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Ae Pee eerie } ss in 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 $7.2 ipety by mail, per year, (in aily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dako‘ . 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 credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontdneous origir Published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMIT) NEW YORK - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) (eich hater le date es tt ste Maths t-te New Water Routes to England? Canada, at least that part of it north of this state, is in a better mood nowadays. After wait- ing the completion of a railroad line to Hudson Bay for five years. word has at last come that the work is to be rushed through to completion. The Hudson Bay line had been agitated in Can- ada for a good many years before it was ever built. Its proponents pointed out that it would give mid- dlewestern Canada a new and shorter route for its products to foreign markets. Its opponents decried it on the grounds it would cost too much money. So far, the opponents of the plan seem to have the edge. It was the terrific cost of the extension from The Pas north through the uncharted wilderness which compelled the government to put a halt to the work several years ago. Because many poli — ticians were of the opinion that such a railroad line was more or less of a local project, the government was given another reason for stopping work. ~But enthusiasm has risen again. One hundred and thirty-five miles of line remain to be completed. When that is done Central Canada will have its own ocean port. It might not be amiss to remem- ber that such a port, through possible lower rates than are now granted on shipments eastward, may also be of benefit to the United States. There is one disconcerting thing about the Hud- son Bay route to England. The straits at the out- let of the bay are choked with ice for all but three months of the year. Fog and storms add to the obstacles. Whether the section of cara which will make most use of the line can use it practicably is an interesting question. It is a very expensive experi- ment, but in this case it is one which the public heartily approves and is paying for. Too Late For Rest Instead of continuing their research, scientists would benefit the world if they would suspend opera- tions for 10 years and give the average man a chance to catch up. This suggestion has been made by the Bishop of Ripon, England, and it is more than a mere idle re- mark, As the Bishop pointed out, despite all his new mastery over nature, man has not really seemed to be advancing his own cause. Happiness is farther off than ever because of the tremendous strides taken in such a short time. Man is, despite all his trappings, a very elemen- tal creature. A child subjected to too rapid transi- tion is not happy. Our transitional periods have been accelerated in late years. The result appears to be confusion and a further drift away from those things which go to make up peace of mind and hon- est love of life. But such a suggestion as the Bishop has made would be impossible to carry out. The world has gone too fast to suddenly come to a halt. Too mucn has happened to allow any cessation of scientific ef- fort. The restlessness of man may be leading away from happiness in this age, but there would be no greater joy in life were science to stop its work. ‘A new generation would have to be brought up, un- used to rapid progress. And such a generation mighj-never contribute anything to the world except an appalling conservatism. The Unions and Americanism ‘Any agitators who may have thought that there ‘was an overnight change in the attitude of labor ‘must subside again. A recent speech by Matthew Woll, vice president of the American Federation of + indicates plainly enough that labor in this country is still determined to follow the dictates of reason instead of those of class-consciousness and hatred, “Mr. Woll, in his specch, pointed out plainly enot that the unions’ “hands-off” policy is still ay He reiterated the basic principle on which labor operates: that of Americanism. { G&merican labor lives upon American soil. It op- erates in American life. There is no attempt to transgress on foreign labor movements. So agita- tors who come here in the vain hope that they can use any of the unions for their own selfish purposes ate.doomed to failure. This country need not worry for its internal peace as long as there is such a great organization as the Federation of Labor, func- ‘tioning on such well-founded principles of Ameri- canism. No agitator can sway the federation from its work, to improve and better