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PAGE FOUR ° The Bismarck Tribune THE STARE oLbust NEWBFAPER « lished 1873) ae Bismarck, N. and entered at the postoffi Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann... President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail, per year, (in Bi: Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck). Daily A mail, outside of North lember Audit Bureau of Circul ta oH) Member of The Associated Press published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives i (Official City, State and County Newspaper) This Capitalistic Dictatorship of the soviet government of Russia. Brother Trotzky minces no words. He told a delegation of the American Federation of Labor, | studying things in Moscow, that “under the exter-{ nals of a political democracy, the United States is ruled by « most concentrated capitalistic dictator- ship.” The Americans ‘who heard him, of course, can de- cide for themselves. We all can decide for our- selves. That is one of the prerogatives we've had ever since 55 earnest men met in Philadelphia and framed what we backward Americans call the Con- | stitution, So Ametigans can decide he was right, or that he! was wrong, according to their lights, whatever they! be, red or white. Be that as it may. { But just a moment: Brother Trotzky has more to ‘ say. Let him carry on without interrupion. The press of Russia, Brother Trotzky told his hearers, has a certain number of rabid radicals to} contend with. All sorts of crazy people with new ideas about government ure just as likely as not | to bob up in Russia with some kind of a newspaper | or other. These crazy newspapers with their new-fangled notions about how a country should be run! Let them have their say and soon Russia would be over- run with all sorts of fantastic ideas. It would be terrible. Brother Trotzky, of course, does not suppress the press. No capitalistic dictatorship in Russia sup- Presses the press. No, the soviet does not need to suppress the press. Adversaries of the soviet sim- ply are not allowed to have paper or printing’ ma- chinery. There you are. Go around talking strange ideas in Rusia and you'll get no paper to print them on. ’ branch roads. , ther. 1 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled eet byte fhe use for republication of all news dispatches: credited to it or not otherwise crediteg in this pa-' per, and also the local news of spontdneous origin | i H G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ! CHICAGO DETROIT , ; Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg. ; PAYNE, BURNS & SMIT) NEW YORK - - - _ Fifth Ave. Bldg. its own, and personalities—-Iowa with an ear of corn, Georgin with a peach, Oklahoma with an oil well, Texas | with a boll of cotton, or Michigan with an automo- bile. or manufacture. Florida, for instance, might choose a bathing beauty (recumbent) to pose for its li- cense plates, California might pick out each year’s most popular movie actress, and New York might | take the head of Al Smith as its model. jsurety of easy recognition throughout the union. Not only that, but the states would be well remem- bered and their most famous products highly ad- vertised. | Editorial Comment | til some four weeks hence when the days and nights are equal, the tang of autumn is in the air and we have wisely agreed to bid summer farewell about the first of September, geous glories of the season whose name comes from the Latin root meaning to satisfy one’s self, ta re- joice, begin to appear. orful gold and purple, would disguise from us the truth of the passing year and hide from us the loss of its youth. Spring comes to us simply clad in pastel greens, trimmed with pale bud and modest flower. It’s all very simple and very clear. America, with its capitalistic dictatorship, isn’t 80 ground under heel after all. a go of it, yet. The Railroad Merger Despite its vital importance to the northwest, the Proposed merger of the Great Northern and North- among the people of this section of the country. to make a large cut in the operating expenses of the two companies which cannot be avoided as long as they remain separate. Use of one shop at points where two are now maintained will be the rule. And there will be other savings, so officials of the linés claim. But H.