The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 24, 1929, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, 1929 2 2 was the part of the house where the family was to have The Bismarck Tribune Bc ne: readangn My ob tes Eee. beobens Lach leephsterdts (4 ‘Equalization’ That IS Needed! THE STA1 E'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ”/ 7 marek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs A \ ‘as second class mail matter. \dtime spaciousness ministering to pride George D. Mann ............... Presidest and rublisher tlawed by that master economist known as Sucscrivtion Rates Payable tn Advance carrier. . Dally by tall FAMILY REUNIONS om Daily by mail, Family ties are said not to be as close as they used to as little water as Lome i be, and yet many families are having reunions where a in the thick aluminum Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota ----::++*" "| iarge number of near and distant relatives are gathered does not require any water in the Weekly by mail. together. Interest in genealogical research is said to be ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for increasing, and many people want to learn who their ‘Weekly by mail. outside of North Dakota, see ancestors were and where they came from, ‘and the desire per year ....... ac ceaposesonsars ancesesties eee ‘< Member Aceh ‘sot ‘don bedi - members of one’s old family tribe will never An obstacle in the way of such associations is created Associated Press The Aiscitatso Pree ia sahudively entitied to the use | by the scattering of families all over the country. Where for republication of all news dispatches creditea to it|a family formerly settled down in its home town or or not otherwise credited in ray peneler iso | nearby, the present generation is likely to scatter all over the loca! news ot spontaneous origin publ'ster herein | the iand, and some may go to foreign nations. Yet as herein i ae oo ee en ere ee people travel more easily than formerly, many may come #8 a i : i that will == from distant points when the tribe holds its powwow. thing to art to- chy Dar cheng It may be said that the tie that holds these distant food on hetieced G. LOGAN ‘ANY relatives together is not close, since the people who as- able to continue CHICAGO ee ee DETROM | Semble in an annual family gathering may never meet Neve Ae foods Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg | elsewhere and may not feel any particular congeniality therefore —\—_——___......_._— | of temperament. And yet anything rooted so deeply in nergy for (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) old traditions as the ties of family relationship must still of energy : SE EeNAEN Dcaaeaie acimeen® 3 be much of a power. DID ‘TIGER’ SEEK PERSHING SCALP? Back in old history people looked to their families for Another curtain has been raised on the back-stage| protection. ‘Tribe fought against tribe, and if you were proceedings of the World war in its final days, when | sttacked and your safety assailed, your government might American participation was winning the weary struggle | not be able to do anything for you, but your kinsmen and slaughter of four years, and a bitter controversy | would rally and beat off the tribe that menaced you. probably is in fomenting as the result of steps to pub-| nose old times of tribal warfare are happily gone for- lish a book embodying revelations by the late Marshal | ever But the members of a family tribe now can reflect Foch to his private secretary, Raymond Recouly. that they no doubt share certain traits handed down These revelations present the attitude of Premier | trom common ancestors. Hence they should have ideas when e othe! im} nt elements of congeniality that run in lt lection from disposition of Marshal Foch as supreme commander of reopening peng ini yn gs OF rn — | } incl actin aeaait the allied forces. Heretofore it has been supposed and Y assumed that thereupon all was harmony in the ranks VIEWPOINTS OTHER LINES OF INDUSTRY °... nooven messace of the allies. But it now is represented that there was one note _ Of discord and it was between Marshal Foch and the ‘When you were 18 years old you were a man, but you were very much an animal. How sweetly your muscles functioned! You could run and jump and wrestle and any of us if the pot of gold was ever “Tiger.” The premier is described as on the point of really attained? It is this hankering kicking up @ row over General Pershing commanding box with the best of them, and you delighted in your for the something more which may the American force. So says Recouly. He quotes Mar- physical development. You were a pagan. You hung- lie around the corner that gives life shal Foch as his authority in private conversations be- | ered for adventure. And aes @ fellow mortal dis- pte Si aac tween them after the war. pleased you greatly you said: “I'd like to have one good vy woman = UVF - el = Clemenceau is represented os considering appeal to| mash at his mouth—Just one. I'd knock it around to ee eee or woman may make that success a SSS President Wilson for the removal of