The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1927, Page 4

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i PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) 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 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)... Daily by mail, outside of North Da ember Audit Bureau of Circu 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 crediteg 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 COMPA) CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMIT NEW YORK - : - DETROIT Kresge B\dg (Official City, State and County Newspaper) i Secretary Work Speaks Secretary of the Interior Hubert Work hit the nail squarely on the head in his speech before the |tirely overspread with rather dark and indistinctly | will spend a week in this city with American Bar association several days ago. With- out mincing words, he pointed out that the present overproduction of oil is only going to mean eco- nomic distress in the future. Federal and state legislation is his thought to end this danger. Whether this can be accomplished is yet to be seen, but it would prove a tremendously beneficial factor in seeing that our oil resources are conserved and not allowed to flow away unheeded. It has always been the nature of the American people to say, “Oh, well, what does it matter?” . when anybody talks about conservation. The usual answer to a speaker who tries to point out what may happen if we continue to throw away our natural resources is a sincere and deep yawn, When Roosevelt put over his conservation pro- fram the public was apathetic. Later measures have been passed, but the country has taken no in-/| terest. One fortunate thing is that the people of some states, if not the majority, are beginning to realize what is going on. Take Minnesota, for ex- ample. It used to be said that the timber supply in Minnesota could never be exhausted. It has been. It was said that there was enough iron ore - jn Minnesota to supply the world for hundreds of years. But latest estimates of scientists show that, it is a matter of tens of years now until the ore is gone. It would pay us if we would take a little more interest in what nature has given us. The present generation may not have to worry, but despite all LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Sept. 7.—The diplo- matic business is good, too. While this government embarks on to their France, too, is @ building program for its embassies | office building alongside its embassy sion Sixteenth strect at the lower end and legations aboard and Congr plans what to do with $50,000,000 Sppropriated for new government buildings here, foreign nations are Next month holding up id enlargi mission will move their diplomatic missions in the cap tal or moving into new and bigger quarters. Great Britain long since announced that she would build a grand new million-dollar embassy on Massachu- setts avenue and sent an architec over here to draw up the plans. struction will start almost any now. In getting out on Massachusetts avenue, the Bri' of the Swedish ai sions, the other d on the circl The ‘ause Minister Zd guests around it scarce. lion has defied | mian mehlspeisen Washington's principal social lioness,| much in deman Mrs. John B. Henderson. Mrs. Hen- derson built a number of prospective embassies or acquired sites for the: out on Sixteenth street—just above her famous castle—and the British decision to go elsewhere was re- garded as rather a blow to her pro- sachusetts avenue » the Spanish govern- bought the famous eenth street residence which Mrs. nderson built for the vice pre he cannot invite a: nor can he fora chancery. Just in the rear of | imperial yellow. the new Spanish embassy, on Fif- teenth street, lies a huge English palace built by Mrs. Hender- son and just purchased by the Egyp- tian government for its legation. cactus room with lection of cactus, Others on Mrs. Henderson’s em-| Mexican art and craftsmanship—som- bassy row are the French, Mexican, | breros, rug! Polish, Italian and Lithuanian. | so on—which The Italians, heeding the need for | note to the a pott ive “Shall I leave, honey?” Faith asked here, expecting to when sob had gone to get Cherry had granted him. “7 “No,” Cherry said, as she buttoned | (Jenn, a@ fresh dress upon the baby. “! Fi when angry face. usually so seay eves narrowed unpleasantly. His rust-blonde_ hair, sleek, was rumpled, his | noon papers will c: In tion, t believe, and his clenched hand he carried a crum- tation will not be further damaged, 't® one unless you have already made th worse by coming here looking as you andal?” he demanded immediately | ee ntl a ioeee ling her I ! 