The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 23, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1930 *he Bismarck Tribune ' ‘An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) eS * Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 88 second class mail matter. George D. Mann................President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail. per year (in Bismarck). Datty by mail, per year (in state, outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Weekly by mail, in state, per year... ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for. Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication 6f all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK One Vote In the state primary election Wednesday only one vote will count. And that vote will be the individual vote of the jndi- vidual citizen. Of course, thousands of citizens will cast their ballots, but they will cast them one at a time; they will be count- ed one at a time and the decision of the majority will, in part, determine the state and county governments for the next two years. And the character of state and local government is im- portant. To the individual there are other matters which unquestionably take precedence over the outcome of any political question. But to the state a# a whole, and to the counties, there are few things as vital. The men nominated Wednesday will run again in the fall but that is hardly an excuse for not voting. In North Dakota, candidates on the Republican ticket generally are conceded victory in campaigns for state offices. If more than two persons seek county offices those in excess of that number will be eliminated in the primary. And one vote multiplied by whatever majorities are given the successful candidates will determine the re- sult. ‘The answer is obvious. ‘The one vote which the constitution of the state and nation grants to each citizen, should be cast. That vote is the average citizen's only opportunity to register his preference on the various important matters which must. be decided by the state and county governments during the next two years! ‘ If he fails to cast that vote, the citizen disfranchises himself. He divorces himself from his only,@irect con- tact with the state and county government. He becomes @ stranger in a land where he should be well-known and where his voice should be heard. ‘Those who fail to vote will have little cause for com- plaint if the result of the election is not pleasing to them. Those who have not fulfilled the duties of -citizenship will have no cause to quarrel with the decision of those who have done 80. Much has been ‘written in the past ofthe trials borne by the forefathers of the country to obtain for us the right of franchise. Practically all of it is true. When the citizens of North Dakota go to the polls on Wednesday, few of them will think of the bloody foot-tracks in the snow at Valley Forge; of minute-men grasping their guns in defense of their homes at Concord; of George Rogers Clark marching in the dead of winter hungry, cold and borne up only by the flame of an intense pa- triotism; of Kosciusko daring death to help s new-born nation; of John Paul Jones and his “we haven't begun to fight yet” or of a thousand other heroes, some known to every schoolboy and others unsung. But their ghosts watch over every American citizen and their spirits, could they speak, would urge everyone to exercise that hard-won right of franchise, that voice in the government, for which they fought. Fs ‘Then, too, there is a practical side to the question of voting. Every good citizen wants clean, honest government. He "BOSTON feeling was asserted. On this side the exclusion had, by reducing the number of Japanese in California, resulted in an approach to the Japanese viewpoint. Any modifi- cation of the immigration law of 1924, as suggested, therefore should be attended by happy effect on the pride of the Japanese government and people. If the law is amended, Japan will be accorded an im- migrant quota of possibly 130 to 200 annually. This might be a negligible concession on our part. There could be nothing of the inundatory aspect about the entry of so few racial aliens to residence in this country. Heretofore the opposition to the Japanese has been economic. Their standards of living are not of the American type. They furnish cheap labor and with Americans scorning to engage in the drudgeries of farm and vineyard and orchards, these immigrants may well fit in with the California labor situation. The Japs are industrious, frugal, thrifty