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rf = L| PAGE FOUR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1927 WASHINGTON & - - LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER the office. |Ra‘hbone is the man Washington, Oct. 13.—Many_ of|marked for political death. He had us are so excited over the presiden-|the hardihood to oppose Thompson tial show in the big tent that we/in the last Chicago m 7. alty cam- aren’t paying much at’-ntion yet to/paign, he is no longer popular the many attractive sic.-shows pre-|/among. Illinois politicians and it is sented by various state campa' Seains him that Mrs. sick which will also culminate in the 1928 direct her campaign. elections. If she wins in A 8, Not one of these senatorial, a she is virtually assured of election. si ernatorial and congressional Poltical shrewdness dictated Mrs. ick's | McCormick’s decision to run for this UH? formance in Illinois and perhaps | abd office. As a candidate lew will be more portentous. lor governor, she would have had to The announcement that Mrs. Mc-| buck the resuscitated Thompson- Cormick would run for congress-| Small combination with its various the foremost | allied combinations in Cook county and the chances were it Lag idate for an - |ator Medill McCormick is a veteran | office which the mec'ine will not of many campaigns, but now she her and which will give sets forth dn her own ht or the bas as good as Pe ere whic! accom-| strengthen herself panied her husbai into. the Senate. Alresdy THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Hide and Seek a Bismarck Tribune P gated, the utmost precaution must be taken to} safeguard these little lives. But it doesn’t all rest upon the drivers. An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S O1DEST NEWSPAPER Musical Foolishness ‘ribune Company,| Some bright person has just come forth with. @ postoffice at|the idea that a world-wide contest be started among musicians to see which one can supply \the best ending to Schubert’s Unfinished Sym- |phony. $1.20; The Schubert centenary committee has sup- 7.20 ported the plan and is offering prizes totaling 6.90 / $20,000 to the various winners. 00; Now comes word that Ossip Gabrilowitsch, jconductor of the Detroit symphony orchestra, 399) has resigned his place on the centenary com- "mittee because of its plan. . 1,80; Says Mr. Gabrilowitsch: taking is undignified and inartistic. Moreover, jit is entirely superfluous. This, to me, seems Press like adding a pair of arms to the Venus de ly entitled to pce | Milo.” Ispatches credited to/ And Mr. Gabrilowitsch is right. Schubert’s < tl : 4 ‘ a aoa | Unfinished Symphony is a great work of art. other matter herein are} Any attempt at finding a suitable ending for it |is about as sensible as trying to rewrite Shake- ~~ | speare’s plays so that they have more ap- : the Bismare * Bismarck, N. D., end entersd ai y bet &s sccond e!ses mal. + Me a Q Subscription Rates Payable In A « Dally by garrier, yor ycar . ‘Sy mall, pur year, (!n Bismarck) Dally dy mail. per year, (in state ovtside Blemare’t) . by mail, outsld North Dakota . i Publisher ‘ance “Such an under- Member Audit Bureau of ii Member of ‘The Associ sh The Associated Press is excli “ geo for republication of credited . datives anied her husband. . ¢ Renin Savin CONBANY. eal to the average person of 1927. Great . see has declared his ne b CHICAGO” ; DETROIT ‘Works of art are enduring, and the ea aad cea : Tower Bldg. é ReeeIT Kresge Bldg. | finished PU is included in this classifi- sp 2 ‘ |. PAYNE, BURNS MIT 5 jeation, Any attempt to remodel or patch them between Mrs. and Gov- { NEW YORK - + + Fifth Ave. Bldg is not only foolish, but also inartistic, as ernor Small but Small would not (Official City, State and County Newspaper) j Make Fires Passe \ 3 Martinez, California, a town of 8,000 popu-; ; 1 jation, has a fire loss record that leads not) trate the other day fined a married couple be- * only the state of California, but perhaps the|cause they had a slanging match on the out- | ° |Mr. Gabrilowitsch points out. | eae oppose her publicly in the face of =e jompson’s stand. But although Wedded Folk ino tical knows, is the tade'uark of ‘Dilgeis A crusty old bachelor of an English magis- - ms 26 ae “J tities, especially fin Chicago