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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) the Bismarck Tribune Company. ., ard entered at the postoffice at mail matter. Published b; +. Biamarck, N. Bismarck as second cla: Geotge D. Mann....... Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ‘Dally by carrier, per year .......eees eee ees \Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... 7.20 Daily by mail, per year, . (in state outside Bismarck)........ Daily 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 of all news dispatches sredited to it or not otherwise credited in Pi per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin pablished herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representa' G. LOGAN PAYNE -CO! IPANY « CHICAGG DETR Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK : : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and Ccanty Newspaper) The Doors Are Still Open Bismarck is sincerely delighted over the success of “Charlie” Lindbergh's New York to Paris hop. As a former resident of our neighboring state, there is a certain personal feeling to be added to the admiration which every one feels for the courageous youth who, alone, blazed a path across the Atlantic and by doing so raised himself to that hall of famé| in which the human mind has enshrined Peary, Amundsen, Byrd and other courageous explorers 07 uncharted routes. Perhaps the single feature about Lindbergh which has made him such a public idol is his : modesty. He was starting off on a daring trip. The odds were all against thim. But instead of sitting { down to pen odes to his own bravery and audacity, instead of rushing to place himself in the limelight. he calmly went ahead with his plans, and when the time came to make the flight, he started out quietly, and without any feeling cf self-interest—and ac- complished what he set out to do. Lindbergh’s. There is a moral which has been po‘nt- ed out to young Americans for many years, and, as a result, has become almost trite. You never know what you can accomplish until you try it. You, yourself, set the limits to what you can do. “Charlie” Lindbergh, by his flight, has reaf- 1 firmed the truth of that phrase, “In the bright lexi- con of youth there is no such word as fail.” No one in Little Falls, Minn., ever expected “Charlie” Lindbergh to be the man who would bring their town into world prominence. When he lived there, Lindbergh was regarded simply as % bright youngster, somewhat bashful, who spent a great deal of his’ time tinkering with machinery But’as far as his being the first man to fly across the Atlantic ocean—no one ever considered such a thing. Now Lindbergh has done it. End of the Trail Colonel King Stanley is dead in New York, and his passing will serve to recall to Bismarck resi- dents many of the deeds for which this friend of Roosevelt was famed—deeds which gave him the title of “Dead Shot Stanley” and made him known all through the west. Stanley’s career was probably one cf the most typical of the old west. He was born in a prairie schooner on the way east from California. At 14, \ a living piloting wagon trains across the Rockies frcm. North and South Dakota to the coast. At 16, an age when most youngsters are just entering many skirmishes against the Indians. He was 2 quick and straight shooter. He was performing deeds every day which nowadays would be worth top positions in our newspapers. It was in North Dakota that Stanley earned much of his fame. He was appointed United States mar- shal for the western part of the state in a day when* being United States marshal meant. living almost constantly under the shadow of death. The Bad Lands were rough in those days and the man who undertook to bring the law to its inhabitants had come west to regain his shattered health. He ‘was Theodore Roosevelt. Thus began a friendship which lasted until the president’s death. King Stanley died in a New York hospital, where he could look out into the crowded street and across to towering skyscrapers. He was surrounded with every comfort. Yet we have a suspicion that he would rather have died somewhere in western North Dakcta, somewhere where he could look out and see the setting sun gilding the fantastic buttes of the Bad Lands. New York may be his final resting place, but the Bad Lands is his home. . Forest Fires Forest fires in the United States average two hundred a day. This is the startling information that brings home to us the magnitude of the forest fire menace in this country. That, andthe fact thatthe total loss to America every year from forest fires is half a billion dollars, should spur us on to even’ greater efforts to eliminate this stu- Ppendous waste. : It is not only a money waste, but a time waste. In five ‘minutes a tree is destroyed that took many _Years to grow. Even if the burned tree were im- -mediately replaced with 2 young tree, in a reforesta- tion campaign, it would be a long time befcre the tree was of any value, economically. .The point i= President and Publisher But there is a deeper moral to this flight of he was thrown on his own resources and he made, high-school, this lad had already been a veteran of| had a hard task indeed. But Stanley did it. One|’ of his deputies was'a young Harvard graduate who! ledging that Governor Smith has held that the Vol- | stead act must be enforced so long as it is the law, eM AR EOP SSR at MNO RM AN | sary if we are to insure the future of our forests, | not only as sources of lumber, but as preservers of watersheds and preventers of floods, such as the| Mississippi valley is experiencing at the presen® time. This country really needs a forest policy that | will adequately care for present and future needs. Safety Conferences Two major safety congresses held in one week,! 