wanted it. His folks back in Sligo came ahead of the party. He acted for them. John Jinks can think for himself. He stands out in Ireland as a glorious character, although there be those who call him traitor. He acted as Sligo desired that he should act, and all the powers in Ireland or Britain couldn't move him. Sligo Go} Bragh! The John Jinks party against the world! + ‘The Vicious Circle / Despite the efforts of good-intentioned. statesmen like the Frenchman, Briand, and tl German, Stresemann, to bring about a better feeling between their respective countries via Locarno/ pacts and Thoiry conversations, there are people both sides who -explode whenever they have a chance. A German, to make capital for his party or for pacifism, prints a yarn to the effect that monocigd officers in the German Reichswehr are clandestine- | superstition of medicine. |ferers in the great south. {| Noyes studies them. ‘woNDAY, AUGUST 29, 1927 1927 “WASHINGTON fj BY RODNEY DUTCHER Wasningtor Aug. 2¥.—oenator 3. yresentatives, but w: Buomboom McWhorter, who not only Hy i id again in 4832. iknows, it seems, all he reads in the} The Mexican. War wade General but scans between the lincs| Zachsi ore the Whig candidate ‘of the war/in 184! L. Winfield Scott the Whig candidate in 1862. Taylor Mars are about to} beat Senator Cass, but it took the -uaint way] other general of the same war, Frank- site ae as he looked up| lin Pierce, to-lick Scott. from his pa er. hae he had been] The first president chosen ao shearing ie political the Civil War was General U. 8. news, ‘particu ms about|Grant, chief of the Union armies, Senator MeWhi elected in 1968 and 1872. Hayes was “Let ut look Her-| elected in 1876 and Garfield in 1880. Hoover ani wes,”| Both had been Union generals. the’ senator proc . t A the! field defeated still another veteran truth? The war le ‘em and these] officer. two men, except for Coolidge, President _Benjamin Harrison had now leading di for presi-|been a general and Président Wil- dential nomination.’ liam McKinley a major, Apparently neither party will draw| The Spanish War and San Juan from veterans of the front line| Hill had brought Roosevelt to the trenches next year. But 1928 may sce) front and he was elected vice-presi- the fitst nomination of anyene- Ei dent in 1900 and president in 1904. nected with the military ‘or civil Even Bryan, who w: candidate so ministration of the World War. It] often, had peta an AaB during the is thus more or less interesting to| Spanish W ad been able— consider the madam’s prophecy in the) or sllowad to distinguish himself in thet of aera history. action as Roosevelt did, he might first three ‘presidents wete| have been elected on one occasion, eorgs ington, John A The two parties, ening in 1920, Thomas Jefferson. Washington had| refused to follow int. Gerard, been Dd be A saa ‘of the revo-| the war-time ambassador to Germany, eee army;-Jcfferson wrote most panies bemoa: the fact that the laration of Indenendence,|'two conventions ignored those iams was also on the committee; sponstble for direction of the war ai which reported the declaration—war! had nominated a senator and a gov- service pul asi theee in Hine for thet ernor, ‘passing over Wilson, Lansing, presidency. House, Baker, McAdoo, Palmer, The first president-choson after| Hoover, Pershing and others. the conclusion. of the War .of 1812). The war administrators were again had been. wh ignored in 1924. sof id) » Even now, onc can predict that whl antag recard the hehe ae 1928 cried es a 2 volution, oth parties may have achieved his ‘ dati But Andrew Jackson, who defended first ia Important hationsl inence % New Orleans, was the real poraias | Waring: or as a result of the war, no hero of that wi He failed to reach, candidate is going to be nominated or elected on his war record alone. national director of the American Red Cross nursing service. During the height of the tremendous tasks of the recent Mississippi valley flood disaster, Miss Noyes was asked how such a big work was carried on, and if it didn’t keep her “awfully busy.” “It isn’t so hard,” she said, “just a matter of this button and that. You press the buttor and things happen.” A button, and there goes a letter to Aintab, Turkey, suggesting a way to ‘overcome the natives’ i Eyes was Another button, and there goes a bulletin to Con- stantinople where a school of nursing is being con- ducted in the former harem of a rich pasha. A button again, and a call goes out to 45,000 nurses in 48 states of the union, a summons to con- jcentrate every resource upon relief of the flood suf- Reports come in from 196 state and local nursing committees throughout the