The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1927, Page 4

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whe “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 3 mail matter. George D. Mann.. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ‘out the vote. The manufacturers are doing more than their share to aid this work, but they cannot overcome all the apathy which geems likely to sur- round the 1928 campaign. Motorists on Their Honor Michigan’s new “no limit” speed law has gone into effect, and it would seem that it is a wise and -President and Publisher | beneficial ruling. Under this law, there is no speed jlimit, but—a driver must have his car in complete Daily by carrier, per year « «$7.20 yeoaakaad at all times in order to cope with prevuil- rey by m iM per year, (in Bismarck). 39a othe’ traffic conditions. ay ny mall, “per year, There is no loophole for the reckless driver in Deity by tasil, outside eee Dakota. s G00 | this law. It specifically provides that no one shall Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press “The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to} the use for republication of all news dispatches eredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontdneous ori published herein, other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY i | ! drive at any speed greater than will permit him to bring his car to a stop within the assured elear space ahead. Likewise, the slow-moving auto which holds up traffic and crawls along the road, preventing othe: in | drivers from passing, is banned. All rights of republication of all | One feature of the law which may possibly prove troublesome is the provision which says that any- one driving at a speed to endanger any person or Property shall be penalized through @ mandatory CHICAGO DETROIT |jail sentence. It does not say who shall judge Tower Bids, LYNE, BURNS & shim Bldg. | whether a man is driving recklessly or canely. NEW YORK ial Berar 6: Fifth Ave. Bldg. | Here there may be trouble. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Character and Education It doubtless comes as a surprise to some scoffers and c to read the address President Coolidge made this morning at Brookings, S. D. The president did not deal in time-worn plati- tudes. He did not devote his time to a defense of any of the administration policies. Instead he dis- cussed, in a thoughtful manner, the need for ideal- ism and appreciation of spiritual values by college students. To those who would have us believe that the pres- ident has neither the mind nor the inclination to =-Bo into the more abstract sides of life, this must be a blow. Anyone who reads Mr. Coolidge’s speech must admit that, in a very few words, he has sum- marized the educational condition of 1927 and has given some very excellent maxims for youth to fol- low. . There is one part of the speech that is worth re- saxmembering. In it he said: “All our science and [Sai of our arts will never be the means for the $ettue advancement of the nation . - unless we 7 "are able to see in them the outward manifestation »<zefe spiritual reality . . Unless our halls of learn- “ing are real temples to be approached by our youth “ig an attitude of reverence, consecrated by worship “ “of the truth, they will all end in a delusion.” ~, >So Mr. Coolidge's speech is particularly apt. It serves to show that the whole trend of this country z+ ig:not toward materialism, but rather toward means for strengthening the entire nation through say strengthening character. “North Dakotans should bear in mind the warn- = ing cf Attorney General George Shafer about the bank robbery situation. With a good crop in the state this year; with _ numbers of transients in this section of the coun- *[%tey;. with large sums of money sure to be on de- posit in banks, every precaution should be taken. As Mr..Shafer points out, robbers are going to hold up those banks which they know are unprotected. Good Crops and Bank Robberies { \ Motorists in other states have sometimes found to their sorrow that they have been arrested for speeding when passing through some small village merely because an unscrupulous constable wanted to enrich himself. There is no reason why such an official could not collect a fat fee from every driver who passed through his town in Mchigan. There is nothing in the law to say that he shall not decide what is and what is not reckless driving. And in the majority of the smaller places he is likely to be postive that everyone who drives fast is driving recklessly. It is this uncertain provision of the Michigan law which lessens its value. But in the long run the ruling should prove more beneficial, than the old system of fixing the speed limits. It should pay other states to watch the working cf Michigan’s “honor system” with motorists. Breaking Up Flog-Rule “We'll tell you what to print in that paper of yours!” That, according to the testimony, was what one of the Soperton, Ga., floggers told H. M. Flanders, editor of the Soperton News. The editor was flogged, but evidently he can print what he’ pleases hereafter, just as before, for one of the men was sentenced