The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 31, 1927, Page 4

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’ resales PAGE FOUR ili lini AeA ARE EN RTE NR re Fn tic il : © ‘ability, no matter what hi » he should ive! | The Bismarck Tribune tori ritin tht ns cue scene June Is fete Giles Mace “Back PRIVATE An Independent Newspaper — Se THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY,. MAY 31; 1997 back, . ‘ PAUL pee ce oes Ee eee Commencement Day Dawns b FRANCE ¥, men nee r : rece oS . aa rae Fenske Comp, _The season approaches when the sweet boy “at Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice a: ®7! graduates of the land will be decked out i Editor's Note: This is Chap- font, refusing, te surrender. Then Bismarck as second class mail matter. ani a bib and tucker, covered ever with mortar- tor, 8 im the sevice atte eel itive attacks by ‘the “I6ith” Beigel: George D. Ma aves gown, and = arrayed, will be led up tage to be tortured for an nent citizen, who will de- ... President and Publisher address or ma’ whether or not he for office. The us vases will ratt! . i the sages w to put a lasso throw it, and rings. Such mencement n to believe that Dakota Circulation by mail, ou’ e of Member Audit Bureau of Member of The - Assoc dated Pr ; co per, and published other m Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT see aide. Kresge Bldg pees st eee Tower Bide, NE, BURNS & SMITH for et NEW YORK ~ + Fifth Ave. Bld exercise, it is {Official ceremony has its the speaker of the g-winded It is, of top, onee he gets be remedied if the place nearer the mid- hree-quarter pyint of his oration. ty, State and County Newspaper) fw as wee prone to be a course, hard for any speaker t started, but this speaker will but dle or Airplanes Versus Airships Controversy between proponents of airplanes and Experts can alway; tart som of airships seems doomed cor disagree in their opinions as to the c* value of each. To the layman, ho would seem little excuse for controversy, would seem to supplement the o For light loads at high speed the seem supreme, while for heavier loads at a lower speed the airship wo: seem to have the best of it. There is a need for both types of air trans- portation, however, and thus there should be no conflict between them. * England realizes this and is turning more to the airship for the backbone of the system of imperial air communications now being organized. In a re- cent report on this proj it was pointed out that the advantages of the airship are for heavy loads on long voyages. England is building experimen- tal ships to carry 100 passengers to use in this sys- tem. According to the recommendations, the ships will contain sleeping cabins, promenade decks and 4 dining room that will seat fifty persons. They wih be designed to make 70 miles an hour at a height of 5,000 feet and must be able to fly 4,000 miles with a normal commercial load without refueling. Motive power will be obtained from heavy fuel oil instead of gasoline, to reduce the fire hazard. Thus it will be seen that the airship seems adapted for the heavy duty work of the air, while the airplane is designed more for speed and the lighter loads. Just as we have express and freight trains on railroads, just so the air lines of the fu- ture will run both planes and ships to accommo- date the needs of those who will use the lines. What this year's crop of commencement per- ‘ormers will have to say has of course not been fed to the expectant public, but there a heme that always seems to run throug}: these addresses every year, so that the mouthful of words heard in Maine is not much different from that heard in Hawaii, Mindanao or the 4 Islands. During We war, of speeches had to be patrictic For a few years aft er the war, the high minds lectured the rising gen eration on the league of nations. nce each irplane would general leutian course, all such It doesn't take much of « prophet to put dows some of the sentiments that the youngsters will hear. There will be references to Lindbergh, of course—youth must have its guiding star. The subject of service to one’s fellow man will be roped in for some fifteen minutes. No orator will let ar one go out of the hall without knowing that Amer- ica is an altruistic nation. The old reliable cross- roads will be pictured, of 4 certainty. Youth, at graduation time, must always stand at that cross- roads, bowlegged with the weight