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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An pendent Newspaper THE SLATE'S ULDEST Ni WSPAPER (Established 1873) ——— cutting down forests, digging mines, building rail- roads, establishing cities and exploiting the earth |to turn out sculptors or musicians or poets—with two or three notable exceptions, of course. But we need not despair. There are signs that Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, a renaissance is coming. Gradually we are finding Bismarck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice @t time to suspend our feverish workday activity and George D, Mann .President and Publisher‘? try to make life yield beauty as well as profit. France Dissents Befcre you allow yourself to get too greatly aroused by the “atrocities” and “kill-the-foreign- devils ness in connection with the National- Subscription Rates Payable im Advance Daily by carrier, per year ........00+ 06 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). waily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck). Daily by mail, outside of North . Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Preas is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatche | overything in their power to discredit the Canton- ger, and also the local news of spontaneous origin ¢s¢ in the eyes of the world; that the British dis- published herein. All rights of republication of all seminate “misleading ‘news, which in no way cor- other matter herein are also reserved. responds to realiti that many stories of Chines \ outbreaks are utterly false; and that the re tonese authorities now have the Shanghai situation | well in hand. | The French, be it noted, have not joined the ish in the shelling of Nanking | and the Yangtze er forts; and they insist they! (Official City, State and Ccanty Newspaper) will not. Before we get all excited about the! IO Chinese situation, it might pay us to study the/ Japanese Honor French attitude and see if it hasn't some points The Japanese are a strange race, to us; and! which we might copy. some Americans fear that some day we shall have | to go to war with them, Hl Here is a little story about a Japanese, culled | Gas Masks in Congress | from the press dispatches, that is worth thinking} The other day, in the British house of commons, | ubout—not in connection with the possibility of war | Commander Kenworthy, world war veteran, asked between Japan and America, but because it throws | the government to supply gas masks to the whole such a revealing light on Japanese character. British population south of the River Tweed, ar- | ‘A few days ago there was much trouble at Nan- | suing that in the next war the civilians will need | king, in China, While British and American war-| them more than the soldiers. 28 | 1.20 ’ 5.00 | Is” bu: ists in China, you might pay a little attention tu the official French government reports of the last few days. These reports assert that the British are deing Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGG DETROIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg. NEW YORE) YN™: BURNS & SMETH Ave. Bidg, | Americans and Bri ships bombarded the city to protect their nationals,, Me added: ; a Japanese vessel, firing no guns, sent a contingent “[ have mine. I have the one I used during the ushore to rescue the Japanese consul. war— | This contingent was commanded by a young) “Put it on!” yelled several members. lieutenant, named Araki. He went unarmed, as “Not here,” said Kenworthy, suavely, “It would did his followers, determined to avoid bloodshed. |be quite useless for the kind of gas we get here.” His mission was successful; he rescued the consul) What Kenworthy said about the house of com- und neither he nor any of the sailors in his com-,™ons applies with equal force to the kind of gas mand was molested. that is prevalent in our own congress. It’s an But when he had returned to his ship he wrote! asphyxiating gas that does not kill the members. | to his commander as follows: It puts them to sleep. “In order to insure the ety of the Japanese, And, worse still—it often kills measures that are idents at Nanking, I endured, from the Chinese,|much needed for the progress and well-being of | s anese can tolerate. The lives the country. i of the Japanese refugees could be saved, but [ am SEE | ashamed that the honor of the Japanese navy has It Doesn’t Pay er eeeee en ty inersone Fifteen years ago Jesse Sharp, “lifer,” escaped | ng written this he took the one course open ron the Ohio penitentiary. The other day, old! to a Japanese whose honor has been offended; he ang broken, he came back voluntarily. % killed himself. ee The strain of evading police, of fearing con-| gy me 1 of the imagination can YoU ctantly that he