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MONDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1927 PAGE FOUR “The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) { Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, .ismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at ismarck as second class mail matter. eorge D. Mann.. -President and Publisher , Subscription Rates Payable In Advance U oaity by carrier, per year ...seceecsseneceecees $720 vaily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) ......++.. 7.20 daily by mail, per year, , _ (in state outside Bismarck) Yaily by mail, outside of North Dakota ... Veekly by mail, in state, per y Veekly by mail, in state, three Jeekly by mail, outside of North rs for.. . Dakota, per udit Bureau of Circulation Member Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tor republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the val news of spot cous origin published herein, All sits of republication of all other matter herein are so reserved, Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT wer Bldg, Kresge Bldg. en en Rr no * PAYNE, RURNS & SMITH EW YORK - : : Kifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Putting the Teachers to Bed Moral suasion continues on its straight-laced aarch. Now the board of education of North alem, N. Y., establishes a curfew law for all principals, teachers and janitors” in the ‘ chools of that city. Mentors and sweepers} like m be about the business of wooing} us no later than 10 o'clock. Despite the swift and rosy hope that our old lgebra teacher handing bright youth the| ormulas in North Salem and is getting his just} srts for that time he kept us at the black-| two hours after we displayed some very itygian ignorance of our Xs, the conviction re- iains that even a curfew law for teachers will ot entice many of the younger generation in- o higher lives. We know that if we were a school kid in; Jorth Salem, this would be the biggest news tory of the year for us—teacher getting stood | -a the corner by his or her superiors. We- 1ight even poke a few jibes at the old boy (or) irl) if we ever caught our beloved instructor | astening to get there before 10 o'clock. And, if teacher ever got rough with us again, nd we should see her at 10:30 at a dance in ome neighboring village, who could resist the emptation of a little blackmail? And just to aake that chance possible, perhaps we'd do a ‘ ttle snooping now and then to see if teacher | ally did actually retire from the public eye t no later than 10 bells. No, no, we fear this 10 o’clock curfew law or teachers just isn’t going to dampen flam- ag youth one bit. Which brings up the whole uestion of just how high youth is blazing, if ny, and why. In this connection we are reminded that a oung man and young woman usually have arents. Simplicity Much fun has been poked at John D. Rocke- eller’s gift dimes by the wits of the day. ‘eople who have gone to visit the governor of Tew York have found him sitting on his desk, * winging his legs like a schoolboy. David selasco, dean of the drama in America, perches na stool at a corner drug store and sucks soda hrough a straw. These are the marks of simplicity that these ten, whose lives have been cast into great iolds, retain. These are the marks of great-, ess that endear us to heroes, Rockefeller doesn’t give away a dime because e is stingy and that’s all that he wants to ive. Those who know the great oil leader say hat this is simply one of his ways of express- ig human affection, and affection is not meas- i red by dimes or dollars. It brings out what _3 left of the child in him, the gift of a shiny : ime, not money, but a little brilliant some- hing. Al Smith, still possessing the rare faculty of ..eing himself, whether he’s in the governor’s hair or sitting with old friends in “the neigh- orhood” in New York city. It is a lack of ose that has made Smith the idol of the most aickly populated little corner in the world. Belasco, pitting hates and loves against one nother through the long hours, still enjoying bit of boyhood from the top of a strawberry dda. Childlike simplicity remaining where reat emotions have had their battleground. ike a toy soldier dug up in Belleau Wood. It is splendid when really human qualities siumph over the position and wealth that are 1erely one of the world’s weak symbols. Can It Be Said of Us? Epitaphs, as a rule, are strange, vain and ften even funny. But over in France the ther day