The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 11, 1929, Page 4

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__ THURSDAY, APRIL 11, PAGE FOUR__ ” The Bismarck Tribune An independent Newsprper STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ‘the Loa Herve ecu td Bu- ica’= share in world shipping grows and becomes more Profitable, there will be another rebirth of shipbuilding along our shores. REAL HUMANITARIANISM Agencies dealing with the blind, the deaf and other disabled persons have long recognized the need of em- ployment for such people. Public consciousness of the Problem was developed with the return of soldiers and sailors whose injuries in the war made assistance for Uf i Suascription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year them necessary. Daily by mail, per year, A man who is blind, who has lost an arm or leg, who Wily by aes pet oat, has heart disease, or is not capable for any reason of Dany ty eat oman ot ores doing any ordinary day's work, may with proper train- ing become an asset to his community, and with con-> — genial work he will not be a burden to himself nor to . ; 3 if weal society. To give him training and to find him a job JA]FTer weve FINISHED HELPING CRUSH bala come within the scope of welfare agencies. MEXICOS “BANDITRY <-- In any job of this kind it is essential to have the con- fidence of the employer. Finding jobs for people who are weil and strong is impossible to an agency which gets ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| ® reputation for sending out applicants who are un- republication of all news dispatches credited to it |suitc1 to the prospective occupation or who fail to be in this newspaper and @180 | of use. A common defect in systems for the employment of the handicapped ts lack of consideration for the em- Ue aetna ner oped re hla Ployer's attitude. To help the applicant seems to be the sole thought. In the end it must be perceived that the Fereign Representatives interest of the employer must also be served. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Employers who make a studied effort to give the crip- any : NEW YORE .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. les and aged workers jobs not requiring able-bodied | swearing.”—P. E. Crowley, president cHICAGO BiETWOES | tgs ais paticbuaiid’s wuasae palo ene aha cate , a ; : of the New York Central Railroad. Tower Bldg. Kreege BSS. | ing true humanitarianism, 7D (Official State and Coun‘y Newspaper) = INSIGNIFICANT 7 XS WF) )1- 3 Rev, J. A. C. Mackellar says that this WHAT THE FLAME MEANS Earth dwellers, laboring under the delusion that they y : Custom is HOW a TINE OF. the pase ‘Whenever people feel some great truth that they can- | and their interests are of vast importance in the scheme ~~ 7 It used to be an old Scotch saying not quite put into words, they clothe it ina symbol. The | of t'.> universe, will derive little satisfaction from the : 4 F 2 that, “A wedding wasna near sic a deeper their feeling is, the more striking and effective | calculations of Dr. Harlow Shapley, director of Harvard “i the symbol becomes. observatory. These calculations, recently made public, A few days ago American newspapers got photographs | Should do much toward reducing inflation of the human of the funeral of Marshal Foch, They were unusual |¢go acd should serve to demonstrate that the most pictures; and they showed how a deep belief of the | important of man’s activities are to the universe, in a French—e belief that is shared by men and women of | material point of view, somewhat as the penny to our all nations—has sought expression in a mystic, poetic | $20,000,000,000 war debt. The earth is not the center of the universe, nor is it th the [even an important part of the celestial system, physi- an eer ivetbe tte chimed ase wie in {Cally considered. In fect, we are 2,000 light years, or the background. By the casket flickered torches; and, approximately 300,000,000,000,000,000 miles as the crow in the foreground, was the bright, glowing “eternal flies, from that center, according to Dr. Shapley's cal- fy a oy 4 SQ Sd = WE SUGGEST THAT MEXICO” BE PREVAILED UPON TO HELP US SUPPRESS SOME QF OURS! i Sk ||A.W.LUCAS 0. » V/, ; Bismarck’s Busy Style and Shopping Center flame’ burns ceasing ms into which to climb, as did Aaron| @@err7 ZT ES SSSS ” without at the tomb of the |“ Gi , meg Soldier. ans If it were possible to draw a map of the universe to be Everett, 69, of Indianapolis, Ind. ted Ap bop lcalgr tat ‘This eternal flame is more than a bit of fire that | ale, the earth would occupy relatively a less important He was missed from his son's home ; FOS Af ve burns on a shrine of patriotism. It stands for something Place than any little cross-roads village on a map of the where he resided and was found in "| : that is not often put into words, Even the body of a world. And yet there are possible standards of relative his hollow tree where hé had lived 497 Ages marshal of France, for the moment, took = secondary |™Portance other than physical dimensions, and the for three days on a pocketful of gin- | \udubadeaDetuatnatneatiad