The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1927, Page 4

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TUESDAY, AUGUSTi801 0027 : WASHINGTON By Rodney Dutcher jfor cotton... -These debentures, or PAGE FOUR | FP The Bismiarck Tribune [ti vomen c'ny scron te Pade x An Independent Newspaper It has been a long time since the senior Doran ( THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER |was Mildred’s age. But perhaps when the Flint : (Established 1873) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Lowdown on the Big Fight =| | ie 5 a wy |farmer gave his permission he remembered some a * daring dream of his youth that his own parents i Published by the B k Tribune Co | Rae Sane ck, N. B,, and entered at the postoffice ef 7 _(TAINT GOIN'AG DEA SHELL- jismarck, N. and entered at the postoffice at oF his neighbors thought just a bit foolhardy, * " bounty certifieates, would be issued Bismarck’ as second class mail matter. | In his young day, of course, women were differ-| is GOIN'10 BE THE se NEA Service ue by the treabary: th the arene ane «George D. Mann..........President and Publisher ‘ent, or so we are led to believe. Unemancipated, | ‘ Washington, Aug. 30—If t! would be for the .payment of i 8 DEMPSEY CF OL STEPS of the farmer adopt the slog lc- | import duties. The exporting farm. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance i shrinking, oVerdressed, more or less servants of man | M 1B THAT TIM Nary-Haugen or bust” they probably! or! ccuid ‘sell them to whomever he any b eatvled cer cee ee 2 (to do his bidding without question—that is the/ INTO THAT RING IN CHICAGO : HENRY, BUTI will go bust in aa the Seven-|tared to for #0 much cash, aug by saull, see yeers Cis “4720 | picture handed down to us by our own elders. . AN THEY GANT TELL ME THATUACKS -/ PICKIN’ TONNEY “It seems. ‘mo Vrooman says the bounty plan I~ Daily by mail, per year, | Girls these days for the most part know what BEEN LEADIN' SUCH ANEASY LIFE CAUSE HES # that President ‘Coolidge will veto the | ctiminates President Coolidge’s criti. 5 A (in state outside Bismarck)....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Circulation . 5.00 | they want to do and do it. There is more oppor- Sea eee? aa this covteinty | cisms of | the equalization fee as rea f It to. administer | : YOUNGER, Erows some of the more thoughtful] qiéficult to adminietes and points out =| “THAT, WES GOT STALE - No MAN tunity for them to exert their capabilities and extend 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 creditej 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) Broadcasting Censorship | Broadcasting in America is threatened with na- tional legislation directed along the lines of censor- | * ship if broadcasters do not exercise more discretion | _ and liberality in their present methods of private | ~ ¢ensorship, declares Representative Emanuel Celler, | of New York, and thus provides us with a peculiar “ tituation if this is true. Usually censorship comes as a result of too much liberality, but here Congress- man Celler says it will come because broadcasters delete more than they edit speeches and that they | prevent normal expression of free opinion. | . In Congressman Celler’s opinion, the radical, the} liberal, the fundamentalist, the modernist, the . orthodox and the conservative should be given an equal opportunity before the microphone. He! believes that the radio offers an unexcelled medium | for educational work; but this work, he states, can- | not be performed if the ideas of some are refused | | was a youth. |their ambitions than there was when Mr. Doran Mr. Doran is to be congratulated for having pro- gressed with the times. We know many parents who have not gone ahead like that, who are living in the past and who would have refused permission or threatened. Mr. Doran seems to us the best kind of a father. “Where Is My Wandering Grandma Tonight?” A grandmother, standing blithely on the thresh- | old of 60 years, has taken first prize for having the best pair of ankles among the summer visitors to Penobscot