-E. Byram, president of the Chicago, Mil- watkee & St. Paul railroad, sees great harm in the merger. Pacific coast, will be without any railroad compe- tition whatever. He further thinks that such a union will result inevitably in driving the Milwau- kee line out of business. 3 <Whether or not this merger is beneficial is a thing most people have not decided. And the rea- son is that as yet they have had no explanation of the plan which was comprehensive and understand- It is to be hoped that either before or at the ‘ hearing to be held by the Interstate Commerce Com- ? mission, a clear statement, easily understood by * everyone, will be issued. bi It It would seem that “Jimmy” Walker, the youth- ful mayor of New York city, is making a good im- pression in Europe as an “unofficial ambassador.” The peculiar thing about Jimmy's success in a sewi-diplomatic role is that his actions so far have been just the opposite of those of Chamberlin, Lind- bergh, Byrd~and his party and the other aviators who made the ocean trip. They had to be digni- fied; had to learn to say the right thing at the if right moment. They could indulge in no levity. But “Jimmy” is wisecracking his way over Eu- Tope and evidently making nearly as big a hit as : did the aviators. He says the right thing at the ‘ right time, but it is not a dignified tribute, in the majority of cases, but rather some clever remark. In the case of Mayor Walker it would seem that his popularity rests on the fact that he has tried to make himself like the people he is with. He has @ ready humor and his actions are tending to. make him a “pal” of the common people, %); ~ + In the case of Lindbergh and thé other flyers, the tributes paid them and respect given them was for their wonderful achievements. A man who flies across the Atlantic cannot get away with “wise cracks” and antics all over the country. He is too idealized a figure for that. But someone like “Jim- my*: Walker can do it, and earn for himself and for America a wholesome regard and affection. ng a.Rival Into an Agent Fo with new inventions crowding Tn industry recent past, illustrate the theory that adaptation “atten can be madé to eliminate what might hues, tinting the garment with deepened color. But Maybe we can make | lor is to be seen, termed feminine. ‘It is as though nature performed ern ‘Pacific railways has excited little interest | main purpose for the merger, it is said, is, He points out that the whole northern ; u tier of states along the’border, from Duluth to the ; those charms are past, her autumn dress is gaudy) But the railroads started out to fight the bus lines, but found tl Now trucks and busses are means that the two great means of communi-| 5.00 | cation—wires and wireless—are linked in one big | world-wide plan. Each agency of communication | has its weakness and its advantages. They wiil The pubiic stands to benefit by this new move in commercial development. | State Personality Long have we dwelt on states’ rights as a prerog- | ative of our constitutional government, but only! ;now do we approach a more colorful stage of our ‘national and state life—that of state personality. Yes, each state has a singular and attractive per- mality just as it has a product that is peculiarly | To prove this, Idaho points the way. \ This state has decided to display its personality yon its auto license plates, not so much in color as in| | form, Hereafter Idaho license plates take the shape | Capitalists run things in America. This we have | of 4 well-formed on the word of Brother Leon Trotzky, mouthpiece | state, potato, the pride and profit of the | | So might all other states advertise their product | The products may not merely arise from farming Whatever each state chooses, however, there’s In Gaudy Garments (St. Paul Dispatch) Though summer may not be officially ended un- And now the gor- It is as though the season, dressing itself in col- Summer brightens and enriches these it is net until autumn comes that the carnival of Nature in these aspects has been by all races before us the act painted by Goldsmith’s words: As some fair female, unadorned and plain reign, i Slights every borrowed charm that dress sup- plies, Nor shares with art the triumph of her eyes; But when those charms are past—for charms are