The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1927, Page 4

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P 2AGE FOUR PM he Bismarck Tribune own. He refused change his ee eal run with the Thompson group. An Independent Newspaper * THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER iat blush Uist (Established 1873) As the headliner in the vaudeville show Mr. - Thompson is putting on for Chicagoans, this Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | trial is doing very well. It has all the elements famarck, \N. D., and entered at the postoffice at! of humor necessary to mak. it a huge success. eorge D. Mann... President and Publisher| The Thompson board mémbers are acting the —— comedy parts with great ability. As a theatri- Subscription Rates Pi cal production, it might play in Chicago for a aily by carrier, per year . | 1ong, long time. Madatiy by mail, per year, (iu 0 i pally by mail, per year, Even _so, comedy becomes boresome after a (in state outside Bismarck) ....- jtime. The average man will stand just so Jally by mail, outside of North D much of the spectacular and then rebel. May- {or Thompson’s placing of academic liberty on the gibbet may have enough humor about it to | appeal for the time being, but it is apt to bring ble In Advance ! arqeekly by m THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Some Folks Sure Are Heavy Sleepers THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1997 WASHINGTON LETTER Editor's Note: This is the first of a series of four articles on the appointment of Dwight P. Morrow as ambassador to Mexico. The stories give in- teresting glimpses dehind the scenes in our relations with Mexico, BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Oct. 6.—After buzz-! ing around for several days to dis- cover the real meaning of the ap-| Pointment of Dwight Morrow as Mexican policy, past and prese; must be remembered that are two great classes of foreign vestment in Mexico—the financiz| and industrial. Their interests do not always run parallel. First, there are the owners of oil wells, mines, lumber and land. I: is not necessarily to the advantage of these investors to operate in a strong, prosperous Mexico. Naturally, they do not relish fac- the year . him bad dreams before his administration ends ambassador to Mexico, your corre-|ing restrictive laws enforced in the nf its term, spondent is able to report that: national interest and a prosperous bil : 2 1—The appointment signifies a| Mexico means an end o: miserably Be Member of The Associated Press 1d Press is exclusively entitled to the on of all news dispatches credited to redited in this paper, and also the | (St. Paul Dispatch) - new method of dealing with Mexico which aims to supplant conservative intelligence. 2—The appointment is deplored hind the scenes to foment trouble cheap labor to work in the oil fields, the mines, the timberland and on the soil. The oil, mining and lumber men disembowel the carth a vs of ous origin published herein. All| by one group in the Department of |and shave the surface. Everything bverirepubitcation f all other matter herein are | The Parole Responsibility State and by those American oil} goes out and nothing ~vmes in. lugiso reserved. | interests which have worked be-| Mexican resentment is directed in against these interests. et Foreign Representatives Harry Jaffa, held with Paul Gottlieb by Min- between the two governments. Second there is the sort of in- = G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY neapolis police on a charge of attempted mur- me appointment is gratifying terest in Mexico j which Morro CHICAGO DETROIT |der of Howard A. Guilford, weekly publisher, e government »f Mexico, en Mr wometiig mon Poe Kresge Bldg. was at liberty on parole. Jaffa was convicted jin Grand Forks, N. D., district court, July 2, |1925, of carrying concealed weapons during \the commission of a felony and Gottlieb of a icharge of engaging in the transportation of Jaffa was sentenced to ten Sally e y Tower Bldg. wg PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK - : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. . (Official City, State and County Newspaper) . ' Li li "Canadian Conservatives and the St. Lawrence|liquor. Jatt: 1 ti Action