and orderly. The only ob- jection to them that is tenable Is that it is impossible to melt them in with the white race without deletcrious effects on the whites. That argument has not been open- ly advanced, however, out of deference to Japanese pride, but all along it has been a motivating force in the atti- tude of exclusion. ’ By a coincidence, the proposal to raise the bars a bit for the Japanese to entcr is timed with steps to shut the border to Mexican immigration, causing the same bitter feeling in Mexico City that was created in Japan six years ago when exclusion was applied to the people of the island empire. It is feared that the Mexican proposal will cost us much of the goodwill engineered by the wise diplomacy of Ambassador Morrow. Whatever is done now, it might be well to look forward to following it up later with some friendly gesture such as is being accord- ed Japan now, perhaps a regulation of immigrant entry that Mexico, too, could regard without offense. Amazing Motorbus Traffic Motorbus mileage in the United States has established the importance of this form of transportation. It not only has passed that of the steam and electric roads but actually equals between twice and thrice their combined mileage. This is a tremendous fact in the problems that have been thrust into the transportation situation of the nation. The steam roads have been compelled to take note of it acutely. The state utility boards and railroad commissions and the Interstate Commerce commission have to deal with it in many of the cases brought to them for adjustments and rulings and it colors the entire structure and evolution of American transportation. Steam road earnings, for example, can not be explained without taking into consideration the motorbus as the main factor in depressing the earnings of the steel-traqk- ed roads. And as graveled and concreted highways in- crease and spread into new regions this phenomenon of bus travel and traffic will become a still greater and more potent factor in business and in the prosperity of the nation. “Bus Facts for 1930,” published by the National Asso- ciation of Bus Operators, supplies the facts that show the amazing development that has taken place in this recent line of public service. Among the significant facts given are the following: There are now 782,500 miles of bus routes, of which 326,235 are served by common carrier busses. What this , What Most Every Husband Knows! ~WHILE 1 WAS AT IT 1 PICKED UP AFEW means may be guessed when it is realized that there are only 288,803 miles of steam and electric railroads in the United States. There are 92,500 busses in operation, compared with 69,490 in 1926. Of these 33,300 are used as common car- riers independent of rail connections, while 42,000 are operated as school busses and 11,250 by electric railways. In 1929 there were 1,855,000,000 passengers transported in common carrier busses. The total investment in buss rolling stock, terminals, garages, etc., for egmmon carriers, was: $345,000,000. ‘The total gross revenue of common cafrier bus lines in 1929 was $395,000,000. Taxes paid by motorbus operators in 1929 totaled $31,- 000,000, of which $26,500,000 was levied as special taxes on the industry as highway users or operators of motor vehicles. Of a total of 46,004 busses operated as common carriers, 33,300 were operated as independent carriers; 11,250 were operated by electric railways; 1,454 were operated by steam railroads; 3,246 were operated as sightseeing vehicles, and 2,150 as miscellaneous vehicles. The 42,000 school busses, making possible the modern consolidated school in place of the old one-room build- ing, carried 1,276,427 children each school day of 1929 Over 425,000 miles of route to 16,518 schools at a total cost of $30,119,302. , A New York society woman is to give a fashionable “speakeasy party” in London. At which, of course, the favorite dance will be the reel. desires that the will of the people be done and that the majority rule. It is the most abiding principle of Amer- dean government. But the majority cannot rule unless the outpouring to the polls is sufficiently representative of that major- ity. ‘The average citizen does not want boss-ridden govern- ment or @ government responsive to anything except the ‘best interests of-the people. And yet, it is a significant fact that government by bosses, where it has existed, thas been upset only on occasions when the number of ballots cast was unusually large. It is almost axiomatic ‘that it is easier to control a small vote than a large one, hhence the need