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See o ete wn ever ce re PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune. An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPaPER (Established 1873) | is Indicative of the slow progress of breaking away AG OF THE UNITED STATES The nearly a year that elapsed botween the declara- | tion of independence and the adoption of a national flag entirely {reed from suggestions of the former allegiance rom Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis-| British symbolisms N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck class mail matter. President and Publisher | ation from the mother country upwards of a year, the Subscription Rates Payable in Advance by carrier per year ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year. (in state, outside Bismarck) vee Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ... vee 5.00 . 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail. in state. per year ...... ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for udit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the Jocal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representative; G LOOMUPATNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bidg. 'HICAGO Fave: Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) COWBOYS AND AIRPLANES This modern age has a most perplexing way of scram- bling things : Out on the great range lands of Montana roam thou- sands of wild horses. Each summer the cowb: 2 out to round them up. In the open plains the task is rel atively easy; but as the hunt progress retreat into the broken bad land heavals of earth have left long tumbled hills and high buttes of finding them is almost impossible And here is where things are ge The round-up of wild horses is a relic of the old west It is done just as it was done half a century ago. The of the old, almost legendary breed rambled cowboys are riders But this ‘This year they are going to use airplanes! ‘The airplanes can do a lot of things that the cowboys cannot. They can sar high o the bad lands and spy out the hiding places of the untamed, roaming herds ‘They can easily balk the cunning of the wild fugitives. This year's round-up, accordingly, will be more success: ful than a Most of us have had time to get reconciled to the fact that the old west is gone. We are aware that few cow- y six-shooters any more, and we know perfectly well that the picturesque, lawless old ways have slipped over the last frontier, gone forever. Yet this business of airplanes is a bit of a shock. What have airplanes to do with Montana round-ups? The fact is that two eras are dovetailing in this busi- ness, each bringing its own special type of romance. ‘The romance of the old days—of the old west, and of the whole of the old America—was the romance of the individual. The cowboy was only one form it took. In other sections there are other guises, frontiersmen, Prospectors, trappers, river pilots, and so on. All were pre-eminently individualists—men who played a lone hand, stood on their own feet, made their mark by dint of their own sturdy, uncompromising self-reliance. The romance of today is the romance of machines, and the airplane fills the topmost niche. No longer is it the individual man who is glorified; it is the mechanical con- traption that he uses. Individualism is passing; even the pilot, serene and alone in the empty sky, is up there as the representative, so to speak, of the scores of men who put his machine together. It may be that this new era will be quite as satisfying and heart-warming as the old, once we get used to It. But there is no use denying that, with the passing of the old, we have lost something valuable. An epoch in human history is closing. No longer can a man go to distant frontiers and stand or fall on his own unaided efforts. He cannot escape from the machines. year— REPUBLICANISM 75 YEARS OLD Ripon has just celebrated the seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of the Republican party in that little Wisconsin town. In July Jackson, Mich., will celebrate the founding of the party there. And Philadelphia and Pittsburgh both claim the right to stage such a cele- bration. Of the seven cities which claimed to be Homer's birth- Place, obviously only one could be right. But all of the Places claiming to be the birthplace of the G. O. P. may have just claims to that distinction. March 20, 1854, 53 voters in Ripon adopted a resolu- tion creating a new political organization to be known as the Republican party. On July 6, 1854, in Jackson, Mich., the first state ticket and platform under the name “Re- publican” were framed. Pittsburgh was the home