frail— When time advances and when lovers fail, She then shines forth, solicitous to bless, | In all the glaring impotence of dress. Spring needs no borrowed charm of heightened color to triumph, for spring is youth. But when to delude us from the thought that “The country blooms—a garden, and a grave.” Overdoing the Non-stop Idea (Minneapolis Tribune) It is now apparent that the daring Redfern has failed to reach his objective, Rio de Janeiro; and one can only speculate upon what fate has befallen him. Possibly he may have fallen into the oceai and again he may have had to make a forced land- ing in an impenetrable tropical forest, which prob- ably would mean a cruel and uncertain death. We cannot byg wonder, in view of the tragedies which followed in the wake of the Dole air derby. whether Americans are not carrying this “non-stop” idea to unnecessary extremes. It has been argued on behalf of the Redfern flight that, if successful, it would have an important trade significance. There were those who maintained that a demon- stration of the practicability of the flight would secure for the United States a commercial advan- tage in South America in that “clipper airships” would furnish us with the same commercial returns that “clipper ships” did in the last century. The word “clipper,” of course, is used in the sense of clipping time. By making faster time than our rivals we could get more trade than they. The argument does not impress us greatly. In the first place, it is doubtful whether the airplane, for some time yet, can be an important factor in carrying trade. And in the second place the answer would have been given just as well for all practical purposes if the trip from Brunswick, Georgia, to Rio had been broken up into several hops, with a conse- quent reduction of the terrific hazard. And the hazard of that trip was, it must be admitted, ter- rific. Redfern had to cover a distance of 4,600 miles, or 700 miles more than Chamberlin accounted for in his flight to Germany, He had to break a world’s record, in other words, and not by a small, but by a huge margin. And during the course of his flight he had to pass over-the Caribbean sea is venture a losing one, | ‘too, So they took the busses and trucks unto their {bosom and used them wherever they proved more | —— eee efficient than engines. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | used wherever short hauls make for expedieney, and as vedi the motor cars have put money into the railroads’ | gett | Recently the Postal Telegraph company announced 4 20 | purchase of the Federal Telegraph company. The. 7.20 latter concern being a ‘radio enterprise, the move the room they faced a glowering black fury, q vast, whose head: was.bound ina dirty red bandanna, but whose glittering black eyes, set in an. incredibly: wrinkled and fat old face, looked as young as those of the colored boy who had ‘di- rected them to the place, “Whyfa. yo!, white folks 2”: it Chi “Ah ain't got’ rashin'- (find her quick and let's get. faint—these awful odors. white folks git outa hyar, Secure to, please, .while youth, confirmed her alld de pdice, he threatel | ultantly, (whose atmospheric conditions are notoriously more treacherous ffan those of either the Atlantic or the Pacific), over the jagged peaks of the Guiana highlands, and over vast tracts in the interior of out old ways of doing things, the leaders must keep | Brazil which not even the most venturesome ex- on their toes. Two very good examples, out of the plorers have ever invaded. It would seem to the lay observer that the hazard was disproportionate ;to the possible gain; and that enough would have re |been accomplished if the fight had been made in nish the first several hops, the last from Guiana to Rio. Even though Redfern, by some miracle, were atill to "emerge alive, we should still believe that such n represents carrying the non-stop fetish too at oe THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE‘(7 | The First and The struggle between the strong white man and the aged negress! guess you know how to scare ‘emi lasted but a few minutes, minutes! all right. Tell ‘em we've got our that seemed like hours to Faith, who/| baby that you were keeping for us a was sobbingly pitting her with Bob's against the door. strength When they had won and were in evil-smelling, faintly lighted shapeless old woman jut you have our baby . “Where is she? Su, here. It’s terrible. I’m a¥gpt *“Dat mah baby cryin’ woman shuffled to Faith are, hideously deformed black feets.