The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 27, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRI BUNE ’ s a. ing fine wines. Prohibition has robbed us of much ‘ The Bismarck Tribune our versatility in such matters and we’ have be- riting $ t An Independent Newspaper | come accustomed to juniper gin and ‘fusel oil i ES! THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER jwhisky and denatured rye and other synthetic hard (Established 1873) liquor of more or less poisonous compositio: i Piialactahied alka ied AR | S . A ‘ ‘ France shold bear with us and forgive our un- y Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, . say Bomarck’ es second cay tall matieer | sore Mabie, Twelten by - | ey nares oat takes no partie Bismarck as second cl. mail matter. " | BAT TT former idot whois revisit- |lar difference. For this spot of up- George D. Mann..........President and Publisher | A Real “Comeback” ing Frepee fas" correspondent ; mand will forever tc Paes a goons ae a i i 0 ib pai lor propagation. Subscri Rates Payable in Advance The story of Clarence Saunders, and the “come- | for the Tribune, agen a oe rears Ly 7m Daily by carrier, per year . -$7.20 | back” he recently staged, is an inspiring one -in- | CHa! A ince. 1 reduc ¢ Hin- i ei i ismarck 2 yi hn Fi rg, line in this region. But, in Daily by mail a “tii (in Bismarck) + 720! deed. ‘Two years .ago .he was a patikrupt with). dust outside. of Hs ee eel: ing this spring, more than (in state ‘outside Bismarck) . 5,00 {business and home gone; with, a court injunction eourt and; Vendhuita, theres & spot call bers aS) als. Daily 4 mail, outside of North Dakota. . . 600 | against him for starting a new business; indicted eieldaetng Wola War stint going Soeunte 5 oat ; Member Audit Bureau of Circulation _____|for misuse of the mails in the sale of .Piggly- on. This particular spot was not, ir. bombs... This pile t] Member of The Associated Press | Wigely corporation stock (of which he had been included ia the termd ‘of the Armia: lla le sh aa aay id The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to | head); former money friends turned into enemies; | cue is arded Sy. ‘the ‘explosion | more thi ur feet away from the ¢ the use for republication of all news dispatches | salary attached—and, with $12,000 scraped from the of _mapy. shells... | road tb, Pecoutt org Pde many ; credited to it or not, otherwise credited in this .Pa- | pockets of a few faithful friends, he started another Here's haw: dite we tdci rn rs Bi \er-ve! js pass eycky per, and also the local news of spontancous origin | business and has paid back to. the Piggly-Wiggly ante ppvers, Ctl eee eee f f° Beitr published herein. All rights of republication of all i mont, Qu Deat! Lurks other matter herein are also reserved. |corporation $201,000 and has additional assets of ophier, aie ‘kaon. pstnonall to | abe oo pagerouey ails bitualiis tere oan "Foreign apranentatives ae . pe divisions, continually plough up’ ae AN ee en a PRY A iP i Hs. S jerman, some ir lives rd na G..LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Mr. Saunders’ comeback may have been due to aly pelt Hare aa bre “Amarican, fuge .exploded. F therd's "ncn. * CHICAGO DETROIT [some luck, but in the sain st js ey eaten Hat duds with thelt noses buried deep, in| ing. te American Legionnaires “who h Tower Bldg. iin. Bldg.|the spirit of success was the motivating force. ry id Thi ally work to Sttorsese Pere oo no » PAYNE, BURNS &.S) Mr. Saunders, confronted by failure’ and ‘disgrace, P \ . K i mitt ‘ hi d}.