20 /one in Kansas City, Mo., and the other in Pitts- ‘burgh, Pa., serve to call our attention to the stren- uous cfforts being made by interested peopte | throughout the country for greater safety meas-| ,ures in our modern life. At Kansas City eighteen | {local, state and national associations prepared ai Program which covered the prevention of accidents | on the streets and highways, in other public places, at home and throughcut industry, while ten organ- | |izations combined for the Pittsburgh exposition and | |convention. The newest types of safety devices | | were exhibited at both conferences, These meetings and the interchange of ideas re- | | sulting from them are of immeasurable benefit t: j the cause of safety. They serve nct only to in- | form those who compose the conferences, but the | publicity ebtained by the sessions serves to brirts: | | home to the average newspaper reader that some- | | thing is being done to offset the large accident toll of cur modern life. i .This arousing of the public interest in the that. | ter of safety is the most important factor in| safety work and it would seem that the bigges:.| problem confronting safety engineers* is that of | making safety a virile topic, an active force, rather | than h merely defensive measure. The public | should be shown that it is necessary to go out and | attack this danger actively, and not sit passively | by, hoping that disaster will not visit in the | mediate locality of the sitter. We are surrounded on all sides by danger, much of which is possible to avert if the public can be! made to follow the simple rules of ecnduct that | have heen devised by safety experts. Let us have safety ccnferences, plenty of th-m, | | } | | An Encouraging Sign Proof that cptimism concerning North Dakota’: future is widespread is strikingly shown by a recent news item which conveys information that power companies plan to spend over a million dollars in {new construction work throughout’ the state this | year. There has been a general feeling amcng the people | of this state that the next few years are going to mark a growth and development unprecedented in the history of North Dakota. When the public util-' ities of this state decide to invest over a million! in new developments, it is an indicaticn that this growth and progress are almost,sure to come. Such organizations as power companies are not likely to invest large sums of money in new work unless ‘they are confident that future growth will warrant it. A goodly share of this work is to be done in the Slope country. Work to extend gas service to Man- dan, is now under way. Extensive improvements on the Hughes Electric company’s plant at Beulah are ine being made and others are planned for the Dickinson plant.+ New electric high power transmis- south from Dickinson. The power companies are banking on the future development of North Dakota and more particularly of the Slope country. That they have faith in this territcry’s ability to continue its march of progress is ptoved conclusively by their and by their plans. And residents of ae country feel Caution Pays that their faith is not mis; ; “Faulty brakes cost two lives at grade crossing,” | reads a newspaper headline. There's something every motorist might well stop ; i | | and think about. | Are your brakes in gocd order? Can you stop | your car quickly if you have to? If not, you'd better get them fixed. It won’t cost you much and it may save your life some time. | Editorial Comment | Does the South Want to Win? (New York Times) Nowhere has the effect of Governor «Smith's article about church and state been more carefully watehed for than in the southern states; The strongest opposition to his presidential candidacy, on the score of his religion, had long been located there. Yet the southern press comment on his Atlantic statement has been highly favorable, at least in the sense of praising his manly directness and courage. This does not mean,-of course, that | he has at once converted to his support thousands of stern and unbending Protestants. Note the opin- ion of The Observer of Charlotte, N. C.: i | Governor Smith’s declaration of views and principles is as clear and unequivocal as the average American statesman could make it, and yet by a large, immovable element of Protest- antism it will not be accepted as