of the first organizing national committee of the party and Philadelphia the scene of the party's first national con- vention. So the four claims aré not entirely contra- dietory. From that humble beginning in Ripon sprang the party which was to number more than 21,000,000 members three-quarters of a century later and which has held the Position of responsible power during two-thirds of its history. The birth of the greatest of political organizations can- not be celebrated and commemorated too often. It has been responsible for the largest share of progressive, con- structive legislation on the statute books, and the fact that it has enjoyed the longest periods in power proves it holds the nation’s confidence in greatest degrec. GROUP GOVERNMENT In their troubles with the three-party system the Brit- ish are viewed with condescending pity by the American people. Thinking we have staved off this evil at every attack, we feel superior to the English, who have been embarrassed by it ever since the rise of the Labor party and the weakening of the Liberals. Perhaps we are a little too complacent in congratulat- ing ourselves that the three-party system has never taken firm root here. There wM®for a short time a Populist party, whose power was suddenly won and as suddenly lost. Here the Labor party never was a po- ltleal factor of consequence and all independent third- Party movements have proved dismal failures. Byery time this insidious creature of the party system has reared its head in a national election annihilation has been its fate, but while the nation poured out its pity DETROIT | | has undergone development. | flag under which the patriots had been fighting much i Though in rebellion for two years and complete separ- | of the time contained a union of the crosses of Sts. | “1.29 George and Andrew. The latter feature had been intro- duced in the first year of the war to signify that the warring colonists were still British and had hopes of rec- onciliation. Recognition finally that anythi: ndicating continuing British attachment constituted an +++ 2.50 | ism led to the designing of the flag, the anni the adoption of which by congress we obse! The flag of the United States—such is It conta stars representative of the increase of cot but otherwise the idea embraced in the origin: preserved. While has a legal nam Spangled Banner” may be regarded as a po | and “The American Flag.” apostrophized by Joseph Rod- | man Drake, is not less commonly used. The flag bolic of the nation. Therefore we have pride in tt be- cause it is emblematic of a people free under law PANACEA s, of Virginia, offers as his panacea for credit and speculation ills—said by some | to be purely imaginary—a plan to tax stocks held than 60 days and to discontinue government rm loans. The contention of the gentleman from Virginia is that the government's short-term securities are used by member banks of the federal resery of increasing their speculative | argument that, if the trea d over a period of quarter to quar’ of actual investors factor in t If the | scheme ts | | if | blows. proposing a ta tain hoomeran; lapse, of thi THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Movie of a Man Who Knows ‘Everything’! LAST YEAR THE GRAYS BATTED .352, OR, .014 HIGHER, THAN THE PINK SOK DID IN 1907 WHEN THEY WON, THEM OUTFIELD THE PENMANTI \, MADE 849 PUTOUTS UNA’ “THAT HORSE SCRATCHED ‘Rio TASUARAT AEE ! HE NE) DiD BETTER 'N 1384 —™Wwo Sere eam we /malt Ful 10 oT. t—% ‘Youn, & SPOT AND MAKE. “THEY SAY HE. NY DEUCE GOoO!.- KNOWS BvERY™! \REMEMBERED ALL. “THE CARDS PAYED ~ SAN, POP!-FoR MY SCOUT LESSON FOR PLAG DAY, Ming <a Guly0u TELL ME- WHATS THE PROPER WAY 97 Bi 0" dy TO SAWTE. THE FLAG? HOw DO YOU HANG THE FLAG CORRECTLY? AND HOW SHOULD IT BE FLOWN, ALONG WITH OTHER. FLAGS? -- AND, wires a ES WHAT ARE THE WORDS FOR THE ‘STAR SPANGLED BANNER 2~ Ere! Exc! Dr. McCoy's menus suggested the week beginning Sunday, June 16; Sunday Breakfast: One coddled egg, three or four slices of melba toast, five stewed prunes. Lane: Boiled potatoes with chopped parsley, string beans, avocado lad. “Dinner: Roast chicken, melba toast dressing, head lettuce, cooked carrots and fresh green peas, ice cream. Monday Breakfast: Cantaloupe as desired. Lunch: French artichoke, cooked greens, sliced cucumbers. cooked spinach and parsley, molded vegetable salad (peas, cucumber, to- matoes) baked apple (no sugar or cream.) Breakfast: the whites of two eggs and 2 ounces of milk, served on Melba toast, stewed raisins. Lunch: Apples or berzies as desired. Dinner: Baked sea bass, cooked celery, string beans, sliced tomatoes on lettuce, plain jello or jell-well (no cream). Wednesday Breakfast: el wheat muffins, Peanut butter, ste’ pears, Lunch: Stuffed summer squash, raw celery. Dinner: Roast mutton, cooked mashed turnips, asparagus, salad of grated raw beets, pineapple whip. Thursday Breakfast: Coddled eggs, toasted cereal biscuit, stewed apricots. Lunch: Sweet corn, cooked as- Paragus, raw carrots. Americans notorio There is little likelihood that Glass plan seriously. but it reason that it shows the With men like Senator Glas a thorough study of the credit and » | seems iney Tt is stated that 85 cent of ; age family is spent by women. Th: pay envelope finally lan If he folds his money carefully three was shoe laces in the dresser drawer end buttons a crowd, it would be wiser to try to borrow the $5 where in the beginning, The reason a bachelor enjoys better health is because | he has no one to pity and scare him when he is atling. | for one | have gon This may be an awful country; but in Paris, men wear | killed 24 earrings. ep Editorial Comment THE FISH-EYED BANKER GONE (Nation's Business) A new type of executive is in the making, and his serv- ices are greatly in demand. The banking brains of the United States realize that “Old Eagle Eye,” the banker with the cold eye and with ice water in his veins, is as dead as the dodo. The public now is impervious to the flashing glance sharpened by constant “looking for the best of it,” and it has discov- ered how easy the ice water can be turned off. Clients used to go to the bank with their hats in their hands and with humble and contrite hearts. They were palsied by the cold eye behind the mahogany desk. The banker knew them all and just how much he could loan them with safety. He proceeded to loan them about half that amount. The banker knew personally the business of his clients and their backgrounds, and the commercial banking business presented few major complications. Nowadays clients feel that they are doing the bank as much of a favor as the bank is doing them when they borrow money on good security. The transaction, they feel, is one of mutual benefit and they wish to be treated as such. Moreover, there are many banks and com- Petition is severe. All the client has to do, if he is given the ice water treatment, is to take his collateral around the corner to another bank. And the bankers know it. This fact has developed a breed of executives who are human and who know how to mix. They know how to speak their client's language and they play his games and share his interests. A lot of jokes are current about bankers’ hours, but many a. bank executive gets a lot more business on the golf course, at the opera, around the clubs or over a bridge table than he could obtain by sitting behind a glass-topped desk. WHAT IS A ‘REPRESENTATIVE’? (Washington Star) who was The wife of the Hunzarian prime! minister, Countess Margit Bethler much. of the dramatic world will heaven and earth to keep the fact of their marriages a secret from their fans. isn't it, wh !groes strike the hour on bells. ile thers. Ie. Doge, arid ttae oe ieee | @laGe Walenta ale’ inches ‘aoroes tie (Sua tapen, ine ecammt aee oe as a Lindbergh or a John Gilbert or | face. This, however, was worn on a! Representative Schaefer, Republican, a Mary Pickford are known to be| Sirdle and not intended for a pocket. | Wisconsin. NOT SO SURE | Richard It’s just such tales as these which that sh convince us that the crime research- ; ping | ers who ‘insist that criminals are| mentally diseased and should be treated as sick rather than sinners | are right Such tales, too, convince us that our pretty traditions about women’s moral superiority over man’s is a bit far-fetched. ‘in seeking {Of others. sk * | WHy? | j Side looking out, and a personal ex- | A ry Sattar ante ona sonia patra ea H perience is very apt to handicap one ‘4nd tactless, a bit off in her taste in virtue of their husband's positions, cen rae one een oo ae in someone ‘else. . Mayer's twins AES aes ner aee ae Crain | amay ba eosdisteren tromitecicit act ikiows Perfectly. well already—that lishers over unknown names: would | their.reactions to-what worked with /She has a long way to go before she] sta mean anything—or, at least, nearly so | her may be quite the opposite. ODD TIMEPIECES London, June 14. — Guildhall mu- “Lindy” trophies, they say, are not | Seum here has some of the most beau- / selling at all well since his marriage. | ‘ul and odd timepieces in existence, Most of the purchasers had been; One sets @ see-saw rocking every women. Which is exactly why, for| hour; another denotes time by mus- box office reasons, stars and starettes | ical tunes. A “clock-watch” of 1850 move! has pins set at each hour so that ascertained by feeling.