Bay, Me. A sparkling new vista of | grandmotherly existence thus invites. | Who remembers way back when grandmother, with a pair of spectacles and a ball of yarn was wont to sit upon her dignity in a corner of the domestic hearth? Who remembers when we used to look upon grandma as a sort of Sacred thing to her face—though there were things’ about the; creaky old girl that were just a little bit‘funny, too? All these new wrinkles—grandma trading her ball of yarn for a dance program, and the like— disclose very hopeful signs, very. There is no longer any need for whatever hypocritical reverence we once accorded her gray hairs. There is no longer any need of pitying her because she must sit on the sidelines and now has no part in the race. No need of any further pampering of grandma, if you please, she’s getting around quite nicely by herself, thank you! Grandmother used to work hard. There was LEADS AN EASY LIFE AFTER ~ HES MARRIED members of the farm bloc are looking around for a@ rose under another name which will smell just as sweet. Whether the scheme finally chosen will actually be a compromise or a little sister of McNary-Haugen is likely to depend on whether the ad- ministration feels compelled to take the agricultural discontent seriously, but the farm bloe di not now show any .strong sition to give up any of its principles Considerable attention is now being paid to the “Vrooman Bill,” & piece of proposed legislation submitted by Carl 8. Vrooman, of Bloomington, lil, a former assistant secretary o! agriculture. Some of those who may have been fighting for the MeNary- Haugen bill observe that they would get just as much out of the Vrooman plan as the McNary-Haugen scheme if the president could be persuaded to sign it. ‘The most serious opposition to the Viguman plan will center upon its Propusal to pay Lounies on export farm crops whenever an emergency occurs in which the farmer doesn’t get a “fair pri Haugen bill, this provision is designed to give the farmer the benefit of the tariff which he cannot deri long as he rai has to meet Petition. Instead of’ the McNary-Haugen equali: fee, Vrooman would square thing: ith. the farmer by having the government pay a bounty on all exported surplus when an emergency was officially declared. The money would actually come out of the treastiry, for it is proposed that a system of export debentures be created up to the amount of the tariff on the’ particular crop and = of relief in only a slight degree as compared with: the equalization fee, It is obvious, however, that most Coolidge objections to the Haugen bill are equally plied to-the Vrooman bill * the administration is ex- tremely ly the farmer almost regard of cost, it seems that Coolidge would repeat if the Vrooman bill actually should be adopted and passed by the farm bloc in Congress. The bill provides for a Federal Farm Board of four or five $10,000- a-year members appointed by the president, who would be provided with federal capital to the extent of $800,000,000. The board would follow closely all crop prices and ‘prospects and other agricultural’ factors and in- form cooperatives and agricul- tural groups interested in wheat, corn, oats, rye, barley, rice, cotton, cottonseed, tobacco, beef cattle and hogs. . it would make loans at interest to crop producers or handlers and, if necessary, store sufficient per- contag of crops when unusual surpluses occur “to secure for the farmer reasonable prices for his crops.” Une of the most interesting pro- visions is that the board would overexpansion as in. becomes profitable.” Vrooman proposes a series of un- paid Crop Acreage Control Com- mittees for each state, county and township, which would allot acre ages. _ Vrooman suggests various methods of pressure on ‘“the oc- casional : individud) who failed to while the propaganda of others is being broadcast. | - --+ To that extent it is easy to agree with the con- ed when ciel bce glad le ahs i the} an j gressman. No doubt the effect on the listening Sabra sogcianenaes beter, aidltiie : i z : tely | out” to e 5 Bi, a : public would be better if