looking toward a real decision on the the penitentiary and Gottlieb to one year. Although there are a few things to be said against President Cool- idge’s choice, it should be under- stood that the denials that the United States and the Morgan bank- ing firm are sending joint repre- sentative to Mexico may be swal- lowed in a@ saline solution. There $500,000,000, owed to foreign in- vestors. Then her approximately $200,- 000,000 in railroad bonds perhaps half of which are b-cked by the government. Then that annual $15,00,000 in- terest payment which Morrow’s 1St, Lawrence Waterways plan, or at least to- ee fash his Setnres tet but ee sate Lond Bence Coupes ne iar chee atched ae Ma ines nirune ns tward the stirring up of renewed interest, seems | ® led after serving 25 months of his sentence. of the matter. carefully. i vith the announcement that the nation-| The state’s attorney who convicted him de- erecgention ‘of the Canadian Conservative clared that he did not know Jaffa was out of party plans to place itself definitely on record) the penitentiary until he read that the sup- Seither for or against the project. posed prisoner was charged with attempted The convention is to be held at Winnipeg Murder in Minneapolis. He pointed out that, tOctober 10, and if the sentiment of the west-| Previous to his Grand Forks conviction Jaffa ern provinces has anything to do with the par-|had served one year for burglary, after con- tty’s decision, it will place itself on record as Viction in Minneapolis in 1922, and in 1924 had eho tee Pee ~; been arrested, but not convicted for larceny. The Morgan firm’s chief interest in Mexico lies in the fact that it is the collection agent for more than half a billion dollars in Mexican bonds held in this country and abroad. Under the Pani-Lamont/| agreement, Mexico is paying near- ly $15,000,000 a year in interest and it presumably will be part of Morrow's job to sec that this inter- est keeps sii He also will be interested in laying any possible Then, finally, more than $150,- 000,000 in scrip which represents interest on bonds which went un- re from 1913 to 1926, during lexico’s revoluticnary and early reconstruction period. Everyone who is_ interested in these various sums presumably wants Mexico to be prosperous and her government stable in order that she may pay. These facts and knowledge of strongly in favor of the plan. me : i . i goings | The responsibility resting upon parole au-| de -| Bs ‘ Nee ee ate cd the extect of] thotities and the consequences likely to result | ‘discouraging work on the waterways plan. Injif they make a mistake are well illustrated in| ‘both the United States and Canada, these| this instance. ‘provinces control a very large share of the vote./ “This, coupled with the fact that the Pacific) states and provinces have no interest in the matter, has served to retard progress. groundwork for Mexico’s eventual|Morrow’s past attitude lead one to payment of the enormous principal.| believe that the new ambassador's It will be recalled that quota-|attitude toward Mexico will be tions on Mexican bonds shot up-|sympathetic and conservative. ward when the Morrow selection| Morrow, whose intimacy with Pres- was announced, ident Soe is well known, has ee often advised the president on the analyze our| Mexican situation. ip ca BARBS | Is Eating Worth $22,000? is) ys Amne ena, § s 4 i. , when she had so foo! \- ies itis has come to the fore because of|that infielder Yoter of the Chicago Cubs will) because che was demonstrating that |lieved that Bob loved her as pas-| Would happen— SEE Ger G8 AS GLE oe Opposition has come to the fore becaus be able to try b “renc she could cook for a family of four, |sionately as she loved him. She re-| Something like six years io} | areca Dare erry Bs oy eee js é not be able to try before a French or German ; h ° ten y 4 - | the opinion that the United States and Canada, ; ; 8 . keep house anc take care of a baby,| mem the look on sis face—the | while stranded in the wilds of Bis-|@"4 from the four corns of the 4, regardless of how friendly they may be now, | COUT t his suit against the owners of the motor] naided. ‘Then he became absorbed | divine tenderness in hit eyes—when |bee, Arizona, 1 stopped to gaze in|city everyone sits down to