of wisdom, and net sure which road to take. very graduate wi'l be told to find some goal—there is no chance of escape from this worn-out sermonizing. “And as we look upon all these eager faces—” Well, there is no escape, but on behalf of genera- tions of graduates gone and to come, let it be hoped that commencement addresses will become shorter and shorter, for the real purpose of a June com- mencement, like the purpese of a June wedding, 'to get the graduate and the bride as many present: as possible. Anything else is superfiuous. Veterans’ Insurance Although liberal! terms have been offered ex- service men by the government for the conversion cf their war term insurance into somesform of per- manent protection for themselves and dependents, : Improving Europe’s Teeth + George Eastman, the American philanthropist; who recently gave a million and a half to improve} more than three million men who purchased insur.|t8€ Practice of dentistry in England, could not have| “y cording to the United States Veterans’ Bureau, in| “hose. urging that they take advantage of the opportun- | Fi ‘ cl ity before the final date on which this may be done, | tist’s office at the first symptom of a toothache, d July 2. [nee appreciate how far behind is the pract! Almost 160,000 men are still carrying their term, (entistry in Europe. Even Germany, a leader : insurance and paying premiums thereon and three ™odern medical science, has not equaled the Amer- million or mere have allowed theirs to lapse. Many ican progress in dentistry, and it will be remem- of those in the latter group are unaware of the lib- bered that the German kaiser had an Americas eral provisions for reinstatement of insurance of- ‘entist who looked after the one-royal mouth. No fered by the veterans’ bureau. + | country in the world has better teeth than Am It is impossible here to go into these provisions, ica, and in passing on our knowledge of denti but it is necessary to draw the attention of veter- the Eastman foundation is strengtheninz the en- ans to the opportunity they are ignoring. The tente cordiale no small degree. government insurance is a splendid thing and all veterans who possibly can should become reinstated and convert their war term coverage into perma- nent protection under the very advantageous terms available. ques during the war have never. taken @ieialep, s-| found any better cause for support than that he | Editorial Comment | Renewal of Faith in North Dakota (Minneapolis Tribune) As real estate men would put it in their vernac- While most students of crime conditions are | ular, farm land in North Dakota is moving. scoring the parole system and its evil effects, John! To the casual reader the statement does not sig- Philip Bramer, New York state parole custgdian nify much, but it is pregnant with much meaning and chairman of the committee on pardon and! for those who take something more than a super- parole cf the American Prison association, comes | ficial view of the case. to its defense with a new book called “Parole,” in» The division of immigration of the Minnesota de- which he declares that the method is sound, but partment of conservation is authority for the as- “it is misunderstood, mishandled and man-|sertion that volume of farm land business in North He points ot that mass treatment of de- | Dakota this spring has been greater than that of on parole must give way to a highly in-| any other state in the northwest or the middle west. effort, however, and that human be-| Twenty thousand acres of land have changed own- canuot*he. veformed wholesale, but can be re- | ership in the last two months at an aggregate con-! d as individuals. ideration of more than a million dollars. _ | ‘ “4 a San amen ne an upeistarm note ety | ,. What can this mean other than that North Da-| Senee, is fun eI e prot mn of society | A ‘and the (aiellgwat teaniment of the Frpcesdaidag 9 Id have taken a new clutch on their faith in| es ES AA CN eg the potentialities of their own state as an agricul- 6s da - gis sound, bu‘! tural region, and that itside the state | has suffered condemnation in recent years, no doubt, ae: at. penne: frome nutes wee ¥ % ‘ are renewing their confidence in its future? of poor administration of its Provisions. | : Why this change in attitude of mind? There are| Certainly if we are to keep the parole plan in op- Puts obvious pith, One pip ee is that the | feration it will be necessary