United States. Miss There follow suggestions, or- Merely the pressing of :a few more ders, changes. buttons! These buttons that the women are pressing now! And to remember back to a not distant day when all that women were supposed to know was how to sew them on! The New Freedom in Russia It is hard to know the truth about “the new free- dom in Russia.” So many people who go over there to report conditions have their preconceptions and find exactly what they go after. But recently at Tula, a small mining town near Moscow, an incident occurred that ‘tells us prac- tically all we need to know about “the: mew freedom” and its limitations. The Russian government_ controls the metal works at Tula. The men had gone on strike and were threatening property damage. An assemblage collected, shouted “Down with the Soviet,” and dis- obeyed orders to disperse. | What -would have happened to such a gathering in the days of the czars? The answer is easy. Police or soldiers would have fired into the crowd. There would have been deaths, and not a few would have limped home bearing the wounds of battle. What happened under the present “liberal” ruling | ~ regime in Russia. Were the strikers told with words that flowed like honey to “go home and be good boys”? Were they cautioned by all the standards of the “new freedom” in Russia that strikes really in the end didn’t get anybody anything and were a lot of trouble anyhow? What happened was this: Soviet militia opened up their guns upon the strikers, and 16 of them were killed and 22 wounded. It seems to make a little difference who owns the property. Editorial Comment | A Perennial Problem (Minneapolis Journal) When it comes to accepting blame in the domestic servant problem, Uncle Sam declines to be meek. Accused of shutting off the supply with his immi- gration laws, he has turned to his records and brought out some figures—his favorite means of confounding critics. Going back to the peak years of immigration be- fore the World War and the quota laws, and looking nt tome like that!” she Biased at * rn im. “The oy was sound asleep up the number of female immigrants over the age of | when I I thought my sister ten years in 1913 and 1914, he separates out the} and M: Hathaway would be | hom countries whose migrants were most favored for do- any minute. Mr, Andrews called 4o0 me at eleven o'clock. I—I'd told him mestic service. Then he looks up the same groups for 1925 and 1926. dosage of what properly used may| “Nigger Heaven” he had interested be a valuable ible "rembay, 1:5 pleeit searching out talented col- folk, holding salons among t! Old Masters} colored intellectuals and exploring iubelt ie Home they brought her rreered ex-sea captain, meat "Side, West. Side,” eae secretary of the Explorers’ Club; s0' that he would not lose touch - with those friends who went out for high adventure in the faraway places. s of hazard were his constant companibes And so it goes—the fellow you meet in. a Broad’ ke likely to-turn out to be i young pla; raright and the young indy you asually at the “all night cat not, a short '|story, writer terial for h ve oho i _ hey She nor swooned, ry. ‘it'd die” i ‘Then they praised him; soft and low, Called ‘him wotthy to be loved, ‘Truest friend arid noblest foe; Yet she nei spoke nor moved. AINE ,=4 SINNER att af meee rl pp ol Agee cor le r Journal je American Stole a maiden ftom her place, Medical ‘egress and - Hygela, Bard to the’ warrior step the Health Magazine k the face-cloth,from the face; The human bei tends to indulge Tok, she. neither moved nor wt in extremes, per! on the hypoth- tle of something: Rose a nurse of ninety years, luable a great deal may be much|{ Set hia child upon her knec— more valuable. Like summer tempest eame her tears, Person one bumped in the subway One of the possible dangers of the] “Sweet: my’ chi ive for thee.” as writing a play. at advice to indulge-in sunlight“may be| —Alfred Ten that ope merely bad t an over-exposure to sunlight: or to) Princess. your second act coming along?” a the artificial ultravfolet rays reault-! ‘ of the journey. would ing in more harm‘than good. itening | fe; the: general. themo Americans certainly are drinki less than they used to. Imports o! it has been known for years that! prolonged exposure to the violet and ultra-violet. raj ural or artifici: in the skin. . It tea fell off a mien rppands last nether” apie air a ae tht Leugehtaiey every potent rem: is a two-e aword with, ponalipitiga of well good. Sensitive Skin It is well known that, some people are unduly sensitive to sunlight; the skin burns easier and freckles easier than in the case of other. pe Some oe respond