all views were adequately Modern household devices have helped in this y Anné Aus re =, and impartially presented. But where would such “ eke oe -o a - fe lity stop? Ci Celler tells us that | @Volution of the venerable lady. She isn’t tired at py aD mpmrescean eer tere ere all any more. She craves action. Let’s go, grand- ‘ ’ « + he would advocate the modification of the present ' ! laws governing slander and libel to suit the peculiar ma! Slip on your glad rugs and let’s have a party. “ 1 ia Daily Hicaith —9|3 cents a pound, by special proviso,| conform. to his allotment.” ly Service . ri and tendency to disturbance colored belt an excellent stock in i] trade for literary ‘wares. sign of actual damage to and the person must be! nwhile Harlem changes, month | treated accordingly. by month. More and more the ef- fort is made to mimic the “1 laces. More and more th At two é'clock reporters for the| astrous attempt to identify herself] Eaity Joe One LE BEIN on morning newspapers began to arrive} with the social life of the rather| Medical Association and of Hygela, |@. to get this sensational new “break”| snobbish little neighborhood, the Health Magazine is: injected and a certain eondilions of radio, but wo could not go tut far, | Grandma is dead, long live grandma! in the famous Cherry Lane-Chris| . Between them, Mrs. Minnock and h ilar Sele being is ole on the i BARBS sciousness clings. to those places A » It would be too dangerous. It would lower the bars Wiley story. Mrs. Harrison persuaded Faith and| "¢24, if the blow is not too hard, he where the whites gather in abundant Cherry to lie down, and then took] Usually recovers. Perhaps a week! women in America spent $75,000, umbers. Copying Broadway, they : ue Almost their first demand was for or so later he will begin to develo - i ce oh for any kind of rash mud slinging. Edi a picture of the kidnaped baby, "| APE of the household, Peculiar symptoms which may be the|000 on hair marcels, trims and sham. Navé,cven et UP “props” to attract Under no consideration ‘would we have Federa torial Comment {haven't had. any pictures made] , 1° sat beside the telephone in the| results of actual damage to the brain,|Poos last year. The barbers rule the Seents about the city to, whisrer in + eensorship of the radio. Private censorship is re-- i Sesaige yet,” Cherry told them hope- is face worn and haggard.| or which may be purely a mental dis-| Waves. - {the ears of visito grettable, but, as we see it now, inevitable. As “ i for news, and every time h ‘A eeaanher inst. alcohol ‘All of which is.too. bad! For fone as the station can be held reaponsible for all| G0Vernor Sorlie Makes Good Suggestion | | Tre sot to, have a picture, so the] or, ten satesh with the sure rept lw oreasonally Eis blow results in af a tedigu sudjerey | that aisonpee endl) crs efile oa aa ‘ Taiibeadsat Foe: aaflas ke ell (Jamestown Sun) babs." the reporters from The Morn.| of: the night chief, “Sorry! Nothing | In a few instances ‘there may be anj People who drank before the prohi-,™f% for imstaness, poo oy arabes Srrciighlthe plc gpeeblie Neanrsad aoa: Aer The suggestion of Governor A. G. Sorlie, made at | ine Stat ‘interrunted. “Haven't youj.deing! But the, force, fp on the ition law went jnto. effect have quit] ik just so long will some kind of private censorship | ii, recent ion of the North Dakota Department | £°t. 2, napshot or . anything? —Ygjp{ lockout. a, completely, | The other 90,000,000. in BELG The! only. remedy for ihe .persone/who)are session of the No jakota Department | maybe all wrong about its beig|:' Police headquarters had sent out ‘a Y wi the country seem to be getting it all. J : “hi b in . - b hei 5 di of the American Legion at Fargo, that the North| Chris Wiley that stole the baby; general alarm to all’ the neighboring dy of 190 Pre . | ustaj gle i i Hh Eee ened ae Fhe greg Dakota State Legion Band receive the financial] "8% be 2 professional crook, plan-| towns, as a master (Gt desuees) but | meereelieernue or, persensswhe must be piney toeelalte nae eae here stations where they can transmit what ey