to reconstruct it some- Greater North Dakota asspciation is making head- what to bring it in sympathy with advancing ideas | way with its preachment that the state is basically | the subject of punishment. | solvent, that a new day of prosperity is dawninz ; with the turn to more rational methods of agricul- | ture, and that the state is in process of realizine| ae ay Osi ag tg efficiency we! #3 it should and can on its natural resources. An 5) the Berlin,. G Sys, coapnination, arkich other reason is the constructive service which in-| subeeit more than 99 per a pe preappar ea stolen | Stitutions and agencies outside of North Dakota! eae: ca “Last year, for jnsi 420 cars wers| 22¥¢ been rendering toward the restoration of eco-| ‘ni emetic ani Pre even though the | omic health and strength within the state. \ bunt in many cases extended to all parts of the | North Dakota has gone through a trying time in| the last few years. The penalty of one-crop farm- | country. ing, so extensively practiced, was to pay. Th It is true that the pote se eae na process of post-war readjustment was particularly | mepvisions hard on the state. Many farmers became discour- | “ng aged and abandoned their farms. - North Dakoto + lyon ee a feet wie farm mortgages came to be a drug on the market. | i copied ; Taxes were in arrears. Legislative and political! & Parole of Criminals tax cars quite hazardous, yet that cannot detraci - af measures failed to help the situation; rather they} 9 complicated it and made it worse. There were in- numerable farms for sale, and no buyers to take ‘aghboy who is re- five attacks by the 154th Brigade 5, formed poet’, correspond- had been repulsed, the “Lost as. nt for The Tribune. jtalion” was found and rescued. ent aires | 204, Legionnaires will find tha: xLvin |the Moulin de Charlevaux is j A tall Sine the ahs of its dead /a ruin, a few moss-covered walls ar branches jaggedly outlined against | piles vi graying stones, A creek- the blue of the sky, marks the spot |the Ruisseau des Bievres ou de Ch ieSay of that notable tragedy of the ‘levaux, leaps with musical splas' ial Y The ‘Lost. Battalion.” About jover a tiny dam where the stre wae tnat of this village, in a deep Passes under the road. A_ yellow Favine between two frowning, wood (butterfly fits past in the warm su ‘ed ridges of the Argonne Forest, near light. Birds twitter to break cd ridges fe the Moulin de Charle-|somber silence of the forest. Ani wae "Charlevaux Mill) the late |the dead pine, with fts jagged stu yaux | \Chhitileces and his troopers |of branches and some rustling i: of the Tith Division made history. | supports for ghastly-white telep “On Oct. 2, 1918, the First bat-/insulators, shoots up for fifty talon of the 308th Infantry and/|to slit the blue to the heavens. talion of the. goith Infantry and| It marks the place and, with he 306th Machine Gun Battalion,|dead trunk rising almost out of reereed a Weak spot in the German /the ruins of the mill and that y pierced icfense. The Germans, in| gling mountain stream—the Rui. the night, cut back to roa ered bape rt BOT aS r mer: |-—it is a monument, in and completely isolated the ithe stillness that envelopes the val cane tive days, with daily casualties ley, to “The Lost Battalion.” si duced the force to a| . * : that handful, the New Yorkers held | _TOMORROW: Watch Y Daily Health Service ere By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and Hygeia, the Health Magazine A Chicago physician who accom. panied the MacMillan expedition int the Arctic regions in’ 1926 made « v Corks. all winter, but running slow now. “Now just look at Broadway, that darn old cowpath down there that got to We the main racket. Just ‘took at it! You can walk from 40th (street clear up to 59th and what is there? . Movies, movies, movies! aan "t eounted ‘em a couple of weeks ago and there wasn't a single theater in that whole distance that |had a legitimate show on it. Every single one movies, ex- 1 | { | i a pe hurlesque and a small vaude- | spe study of the health of the SIRE houses And 1 think they've mos of northern Labrador “and ies now. All the legit | of Greenland. 