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a III EEE i[ve Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER 1 (Established 1873) lished by the Bismarck ‘Tribune Company, rek, .» and entered at the postoffice at rck as second class mail matter. t e D, Mann........ wessseteseontaverers President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance by carrier, per year ... by mail, per year, (in Bis of by mail, per year, , Mn state outside Bismarck) .... or by mail, outside of North Dakota Ww Suy by mail, in state, per year ...... 1, in state, three years for.. orth Dakota, per Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press . Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the » republication of all news dispatches credited to ‘not otherwise credited in this pate and also the fonews of spontaneous origin pu lished herein, All {fs of republication of all other matter herein are wyeserved. we aS Foreign Representatives AN PAYNE COMPANY oo DETROIT Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH AYE) BURNS Be Fifth Ave. Bldg. Te J oncOfficial City, State and County Newspaper) ol , ee It Accomplished Things + 1e return of the American Legion delegates : My France might serve as a basis for inquiry ws what became of the wild tales of the bit- : suiostility, the enmity of the French toward orrica, * &% was not so long ago, that one person or twher was warning the legionnaires to stay Aty from France because of possible dire re- to; The French were represented as nearly Muy to stab every American in the back. The Men convention, according to these seers, coid be the signal for a concerted uprising wegtist Americans. arad yet, all the legionnaires are returning Roly and without evidence of having been Citreated. If they were mobbed on the Gets by the indignant French, the press as- Ppiations said nothing about it. If any of Dar number were maligned and insulted, they De; failed to report it. The only conclusion, is that one can arrive at, is that the “bogey phi” of French hate had just about as much Okity as the mythical “bogey man” whom lase parents use to discipline their children. “n the contrary, as far as can be observed, French greeted and treated the Americans B:, respect and friendship. They were en- E ‘pining a group of men whom they honored Se, loved, and they accordingly did their best hake them enjoy their visit. Sricidentally, the legion convention helped to Ene even more firm the ties of friendship Litailing between the great majority of the Chych and the Americans. And the gather- ‘scotched as thoroughly as could be desired tale of hatred and distrust. Too Much Oil he world’s production of petroleum, after Laining practically stationary for four years, 1” show a big increase this year. Experts ate that a billion and a quarter barrels eR eR Ree mao science, marked by the p: of religion and history.” There may be no connection whatever be- tween those two answers of Edison’s. Again, there may be. ng of the myths The Waste of Salmon For years conservationists have been c wolf at the way we were snatching up the salmon. Hundreds of millions of the fine fi were taken each year just as they came up in- to fresh water for spawning. The only answer these “alarmists” got was a laugh for their efforts, Now the department of commerce ‘tells us there is certain to be a great shortage in the salmon pack in the far northwest this year. The catch is the lowest since 1921; the Alaska pack will not exceed 3,400,000 cases, and the =| British Columbia pack will not amount to half of what it was last year. Even the sea can be emptied. Whether the new federal regulations governing the catching of salmon will have any effect remains to be seen. Hoover's fears that the laws came too late may be justified. Speed Fourteen years ago the first Schneider cup race for seaplanes was won by France. The pilot made a speed of 44.7 miles an hour, and the world was wondering if a plane ever would go faster than an automobile. The other day a British plane shot through the air at a rate of 281.488 miles an hour to win the same trophy. When you figure that a sprinter running the hundred-yard dash in ten seconds is fast and that this British plane went 412 feet a second, you begin to realize what the word “flying” means. Compared with that, a bullet travels like a schoolboy’s paper-wad. Editorial Comment : | The Great Stone Face (Indianapolis News) Akin to sacrilege is even a suggestion that Franconia Notch and the Great Stone Face yield their majestic splendor and beauty to the lumberman and quarryman. Nathaniel Haw- thorne found in this New Hampshire spot the inspiration