Mrs, RR a ae n e ence { substituted “for her” father, Mark|ca:. avoid its blighting effects. Hanna, at the age of 16 in a rear latform speech during the McKin-| Although wise enoigh not to | Tey campsign start without come assurances of campaign in 1896. ere is significance in the fact'regular support, Mrs. McCormick that she is the first woman to runjis going to mske a fighting, inten- for national office on a state-wide| sive campaign the state, as be vote ina large industrial state. Lenin ounty and mie wil uniniti United States by a wide margin. In the year | side of their home. _He said the proper place ended August 1, last, the total loss was but|for that kind of thing was inside the house, E $165—less than three cents per capita. with doors bolted and windows closed, so that le: ii A record like this is worth emulating and|it would nof disturb the neighbors. Y can be emulated. It proves that fire loss is| He would have done well to remember an old * not a natural evil, impossible to do away with,| French wheeze which runs something like this: but an entirely unnecessary one that can be| Betrothal period: eviry often as she can. a . 1 intelligently controlled to the point where it] He talks. She listens, ‘There is even more i cleHlancg a revelation to some of 4 practically disappears. Today, what Martinez! Honeymoon period: ig tt eee Liongh tes org Conemls Sten ead hae’ compete: “eke t. has done is considered remarkable, and it should] She talks. He listens. a . Whether she|yected to be unique, She plans » be. But it should not be long before every town Ae s right along “4 co.apletely to avold | pe sone ities ity i inimi fy) fe i 's lis remains unless forced n : ae iy the country can show minimized e neighbors listen. be saan, bat there igvmore han ‘ xe ve cael he ie” % the | 4 Fire loss is almost wholly caused by care- 7 ang suspicion irs. McVormi rdhes oe (afieied rege arte) lessness. Educate and Lt me veel and Editorial Comment attempt to suit the voters with a we will have more records like that of Mar- [Editorial Con 2 = Anne *"@ Bes adie ae Hs tinez. Hindenburg at 80 Faith and Bob found Aunt Hattie _— wwencing on fl man to have “rthere inver y reason to believe take to make every "et wowera ‘ “i ee a (Milwaukee Journal) in the living room, sitting bolt up-| to live up to a wife who just hangs| Verdun, Oct. 18.—Ten years after-|that Deneen wil’ be pushed out of|see that she understand: their ‘ A Marked Man ,__| Senator Moses recently advised his party| tight in a straight-backed, uncom-| on his words, trembles when he| Ward we all got out of automobiles| the picture when is careata lta beraastty eoscecatel at tales tee © Albert B. Fall, former secretary of the in-| colleagues that, in the selection of a candidate| !ettable chair, a work basket filled| frowns, and weeps with delight when! and stretched, relat ts Cormick agit she lio del pon bee = bern “om ¢ terior, may be a free man, but today he stands! for president, it would be necessary to consider Cilaneal Sonor Eenged ieee can ee you can’t! We looked about at the gentle Fun, would face e terrific vattle for |and ‘hypocr Mare among ‘her Pan BAS = marked by the highest court of the land as @/not only next year, but 1932 as well. With] spectacled eyes frowning intently] of humor, but I reckon the Lord] SloPes where the great pockmarks}the seat. | | Tote frien, Mrs. MeCormick re- ; man who took an unjust advantage of the Peo-/ihat thought in mind he declared Herbert! upon the stocking she was darning.| didn’t have too much humor handy|of war still disfigure the face of a! ay. ae evo SHlinois 25-| cently ed that she hoped to | ¢ Ple of the United States while holding public) Hoover to be the logical Republican choice. As-| ‘Has Hope been good?” Faith| When he made wives.” lovely countryside. So this was the) men Ay ares; Yates and Rathbone, wage a bur ss pitt ag If i " office, merely for the furtherance of his own|suming President Coolidge definitely clim-| ®8ked, as she bent to kiss ber aunt.| | “Marriage seems to be humorous| bloody sector in a war that, some-|one of whem must go out if Mre.