| W: | There is one large clock of the empire i period on whose face miniature ne- x * * | “LINDY” FAILURE | #8 srarments. cheap TWINS | Because she herself was atwin. Mrs.ime sick, sh {time can be (By Alice Judson Peale) ed at the age of 16, when irls begin to begin to care hes and worry over their =S2-icomplexions, Enid wears hideous ung thick sweaters, clumsy shoes and about with her hands thrust ‘0 her pockets and a forbid- ing scowl on her face. My dear,” remarked a well mean- gz elder, “why do you do it?) Why jdon't you try to be more like your get into! charming mother, whom everyone - vening | adores 7” ser esa | 's scowl grew blacker, and she burst forth, “Because I don't want Ito be like mother, that's why! Ted hate to be like mother! She makes ne’s_ so charming!” er of Glencoe, Ill. thinks} Daughters of very charming moth- especially know how to jers do not al bring up her own twin girls recently jroses. born to her. y We are rather prone to embrace ;tempcred and candid, would express the theory that personal experiences |the same thoughts springing from are apt to be duplicated and that per- ‘the same intense bitter fe lings. | sonal experience is of any special help / ¥8 find life a bed of I believe that a great many jof them, if they, like Enid, were hot You mothers who are “so charm- to interpret the experience jing” be sure that you give your s*#* OUTSIDE, INSIDE! Some communities have tried to in- | Try to soften -what often must be a sist that their teachers be married so | eral Sere avers Che is winni le gu , | that they could “understand children y x erie tee Pay anne a cones etter” ‘But nothing is so true as that |the brusqueness and angularity of reminds us of Margot Asquith and | infinitely more can be seen from the ‘herself. Princesse Bibesco and Mrs, Frances | outside looking in than from the in- jnerself. {growing daughters a chance to de- ivelop their own type of attractive. iness, their own type of social ease. comparison between the youth. Let your daughter express If sometimes she seem awkward {clothes, don’t tell her so all at once. Don’t rub in what she probably ;as you are. Let her emer; ually from the hard chrysalis o: youth, lest, like unhappy Enid, she become defiant and decide to wear her fault as boldly as if it were a ue. ‘will be half as gracious and erad her. ASKS DRY LAW P-.OBE ‘ashingon, June 14.—(AP)—Cre- ation of a joint congressional commit- tee to study methods of enforcing, A| prohibition laws by federal officials Representative Ruth Bryan Owen, Democrat, of Flor- ida, in an alibi for her vote on the Hawley tariff bill, says @ supported that Republican high protection measure because the people of her state favor it: The accom- ab | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern Plished daughter of a celebrated father declines to admit | : = 5 that she was recreant ‘either to ancestral Political tra- ditions or to the Democratic faith. The gentlewoman from Miami conjures up vividly the question as to what really is the duty of a member ofa national legislature under a popular form of government. The question is as old as the hills. Some authorities hold to the hide-bound view that the party label is a party yoke which can and should, in no circumstances, be thrown off. Others declare that when the interests of a congressional district or a state demand disloyalty to the party platform a member of the house or the senate has no choice. He (or she), as in Mrs. Owen's case, must plump for a high tariff on citrus produce, no matter whether the Democrats happen to favor the free and un- limited importation of grapefruit, lemons and oranges at the ratio of 16 to 1, or on any other basis. The pending session of congress provides William Jen- nings Bryan's daughter with plenty of precedent. .Of- ficially the Republican party is opposed to the farm de- benture plan. Thirteen Republican senators were for it and secured its passage. Herbert Hoover, titular chief of the G. O. P., recommended “limited” revision of the tariff. The cumbersome’ administration majority in the house made mincemeat of its commander-in-chief's ad: vice and revised the tariff unlimitedly. Not long ago senator Blease, Democrat, of South Caro- lina, announced that, whatever his own views on prohi- bition may be, he constantly votes dry in the senate be- cause his state is politically dry and he regards himself bound to respect its sentiments. Senator Blease’s views of @ congressional representative's obligations coincide with those of Mrs. Owen, yy orders— party or of the people of Idaho— iors 6 sere sate, soesainty and delay sa| Sh Sten Qneations, they would better vote for somebody works in England, Out of our| *l#. preferred