*You . her ‘voice endeavoring to lowing the sound of the baby’s-cries, she rushed from the front rooni into the one other room of the shack— the kitchen. The old negress at- ‘tempted to follow her, but Bob, 6ver- coming his distaste of touching the filthy rags with which her vast old body was covered, seized her huge arms and held her back. And in the ‘kitchen, lying in an ancient baby buggy drawn up to the warmth of a crackling fire .in a broken, cast-iron stove, she found Hope. The baby was dressed in one of ‘the exquisite little hand-em- broidered dresses she had made for ‘it, and wrapped in its own fleecy blue-and-white blanket, which the kidnapper had snatched from tthe crib. Faith stood and gathered the baby gently into her arms, deaf to the clamor in the other room. She knew only that she had her baby safe ag her, Faith?” Bob called ex- “Now. look here, Aunt Chloe, if you don’t want to get locked up in the calaboose you'll come to the door with me and send that ‘ kidnappah! Da: ‘dith | She got red ha’h, she have. S phantly in her arms. With » great ery of joy, which brought a score of reporters and photographers running from the house, Cherry flung herself upon her sister, her hands frantically grasping at the blanketed bundle. A ‘ half dozen cameras, placed and aimed | hastily, recorded the scene of a kid- ; naped child thus dramatically re- stored to its bereft mother. “We'll have to tell the reporters ithe truth, darling,” Bob murmured to Faith. “I'll handle them. rou take Cherry into the house and feed the baby.” “T'll feed my baby myself!” Cherry cried passionately, holding the baby so tightly that a tittle whimper came bundle. “Oh, "precious sweet! Mother's baby!” she crooned, her musical. voice rich with real mother love and exquisitely deepened by the suffering she had endured for eight hours, $4.93 Cherry's face, illuminated by joy, flushed and sparkied through the inbow of her tears, was a sight of bunch of young hoodlums away. 1 while, and to let us get away in peace. Otherwise Chris Wiley is go- ing to spend a long, long time in the hospital, and I gather you don’t want that to happen. You were his nurse when he was a baby und you don't want him to get hurt, do you?” The old woman began to rock and moan. “Ab ain't gwine let dat baby go outen mah sight! Mistah Chris brung her to me tak’ cyar of fo’ him. He say she his’n. He ain’t no by his’n! Dis ain’t dat baby’s ma,” she lifted her head to glare at Faith. “Ah seen its ma. Gimthe ch moving beauty that even the teporters,-avid for news und harden- ed to emotion, back dat baby!” She tried to rise, to; hurl‘ herself upon Faith, but ‘Hob, with unsuspected strength, held her down. “ “Look here, Aunt Chloe! I'm a po- liceman mysel: job panted, taking a hand from one her shoulders to conscious of an ‘audience, were fixed with ‘prayerful intensity flip back the lapel of his coat. His! upon the tiny’ face that: led up at ry prohibition, reament of | her from the right arm. k badge, which’ served him| “I've already prepared her bottle,” wal before on a notable occasion,| Cherry's hushed, happy voice came glinted brightly. The symbol of | softly.’ “Mrs. Lundy showed me how. Suhority’ complctely sowed "the old Oh, to think’ I’had’to be showed to woman. Groaning and muttering,| fix my own baby’s food! _ Something she Allowed them to leave, even fol-| told mé you'd bring her back. You lowed them to the door and waved a| always’ save me, darling. I—I can’t farewell, intended to deceive the; thank you—but—you know! Darl- pack. of curious, trouble-loving chil-; ing Faitl 4 drew clustered about the car and in| They passed together through the thesyard. And tanked under his arm| living room, Cherry holding the baby Bob arried the hjg bundle of baby|out in her arms’ for Mrs, Minnock clothes which Chria had stolen along| and Mrs. Lundy to see. But neither with the infant. Cherry nor Faith. could talk with “Drive fast, Bob! To Cherry!”