conclusive. i There you have it—a confession of invincible prejudice, And if the religious issue can no longer | be pressed against the governor with the former bitterness and openness,‘ there is the” convenient club of prohibition to take ‘up. Though acknowl- The. Commercial Appeal of Memphis holds that} southern Democrats, devoted body and soul to pro- hibition, cannot “jeopardize national welfare” by supporting a candidate who both personally and of- ficially is known,to be against prohibition. .On this question, the south, holds convictions which it will not surrender merely in order to win a political victory “at the cost of a national catastrophe.” Similar virtuous sentiments could be quoted from erats, that the south would_rather ‘have offices than, principles. Yet it is noticeable that the féeling is growing in the south that the presidency may be ; z compromise, and that this so that public sentiment for safety can bq aroused,’ | | sion lines are being built east from Washburn and! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, MAY 28, 1927 k PRIVATE oes hack, : f FRANCE y PAUL ADAMS @ MEA Serves Editor's Note: This i3 the dist |about this grave. They asked that arty iS ‘the story of an ex- {the remains of their son be allowed Goughboy whp. is. revisiting | to lie without a change. The permis- France as o correspondent for {sion was granted. And every year, The Tribune. since 1919, this grave has been the ° ° object of their visit to France, CHAPTER XL! At cither side of the grave are “Sur la route a Tricot.” ar marble Lon bgp lig oe SN dd i i Jules Gade-|thére — on their way from Mont- eet ar tae, didier to Tricot. Almost every day some children leave flowers as they jpass. And they place their floral tributes in two vases—-one a shell ei ig of a French 75, the other a shell casing of a German 77. The grave of H. H. Houston Wood- ward is on the right, just two kilo- meters from Montdidier. The gen- darmes of Montdidier know the exaci 24 They give the information , gladly. Also they, will tell of the reverence that everyone holds for the spot. The corporal pilot of Spad No, 94 of the Lafayette Flying Corps has their respect. The grave of H. H. Houston Wood- ward is on the right—— “Sur la route a Tricot.” * ‘Sherlock Holmes—Himself lorge, members of. the gendarmerie of Montdidier,, will, with dignified gestures, give those directions to a stranger., And the directions. will lead to aiwayside tomb—the grave of an American—H. H. Houston Woodward. * It is the Jone grave on the objective to be made "a parents dA, E. 'F.| location. + ‘5 comes to France. On the stone. that marks the grave yinseription: ee jonor of @n American, fipy Who. Fell aoe isnting ee France April 1, 1918 H., H, Houston Woodward Corporal Pilote Spad No. 94 Lafayette Flying Corps.” Woodward’s parents made a request is this TOMORROW: Captor, and Cap- tive Meet Again. Introducing the Governors Jefferson City, Mo, May 23.) —Missouri has a xchool teacher in hunting down the dodgers and bat- tling with them when they offered resistance. Some say that this was the way | the New York police force became so largely Irish, Once Gas House | gangs got in the habit of helping the police, they swung into the po- lice point of view. What is more, they found that they could fight and actually get paid for it. GILBERT SWAN. Daily Health been an educa- , and he has car- atehouse the tutor’s Farm boy’ and , section 7 viewpoint. hand, he started on his caree#-ad; a leountry teacher, then served. as school chief in small Missouri towns an4 as state school superintendent. All his life—and he’s 53—Baker has sought a separate fund for education in Missouri, He wants a state tax of ten ner cent on tobac- an'Co products and amusements, and the whole state inheritance tax for sup- port of the University of Missouri, five teachers colleges and the other halls of learning maintained by the state. If he can get the plan over during his second term as governor he'll be happy. BY DR, MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the Medical Association and of # a, the Health Magazine What used to be called “yellow) janders” is now recognized to have een merely a symptom of many conditions that may interfere with the proper flow of bile. When the gall or bile.duct or tube which carries the bile from the gall. bladder to the intestines is bi e through some méchanical cause, such as a stone of the presence of a tumor in a neighboring organ, or by a swelling of ita opening of the intestines, the bile is taken up by the blood. It is then — circulated throughout the body and the skin becomes yellow. Sometimes the tak- : INACrS% « (907 & WA SERVICE, iC = Stephen Churchill's manner, as he|a week. I was his receptionistand began to question Cherry, was at secretary, though he did not have once fatherly and deferential. His| much correspondence. I left his em- voice was almost coaxingly kind as/ploy January a year ago.” if he were talking to a child whom| “Will you tell the ju [IN NEW YORK | New York, May 23.