an American legionnaire, in France ow the convention, ran across a few words that 2ally mean something. Ona slab in the Aisne alley he found the words: ‘ He has outsoared the shadows of our night. It was the grave of a soldier, an aviator, hose death will be remembered by thousands. gain, there are other thousands from whose ,emory the man has slipped away forever. That sublime sentence must remain, though, * . hen all memory of the man has vanished from ‘4e earth. It was spoken from the heart of heodore Roosevelt, a sorrowing father, but ' father proud that his son had fought the good ght. It was the grave of Quentin Roosevelt. And is like, like his epitaph, need not be a lesson ? war alone, but of everyday life, wherever it ight lead us. How blessed to live and to die at such could be said of us: “He has outsoared the shadows of our night.” - i Honoring the Eats-Merchants 1 | Cooking is not an unrecompensed art in “| rance. Your Frenchman likes his “eats” and 4 those who purvey them. He does more. ‘e is not unwilling to raise statues to them ith just as ready enthusiasm as he does to ‘THE BISMARCK 'TRIBUNE | Colorado, can be done in western South Dakota. cian or magistrate. But fate intervened. A book, which was published after his death, made his name dear to Frenchmen. It was a wise and witty volume about eating and drink- ing. It celebrated the joys of the table. It de- scribed good dishes with a gusto that inspired good appetite. Hence the epicure of Belley is now an immortal of Belley. the philosopher and the probe an of eaane:| When he died, he thought he would be remem- Inbad, the Sailor bered as politician or soldier or hunter or musi- | Cae Needless Suicide A mistaken idea that he had killed a man caused a New Hampshire farmer to end his own life with a shotgun. The coroner’s ver- dict was “needless suicide.” Needless suicide indeed! Through all the ages, of all the men and women who took arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing ended them, when was suicide ever necessary? No matter how sadly time and circumstance have battered life, it is always possible to re- build. There is always inspiration in seeing a shining new structure arise from the ashes of the old. That is man’s fight, upward from the ashes. Suicide is a return to the dust, giving up the fight, fleeing trouble rather than facing it. There is nothing “needful” about sinking a ship just because there’s a storm ahead. Editorial Comment | South Dakota’s First Sugar (Minneapolis Journal) The first sack of South Dakota made sugar has been sold at public auction for a thousand Editor's Note: This is the last of four articles on the ap- Wee: of Dwight Morrow as lexican ambassador. BY RODNEY DUSCHER Washington, Dec. 10.— wight Morrow will find Mexico in the midst of a presidential campaign which will remind him of the third battle which would have been seen in this country had his friend Cal- vin Coolidge chosen to run for re- election. The difference is that in Mexico a president, under the constitution, cannot even have two successive terms, let alone -hree. In fact, the main surface issue of the Mexican campaign is whether a_ president, having served one term, should ever be reelected as long as he lives. The question of real importance to the United States, however, is not one of reelection, but of whether the next presidert will be strong enough and wise enough to protect American s and prop- erty, meet Mexico’s financial obli- gations and guide Mexico toward the day when she will be one of our biggest export markets as a result of increased buying Power. The candidates are former Pres- ident Alvaro Obregon and General Arnulfo Gomez. Obregon is the man whose force and diplomacy stopped the post-Diaz,series of rev- olutions and who put the govern- dollars. If beet sugar, within the next decade or two, comes to figure as importantly in the fortunes of South Dakota as it now figures in the fortunes of some of South Dakota’s neigh- bors, then the silken bag will be worth many times a thousand dollars as a souvenir sym- bolic of a major stepping stone in the state’s progress. South Dakota’s neighbor, Nebraska, produces every year more than a hundred thousand tons of sugar—not beets, but sugar. Another neigh- bor, Colorado, produces nearly four hundred thousand tons. Whereas the average for the country is little more than one ton of sugar for each acre of beets, Nebraska and Colorado each get more than a ton and a half per acre. What can be done