promptly to s i tht: with blistering of the skin. Blonds usually burn far more easily than do brunet: The most place in babies whose we cited of a boy, aged ry half past one o'clock night when the police ar- rived at the pretty brown stucco house on Serenity Boulevard. For an agonizing fifteen minutes Faith and Bob reiterated their story. At least six times they were com- pelled to tell just when they arrived nome from the Lyttons, just’ how they had discovered the kidnapping of the baby just how long they had’ waited. for Cherr; “And Chris is vitting farther and farther away with my baby!” Cherry screamed: at last, her small fists beat- ing franctically upon fhe broad chest of Sergeant McClusk; “Now, lotka here, sergeant ‘commanded seizing her han ‘We're goingues find your baby for you, Le ef "a better not forget that it-was went off joy riding and le (igs baby alo: Come clean now! your trois make it snappy!” The ant’s harshness had the salutary “Steet of drying in, a heat of rage. “You T'll attend to this,” McClusky told “Now, is there any- clothes taken, too, Grogan, Brown!” he shouted. aoe ‘The two policemen who had been scouting about the premieses came on a run, “Footprints in a fi the. front. window: the New York columnist, theory that every other ir) bed under- ‘geant,”, Gro- y been : made by Chris last night,” Faith ‘told the ser- geant. ‘Where's Samuels? Back yet?" McClusky snapped. “I ‘sent him to see if he could learn anything from your neighbors,” ‘he explained rapid- 1Ye. a Boo. hen Samuels fone striding into the living room, istlin, importance. “Ramilyt: zones son piace the street say the; dark coupe drive up and par! a block down the street. shortly b fore eleven. and a man ‘get out of and come to this house. They didn’t watch to see whether he admit- ted at the front door or not. “Chris’ coupe!” Cherry cried. watched until I was gone with Gl and then—oh, Faith, | Fait! 5 taken my baby. And she'll; ‘ith- out you! He'll feed te wrong ‘But if she rin kill him, I swear ‘it! Fit kill him!” Sie racnien ental? 4 he rot this rep! ‘it out over in Jerscy th other night 1. bi tm going to of the sun, to nat- may cause of the whole f course, that evety- ting. a play is trying As Rat.29| women. pi dies will Social ral, Droapacti: he tenant, White are. considering the ww tl the new roof has -{ been pry iB : + $25, Met. -Nomgn, Fite, Cnists De +|M.,G. . Wien G," woman re, , Silvey us ‘reactions’ take springs Md...-Do you Set she! Clear “Lake Devels ment asaocia- tl in rolls her hose? , eapeles resort, Clinae The real raed will Rent an I arene t anne ene T had to stay in with the baby, but he came anyway, and he said ‘he'd only drive around for half an hour e 0 Ebling; sare, MG, If his critics were right, their Uncle Sam should| or so, that nothing could possibly! NEXT: Reporters and photograph.| WO had a severe cruption of the| Of those 1922 Model-Ts ‘also wil ee. : i i i n to Hope—my: bi I left th skin every time: he was exposed to| Choose, not - run, in, 1928, aap ‘cooperative Oil company, Od nieces tall gieet ins the yatiat cnn eats, Eee se eleeean ran in case of| Cra nrive., Promising thély. Relp im oi violet. rays,” This a occurred Kempton, $5,000; H. G, Lee, George searching ‘for the kidnapped baby. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) Justajingle Sald he “What alle this bloom Cp er be! toning” Cherry and and I've practiced for an hour. t Although I blow the night, and I- warned ‘Tuey abuays A Thought e perfect man, and be- upright.—Pealms = xxxvit: AT. Martinson and Peterson Grain com! » Scranton, Harpe William Peterson crease. go yriiian Batey Me in E. B. jurgeson of Baker, oe Cooperat rarmers Ree an shes Produce, Asso- f Kulm, E. —You paver: nee as oi where and when an.author ores ‘gay aes he doesn’t. In the earlier two years, the number averaged, just about the same as in the later two. From England, France, Germany, Ireland, the Scai dinavian countries, Scotland and Japan—whence| come the immigrants most favored for ‘and most i clined to enter domestic service—the number in each of the earlier two years was one hundred and twelve thousand; in the later two years, one hundred thou- sand, The big falling off was from the other coun- tries—from two hundred and ninety-two thousand compared with thirty-two thousand females over ten years of age. Enlightened by his own statistics, Uncle Sam turns to seeking the cause for the new problen— if it is new. And he finds it is not. Down through the years, back into the Nineteenth Century, ac- cording to all the learned books, women—and men, too—were talking just as much about it, and were just as far from a solution).ae now. Women