The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1925, Page 8

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a rpeg ner rymcann: tales. PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE STATE TROOPS TOHOLD CAMP. DURING JUNE North Dakota Guardsmen to Train on Shores of Devils Lake The 164th Infantry, Dakota al Guard, representing —n military organizations with a strength of between 1200 and men, will be in camp at Camp ton, Devils Lake, June 13 to 27, clusive, Adjutant General G. A. F ser announced today. i Companies A from Bismarck; B and Headquarters company of Fargo; D from Minot; H of Jamestown; N of Grand Forks and the Devils Lake Howitzer company, with the compan- ies from a dozen other towns in the state that make up the state's infan- try regiment will be encamped on the shores of Devils Lake. | “This year’s camp,” total | 1450 ser said today, “will have for its major purpose the development of team work in offensive combat on the part of the small unit—the squad, platoon and company. We have thereby to give greater training to the minor officers, imeluding geants and other petty of- core adjutant general announced that more than a thousand young | men who will temporarily take up| military life during the fifteen day | camp “will receive not only the mil- | itary training, but general man-{ building work.” A full program of supervised ath- | letics will be available for the men, | he said. Instructional periods for | the purely military work will be from 7 a. m, to 11:30 m. and from 1 p. m. to 2:30 p.m. From 2:30 un- til 4.30 each afternoon, a schedule of track and field events, bascball, | swimming, wrestling and boxing | will be in effect. | This athletic training will be on} a competitive basis, according to| present plans, each unit sending rep- | resentatives into the various events the winners of which will all meet in finals during “Field Day,” June 26. | This day has been set aside as a holiday for the guardsmen, with the athletic competitions headlining the | day's program. Hundreds of parents and friends from all over the state | are expected to visit the camp on| that day. | Each day will close with some sort of a ceremony. A parade will pre- | cede “Taps” on one day, a review on another day, and some other mili- tary ceremony the next day, accord- | ing to the state commander of the guards, June 20 will be “ at the camp. vernor's Day”, On this day Governor A. G. Sorlie, commander-in-chief of! the troops, will sit with his staff in review of the state’s military forces. Members of the legislature have also been invited to review the troops with the governor. A full day's pro- gram has been laid out for the visit of the governor. He will be the guest of the officers of the regi-} ment. Included with the schedule of reg- ulation army drill and parade work which will be in effect throughout the encampment, are range practices and a two-day regimental maneuver. A new forty-target range is now being put in shape, something over a mile from the camp grounds. It was completed last summer and is said to be one of the finest national | guard ranges in the middle west. On this range each unit will have three days of firing. Rifle compan- ies will fire during three days of the encampment, machine gun com- panies during another three days, and the Devils Lake Howitzer com- pany will use its 37 milimeter guns and trench mortars on the targets another three d One of the main cvents in the camp life of the thousand young sol- | diers will be the two-day full regi-| mental maneuver, General Fraser said. On June 24 and 25, the guards- men will march with full equipment to the Ft. Totten Indian reservation. There the regiment will divide and “war” will begin. Half of the offi- cers and men will show their skill at finding the “enemy,” tracking the “foe” and “exterminating” the op- position forces, while the other half is seeking to avoid being found, cap tured or beseiged and 1s also uryiuig ie locate the first division and stake” it. Umpires, appointed by the state officials, will view the “war” and decide which section of the guacus won the two-day conflict. The guardsmen will be away from their permanent base for the two days and through one night. They will sleep during the night in shelter tents and generally observe marching regime during the maneuvers. High Tariffs Question To Agitate Germany Dusseldorf, Germany, May 7— While politicians are figuring out election combinations at Berlin, and getting much newspaper attention, a / wigantic economic struggle is going on behind the scenes in Germany of svhich the general public at present knows or suspects little. The issue is shall Germany have high protec- jive tariffs, or shall it