would be caught, was too great, he | imagine an American or British naval officer doing aid, It ruined his health and prevented him from | that. Our entire philosophy different from! cotting any enjoyment out of his freedom. So he| Japan's. ame came back. } And what a Philosophy that is! It is Spartan, | A lawbreaker pays for his.crime in more ways ruthless, aver-heroic, if you wish; yet it is impos-) than one, This man found out that a man’s own, =e vg ahh fae little story without being con:| cadaitenay can punish him mbye sharply than any | vinced that there must be something extremely | man-made prison. | fine about a race that can maintain such a phil-| 4 doesn’t always pay, after all. esophy. | s A nation with men like Lieutenant Araki is g0-| ing somewhere—it deserves to. It also is a nation worth being friendly with; not only because of policy, but because it has something to offer us spiritually. ‘ac ose | Hope For the Crippled One of the problems of this efficient industrial | age of ours is the placing of physically afflicted! men in jobs where they can support themselves. _ The man with poor eyes, a bad leg or a twisted Main Street Again jhand is frightfully handicapped nowadays. But Mendrik Willem Van Loon, historian’ and author! there is a ray of hope in a report from the welfare of “The Story of Mankind,” has changed his mind Council of New York City. about European conditions and the so-called} This report shows that employers ure more and American Babbittry. more finding that physically handicapped men can In Berlin last week, Mr. Van Loon said this;!he very useful employes.’ The Ford Motor Co., “Europe is poor, her art and literature are bunk,|the very home of efficiency, employs no less aa 4nd all she is thinking of is three square meals|!%000 men who are physically below normal. and a suit of clothes . . . Europe thinks we have | PRE ome magic formula, It is really only that we ive and let live, whereas Europe lives and lets| starve.” H In the last few years, a throng of writers have} joined H. L. Mencken in beating the drum and an-j{ (New York Times) | pening. - Americans. that they are ignorant | President Coolidge is going about the selection of fools and bigots, unable to appreciate true art and |shis year's summer white house with his usual literature. We are the crassest of materialists,| .., Sia Eb: A hence B a th sion so we are told. North Dakota has come in for its|“2EACtY. te DAS BIWayS \rownhee, On tne owe, sh: Aiiaes H ; ‘i |promoted by the zealous Mr. Dickinson of Iowa, share of attention in this noise fest, with Mencken | th3¢ 9 permanent white house should be built some. calling us a country of “Little Bethels in the no- |where west of the Mississippi. Tnat would pro- #More-scrub-bulls belt.” 2 4 : ae 4 “ 3 ee uaa e ,.. {Mote too many jealousies and tie the president = “pray tellin ihe = eee Van | down too closely. .’fter“one summer in New Eng- “Old world culture” and “eld world polish” hava| 2h and another in the Adirondacks, Mr. Coolidgr | “been favorite subjects of these intellectuals. New], Ne rapeteae’ eee ta haw Ant rise world culture, to them, does not exist. They will| NaS not yet been decided, only it must oF | Late, 4 : igh | enough to find an altitude that will assure cool- shave to range to other fields to gain comparisons ness.” H Id th xy di ly? which will reflect on the United States unfavor-| Ness.” How could the matter be put more discreetly ? ably. Iowa need not feel slighted. The heart of the corn| EYE Ie have lived peaceably, so far. on our Maia| ees bit Ae hat ee renident iA vacations, JAP | e Viezepts, despite all the ballyhooing. We have gone, yon. the eve.of a presidental campaign. . rH The states cf the west coast would be glad to! -- quietly about the task of building up a new culture, | : a rf producing new inventions. If we are “Little Beth- welcome the president. But Mr. Coolidge naturally MS? we have ai least dane-better than. similar| cerntee (> 6On0 SRC Away Com aekinginn. Ben: fi “places across the ocean, if Mr. Van Loon’s words ater, Eiioot, prandiet ie scene wpuders of Utah; iss ts be taken gh dace vale. would like to have him spend the summer near F ei ue | Zion National Park. If he wants isolation and Editorial Comment Presidential Vacations ‘hered’ upon THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ; i It’s in Your Hands Editor's Note: This is the 20th chapter in the story of a | ae "MY FUTURE : former doughboy who, going STRENGTH DEPENDS | | setts ‘eenesu an sav i guard of the “Second A, E. F.,” TIPON THEIR, FREALT IN| | i vevisiting'ato¢ the scenes te | and his buddies saw during the war. CHAPTER XX | Maybe you were at Bazoches on | Aug. 9, 1918. Maybe you were at Epieds Chamery Pra- inay Wez . .”