this country through the, improvement and betterment of its members. Criminal Psychoses ‘Chileago’s experiments with its criminal suspects fruitful. R & new ruling, the chief of police has the to remand. suspects to the psychopathic hos- il for 10 days to determine their sanity. Some master minds have taken psychological tests yyed with the blocks,” only to discover that .thay have mentalities about equal to those of six- year-old children. + Of course, it may not be polite to some of these im the underworld to subject them to this rigmarole. It would be so much nicer to let them about their business of robbing banks or stick- just about the same mentality. It is extremely hu- miliating, after one of these so-called brilliant criminals has been pulling off jobs for years, to learn that he isn’t so very bright after all. And the tests are hitting a very vital point in| the criminal’s makeup, that of pride. There is al naive, childlike pride on the part of many of the underworld habitues because they think they are | smarter than anyone else. To stick a pin into this balloon of conceit should do just about as much as | any strong-arm method to reconcile the criminals) to moderation. | Editorial Comment | Sound Immigration Policy (The Chicago Tribune) The United States as a whole is very well satis- fied with its policy of restrictive immigration. The} efforts of minorities who may seek to lower the/ barriers will be looked on as a menace to Amer- ica’s social and material welfare. The country is fortunate, therefore, in having for its secretary of | labor such a man as James J. Davis, who has prom: ised to give no ground, but instead to strengthen the machinery by which selection in immigration is accomplished. Especially wise is Secretary Davis’ proposal to amplify the examinetion of prospective emigrants in foreign ports of embarkation. That is not only good policy for the United States, but good policy for the foreigner. The old system whereby immi- grants were allowed to reach American territory before being turned away and sent home was un- necessarily cruel and heartless. By standing behind Secretary Davis and those congressmen and officials who habitually work for the success of the restrictive immigration laws, Americans—especially those workers who are most threatened by the foreign imflux—can assist in attaining the goal of which Mr. Davis speaks, of weeding out all but the most desirable European stock, halting the “bootlegging” of aliens. and cut- ting down the necessary number of deportations, Why Shirts Wear out (New York Times) An interesting discovery has been made about the mysterious holes that appear in cotton garments which have not had hard enough wear to justify disintegration. When shirts go to pieces after only a few trips to the laundry the owner is likely to blame the strong acids which he supposes are used in place of mild soaps. Certain laundry owners put the problem up to research laboratories. The cause of the destruction was easily found to be sulphuric acid, though it could not be found in any of the laundries reporting the trouble. It was then dis- covered that even housewives washing clothes in the approved manner were having the same diffi- culty, and that sulphuric acid was also the cause. Suspecting that sulphur dioxide in the air might be oxidized, eventually forming sulphuric acid by uniting with water, the investigators tried the ex- periment of drying wet cottons indoors in pure air and outdoors in smoke-laden air. In the former case no weakening of the fabric appeared, while in the latter the characteristic brown line of acid formed when water was sprinkled on the cloth and allowed to stand for some time before ironing. The brown streak could be washed out, but the fibre was permanently weakened. Further proof of the soundness of their theory was found in the fact that the trouble reported by the laundries occurred only in the winter, principally during January, February and March, when the air is smokiest. Seventeen years ago an engineer wrote in the Journal of Industrial and Engineering Chemistry that 1,300 tons of sulphuric acid were discharged into the air of New York City during a period of twenty-four hours. Since much more coal is burned now, the amount of sulphuric acid mus: be much greater. At any rate, it is sufficient to ac- count for the destruction of fabrics dried in the open air. A Great News-handling Machine (Minneapolis Tribune) There are at least two sides to nearly every ques- tion of public pelicy. On each side of nearly every question there are those not generous enough to believe there can be anything good on the other side. This being the case, it is highly desirable that