enter into a customs union with as many nations as possible? Ordinarily one hears a great deal im Germany about the ruggle be- tweep the so-called heavy industry of the Ruhr Valley and the manu- facturing industries of Saxony, Thuringia, and southern Germany. In the ‘struggle over protection vs. vir- tual free t@ de, however, the line-up is w different one. Heavy industrial concerns are found fighting shoulder to. shoulder with one group of man- ufacturing industries Those who favor a high protective tariff-argue that so long as Germany ig fettered with reparations pay- ments, its production costs will con: tinue to be ,se high that there i Wenger of dumping by foreign coun- Theréfore, the only way to, On the left is shown Lieut-Com. R with the MacMillan Arctic Exped up it will support weigat of 750 help Ge the hom industry is by high tariffs The gument in favor of customs unions runs as follow Germany has become so crippled | the loss of Alsace-Lorraine and her colonies, the slicing off of Upper Si lesia, the placing under foreign) administration of the Saa mel regions, that tl of her industry 1 out into foreign countries other nations would be iling to)'Three Year Eclipse Pro- receive German goods unless similar i‘ favorable treatment be accorded] gram Made By United their goods in ' the customs union advocates argue that Germany should abolish tariff barriers as far as possible. This m mean the ruinat some few German indus- tries, , but on the whole Germany nefite This issue will come to the fore more than ever after the turmoil of the preside 1 election h bsid- ed. LONDON’S BIG DUNGEONS OPEN TO PUBLIC London, May 7.-Four additiona? towers of the famous Tower of Lon- don have been opened for the first time for the gonvenience of the} thousands of htseers from all parts of the world who visit th historic place weekly. The grea’ oaken doors of these towers, known as the Byward, Salt Martin and Broad Arrow were found to.be in a wonderful state of preservation, and the great dungeons where enemy spies were lodged during the last war are now open to public inspe for the first time in histor; was near the Martin Tower that some of the spies were shot, among them Carl Hans Lody, a German posing as an American, was captured in the summer of 1914, and who was the first pe: to be exeeuted in these precincts for nearly 100 years. In past centuries hundreds of trait- ors and prisoners of state were con- fined in the towers, and y of them whiled av y by carving picture d inscriptions on the wi and these are still visible today. Byward Tower, being the main en- trance to the inner ward, must have s gates carefully 1 every night, and the chief warder, in his scarlet co d flat h cort from the mili self performs that duty. ra Tower of London, which to 12 acres, dates from the William the Conqueror, who began the White tower somewhere about 1078, and completed it about 20 years afterward. At first it w: with ane guard, him- time of to protect SUN AGAIN IN. . with the 10-pound E. Byrd, U. S. ition. Before inflation no larger pounds, On the r .ieut-Com. Byr from a plane to the bout, A JANUARY, 1926 States Navy Scientists A Washington, 7.--Prolonged i study of the vagaries of the sun and |the moon has enab'ed scientists of the United States Naval Observatory here to work out their eclipses for the next three years. Under the di- rection of Captain W. 8. Eichelberger, W, y ure starting on w a of the sun—an rim of the sun} shows outside of the eclipsed area —is fo t for July 20-21, this’ but will be invisible in the United States. A part the moon is due Augus I eclipse of | more or less visible in the eas AD | states and wholly visible on the Pac- t® ifie Coast. for | the §4 but there will be a pse of the sun on January It will be visible only from to the Indian Ocean, and the 1 observatory will send a party from here to Sumatra to observe An annular eclipse of the sun will be visible July 9-10, 1926, in the cen- tral Pacific Ocean, and as a parti in northern Anstralia, the easter edge of Asia, the United States ad Mexico. There will be ‘no eclipses of ur ; moon next y total 14, 1926. Afri nie wh v0 20 In 1927, there will be five eclipses pe -three of the sun and two of the th moon. Seven eclipses in a year is {} the maximum, five of the sun and two of the moon, the least num- ber in a twelve month is two, both of the sun, as will be the in 1926. An annular so! the southern F ipse, visible in’ c; will occur Junu- A total of the moon, be visible in the Atlan- “a, except the uth America and A total of the be visible in Eu ine, a near-total at Nome, Alaska, Another total of the moon in 1927 will take place Dec ber 8 visible generally in the Pac by 1 northern border, ‘ the Pacific