‘ There's plenty of i taneous 4 NEW ses RSNA ORNS bs le we Bldg. | did not contemplate suicide, he tells us, but he joule Niong with hem te. that seat ies ‘ ‘around fe ati u (Official City, State and County Newspaper) {ones ate varias by a fate that aroused all girth of no-man’s tand near Hargi- meek “nt legen stroll ie one i area: “this fighting spirit. : Worthless Land with their-H. E. to explode the shells vw Ought There to Be a Law? , There is a lesson for all of us in Mr. Saunders’ Some Frénch artillerymen go there | thet, IP Pepsants wwncover on their i wh. The i hi hing excursions in the + Governor Ritchie of Maryland says that a “law-| achievement. | epee f) Pa “I expletive tn cede, peace ote ry A mad” era is upon the American people today LO cAI RTT ade pile the shells above it, and touch it —_— 4 i 3 2 Cavair i Much of our présent zeal for passing laws on every | Going Forward ne eg en Preker ee at tot aan _ avalry a oceasion is due mainly tothe average person's in-| Minot business men who cooperated in a trec- ] ia ij isi ist Be Ls difference and apathy, he says, and points out that| planting campaign throughout Ward county report | Fags { A " he laudable desire to modernize our governmentai el ey tet ccey creetame we lanee Coen ee [AN'NEW YORK |/{ “Flashes of Life / face a real menace in this problem, the executive | trees, they have offered $125 in cash to the farmer : ; (By ‘The Asuociated Press) * bd 3 . id mK cy Mi a m * “Ww believes, who, at the end of five years, has the best grove. sDunciy akeaplaten cena fe Wall Aviantle Ck Paris iy “dhol a Here is what he has to say: Such a campaign is a good thing, both for the Street belt and Sil caligbt incident of Dr. Gol yn W. ‘Howlatd'‘e For. ke “If crops fail, if prices go too high or too low,| businesss men who sponsored it and fér the farm-| de the net leet oe aieen, “eSue as ‘onto. a) desc pea fo the Anat jean 7 if men gamble, if art or literature becomes indeli- | ers who agreed to take part. This state is in the| a bear raid-or:a heavy drop in steel. | Nevoleical, association, results of a Sn Seen Mer mMEUMNOFOS Het sae Se a me cate, if drama offends—put it up to the govern- ment . . . What do a few more officials matter when we already have a standing army of them? . . It has gone too far, and we now face a real public menace.” Although it is doubtful if the present tendency to, pass laws whenever the opportunity offers is a Great Plains region, true enough, but there is no| reason why farmers cannot have groves of trees | here just as well as farmers in southern Minnesota —at one time also a treeless plain. | The agriculture department’s “shelter-belt cam-! | paign,” in which the state agricultural college is | | assisting. is also meeting with success, Farmérs | Mary—nobody knows the rest of. her nam jas become a financial zone institution second. in importance to Trinity Church only. For years on end she.has appeared \on the streets and in the offic selling apples and. little, sacks of c » The kings:.of finance knew her ahd she knew them, but. she was,not impres- sed, for to “Apple “Mary” the office uestionnaire to men, and women. ask- ite want ‘Teer wouta do if they were worth 000. Not one’ woman mentioned marriage. Dr. Howland eqneluded they-did not react pleasant- ly to the prospect of men living on their wealth. New York—The will of John Joseph Sturtlinger, war veteran buried in Arlington cemetery, directs that his “menace,” it is none the less true that we are| are beginning to realize the value of a grove of; chi ADEE P55 SEES RE. APY —T| boy’ and John, D, Rockefeller were teas STemehid and abe apies ‘nearing a state when many laws, instead of stand-| trees. The small investment necessary to purchase Rute ries Sienas aieoe system- | Placed in a gold cigarette tasé highly ing as tenets for the people to follow, will become | and plant trees is a permanent investment, and na-| atic and thorough. In the late after-|Prized by him (for sentimental ; cathe cia ge eign | p » th din tl ‘~imerely things to be ignored. Governor Sorlia) ture, the wise banker, in time increases it in value | ‘Service noons she has: a) neared in the new - Pree g S eaeted aoe ore pointed this out in his message to the legislature, | many times. £4 paper Wi pecs dhs Eo ie dueuttvsvqueer when he urged that