watch), ; . f } involved in extraterritorial| tuck which collided with his automobile and] in his plans for the new retail fur|they had tatked of the child that|the window of a haberdashery and|the rest of Pa is walk by. Don’t boast just because you're might become involved in extraterritorial). - “4 T Within half an hour I saw: three |a globe-trotter. Consider the gold- plese th lit the cost of building the|injured the baseball player so as to damage “to| store, whose windows were to be s0| would undoubtedly come to them be-|there displayed were a couple of/ ., 1! ‘ f | Fish Baeeeries it they spit Vie costo e the extent of $21,257.25 his natural pleasure| distinctive, and Faith found herself | fore the year was out. Then, as the|suits and a hat labeled “Latest/ Turks with gaily colored rugs fish. waterway between them. + ete Ebdon taken very much for granted. The/|first months of her ge had | Paris mode.” oa over ae one two a Renate : It is to be hoped that the delegates from the] i, th from Indt ts third evening of th- servantless re-| slipped away, she had seen that he| Moving on to Los Angeles, 1) slender, olive-skinned Indian wom-| | You don't even have to be a big western provinces will be able to muster up in the case may come from Indiana or Iowa or| gime Bob did not insist too positive-| was growing reconciled to nature’s|gazed in the windows and found veh ne J NOU eaten g je cired. Eieiiattength to swing thei jee .| Michigan, where the pleasures of the table are|ly upon his right to wash dinner} hesitation in the matte: of making |that the show-cards read: “Latest | ttt At P-Beittaiysn these | Lidanwoatcnek cae gh streng' © swing their party to en-/no¢ exalted, instead of from Kentucky or Mary-|dishes, possibl because ¢ serry had|him a father. And after Cherry's |New York model. “tp tg le alates sei coat Sirloin {3 dorsement of the St. Lawrence plan. The east- ¢ y ducked her share of the duty by|beby had been born h had seemed| As I moved eastward the windows | Spaniards looking as though they | presidential race this year, the 24 ern provinces, much like our eastern states, land, where they are. leaving immediately after the meal|to dread the ordeal of child-bearing | informed me that this style and|had stepped from the tecond act of /gentlemen from Alabama will have a ing to cooperate in securing a channel|, An Indiana judge, if truly representative of|fo. a visit with Junior and Fay and|for Faith; had rejoice: that it was |that were-variously the “latest from| Carmen, but actualiy advertising |to learn a new song. ee ee,“ coop i \the culinary art of that state, would be famil-|her father at the old Myrtle Street not his wife who had suffered Chicago, New York and Paris.”|Greta Garbe in something-or-other; ie In attempting to of eating.” The American judge who presides « which would be of benefit to both countries.) . i & home. had. tried to reconcil %. |And then I arrived in New York | Rex Ingram in from Nice and Ma-| Sixty per cent of children born 4 But if the western commonwealths pool their iar with fried food, and could hardly under- That. evening Faith washed the|own aching desire for a seer and found the placards proudly’an-|Jor Bill Desgan, of Manhattan's |to cigaret-smoking women dic be- ~ votes and work unfalteringly, they may yet Stand. why Ga down me Se 000, dishes herself, and Joy dried them, | Bob's undoubted], Sees cee) teense atravel 180m aioe a eeonii. Seiumene aad nla chicos ‘doctor. What eosin : ~ ried s Psi ve ] r ii “is,” 1 . at we are make the waterway a reality despite the imag-| hoe eine o. Semegessc tee Me :000. an arrangeme t which Faith could| but there in the cc 80 many days ago I arrived|stranded vaudeville act; Johnny jwondering about is the girls who « _ inary obstacles which have been set in its path. orc Saale Senco oe an uc camaune Bat “he id pot coma, a Cherry had had|in Paris and, turning at the Rue de elder Meet poset Saar lehew. orate » ee ee | 5 e i 7 numerable flirtatious “rench maids t Spain Discontented the Palatinate, would sympathize deeply with|herselé for she fo id React] Pebigrpt pantie peligro Sait Dieu pepe arod with oo-la-la eyes; a party of Cook’s.