—They are tell- ing about Broadway a tale concern- ing one of those lunch counters that | advertise, with a: large sign, “A meal {a minute,” “a snack a second,” oF | Something of the sort. The other day, while hundreds on, eighth governor of New Mexico, surprised President John Grier Hibben of, Princeton university and the guests at a banquet when. he welcomed Hib- ben to New Mexico with a five min- ute speech, in which not one word of English was used, The executive re- lied on Spanish. 4 t t! ¥ why you) were gobbling, down their food, a| ing of too much alcohol or of irritant] In this m4nner Governor Dillon { he did not want to frighten. Cherry’s | eft Dr. Mullins, Cherry? young man entering wearing a gold| foods or spices may set up~inflam-|kent up his record as an unusual { hands were clasped in her lap, her! .,.°°¢ I felt that I had badge and several diners pointed} mation in the intestinal tract, with] publie speaker. It started at the open- jenough experience to command more ‘money. I was then getting eighteen {dollars a week. I got a position with the Prudence Insurance Company, at admiringly in ipydi ion. “What's: hee sy as Fr. stranger. “Oh, ‘he did a bowl of soup, a similar results. ing meeting of the 1926 campaign Other Symptoms when a pacRed house in Albuquerque Associated with the absorption of; gathered to hear the republican jthe bile there may be loss of ap-| nominee expound his theories of gov- little feet, in their black patent leather pumps, dangled an inch or two from the floor, the witness chai being ludicrous!: asked a y high and big fdr/twenty dollars a week, and worked! sandwich, a piece of pie and coffee! petite, nausea,’ severe héadache,j ernment. Dillon at 2 Pagano ehabl y nd is 5 ' 5 rose, spoke 22 her tiny body. mame?” Ghurenitt, TS, UME about the ‘first of last] in forty-seven seconds the othertheavy coating of the tongue, bad| words and sat down. th y ? May | day.” i “Dick” Di ‘ d, with an eneouraging smile, “Why did you leave the Prudence| ©" tone stip amet EL eited Pte toe role ny oper eeel tea Naturally the excretions of the body| acquaintance, obtained as a merchany are also discolored with bile. for years. It is customary in such instances to put the patient at rest, to adm Harrisburg, ister a la e which will tend’ to} ‘ernor John er of Pennsylvania remove irritating substances, from|--the first “southna:’” governor in the bowels, and-to lower the amount) the memory of capitol ‘employes— of food intake, while increasing the] likes to stroll up and down Front amount of fluid intake so that gen-| Street, along the Susquehannah, re- “Charity Amapda —Lane—Wiley,” Cherry answered, hesitating slightly sie added her hated new name. “You are: known py what name?”]- *herry.” When were you born, Cherry? hat is your present age?” Chureh- asked gent! <1 was bor Company, Cherry ?” ; Hell’s Kitchen gave a banquet to Color flamed up in Cherry's pale i | Policeman Pat Diamond a few days Fo. ‘That's something to write about, | because’ the Kitchen’s past reputa- | tion’ has been’ one of presenting bluecoats, with lead, ‘and little else. Pat ‘Diamond covered its length jand breadth in the days when a “|—-because my employer was too fond of me, and I—I didn't like; May 23.—(P)—Gov- “Did you encourage his attentions, jead him on?” Churchill asked gent- “December 20, 1907. not!” ; : no eral flushing of the intestinal tract] y in his, mi Iwas nineteen years old Inst Decem: y,” Churchill encour- | riot a day ken€ the doctors -away| occurs, Most important of all ap-| Kir sahiens ie mind the problems of > per,” erry red very clearly. from: their office It ‘was Pat's! parently is the placing of the patient e “Yo offer a copy of the Walking is the governor's diver- to work for Mr.’ code never to draw a gun. | Any/at rest. j ; ¢ I. went : i berna- birth cortifieate of this defendant, hn, and. worked for him fight he couldn't. settle. without! Sometimes warmth applied to] oR.) He, walked ke vredtae ay hureblll: guid: quie jumping a man full of lead had to\ the abdomen, as by the use of an| jority ever given epted for the did you eave Mr. Bohn's candidate for of- e “some” battle: UAnd’ that battle |was never fought-«#t: Keist not in “Hea-he asked ye to marry him his presence. ane t and I—I could net’do-so, because [| The gangsters knew this. They was in love with: somebody else,”| learned that they might get a crack Cherry faltered, her cheeks like pop-/ over the head, but they knew that pies. they’d never get a bullet through “And that the heart—and Pat had many op- Churehill_ pr portunities. “Mr. He can go back to County Derry now with his mind at peace, for of the many cops that came and went in the bad days of the Kitchen, he never killed a man. | record. The next half dozen questions elic- ited information from the docile, un- smiling ‘little defendant as to her place of brth, her parentage, other members of her immediate family, place of residence. Cherry's voice e when she told of h mother's h on the day of her indictment for murder, and two tears trickled slowly out of her wide eyes. “When did you leave school, Cher: ry?” “I was graduated