in western Nebraska and eastern Judged by government production statistics, the strip of land that flanks the western slope of the Rockies all the way from the Dakotas down to the tip of the Texas Panhandle can be made to yield more sugar per acre than beet land anywhere else in North America, a small area in California alone excepted. Inauguration of sugar manufacturing at Belle Fourche should prove a magic stimulus to beet culture in western South Dakota. Beets are bulky. Seven or eight tons are required for conversion into a single ton of sugar. Hence, manufacturing must be conducted close to the beet fields, for long transportation of the bulky raw material eats up too much of the grower’s revenue. But, with manufacture close at hand, beet culture pays, and the prospects are bright that it will pay more in the immediate future. For the Cuban government just now is setting out to enforce a drastic compulsory reduction of cane sugar production to force a higher price level, and beet sugar, of course, will go up with cane, That Ticket of ‘West and South’ (Christian Science Monitor) As the time for the presidential election ap- proaches there appears in the press and in the utterances of more or less radical and ¢ tented publicists the prophecy that the States is about to witness the political combina- tion of the farmers of the west with those of the south. The proposition is put forward a: f it were something entirely new. The argu: ment is made that the farming Republicans of} the west have little or nothing in common with! the dominant figures in their party who hold power by control of its machinery in New Eng- | | land and the states east of the Mississippi} river. The corollary is presented that the! dry, Protestant, free-trade Democrats of th south have nothing in common with the pa organization of the North, which is controlled! by the Democratic machines in great cities normally neither dry, Protestant, nor interested | in free-trade. The theory that these some- what disgruntled factors in the two great par. ties can be combined is attractive to those wh would like to see a breakup in party organiza tion, and to those who believe that the two isting parties are too nearly alike in purposes and in control to afford the voters any fair se- lection of policies. | But engaging as the theory may seem, it is not new. It has been put to the test, and has invariably proved fallacious. Perhaps the et- fort to give it effect which promised most for success came at the time of the revolt of the farmers, north and south, and the organization| of the People’s party in 1892. That party at- tained its greatest strength in the Republican middle west, but its genesis was in the south, and its first platform was drawn in the then! almost unknown town of Ocala, Fla. Many of the demands of that platform have since been transmuted into legislation by the action of one or the other of the old parties which it de- nounced. One attractive plank, however, failed of appeal to those who so nearly approach the position of a governing class. For the embat- tled farmers at that time laid down as one of the fundamentals of their code the rule that no lawyers should be ever nominated by them for office. For some six years the People’s party, or the Populists, as they came to be known, was a very real influence in American politics, electing members to the United States senate and securing representation in the elec- toral college. But even at the apogee of its strength the leaders of the party found it di ficult, almost impossible, to maintain that liai- son between the west and south upon which its success depended and which politicians are again trying to establish. In 1896 two can dates for vice president appeared on the ticket with William J. Bryan—one from the north statesmen, his poets and his dramatists. Strasbourg has for long had its monument “Maiti ose who invented a peculiarly de- ful form of pate de foie gras. In the lit- clever woman, Mare : her native town. now Belley town of Camembert they have a statue to/memories to span. It might be as well for » who named|those who are so confidently predicting an al- Hance of the farmers of the west and south just unveiled a monu-|next year to study the histery of the abortive The latter was not a/ efforts in the past new food, But he was|during, and one from the south—and neither would re- tire to make the alliance more complete. Thirty years is not a long time for political to make such an