to three to five years on a charge of as- sault with intent to murder. The courts of the south are moving in the right direction toward the break-up of this flog-rule we've been hearing so much about. Stiff sentences are the remedy. . THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “Bob, I'd like to speak to you a moment before you go to the office,” Cherry said softly, wistfully, as her brother breakfast table. “See: » honey?” Bob asked light- ly, leading the way to the sun parlor which the family considered his home “office.” Faith watched them 1 Editorial Comment | Does Preaching Pay? (St. Paul Dispatch) Ralph Lium, son of a minister in Richland coun- ty, N. D., and summer supply for the Congrega- tional church at Hermosa, ends his season’s work by asking: and answering in the negative. Preaching. whether to a president or to the peo- “Cases of robberies in the larger cities of the state! pie, whose servant he is, does not pay and the ex- =. 8re_ unknown. It is in the small communities, ‘perience of his own father might have taught him where there is an insufficiently large constabulary,’ the futility of such a question. The man who*en- that the depredations occur. 4 Appointment of special deputies to be on guard for bandits is one way of coping with the situa- tion. Another way would be the organization of a i state-wide vigilante system. Such organizations are functioning successfully in other states. With i ters the ministry may look for and receive any re- ward other than a financial one. If he enters it with the hope of making it pay. that hope is not only destined to be blasted, but his work may be seriously handicapped. Preachers must live. They are entitled to a liv- men on guard all over the various counties, bandits | ing—and for the most part it is a modest one. are much less bold than they are in states where they know there is na large body of men who will be on the lookout for them. .. North Dakota cannot afford to sit back, firmly believing that it will not be visited by bandits this >year. Steps must be taken immediately to see that the isolated robbery cases already reported are not the forerunners of a widespread campaign of ban- . ditry. Barnum Was Conservative Veritably P. T. Barnum was leaning way back when he made that statement about there being « sucker born every minute. He was not a man noted . for conservative statements, but here he must have Theirs is truly a scant living wage. Few there are who attempt to do so. : Allowance must be made for the youth of the speaker and for the peculiar circumstance of fame and publicity that caught him unawares. Other- wise he would know that fame has come to many great preachers, but fortunes to few, mainly be- cause they looked for nor wrought for either. Let Them Fly (Minneapolis Journal) From numerous and various quarters, both in America and abroad, there has risen the demand that transoceanic flights be interfered with, if not prohibited altogether, because of recent heavy mor- " felt that he should watch his step and not overstate |tality among aviators essaying such fights. the thing. By which we mean that, rather than there being one born every minute, there must be minutes when as many as ten or twenty are brought into the world. Sophisticated New York furnishes the finest modern classic in suckerism that we've run across. Down in New York a man demonstrated to a cus- tomer a machine that would change $1 bills into $50 bills and you couldn't tell the difference. Just to show him it was real he placed a $1 bill into the machine and sure enough, a fifty came out the little slot on the other side. The customer had run a successful restaurant _ business, but this had the restaurant business, even es 5 *”, im. New York, beaten to a frazzle. So he dug into i his jeans and paid $4,000 for the machine, the i 'y*galesman wrapped it up and the patron took it An unwarranted demand. Admittedly, trans- oceanic flying is extremely risky business, but the world has come forward out of the stone age to its present state chiefly because humans were willing to gamble their lives in risky adventure. Had the overcaution that now dictates this de- mand for interference prevailed down’ through the ages, the man who built the first boat would have been forced to remain ashore. Ancient Phonecian navigators would have been forcibly detained inside the Pillars of Hercules. Columbus would have been kept at home; and Magellan, too. Nobody would have been allowed to drive the first locomotive, the first steamboat, the first automobile. The Wrights would have been permitted to advance no further than kite-flying. These ocean flights that have been killing aviators “Does preaching to a president pay?” B _, home. Somehow, it wouldn’t work at home, though. no és iby wholesale are not mere stunts. They are lessons, It never did work after that demonstration. x 3 lessons for a world that will some see daily The moral of this has something to do with grecd. | transatlantic flying on regular picts oth Today's Lae aat eka STS tragedies will light the way for that kind of flying, How About the Vote? in fair weather or foul. And most- transatlantic The National