|them. With Faith’s arm about Faith cried, smiling through her| Cherry's shoulder, the sisters walked tears, her jealousy of Cherry forgot-| on steadily to the hall, but when ten in her joy. Faith was about to turn into her own room, where the baby had always slept, Cherry drew her on down the corridor. “I've taken Hi crib and chif- fonier into my m, Faith,” she said, her eyes meeting her sister's bravely but pleadingly. “I'm going to be Hope’s mother now. .If she hadn't been found, or if she been harmed, I should have myself out of rae, 1’ neglect her agaii Faith bowed her head, turned it slightly. aside, so that Cherry should mot see the agony in her eyes, nor— Before the car had come to a full stop in front of the Hathaway home in Serenity Boulevard, Cherry was flying down the path to meet it, her tear-marked face strained but eager with hope, her arms unconsciously outstretched for the light burden of the baby she had not wanted but which, now that it had been snatched from her, she had found to be her greatest treasure. Bob opened the door of the little coupe, and Faith stepped out tmme- diately, the baby held high, trium- had— killed never OUT OUR WAY ty "STEAUN ! wHy,is IT STeauN’ WHEN ITS A NERY OLD HOUSE” WHICH NOBODY LIVES IN AN’ THEY TiSS FALL ON TH GROUND WN GIT ROTI NE 1S AT STEALIN'-HUH-I AST YA? “WHY DONT: AMBROSE TAKE HiS HOME"? Wty, Coz HIS MA MAKES IM GO BACK’/N GIT MORE=N ITSA LONG WANS. Got Sut Go 7H Gane, CHURCH Second A. E. F—No, 3 2 ane | j white shingle house, its paned anu Se BY RODNEY DUTCHER very” room, Washington, Sept. 6.—M @ pub-| home's keynote, lic buildings, the treasury, “The brides,” laughs Mrs. Bowman, and navy: building, legatic “fave about the furniture and the baasies, Red Cross headquarters and wall paper, while the grooms go stately art galleries ‘almost burv a| down cellar to inspect the heater.” little house in New York ave. which ‘he little house was furnished for is the Mecca of thousands or briues ; $3000. As one enters the front door and grooms on a wedding trip inj the littte reception room shouts wel- Washington. come with its spriggied wall paper, A breath of the arbutus of New| oval’ oriental rug. mahogany drop- England or the moors of Nantucket: leaf table and ‘winding stairway o: hovers ‘about the little green and white steps with mahogany rail. ised d nd icoming| the Poceptian. Dall’ Nao a refectary trellis joorway, and its welcoming! the rec ion |, has a refectory knocker. ie Stable, Welsh dresser, sideboard and ia little house is the national! upholstered chairs in early English girl to the girl scouts by the & desi; r and willow plates are joni Federation of Women's r, and electric percolator Nat and silver candlesticks on the side- clubs, who built it fer demonstrations| board. The rug is’ of taupe velvet. week in their famous Better Homes| This room cost about $57! movement. “ The little house is ‘modeled after The living room ‘is 26 by 15 feet. ‘It, too, uses a figured two-tone gray the boyhood home of John Howard Payne, author of “Home, Sweet paper and plain taupe rug. A nost- Clontal deaign sore in tevin ma- Home.” ‘ Harding called it “the je‘ home in America.” outs’ headquarters. It was hogany and satin, and the baby grand piano are the qnly. really big Beeee in the room, A secretary desk, Wind- sor chairs, and Colonial tilt-top table harmonize with the old style fire- place ‘of red brick flanked by brass andirons;and shovel. re and grooms at the rate of les a day have made a beaten track up the walk, and grat fey pay their hostess, Mrs. Gertrude’ jowman, a quarter for the privilege| “Brides are amazed at a real kitch- of walking through this dream home! an,’ says Mrs, Bowman. “But the | of their own, ideal home must have on The quarter goes’ into the scouts’ own family ginger iar! The 1 house should be built for about $7000 in any part of the country, the hostess says. It has a-fully equipped beasement, a living room, a dining room, recep- tion hall, breakfast nook and kitehen on the first floor, three bedrooms, a nursery ard a bath ‘on the second floor. Furnishings are entirely in the early American design. Spriggy, chintzy wall’ paper: covers almost the doubt. For Faith could not be- lieve’ that Cherry's nature could inged utterly, such a cris! he had just pa: ing,”. she insteadily. grown so used to taking She knows my ways, and. hers-——" “I'll have to learn,” Cherry | said sturdily. “You'll teach me, won't ; The kitchen wall is covered with a’ washable aotbanld 4 the floor is covered with cork linoleum, there is a double drain-board, gas stove with aven lator, pressure and fireless cookers, “work table on rollers, re- frigerator filled from the outside, clock, ‘metaf waste basket, long- handied dust pan, stool and linen and paper: towel-racks. these newlywed “I believe that pil, bli ed to the little house are ig finer homes over the entire jon,” says Mrs. girl Bowman, ‘inches long. You ¢én ratee:them and have a fine pet.” (%) 0% Yea, bo! How the: neighbor's chit- dren would love thesd dainty seven- foot playmates! i ba GILBERT SWAN. .