5. | slightly bitter smile curling her love- mee Bob had closed the door upon jy Jittle mouth, “that you can go newspaper. ““What do you mean, Cherry, let- ting me in for this rotten fron’ lo now. his own departure. couldn't lie about whom I | ceived joyor " she told him sharply. “If you ably, 1 adm: parmed of having been with me| fm sure you'll : ould ni to leave my baby alone to Rgrinice seed cee fe with not ruined your cl ” t do it rection. oul” the man flung at her. “Go ‘The man glared I was warned often enough | minute, thes vonive a choan little publicity! ward the door. it you! page going with yo | ized suddenly whi “war. Andrew! of the bed adv: her brown blazing “My sister is in no con- them, Glenn had to listen to your insults. ike a drun| send _me I was crazy, I guess! you sive me! I can’t live ‘Get up off baby is safe, of| Che: id t * Andrews admitted into ke wt I want her to know) ber h =v re-ntation in this| ridicu! ly. I'm s newcomer’ + $7.20 | 7 WASHINGTON | expansion, are building an extension mbassy which will give them larger quarters for offices. of Embassy Row. | the on lower Sixteenth street to Sheridan Circle, where it will be a neighbor Czechs decided to move be- is present quarte t And kitchen is so famous for its Bohe-; sy now occupied by the 3 i: neonvenie! posed of three old buildings on Mas- ing two rooms into one has the am- bassador been able to give any ade- quate social functions. as he would like to his much sought after dinner parties and bier abends, splay to the best ad- tage his famous collection of old dent and will add an extension to it; china with its mural background of The Mexican embassy boasts the only roof garden in Wash- ington’s diplomatigoland, but has a tocratic surroundings. 8 Gienn| and to found a business here, and Andrews for the interview which then she lets me in for this— re ‘m sorry I've hurt y ( , hey, ARIAES ¥ ing almost humbly. want you to stay. I—may need mor-/ porters, when they questioned me, Pee acaie that she would that We were not—in love with each she saw Glenn Andrews’ red, Thad fat me were ee hat | nal state, depression is mentioned when I get my divorce. back to Selma Pruitt, She love find that your connec- persuaded me tion with this terrible ‘scandal’ ‘h ee I} wish/ au i 3 sood-bye! I’m ve: ‘And I promise you I won't ast | borin the future—with my baby then swerved furiously to-', ./" land me on the the knob when h in a seandal if I persisted | curiously changed, as if Faith rose from| what he had lost. ‘anced ' could interpose her tall body between toward, Cherry. Hi your ; knees, Glenn! e are making yourself go ‘der, The man lifted a haggard face and turns —_——— the apathy, there is another generation. _coming along, and it will not be apathetic. It will try to sulvage what is left from the wreck of our natural resources. We can avert that wreck if we want to. | | Editorial Comment. _—| | New Fruits For the Table i (Duluth Herald) | A report of the department of agriculture tells jof new varieties of fruits that are being developed |and brought into the market. ture offers something new and then the observant |horticulturist seizes upon it, develops and stand- ardizes it. Oftener, though, the breeder hybridizes }and develops the new variety. | There is a habit of thinking that all development is mechanical, like the telephone or the electric light, but this is not #0. Man and nature are ex- perimenting continually with natural products like and improving them. It is a far cry from the apparently perfect apple |cf today to the apple nibbled by prehistoric man! Fifth Ave. Bldg jand yet the folks are trying to make them better} the week-end with friends in Fargo! | still. | | For example, note what is said of the new Me: | ;Croskey apple, which was developed by a farm [of that name: “It is of greenish yellow color, en |marked stripes. Its skin is tough and tenacious, the contents beneath are very juicy, and the flavor | |rich and pleasant. Also, it is of the winter variety, ; ‘and now grows extensively in Tennessec, but in few} other states.” | Then there is a new peach named Lizzie. The} ‘man who developed the Lizzie says he gave it that} ‘name because it was just as good as any other. | There is no romance in it. This Lizzie is merely al peach. Some people have been developing new varieties of grapes. There is the Flowers grape, named for| a man wo found the vine growing in a swamp and| developed it. ling to the agriculturists, although why this is a | recommendation is hard to see in these days. | It is good news that the persimmon has been im- proved. They have one that is known as the Tri- |umph. It is “tender. buttery and juicy” and doesn’t | pucker. Then those who enjoy their breakfasts will be glad to know that there is a fine new orange, the | Lue, which was developed by cross-pollination. Not satisfied with many achievements like those noted in fruits, and in flowers as well, the special- ists are giving the world a new chestnut named the Boone after the great pioneer. One crop of one tree of Boones sold for forty-two dollars. Nature has always been lavishly fruitful and now coaxed and trained by patient man, she is excelling herself. stared at her humbly. “Will you— marry me—Cherry?” He brought out the momentous word as if it were very hard to