sun, June 2 2 h America. A partial eclipse of the sun will occur on December 24, Another heavenly phenomenon will en in 1927 in the transit of Mer- which will appear as a dot on SOPHS AND FROSH IN DUCKING BEE When freshmen at Western Reserv. two sophomores and made them wash the face of a statue building, they started something. The sophomores herded a number of freshmen to a park lagoon, | |the sun. On Nov 4 | will take place, : |the Pacifie Ocean, Australia wi at Honolulu, Manila and Samoa. of the moon will eclipses. siders that the total solar eclipse of May 19, that year, will be a curious one, only part of the resulting sha- dow falling on the earth, appearing as a piece on the south of Africa, and as a partial in South Africa and the southern part of South America. be visible North and South America, the Paci- fic Ocean, Australia and the eastern border of Asia, Partial solar eclipses vember 27, visible in hemisphere. pictures as he drops. rubber boat which will be taken than a hanébig, but when blown ‘d is demonstrating his transfer vember 10 the transit sible generally in and sia, except in the northern and estern portions. It will be visible n 1928 three of the sun and two be the Captain Eichelberger- con- total of the moon, June 3, will in the western parts of ill occur June 17 and November 12, total of the moon transpiring No- the western ‘Sweden Shows Fondness For American Bread Stockholm, May 7.—White bread of American wheat flour is gaining popularity in Sweden, according official trade and crop statistics r 1924 now available. But at the me time Sweden’s own grain pro- ducing capacity is rising, so that in pinch the country could. supply its entire need in breadstuffs. While still being supplemented by heat from the United States, ¢, Sweden's own wheat production has also risen during the same periods from mestic consumption, and yet the im- ports of wheat flour rose from 26 51 to 63 percent of the total:do- 0,000 kilograms in 1923 to 28 0,000 in 1924, so that the popula- on not only raises more wheat than rmerly, but also imports more. At e same time it consumes less of e old-time dark rye/ bread which was once its principal staff of life. PARACHUTE PICTURES hington, May G. A. Shoe- a photographer in the army r service, risks his life regularly falling in a parachute and taking Three small ‘otion picture cameras are strapped to him as he leaps from the wings of an airplane. heads off, ready for the pan. ‘5 cents per Ib. Central Meat 1 and im the northern part Market, ‘Let “GETS-IT” of THAT Pain st once, quickly t! corn or callous shrivels up and soon it may be lifted right off with the fi 5 No more i corn, at urt- ing feet, no more corn limping. Entire satisfaction or your money back. Costs but a trifle—sold everywhere ey, | e University, Cleveland, @, kidnaped. the federal i mee Rn Chinn ar 30x314 Fisk Tire 30x314 Fisk Tube t order of Low Prices Rubber Case Battery......... 13.50 en] Corwin Motor Co. FEW GUILTY Law Is Speedy, With Snap Judgment; Innocent Often Suffer BY CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer Washington, May 7.—Chief Justice visited London some time ago to study the English courts, especially their handling of criminal cases, He was much pleased. What particular- ly struck him was that English jud- ses simply won't permit delay or be bothered by technicalities. If a man | obviously is guilty of something, the | judge concentrates on finding him so and generally succeeds’ Then the authorities execute sentence and) that ends it. It’s the method we cught to adopt here, Justice Taft said. nite All this is recalled by the recent hanging in England of Norman Thorne, convicted of killing his sweetheart, Elsie Cameron. The evi- dence was so purely circumstantial that even the prosecution admitted it was impossible to prove guilt be- | yond a shadow, of doubt. Sir Arthur ‘onan Doyle led a strong effort to save the condemned man, on the ground that he was being railroad. ed. He was hanged nevertheless. “Good work,” is the contment heard in Washington judicial cir- cles. In fact, the impression is so favorable that a meeting of legal lights is being planned here for the coming summer to consider changes in the federal law which will make convictions easier to get. The move- ment’s backers have the English model in mind. If they can get it through Congress, they hope state legislatures will see how well it works and begin imitating it. Now, on the strength of several years of .my own observation of English justice,” as a correspond- ent in London, I want to say that it doesn’t seem to me to be all it’s cracked up to be. It works fast and smoothly, but at the expense of a lot of snap judgments I wouldn't like if I were on