. Ste. Mene- |hould + or Juvi 5 | it makes little difference; when you Legionnaires come this Sep- tember you will see they all have changed. But ihe American influence is easy to recogn A peasant goes past with a leath jacket he probably purchased f ten francy and the purchaser. proh ably tried to out-frane a buddy with the galloping dominoes. And rain- coats! ell, it must be that all those buckled slickers were left be- hind for a consideration. This work areas could hardly go on without American eaalprient. ! Hob-nailes ikers; too. ing stron In the ing there when you sweated through with the line of advance you can now buy cafe au lait, or cafe au rhum. pear under the ground. Then fever- ish hubub above ground and echoes of struggle below. Ambulances ar- rive in squads! Smoke puffs through cracks and, now and then, a line of flame is seen to shoot along wires. A fireman is brought to the sur- face, overcome—then another and another! Lights flicker in buildings and elevators feebly lift themselves, or halt as though by order of a magician, Men and women crane nervous necks from a score of build- ings. The skyscraper buildings be- come alive with peering faces, Ani- mation ‘overtakes entire blocks ‘and thousands pour into the street. Pe Above ground the air is tense with BARBS uncertainty! What is going on down | |below the earth? A sweat-soaked, ‘ grimly-faced fireman comes up for jair then another... and another! Down the block excitement spreads. MANUAL FOR BEGGARS book found in the pocket of a Saint.» Sinner ® 1927 & DEA SERVICE, INC ; , » beggar arrested in Paris was called ; Jim, Junior, and his bride, Fay, in-) She dropped the paper to the floor )¢rk dlthe fire has leaped along wires to isted’ “upon Jim Lane's ‘lunching of the car and laid a trembiing hand {4 Manual for the Use of Beggars.” break out in a new place. Great with them, se that ind Bob! on his arm. “We've got to do some- ha = Peek | sucks of sand and cement disappear lL were free to lune nd to talk thing! Do you realize that Churchill the fatllers below ground. | of college students to suppress the volume. They unhampered of Ch had long since tacitly has nothing nothing —to combat this terrible evidence with, but Cher n entire street suddenly is bar- ricaded to traffic, which is shunted « What beggars reall; is not so much a the subject of the its prob- ry’s own unsupported word? And, need, of course, Hr into the next and the extra burden able outcome when ( diseon- when he puts her on the witness’ Manual as manual labor. . . . If chokes this street to limits. Ve- father was with them, st Banning will simply tear her the book were introduced in Ameri- hicles travel within fractions of an “Well lunch in our own little tea to pieces. We've got to do some- the title could be changed to inch of each other. Drivers curse room, witch the me» hasn't. dis-| thing, Bob!” anual’ for Oil Stock Salesmen.” themselves and cach other. Soon an ered yet, thank heaven,” Beb told, “I've ng that Crowell, 4nd it would go over big. in ie {he entire section feels the crush. her compassionate, as they — drove ator, would turn Strange thing about it, all is that) “and in a hundred buildings busy they should arrest a beggar in Paris.! men take up telephones only to find We thought, they. elected all their them wealsues oe ts beggars foreign, mipjqters. 1 "How compictely at the mercy of mechanical perfection they have be Roller skathig isyag@vancing as 2 Come. They swear and growl, The: fad among the ladies.” Probably they Cannot reach their stock. broker! figure they may as well’ use the They cannot i fi : y phone their appoint- skates as associate with them. {ments nor reach the ears of their “Make Chicago’ Hum,” is one of customers. A little instrument of 4 metal and wire has them at ite darling, I haven't forgotten! Mayor Thompson's new slogans. We vt him. T've got a man stationed| Mayor, Thompson's new sic mercy! y from tn don’t want ap ritably to m new. court hous jo, we per!” he shouted ir- poy who had clam- the running board. t. Bob!” F: * Bob admitted deject- ‘Seems ‘} me a good detective could have got hold of something in connection with that threatening let- ter, but Churchill says they have run in) blind alley on that lead.” “Have you forgotten all about old Phil, the beggar?” Faith asked, re- h creeping into her tired voice. darling, I haven't forgotten the hea bright, awe she read aloud, robbery’,” : ay while she robbed on Saturd. of reconstruction in the devastated | Still go-| Suvette that wasn't stand-| THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 1927 Buck PRIVATE pos “fb FRANCE: 9.8 back, PAUL ADAMS de~rhum, madame, Avec | di joulez-voo promenade, madame?” promenade, 'M’sieur.” ‘Aw, sanny-fairy-ann.” i ‘Mais, non. z “Then bring on some vin blin! If you try cafe au lait madame will bring it along in two little