The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 13, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT fa aD t 4 roe ° out the purchaser’s knowledge of such substitu The Bismirck Tribune! that it shall be unlawful to display any can or dtum \ An Newspaper n which is displayed any trade-mark which is not THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER the distinctive designation of the ofl within the Established 1873) | container; that it will be unlawful to display any gm z , PAUL &@ FRANCE 9.2% Published oy the Bismarck Tribune Company, | sign or label which describes any lubricating ofl for fae Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at internal combusiton engines not actually on ‘sale ‘at | “fee So aa F ‘ 7 ‘This. ctinpter, {the mess of wreckage on the dank kits. “4 Bismarck as second class mail matter. the place of business where the sign is displayed. ries Of articles | concrete Pua hin et oon. et the George D. Man s::++President and Publisher Modern internal combustion engines have become | g o 4 4 \ ane tae Hf bs of the soltines was anteoded phd bow Reg Subscription Rates Payahle in Advance jsuch delicate precision instruments that proper oil | x most extraordinary mo mpgs td * OS tani os Sotndeied ened Daily by carrier, per year ... A Tes is an essential. Motor manufacturers have experi-| on record and heretofore has | \¢ ‘lotunfamiliar gesture. A few WDaily b; I, per year, (in Bismarck)...... 720! mented with their products and designate the kind’ . inches away were two dice. One of 7 Daily by mail, per Fear marck).......-.e.s-+ 6:00{0f oll best suited for their motors. The average Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota «+ 6.00; motorist, buying oil along the highway, will have: Member Audit Bureau of Circulation no protection against ‘substitution of inferior lubri-| Member of The Associated Press cants unless stringent laws are engcted. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to ‘ok ak ia the use for republication of all news ba The Trend of Advertising tila it 35 sid Gea atgetell in this al The volume of advertising in the United States | per, and also the local news of spontaneous origi shows a steady and gratifying growth, Elbert/ ee horned ig aa tall Hubbard’s mousetrap mang a hermit who made} CHAPTER XXXIII. the investigators flashed his, lamp he war | on the cubes and “read them.” One Pig 3 Bava i os ata showed a 8." The other a "2"... is-| a natural. tention anreisg, or the. nited, States Just beyond this successful pass army were called to a ruined French | was a little pile of ‘moldy 4 Laer village in the Champagne sector last | francs, almost lice, Sart) y oie iyear,.eight years after the Armistice | “works” that had been the object o! had ‘been signed. Villagers, poking | that pass. around in a shattered home, had dis-| The inve: covered some American soldiers in aj mains of t! cellar. Their gra ‘The debris was cleared away. With | can ceme igators removed the re- jsuch excellent mousetraps that the world beat a ; ; flashlights, the investigators erawied| the O. D. clad skeleton whose with. Foreign Representatives path to his door in the wilderness, could not exist ‘ : , ete tgti wees 4 throngn e Role, in the masonry and | Foie in that cellar where the tragedy G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY jtoday. It is not anly necessary to! make good ig had been disturbed since the day | occurred i io CHICAGG ‘ eee aa mcusetraps, but it is necessary to “tell the world” ® huge German “G,.1 ce had ex- i haee and’ the twa" Gite: Teenie Tower Bldg. NE, BURNS & SMITH Me? BIE: in a very clever manner in order to.sell the mouse- aoe eam atlttly vetted | They tell’a weird story of the war NEW YORK Sie: Pi Fifth Ave. Bldg. | traps at a profit. | on two chairs and a wooden bench, | st Fere-en-Tardenois, France, where were the American soldiers: They |" American cemetery is located, It had been killed by the concussion | is this story of “The Last Pass.” of the high axplosive shell, —— On the floor. were thelr packs.| Tomorrow: More Traces of the Their rusted rifles were stacked. In| War. ay Pe heen ond Dunnnen Wannare, | Newspaper advertising is increasing at the rate 4 __(Wfticial City, State and Ccanty Newspaper) | o¢ approximately 2.8 per cent per year and maga- : zine advertising is increasing 4.9 per cent a year. Intrepid Airmen - aa Adventurers of the air do not stop.to count the| “te Amount of advertising throughout! the country | : a eoal namtone ty jat any time follows closely the general trend of | costs. Two intrepid airmen “hopped off” in France! ‘ in the cold, gray dawn of a Sunday morning Pl ballet with a cheerful farewell to relatives and friends, faced the perils of a non-stop Trans-Atlantic flight from Paris to New York. They had hoped to reach 9 | These are connected by 58,000,000,000 Daily H Ith | | miles of wire, which carry 71,000,000 | vally hea | |calls a day, acgording to figures of 7 4 the A icam Telephone and Tele- | : Service graph Company. The total investment is more than. $3,000,000,000. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN |g __7__-_—__» Editor Journal of the American | CROP REPORT | Advertising in magazines reacts much more slug- 'gishly than does newspaper advertising, .perhaps |due to the fact that the latter is more flexible and | the port of the American metropolis some time is not contracted for as far in advance as is meee: | Monday, May 9. No wotd of the machine has zine space. Newspaper advertising falls off more} R it ie meee .o| Sharply and rises more quickly *than does the vol-! Mi reached an anxious. public ly ed \ibeed ume of magazine advertising. - During the. period. 1948 Winter rye and pasture conditions , aviators doubtless waged a dramatic battle with} were regular decreases in the num-|on May first as reported by Paul Cy the elements. : Two views may be taken of the advertising in = : ber of infants uhdér one'year of age] Newman, statistician of the United ea chat veteran flyers. ‘They. smdst negotiate [Ness men generally forogijt~-qnd anticipate the feats: sa ita evage, and hay reserves are the low- ‘<< ; . oa trend of business and change their advertising ex- ‘ > According'to Dr. R.'M. Woodbury | est since 1918, 3,700 miles by air routes, while Alcock and Brown i scordt A : ‘ 6 of the U. &:Children’s Bureau, the| Rye condition is reported at 87 per in their Trans-Atlantic flight only made 1,700 |Penditures accordingly, and the setond isithat the N “4 . : Pa a explanation is to be found in the| cent compared with 83 per cent a miles, the distance between New Foundland and | *¢vertiser determines the volume ‘of ‘his: advertis- Ireland. According to weather bureau reports the L y movement for the protection of the| month ago, 75 per cent a year ago ing by the current volume of his sales without at- ecient inate - aviators encountered strong head winds of at least health’ of" thé babies as wetl as injand the ten-year rage of 84 per tempting the forecasting of the future. The latter the movement for general public] cent. Cool temperatures have held ‘ . * 5 t , | View is more nearly the correct one, since a close twanty-tive miles an hour velocity. Not since the comparison of advertising with a period of trade a e ‘White Bird” took off from France has anyone ety ANOara cent avandia: Tag “08 foe ‘ennai ‘ received a word relative to the participants in this | °UV'Y . ice lng of 9 few: ty a © a ae health protection and sanitation] back growth of rye and pasture ° More and ‘more ageacies such as|grassea, but there is an abundance = ms ‘ BARBS those of the governme: of the|of moisture. The acreage of rye states and of the cities, well as| abandoned to date in the state is > - volunteer agencies, are jucating | negligible. . in the former. \ e CHQOSE YOUR WEAPONS mothers in the essential facts 0! lay reserves on farms May first flight. ii : © WEA SERVICE, HC. . Beliboyr in a New York hotel are| child care. : were much below average, and but 35 Advertising has progressed from the status of ; ; hi . i aah vate by an: as eee iee nae are ; bier a ahs ache pe to ts per cent ot ae essere “ oo . ‘ » peri i “I'm trying to tell you, honey, but; cabinet. June testified that she hac | the boys going in.for now—bayonets?| done. For instance, the rate for the| year ago. The general shortage o! an experiment through the period when it was a youtll hiwe-to;besedlineicus the doe: | opened the original letter, that she |---+ Maybe they're taking a little} United States for- 1921 was 78.67| feed during the entire winter has re- luxury, to the time when’ it is now a necessity and tor ‘will bent nie up for walk i i Uncle Rulph, who |#renade drill prior to ‘a convention | deaths in each 1000 infants born, as| sulted in the lowest reserves of hay an indispensable part ‘of the business structure-| worse,” Hob told Faith tenderly “Lie | looked startled. then ansazed, ‘ana {of Scottish clans... Or, again the | contrasted with a rate of 47.82 for/on May first since 1918 when they a , 5 rw 4 x idea may - be: trench: watefare from |New Zealand, the place. with the| were 6 per cent of the;previous yea‘ Judiciously “uséd, it’ spells: the