from Centrat High School in June, 1925, when 1 was seventeen. Then I entered busi- ness college—the Graham Secretarial! School—from which. I was graduated in November, 1925. I entered the Graham. School June 15,” Cherry an- swered, in an even, steady voice. ‘ou. completed the stenographic in about six months then?” ‘Bill asked, smiling upon her as frere proud of her. es, sir, Then I started to w “Tell the jury briefly the positions that you held, Cherry,” Churchill di- rected. “I worked first for Dr, Charles H. Mullins, ed in the balances, swanting,—Daniel: other man was?” ‘ompted gently. istopher Wiley,” Cherry answered in a voice so low. that the jurv. strained forward to hear her, “The man you gre now married ” ChurchiH cleared his throat our Pat—like all who have watched— has seen times changed. Today a sinister machine. draws up, a shot is fired and a gangman takes the sidewalk and the grave. The machine and frightened onlookers tly forget to remember its number. It isn’t safe. That's far different from those,old, Gas House days when the gangs of years agone fought it out with pieces of pipe and bricks, Then, only a few bones were broken, and a good time was had by all. In the Civil War, New York saw the famous draft-dodger hunts, Many gangs joined the police in sir. “[ wish you would tell the jury, Cherry, whether you are still in'love with Mr. Wiley, your husband?” The audience, startled at. Church- i's amazing tactics, gasped audibly and cunned their ears to catch hi low answer. i Ag “No, sir, Lam not!” The color died out of her face suddenly, leaving it as white as paper. ’ “"4Can you say just when your feel- ings toward your husband changed?” ;DOMOREOW: Sharey, fon the stor i who paid me fifteen dollars Cluny.” eee ret , OUT OUR WAY Kools-41008 HOO OK ~HE UAT me MA! Homing Me te LITTLE SNIP } Hu ats sHuAaH HOO -HOO~— . n't Know Exact Altough. the exact: cau ses. of gall- stones are not lefinitely known, some evidence as. accumulated to show that the center, ofthe stone is frequently bacteria. Ipflanmation bottle, will aid the eirculation and serve'as well to relieve any pain eer ee fering. Coe THOUGHT | On the other hand, it is of the/@- er Ero ear jaundice to. secure. competent: med-|and are foul ical advice, as soon as possible for|¥, 2% are recorded in which a swollen gall-| Our necessities never equal bladder has: been burst by attempts| wants.—Franklin. are also records of severe toxemia due to the fact that the obstruction have been made to treat the condi- WR EE Hyer tion as a slmple inflammation. pe ea as pinesce ahha al is thoroughly familiar with | the Then he was reprimanded, anatomy of the gall bladder and its very underhanded. occur ‘due ‘to disease condition: ‘ be able to take the necessary precau- ll " tnematoe y Incorporations | o——__—____—________.__«¢ Huso Brothers compan: pigs K. 8, Huso, J. A, Huso and copscoiah company, Bismarck, $25,- i H il W. Starkle, with an ine deposit of the i wan Sith ae aaceas 3 iispesit midt and J. Poter Schmidt:: investigations are, jelectric heating pad or a hot water) fice in Pennsylvan from which the ‘patient may be suf-{ reatest importanee <in ‘all cases of| Thou are wel the purpose of diagnosis: Instances at massage or manipulation. There r has been mechanical, and attempts | Justaj gle A competent diagnostician, who Because the stroke he seemed to use tubes and with the.changes that may| W will tions, Cause Yi Leeds. U S. Huso. of the gal. bladder may be associated| mess,” Pail We ‘Seertee fee ee econt Janeane | Goldberg Furniture store, Minot, By Williams: inclined to 3 that. the diets) Soyo anne Gand Harry Soraky and Cyrus Goldberg, may be . respon: larly in relation’ to, the: v. ions eon nations of vitaming. ——___ ADD LAFE TO YOUR Y! = EARS And so add zest to your life. Whtn John R. Gordon, Danville, [1l., found himsel¢ “al tired at. night burdened with @ backache,” took - Foley Pills, a. wonderful diuretic 2 stimulant Ca Org kidneys, “After a thakespeave wrote that “all| few doses. 1 felt better, could work "-he no doubt fore-| with more ease, became stronger ab raw thay all the same it would] could sleep : ri” Men and women dress like chorui everywhere ‘He using ane Tecommend~ ret! wet ing Fol This new fad for snakeskin purses Pi Iney action. and shoes gi the daughters of; Eve a. chance ‘to. get ‘hack atthe! Adi descendants of that, snake, ‘ ¢t The-little girt:next door who plese]: Lady: - the Wage every morning at 7 is one| ‘ashamed to beg in of those persons-who doesn’t believe) Tramp: in letting her left. hand know wh Lis her right hi d's doing, You may have. 1 don't bottle them One nice thing boards alone the: ’ off the draft, ae _ Hundreds f, movie publicity, crowd the rial in Los Ange! better be keeping press agents ME 2? MEE EE? WHY « YOU'— WHY MASHE WAS. , SITTN “HERE IN HER STOCHIN: FEET -N! COUNTN HER CHOCLITS| N' SAIO THER. WAS “KNO Meee te ee wr AN ( ON TH HI POCKIT — Ancor = HAD A O0oR-KNOB IN My iT—ATS ALL TAT SAVED ME! it, seen worse.—Answers, eorking ideas, but PLA! ys. ¢ Serenetitineumean" | By "springs" concealed "bono