|_ A man who won $2500 on the \ £ 5. oe an i “mailed fist” Yoter, whose teeth were knocked out, lips cut| of Cherry’s high, tensing laugh|her arms unconscl forming «| latest Paris fachions might be and | tourists; three yodlers in town fr _a|Tunney-Dempsey fight -refused to t Spain, which proponents of the “mailed fist”) ing jaw injured, and who now can eat what| joining with bs deeper-toned | cradle for the baby zhe wanted, Bob|there, in the first haberdashery I oa and four of th eight orig-|accept it because he believed Tun- fh ; form of government would have us think is] Micawber called “only slops and gruels.” |mirth, as the tw. of them made a| was aight. Life was already com-|came to, was a wax model wearing ane soared ie egear belt shirt sey peoancces out in ie seventh } living in comparative peace under the de Ri- ees ; frolic of an unpleasan* t:.sk. licated enough without adding to|a familiar looking suit of clothes be ie au Rae Co ee i vera administration, is in reality seething with The baseball player will be fortunate if he|” It was a comfort, too, to know|its problems. But, oh, if he loved | and below, was sign read-|money and a famous one-legged dent! 5 H § . has for lawyer a gourmet who will challenge] that Bob was busily and cheerfully |her as much as she loved him he “La mode a New York.” risette; unrest, if reports to British newspapers are to be believed. two members of the iene | merican expatriate colony; Frieda| Social Note: The fail house- i the jurors entirely on the basis of where they |at work again, with every assurance |would not be happy unti! he held Perce anette ary MOSES | STE lt Loin, Holler, soni tive ex7| Geanie sesven ds on fulliawing, i ir i from the rich fur merchant of hav- | their child in h’s arms! - After a lit-|in this world? dh " i" The joy with which the Spanish supposedly ner i nd what mae ee La soot ing his plans accepted. tle while she went to see Hepat arr ee sis counts now driving taxi-/ Indiana. Beas At shi Sh Is. ave you ever eaten ruddy duck and wi “Faith,” Joy dropped her voice|baby was comfortable ‘or ‘he night.| Which reminds me ... advise|cabs. greeted the de Rivera dictatorship has appar-| ice?” should be an allowable question. Per-| mysterious! Nain't you ever going the boys from Maine to California| Which, it seems to me. was quite ently vanished, and every day come new re- haps this might be varied with: “What do rales & little baby? Looks like| NEXT: Cherry's “tall, handsome!to look out for hats f burgundy | enough for a short time. ports indicating that they are at last tiring of) yoy think of serving tomato salad with a slicu| You'd want one of your own, not| man.” shade. I counted fifty around the| What a place! long way is to wire home for more. the semi-tyrannical conditions imposed on] o¢ country ham?” If the prospective talesman | ¥St, Cherry’s baby.” Cafe de la Paix today and they're GILBERT SWAN, ————_—_ Old Masters | \ CESS ruin oaen | ques- being shown in every other shop ———S them. answered, “Never heard of its being done,” he} ti The nee ere tee Tho { 3 ie f Indicative of the way things are going is a ones, ne tion, stunned Ns dee eam | AThought | “oie se # {Daily Health Service ije ——_—_me is instantly revealed as a resident of the fry-| Under the clear. keen gaze of Joy's ints i fra 4 hot tide of color And if that doesn’t awaken their note given out recently by the government] ing-pan haunted Midlands, Srey eyes a Rei color spread ae greedy of filthy lucre—1 |sartorial interest, it might be added im. 33 se & which declared: “Those who conspire to over-| Of course, a jury of chefs w " + ho | ver her throat and face. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN throw the dictatorship commit an act against| unfair to the Melanie ce Aa pg ensli oe ee aaa ee pele Piper geeig on the |Editor Journal of the American Avarice is the bes my declining years.