a senator who ‘~UP pl cnecare! te Sfore Hey WERE ELL! ME, MAJOR, THAT ‘You'Re ae LEAVING SooN FoR ENGLAND! eI S'pose, WHEN You GET 10 LONDON, YouLt SHANG AROUND ouTsiDE OF BUCKINGHAM “PALACE To GET A SquINT AT. TH’ KING AN’ Queen, AN” TH? PRINCE OF WALES, EH 9 ~ BLESS You, ANTHONY, ~ Hqw~ Haw ~You'RE So NAIVE fu wEGAD,~ I LomfER OuTsIDE oF BUCKINGHAM PALACE,IN HoPES oF GETING A GLIMPSE OF HE ROYAL FAMILY 2a MY WORD, THAT Is VeRY AmusiNG AND DROLL Ju ANTHONY, ~~ THEIR ! MASESTIES, THE KiNG AND Quee ARE DEAR OLD FRIENDS oF MINE fu AND AS FOR THE PRINCE OF WALES, — EGAD,~ EDDIE USED 0 SNS Me cae Dinner: “Broiled steak, mushrooms en casserole, greens salad of chopped raw cabbage and celery, junket. Friday Breakfast: Baked stuffed apple with milk or cream. Lunch: Baked egg plant, spinach, lettuce. Dinner: Broiled white fish, sum- mer squash. Salad of tomatoes and water cress, prunes in gelatin (no cream). PAA AAD Se Today is the birthday of the Amer- ican flag. On June 14, 1777, 152 years ago today, the Continental congress adopted a resolution providing “that the flag of the 15 United States be 13 stripes, alternate red and white; that the Union be 13 stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constella- tion. Historians disagree as to the or- igin of this design. Many authorities believe that it originated with the Washington coat-of-arms, which con- tains both the stars and the stripes. The honor of having been the first to raise the new national emblem over a naval vessel is usually ac- corded Paul Jones. And the first use of the stars and stripes on land was at Fort Stanwix, where a hastily ceeoriea flag was raised on Aug. 3, Vermont and Kentucky were the first states admitted to the union after the flag was adopted and con- gress amended the original design to make it 15 stripes and 15 stars. As additional states were admitted, how- ever, the original 13 stripes were sub- er and a star added for each [Our Yesterdays] FORTY YEARS AGO Herman Hanson of McLean county, was a visitor at the capitol yesterday. Messrs. Logan, Eppinger and have emploved tnen vo sepa the Fees track for the Fourth of July races, Joseph Halstead, Butte, Mont., is visiting friends and transacting busi- ness here. Mrs. F. E. Titus is in Minneapolis this week for a visit with friends. Quinlivan has returned from & week's visit with his friends Cid and Theo. Taylor, Garrison. Attorney T. R. Mockler will speak at the early pioneers’ picnic to be held next Friday at Brittin. Col. ©. A. Lounsberry, special land agent, arrived in Bismarck today. Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Hare have gone to Wilton for a few days while Mr. Hare looks after matters of busi- the Pal Le an fe com- pany of Bismarck celebrated its third birthday anni with the an- versary mouncement that it has $7,851,428 worth of life insurance Saturday Breakfast: Baked. eggs, whole- wheat muffins, Stewed figs. Lunch: About @ pound of fresh Dinner: Boiled fresh beef tongue, | salad French omelet made of | three Hy 25g pre “If there were mistakes made in the past, let us not spend time de- bating them.”—Mayor Walker of New York City. «ee “The technical and professional schools train for specific tasks. The liberal college views human efforts as _a whole and strives to unify it.” —Dr. Alexander Meiklejohn. ees “There is power in the Federal Reserve Board with laws to correct the situation.”—Sen- ator Fletcher of Florida, “Canada is an attractive country for investment. On the whole American investments have proved highly ey in Canada.”—Flo: S. Chalmers, (Review of Reviews. “We stand today torn between two worlds. Our bodies labor in the city factory or office; our hearjs i still in the Pear has of tl village community.”—John Herman Bell, Jr. (Current History.) ? oe j BARBS f °o eo Roosters crowed at high noon in Salt Lake City and led federal of- ficers to two 150-gallon moonshine stills. Maybe the roosters were only cock-eyed. ” * A tortoise over in Indians moved ® mile in 67 years. It is believed he started somewhere in a Sunday automobile Parade. a You can buy wheat loading points Yor 5 cents a tashe ‘We knew that it as soon as ci 8s orn ee farmer. would be You're never broke if you have apeat it all for something worth wi be ig eee Cee , June 16th, -is Father's Ys mother, but the usual practice is to ive father some cabbage rolled in the shape of a, cigar, - Maria Jeritza sit Pretty well and now and then ou Tead of ‘her socking a tenor. Ve ! (Copyright, 1929, NEA dopa Inc.) —_—___ CENSUS BILL APPROVED Washington, June 14—(AP)—The senate today aj the census re- Spportionment bill and sent to the white house the first of the meee Proposals of the extra sion.