wis! : yi ing to hal e kid for ransom—” morning dawned without een hit on the head were stud- ‘ by 4 Fits viligisstuarts) content , support of the state legislature, and that an appro-| Cherry's high-pitched scream cut |mews whatever without a5y /fej, "Some of them had fallen while] With King Michael, outgrowing ai Wat? gate, 70% going, ° dea 4 priation of fifteen or twenty thousand dollars be , off elope) but miner his for- Pat seven o'clock Faith crept into Ira ahi some na eee knocked] CFOWN every year or 30, She knocked him to the lawn. 8 ward, ce i. i, " i i wv , ‘ ey made to send the state band to the next national] *"viceure, a painting of rayself with | ure huddiad on the flovt’ besige ies (struck with weapons, || * “°™) “Knock and it atall’ be’ given tol He doremt, know Juat where she Europe’s News Gathering System ‘But, gosh, he’s glad she's gone. convention of the American Legion, will meet with] the baby. It was painted by George| bed, her head bowed on her outflung| 'If the brain is injured, there are|¥0U,” is the way some people think , Some good work may be done by newspaperjthe approval of large numbers of his constitutents. | ")'* herry, darling,” Fatth whispered |sometimes due to bleeding intéthe ¢ | arms. > | invariably symptems: of importance,| that passage reads, | ° Hf : t “Judas Priest! What luck!” the i vin D- wnits eM trecmrsy 5 Hl | xecutives, in session at Geneva, in an attempt to| The Governor says that the, Legion band will be] Star reporter breathed devoutly.| bunkily, as she knelt:beside her-sis- | brain, sometimes.to mild inflamma. That recente te. pationsl apes A Thought | - yemedy the international property laws. an excellent advertisement for North Dakota and,| ‘Say, let me, take it with me now,| ter, "don’t make yourself ill. You in aS Sait one Seman personnel sug-| | ‘ 7 4 = Fe you ve t i ne Chri: " tl y. a perso! as = As far as American publishers are concerned,|in this, the chief executive is correct. The Legion| Couple of hours." --, | He's doing it to make You go back to| received a severe blow on the head] Shakedown somewhere along the line.” ‘The laborer to worthy of hie re- “ there is no cause for worry, but many European{band is an asset of the whole state but it can be} “Hey, ae ae "Salat old-timer,” the a ae 3 | and wae Sitters vi any secondary President Coolidge's sane stiaenen ward.—1 Timothy 3:3, 5, a A js ifi j ‘ eee. reporter from The Chronicle, the op-| “I’m: going to tell th rters | Symptom: ich as dizziness, ringing i ky 3 : _. publishers have had serious obstacles to their work oe a larger asset if it receives official recognition | position morning paper, pushed ‘ae Til go Tek tai him if hell an |in ‘thee disturbance , of vision, calomee su ts the crack!» Bodily labor alleviates the pains of - of news gathering. ‘ ve fae barr fra an appropriation that yard. el jane photographs of me may baby Thee Cherry said poscqnin aber pains in ithe jere's nothing ing the ar Oe minds and hence aria ea, the hap- Services of press associations are a thing which|will make its further development possible. The! the paintings, for both papers. Wel dully, but her lifteg face was bathed | €¥e inability. to sleep, convulsions ee ee jochefou- : : A ned : 4 4 ‘i {or vomiting, should h t care- x : continental Europe must do without. The reason "ge eo heartily in accord cy the suggestion of | peat Bou find that 1 baby a ina white Hight 98 gaerifies, jfal'ecuset ng should:have 8 stost care- eauld. is that there is no law which makes special dis-|the Governor, and believes that what he has said NEXT: - One. t. wed by ith, i cialiat in diseases of the nervous!