say. But then he gath- ered courage; Marry me, darling, marry me! I don’t care about—scan- dal, anything else but you!” NEXT: Che decision. Once in a while na-| nee ae WE stone ae Rl cee a ~~ oe ee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Social and jof relatives for several days. She {was accompanied home by her son, | Jack, who has been spending the sum- |mer at that place. ON BUSINESS L. Vanderbloom of Dickinson, rep- {resentative of the | Mandan and the Melody Shop in B {mark, spent Tuesday in the city on | business. i | VISIT TWIN CITIES s. F. A. Knowles and little daugh- ter, | Twin Cities, where they spent two | weeks with relatives and friends. VISITS AT FARGO Music Store in} ice, returned Monday from the, —__________-» | Justice Court | o—_—_________—— and Al Carter, Robert Joh. leounty jail. The sentences | suspended, however, on {that they leave the city | which they did. | preferred | missed WINS SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIP | | Napoleon.—Clinton Heath, son of| | Mr. and Mrs, Fred Heath of Napoleon, $500 scholarship donated by ck Military demy, Fari- Minn. to boys attending the itary Training camp at/ Fort Snelling this summer. | i ; Try Our Modern High Pres-, jsure Greasing Service For All) \Cars. — Prices Reasonable. were condition | at once, The assault charge against Johnson was dis | | | Off Ready to serve - easy to digest Vigor and health for young and old The Flowers is fine for wine accord- | 5 planning a small rvice Czecho-Slovak BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN rs, Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine A noted psychiatrist said that an [Italian finding himself in difficulty itakes steps to kill the third angle to his triangle. Under similar cir- * cumstances, the Scandinavian is likely ¥ to commit suicide. . jster's! An analysis of the race factors in- volved in suicide in the United States permits the investigator to draw cer- tain general conclusions. In_ our opulation, Irish, Italian and Polish immigrants show a slight tendency to suicide, whereas Germans and avians manifest a pronounced tendency in that direction. As previously pointed the negro commits suicide far less fre- quently than does the white man, the Indian slightly less frequently, and the Chinese and Japanese far more frequently. None of the foreign races learned suicide from the American or from the white man, since all of them knew of suicide be- ing to this country or ming- : [Deity Heaith | out of its quai nd Rumanian mis- iplomatic buildings lenek Fierlinger, can place on’ table—room the = mini: that seats are very It is com- and only by turn- cee Even now, s large a guest list ling with the white race. Weather and Disease Much has been said of the relation- ship of the weather or of disease to the occurrence of suicide. The sui- cide rate is higher in the northern countries than in the southern coun- tries. Th not only a remarkable col- and a display of ery, paintings and & eingwiarly exotic two hottest months, July and August, are not the months of high- est suicide; rates. In_ the nited States, line that marks the de- velopment of the suicide rate from its lowest to its highest point draws from New York city or Boston to San Francisco. The east end of the line is noted for its cold and disagreeable weather and for bad winte Tt has the low- The west end of the line ‘ion which talks most make it my home rr est suicide. i about its climate and about being a land of eternal sunshine and yet it the place of most frequent suicide. In practically all cases where it possible to gain some understand- iz of an individual's previous emo- “I told the r The x¢er as almost invariably present. If arry that inform: your precious rept mental depression may be taken as a sign of mental di hen one-fifth of all suicides are men- tally diseased. It is perhaps safer to , Say that mental depression may be onsidered a dani signal. Rell Al Practically at £2" Fo avproved of suicide. It seems reason- is, unaccount.’ Able to believe that the unbeliever and ith you, and the‘ atheist are more likely to com Hee suici she added, a hances in that di- icv! And sy—and shall potent and prevalent preventive of self-destruction. higher for Protestant than for Cathe: er for Protestant jan for Catho- Alpe “his yer lic countries. It is perhaps safe to at her for a long real. £8¥ with Dr. Frenay that the race at he was doing, 27d temperament of the people and Before Faith the economic conditions must ‘taken into account before passing gered blindly’ Judgment on po greater or lesser "ga le'drepped to hia; tendency to suicide, | ae away, without you!”| Walk worthy of the vocation where- with ye are age oe all lowliness. 