for every bill passed, one ob- solete law be killed. “There ought to be a law” Gas-burning Dirigible “Chris tried to abduct me on the’ ment, but he would not listen to me. By DR, MORRIS FISHBEIN * the newest cub reporter to the oldest pensioner, Hollywood, Calif—Al Jolson, who testified in recent Ii i i i ight of September 14—Tuesday/He was very happy, he said, and he| ), ope ties in tomate, Dapabiem in ew is:becoming too common a phrase. We are begin-| phe Gérmans 4 acs | Cae ee . d ef Sy Editor. Journal of the American idtantgrectl lace York that he rega et is are experimenting just now with | night,” Cherry answered clearly. “It,looked younger every d é It is interesting a place i ning to depend too much on laws as temporary Ps Lad was late—one o'clock at night. i had| “Go on with your story in chrono-| Medical Association and of Hygeia, | tne size of New and:-in,ca Melt ae rotten, seams te cpl age ie ““panaceas, means of solving some imminent problem which—at the time—bulks large“ff the public eye : instead of realizing that there are some things a most interesting lighter-than-air ship. It burns} gas, marsh gas, which is carburetted hydrogen. Much lighter and more efficient than gasoline or benzol the gas draws its greatest advantage from | been out driving with Mr, Hathaway | lo that night—it was the night I. met) rected her. him; he was our supper t,| Well, on brought home by my father. Saturday, hen I realized that the engagem 1 order, Cherry,” Churchill dit October the Health Magazine Dr. J, J. Conybeare of Guy’s Hos- pital, London, has formulated briefly some simple! rules to be followed by zone as .commerci there can come out of the tene- ih a screen story of his own life. ments of the East Side an anonymous personality and, by dint of nothing Néw York—A_ m smoke cost $13,000. i ished wi i : I'eame in Faith told me that some-|would be. announced in Sunday" simple rules to be followed by | fore than peddling -apples can. be- § ° which must be accomplished without the ald of reg-| the fact that when it explodes in the engine cylin- one hd called. “I knew it was Chris papers, I felt desperate, trapped. 1 ications which may_be the final {© to people than youth, carrying, a beg of, securities fart seca | ders one of the products is water vapor, which is| "41 called him up, He came to the| wanted to get out of it any way I/factors in bringing about death. it with hip to lunch at a. self: We probably never will be rid of all the obsolete P por, house. I italked with him on, the,could, I asked Mr. Hath: :|These a bat jxervies Fall Ee Hib -wastimhes- taws which clutter up our statute books. Certainly, we never will be rid of them if we keep flooding American intervention in Nicaragua was undertaken merely for someone’s aggrandizement. That is a charge which has been made before. Viewed in the light of what America has done in Nicaragua, it Toses weight. i A country torn and racked by civil strife has been restored, temporarily at least, to peace. A aise and humane effort has been made to see that perscnal jealousies and personal ambitions give to a far-seeing policy, planned for the public's good. “Imperialism” this may be, but if so, then in Nicaragua the meaning of the word differs from the definition offered by the dictionary. The “Ghited States need not shrink from that brand of “imperialism.” f A Smoke Tuberculosis “Tie rather unique idea is advanced that smoke has a great effect upon health, contributing largely condensed in the exhaust and used to replenish the cooling systems and the water ballast. The ex- | haust water will make up for the loss in weight of tion of tall men and, while stature is not by ai means an index to manliness, yet a tall man is undeniably better looking from a masculine view- point than a-short man. | ___ Editorial Comment, | And the Coolest of All-Was Lindbergh es (Minneapolis Tribune) It was a moot question which is of greater in- terest—the