|| JIN NEW YORK patches cr dispatehes of any organizations corre-|relative to the state of North Dakota in its relation| Not long afterwards newspaper) blighting disappointment. mptoms of severe| | sponding, say, to the Associated Press in the United | to the state Legion band is equally true in connection] graphed the beautiful Madonna hs yh i | (Copyri NEA Servi | : photographers arrived and photo-| (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) infectane. i whe nervous sssten, New York, Aug. 82-—Taking “Uncle ya = = * States, the property of the paper or papers publish- ; with the city of Jamestown and the Jamestown Boys’ | painting, the empty crib, the weep- | @——————————___@ EE esate - rely revlow scmple| Ned” and “Cousin Agatha” to Har john Henry Fernand, provost of ‘4 “4 y, fi thi 4 Trinity college, Dublin, fg : ing them. A European publisher who wishes to/ Band. ; ‘ Faith and Bob besile the enor chete| | Old Masters skull. zi meet iem’s black belt cabarets now hai Pe gee eee ~ run a series of special articles may do so, but only; There is no. question but what the Legion band| arms about each other, tragedy on oo he ares bance Reeanent sve| PSCome 85 much & matter of course] | Minne olis — Geo. E. Young, 62, ~ short time after the first edition of his paper has |deserves the hearty support of the state, just as the |r {sur 11 yiy_q| About the little chambers of my! some disturbance. ‘results, from na] se S0jte, t9,h4, Woolworth, building, S27n0% tne, natin “ tome off the press he is likely to see the same |Boys’ Band deserves the hearty support, moral and| across the street from the Hatha- pie, b i " severe blow on the head. Frequently 4 few years ago a visit to Harlem bene articles in a rival paper. |financial, of the city of Jamestown. ways for month without calling, ar} Tanya years eee ae ea rericus eympron aver hn held all the elements of furtive and’ gatlog Nnding Sf bene glory invent. It would seem plain that the enterprise of a ‘ re oe mittee, sana ar eerd abe. Fa he one yo ae ” mie neces rete may be suffi-| few mekealans and nly i heave fant on farm 10 miles southeast of @ | Rewspaper or a press association should not be! “Equal Rights” for Women o'd-fashioned neighborly "sympathy Phe ty RP ne AENNES: 2G | STORE Meee Oe THE MEAN 10 Bane, dared: pioneer this path. Like all Sabian, Minn. impaired by letting the news gathered be available (Minneapolis Journal) mores Iving “onthe nent Wieck, Hull Prechy” thly’ Come and treety eney| or*sdTeMinmany people receive blows] as"eatio wadiesi and inet otee CERN Three hundred. and itty, Chicago x to any paper, whether it is paying for it or neg.} Do the women of America really want the “equal! also been aroused by Samuels, the pd at oi meus jetelyes Men a eratly Enocked| Rered comments over the teacups. It theatres close as result of contro- As this conference is being conducted under the\/rights” which a feminine delegation recently de-| policeman, on his search for informe-|The wails give back their laughter; | out. in football games, or'in priee| Wan. apresd about that these parties verey between exhibitors and moving ‘ out in football games or in a prize - picture operato: * auspices of the League of Nations, anything decided | taanded, in the course of a call upon President Cool- ee Ses a goed rd The ee long iy % fight will, after a short time, re- re ee “intelligentsia; | we ., on will be heeded attentively by League officials |idgéxin the Black Hills? Would they support such|leved that she was the same Mrs,| One door alone i shur aoe shamber rther disturbanaeen, | that evening salons were held in. , ghee and, Brocke take, off on * and fenbebly by the majority of the organization’s Ree Hoes) amendment as his callers contended | Minnock who had been “not at home” ae Be sCalacibgs > stass, 5 SER mii ual neem ak ee round world flight after American members. |should be\adopted without delay? + ‘ ry © . 2 J 1 danced togethe: consulate dinne: Munich. - } Largely through the efforts of Associated Press| For, as the President cannily replied, such a con- BEE "4 _But that was @ couple of years ago| a officials, the bar of censorship has been removed |stitutional amendment would undoubtedly be adopted, OUT OUR WAY. (7) i a hee sarten Small’s was a tiny place over, y Nery, Pammim cocraritiee: in Boe: & ~ in most European countries and news correspondents | whenever it became evident that the majority of the He A Sen appeals enranie 0 6 and =, are free to send their member papers what they|women of the American Nation wanted it. 