just don’t like to hire out for that kind of jobs; their liking runs in other directions. So Uncle Sam apparently gives it up: Probably only inventors can find the way out. Unless the Na- tional Women’s Party should take it up. One in we knoe. who too up WwW. If to improve his health. Now /J- e’s looking for some other game * improve his moral fire—" “Oh, Cherry!” Faith wai he had to do was to walk i: could youl” “Who's ‘he’?” the sergeant demand- ed, panel poised aboye his notebook, id you!” Faith choked. Cherry's husband. I every summer fgr four “AN There are other case which the how reaction involvés changes in the blood which may be even more serious than those oat ie rage on ozakia- is Recomm Infai Ky should be tested first with f it or the arti & jolet_ ray to determine whether or not they are especiall: aes ts in. Sweet, ive before they are treated witi iT doses. If they respond with ses‘ous reactions, they can be treated accordingly. Whenever a new method is brought into the practice of medicine, the quacks seize upon it and exploit it without ¢ leration of its dangers.’ They were jong the first t ver- tise themselves as especially com- petent in the treatment of disease with light. Their jgnorance of dan- gerous. reactions in the human body is likely:to aa) in La from over- New York, Ai tell in New Yo you will come open “atmosphere.” From every pai come, sooner or Tatu writing folk. to haont unusual highway: byways.of this city. Ja. search of material for their ’ bias of ste of ther of Some of we was: picked up; we thone dors who trail the carnivals, and Selobeation: - with a pi} to Which Naini mae, tha wander -abput. “poteh” headqu: these days you'll find Don creator of the “Old Soak” humorous characters, getting atmos- here for future yarns.’ 1 rth wis recently wrote “Gasoli Bill Baker,.. wh balg ake Pitchme: in -askit for permission to join the’ Pitchme ‘| Association and attend Sheie. national convention. Refors rea: (never na Cherry—"” “I never dreamed that Chris would are to take my baby!” Cherry sob- “Mr, and Mrs, Wiley are separated, ergeant turned to- the—the trial Bob d. “We believe has taken the baby to force her to terms, But won't you please, send out an e@larm, sergeant? Des passing—” OUTOURWAY _ tk Cooperative. oi and iteel; Jo > an army 1) ie various Mark th bold the 37. Even women are perfect at outset. Rochefoucald. the f ney Crore Tabernacle, fa Neng, Ole A. Torkildson, Eddie im and others. Grand Fone Pies Department Re- rs lief Assoc Bi eS equls,| Newark re) ‘Crw! each : FORCED: OUR.BY BEES y Kansas City—A swarm of -bees Ing for a éarly this year Petar Iddge of rt- there f eke The tenn andthe" bees" remalned—for five Senne, The other oy their ‘hi soured aes but th t cit ARE MA. . THATS WHAT L Ger every “Time, I ASK HIM 7 PASS ANYTHING. and - AN. ME AWAY OVER HERE. Nowe WATCH AN TLL SHow You SHE'S A HULLANCH CLOSTER TO IT THN ME. AN' SHE'S GoT TH’ NEQVE T'SAY—PAWSS TH’ SUGAH PLEEHEES~ LIKE IF I WAS JIST A'SERVINT ER SUMPN, ARE YA WATCHIN MA? HERES ME: RIGHT HERE J: Changes in the Trades (Duluth Herald) Ways of living change with the changing times. During the past two years the numberof men work- ing at the saddlery and harness-making trade has shrunk from 6,617 to 4,564. Improved harness-mak- ing machinery has had nothing to do with this, but the most important factor is the automobile. You don’t need a saddle or a harness to drive an auto- mobile. Horses are not so plenty on the streets as Dve- sai tell’ where you'll ‘Edith Whsrton } in: that . borg \[of lower Fifth Aveau i ursts, af ly building up a big German army. ’ Immediately a French paper prints: two columns about it and virtually says: d out of their hy psy They aré’@ menace to France and to peace. of the All the more reason why should not a single French soldier fi the Rhine: they were once. The experts report also that appreui are more numerous now than at any time since 1860, all trades considered together. In fact, the pressure to be- come journeymen manual’ workers must: be very: great. There is no longer any feeling ong the intelligent that the white-collar man has any ad- vantage over the man in overalls. In: fact it is quite the other way. Draymen, hackmen and teamsters were very nu- merous relatively in the past, but they are being crowded back and the chauffeurs are coming to the front. Many even now remember when the team- ster or coachman on his perch, drving his shin- ing gallant pair, was the last word in developmen‘. Now, with his outfit, he looks as if he had slipped out of a museum for an airing. ieclaa fox ri “I ull! uN pu Gar- ‘ ‘ “4

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