pitchers, the au lait in one and the cafe in the other, And the au j lait will be cold, and so also will be the cafe. You can try one of those well-known omelettes with the pommes des terre all wrapped up inside. Boy! And you can cut | your bread off the piece witit | your jack-knife, just like any goods j efficient A. EB. F. sold at American bon camerade Id be able to do, su menl. ie mademoiselles peek —cayly out through the curtains of the windows as you you've finished the omelet there serv. ust as it used You drink from the fountain the center of town; without a put your face in it. But se comes when you meet a He clops by in his wooden shoes. And shyly regards you. But he don’t put out | imy hand and plead: | igarette pour papa, cigarette pour papa.” He was born since the war. | to be. in cup; jusi | the ‘surpi | youngster of six or seven. . m’sieur; sciatica iain ae || NEWS BRIEFS | | John Early, leper, disappears from | his isolated camp on South Toe river, | North Carolina, ' “ Lieut. Stewart W. Towle, Jr, army | air corps, escapes in 1800 foot para- chute drop from burning plane near Champaign, I, putting out blazing | clothing in'descent; plane is destroy- ed. |. Monthly survey o? feferal reserve | board in Washington shows prices of |on-agricultural commodities _in | March fell-to lowest level since | world war. | Combined resources. of national ‘banks on March 28 were $25,690,147,- 000 compared with $25,683,849,000 in | December. League of Nations decides not to invite Russia to forthcoming econo- mie conference. | Rapid City, 8. D.Louis A. Mun ‘son, returned here from Rochesterd Minn., on charges of embezzling $6,000, was adjudged insane. ! Aberdeen, S, D.—-Mrs. Margaret i McLaughlin of Mitchell was reelected president of the Supreme Forest Woodmen Circle of North and South Dakota and delegate to the national convention, Minneapolis—D: 1 James Filt- more, resident of Minnesota for 75 years, died here, aged 101. ‘ Minneapolis—Rufus R. Rand, Jr. state commander of the American Le- \ gion, wired commanders of 500 state to watch Phil's corner and to report| to tnat attended to me if the beggar shows un, and at. saa I've been down in Shantytown— attending the dear, and “How much?” B. Tip your hat but let your hand Cut the phones of all New York legion posts urgine them to take the for a day and there would be some- Jead in giving the Red Cross all pos- thing approximating panic, sible assistance toward helping low- And somewhere off on* his quiet er Mississippi flood victims. ably, fought to make the world safe to sit out, in, The grammar aed, jy. the “flo: stu this is the fourth big jewel robbery in the last six months, and no gle arrest has been made ye chief of police is quoted here ing i like the work of 0} by a ‘muster mind Bob snorted contempt- the news stand, you know, has prom- ised tw get word to me the minute, old Phil shows up. Here we are, honey. Let's have lunch and try tol ing unigecsity’™ by forget about ital for an hour. Tt] afl Une weclay jurgeal’ Leadon, ey breaks my heart to see you looking 4° dj : ae tivad. and aiscoumaged cls Wink) | Cn. eer ae ae 4 At The Movies; CAPITOL THEATRE “The Broncho Twister” is the best priors drama Tom Mix ever made, uously. “Just a nice, machine-mide | you'd stay at home one day from the] Pest to be spoofing the British. 1B. E. Mix, the star's father, makes little ‘alibi that Morehouse trots out trial and try to get some rest.” this declaration after camping on when he’s fallen down on the job.: “Stay at home when Cherry is all sets and locations while the pro- duction was being made. Tom agrees with his father, but not because Dad Mix is an guthority on film dramas. What's that headline about Cherry? “‘Bates testimony blow to de- fense,’” Faith read aloud, dispirited- ly. “A subhead says, ‘Cherry lays blame on-Wiley, when confronted ghting for her life?” Faith flamed at him. “Bob, I bel you've given up hope! You're beginning to believe she did it! And if you doubt her— y No, don’t touch me! I don't want to preacher.’ I knew the papers would, be made love to! I want Cherry to be seize on Bates’ testimony as a sort, free! I don’t want anything else in of confession, and you can imagine) the world!” what they'll do with Anderson's evi- xcnbanss dence about Cherry's saying, ‘To| TOMORROW: Faith overs that think I got rid of Ralph Cluny for a| Cherry in tortured hy a secret fear thing like you!’ The late afternoon oe: connected with her trial for murs) papers will be shrieking that Cherry | der. confessed to killing Cluny, Bob!” (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Ine.) THEY’RE ALL ALIKE By Bess Bly —_————— OO | Old Masters | We meet neath the sounding rafter, | “The Broncho Twister” was the And the walls around are bare; first of his famed son's films that As they shout back our peals of the father ever saw in production. laughter. . E, Mix, of DuBoise, Pa., was on It seems that the dead are there. [his first visit with the actor at his Then stand to your glasses, dy! | Hollywood mansion when “The We drink in our comrades’ eyes:]Broncho Twister” was started at One cup to the dead already— Fox Film: udios ‘and “it was all Hurrah for the next that dies! new to him”-except the horseback riding. “The Broncho Twister,” which will have a showing at the Capitol Thea- tre, shows Mix in a lot of new daring acts, including rolling from the top of a fifty foot tower in a powder barrel that is left in splinters when it hits a tree. Mix has the starring role of Tom Mason and opposite him Not here are the goblets glowing, Not here is the vintage sweet; ‘Tis cold, as our hearts are grow- ing, And dark as the doom we meet. But stand to your glasses. steady! |“ “And rcon shall our pulses rise: A cup to the dead already— Hurrah for the next that dies! in the feminine lead.is Helene Cos- tello, Others in the cast are Paul There’s_a mist on the glass con-| Nicholson, Doris Lloyd, Jack’ Pen- NEW OfESS Havenl I SEEN THAT Before? 0. nick, Maleolm Waite, Dorothy Kiteh- en, Otto Fries and George Irving. ELTINGE THEATRE gealing, ‘Tis the hurricane’s sultry breath; And thus does the warmth of feel- iny ‘ Turn ice in the grasp of death, Hour 00 You LIKE My NEw DRESS? o y Jack Holt's career has been as 71's ALL RIGHT — USN But stand to your glasses, steady! | picturesque as the parts he plays in t : For a moment the vapor flies: | fhe motion, pictures. He has lived e Quaff a cup to the dead already— Hurrah for the next that dies! ~-Bartholomew Dowling: — From “The Revel: East India.” IN NEW. YORK | the life of the open air, and was well acquainted with the broad vistas of the far West long before he even face a camera lens. tion of a man’s future life, Holt’s career should have been a quiet one, privacy, that might be the place to go. The drive: through the hot desert into that magnificent bit | of molten sunset nearly finished the members of | President Harding's party in 1923. The newspa- per men who follow the president on these saun- terings haven't forgotten that experience, and the mere thought of spending the summer there would make them faint. The place in the Black Hills seems more attractive. It can’t be so very far from the “isohyet of eight inches” which the com- mercial geographies say bounds the corn belt on the west. The farmers would be vocal there, but not too vocal, and there is plenty of fishing. Representative Dickinson long ago urged the president to “breathe the air of the west nd come Self-made Men Dr. Edward A, Fitzpatrick, dean of the graduate hool of Marquette University, took occasion to remark the other day that all men—even college graduates—are “self-made men.” “Education can in the last analysis be only a = Fprocess of self-development, where a man is maste | of his fate, and the artist creating his own life out . of the raw materials cf his experience,” he says. That’s a point worth stressing. In school or out of it, every man is constantly meeting rew experi- ences, each one of which has a certain effect on! 7+ him. His reaction to these experiences deter- ines what he will be. He is, after all, arbiter humble origin, in whose experience beauty was the people who live in parts of the country far re- associated chiefly with the devil. moved from the capital a chance to see and hear True enough. Mr. Taft might have added that jhim. This is particularly -true in the case of a these humble men whe developed country found | president born and bred in the east, like Mr. Cool- their job so ‘tremendous that it left them little ;idge. He ought not to fare so badly, even with the time for any of the less utilitarian graces. Ameri- |embittered farmers. They will find him a little gaps, ever since the revolution, have been too busy | more than kin—even though less than kind, a Virginian born, the son PS i ah a ss New York, April 28—There is no coal clergyman. place more’ helpless than this be- Paths of learning led him, 3 be) however, to the Virgina Military hemoth city when helplessness over-| Ao iemy, from which he was grad- uated with a civil engineer's degree and an incipient restlessness. He worked at his profession for a rail- road and gave this up in favor of cattle punching Oregon. To thi experience, he owes his expert ho manship. And then one day he found him- self in San Francisco with $25 in his pocket and no job in sight. He took a chance. The chance consisted of sopping a horse off a towering cliff into a river several! indred fect be- low while the cameras registered the scene. That little stunt cost him four weeks in the hospital, but when he came out a motion picture con- _A heavy snow storm leaves the giant smothered, impotent and al- most inert. A heavy rain and the rush of waters jam subways and block streets, In a place so dense with activity everything must move with clock- work precision or chaos results. Let any part of the big parade stop and the whole soon suffers, It is} the old story of one toppling card that sends the yhole pack flopping. Hu !