non-stop flight of Lindbergh from New York to Paris, or the emotional reaction of the | people of the world to the fact of the flight. | »Due to the attention Lindbergh focused on him- self in New York after his transcontinental two-lep flight from the Pacific coast to the Atlantic coast, it was anticipated that a successful hop from New| front porch and suddenly he picked me up in his arms and ran down the path with me toward his car. I knew’ that we were poor people, that my father had a large family to sup-4 port, as well as a sick wife. And Mr, Cluny himself had insisted that 1 quit work after we were engaged, He went shopping with me,-made me buy far more expensive clothes than I normally would have chosen.” “Did your fondness for Mr, Cluny increase during your engagement?” Chuchill_ asked. “It did, with every day that I knew: him. But—but I. did not fall in love’ with him, the kind of love I mean tliat makes a girl want to marry a man. Several times—every time I was with him, in fact, before our eh- gagement was announced in the pa- pers, I tried to break the engage- letter which made of everything—my ithe next day and in the war. take me to a dance at the Country club and he did. troduced to Mrs. Seymour Allbright, again sight Phil, the beggar, on corner. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) I was in- on Monday I received an anonymous me so angry that Mf decided to marry Mr. Cluny in spite own inclinations or my family’s disapproval or any- thing else,”:Cherry stated quietly, as if she did not realize what a sensa- ‘tion she was creating, TOMORROW: Court adjourns stil Pert ny Faith _ # lamp which burns day and night in a corridor of Scotland Yard is a memorial to civil servants who fell 1. It is important to avoid un- due exertion, either physical or. mental. The latter is.probably even high proportion of 5 per cent vege- tables, /is in itself usually one which of the bowels, 5. Biabeti fections such as influenza than nor- mal people, and the results of such fections are’ far. more. serious in jabetics, In consequence it is wise in ‘the ‘presence of an epidemic to avoid places: such as theatres, churches, ete., where the disease is likely to. he contracted, - Whenever. a diabetic feels ill from any cause he should at: once get in touch with his doctor. It is prudent to avoid patent medicines, as -not infrequently they contain: a co! able amount of ‘sugar. OUTOURWAY __ | THIS VERE PRESSIN! TH’ MATT RUS. MAN. BE YORE PANTS. N'ONDER’ will tend to lead to regular action a There are several such personal ties, identified by'time habit to a casual way that has with fren, r life, fart! west. than. Pi sh “And. ware a liye hin, t would, Pa, content ; Broadway slant is and the. aolemn reds of a breath-tak! said eine anise See rt. sks K 7 e eee » “Give me the good vid brie eta 1 SWAN. 92%, NE rvice, Inc.) -Minot, N.. ‘ primarily. on "senger friend and they went out to Battery Park to puff and watch the ships go by. Then they noted the q the statute books with new stop-gaps. the gas used for fuel purposes and thus make un-|came “running tomy. asstetunce.|ticl “Mr, Cluny's daughters” Cherry | oee,mportant than the former. A/SCHOS GISHOS sing “news vendor! Dae was missing. A surety company 4 ' — Aeceacaty sthe wvadving: GER cd Geen Chris got away, and I begged Faith|explained. “It was a sudden wild| (al exercise is beneficial but te meat |ou the Times Square -district, whose has paid up. 1 Is This Imperialism? —— jg | Rot, te tell my father who it was. Ijimpulse that made me try to trarlextent it may be indulged should{¥ncanny ability for picking? out the. 00 |||", . . : But what of the safety element? Marsh gas is|lied to him, said I didn’t recognize] Bob Hathaway in a compromising sit-| he left to the decision of the medical | ht paper and making quick change a N ‘i Bi . 