there should be a great news-gathering organ- ization whose sole business it is to collect and dis- tribute the news impartially. The American people have such an, organization in the Associated Press. Employes of the A. P. have as such no opinions of their own, except those necessary opinions as to the relative value of this or that item of news in the test of general public! interest. They are paid to find the facts of a news | event or about a person or thing that is for the moment in the news, and spread the facts before | the news-reading public of the land. They do not color their recitals to suit any feelings of their | own, They are never guilty of any conscious dis- proportioning of one essential in its relation to; other essentials. It is absolutely indispensable that news-gatherers and news-assemblers of the Associated Press should have a trained news sense. They must be able to! weigh accurately this or that available item by the yardstick of universal interest. There is just one favorite for them to play—the general reading pub- lic—and in playing that favorite they put the em- phasis on clean news for clean minds, although they cannot ignore the other kind of news, created without their aid or consent. Il If all readers, if all schools of opinion, were a3 zealous for the facts, were as unbiased and tolerant as the Associated Press staff, ours would be a less querulous and a more neighborly country. Because the situation is quite otherwise. it has been no easy task for the Associated Press to establish. the pub- lic confidence which it enjoys today as a faithful gatherer and distributor of the news. Edgar T. Cutter, superintendent of the central division of the Associated Press, with headquarters in Chicago, rendered a worth-while public service in telling the delegates to the national W.C.T.U. con- vention what the Associated Press is and what it seeks to do. He let it be known that this great organization is not a propagandist, not a special pleader; and not a partisan in politits, religion, eco- nomics, government, legislation or any other mat- ter of common interest. It strives merely to be the most accurate possible reflector of the world’s hu- rap people. But the plan seems to be bringing | man pageant from day to day and hour to hour, results, ‘No “master mind” likes to have the world know that he and youngster barely out of rompers have the most dependable purveyor of information that can be contrived in an imperfect world where all mediums are more or less fallible, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE OCEANIC FuciT ° prove t! of president been cited tending to m i ‘as he functions had five of them in their, Furthermore, men live longer in th day and none of th are exactly feeble. died a theory gained currency thi the preside: which generally made bey wreck of a man, but Cooli Proved that a president can take care of himself despite th pe LY of his office. No one that another four Present term would kill him. Governor Al Smith ry Mellon is wouldn't be nominated in any event. That seems to cover the old Evans Hugh: a fow campaign steeches. 62 is as ve and perhaps more so: England. s in him ‘than. in any other man in of speech, training by on in this jowever, ulceration, thickenin larynx a ne} of mentioned will aid {it réstoring the proper voice. there are any special defects work fi gratifying results. in whi destruction or in voice is almo: SAINE = SINNER | >Ea=@ Medical Association ants of Hygela, Public When Cherry, free forever Chris W room from, make me marry him , walked out of the court. | ith her lawyer, Stephen ly what. his bill for legal services in ion with the divorce would; married to one man prisoned and tried You said it would be two hundred dollars, because Chris was contest- ing the case, and you would have to his counter suit i she reminded — him. Ive been saving toward it—” My charges are—exactly thi and Churchill formed a large circle by joining h forefinger and thumb. “The divorce is a present to you from) Judge Grimshaw and myself, Cherry. Tm glad it was made easy for you. ne your savings in the bank for Hope.” And so it was a hearted Cherry who rushed’ home to her sister and her child. She found them together in her own room, Faith: bending over the crib, holding the. warm, filled bottle of milk so that ki little hungry mouth could draw upon it contentedly. “I'm free, Faith. I'm free!” Cherry chanted rapturously, as I have become the world. And to I'm free again! But, oh, Faith, iously, tears making ” Faith said jubilant, light- You're growing up. Cherry. But—won't sweethearts, sorry!” she crooned contritely, as the Ne aby wailed a shrill protest at th Ie sharp jogeli 1 of the bottle. % my daughter,” she cried softly, bend- ing over the crib and touching the delicate, rosy little cheeks with rev- erent fingers, “you're all mine now. Meet your combination mother and father—Miss Cherry Lane! Sounds funny and a little scandalous, doesn’t , Faith?” she laughed up at her r, her eyes wet with sudden te: When she had finished her excited, exclamatory account, Faith sat quite still in the corner of the big couch don’t want to Faith to smile ly imy to which Cherry had. dragged her. Vanity of vanition, sath the “Aren't you _ pleased, rling?”