alliance en- |a party for us for this evening. ment on a comparatively sound basis before handing the reins to Calles, General Serrano, who was regarded as a presidential possibil- iy, was slain in the uprising in lexico City the other day. The “no reelection” cry rected at Obregon, principall: the followers of Gomez. These point to the 1917 constitution which stipulated that a president is di- by tures; sage old fellows they are with broad brimmed hats, low crowned and rakish; with velvet trousers and velvet coats and work- men with gay bands of blue and red about their waists. Here is a fellow from the Ameri- can west in cowboy boots and 10- gallon hat. Here is one of those myriad little -urtyards that dives ick from even the most fashionable street and displays, hidden across a court of cobblestone, a perfume shop with dazzling windows. Here is another courtyard of fountains and trees and a latticed window that cries of romances past and present. Here are buttressed walls and gates that tell of regal past, here is a push cart belt reminiscent of the New York ghetto, and here an out- door market in the very center of a boulevard where you can buy any- thing from two cubes of sugar to a om, terrupted quietly, only the darkening flush on her cheeks betraying her| | Paris, Oct. 10.—If Paris is to be anger and hurt. | described in a word, that word is Bob was striding angrily out of; “Majesty.” the kitchen, the set of his shoulders} Dignity it has and quiet xpressing oOutrage.! and all about is a sense of in t, then Hope, then hus-| ualistie social life, but physically + “That's the! the city is majestic, And it is a I hope you| majesty that at first may escape, be- tirely fooled.” __| cause of all that is colorful and pic- astounded herself, turesque. Stand upon the Mont- back at him. “You are martre hill and look down, with the ue aan nen about my not! snow white minarets of the Sacre bie to go with you as you are! Coy ii gbou ae y’s date with Brue Pat- pais aijeioni creat on. hy are you so jealous of idee Hy everyone that Cherry goes with,! zi ae aan ee that links abe Bob? 4 Hi spite of her anger her at soul ineet nai chat voici ‘ok vi + | bl jesti e broke on a wild note of ap | Spires, majestic lines of old Gothic Ro is *° That Friday evening, when Cher- ty Paris ry was to have her first “date” with Bruce Patton, teacher of dancing by correspondence and new tenant of the small office in Bob’s suite, Bob came home to dinner in the most cheerful mood he had worn for days. “Hello, Dame Lisa,” Bob said, with a tender jest in his voice, as one of his hands tucked in a lock of brown hair that had strayed across her damp forehead. “Surprise! Guess what?” “Klein likes your sketches of the new fur store?” Faith glowed. “You're a clairvoyant,” Bob grinned at her, his hands resting fondly on her shoul- ‘iety ivid- k ” Faith ders as he stood behind her,| Peal. | buildi i i Bibs 21 Bob whirled to face her f, the| buildings, and majestic dwellings| leg of lamb. The whole neighbor- fe cuicbenag Se ec eainciniae: door. “Jealous!” he abel ncaa | that line the banks. The Champs | h sen Serta set lighted. I've got his ‘go ahead,’ and fauy. But his very vehemence was eaion4 id re eee Cains baskets. Re sin vee ee . i : and clos | ivol - in wood janks by. I thought it was only decent to cele- tee eat hand closing about | dens, the owl: the ialeentle scepeeabvatien, wc oc ate y brate tonight. I’ve got tickets for ‘Naughty Nancy,’ the musical com- edy—‘direct from a year on Broad- ’,” he quoted, with a chuckie. if go where you will outside the lurid fronts of the Montmartre, and you | face a dignity of line and archi- | tecture for which “majestic” seems to be the only word. *_* @ How, then, are you to remember that just ahead rise the towers of Notre Damé, or that the long, gay reaches of the Tuileries lead to majestically sprawling old edifices of stone. How, then, can you think of majesty when the world is play- ing so prettly in the front yard and sort of thumbing its nose at the cold dignity of stone? way’, NEXT: Cherry champions Faith, “Oh, Bob!” Faith hastily set the thickened sauce into the warming —_—_______is Old Masters | oven and faced him, tragedy in her | —$ $i g eyes. “I’ve promised to take care of| Stay, stay at home, my hea Hope tonight, so Cherry can go out. Hote sai sea: Didn’t she tell you? She’s dressing} Home-keeping hearts are happiest, now, I suppose—” For those that wander, they know “No, she didn’t have the nerve to not where tell me, I imagine,” Bob said grimly, | Are full of trouble and full of care; tenderness wiped from his lips and} To stay at home is best.