isles z ; place beside it, It was greater than Foch, greater than | Jarvard observatory figures will not shake the belief "ALLENE SUMNER, {2° snaps. LINCOLN’S LAST SPEECH } WII 4 aa 1 in the minds and hearts of millions that the stars were ‘There is more here than the mere Sixty-four years ago today Abra- , Bq 4 Back of it there are all the armies that marched to created for our guidance and pleasure, and the sun and| Holding ne two ate fe eae story of an old man who wanted | ham Lincoln, from ‘the steps of the war between 1914 and 1918; all the armies, and all the moon to give us light and heat. hone : pid on see gate) Peace and quiet and had to run away white house, delivered his last public from the radio, even if he had to ex- Prayers and tears and aches and hopes that went with them to death. He had quarreled| change a good home for a hollow | *4dtess to the American people. them. The flame burns for them—a symbol of the JACK RABBITS’ SPEED with his wife. Whether he killed her | tree. It’s the old, old story of age} 172 Occasion was informal and the » r speech wi tem} cous, i Face’s profound belief that in spite of all its senseless} How fast does a jack rabbit travel when he really puts |illdren in revenge or through in-/trying to live with youth; the old | svc u,wes xtemporancous. General |§ his mind to it? sane despair is not clear. problem of what shall we do with the fury, its destruction, its insane violence and its frightful | DIS | Mark Twain used to assert that the|° It’s merely one more human inter- ldahen. theyAlke ios the! ways of spelta best eal ee ova begat don . cost, the great war really meant something and accom- | Jack rabbit could outdistance a desert gale if he chose | est story proving that mate love is outh any more than youth likes their ler jul " plished something, and was not simply an appalling |‘©. Of all the animals of the plain, he said, only the usually infinitely more possessing and | ways, it occurred to several hundred Wash- ingtonians that it would be a fitting laiiek des setsiehs ‘all the enceifices were in vain. coyote could give the jack rabbit a race. The ease with epee dager pen it SAL Leye, Ed Reina: tribute to the gaunt, worn man in ee Eid ot se up after te ee teed int ath tics | Aistsnced one of BADE Twalnrs tect hone epee ay | Specialy tn the case of a man. ””'| a4adame Ferdinand Focn was voted |e, White Rouse to cal on him early ‘where did not rise up after the war and fling all their = ‘Twain's best dogs apparently left ** * | an annual pension of $4,000 jusb a day Seg " ; tulations, military machines on the junk pile. Surely, if anything | ® @¢ep impression on the famous humorist’s mind. JUST HER GAME? or so after the funeral of her great PTT reanonke to their noisy ; could ever convince the race that war is an insane folly,| A Westerner recently was driving along a country road| Some schools of modern mental ! husband, Le Marcehal of France. It| acclamations _ b: ay ‘1 outside ; ‘the Worlé War should have done it. It would have been | i a0 auto when a jack rabbit popped up in front of him | Science are attempting to say, how- Fan aia terns So thet oUF | and ‘speaking to them briefly on the | Snly natural ifthe people of all mations had declared: || Sno Bevan loping along just ahead of his car. For er'she‘maternal imtinee is se omach | ist Pension to Mie, Woodrow Wilson, | ubject, of Tesonstruction. He foe “No matter what may happen, we will never, never let | Several miles it kept this up, staying in front without | heftier than the paternal, is all un-|Zmotional France and cautious eet to deolde whether the |% ourselves in for anything like that again. Nothing on |*!lort even when the car reached a-apeed of 35 miles | proven; that: it’s just one more at-| America are well illustrated by this southern states were ever gut of the art: is worth it, We will find some better way of |@" hour. At last it turne@ deide—not winded, but simply | tempt of the female to avoid econom- woe Ea hich atti- | U2!0n, 50 long as they were brought | settling things.” satiated with the game. Se ni Besa eae aap male tude is wisest? ‘Somehow I aa more esis into “proper relationship with But they did not. Marshal Poch, greatest commander | _ 50 we have that much of a gauge at least. Thirty-| staying at home ant caring for the| interested in’ pensions granted | “ringing themselves safely at home, | § of the greatest war in history, goes to his grave mourned | “¥¢ miles an hour, for a rabbit, is no mean speed. And | child because she loves it most. | Widows of $1500-a-year governmental | i, “weuke “ne utterly immaterial j by milli His body lies by the 1 flame; and | CVidently the creature had more in reserve. To which argument, many stay-at- | employes than to widows of those in| whether they had ever been abroad, home, child-rearing ladies will prob- ! the high places of earth who seem to all of France, saluting reverentiy, renews the kind of ahiy sale pyres frie Le "| automatically accumulate ® personal Lincoln said. ‘ emotion that makes war possible. Some people talk without apparent strain, and some | like to swap places for a while, and| fortune @s they accumulate their | ats’ ave ie eee es assassin: |3 ated, and the difficulties of recon- ‘What does it mean, then? Simply this: that although | 5#¥¢ ® reputation for cleverness, let ‘HIM’ try the baby-tending!” fame. struction, more difficult in many ways | ¢ the race may be blind and stupid, it is also indomitable. zs & ry than the difficulties of the war itself, It has @ éetermination and an endurance that can, in| Winning an argument by calling a friend narrow- _ LADY TARZAN | BARBS fell onto more belligerent, shoulders. 