|she does and-. , her performance & The supreme court decision confirms what| qualified hy age to be available for renomina-| “Seems like E never eee tie baby accustomed to Aunt Hattie’s acidu-| Pee” i rhe aos a vbe! receive ™ opera in recent | , the newspapers have long heen saying: that tion at the close of a first term, although others| that she ain’t asleep. What do you| lous tongue to be offended. “I sup-| Had it not been for the white) /®™&e = : Fall acted without a single thought of benefit- aa ail ‘ ans ee ai -|feed her on—onion tea? Weil, Ij pose you would advise me to fall|monotony of crosses upon hills the under consideration are still"in the early or h ildi ed out of love with Bob so that he and i x +. “Here, folks, is where}to stimulate the breathing and the ope you rea gs sah heii Rai diicthscoulbtbesnonecenatocabies countryside would have seemed dedi. 4 » ing “If you fell out of love with him| ated to the memory of forgotten aa to come any time.” you couldn’t endure the sight of|SPrings and wildflowers. There is} First it was Meaux. Is it possible “You're a dear, Aunt Hattie,”| him,” Aunt Hattie retorted wisely.|a regularity to the rows of graves|the Germans were once so close to Faith said warmly. “But you really| “Nor he the sight of you. But if/that tells you how time has sped| Paris and all the world stood trem-|4 ==’ mustn't strain your eyes darning! you could just let up a little on him,|.. . time for efficiency and burial|bling? Remember the taxicab army|" 740 Sovernment of Russia has | Cherry's stockings. We all spoil/ quit looking at him with dying-|and landscape gardening; time for|that saved the eity? Then it’s|ss04 Leon Trotsky again. We can’t her.” calf eyes.” new branches to burst upon over-| Chateau teeta? , after a long) remember the but understand | “Sixteen pairs!” Aunt Hattie] “Aunt Hattie,’ Faith took the| hanging trees; time for new life to|ride through a farm Pocsaepe peony that Troteky usually gets fired on a snorted, “And every last one of| plunge desperately, “do you think) appear upon the hillsides and grow|the white crosses of Belleau Woods. | coturday night. ‘em needing a needle and thread.| Bob is still in love with” Cherry?|old and die; time for all that another | Belleau Woods, where today the see You trot on to bed, Bob. Me and] The way he looks at her! And he| summer has born to die in a radiant| trees rustle as gently as epring rain The American people spend ten Faith wants to talk, and when an| acts like a crazy person when she’s|lavender and rose with the coming|falls upon the roof. At the fringes | tines as much money for sugar as old maid and a wife get to pow-| Out with another man, as she is to-| of autumn. of the wood you stop and shiver,| ¢.. books, some statistician has an- wowing, it ain’t no place for a hus-| night—” ° chit that is if you have.an iapinatiog. nounced. The pantry is mightier band. Scoot!” “Guess he'll always have a little] In the Rue Auber, Paris, a fellow| It isn’t hard to story, ing the people of this country; without a single| middle 60s. * thought of doing something which might react| ‘The fact that this is counting chickens be- y favorably on the interior department; without! fore the eggs are laid may be disregarded. The n &single thought of the solemn duties of the of-| senator's method of declaring for Hoover gives v fice which he had sworn to perform faithfully.| prominence to a matter which politicians have D Whether or not he is ever given a prison talked of for many years, although it is doubt- term, Mr. Fall stands as a marked man today. | ful if the matter of age ever has had any real y He has betrayed his country. The supreme influence in determining a candidate's availa- le court, in pointing out his misdeeds, has set on} pility to head his ticket. him the stamp of “grafter,” and nothing he} As a reply to Senator Moses the friends of tan ever do wiil erase it. Hughes, Lowden and Dawes have only to point ae to Germany, where President Hindenburg is Bonding Dry Agents just celebrating his 80th birthday. In spite m= jaunt. out more, Faith. You know I’m glad = 5 jedéto [than the brary. | | G Mandatory bonding of dry agents has been] of his age and the energy he has expended up- : di ” Alls i te d thi * proposed to congress. Adherents of the measure/on the detail of one of the most trying admin-| 4 A{'s", Bo Peet a agli erri Aunt HEStten, coneabod etch pour kana) cemanbigg ce the ba An ‘eastern editor says the aver- * claim that, under