of a prose epic that hundreds of thousands of school children, and a multitde of adults, have enjoyed. Others have recounted in prose and poetry the glory and sublimity of what nature has achieved there through the centuries. Annually thousands make their way to view this sculpture by the elements, set against a background and in a framework of woodland. It will come as a shock to millions. acquainted through reading if not by sight with a masterpiece not made by man, that it is in danger of destruction. Mills have been ready to turn into the maw of industry the trees and the stone. They would have isolated, even though they might not have touched it, that face “formed by ledges high up on Cannon mountains and swept by clouds.” To quote further from a descrip- tion by Kenneth Andler of the United States coast and geodetic survey, “the clear-cut pro- file of a man’s face gazes steadily, an eternal sentinel fashioned in the dim, gray dawn of is lost in the twilight of time.” Or at least he should, and in a setting worthy of the mag- be taken from the earth during 1927, inst 773,000,000 barrels in 1926. sharp increase in production in this coun- is the reason. Eighty-five per cent of the Jid’s oil is produced on the American con- nt, and new fields have brought about the condition of overproduction, resulting in te. = hus far the oil industry has not found an ble plan for curtailment of production. re are fears of violating the Sherman anti- st laws and state laws of the same nature. wuarter of a century ago the steel industry ad the same conditions of overproduction, alting in price-cutting, secret rebates and ‘like, but steel eventually got organized and + is remarkably stable. . great industrial combine may be the way just as the steel industry found that the ttion. We are losing some of our old an- ithy to huge mergers of such a nature. The ciency resulting from centralization of ad- tistration is one of the reasons. e industry must make up its mind to con- == itself. Otherwise there is but one way to followed, control by government. The plan t will sober up the oil industry depends on ‘caliber of its leaders. The situation offers opportunity for men to become great. A Splendid Record the second A. E. F. left in Paris a fine rec- for good behavior. Only six arrests were je during convention week and these cases *e quickly disposed of by the judge advo- 2’s court of the legion in conjunction with French police. Fewer than a score of le- nnaires were treated by the Red Cross ‘ses for injuries of any seriousness. Of these » were cases of veterans who had quarreled ut which American division had been the t during the war and they so damaged each er to prove their point that both men were en to the hospital. iqually as satisfactory is the fine impres- a the second A. E. F. left in «he hearts of French people. The amity between the ‘ch and American peoples never has been ter and the spirit is such that it will live g. As unofficial ambassadors, the legion- res followed nobly on the wings of Lind- gh. : "The French people and the American people slifferent,” said he Clemenceau, the and Old Man of France, to General Pershing legion officials who visited him, “but our beat in unison and that, I think, is the of the world.” wise analysis of the philosopher typi- nificence nature has wrought. The Great Stone Face was made for eternity, a constant reminder of the reach of time and the mystery of a universe in which humanity dwells. There is hope. The state of New Hampshire has decided to eppropriate $260,000 to make ot Franconia Notch a people’s reservation. The estate of James J. Storrow of Boston has pledged an additional $200,090. Another $100,- 000, necessary to complete the fund regarded as adequate to save a place endeared and en- dearing, must be found. If the heart and con- science of New England are not to stand con- demned, the money will be forthcoming. The sound of the sawmill and the rock-crusher in the vicinity of the Great Stone Face would be nothing less than an American tragedy, A Speaker’s Lesson io Writers (Minneapolis Journal) In all the pages of words printed about the ‘unney-Dempsey battle, there were two or three that differed from all the rest—even to the eye. Down the columns given to the transcript of Graham McNamee’s racio descrip- tion of the fight as it went on, poured a stream of short staccato words—mostly monosyllables, and each one adding up the fewest possible let- ters—the explosion of the instant to tell what was happening. As these words poured out of the loud speaker, they seemed to be more dramatic be- cause they were of the moment. But they read as well