® eyes as if by a blight. “No need to ask who the man is. That damned, Yet even as you begin to draw yourself up majestically to fit into the setting, the world that goes by you makes this impossible, The places have majestic antiquity, but GILBERT SWAN. the people have a freedom and a| (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) colorfulness that blots out the back- "ere fAThought | ere is an entire parade of maids and men, arms about each other, | Ao openly kissing on the sidewalk, Weary and homesick and distressed, They wander east, they wander west, WASHINGTON § should never (“nunca”) be ree elected.. The Obregon folks say that this only meant a president couldn’t succeed himself and that, anyway, the last Cong.ess formal- ly interpreted the lav. to permit none-successive reelection. ie an- swer of the opposition is that Obregon’s election might mean a return of the old days of the Diaz dictatorship, although Obregon is a liberal. ety The Calles-Obregon faction had charged that Serrano and Gomez were finan’ : by foreign oil com- panies. Gomez shown marked favoritism to the oil interests dur- ing his Vera Cruz command, but Calles and Obregon were said to favor Serrano:in case it appeared that Obregon can’t make the grade. In the governmet at Washing- ton, there has been one group which favored Obregon and an- other which favored Gomez. Gomez, incidentally, has hinted that he will lead a revolution if he is not clected. Latest advices are may be no more crooked than our standing candidate. One reason is the fact that Mexican elections aren’t like ours. Mexican politicians may be no more crooked than our own, but their methods are cruder and the party in power at Mexico oy is likely to determine the re- sult. Obregon and Morrow ought to get along very well, principally be- cause both of them presumably will be in a mood to compromise rather than to pursue courses of action where‘*rom both sides would lose. Obregon saved himself in the de Ja Huerta revolution only with arms obtained from the United States and although he has opposed the Kellogg policy, he probably will be guided by an intelligent self-in- terest. wink at you as they point to In case the child falls or bumps volume that contains naughty pic-|with the stick protruding between the teeth, into and project, the pointed end may do serious damage throat. run around without serious accidents from their lollipops, but one severe accident may be sufficient cause to look upon the entire tribe of lolli- pops with some suspicion. SN ors ee if Hampton | Se 05 in the Of course, many children and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kopp; inton son were business callers at Wednesday. John Joeb is sporting a new Chev- rolet truck which he purchased re- cently. Frank Sleva was a business call- er at Temvik and Linton Thursday. Joe Fettig of Linton was out in this community Friday. John Joeb and “Ted” and Frank Lawler were hauling grain to Lin- ton with their trucks for Frank Sleva the past week. “Bob” Chesrown left for Grand Forks to continue his school work at the University. Many of the farmers in this vicin- ity are busy digging potatoes. Earl Smith was a Linton caller Saturday. John Herr went to Linton the fore part of the week, bringing home a new Deering corn binder. Miss Laura Kyes left Monday for Chicago where she will resume her school duties at the Chicago univer- sity. This ill be Miss Kyes’ third year in college. Frank Chesrown made a business trip to Linton Saturday, taking in | potatoes and garden vegetables for s, it's Bruce Patton,” Faith aid dully, the joy as dead in her 't as the moment which had pro- And are baffled and beaten and blown about By the winds of the wilderness of doubt; To stay at home is best. Be not wise in your.own conceits. sometimes tripping, sometimes sin; —Romans 12:16. | ing, smiling, carefree and careless. , Here, on the banks of the Seine is the man with the trained birds. He entertains you with their tricks and offers to sell them ever so cheap. Here is the man with the two parakeets, making them jump. from stick to st’ Here is the fellow with the mechanical frogs that jump all over the sidewalk. Here is a sidewalk cafe, with the chatter of voices rising from the tables, and waiters hurrying. about with “cafe cognacs” and “vin ordi- naire.” 