difference ‘betwe@| quietly now, and I'll make it as short |then contemptuous—I'm quoting Junc | the bathtub. when the sailors are in| lowest. infant’ mortality rate ef any} harvested crop, the same as at pres i . . Much money and four lives have been sacrificed in an attempt to fly between Paris and New York. Nearly $500,000 has been invested in the various flights. Special airplanes for trans-Atlantic work are costly mechanisms, ranging in price from $50,- ’ y af sed | and that she had filed it. She ad : i 000 to $125,000. Amundsen’s dirigible with which | *Y°°e** and failure, profit and less. on rieeieh ey an nec A med mite that she a ot ‘automata town See in savbeen found ht tne heath fe wry cotati stip a May he made his Polar flight represente h invest- tocks, whose garage and ~ servants | discarde A rete asking $1,250,000 | and physical vitality of the mother| of the crop. je ten-year aver- ment of $75,000, It eas He elena The Geddes Faux Pas Quarters ure backed up to the alley the mail. When Churchill asked her | alimony and Frie Hempel demands | previous. to the birth of the child| age is 11, per cent. Conditions of limited funds to do pioneer work in this most in.|, We ®t¢ glad that England herself, unofficially at| behind Uncle Ralph's place. TS ee Sa Be e girls cer- | is one of the most important factors|tame hay is slightly above average Th ft “Sanders was in his room ove: more threatening letters from the | tainly: are livin Bible | in determining how the infant | and very much above that reported a least, undertakes to repudiate the faux pas com-| garage from half. past seven pte same source, she gave us all a big tenchinee these Maye, poet lives after birth, Ryd if the] year ago.- The present figure is 83. mitted by Sir Auckland Geddes, former British|'til ten minutes to nine, when he got |shock by, saying he had received two ian athe dies during the birth of) the) per cent compafed with €5 per cent if out the car to take the famil; berketp rd a A An extra session of al or shortly afte: at cel is] @ year ago, and a three-year, average Ambassador to the United States, when he charged,| the church for Uncle Ralph's y f° | reading, and which he did not ou- | niga an at eeealt of she Maacie under a considerable handicap. of’ 81 per cent. Pasturep,, Al } ih in a public speech, that: the westernization of|ding. He looped out of his bedroom |SWer Of course. She also swore tha‘ | tigods, Itnever rains, but it pours, | Six in every ten babies; whose} greening, are making a w China is mainly due to the United States and that|Window about half past eight —he Uncle Ralph had been hounded, not ( te pees . mothers died within one month after/growth. The estimated conditian. is ' - 4 : ;-_ {fixes the time within two or three| Jone after the last of the three let-| New York politicians are worrying | the birth of the child also died-before|79 per cent compared with 49 no- back of the anti-English feeling there is the in-|minutes—and saw a yellow and|ters was received, by a series of |hecause so many people stay away |the end of the first yeat...Infants|cent 2 year ago and a ten-year aver- teresting field of aviation. Best wishes for the safety of these brave French- mefiifgo from millions of hearts. May they conquer the' furry of oceanic storms. The Ballet Mechanique ; Hl Saideals aloe stall, | ™ysterious telephone calls.” fi whose: mothers were knowg, to have|age of 76 per cent. New York has followed Budapest in its derision] “uence of the public men of Americn who have aj own tanieab either pxsked or stall: |Z coing to court tomorrow it 1'/ rom the polls. "Chicage is anxious | tuberculosis: had a mortality ot two| North Dakota farm labor—is re- of George Antheil’s “Ballet Mechanique,” the sup- widespread desire to “twist the lion’s tail. : the house in answer to a ring from'|have to go on a stretcher!” Faith | fae ‘ and one-half times that among other See tearcsicel datacoretnlinn ef! ndinicinlAniarion: A more unfortunate remark could not be imag-|McClintock, and when he got back|“¢clared vehemently. Leisure isa four-mile:hike-around | infants; and. over .one-thitd of the H babies born to mothers who were| Brief ry er ee vials - ' eee ieT toan Rung, morning. | reported. to, have. had convulsions as Northwest — Spring late. ially, “Nothing more blazing in the way. of politi-| the famfly terthe cherth eae faprace | (Copyright, 192%, NEA Service, Inc.) eo 4 4 complication of pregnancy died dur-|of wheat delayed. Weather cold and cal indiscretion has been perpetrated in many yenrs.