| (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) er BARBS | you?” e Faith was “teaching cher,” doing! The two missing oil witnesses send her best to hide the ache of jealousy {word from Europe through attorneys, in heart, when came into/that ‘they can shed no light on the foom, announcing in a gtim| alleged gift of bonds from Harry H Sinclair to Sée: Fall. They have Glenn Andrews:is here, Cherry,jnothing to fay, it seems, and just beware, to see you. Shall 1 send/hate to say it : im a J z Would you call the ice cream con- NEXT: Cherry's interview with her} sumption for 1926-—42,200,000,000 gal- [Daily Health | ara Association in Hygela, 1 fell back, allowing her| may. become to pass unquestioned into the house.jor dandruff from ‘the ‘hair For once her golden eyes were un-|mals and that 4 for they | sensitization may: latest suitor. 3 lons—a staggering total? (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) ovee Soe ine SM Now if that 182-year-old Turkish entleman would like a little pub- icity, why don’t: he fly over? ‘ d_Schtee, on-their world asked fot cigarettes “firs: at BY DR, MORBIS. FISHBEIN " -}¥' rp of ‘the American PUR: Idaho is going to advertise her jehief product with an automobile. li- ‘cense plat’ shapéd- like “a potato. ‘The & tip for the south—which oa the first to adopt the the Health Magazine It. has been well established for that. the ‘hu become: sensitized to. is response sin the form of bronchial asthma ot similar disturb- ances of the breathing apparatus. Severai “scrate ‘promi physician showed Sete pees of: children were sufferin; from bron- chial asthma due to the inhalation forest ranger. found a pack of ad winree in Oregon. The oie : How did they get so far away ? York? « i CCopyelant, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) . of dry dust resulting from xabbit. ‘Masters hair that was present in pillo : Old 4 sores rf r ; t : is possible. to make. animals. sensi- Te ae soe ip ska hal ee tive to horse dandruff by inhalation, and. the reaction is invariably in the form of bronchial asthma. When guinea pigs bad little pledg- ets of cotton filled with dry horse dandruff: placed in the nose al after an intervening period were sub- jected to dosages of horse dandruff, they developed symptoms of short- ness of breath and body indefinitely asso we gerd attack, he sat in; Time, you 1 to get Sweets into your list, put that int bas 9 I'm wea "1 jay 1 ‘m sad, that health and wealth have missed me," Say I'm ing old, but add, e 1G. “Jenny Kissed Me.” ! A Thought | J not, ti judged.— Mates, vil: eats viaioiee or adrena- just above. the kidney, ig just above which has been found to be of maine in alleviating such attack: ee The right of private judgment is absolute in every “Ai itizen. James A, Garticta. aisles po cds nag 'Fly-Tox Quickly Ends Mosquity Torment i Normal human blood ts'too thick be drawn through-. y g tube. They must first ning-fiut@ Jethet reas. of oe 2 somewhere a living at what way { leased to he "hee fucka” we . & call tl rangely eno lew' of the: liberty” ‘fojk are on irs “nee are scattered over’ the nation, some dise: in tiny hamlets of which 1 haye never rd, irming communities, hs end t a ton’ (bi such ‘sera th Most ‘should a sition at’ oni word advocate eta iy italites. And the no- to 1. e wherever that is! eee oo m f “At a refined s uitalte vee cee ot eua one afternoon's delvings into 4 peals that fi teach me ng. | ine dancing suiteble for female imper- ° sonating and let me pay after I get an engagement?” . ~ And here's a fellow. in Blooming- I, whe is “the highest vant doing the Black Fe iu. smile. But think probably went in- and yet out of chance with & ‘ is asking fmauch.