—George Fo! 9 5 ie was trying tq answer that their country and must expect to suffer se-|counsel had charge of Yoter’s case, eleven of | question for herself as much as for Champs Elysees, | | Hiatal sree onan oC av ane. Severa prominent citi- zens are reported, to be noving. One way to make a dollar go a Mowers, weary and brown, and lithe, What is the word methinks ye now, Endless over-word that the Scythe ‘I don’t know, honey, W vere punishment, such as confiscation of theit|the panel would very likely be knights of the| 2%, vf er itie taklce: when they want them, seems like my very own baby, you says she hopes she has fina Seni it’s not any more joms. trouble to take care of wo in the hole. it wiih Punch and She says one ties you hand and foot | But when he downed the ball he Fash ee ebich r while property and loss of their rights as citizens| saucepan. and deportation.” Discontent was to be expected. A sudden uprisal resulting in the overthrow of the de (The Duluth News Tribune) Rivera government would not be surprising.| ¢ there is an hi hor- The strange thing about it all is that the Span-|ity on eh tiothing, it gape Discomfort in Dress one.|_ “My team is s0:2|(—Justalingle | “It's up to me to The Champs, it seems to me, is eatest street for children in world, At intervals of each and even more frequently, little catch-penny stands pop out win,” said he, of lovely parkways like mushro: Among the many terms invari- ably misused by the public and not infrequently by the physician is “auto-intoxication.” Incidentally, the phrase has af- forded merriment to the humor- ists who rely on the pun as the source of their humorous efforts. significance of the term lies BIER to the blades of grass be- lows Scythes that swing in the grass and clover Something, still, they say as they Pass; What is the word that, over and over, Sings the Scythe to the flowers ish have stood it this long. Premier de Rivera! man, of course, can tell how clothes look anyway, so it might as well be ig hou ? : ' <4 5 ona Behind his own team’s goal. in the belief that it is possible fc d the 7 has not the personality or the flair for the dra-| woman, but he cannot tell how they feel. He| ‘Wo t"d, Goat toe ge a over r calls mere ee ger pm ible for and the grass matic which has stood Mussolini in good stead|does not know whether or not a girl is com. in his government of Italy. Lacking this, he|fortable in the mode of dress that on wears. can expect nothing else than his overthrow. The burden of woman’s dress has been con. The Latin countries are willing to bear op-| siderably lightened in the last few years. Its pression a little longer if they have a govern-|bulk has been greatly reduced. A great deal ment which is willing to go in for the theatri-|has been said on the subject, pro and con. The cal now and then. Without this, they soon|effect of dress on the health of the wearer has grow tired of harsh rules. That is precisely|been discussed. Some doctors claim there is what appears to have happened in Spain. too mee reckless exposure, while others com- mend the present simplicity and the back- Bee a eee ——— i nature movement. re nares _ Dr. 0. R, Sweeney of Iowa ollege be-} But to the innocent by: ¥ lieves that the time will come when, through|the street, og thelr pty fashions various scientific processes, the neglected corn-| appear so free and so untrammeled that the stalk can be made to yield rich dividends. He/men envy them their comfort and freedom prophesies a time when a billion dollars a year|Especially in summer do the men look envi- will flow into the pockets of the farmer from|ously at the light and airy clothing worn by pe now cy OES. the frailer and more fashionable sex. a an ier! fo AG lop the patent wealth of Now, however, comes a woman authority on corn Pe anntin, peghss an his aides have| dress to condemn the resent styles. She is ng things thelr experitnents Years: | Among | Elizabeth Robins Penneli, writing in the North igs their experiments have produced) American Review for October. She claims are building blocks for skyscrapers, artificial that the appearance of ease ig deceptive and ember core | syrup, corneob pipes and many|that the modern, straight-line modes, the fet of Dr. Swocney’s experiments in: straight, slim, delicate garments actually are dicates that as time goes on agricultural prod- peeves. wey and dangerous to the of the prevailing modes. Of this she Says: ‘The average woman is hopelessly out of stalks decreases—and it will inevitably de- _ that of raising industria! as well as food prod- fatlonn ta ene, Season that its lines have no re. Only very young girls have figures suitabl to straight-line frocks, the author claims. All other women, she contends, must starve and Massage themselves to slenderness, or