for the citizen to protect his interests and thg interests of good citizenship by exercising the right of citizenship by casting one vote. ) The Japanese Bogy Vanishing Having led the country into the belief that the con- tinued entry of Japanese immigration into the United States would be a grave evil and having driven the argu- ment home to the extent of inducing congress to enact, the law of 1924—in addition to the Root gentlemen's agreement—for the purpose of keeping the little brown men out, the Pacific coast now volte-faces,and would have the rest of the nation somersault with it. That is, Pacific coast representatives have reconsidered the mat- ter and have so far modified their beliefs that it is pro- Posed to put the Japanese on a quota basis, same as European nations. . ‘The Japanese question has always been a California af- fair. The Japanese who came to this country largely set- tied in that state. So California views as to the desir- ability or undesirability of having the Japs dwell among them were accepted at their face value and the coast had its way in handling the Japanese immigration prob- was unforgiveable offensiveness. It took a lot of diplo- matic trimming and finesse to mollify Japan when the legislation of 1924 was imposed. - Now it apparently is up to the rest of the country to shrug its shoulders, mod- kK ify its views and console itself with the assumption that California again knows what is best as the result of the six years of experiment, So there probably will be little objection from other parts. Of course, after having been #9 convinced by the Golden state that Japanese entry was {unwise and attended by evil economic menaces, the rest of the country may be a bit reluctant at first to surrender ‘that belief. In fact, the nation had come to expect that the results of the irritating legislation would be somewhat similar to those of the anti-Chinese legislation of the 60's. We were able to maintain very friendly relations with China } An spite of that affront. For six years now, the reaction @f Japan has been and it was but recently, in a 4 , former ambassador to the gontinued existence of the old Jem, even to the extent of what to the statesmen at Tokio aie: Afd at such a party you won't need an invitation. Just say at the door that Gus sent you. Envy the outfielder ‘who can occasionally take a high ball. | Editorial Comment European Travel Held Necessity (Brooklyn Eagle) Edward A. Filene, merchant, internationalist and man of ideas, believes in the old adage that travel is broaden- ing. He wants more Americans to see the world with- out joining the navy. He believes that more European a bln wi she Al travel by Americans will help toward international un- derstanding, tend to stabilize foreign exchange, stim- ulate production, add to our culture and contribute to general happiness. Being a practical man Mr. Filene knows that the chief barrier to increased foreign travel is the cost. At a lunch- eon yesterday he urged steamship companies and other interests to get together to facilitate a tremendous grewth in European travel. He urged them to apply the prin- ciples of mass production made familiar by Henry Ford to their business, suggesting that with the Deen of tourists through the year it might be made Possible for a person to spend a month in Europe at a cost not to exceed $250. The practical aspects of this will no doubt be given serious consideration by the steamship Mr. Filene has done his part in Demure Under Their Brims i (New York Times) People will recall the clarion tones in which Ameri- of common sense must be edges becoming and are eminently protective against sun glare. But these things have been true at least since the Spanish-American war. The reason why strong men now cultivate the mushroom umbrella effect is Probably the prince of Wales or somebody last winter at Palm Beach or in a musical show on Broadway. With the coquettish down-flare of the men’s plaited ‘headgear goes @ daring but successful color note in their suits. One encounters plum color everywhere, adven- turing at times toward the borders of maroon. In the shop windows green suits are on exhibition. Why men should be veering toward Sir Walter Raleigh in a sea- son that finds women harking back to Victoria cannot, of course, be explained. But it would seem that in feaity to style, Judy O'Grady and Jim O'Grady are not 60 far apart, z The temptation to explain the new mode on resisted. The depressed 4 BEGIN. HERE TODAY NATALIE of her huaha: BERNADINE LAM im. ALAN seeke consolation with seeretary. PHILLIPA