1? { Juan Sacasa, head of the Nicaraguan Liberals,| highly explosive. So is the hydrogen in the gas| the man. . uation. I did throw, my arms around | attendant. $ from bis ‘siil''bas made ouilitens. dtop |) ews | | 4 who have now formally laid down their arms, ac-| bag. Is all this “efficiency” worth the added acci-| ...2", Tidy, October -, Mr, Cluny phisyneck and kiss him and say, “My|” 2, Special’ ‘gtfention must be paid |t® wateh «1. to-esy-mothing of the}g "lg ies = Paci 4 ee ORR RS =. ER @ added acci-| came to my home for the first time,] answer is “yes” Bob, darling,’ because | to ¢h h, heel it customérs it has brought him. + tuses Henry L. Stimson, the president’s personal | dent risk? and asked my father and mother to|! knew Mrs. Allbright was in the li-{10 Me teeth, and regular visits should |""rp ere i, a certain boot-black in al, £mma Bogarin, shot by Senora ‘ representative in that country, of “ramming the : Aaramieks (sae consent to our fnaringds My father y, was overhearing me. I didn't Shout nj abe cereal areca building accupied chiefly by mid- beset) at aerepeee ct sale 4 presideney of Diaz down the throuts of the Nica-} ‘The mini f six fegt in height for the Lon-.| to mother" the iaivad her handker: |itrat just wanted Mee. “Allinient tu | ihe teeth affected must be extracted, |Nonaires, tzel; sealer in Union 8 el H e minimum of six fey in hei, for on-.| to mother—” she raised her handker-|it; ,1 just wante rs. right t i t ere is.a pretzel, dealer in y ‘ raguan people.” Strong charges of “oppression” |don Grenadier Guards has again been invoked, Jac | chie! to, her lips to hide their crem-(tell her father what sho had seen, s0| [ee reason fox this somewhat dras-|cauare’ and another’ in, City Hail Pn pel ne ogg tn oe imperialism” are hurled by th nd lead ear invoked, Cue | bling—“and she had consented, be-|that he would break our engagement. i oa} +Park, though these are“not so widely | $t0P, #izP. ta paaaie ' and ‘imperialism’ are hurled’ by the ousted leader-/to the number of applicants for the ‘positions. | cause 1 made her believe that it was | Later I was, sorry and ashamed, and sorbed, mee the, blood is an abcess is | inovins Pp ber sedi Spe; peo ar ee | He charges his people have been “doomed to sacri-| During the war the standard was lowered to 5 feet | for my happiness. She—she liked|I-~I lied when Ralph—Mr. Cluny_-|Dresen and these affect the pan: ‘ > ee eee eee fice.” ; AA i ie ‘ Mr. Cluny. It was with her consent | asked me about it. I still wanted to “The diabetic shoul .|. But “Apple Mary” .was queen of i . 10 inches. While size is, of. course, no particular % 2 | ie diabetic should pay par ps ‘ etl A ss ‘ ‘Sabana has not a good worl to say: for the wbv-| <a: . mane that I began to get ready my trous*|be free of the engagement, but I lar attention’ to the feet: they|*hem all. Mayor Thompson of Chicago ga } Bacaza has good | ie despotic, to his| Criterion to valor, the chief function of these guards | seau, charging purchases at three| couldn't bear to'hurt him soterribly.| should be washed. daily, carefully |, ANd here is the point that makes! , Mayor Thompson of Chictgo ga! « ernment’s Nicaraguan policy. It is despotic, to his|js to look pretty and therefore the regulati to | Shops where Mr. Cluny had -opened|And Bob had already told Mrs. All-!dried, and sprinkled with boracic {the story so typical of Manhattan | SuoportersNare chosen. respectively t snotion, But, actually, just how despotic is it?!) on ; : e regulation as t0| charge accounts for me.” bright that I was just showing him|powder. Shoes must be lar qj though ‘Mary has dropped from sight resident and. vice president. tect wh: t the United States be considered a| "Cent is probably justified. | “Just a minute, Cherry,” Churchill) how T had accepted his uncle.” hot constrict the toes. Negicet of |f0% many days, aiid though one asks} ?™ oniene : i ee eee ne. nite eS De ee s ——— ‘interrupted. “Was it at Mr. Cluny’s| “Did you try again to break the|these precautions ‘may lead to | #nother she js, not one in the} Moorhead, .Minn.