make use of uncomfortable restraint. They cannot be at ease in the artificially attained simplicity and flatness of styles that do not fit the fig- ure, no matter how comfortable they may ap- Mr. McAndrew Goes on Trial William McAndrew, superintendent of Chi- ae seo, is on trial for alleged insubor- : He is accused of having incited to disobey the rules of the school now under control of Mayor William small face eager but sulemn. “I hope Fay gets her wish,” Faith answered evasive. But long after Jo; ith forgotten the conversation brooded over it. had za She lived again Furcal ME, M'DEAR,~ MUCH AGAINST MY WILL, PRESSURE IS ~~ WE MEN WHO DEVOTE our ENERGY “To “THE COMMONWEALTH! MUST MAKE A PERSONAL COMMITTED TO ASYLUM bedeck his counter. ters Five o'clock is rendezvous hour Cafe de Paix which, in “un: Theater on THAT REMINDS ME~ I w~Go DOWN IN THE BASEMEMT AMD LIGHT UP-THE PILOT LIGHTS OF symptoms as @ result of absorbing pulses developed in his own body. These poisons develop presumab! in the infestines as the result of the putrefaction of food, due to the fact that the intestinal tract is full of the wrong kind of bacteria. to Metchnikoff, the celebrated Russien-French investi- er, the human being comes into world with his intestines free from germs, and harmful microbes enter Promptly, into his system. It was. Metchnikoff’s belief that might be or combated by favorable microbes that could be implanted in their place. The’ favorable microbes original propose were known as Bulgarian bacilli. fore recently it is the acidophi- lus organism + is urged for the purpose and preparations of milk containing Sas. comanians ae an on pre: ion Pi ans, at _soda fountains ) OF rectly from milk concerns. Habits of Livi Much of the condition known as auto-intoxication is due to the American habits of living. The pa- 'tient who getc up in mo! feeling ti ins of his wor' uets are going to prove of more and more value.| Mrs, P 1 maki ae as i apparently ages rapid- As the world’s supply of the commodities which | regard to the bere one terest point in ly and all general hy- have ‘been successfully ‘produced frecy weich|regard to the beauty, or rather lack of beauty, Ziene, is likely to feel that he suffering from auto-intoxication. He begins his day with a break- crease, at the present rate of consumption— ing i "|fast of sausage and hot wheat the farmer may enter on an entirely new field: | (ra ing in the ready-made one-piece gown, for cakes, sometimes supplemented bg tatoes, washes this down with seversl cups strong coffee. He sits all of the forenoon in a Oar smoking anywhere from 20 EE surprising that he has a dull, list- less or irritable temperament dur- the attempts of his overloaded int ion! tract to get rid of the Thompson’s supporters. Then, too, pear. ‘Much of the treatment of s0- urged that McAn- So it be that men haven't called autio-intoxication involves : ® stooLpigeon of King|complain of af they think. they have. Men thee with Real ciety fe it is only natural that Mr. wi ve en’ e women their ease and sim- cutting down of the quantity of Shot ihould’ ta’ be op ve He wilt dress may in reality be more com- froth Melia fee. eeanities and than are the women. ousted and someone more to] It may be, too, that will le will get lis job. He i uma seal ceed ducomtect w bed sin of having opinions of his Complaint if she is sure that sho lo in siple y £ other substan: vith laxative action. . ar A healthy apple tree has an aver-| Ww age of 30 to 50 leaves to each apple. in Who's a “Hush, ah hush,” the Scythes are saying, “Hush and heed not and fall asleep;” “Hush,” they say to the grasses swaying, “Hush,” they sing to the clover leep! “Hush”—'tis the lulllaby Time is singing— —. “Hush and heed not for all things 88, “Hush? ah hush!” and the Scythes are 8 Over the clover, over the grass. —Andrew Lang: Scythe Song. CARS-COLLIDE Wishek—Cars driven by E. J. Ensslen, John Kramer and August Vilhauer figured in an automobile wreck near Wishek recently. The Kramer and Vilhauer cars collided be | °: the highway, bending the fer.cers and axles. A few moments later Mr. Ensslen drove along. As he fepiosshed. the wrecked cars the lights on his car went out and he ran into them, PPER FANN

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