the bonding system, all pos-|istrative jobs in Europe, the Associated Press| little smile because of the kiss he| relentless honesty. “No use beating|tlefields. . . . See the battlefields.” § ee: wn prare it and reise driver would rather lose his g_ sibility of over-zealousness and recklessness on/reports that “on the threshold of 80 he dis-| had given her, Faith sank wearily| about the bush, It’s your job to see ane and the cores from en ee eee care- Fight to vote than his right to oper- 3 the part of dry agents would be ended. plays a vigor which might be envied by many] into a corner of the sofa, pillowing! that he never does get her—or| American ‘press: a de 2 ate acar. The distinction seems to a There have been cases in the east where out-|a younger man.” The report illustrates his| ter head ona clon chuted are ren ae Abe ith bal aba shaves t he uses his car, ir 4 A a A sa ; a . <=; | in cushion, She could feel her I) rages have been committed by federal agents,' condition with an anecdote about a friend solici- Sees ith i it If marriage could be disso! » but in the northwest this has not been truc.|{ous concerning the president’s nerves. Hin-| Bob Lilie Heese ee NEXT: Aunt Hattie discourses) fail to see lero He from | dang! easily as business partoershipe bald te Administration of the prohibition law in this} denburg replied that he whistles when he feels| less to keep up the pretense of being| further on love and marriage. the Place de VOpere are cthes ante (nothing. Ei the married couples in the country m gection of the country has been carried on nervous, but he has never been known to pel aved an Nana es (Copyright, 1927, NEA Bervice, Inc.) ing cars, mesing ‘tan caauinsly in| bloody Verdun, age yar oy mre a6 or. earnestly and relentlessly, but in a sane man-! whistle, Naar aes ar every direction. Tourist’ agencies Lewis, who'd 7 } yi ner. There is no record of prohibition agents} If there was any doubt two years ago about ees dntensli ne tee Pallonotinee | Justajingle arrenge.qaviens seaerares, ceed sitll shat senedee ee Sneaes silica 1 5 vaca acaaanad s in seis section “4 We Pint ever having vio-|the wisdom of placing a man so advanced in AcWhat’s the, matter, with you2”|@—————————# yoy erte end), ea arte Rio prop epotoegety seam comare i lated the code of their department. years at the head of the republic, it has long} Aunt Hattie demanded in a voice sloping hillsides and white crosses Now their save 3) 2 But to insure scrupulous observance of the) been dispelled. The Hindenburg of 80 has be- hoes hepshnes® <i BOE nS ue walked enihroumt the murky standing at eternal attention. And off feoms fo be esting fost eee _| a Code all over the country, the proposed bonding|come the hero of civil government that the| ts me likea wife who's come down|., No brightness was about. Sen spe Teenie Tae a8 the ‘and shakes efiggics || bi system would be of benefit. Its endorsement; Hindenburg of 70 was of military prowess. with a spell of them ‘my-husband-|He, crashed into a pole and then =| Drs Ct You ramen pera unable to com-| , if, this election graft keeps up, ‘| ir py S. B. Quale, partjeast prohibition agent,| America can hardly fix an age deadline for Hei avenniecanxstance ante Aiea sary rame Pals baa ‘ peng yell have to start appointing H ‘ indicates that it has the support of the prohi-|the presidency, even as an unwritten prece- ‘aith’s eyelids quivered, but she Along the sloping hillsides groups| - about, perhaps! (Copyright 1 7 | - i ition department, in this section of the coun-|dent, without the humiliating acknowledgment ae et one iets pr ia f A Thought J qrander, (Abd when they compares heed ond Fgh " a try at least. that our public men are inferior in stamina to]” “old maids have a chance to do Mee a funeral ee cvaree ot aa they are The Controversy Continues The controversy about prize fight films still continues. poenas have been issued in New York for eight individuals who are reported as hav- ing had some connection with the bringing into New York state of the pictures, now shown at & number of theatres jn the metropolitan area. The district attorney has made the state- ment that he intends to prosecute all violators) of the government law to the fullest extent. He points out that, regardless of whether or not the