| Preacher; all is ity. Ecclesiastes Cherry demarpied impatiently. “Are} 4 u glad I'm happy for a moment? oe I've had_such an awful, awful time, Faith! This last yéar! What a vente Do you realize it’s not quite a since we first met Bob? You remem. ber Dad brought him dinner. We All.is vanity, look preacher is vanity, it appear to Bob them, and your feelings were so hurt! “Remember? And Bob and I went out together that night after dinner, and late that ight, when I'd got back, Chris tried to abduct me and |” “ ‘Cause Im Faith! And in that year. I've been e gaged to four men, tried’ to elope with Churchill, she asked rather nervous-| that awful Albert Ettlesion; have been was to marry another; have been im- a deep breath, as if to; tragedies which Cherry's’ swift sum- ming up of the year had. recalled so vividly. “You've changed, h with all that!” But her very vehemence wisely, Cherry would be dead before she was “through with all thi NEXT: yin Lane becomes sudden- teo.—Thackeray. “If you would keep yo don’ then. A yea on ‘the day 1 for murder. Mother has died, and yiou have mar- ried the finest man in the world and nwother of the it| darlingest, most beautiful habv in the round, off the year I never thought tne word ‘divorce’ could be ‘so beau now I I have changed, haven't 1? e noticed: it?” she persisted an want to he her voice trem- softly, drawing dispel ,the darling. Bob. and, I were talking last night of how wonderful are with little Hope. you're going to make a good mother, T believe you—miss the other? You have always had so. many no free to marry again—’ ” Cherry cri€@ out vehement that you're be married. I’m caused knowingly. portan (Copyright, i927, NEA Service, Inc.) 2 AThought —|ji. very loud speal open or. in noisy = "di pl I . you; and so the ustajingle “I'll give you good advice,” said he, 2 emart young fella. good name, age hi Put it in your umbrella.” and hoarseness. Some people seem to become hoarse much more easily than others. casionally People will be especially 11 | Susceptible to vocal cords fae rib from ‘the at- tacks of ‘wl he lai tubercul cured, The voice may. be by local disease in the upper respi “reg tory tract or. by those that atte the Peer whole yal are thé sorcalicd gin in the nose an: the throat to the voice box, or larynx, and to the Sime Patecta op trache si Infections the forniation of "| the vocal cords because the pus may drop from the nose to the throat and down into the windpipe and bronchial it tubes. Systematic tuberculosis, especi often affect the ions the inhalation of irritat- ing dust or chemicals is ‘likely to affect the voice. One of a Eng in character of the voice im, Chronic lai itis may impair the volte to apna ‘extent. peaking becomes eevee or eeneti- cally impossible. senale be cautious in the use of to- bacco, especially. the use of “highly spiced aoe, al- cohol and other irritating sul patanese. The cure of vocal trouble largely on the cause. stance: singers and not business men and women in various losis elsewhere’ in the body ! and does not tend to recover -until the general tuberculosis has ‘been again. | It’s fullbacks,.. American never si the Health Magazine speakers, ministers, actors infrequently I plants use the voice so ly that they suffer with loud must Oc- inflammations of the} Ove th bacteri berculosis of COMPANY. mx is usally secondary to ing divore: gambling item. the’ iccompanied by » often involve | *'Y- conditions, such as lly of the lungs, | nx. In certain the most common causes of se apes te proper use of it, such a peeigily i Only the si Caution \to - love, public A public speaker terate. its inhalation, and a In mi yin if no severe or marked "aam- vocal ap- of the voice oidane: of. the setae tO, spair OUT OUR WAY WEY THEY Cant HELP BOT LIKE IT By Willams ALL RIGHT THEN, THATS, TFIREE. AGAINGT TINO. e TLL NEED ALOT OF ‘SuPPORT | HERE —THE LOUDER THEY GROAN “THE LOUDER YOU CHEER. Alene is You “Wwo GOT ME To 0O “THIS—NOW_ COME ON IN AND 0O HE FLAG jake- In the tate might to hours, Well, th fern e ie bo: gettin er to get @ horse shoed these days what with the Bias demand for pe’ at the am a eypentte just the