Pershing from com- | Where he could bite himself on the neck.” stepping stone to some greater heart's} SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR (salsify), mallow, kale, zucchini, Loren endive, alligator pear, ripe “ ves. These foods may be used either cooked or uncooked as you desire. I suggest that you use not over three vegetables at any one meal and that you use at least one uncooked vege- table to one or two cooked vegetables. For instance, this would be a good De FB . h up to that time} 5 the years passed you lost illusions, teeth, hair and desire, and fortunate is he to have! ‘Thirty-one years ago today Spain | satection: 5 Mae au ttik-twa ale caine ose brilliant | Vigor, but you retained your intolerance of opposition. Texas a one! nner geo yetiel on the babar oon * 2. cm . ® publ answer to resolutions adopted = vietorles. Chateau Thierry, St. Mihiel and the Argonne | You slowed up. Random ene ranch nantes ide oe much at- SHE MAY COME BACK gress, recognizing the independence of has already were history, when, according to Recouly, the} Particular reason. At times you & touch . Tex—| Marion Talley’s farm won't con- | the Cuban republic. ears and mashed togeth “Tiger,” already spoken to Marshal Foch on the |*heumatism. Perhaps you developed @ paunch. At any jtent her any longer than her spec-} ‘These resolutions adopted on April ne ? satnccl, sent the marshal a letter inasting that, it his|FAte, you lost pride in body and gained pride in mind. 2 operatic career if this human | 19, 1898, the anniversary of the battle | jit. little butter and cream. Head li with the result that you lost that desire to shoot a right safety valve for aspiring to the next | of Lexington, the start of the Revolu-| “ninner: Baked parsnips, cooked ee ee ee és thing is within her. In fact, it's very | tlonary War, and of the first, blood- results, he should not hesitate for a moment to appeal | into the Jaw of those who Ginieasee yeaa rd Possible that s return to her old ife | shed of the Civil War on the streets | Separagus (fresh or canned), grated to President Wilson. ee of glory as a great singer may be her | of Baltimore, were in effect declar-| "hese are just ceipon! It is to the credit of Marshal Foch that he refused to like to get him in a tight place snd break him. I'd next mirage ile after which to trail. ations of war on Spain. sible pent cele cee be bow to the alleged demands of Clemenceau, which, in| Smash his business so flat he couldn't borrow carfare Funny and bewildering, true—and| As soon as they had been approved | ing wholesome, and found pleasing view of American achievements on the war front, would | % the poorhouse.” This was at 40. yet, the best thing in human living | by the president, April 20, the Span-|t,"tne tast : have been most ungrateful. What the latter's purpose| How quickly the years pass after 40! You glance Passports, ie F i 4s the incessant chase after “the next;| ish minister asked for his thing.” thus severing diplomatic relations. ty impulses as Edith’s. The following day, the American may have been is not disclosed, except that he com- | ®Way from the calendar and work for just @ little while, se ¢ inister te a seh auaiets from various causes, often, as in this to that | 8nd then you look back again and you are 50, Half a HER “RIGHT”? bar pein J instance, from jealousy. ee ee ee ‘To Edith her little brother was a moralists may argue that a| On April 2¢ came Spain's formal girl with a golden voice has no right | declaration of wer to create an en-| rivet for her father’s love so that she thusiastic patriotic sentiment in America. War had bee! could not ees but oe delight pee} n_expected since the sinking of the Battleship | Prospect of seelr impression is not disclosed either. It is recalled that|Century gone! And so many enthusiasms, ambitions, General Pershing refused to scatter the American forces | frenzies and intolerances are gone! You have acquired 4 as remplacants among the allied forces and insisted on | Patience and humility. Many failures and much sorrow keeping them together and fighting them as an individ-| have taught you wisdom and sympathy. And you say Maine in Havana harbor in the mid- ual unit under their own flag. of one who has displeased you: “Poor chap! Stupid dle of February. A tragedy in which * Results would seem to have Justified Pershing in this| Md blind! A poor, weak mortel—forever frenzied by the Croatect maber ea cthee words |260 members. of the crew, lost their decision not to make nonentities of his men by sub- | ‘he Insignificant.” this is an age of individualism—an ue idle 4 cae merging their identity under foreign flags and com- oc ere 5 attempt to at least “kid ourselves” |», 7hAt Cris Win elites: with ‘Spain manders. In fact, according to Recouly, Marshal Foch, in THE COUNTRY DOCTOR - tee glievinns that ae long: oe and gave rise to the cry: “Remember his written reply to Premier Clemenceau, gave him a| The scarcity of country doctors as a subject of pop- fe | else’ll be better off, as perhaps they | the Maine!” : detailed but bricf picture of the distribution of the | ular