3 | Here are the glorious flower markets, with dazzling rows of color. Here is an Arab in native costume and here a Hindu on a balcony in a robe of emerald hue. Here are the old book sellers who line the Seine walls and who will Men are found to be vainer on ac- count of those qualities which they fondly believe they have than of those which they really have.—Voi- ture. TODAY’S PUZZLE Just what is a vegetarian sup- Posed to do about, animal crackers? “That wasn’t no lady,” the Brit- ish bobby might have said of the young woman who told him to dash for Hades the other day, “that was @ countess.” it. i: ‘aith!” Joy shrilled from the din- ing room where she was setting the table. “Are we going to have a spoon dessert or a fork dessert? And will we need the salad forks?” “Salad forks and cake forks,” Faith called out automatically. “Listen, Bob, I’m as sorry as I can be, but I had no idea you would plan Then cay. at home, my heart, and rest; The bird is safest in its nest; Over all that flutter their and fly A hawk is hovering in the sky; To stay at home is best. —Longfellow: Song. wings BARBS I'm awfully tired anyway—” “Been slaving for Cherry all ai ternoon, I suppose,” Bob cut in a grily. “You're always too tired when I want you to go somewhere with me, Damn it all, I want a wife who can sweetheart for an evening, once in a while—” “Bob, that’s nvt fair,” Faith in- f Justajingle > They let the bird out of its cage The cat near threw a fit. And now they’ve sold the bird cage "cause They’ve no more use for it. oo * € . Congress is getting ready convene and probably the first thing they'll do is attack Coolidge’s for- eign policy. We hardly can wait to find out what it is. ; If Gene Tunney goes into the movies we can suggest a title for. his first picture—“Pay, Brother, Pay.” OUR BOARDING HOUSE I HEAR TH’ WOMEN'S, CLUB HAS“TH” DAGGER OUT FOR Yo) MAZOR, \F You RUN FoR DUSTICE AGAIN foun ~\F I WAs You Ip 4] QUIT fx ONCE “THEM DAMES PUTTH” INDIAN, SIGN ON A Guy, HE HITS UP A CAVE AN' GROWS A BEARD, AFTER “HEY GET THRE WITH HIM t= ——s HHEVVe KEPT ZF COUNT OF -TH’ “TIMES Now ERE ON ~TH’ 0B, SEVENTEEN RAIAY DANS, « AN’ FINE ¢ NIGHTS You WERE LOCKED Out AT HOME! I WILL NoT BE SWAYED FROM MY PURPOSE! we T WILL NoT FoRSAKE “THE CITIZENS AT-THIs CRUCIAL PERIOD !~"THEY DEMAND MY SERVICES As SUSTICE FOR ANOTHER TERM, ~~ AND “THEN -Tfo sHow mY APPRECIATION Fore “THE TRUST THE PEOPLE HAVE IN ME, T WILL RUN FOR GOVERNOR, EGAD! = o* * Here’s Dora again! She’s so dumb she thinks the sugar restric- tion bill that the Cuban Senate passed tite other day has something ‘| to do with the butter and egg man. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) or [Daily Health Service | BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine Every so often it is necessary to issue warnings against the old-fash- ioned “all-day sucker.” If this candy is made in a clean factory of good material, if it is agg wrapped before it is sold if it is kept in a sanitary con- dition until the child receives it, it is probably no more harmful up to that time than any other candy that the child may get. ~ The difficulty lies in the fact that it is on a stick and that it does not the lent, 1 ia the. mouth and his family, who are staying there for the school months. Mr. and Mrs, Godfrey Grenz were business callers at Hazelton Satur~ day evening. Gottlieb Grenz and Jake Huber of near Temvi:. were visiting in this community Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Jake Grenz and fam- ily of the Hazelton vicinity were Sunday visitors at the Godfrey Grenz home. o>—<—_—__________—_¢ . ry \ Radio’s Rialto | a By The Associated Press Mrs. William Miske, contralto, widow of the late Billy Miske, St. Paul, boxer, will sing tonight at 7 o'clock over KFOY (285.5) the St. Paul radio station, WCCO, the Twin Cities station, will have a dinner concert at 6:30 p. m., and an orchestra at 9:30 p. m. A one-act play, “The Open Door,” will be heard from WAMD (225.4) Minneapolis starting at 7 p. m. A dance program is on at 10; an enter- tainer at 11, and an organ novelty at 11:15 p.m. ‘i WCAL (236) Northfield, Minn., as an orchestfa at 7 p. m., @ mu- sical selection at 7:30, and a book an by Dr. George Weida Spohn, at ‘ *2 @ From WRHM (260.7) Minneapolis comes a dinner concert at 6; vocal numbers at 8; a health talk by Dr. Walter K. Foley at 8:45 p. m., and dance selections at 9. WHDI (245.8) Dunwoody Institute, jinneay has talks at 8 and 8:20 p, @ reader at 8:40 p. m, know plcay shou sebpanageron BCLOMg wi’ t