as they sounded; they continued to flow rapidly into the reader’s mind, as into the listener’s. Even on the printed page, they showed their difference from those of the type- writer boys who thumped out their language. The radio story was a spread of short worfs and many spaces, whereas the written accounts ran to more black type and fewer white spots between words. This is no reflection on the members of the writing profession. Theirs is a different me- dium from that of speakers, either through some subtle play of psychology or because tra- dition bids the writer run to more formal ex- pression. But there is hardly a man in all the world’s army of writers who could not find counsel against large language in such a Mc- Namee passage as that in which he described the seventh round of the fight: Now Tunney is backing away for a min- ute—Up there he leaps with a short left hook to Dempsey’s jaw, and then a left and right while Dempsey shoots a left and right to the body. . . . Dempsey comes | back and—Tunney is down! Tunney is down with a left and right om the face. he spirit of the two peoples after the con- ° . Edison on Happiness _ ‘man is now constituted it is impossible replied that “this is the age of The count is going on. Tunney is down. Dempsey is on the other side. Nine! Tun- ney is up and at it again. Tunney is back- ing away and Dempsey is following Tun- ney. Demmacy. Gore" t stop but goes on and on after Tunney. They are together, body to body, blow to blow, fist to fist, one after the other. Short, word jabs—only two of more two syllables, and by far the greater num- of only one syllable. Yet never a miss; ‘@ word wasted; every one is working. What a lesson to word carpenters! What a to all of us that aM 2 It is more tha’ great reporting, it is great diction. 4 / ‘ creation, and so he will gaze when the world|: ‘THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE SATURDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1927 | OUR BOARDING HOUSE tT HAS COME “To Yuwe HAVE KEPT OUR ATTENTION “THAT CHECK ON YouR ~Nol) CONTEMPLATE NEAR IA OFFICE, A SECOND TERM IN AND AS ADUSTICE OFFICE AS SUSTICE You HAVE BEEN OF “THE PEACE! ~~] A STANDING DOKE, ~~ IN IEW OF YouR a RATHER, 1 PAST RECORD, WE SHOULD SAY, WOULD ADVISE Yous SITTING !. “To GRACIOUSLY - WITHDRAW AS feel A CANDIDATE ! = —_——— re Two mornings later, Cherry, be- fore leaving for the office, dashed into her bedroom, where her sister had just started to bathe the baby. Little Hope was writhing muscularly on Fail ap, protected by a big, fleecy Tur ol “Oh, Hope, you precious, dimply thing! I saw the most ravishing little coat for her at thut nev Baby Shop, Faith—” “I’m making her one myself,” her sister interrupted firmly. “We can’t afford to buy ready-made coats for a tiny baby. Now, please don’t be foolish tonight, Cherry. Every time you get a new man I live in the most dreadful suspense. Be content with—dancing, darling.” the gurgled, droppi Cherry knees to ok against hey baby. positively fat, rub her apricot-' t y NEXT: Cherry’s sew affair pro- “She really needs more sun-| gresses alarmingly. light,” Faith frowned, but her eyes were glowing with love for both of those bright-headed bits of feminin- ity. “I’m so busy with housework and cooking that I don’t have time to take her for the long jaunts in er perambulator that I feel she if BARBS ‘ ___ BARBS o— cA put in jail was given’a job instead. “Look! She's grinning at me!| Moral: Don’t ask t be put in jail. And she actually winked as if she pdt meant it, funny little monkey!”| Senator Shipstead, attacked by Cherry laughed. “I’ve got to run,|bears in the mountains, turned a darling, but I was just wondering | camera on them. ‘The bears fled, if you'd do me a most tremendous| Probably fearing their pictures r, You know it’s been an age| would appear in the Congressional ’ve been on a_ real party, | Record. nd tonight—” si leas ke care of the baby,” | Clemenceau ate cold ham and a Faith promised, “Who is the man?” ’ Cherry grinned. “It's Bruce Patton, There’s a new club just opened—members pickles on his 86th birthcay. We'll probably be sceing a half-page about that one of these, days. Aren’t we ge be a| Science has shown the brain of New York? a: ¢ |woman to be equal >» man’s, The “So it’s Bruce already, is it?”