WEST, has cleverly managed to be- jo him, usy aren ae. ie dinnei Pruritis may be so mild as to cause | velop only '@ tingling sensation, unusual extent s0 that all of the pro- enough to lapsed abdominal organs are raised. The kidney's function is seldom re- tarded because of its position, and most people unnecessarily worry when told they have a floating kidney. In only rare instances is it ever neces- sary to resort to such a radical meth- od of treatment as surgery, as the Kidney can usually be slowly raised through corrective physical culture exercises, salteble| Question: “airs, B. G writes P| s 00 sought refuge in Penn’s new |@———————___y Question: B.C. : “In Today Is the ||colony, where from the first, the| | BARBS { anon & dinner of meat, bread and vege- rs rinciple of toleration was estab- tables we do not use any fresh fruit, Anniversary of _||lished by law. ‘The settlement made | °———— Perec ny value | but is it all right to used desserts such promress that when Penn re-| Health Commissioner Wynne of it is, al ‘a | made with cooked fruits, or stewed turned to England in 1684, he left|New York declares that loud noises the akin’ thore | ‘uits alone? Penn’s Treaty behind him a prosperous colony of often cause sudden deaths. ‘The cas- day with warm | q;ATo¥er:_In the first place your On June 23, 1683, William Penn, |7000 inhabitants, ualties must have been terrific after to improve the | “nner of mest and vegetables should founder of Pennsylvania, who came Mussolini's recent speechmaking tour. not. contain bread. If you leave the to this country from England to} ¢———— ———_______-» ae ® “ bread out you could use either cooked “found a free and virtuous state, in| | Quotations | causes Of | or raw fruits. which the people should rule them- A Greek play more than 2,300 years the skin, Red Eyelids selves,” signe i yold is now the rage on Broadway. paint, dust) Question: M. W. P. writes; “ Indians at Shakamaxon which i “The making of @ good museum And yet visitors who have taken it in eyelids are always inflamed, sured a lasting friendship with them.|man must be in the blood. The work] Will insist back home that they've the nerves, | in the mornings, and they remain red Penn, an ardent Quaker, had ob-| becomes mere drudgery, if one’s heart ‘seen the original company. of some} an day. I have t tained from the king an extensive! is not in it.’"—Roy Chapman Andrews, xk causes swell- | money having them treated, but to no tract of land in America in lieu of 8| explorer. be poizon | avail. What is your advice?” claim of 16,000 pounds eee A shifting of the Gulf stream to- toxins de-| Answer: Your trouble may government which he hi ward New York conjures up visions from. pooner caused by a severe toxic condition from his father. territory,| ‘The world’s opportunities are only|of balmy all-the-year-round weather wrong food generated in other parts of the body which, in the royal patent, was called| beginning to break. Every genera-!for easterners. California may even- the result of drug pol- | but showing only in your eyelids. ‘Try Pennsylvania, Penn resolved to make|tion leaves more opportunities than |tually have to find something else to| soning. & good body cleansing treatment with a home for his co-religionists, it found.”—Henry Ford. boast about besides its climate. Sometimes the patient develops 8/0 ‘testing and diet regimen. This is Soon after arriving in America xe ® oe diffused rash while fasting, which in-| bound to help you, as your trouble is Penn took possession of the terri-| “our language, in nearly every de-| A sporting goods house advertises, | ‘cates that the body is going through apparently not local nor due to in- tory and laid out a site for a new |tail, is illogical. In this lles a charm.”|that it takes 20 sheep to provide the| ®,(ietetic crisis and is unloading some | tition "of the eyelid or it woud no capital, which he named Philadelphia. | "Janet Rankin Aiken. gut for one of its rackets. Let's hope| Of its impurities through the skin. In| doubt respond to the treatment al- Rae eo ss Be Stet ee rE a ee i |e wit ie Indians, a move spal q Pat the Quaker settlers the horrore of In| “We all talk to Gurselves. Each of rae after it is over. (Copyright, 1930, oe ~— dian warfare which befell some of |¥US !s not one, but two—I’ and ‘Me’—} Another useful article for which To build up the * " the emia aoe set lements. as aod igbotae a7 resstgge these bess are sacrificed is, as you know, | your skin so that fot only ers, but persecut Sites be lerson eepskin. itching members of other ‘religious sects, | Fosdick. 