—Jamestown -Col- ' ‘despot because it chooses to maintain law and or- A y Suggestion or your, own that | these/engagement with Mr. Cluny before} gangrene ‘of the toes, a condition lege won annual. interstate . confer- i “der in a neighboring country? Sacasa would have Medical records show that the average American charge wccounts, were opened?” November 252” Churchill asked. which often ends fatally. ence .tragk .and. field .meet with 44 i the world believe, indirectly at least,: that the| CY 1 18 inches taller, than the American boy of |, tised’ her voice: indioratly etie led We're gngagement was announc:| 4. He. eareful to avoid constipa- Manhattan Points, Valley, City Teachers war 4 , y a 50 years ago. We seem destined to become a nay| 1) raited, het voice indignantly. “Heled in the papers the next day, and| tion, ‘The diabetic diet, with its attan second, » Wahpeton ce / third, Ellendale ft he and Mayv! sixth, normal fifth, and D.—Problem of safety is field ead Mat ot “the rr ent Nationel ‘Eatety Council, old first annual, safety congress, * Minot—High) gal er, were awarded highway. coi a ties. Sfided" No Dakota company Conere 3 ao company, cea B itartons Mines Pa A. deel ithe eae we Here eae f laughter for the death hides Bon foe case fa. four Mer ‘i who for on to tuberculosis, and exhaustive study and experi- | 4 mentation to determine the degree to which this is true is to be urged that complete data on the sub- | ject. may be obtained. York to Paris would cause quite a stir, but the ac-| tual stir was more lively and acute than anybody | | |}iji|! had expected it would be. ¢ Tt makes a vast difference whether a man wins! ‘ OEAD MAK GOSH) THET CUBIST |} TH! iret at: P MUSTUH ‘BEEN RESTLESS SMLE 1S ALL | WERE LAs law is spread to. wide, Anti-smoke laws are really inadequate to cope with the situation, for they embrace only a part of * “the air pollution evil which is greatly menacing the public health today. It is proposed to make “ Pittsburgh, the “smoky city,” the subject for this Fy investigation, since the large quantity of smoke pervading the atmosphere there would provide § ideal conditions for determining its effect upon the ©, health, especially av far'as the possibility of tu> berculosis: is concerned.» - . It is to: be doubted that the smoke has any di: rect bearing tuberculosis; but ‘in itself it pro- duces a/eondition of the lungs that makes them an easy. prey-to the-attack of tuberculosis: Tt would: much ‘eredible that pneu- monia” ore closely’ related than is ér fails in such an adventure as this, even if he} ecmes out of the failure with his life, and yet his | daring in making the attempt is the same in either case, Even his endurance and skill may be the -same. The difference between success and failure | for Lindbergh would nct have been any difference in Lindbergh himself, but a difference in the cir- cumstafices that attended’ his flight—circumstances which ‘he could not control. Lindbergh put new meaning and vitality into the old French proverb that “nothing succeeds like suc- cess.” ‘In the case of Lindbergh the dramatic quai- ity of his achievement was heightened by the man’s innate modesty. He was gooler in‘the presence of his own ‘success than 95 per cent of those who Rajled the remarkable thing he had done. He com- ported himself ‘much as if‘he had simply done.a day’s work ‘set by himself for himself to do. Most’ of thé ‘rest of civilized mankind comported itaelf as| if he had compressed a task’ of @ lifetime into -a “TH! RAGE Now, H' LASTEST WRINKLE- > NIGHT. YUH MADE Quite. | ‘A FEW MOVES, HA-HA-HAH-HAH=]- PRESSED WHILE. SUH WEIGHT, . Women in. .a) New. Ja backing i ‘candic peer to! f Sear se #8. 40.9 Bre t muble, ptficial is. go-, and: " ay After he Chi its sweep may hid ‘Wieslies gre so fine-and strong, ‘They take in every child of ‘wrong. 0 sania “web of mystery!

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