Association of Manufacturers has flying of necessity is foul weather flying. Between announced the resumption of its “get out the vote”! May ist and July 15th of the present year there campaign. At least 30,000,000 voters will go to the | were only four favorable days over the ocean, says polls in 1928, if the association has its way. the weather bureau. This is commendable work, and it is to be hoped| So if we are ever going to have regular, daily ; «that the manufacturers will succeed beyond their | plane communication with Europe, we must develop, fondest expectations. Every election in recent! and learn to fly, ships that can cut their way years, while@he number of eligible voters increases. | through storm and fog. Doing so will cost a lot ‘the number of those voting takes a drop. There {sof lives, just as developing the airplane from its Jess interest than ever before in affairs of govern-| kittyhawk stage to its present stage “Cost -a lot 1 e of lives. . +; "But it is a question whether the great mass of/ ‘These daring pioneers are doing constrictive these who have not voted in the past will vote at! work. Their flights, whether the: ge! or fail, the. coming election. There should be a slight in-|are not just spectacular stunts: No jtite so, than “erense in totals due to the desire of western voters | Columbus’ first transatlantic voyage was a stunt, ‘for ‘some form of farm relief. They should back} or Magellan's circuit of the globe. _thelr candidates solidly. Further than to insist that planes be properly go, Cherry’s little hand tucked affec- tionately in the crook of Bob’s right arm, and for the thousandth time she reflected on how beautiful a couple they. made. When the door to the sun sparlor had closed on them Cherry raised her luminous, misty golden eyes to Bob's quizzical, tenderly smiling face. And before either knew what was happen- ing, the eyes of both had changed, with a feeling long suppres: face lost its smile, grew pal his ‘mouth quivered, then tightened. With a pathetic, child-like sob, Cher- ry crept close to him, ainst his breast, her inging to his shoulders. went around her, crushingl: he had forgotten everything i: world but the fact that the girl he had .loved so passionately was in his against his. pounding heart. , But when Cherry suddenly raised her face, with its passion-dru: swimming eyes, her lips quiveri inviting his kiss, he came to senses with a great shudder, put almost violently from hi so tl she staggered a little, one hand gi ing up instinctively to hide her tell- tale eyes, “What did you want to speak to me about he asked harshly, be- cause his heart was still pounding and his ae singin, ay cl egan to gi ing face averted, her e: shielded by ker trembling h ng, should ask alimony fro I don’t want “hris for myself, but— we no right to deny the Bob looked at her, scowlingly, for’ he thought he hated her for having made him forget Faith and his and that hi & moment. the marriage. he ought own busin ‘Chris forced you 0 It’s his baby. I think pport her. And my iS ‘ot too prosperou: 3 " e talked, harsh! SAING 23, SINNER | Anne was rising from thel Bob's arms Daily Health Service BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine The popular slogan that a clean ooth never decays is probably cor- if iated with the right de- finition of a “clean tooth It is equally ‘true that millions of unclean teeth -never decay.. Of his hate turned in upon himself. He was hurting her, making her feel de- pendent. Oh, money, or the lack of it, was a shameful thing! “All right,” Cherry gasped, turn- ing ‘a ly away toward the do: “Ti Churchill—today. I'd fused before to consider alimony. he tore open the door and was gone before Bob could retract, or soften his apparently mercenary ai The next week, on Thursd: tember first, Cherry went the courtroom and faced the ordeal of her divorce hearing. She had re- fused to allow Faith to accompany her, and Bob, still avoiding her be- cause of the unhallowed — memory || they shared of a moment of treason to Faith, did not offer ;to lend th support of his presence. The cat chambers,” that is, Judge Grimshaw, who had regarded himself as an old’ friend ‘of Cherry’s since her trial for the’ murder of alph Cluny, gravely listening to Stephen Churchill’s presentation of they ‘are un- and ay ware irritations of the vy ing the Enamel About 1890 it was shown that cer- tain acids formed by the action of mouth bacteria on a substance .con- ining sugar when held in contact with enamel of the teeth for a cer- tain number of hours: would. cause the enamel! to ‘fall apart and open the way to destruction of ‘the softer f] eleventh hour, had withdrawn juty J. love of his even fo the case. Since Chris Wiley, at ve is counter suit for divorce and had in- structed his attorney not to contest Cherry's own suit, the case was not tried by jury. Cherry was awarded her decree within fifteen minutes, on the grounds of mental cruelty, was also awarded sole custody of her daughter, Hope Wiley, the right to resume her maiden name, Lane, and fifteen dollars a week from Ch for the support of thé child. She had instructed Churchill to ask for that| , As sum and no more. di “Thank you, Judge Grimshaw,” Cherry quavered, her golden eyes smiling mistly. ‘You're welcome, Miss Lane!” Judge Grimshaw re offering his hand. Cherry She was free, free! NEXT: Cherry makes a resolution at which Faith smiles. A Thought | He that endureth to the end shall’ be saved.