|ed to lock out of the winder ord ing the first year of life. freezing, may have damaged some A ————__—_——_* he interval sinice a preceding birth | early seeded wheat, Plenty of mois- An explanation and an apology are needed at, once} $*¥ ae the at was gone. It was, | Justajingle is an important dabor in inteee |tuce, ib uh from Sir A i ee aann ren CO \Blne, ‘heneaya: | asters rtality, since it has. been found| ‘West Central — Some di rom Sir Auckland, and it should be the duty of; “Bob,” Faith cried, her eyes glist- Ghat the: iteptalliy 1a toch higher Leacly sown aheatiby teneaine rine K * transmuted into sound by ten pianos, bass drums, ined, and, as the Westminster Gazette: says editor- pe aise get eters hina Tomorrow: Faith doesn't go. xylophones, automobile horns, aeroplane propeller : and wind machine. As music its value is nil, re- viewers and critics say, and as an interpretation it is hopeless. Mr. Antheil is either reaching cut for a . sae 6 ,, i ape errere mnie Sn e the government to find some way. of repudiating | ening, ‘‘there’s no doubt in the world “f forget what I have planted,” motif far be ical teh fh me m when the space ‘between the. birth|ter wheat winter killed in Ly He a eared pot aang ae evel | him and his‘ callow, mischievous utterance.” The eet Seen tree eg an o ueny abel T hang on the chamber Peg Coro ieee eee of jinfante i than two A Ae Weather cold and _ wet | t profitable hoax on the world. Daber ies on) tes polnk aur: Syemane cement ce Goon driveway, ‘hid on the roof} And what shall the pictures be that| He ask the hens next door. pears to affect ‘unquestionably the Seeding 1 by 4 5 . jt.| Should not be taken too seriously anyway, as he is|¢), the porte cochere until Chris and) = Phang on the walls, (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) | fnfunt mostality rate weather. Moistur Bp: ¢ ‘Wherever he has given his strange and ear-split- “a politician of: no consedmence: and. is ets rent Cherry were gone and then climbed|To adorn the burial house of him 1 ¢ bies psy wlag born. prematurely | plentiful. “ ne si | Sprrrzntons there has een an eS. . O° rgn| 2 Patino, no cone rumen I COE A" PA THOUGHT | fen arti tea cts aatet Sent — Baska, soring er the d if “ i ” i 1, times as high as that of babies born| weather delaying seeding, loist € s 4 A & dies : abies died dur: e entral-Stai : f intensely original, even i? the result is horrible,| °° each cycle when international amity is strong- excere tary, Ne one saw oe mur-| With the Fousth-month eve at suh-| The heart knoweth his own bitter-| The death rate for twins and triplets | promising. Moisture’ plentiful ie / dissonant and utterly repellant to lovers of music’ |°% Someone with a great sense of personal impor-| SeF@F and Banning. can. make leap. ited the gray smoke lucid | ness.—Proverbs xiv:10. is nearly three and one-half times} | South Contral—Plenty of moisture. . i n s . “ ” A ere . i Rees that of children ingly. asturi 5 ‘ ‘Mr. Anheil’s programs are in themselves gems of tance makes a “grandstand” play and raises hob| stalled in the alley, or was waiting| With floods of the yellow gold of the| A guilty conscience is like a whirl- te ta to ‘ald 3 wae ee much ado about nothing. He spreads his words around with vast regard for cumulative effect but with all the amity. While it is true that many| there for a servant or a policeman gorgeous, indolent, sinking sun,| pool, drawing in all to itself which : ‘ : calling on a cook, or something like i i “| woul mi Fuller. persons will not take Sir Auckland seriously, yet| that! Sut of course [ehink yeu ote | With ake eect ee tea under | Mould otherwise pasy by —Fuller. NEW YORK rene 4 there will be enough to cause a feeling of resent-| dead right; and the least. Churchill é AS seeding. | Pasture grasses making with little or no regard for accurate meaning. They ane aH ge ag ast ure] foot, and the pale green leaves RIDES FOR LIFE very little growth, Wheat seeding ali rae ree ay i i je jury see that ific, q réait like prospectuses for fake mining and oil stock, peice ep ace situation, has been ascribed there is room for ‘reasonable doubt.’”| In oa ate an rewlie lace he Connell SHU 2 New. Rabe May isthe conch pace heat vince, Blea Siem : promising in nebulous fashion many things that the f ‘ | asked dully, ee excitement fading in aapele * he hires wich a win Fs feape avidly. st ae gh er ae Stock feeding is it G ing in ; f performance itself lacks. ’ the old hopelessness. el with Fanging “hille, on’ the banks, | 4 ; f menne of ‘sarning a few hundred y ; 2One hesitates to condemn new thought, for in all sar Pad as py st aceuse:.Churehill}.,.'