7 time, conquer everything. minded doesn't count. Speaking of babies, an elephant. If you want a thing hard enough, you get it. And if ‘When @ woman looks her best she finds what she is that the World War was not utterly useless—as the | *f?- turned to Berlin to tell a story of dis- | are taking a new course in cooking woman iving with a colony of apes. "| eit peawie. Sinayiy a nee ” hosiery is all that it a Col » Is ible somel aS n “Shi q i Saar ae, ae | mms ne . poets rtscan aiioctom, nario |f penta le r, a o the gutteral ape sounds for a lan-| A Connecticut woman is on trial| “The economic pressure on the pretends to an anne : guage, and quite convinced the hunter | for murder on the charge of having | modern wage-earner is such that the |$ of beauty, an article of necessity—made to that she had been stolen from her | given her husband gas. When there's | American husband, however willing, ; 5 3 4 cradle ky apes, or hurled into the| a falling out, girls, the best thing to | finds it difficult to support even a give the utmost satisfaction. 4 forest by cruel parents, and brought | give the boy friend is the air. childless wife in the state of life sis * . rr “4 up by the apes much in the manner ccm that she desires. As a consequence | % In addition it contains that clever “Slipper of Romulus and Remus and the/ A Chicago woman offered a con-| married women are entering indus- | i caikat x ‘ wolves, ductor a transfer that was 36 years|try and business by the hundred Heel” which makes all ankles appear slimmer ‘What a movie, wot a movie! Here}old. Just like a woman to stand | thousands complete eco- . , . should be some sort of answer to the} there all that time and be sure the of thelr hus- and trimmer. i ; old question of -whether it’s heredity | car would come. bands.” — Mrs. Beatrice Forbes-Rob- | / or environment that counts! ertson Hale, feminist, author and lec- bie. ie * * * iar Oliver Lodge says real eft: turer. ae In appreciation of the good work that is being HOLLOW TREE PAPA ciency is consistent wit uty ‘ i iness and ‘While not a few people get rather | that ugliness is consistent with waste.| “A church is not a political party, y done in this yee gine by > ‘Women's Bus awearied of the radio in this day} At that rate, what a profligate Lon |nor a convenient social club, nor yet|%| Professional club we offer this Hose as an ——— Education is almost as expensive as ignorance. — It is very easy to rise in your own estimation. All the world likes a liker. forecast. The “new cooperation” referred to began several years ago and in the last year or so has broadened re- markably, Indeed, there is at present such an intimate Uaison between the various distribution departments of many lines of business that it is difficult to say precisely ‘where the wholesaler’s interests leave off and those of the retailer begin. Distribution has been one of the knottiest problems business has had to face. The cost of placing the manu- Editorial Comment when they play everywhere all the @ contrivance for keeping ex Chaney ts. ploded factured product in the ultimate consumer's hands has ate ae ree | Hn Pe avenbete hes a olla Seen si CORT gE Mae NRA: Beryien Soe) : | SunseNetions teal Maeda 6 ; Se } ) ‘ been decried universally. Unquestionably, the price of investigation for the : . un ucia ; many articles in common use has been out of proportion home 4 Special | Friday and Saturday |} of this week only at > Ln EGAD, JASON, MY YEARS IN YZ SURE, AHTLL Do IT, MISTAH Y Y MATOR Sa AN? AH KIN ‘USE Hy A iL EXTRA SUGAR, Too /~ G »~AH CAN'T BE DECEIVIN’.. PEOPLE MUCH LONGER, Goud?’ AROUN? SINGLIN? Bor WASHERS IN MAH: PocksT “TRYIN To MAKE FoLKs THuLK<’ 11'S MONEY fu Y'KNOW > THE ARMY HAVE MADE ME VERY RESERVED IN PASSING OUT PRAISE OR COMPLIMENTS To A PERSON, w BUT You ARE AN EXCELLENT VALET Suu IN FACT, A The BEST I HAVE HAD % Date /- + UM- Ms ~~ YES mc OH SAY, JASON, ~ BY THE WAY, MRS. HOOPLE WILL Soo) BE DOS HER sprite AW NEARLY 6oT CAUGHT TH: HoUSE- CLEANING, ~~ AND I WANT OTHER NIGHT, wo FRIEND You To TAKE CARE OF THE Russ, SAYS,."SA6oN, You ~ WINDows, AND WoopWoRK / uu. “OF COURSE, I WILL SEE THAT You ARE WELL PAID after Saturday evening they will be SL95apair, BECOMING AN AUTOMATON (New York Herald-Tribune) Thirty subway and elevated This is a Sheer-Ghiffon Hose, silk’ to the'top, silk |% Patronize “Aunt Lucia” and buy. “Aunt Lucla’s | ) e * hunter in the Kameruns, whatever | ® : ; St Mt ¢ “ row? er? wherever they are, recently re-} Army officers at Fort Sam Houston S : sing neete

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