—Matthew x: 22. There never was philosopher yet. that could endur® the toothache atiently.—Shakespeare. dentin substa: beneath. Since the acid must exist in con- centrated form in order to do much work the proces: ally goes on only in the tiny pits, fissures or other defects in the enamel,‘ or in the spaces between the teeth. seldom decay bee: the natural Roramgh) a fee a 3, chests and jongue he pte em clean, iated with the cause of tooth e errors in the diet. a the calcium is assimi- lated. Apparent Phosphorus, the products of certain glands, . ultra- violet rays, and the vitamins are in- volved in the use of calcium by the body and must be taken in the diet in order to permit the process to go on satisfactorily. . Once decay begins, once the enamel of the tooth is broken down, bacteria, constantly present in the mouth, the destruction. Chemical changes occur that.are FO The most that anyone c: to keep teeth clean tl methods possible, to overcome acids bythe use of proper alkaline washes or pastes, and to see that the di is of the proper nature to keep t! teeth in a state of satisfactory nutri- the ‘east_and south, however, there is little at} constructed and adequately fueled, and to stop fools people will go to the | from hopping off to certain death in machines they more or less dormant. | know nothing about, no government has any right “people seen | to interfere with these ocean aviators. . of either! Sunday driving kills more humans than ocean major parties. . fying. Nobody is demanding prohibitian of Sunday something sensational nowadays. to get driving. E Piet i. cls amaghiglibenbe ees bmnpeme: FEESH | Home'N Hap) WAS AWFOL OUR SUPPER 'N GOT Time T Piay Fer | YOU ALL OUR A Nour ER | FISH: MaKEes So Bur we - DIONT HAVE | MESS ALL OF EM NO FISH KT GETHER HOH ELT? | tion, By Williams \es -YES-\ouRE NERY KIND HEARTEO YOO FELLERS ~ Gwin’ me, ALL THESE NICE FISH. : YES.MY MA. WAS VERY. “TICKLED~VERY MucH— MUCH —ANO ME, WELL, T MYSELF Am -NERY STOUPID— BUT, : Ld aie, FAST: OONT TAME THAT WHICH IS. GINEN Too FREELY. ‘ATS ONE & LEARNED Day. 7 AICKLED US FELLERS Givin’ QUITE A. NICE wey es Cee ee a paswrcae 35 be sete course, unclean teeth are not desir- | land the city hall. farrivi | The exposed surfaces of the teeth} ro. \ tain. BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Sept. 10.—The impres- sion has been growing more and more definité among the political cogno- scenti that President Coolidge didn’t make his “do not choose” anneunce- he was tired of his job nt_a thifd term. failure to solemnly that the t highminded to make such an an- nouncement and still have an eye on ly men and newspape: ba Bret) to have of the picture. The president didn't morally bind himself to anything whatever exce to a refusal to announce his candi- dacy or to promote his candidacy from behind th nes. It has been said that Mr. Coolidge of his. job, but never con- The impression here’ is very happy in it. The theory is more and more ofte - vanced that Mr. Coolidge, having tened to the assurances of his “yes men” for months, strongly suspected that the people would urge his re- tention in office. But the people seam to hav inartien or indifferent. Most of the party politicians snd ce ly all who automatically became presi- dential possibilities turned somer- saults of glee. There re a few, including so1 of thes politicians, who jt that the party mu: ” Mr. Coolidge—a: in the party were so poor been it 3 —__ Tass Geen Tatsove | WASHINGTON LETTER that the third term tradition should -Jinto a ban “SATURDAY, SEPAEMBEK 10; 2687 & be broken. =| |, But as the “draft clamor” if it can be called a clamor, began to subside, it ‘became more and more apparent outers were old smoke screen it some which might be converted wagon. The likelihood lidge will be drafted be- smaller. none talks Republican politics now lie talks of Hoover, Dawes and jen, and hardly ever of Coolidge. js cel in, Ir. Coolidge’s sentiments as he made his nouncement are still open to ques- tion. ‘If it be true that the president still hopes fer ‘renomination the fact de- finitely’ explains just@why he need rt ahother Incidental rt his own aspira- overt act would that Mr. CO dail, not ex] to su el » for a1 leave him, politicaily speaki without a trace. Reports that Coolidge would en- dorse Secretary Hoover continue to go unconfirmed. The president split with bers rl i, e eet reta: el uring cabinet row and hi: preside it feelings toward Hoover are not clear. pondent di growing im won’t support anyone will prove cor- quite Mkely that Mr. Coolidge will support, if anyone, the man whom Secretary Mellon si ports. And it is equally likey t! the man whom Secretary Mellon de- cides to support will be the next Re- publician candidate. four corres- not ict that the jression that Mr. Coolidge rect. It-seems it —<$____.. | IN NEW YORK | New York, Sept. 10.