+ with’ many » line against the che Hardly. had: the Sn: der-Gray trial ages, new thought, condemned, has arisen to spell Editorial Comment bow his mate py pees ei 4 ice eT ith dwell P been ‘started. before. some bright Progress and to confound its criticizers, Yet ther? —_——— es |PAthy. “He called June Pritchard, a 80 dense, and stacks of chim: anchor applied tee Someel ean gave peed ioe: Hed: regal on sight: Sout! y ia scarce, Grasses must be a limit to which one must go without pro- Confounding a Prophet of Evil fn cld-maidish sort of girl who was]. néys, i 4. | ed Heistland’s Hit Pol Balate Get intaccee ne MeteLate ons : ep ne a pr é Prophet o! Unele # secretary before Lola| And all the /scenes of life -and the auiekly supplied : Myacwcalll sot kay that the aia ok Me Aca fe (Minneapolis Tribune) Gons 1d to the threat- workshops, and the workmen| Contrary to popular belief, * the | fy % : >—_—_—_—__—________4/ ver of Church-| homeward returni Byer Spon passing tea 2 A few weeks ago a noisy ranter in the Minne- |¢"'ne é ., whale does not spout water. The| Snyde i i 1 . ill to fi (ie ‘ 03 “ nyder residence courtroom. troducing ‘sota senate predicted that the agricultural north- the suas Srithout Mininate saint, Whitman: From «When Gondensation. of its warm breath in| Sunday business became so great tha ! u i acs Last Bloomed Round the] the eol three industrial | west would rise in revolt against Minneapolis, and|me for robbing Uncle Ralph's filing |Dooryard.”* ator oe ee peciextra busses were commandeer-|| ~ the Governors | ridiculous—this interpretation of the soul of in- dustrial America. For all we know : ae TAY. mre eee Spit one oo that the time was not far off when grass would — pant ens s SSS Re Freaitellh Ris May 18 Ap). i write & score that will reveal it. We will con-!be growing in the principal’ streets of the city. All| QUJ'T’ % s ‘ ? , in a tow’ hems j Piel wines io tent ourselves with merely saying that he has at edad ‘was & be a la ep mt country: a 0 = AY UR WAY 252) é ve ir apr ese: play en ee pian: 4. Flelds wants to i yet accomplished his purpose. Minneapolis because some of its business and pro- F : oa ( “ + of at Teast two" being “bootleg-} + a @ traveling Salesman, some S No “Play-time” J festional men advised the president that, in their| a : he dente ot Veleetine” as tel: 4 i i lio “Play-time” Job Judgment, it would be for the best interests of ag- lowed, within 12 hours, by two maud- *The United States forest ranger has a fine job.|rieulture and the country in general if he withheld : MONS |< | Hie, “ORE, Sm five” paper-backed : 4 pat it ioe aay ag. ; _ {his approval of the MeNary-Haugen bill. : + lqegcsexar| | |in hie grave before ‘Tin Pan Alley not get @ * lepartment of agriculture is protesting) This dire portent of what was to be, does not jy) YOu GOING wre pap peerncis @ song, “They Need- the ozamlnatian: 16F the state. bar against the activities of various correspondence| square well with the fine neighborly action of the A \ es DO Witt : 7 —— . A jp ee oe ted, Taek oe Pe ing governonigp, schools which offer to fit people for forest rangers’|Greater North Dakota association in ‘béeoming .a B ‘ CH A 10. ? tee ? jobs. These Schools, comptains the department,| subscriber to the fund for an‘organ im the new ‘a . $ ATED hey , omins trip répresent the ranger as a chap who has little to| Minneapolis auditorium. Comnienting on this ae-' “ YOO do but live in the open, ride a spirited horse and tion, James F. Milloy, executive seczetary' of the he ‘was the author, stand about picturesquely on the slopes and crags! association, said: eM ‘4 re bs of the Rockies. ene “We. feel: that’ our contribution: will help''te es~' A Se 3 TT who crashed the gate at perform: -ecuti “The reality is far otherwise. A. forest ranger hea! tablish farther’ the bond of mutual interest’ betweew} : ‘ yi "ae | pbee, of Bophocles “Electra” by tell- aztask of great responsibility, requiring, plenty. of | Minnewpelis. and-North Dakota.” back-breaking work and a good deal of real.execu-|, There fs‘no’ hope or desire among the thiwking| { tive ability. If that's what you want, go to it-{people of'/Nerth Dakota that grass should) ever i 5 fy te : : But if you're looking for a roumanttc' esfstents 'un-ferbwr'in te ateeets of Minneapolis, or that the city @ ren, A 4 eae Goo tony : a the big trees, with little to-do, you'd better tay hottld tecede from the place it has gained we the| , eee ae tack 53) 5 elelefmaritet,' consuming center and distributing siege point of the near northwest, ‘Wo! | Play. eke

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