11S GONE roppine down now on a Saturday want. Now it will. be necessary to insure these; “Equal rights” is a broad and inclusive term. It ¥ dispatches: priority in sending, so that the papers in} covers not merely such privileges as equality with Hourly he called the police station} turbance. pared an here for ee ee jin night, Small’s may be found to poral parlor disturbance, and fp, re- AbosnD Tipee Oo) fafen on all the ales ‘fit Broadway ed,on $1,100 Bally vet, MES CURLY — AT PENDLETON, ‘ - feor!, Florida coast guard patrol ordered * the” tes may get them in time to use, | men in matters of holding public office, or receiv- “THE SECOND i iT n i ms ne Leone alle: tae eve Saar ‘aid search for Paul Redfera,. ; «. It would be'll'yeally great thing if this conference | ing the same scale of wages, af enjoying the same LER ° : an eee ae sear: Sram he peered ig should succeed in untying the last few knots in the|legal rights in property, and so on. The phrase i i Harlem ‘unr toe ts preg "Reatle 3. confirmation lack- @ ‘. -, Buropean news-gathering system. also connotes equal responsibilities with men in Mixed dancing mixed conversation, Venesuelan report that plane respect to various privileges now accorded to wome: mired bag ohg tables are common- Wat seem i . AN! isd : place. No one so much as raises an|< gS ee : alone. TH est eyebrow. Hundreds wait in.vain in New York meet Orderly Marketing There are, for example, laws limiting hours and “Uncle Ned” and “CoBsin Agatha”) for arrival of EL: ashes The secret of adequate prices for the farmers’ ‘ * products lies not so much in legislation as it does ti . in an orderly system of supplying the market. 8 - Thus the plan recently announced for a wheat +, pool in the great winter wheat states of Nebraska, takert out: th from Boston. Death masks placed on of the sights of Manbetten, “Buyers display in New York after police dis WINDS.'IM_UP. defining conditions of labor for women. Are: they ‘ Pada nd seize red fl from Omaha and 1 ion ai pels ize : lag. to be repealed by constitutional amendment? There 4 y { Seventh avenue sit tablote table with 1. comm! are laws granting pensions to the widows of veterans, Balhae rarer anes sopeable, With. cope ashes willbe aivided just because they are women. Must these pensioners fi ; Sending. tort tips joa or Cert in Italy and. Mal give up their money grants from a grateful Govern- ft i i tare coast-to-coast trip, ig t "Ol » Kansas and Colorado, seems a move . y Only a few retain their original tl ment? Are mother’s pensions to be abandoned, or identities, and a very few—suel p ., # the right direction. must they be matched by fathers’ pensions? Are Philadelphia Jimmy’ werely’ vi ’ The plan is based on the successful method fol- lowed by the great Canadiin cooperatives. Wheat growers sign to sell their grain through a central «; agency. When 50 per cent of the wheat acreage ? the four states has been thus organized, the become effective. bri his wheat to the central agency. cent of the current market price ited by whites, even women prepared to pay alimony in divorce settle- ments, under the same circumstances that men do? Examples of favored treatment accorded to women by the laws of the land might be multiplied... They are grounded on sound reasons, arising gee most part out of inherent differences in the ation of the sexes, or out of the maternal of womankind. They are good laws, ané = : J th , belance realized on the sale is paid oy > . F eal Sescitceate: “Fas puspone be to: warcet be nullified by a constitutional amend: nda fast é ¢ i? ’ \ that were to be found. Hidden by the orderly fashion, to keep the peaks down ae € st about, {35th street hey ‘the depressions in the market. y ’ a f pace artists, dvamptiste and 8. Resse os thi plaxéers, who “came, ja sais wel i t é > mgrnee These discriminations, so fer as they are un to disappear, and lawmaking bodies will continue to eliminate them from the statute books. That is the right way of Soin hit we dete means of s constitutional ani numerous discrimingtions

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