same. ++. One eastern univetsity put up a new dorniitory during the summer. peeoaied just to keep up a ances. The grand thing, ‘but ‘father inkwell at some freshman’s cap. ocean th “4 days—there’s Many Am spond in' France awai gambling hal Pp year only a few months 5 watch your, leaps, tide feats ne Kelis pabipateg a man. Sir, Arthur, of cout: the outside i At a Boston wedding, tela tried}: ni- to handcuff the Sonie one} always going. around painting the}: the weight of a enpressed her heart; for all And‘ the ee malice of the worldly To - was past, extinct, and out By ee a fiercer:than are blown And‘? purse. the She ‘thane wept, and with her ressed hair * fa stil ipod seas fost And he wiped ore “the soiling of de-| on, ieom her sweet "a because she New the late oe -: Be a: Tesult of some of the conditions already mentioned, complete restoration of a normal _MONDAY, ‘SEPTEMBER 12, LETTER party. Hoover in their fifties and MY, eee certain sta. it of the current ce oss ibiliti s is iil You might just prove that Haover and the yh sinh hod of it i method of argument is sibiliti starts. was @ ae! has glue restrictions since the Civ’ In the fifteen iggested awn from Mi years ater’ hi indiena and Iilinoi is said to have his friends that hisjhave been left out of the pictu: favor of the i aeiseted north For all the talk of balancing ti Secre- oi hasn’t even produced a 70, but he|p in ‘the ‘Tifteen before the Civil thirteen si were represented in the two bi national elective offic 66. at 66 stands} In the last fifteen Lng ding campi “a ‘ar, me food alte but it takes more than youth and h to win @ nomination even in rare instances but not quite as silly as to sugges! that a man pet three score years is e ave been subject to narrow geo-* il presidential campaigns since that time, 0 talent i been ssachu- New York, Ohio, New Jersey, The south, the west and even the real middle od in \t. ice lections, it is ise before The presidency and vice presidency , , hysical is obviously good for | one of their own and so have the 30. “Senator Jim | there's more fight [vice president in’ 1912. and free lunch for a nickel. skilled juently brings In’ those cai wd there hi agp an tags de and, to gamble with di fifteen cents adds arked various parts of the! In those da: one could get the | bits. changing clothes. & two-spot has been kis: and, with one’s girl along, @ 285 impossible. Dawes at! other nogtheastern states in New So has Pennsylvnia ex- pt when she went for the ticket which Hiram Johnson ran for when one could parade from one, beer hall to another, getting drinks “* ‘oday the veriest orange drink sets pos if you wish on, a ecoug tine that isn’t as good as free janet used to be. bathing suit and take a swim for two Today a dollar is a minimum rate for a three by seven stall for Before ai exits is about ruined before one enters the water. ‘ ‘ . in proportion. an ci inces and takes i ‘off to col arder and h ard Some ‘of the boys who writer are very good | told som up so well under ¢! 9 strain of eresting to note, the six state: struse and Ay al a court argu-|named above have always voted ‘for ments that he thousands manage to afford ie of* medium anything or go anyw! voll re kes ee: the | outing. outh GILBERT SWAN. ‘only an \ RIBUNE out fiying genes the their time at th of the Riviera. The hard to break. The world of books is acquirin, in‘fact, I often wonder how people y™) incomes hema to do in these parts, since $5 is Nieele more than pin money beste taking a Sunday oe t certainly when ‘monks gave . . pew te oi a ‘semparatively ene hadnt in’ read it wanted to. But me ae a rr tie groom. ty the “Beck. of and the oCherety ‘Gaia ‘are eo} partly Tesponaible, ‘She sat and beside his fects]: sat and wept: bes is +1 cree & Semler macstinns, tl remained,—the leprous| girl stands on the doorstep at 2 She would be ted b: the heat of pe oh at her ewe com as es oul melted by t! at of pF aot ry che ask him in?” silver ore .adul- Whether it is better to «| ie group with faces in Pr fright bait ise having the wiicnoee he iso and one which demand: its illustrations is she was so ig starting hi a fe tomes fe akespeare’s play- ¢ long-run records at the “e bank on the best-looking au: the one which has the most *-~ next thing, we ref ihe-month, narian question, BIDS WANTED. Bids wilt be eck Beheal D by ane meet leas of ° ast delivered to three ve fie . Bids will be anon at 7'p. m. Tharedey, Es Sept. .15, 1927. Sect any, or a bids. . G. RAYERPORT, MBS. JOHN WEE, & 31—Se 7-12. ae Oe iemarek NY, CASH IN HAND bi Wit “e es Wibaod, "Unet ald he der” in ieimorings Caper a, 'N. Dak: fight Sane FANNY SAYS: tL Made me pay in advance— rd reserves the right to re- oa ay , Sector hades | |