5 |Copyright, 1990, NEA Service, Ine.)| a diet [ KFYR 1 TUESDAY, JUNE 2% 850 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters 0—Farm reporter in Washington 5—Meditation period. 0—Shoppers’ guid AM. — ha . ¥ :00—Dawn-reveille. ie . 5—Early Risers club. 5—Time signal. }0—Farm flashes. 5—Time signal. : fee rf 3 “Or jealous,” Alan broke in. “You ing of the ways.” may as well know it, Bernadine.| “Well, we are,” Alan replied, Her insane jealousy is at the bot-|crisply. “But that makes no dif ‘tom of the whole thing. And {|ference to you, Bernadine. I love won't tolerate it longer. There’s| Bobby. I believe I've grown more No use trying “to defend her. I/or less to think of him as my own cate here to tell you I'll make|son. Why, I'd be crazy about hav- good all that you lost—paper profits |ing him in my home .. .” {ncluded—just as soon as I can} He broke off abruptly, aware too taise the cash.” late of the significance of his words. “No, Alan,” Bernadine cried em-|Bobby in his home meant Berna- phatically; “I wouldn’t let you do|}dine—dead. Silently he cursed that!” himself for a blundering fool. But Alan came to a halt before her,|she guessed the cause of his sud- he had resumed his striding, and|den. perturbation, and smiled un- looked down at her thin body and |derstandingly at him. drawn face, ravaged by illness. A} “It's all right, Alan,” she sald Great compassion for her welled up|gently. “I know I have to go— in his heart. and I’m not.sorry. At least, 1 “Don’t oppose me, Bernadine,” he| wouldn't be if it weren't for Bobby, said gently. “Let me be a man in| but I'm wondering wi will hap- my own way for once, The money|pen to him if you should ever {s rightfully yours—you need it, [|marry again.” know. The second mortgage on| “You don't have to worry about this place—it’s been worrying you,| that, Bernadine,” Alan told her. hasn't it? And you want to quit/“I wouldn't marry any woman who the club, don't you? For Bobby’s|didn’t love Bobby. And you know : oD RUTH DEWEY GROVES This idea had been pleasant enough , ta euable him to take ls mfad f—Aulington tine slgnale off Phillipa and think of Ber: ine, 2 hin 5 She was weeping now, the tears job Bigmerce Eribune mews snd” rylning down Mer cheaba unaheed. Ol | £3, ott" program “I could just be sure that 1 # _ ieee Seo erie ot Alan; that “Tat—geain Snarkets ‘Sigh iow and wasn’t responsible for your Rome orm being Broken up I L woultsrt mad we wontons snlti musa aiveciibks Natalie, I'd still want you to have ea Bobby in a home where he was welcome. I'm selfish, I know, but I can’t help that. Oh, you'll never take him to any woman who'll be unkind to him, will you? Promise me that, Alan. Promise me you won't do that?” Alan gently released her clinging hands, and turned, her over to Nel- Me, who had come ap fast as she could from the nursery upstairs, without bringing Bobby with Ber. He had beén determined to come, for he had recognized Alan’s voiee when the latter stepped into the hall to summon Nellie, 0 “ZY NEA SERVICE INC. ening, gral S—BSunshine hour. 0—Weather report; grain marketa q @ 8; % 9 0; 0: 0: rf 1 2: pg hota 0—Stocks and bonds. ‘Bisrgarck Tribune sports items. 5—Bismarck Tribune news. World Bookman. 0—Time signal. s—Old Masters hour. res. peaker. tors’ 8 Fuiitesre as tterward spend: sake. Natalie doesn’t care for children. He came over and put a hand/I’m glad she'll never have a chance PB be teat ie on her shoulder. He was much/to hurt him,” he added fiercely. | she begged of Alan. quieter now. “That's settled,” he/ Bernadine sighed. “I was afraid Dr. W: 1 sald, “And if you, will take my ad-/it was like that,” she sald. “Alan,| Dr; Wagnall came as soon ss vice, you'll invest the mowtey safely, | tell me, did Bobby have anything | °U! Portas a wig Pak Dut this house on the market, and|to do with your quarrels with Nat- are ered in bed, Mrs. ont, sian Relations—1866,” while the other, &o to live quietly in the country | alle?” Oe katie dik eens entitled “Europe in 1914,” was pub- somewhere.” Alan answered uncomfortably: aa ruadine ra : lished in the Political Science Quar- Bernadine managed a weak amile.|“She never knew why you sent) cid not tla haved Peed bese terly for June. 5 “And ralse chickens,” she said.|for me that first night I went to|4°11° smile played around her lips, “It's the dream of every actor’s| your house.” ro cd nothing to an with any i AT LAST life. But I know better, Alan.” “Then she was jealous of met” |**anon to disobey her physicls Now co on wit tum,stony |, ‘You won't have to depend upon! “Yes,” Alan admitted. “So 1), Sh® was more at peace now. Ps Tola, Wis.