2 Ie cee Lowliness is young ambition’s lad-| hereto the climber upward his face,—Shakespeare, Cherry! ing it against! Mrs. C. J. Lynch, who has re- turned from a visit in Chicago, spent en route to this city. | SPENDS WEEK HERE Miss Ingrid Anderson returned home Saturday from Minneapolis and relatives and friends, DRIVE FROM MINNESOTA Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Swinn drove to this city from Zumbrota, Minn., Mon- day to spend several days at the A. G. Bahmer home. FROM EXTENDED TRIP i Miss Beryl Knott, who has spent the past two months in Puyallup and Seattle, Wash., returned to Bismarck Saturday. FROM ABERDEEN Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Hendricks had as their guests this week-end Mr. awe Mrs. P. L. McGarry of Aberdeen, TRANSACTS BUSINESS HERE E. E. See of Wing spent Tuesday in My city, looking after business af- fairs, SPENT WEEK. R. J. Wilde of Jamestown spent the week-end in this city with rela- tives. ® ADMITTED TO HOSPITAL rs. B. F. Lawyer of this city was Hela to St. Alexius hospital Mon- jay. AT ST. ALEXIUS HOSPITAL Miss Marjorie Smith was admitted to St. Alexius hospital Saturday. FROM HAZELTON Mrs. Henry Well of Hazelton is a patient at Alexius hospital. [7 BARBS ——1 A new baby makes the days bright- er, says a doctor. And during the teething period he usually brightens up the home by night, too. An Ohio woman got a testifying her husband had - given her only $50 in tl -five years. The women certainly are becoming restless these days. a Dog races are a menace, says a western reformer, Maybe he.th: people shouldn’t ge-to the dogs: for a race, That flagpole sitter should have stuck’ it out a few weeks longer on top of a Chicago hotel. Now, the chances are, he'll have to pay $40 to sec Dempsey and Tunney fight. A Chicago woman got a divorce be. cause he husband told her every- thing—even lies. aes Some times it's not so much a mat- ter of meeting creditors as it is of avoiding them. OLD SAILOR BUILDS MODEL BARK Hazelton.—N. A. Ekanger, a pion- eer of near Hazelton, has constructed a model of an ancient full rigged bark. It has old-fashioned capstans, bilge pump, water casks, life b ete. Mr. Ekanger, who old, has spent the past working on the model in h time. It was raffled at zelton, | and given to Joe Wohimann who held the winning number. Just received a large shi ment of Silk Scarfs of all the newest designs and colors. Priced at $1.95, $2.45 and $2.75.—Bismarck Cloak Shop.|’ TWO YEARS? NO, TWELVE St. Louis.—Charles wrong. Refusing to pi guilty to a burglary charge and accept a two- year penitentiary sentence, he was convicted by a jury and sentenced to Justajingle “Where do we go from here?” sald she. . The answer was no joke. “Nobody knows,” her Wena “The steering wheel is Just received a large ship- ment of Silk Scarfs of all the} newest designs and colors. Priced at $1.95, $2.45 and $2.75.—Bismarck Cloak Shop. Regular meeting of the ec abe way ui A ° » P. M., Odd Feliows Hall.’ ied, deadly Short Stop Station. - Tailoring YRC | ee first. to school in ahurry I. win | Personal j son and Mary Smith, negroes, plead- | nate an jed guilty to vagrancy charges when | RETURN FROM HOPE arraigned before Justice of the Peace | Mrs, Della Fox returned Monday! Anton Beer late Tucsday and were/ jfrom Hope, where she was the guest} sentenced to serve 20 days each in the | Delicious with cream or hot milk. Why So Much Suit Value for $30 - $35 - $45 | Hart Schaffner & Marx Specialization and concentration do part of it.. Our vol- ume and narrow margins do the rest. New colors, new style lines, new' fabrics Knox Fall Hats New and Different But as time envious eyes. the joys of life,” regardless of consequenges. Little did she dream of the terrible lengths to which her desperate folly was to lead her. So she went desperately, blindly ahead, soon to be caught in a seething maelstrom of disaster, anguish and terror that was to forever destroy her hopes for future happiness. Don't miss the story of this wife's tragic, soul- stirring experience. It is entitled “Under Cover of Matrimony,” and appears complete in True Story October, dal Wd 110i Staries More Amazing “The most interesti agi about life,” saida pone mo for “nm rt —* Yo; BABE, BER AB Ss. OVE never flowered into a more beautiful romance than that which culminated. in the marriage of Beatrice and Joe. It seemed that ahead » ,of them lay only happiness. “ The fact that Joe’s salary was small—that he *was still studying for a bigger jo! matter—at passed, with the financial goal still far ahead, Beatrice’s mind often clouded with-worry and doubt. Her girl friends, more fortunately married, had pretty clothes, smart cars, lovely homes, which they were forever flaunting before her Fora time Beatrice nursed her growing discontent in re But the seed of a a —_ its growth, and Beatrice secretly determined to “‘taste Bergeson’s VUECANIZING Tires and Tubes, Oil and Grease Aato Accesyories ’ Tire Co. . Next to First Guaranty Bank My Funeral Parlor Phone number changed to 706. House as usual 687. Phone 706 & 687 W. E. PERRY ——_——=_—_=_—_—————————— GAVAYAVAV at STHEWe d @ Fasnion Stop ror: See the New ~ Line of “Phoenix” ANCY * IFTY id « gist, “‘is its tedness.” This is es;

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