trial on a criminel charge. And, in this day and generation, any- "MEN ESCAPE | IN ENGLAND Taft of the federal supreme bench! (body is liable to be A notable case, in my time ia Lun- don, was that of Stinie Morrison. There had been several murders in the White Chapel district and no ar- be criticized. ‘Then there was an- other murder. to be caught. ‘The police brought in Morrison. He had a prison rec- ord. On that ground, the judge set him down as guilty.” But right in the middle of the trial one of the con- stables—it was all police evidence —broke down and confessed. the whole thing was a frameup. When he broke down, more broke down. The case collapsed. The prosecu- MUXATEO DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO. 107 Sth St. Phone 428 CARS - WASHED | AND j SIMONIZED { Best - Work - At - Low | Price. Phone 985W acess s§ 6.95 ‘3. 1.50 tion threw up its hands. Well, the jury convicted Morrison. The judge sentenced him to death: Even for England, that was too much. There was a how]. Very reluctantly the government commuted the sentence to life imprisonment. Morrison's doing time yet, I suppose, for a crime there absolutely is no reason to think he had a thing to do with. The English get convictions, yes —because they're not too particular whom they convict. It may be true, in this country, that a man actually guilty of some crime finds escape too easy for the public's good. But in England, once accused of a capital ffense, he'd better make his peace th his Maker," whether guilty or not. Personally I prefer the Ameri- can system. I may be charged with something some time myself. IS THIRTEEN UNLUCKY By NEA Service Paris, May 7.—Those who believe 13 is an unlucky number will be in- terested in a compilation of unusual incidents made by Le Figaro. On Friday, the 13th, in 1907. briele D’Annunzio was in Free to Asthma and Hay Fever Sufferers Free Trial of Method That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Tim ee ‘We have a method for the control of Asthe ma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long stand- ing or recent development, whether it is pres: ent as Chronic Asthma or Hay Fever, you should send for # free Trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with Asthma or Hay Fever, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those enparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, “patent ¢mokes,""ete., have failed. We want to show everyone, at Our expense, that out method is designed to end all difficult breath- ing, all wheezing, and all those terrible paroxysms. This free offer is too important to neglect @ single day, | Write now and begin the method at once. Send no money. Simply mail coupon below. Do it Today—you even Dostage. * FREE TRIAL COUPON SRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room715C iNlagara afid Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. ¥. Send free trial of your method to: Universal Shoe Shop ' First Class Shoe Repairing 111-5thSt. Bismarck, N.D. rests. The police were beginning to| as Somebody simply hAd , cs Why have your tubes cold patched when you can get them yalcanized at EVERREADY TIRE VULCANIZERS. 216 4th St. “Phone 944 THURSDAY, MAY 7," 1925 manuscript “12%.” Moreas refused to have «ine of his books printed at an estefblishment h bore the number 152 (four which nearly cost him his eyes, Taxi No. 13 took him to his house, the driver. charged-13 lires for the rip, he found 13 letters awaiting him | w! : : and entertained 13 guests at dinner | times 13). Richard- Wajsner, with that evening. On Aug. 13, 1922, his|13 letters in the two. njmes, w. born in 1813 and died Fek.ruary 1 icia 3. E stand—Lif_ letters— Massenet, the famous musician, | 1883. Edmond Ros’ at had a horror of 13, and always num-|was the holder of chair ‘No. 13 at bered the thirteenth page of his|the French Academy. airplane crashed with him. Ix) "Hello Daddy ~ | WRIGLEYS TZ FLAVOR LASTS, ie The Ideal Car for Spring STUDEBAKER Standard Six. Duplex-Phaeton HE new Studebaker Standard Six Duplex-Phaeton is the ideal car for Spring—and for all the year. : ‘When the ‘sun is shining, it provides the exhilarating freedom that only an open car can give. ‘When it rains or storms, or on damp, chilly evenings, you have instant protection at your finger tips . . . by . simply lowering its roller side enclosures, an exclusive Studebaker feature. : This extra convenience is found only on cars built by Studebaker. And the Studebaker Standard Six Duplex- Phaeton sells at the price of an ordinary open car. THIS IS A Bismarck Motor Sales Co. Come .in and see this new-type car. Learn what Studebaker offers before you buy. i STUDEBAKER YEAR | |

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