law is a sensible one, it is on the statute books and must be observed. In this he is right, of course, but that does not prevent the urging on congress of a repeal of the law. It must be enforced, now, because! it is a law, but congress should repeal it just, as soon as possible. The very inconsistency of the attitude the government is forced to take} on the matter of prize fighting is proof enough that something should be done to remove from out statute books a Jaw which serves no good and is, in fact, only an excuse for B hing at the government. Young Lives Thrown Away population of 2 small city. Every year 7.000 children in the United|strictly. States are mowed down to death ‘n the streets| whether corporate or individual, believe them- by motor cars. It is like wiping out the entire}selves bound by the laws of hospitality to fur- i nish their guests with liberal and lively pota- Reckless drivers are to be blamed. But there| tions. are other factors, too, and not the least of them|dulge, hosts set it before their guests. the beer-drinking German. One Corporation’s Respect For the Law (Minneapolis Journal) Recently one of the large corporations en- gaged in the manufacture of motorcars enter- tained two hundred newspaper guests at its proving grounds in Detroit. Naturally, it was eager to entertain them with abounding hos- pitality. And yet the head of the corporation in his little welcoming talk to the guests, said something like this: You are most welcome. We want you to enjoy and profit by your trip to the ut- most. We shall leave nothing undone to that end. But there is the matter of liq- uor to be considered. You are free to drink, if you like and as you like. We shall not criticize or blame any of you who do. But let me make it plain that our company will not buy or furnish one drop of intoxicants of any sort for you, while you are our guests. As Americans we be- lieve in obedience to the law, and we shall not be party in any way to violation of the Volstead Act. And the announcement was lived up to Too often on such occasions hosts, Even when they do not themselves in- The is parental neglect. Children should be trained |results are sometimes deplorable—but it is all carefully to stop and look before dashing across|done in the sacred name of hospitality. @ thoroughfare. days as the railroad tracks, They should not be allowed to play in the|that a very large one, whose responsible offi- streets which have become as dangerous these|cers believe the statute laws of the country They should be}more sacred than the laws of so-called hospital- It is refreshing to find one corporation, and it politeness, too, toward drivers. Often|ity. Here is an example to be followed in all we have seen impudent youngsters crossi street in the middle of a block and by titude or words defying drivers to hit them. There seems to be a trait in all of us to “beat|Many a host off because he across the street.” If we see a chance |guest “ on the|such gatherings whether inspired by business at-| motives, by social objects or whatever. Many a guest drinks, because a host offers. thinks his Both should take their stand lew. Lee should ie eeerite Car onan Sage Sere te on respect for ne automobile street,| refuse, the to offer, other of it. ete age u bap repo the desire it ! Until that : congte-|day, let us'as Americans observe it faithfully. law can be service. Render therefore to all their|They walk around in that sort of dues—Romans, 13:7. lost fashion that strangers have rT when they are in a soanas and you, Faith, is that you never let! A tender conscience is a stronger |embarrassing land. From the seats Bob forget for a minute that you're! obligation than prison. — Thomas|of automobiles the raucus voice of crazy in love with him. It must be] Fuller. the spieler spurts the sing-song a lot of crowing, first and last,” Aunt Hattie observed with appar- ent irrelevance. “Trouble with SOOT MATOR, ,~NOUR OPPOSITION CANDIDATE, ~ A DIMMY!~ 38 ~~ Nous CAN SEE FoR V'SELF, SJ -THEN'RE OUT To GET YouR SCALP, AN” MOST C4 Nour tant wee NOU GET-TH’ THOUG THATS WW BACK OF “THIS STUNT Zee T CLAIM (T's A BIGGER Dic THAN “Tl PANAMA CANALS I KNow We PARTY THAT AS IN) BACK OF His CALUMAY, AGAINST ME tw EGAD,~ I WILL-TAKE jin ihe H i ebout It's easy to toll when a girl is wild