|men probably wi'l be wilung to ac- “Darling, you are mid-Victorian!” Cherry caught her sister’s hand |that was reaching for soap and brushed it lightly with her lips. {“I’ll promise to be awfully good jand home by one o’clock—two at he very latest. But Bruce is going to teach me some new dance steps. He’s really a marvel, Faith, I'll bring you a set of his lessons, if you'd ce. They’re good, honestly. And I'll help you get the trick of hi rd ones—” anks,” Faith said sarcastical- |? “I have so much time and op-|| portunity to dance these days. | g. You'd better teach Bob, and see if you can get him into the notion of going our at least once a week. I sometimes feel as if my whole life is bounded by the walls of this house. Of course, it’s a nice house,” she added, with a humorous twist of her broad, sweet mouth, “Poor Faith! Marriage is the very devil, no matter how much you love the man, isn’t it? But listen, darling. I haven’t a thing to wear, unless you'll be a Good Samaritan and clean and press that black chiffon-and-rhinestone eve- ning dress of mine. I want to look rather special tonight—” “I was going to make a cocoa- nut angel cake for dinner,” Faith demuried. “But—I’ll do the dress, Maybe I'l! manage to squeeze in the cake too. Bob loves angel cake—” “I like devil’s food best.” Therry grinned impudently. “Good-bye, cept that, if the ladies are. ** * The can opener is the chief di- vorce ally in this coun! y, a woman told restaurant owners. Don’t tell us that the men hav2 been keeping their money in cans!) A European physician announces he has found a way to create super- men. Ha! New York’s welcoming committee shall not go unmanned. OO Old Masters | ee This world is all a fleeting show, For man’s illusion given; The smiles of joy, the tears of woe, Deceitful shine, deceitful flow,— There’s nothing true but Heaven! And false the light glory’s plumes As fading hues of even; And love, and hope, and beauty’s oom. Are blossoms gathered for the mb,— There’s nothing bright but Heaven! Poor wanderers of a stormy day, From_wave to wave were driven, And Fancy’s flash and Reason’s ray Serve but to light the troubled way,— There’s nothing calm_but Heaven! —Thomas Moore: The World 1's All a Fleeting Show. ly. on Harry Hill, 21, charged with th Ottawa, with his father, Dr. H. and W. C, Jones. An Ohio man who asked to bej Planning Defense in Hill Murder Case e murder of his mother at Streator, Ill., is shown here in the (Hl let) who ish eiping hls 60h, ad the defense attorneys, MESDAMES !< 1 DECLINE To WITHDRAW! —~— J aw\T ISTHE WILL OF. HE CITIZENRY “THAT I CONTINUE AS DUSTICE OFTHIS FAIR COMMUNITY # <- EGADY L~ AH,~ ER, THAT Is~ ~UM-M T MEAN “TO SAN, —~ AH~ KM-M- —~ KA ~ KAF~<THAT TERMINATES “THE INTERVIEW § —~— Paris, Oct. 8.—“Gay Paree” not particularly gay. At least, not as Broadway defines the vagrant taxi. cafes that front the Only the Montmartre and, the dance roonig of the fashionable hotels supply the brand of “naugh- ty” most people associate with Paris, 2 * The fact is that few Americans appreciate or comprehend the sort of gaiety that is Parisian. Folk who have dwelt in American thrifty ‘dere? were once engaged in are est capable of matching the casual ; lies in nothing more exciting than strolling up and down the boulevards and avenues with suburbia where simple, gayety that your arm around your best girl. The chief difference between the Parisian ie and her swain and t treet girl and her swain is that the Parisian makes no effort to hide from the world that he is the Main in love with love and, as likely not, he will stop at every half block to embrace his companion, whereas his American country cousin will wait until he reaches the dark pop- lar lane that rims the town. ee ‘But the Parisian will sit down with his “girl friend” at a side- spend many an hour sipping at a half-litre of “vin rouge,” whereas the boys in Main Street rush their girls to the cor- soda fountain or dash in the car to some nearby roadhouse, there to lap up fourth rate gin until walk cafe and ner dizzy. The gay Parisian, on the other hand, will sit for hours Gages it the pretty maid at his table while their gayety will be entirely con- versational; it will be a quiet, civ- glass, chatting now and then she sips of coffee and cognac. llised gayety which has learned world pass on the si For_ th ¥, maid have little, if any, spend. A few frances is the entire su and their its boulevards and about terned, festooned and gaily painted be found sidewalk cafes anywhere [er se] It is the city, then, that is rather the average In two visits to the “gay that can life” word, At_11 o’clock one can shoot up the Rue de la Paix and hit only a At 11 o'clock the number of persons on the sidewalk Avenue de L’Opera could be counted in French even by me—and I can barely reach amusement in watching the e Parisian man and his for an entire evening’s entertainment. The maids friends have had to learn how to ls. shone thrifty. In fact the entire’ city of Paris ts peg Yet