interest is matching the scarcity of teachers in the iu, Diss. - cawiunasinge American forces. Of 30 divisions then fit for combat, ten | rural districts which has been partially met by consolida- ‘ x * * were divided among the allied forces and the other 20| tions. The country doctor is stronger in tradition than va sails tate ite ee celaicw atk formed an autonomous army under Pershing. The|the country teacher and his disappearance even by Geno ititina are carried in: thelecwa. marshal wrote the “Tiger” that he intended to change | rumor is disturbing. In the generation represented by 5 country, divorced in the United the proportions of these two categories according to| the grandparents of today the country doctor was one Stat are remarried in the same circumstances. of the greatest American institutions. He carried his “Besides, one cannot deny the effort furnished by the | supply of crude drugs in his saddle bags and an inex- ‘ American army,” he concluded his letter. “After having | haustible sunshine in his face and his cheery words. ONE TYPE OF CRUELTY attacked at St. Mihiel on Sept. 12, it attacked on Sept.| Whatever he may have lacked of scientific attainment . AERA en canis sc Seep emengeaees June in, bettie, batroan: sat; 98/74 crepes 10 inset rare aimmomapere ne drapes 5 literally | marital mix-ups when about the same | whip Jeff? You said ‘you would.” and Oct. 20, 54,158 men for slight gains on what was/| cheerfulness, which no country doctor was without. can happen if a couple right! “Well, I'm not going to.” i peesgyutinee ‘ indeed a narrow front but over particularly difficult} Patients improved when they heard his horse's hoofs here in our own United States are| “Why not? I think you ought to.” Pr pyr rang epee ground and in face of serious resistance by the enemy.” |0n the road. All the people for miles around were as wed in one state, divorced in another,| “Why are you so anxious to have they 4 Places see if It also will be recalled that the “Tiger” on his Amer-| members of one big family so far as the doctor was and remarried in another? Parking pat pertained panos ried drink.”"—President E. A. Alder- ican visit some years after the war was quite peppery | concerned. As towns grew the young doctors chose to A MODERN DOUBLE soln £0 Eel aaany eee meet ney in his attitude toward America, failure to renounce the | display their skill there, some because the life was less Movie Electrician: Come quick, sir! | and be very unhappy.’ FORTY YEARS AGO war debts owing the United States by France arousing | laborious, some because they believed rewards better. The The Vitatone has gone haywire and| ‘Yes, but I want to hear him cry. I] Miss Agnes Taggert left yesterday | him to outbreaks in his talks: The Recouly revelations | country doctor of today is at the disappearing point, T-peph Lin ears: GrPOr. want Di Si UOBRONY: sa for Lpbates Lu ise adh i da are likely to reduce still further the impression of his | largely because of his consideration for wife and children. Resa ee got ig gett hatin tae made the mistake Va cena Edith, amiability toward the United States in spite of the fact that he lived in this country for years, married a Wis- consin woman and lived to see this country strike the decisive blows that brought the World war to an end. Marshal Foch was a better friend of the men who came He says frankly cash returns are often satisfactory, but screen and make a noise like Clara| But her father wisely said nothing,| A. C. Wadsworth, pharmacist at that he wants better conditions for wife and family than Bow.—Life. finding occasion to turn the conver- | Frisby’s drug store, has returned from he finds in the country. ———. sation at once into more pleasant | visit with friends in Iowa. A 16-year-old girl of Atlanta drives | channels, cemanad . uch -| Mrs. J. M. inn left Sunday to BATHE andl Eoseey a moving Gane, Nearly all children have such cruel. ‘ pe, en hes Liat By 1950, all a man will have to do to disguise himself as 8 woman will be to get a shave. | Editorial Comment | Zag? BB w= MAJOR AMOS B. HOOPLE, —~ ENGLISH TRIBUTE TO MR. KELLOGG a 4 ‘¥- DIRECT DESCENDANT OF LonD RUFUS es € OF DOVESHIRE,~— I ALSO ‘The C. R. Williams Bottling Works ee, Seely destroyed by fire last | “The American army was a young and a new one. We | had to take it as it was, Moreover, such as it was it had | already rendered great services and it was going to ren- der much greater ones. trom, T ebafond from Pershing, and from WILL THE HAVG THE TITLE OF GARON AMos to part from, I. from and from WITNESS KINDLY B. HOOPLE, ww. BUT REQUEST THAT Gwe His Name I BE ADDRESSED AS MAJoR AMOS B. HOOPLE, — oR HONORABLE MAJOR AmMoS B. HooPLe/— AS To MY OCCUPATION —~1 AM A SoLDIER.—~ SCIENTIST, w~ PHILOSOPHER, —~ BIG GAME HUNTER, —~ EXPLORER, ~~~ ARCHAEOLOGIST, ~~ ARTIST, — WRITER, ~ INVENTOR, - PSYCHOLOGIST, —~ - PROMOTER , —- EX-CoNSUL To BAGOVIA, »—~ Ald, ~~ ~~ AND occuPATion ? assistant secretary of agriculture. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) FLAPPER FANN i il i fis i i i pal rigs § i iv i =

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