-WHEN DIDJA ~-ANo- WHEN WIFE | | HAS oN A | 13 year i GET THE NEW ‘ Just how one entire section has lost its voice. of his. own destiny, to that extent at any rate. into. lume inomiact anit we iment” b igcinall (fire lin’ the underground) act was waiting for him. We are, as Dr. Fitspatrick says, all self-made establishiig a residence west of the Miseissipps 2 THATS THE |e : snow aubwayeand "B6n00 tele: |» Tod's he ta considered the tyvical ig meat 4 | yy T 7 Phones become silent, Giant eables| Zane. Grey here, being picked by | That was before the veto of tie McNary-Haugen | STyYZe criss cross beneath the ground, run-| Zane Grey himself to play in his pic- re | bill. Now it is perhaps more of a challenge than | LIKE ON ning a limited number of trunks Hy ane othe "i atonooe. Rider” the ne No Time for “Art” | an invitation. But the president does well to ac-| . / these, “taid ‘many. years aor were Neane Grey picture at the Eltinge Fri It is only natural that America is known as a cept it. It will help to give him perspective and | figured * basis of population | day and Saturday. nation that has little appreciation of the finer | understanding. It will make those with grievances { prowess 16g since tnarwet Bae PAs arts, Lorado Taft, former sculptor, said recently in| feel that they are not so remote from the white Sedan ee Justajin le P an address at Yale University. Ame he points | house, after all. When the president can get away Nothing i ‘i a aladra ti id Pesageeire ing is more me| atic an £ pit, was settled and developed largely by men of | from Washington, it is fitting that he should give imagination stirring than these fires “Why the brand-new clothes?" in the murky homall, of the city, From a sidewalk ‘edge one may pene- trate section of thé bilackne: Suddenly a few puffs of smok ree crowd and fire engines: ing from everywhere. Somehow t wooden supports or frameworks have caught fire. The makeshift gtrees of boards is quickly pried and one after another the red Belmets disap- ‘The modern record for highest bat- ting . average is held ‘. Hornsby, who batted 424 in 1925, Hugh Duffy, in 1894, batted 438 dur- ing the season, ™ ed lnc | Peach Tree Hollow--twice 1aceiy, to! : ly, but there ather him. If he's living down , 910n¢ naeates hillside the philosopher can chuekle mis tired face, — there he's got the whole dirty district : at this, and add a few notes to his’ wh ut toMy tn cahoots With nie ko tine the tant! inate, Charleston and Black Bottom dissertations on man’s futile strug- ith told him! Looks to me like somebody's told|\oe"the cublic mind, according to SUiM&® jumping down him that I'm looking for him andjatince teacher, The next war id GILBERT SWAN. the column’ of type. “It si he’s hiding out. Old Kelly, who runs ei be 4 If early environment is any indica-' Grand Forks—The death of the _father of William A. Larson, member of the Mayville Normal debating team, caused the cancellation of the scheduled debate there Wednesday night with the University of North , Dakota. *, Fargo—Axel R, Swanson, James ‘town, N. D., internationally licensed pilot, will attempt a non-stop flight from New York to Paris this summer, he. announced in Fargo, A THOUGHT | —_——_—______________4 The harvest truly is plenteous, but nae laborers are few.—Matthew ix 237. be seas '” Untess man plants and sows and reaps, seed-time and harvest avail him_nothing.—-Presbyterian Witness, ; Women, to Look Well, You Must be Well Rochester, Minn.—"I am always, glad to speak a good word for Dr: Pierce's remedies, especially the ‘Favorite Prescription,’ because I have taken it and know about it from my own experience. My health was very poor when I wa: advised to try the ‘Prescription,’ andby the time I had taken/three bottles my health was good. I had tried_several remedies before, Dr. Pierce's Favorite ‘Prescription was the only thing to béo? any benefit to me. It took me safely through middle life and left me in good health, which I still enjoy.” eat Cora Headly, 105 1st Ave., All dealers. Large bottles, Nquid $1.35; Tablets, $1.35 and 65c. Write Dr. Pierce, President of the In- valids’ Hotel, Buffalo, : free advice, MONEY TO LOAN on Bismarck City Property City Insurance A, Biomarck, Rerth Dakets Representing Eaton & Eaten Financial Correspendents ‘The Union Central Lite Insurance Co, . City Nations! Baek Bulléing In What Month Is Your Birthday? ” , . Hoskins-Meyer Home of K-F-Y-B Pye