—Whereas the mayors and domos of other cities are wont to. take to themselves residences becoming their positions, Jimmy Walker, of New York, has steadfastly refused to leave the humble neigh- borhood in which he was reared. The mayor of this big town lives on a rambling little street that screw off of Greenwich Village. There is no way of identifyi: it from any of the row of rem led plain red-brick fronts that centered the Irish quarters in a day when the early Irish settlers of Manhettan ruled this particular roost. . This was the scene of Jimmy Walk- er’s struggles when he was a pooi kid writing Seng lyrics for a Broad- ishit rm. way pent ing fii Only light marks the m 's ec, therwise there a scattering of venerable street mps:and, just cat-a-corner from place is a big lot, converted into playground and. overrun by Itali from the tenement. belt. taken over the. buildi once dwelt the Irish aris-" 6 whi tocracy. Gus thaps no tson in| ttan who reflects more thoroughly than th: mayor.” At fi be mistaken for Sartorially he w York “midnight lance nlp prosperous hoofer. mbines Broadway Someone suggest- ed that Jimmy. Wall id” the Prince of Waleswould. make one’ of| the .grestest . vau - teams -ever created. But while the ‘Or’s ap- parel has flash and somewhat reflect: »the George M. Cohan . spirit, ‘it. is i never in bad ti 5 : vette fo thi st New Yorkese habit of Jimmy Walker. is that late at” banquets, theaters and other festivities. For few “regular New Serkerbe” ach a in. theater for the opening cur. Many a house that is sold to the doors will sprees. half empty until the first act is yal under way.! Perhaps the greatest charm of the idnight mayor” is his lack of pre- tension or ostentation. 1 remember seéing him one night during the in- ion of a big movie openi: chatting in the lobby wit! out the shoulders of two being eas. It would occur to no true New Yorker to find such a posture unbecoming. It is the casual gesture of camarade: and good fellowshi| The midnight oi knows srety, hase of a night club but has seen him trip- Ding about its floor at one time or another. The august and over-digni: | fied chief of many a ti 1d be flabbergasted at the ry roadway has to offer. the city's vast problems: Iders only in working hours. Thereafter he becomes as reat a playboy as any Broadwayite, le carries this nonchalance — and ety with him wherever he goes. rlin, they say, was most perplexed when he visited there. sense he agabol es the city he serves—' and the city attaches to him an affec- tion that is almost sentimenta 4 GILBERT 58' The assistant secretary of h of aviation ing to fly. that’s President Cool t day that “our air perfected.” the jearn- it led [the most approv hamlet | ‘Tis RIBUNE OPICS Now the time is drawing near when our college students will be frolicking merrily over the green on thelr way to classes and learned men will be trying to discover the cause for the degeneration of education in this, the year 1927. It seems lp 9 regular thing, ing: il June rise on ae priv: _- through thie pages of ‘some magazine. ‘The students do not mi: great sport for them. They have a chance to shock some of the heads, and shock them they matter of in ' connect: with comes to mind the im drives bul pro. stadia i Lary is a fertile eevee the tins Tesh of en- thualasm bounced, and bei lost aterest. sae would 'be- interesting to know how many youths“and maidens who left college at an earl; receiving «letters — aski them to send their $10 instaliments s0 that old Goofus Hall could. be fin- ished. There is a tremendous wast. ge. of stamps here... How mu i pler it would be to Rieely chat off the lists anyone who has been out of school for a year or more! By the been out a year, action toward his alma mater is less than lukewarm. There seems to be no solution. date are still ‘ys id th ale whieh bo: ‘he likeli! good Wi Di i rtaii igh M: 4 f r) r 1 PPO! ither, . Ti hi jorted Sec. mn Ye ing. el! has 4 a < i . cometh the inequri here, which prompt: 4 he |= preber emerges with fon and nsiderat! v4 kk red ji ion and building ve then, Ie i i bricks and new building will come from the partiel; students, rather than ¢ who once participated and then thought better about it. “all Old Masters | What is Hope? A smiling rainbow Children follow thi the wet; net here, still ir, yonder: Never urchin found it yet. What is Life? A thawing iceboard On a sea with sunny shore; Gey 1; it melts beneath us; are sunk and seen no more. 1 Wi A foolish bab; Vai (ue ‘ant be and if Demanding all, deserving nothing; 0 tH ; Thomes Eprizies “Cat Bon. ‘ouR “Look here,” shouted the agitated customer, “Tae gare, me ‘strychnine in| be ; instead of at, © four pence, HOPES “L think 's the meanest man on cai Why tr “It is fo in imploring ans ng e. , chim ayy the British Kee Be e| 8. We wea- y Darwin hail Several of our best have been: mistaken by ace) on various ecean‘routes. . * . Some of our leading: it have regained eer A ‘oft helt lost -preatige- “the. last le of weeks, see jones. wot | me" —TitBits. oer Be aie. . ~ PLAPPER FA! ls - M.D, LLD-#, B. der Weiter pose that some of those] " “choose not to rua. « 4 ‘ x ; oh a> fs PAS

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