it seems to go danc- ing down the streets, and there is a gayety about its about Parisian, WASHINGTON 6, LETTER sé Editor’s Note: This is the |ment with whom he allowed him- second of a series of four arti- |self to come in contact, Finally cles on the Mexican-American |the Mexican government obtained situation as effected by the |certain correspondence between appointment of Dwight P. Mor- Sheffield and Kellogg in which row as ambassador, Tomorrow jsome very strong recommenda- tions were made and it became evi- dent that Mexico City wasn’t quite the place for Mr. Sheffield any more. Mr. Sheffield packed his and came home. State Department has pursued What Morrow Faces in Mexico. cee By Rodney Dutcher Washington, Oct. 8.—The selection | Later, of Dwight Morrow as ambassador trunks to Mexico appears to have given| The ] 1 some of the high officials of our|a strong policy toward the republics State Department a polite pain. north of Colombia, Whether or not Not that they object to the fact | this attitude is wise and correct, it that Mr. Morrow is one of the Mor- jexplains in part why some of its gan partners, but they see in this|burcaucrats look askance at Morrow, appointment both a virtual repudia-|_ They would be much happier if tion of the Kellogg iron-hand policy| they could have put a career man toward Mexico and another heart- in the job. The selection came not rending sock at the career so dear long after Vice President Dawes to the department’s dominating had sneered at the career system diplomatic clique. jin a public address, recommend- Mr. Morrow’s methods are ex- ing that able men of affairs be put pected to be somtwhat different from in the important posts of the for- those of James R. Sheffield, his eign service. Although the re- predecessor. 3 |actionary Dawes may have had in Mr. Sheffield was a man after mind the good old days when the the State Department’s heart. He foreign service was packed with knew, or thought he knew, that political angels and lame ducks, one you can’t treat Mexicans like you might almost have thought that treat real Americans. Mr. Morrow President Coolidge had chosen Mor- has yet to learn that, if ever he,row after reading the Dawes speech. does, Secretary Kellog’s feclings must Ded be somewhat mixed. If, as appears, One of the things Mexicans the Morrow appointment is a repu- point out is that Mr. Morrow diation of his methods, he might be foe, will demonstrate that he expected to hand in his resignation. as a mind of his own and will But the belief is that Mr. Kellogg not pay too much attention to in- will serve out his term, lest his quit- terested members of the American; ting provide ammunition for the colony in Mexico City who will be|anti-administration forces which will glad to give bim an_ earful on be on the warpath in the next Con- what a bad lot the Mexicans are.! gress. In this respect, it is said, he will; ad be different from Mr. Sheffield. | The appointment is supposed to Some Mexicans will howl along be popular among other cabinet with some of our own anti-admin-| members. Secretary Hoover, for istration politicians at the idea of! instance, is understood to have op- sending a Morgan man down to’ posed Kellogg's stiff policy in favor them. Others will suggest that of one which would allow Mexico their countrymen sit tight and see, to develop into a better market for how Morrow “behaves.” But the! American goods. Although Mr. Calles government is inclined to| Coolidge is said to have based his regard Morrow’s appointment as! so-called public rebuke of Hoover a friendly gesture and probably} on the latter’s disagreement with will try to meet him at least) Kellogg, it would seem that he had half way. It will regard him as; swung over to the Hoover idea, the emissary of Coolidge rather; In fact, if Mexicp can keep peace, than of Kellogg. pay interest on her bonds and re- In contrast, Ambassador Shef-|frain from confiscating American field seemed to spread an aura of | property, she would seem to be free dislike among the Mexican people; of the spectre of American inter- and those members of the govern-i vention for an indefinite period. is Montmartre, I have seen but a couple of people who might be Pari- sians, and these were accompany- ing American friends. Otherwise the “big spending belt” of Paris is made for, by and of the tourists, and few indeed are the residents of Paris to be found there. But father couldn't find a rock, Me a - And so he used a boulcer. In fact, it has seemed to me that Justajingle eo “Please rock the baby,” mother sal “Just hold it or your shoulder.” if any of the old boys of Saw Cen- | &——_——__—____——_-* ters care to revive the lost art of | whittling, this is the place to do it. | A Thought 4 Give the average lounge: in the sidewalk cafes a jackknife and a stick and he would be happy for hours, particularly if he had an- other friendly soul doing the same thing in the next seat and there was pleasant gossip to be exchanged between knife strokes. GILBERT SWAN. Boast not thyself of tomorrow; for thou knowest not what a day may bring forth.Frov. 27:1, Self-laudaiion abounds an.ong, the unpolished, but nothing can stamp a man more sharply as ill-bred.