—()—R. I. Anderson has CHAPTER XLI chickens,” be said. “You'll bave| thought it best not to tell her about regis “ tng Eig achieved a lifetime ambition after money enough if it’s well invested; | Bobby, unless . . . unless it be-/*Sainst her unheeding cara, then waiting for 24 years. Ever since he AMAN Sot up and paced the length | a54 11 sce to that.” came unavoidable.” getting her attention by gradual de- was a youth, Anderson hoped to hold ot Bernadine's semewhat exotic Bernadine’ laid"a"band on bls.| “I'm sorry,” Bernadin grees, until finally she was drink- '& political position of some sort here. fat doch aaah et eee «a UE] why bother’ she sald. softly.| with deep regret, cI strand 1 And ine is pass 26 years he hes run way and then tnstentiy apologizing | “Everything I have will be Bobby's| didn’t consider your wife that night, Fe OTS epee ON. | Tas with a brief: “Sorry.” and you're to be his guardian.| Alan; or you, either, perhaps. I ar “illage' “9 ee pas lag mq wan] YOu! have to give a gredt deall was thinking only of Bobby.” copter? of tne toalibet an ne, afraid,” she said, “that you were to his support, Alan, because 1 don't ‘You did me a great honor,’ votes. going to Natalie, and you shouldn't do that until you're calmer “I've already seen her,” Alan re- plied, his face darkening and his even harder than they Ups grow! had been be! sharply, and faced Bernadine. “Thi: end for me and Natalie,” declared, with unmistakable finality in bis suddenly lowered voice. Bernadine realized his conviction of Natalie's guilt permitted no ar gument, but she did think that he might be less bitter, less hurt, if about it with someone. he began, speaking un- emotionally, “let us assume that Natalie did it; don’t you think we ought to try to find out if there} ff; was any excuse for it?” : “Excuse?” Alan shouted. “What excuse could there be for a thi lke that?” He glared at Bern: dine as though he defied her to answer him, for wanting to belie ot he talked “Well, esty, “Perhaps she didn’t realize how serious it was,” gested. trouble “She may have tho: was just causing you some s! beca TY have enough to leave| Alan quickly assured her. “I'm take care of him. I wish ['d|sorry, too, that Natalie couldn't taken your advice and not specu-|have shared it with me by being lated so much lately.” your friend, But that is her fault, Her troubled eyes sought his. He agetiss are ee ve her shoulder an encouragi: e+ Ol er lig cada Pat cn woul “But I was desperate about the|be any good went to le, e/ money,” she went on, “You see,|and told her there's nothing be- 1... 1 didn't know about you and | tween us for her to be jealous of?” Natalie... when she went home.| Alan saw that she was becom: 1 thought you might have parted.|1nb hysterical. “I'm going to call You know you were very strange| Nellie,” he said firmly, and did. ‘and unhappy those days, Alan, and} During the few moments he wait. she was gone so long...” ed for the servant girl to come, Her voice dtopped, drifted away|he spoke sternly to Bernadine, as though it were lost in a fog.| “Natalie has put herself beyond Alan spoke up sharply, forgiveness,” he said. “Don’t think “You were right,” he said. “We|of her, Bernadine. She's not worth came back |{t. Bobby is all that counts now But | with you or ‘Then he wheeled She was, he told Alan, on the verge of complete collapse and must be kept perfectly quiet. P That was why, in the days that.’ followed, Alan did not tell her all - that was happening. told ber. not a word of the letter Netalie wrote him before she closed the house they had bullt together ia Westchester, and went away “to sive him his freedom.” But, though he tried not to worry he received a call one day thrt sent him hurrying to ber in frantic haste, (To Be Continued) E HAD forgotten Phillips, who, & moment before, had risen in I want you to agree to do as I say about your financial sffairs in the future.” bis mind Ul ghost. Bernadine's Bernadine did not wer at|talk of nd marriage for him once, Alan waited. Tlien she said,|/had turned bis thoughts to Pbil- musingly: “I wonder.” . |Mpa, He had not felt any upsurge “You mean... you're doubtful|of joy, but—and he was conscious About trusting me?” Alan asked. |that he felt relieved over ithe “No, Alan, not about trusting|/badn’t thought of her with aver: you. But tl So many things |sion either. that can happen, lly if you| She was fond of Bobby. Given and Natalie really at the part-[a chance, she would love the boy. Bernad! nl jo she was piqued zs

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