— Charles Buxton. | [Daily Health Service’|[ NEWS BRIEFS | |__| The Rev. Willis Jordon, Columbus evangelist, i sentence Charlotte, N. years in penit as BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association ahd of Hygeia, the Health Magazine A committee of the American Public Health Association, includ- ing several authorities on public health, after consultation -with numerous leaders in the field of public health, has prepared an out- line of the elementary facts that) should be known relative to the spreading of all infectious diseascs. Some of the conditions are so unusual in the United States that they are little likely to give con- cern to the average person; others h | are tie frequent aa ty @ constant menace. ir " * indood their “complete ‘elimination,| , Chilean volcano Lisima erupts, depends largely on what the aver- | driving inhabitants-of Andes region age person knows about them. from homes. / Cause Is Myst # pei The cause of aa 2a is un-| _ Crookston, Minn.—Mrs. Willarc known. Apparently the infectious| Bayes of Chisholm was reelected agent is present in the blisters that | President of Minnesota Federated to|appear on the skin and on the| Women’s clubs. membranes in the mouth and nose. Since the blisters appear early and break almost as soon as they ap- ar, the disease may be spread fore the eruption is visible on the skin. The blisters on the skin appesr in successive groups, usu- ally first on the back, chest or face, and most profuse on the parts of the skin that are covered by the cloth- ing. One of the most important facts relating to chicken pox has to do —_=._ --—— with its resemblance to smallnox.| - NO CHURCH BELLS ~— Any time that this condition ap-| Seattle, Wash.—A minister here Pears in a person over 15 years of |has declined the offer of a parish- age, or at any age during an epi-jioner to donate a set of church bells, demic of sma.lpox, the eruption | claiming that they are out of style. should be seen by somecne thorough- | Well-planned newspaper advertising, ly familiar wit} the two diseases in he said, will draw more persons to order that smallpox may be abso-|church than noisy chimes and at the lutely ruled out. same time will not disturb the slum- If the case is one of chicken pox, 'bers of those who choose not to at- the medical treatment usually in-j tend, cludes the prescribing of some laxa- é tive, of a simvle diet of mildly Best of 5321 Indiana coal operators and miners settle differences at Terre Haute. Ten thousand foreign troops guard concessions at Tientsin in largest foreign military concentra- tion since Boxer days, Lloyd George condemns “indis- cretions” of late Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson’s memoirs and denies many observations attributed by Sir Henry to him. to Luverne, Minn.—Kenneth, 2-year- old son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ol- son, living three miles southeast of here, was strangled to death by small carrot. ; San Francisco—Robert Graham, 25, gave himself up to U. S. mar- shal here, saying he was wanted at Browns Valley, Minn., on auto theft charge. of warm baths, and of suitable powder to prevent itching. It may be neces- sary with young chilren to pro- vide celluloid mittens, or otherwise to control the arms and hands. so that they will not pick open the blisters, causing secondary infec- tion and deep pitting or scars, Don't Last Ordinarily the blisters, if let alone, will last a few hours, break open, dry up and form a crust. The crust disappears in from two to four days. When the child recovers, because it is usually a child that is con- cerned, all that is necessary in the way of final disinfection is to wash selves with other children. rain 4 - beacon” pegeem installed nthe si ip Levia that will pic pein rr abc | art, pitt otis é) ble a test of the light wi ves- | cut forther by the, jr sel is in port, but on the next tripe |and fi Kenneth Collis county jait at navy over will folow the ship pla net anne ° Arthur Shay x make tests on the open | prize Aj man, shown, Bea, above, above $5 per’ sent $ A ade i lll aici