1 Seer on the. side. siteets, ce These Eskimos live, for the mo:t And, back again on the other s' part, on die C1 g largely ot ’ door: The little room is now} meat and fish, meats beisg provided of the d jammed. . . . They are sitting by whale, watrus, seal, c Ik |three abreast on window’sills and| ox, arctic hare, polar bear, fox and |Gverflow on the phone switchboard. | numerous sea beasts including geese, fees ce They crowd hard against | ducks and gulls. These meats as weil . | the elbows of the stenographer, who] as the fish are usually eaten raw. , | tong since has lost patienc >. «| Dr. Willism A. Thomas | A girl comes in. . . . A darn|contrary to general z fe — staat ~———| pretty girl, with too much make-up|Eskimo eats relatively little fat or {pretty ¢ i; jor Sa ae | and over-dressed. pep ye blubber, nat uses ae Portions for { j he has kicked @ 9¢ | 0 ing and warming th © ! IN NEW YORK | ig many 'a show. ... . She talks |home, and in melting ice and’ ance Inmncr ae ec eh “Whe ottiee | rcrimi Ae Reet aap A 2 “It’s an hour's wait,” the office] The Eskimo prefers red mest, eat- % | New York, May 31.— Broadway | sis] tells here... ing the flesh, and particularly the nc snapshots—the tattered straw hat|” 4 shrug of the shoulder. . . -|liver. Dr. Thomas says that polar the first time, his ashen/that lies in a corner of every bac! -. Zen TU moron i bear liver is poi ‘onous und that dogs, ed with stage. There are at least | Spotl sephora ai ee Best bdr de starving, will leave it three stage manacers I know who! fort to discourage aybe more| On this diet the Greenland Es- fro who had so king slap one cn the minute they start/than an hour. . . .” — Another) kimo does not show any tendency passenger 2200: - work, come winter or summer. «| shrug . : “I don't care, I zhall|to diseases of the blood vessels cy “Fi p Why? .. . Not one of them| wai init Sore - kidneys, and seems to be quite “would dare attempt a straw bennie} One by one they go in and one by healthful. The presence. of — the on the streets until the official day.}one they come out the side door. vitamins in large amounts in the o arrest . , But they’re always wearing |. . Those inside never know} tissues that have been mentioned 2 “Let! them back stage. when or how the others left. . g {Protects him against scurvy and € 4 genres ¥ t. I know you—{ The tiny cluttered waiting room} ana) again, we aie els sare ee Sree ‘ { you're Hathaw. a producer's office. Just|the door. . . . The yo in the other hand, the Labra- weet sm Bob grin-| moving room enough for six orj is enthustastic. “Boy, I caught dor Eskimo, whose diet includes he ‘prodded Hutchinso: seven people. But the wordja vaude act the other night that's many .prepared, dried and canned with the automatic. }has gone out that a new musical]a knockout. The best nut comedy articles, is frequently subject to both from the| show will be put on next spring. since Ed Wynne. . . . I'll give scurvy and_ rickets, diseases that - .And maybe there'll ‘be a spot} him $2500 a week to start shave been shown to be due to lack open. . . . A sister act comes in.] Yah I'll raise that to get him of certain vitamins. svi... . Of course they wear curls Ae ig It was found that thi i h like and those flowing hats that went] And then you know why they wait. nursed for four and not tact bs aption of leather, with dangling! ous of date with the old Gibson GILBERT SWAN. ‘for six years, or until their teeth ‘ Straps: endl buckles. tgirl drawings. A lithe young| (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) are strong enough to permit there. the PGi fix you for this! It's an out-rCuban whose every movement be- —_—_—_——— leat meat. Thus they also are pro. rage, drrestirg a peaceful business trays the dancer .... And a fel-(@- ected through their mothers’ milk man on a trumped-up. fantastic|low with a flowing tie and a port-| |. BARBS Labrador, even though the chil. * Hutchinson began to blus-/ folio ooking for B Jeb painting |) aren nurse from the mothers, scurvy posters. . .. girl who got Pay and _ricket: C1 ir Bob “three months ‘time’ before the AMERICA, THE COP mothers themselver eat inety te Fou | fo0k the show off. cer look te vicz| America’s world role is that of|#ophisticated diet. a NCE days ago at tims of a hard winter look at her i i ‘ Gee ee renviouglse Wand 1 was just | Policeman, says an Italian paper.| | But the bull doesn’t: seem to be getting very far in the China shop. ... America has had to walk her show Can sing when the Had to talk my songs. ie?” But learning to closed. ‘a beat other da: Le | NEWS BRIEFS; ‘ “ nobody could. i le of fa Fai join him. Ih ara is . The heavy gent in the giddy |b¢t, maybe, ‘because aicouple of the running bourd of t 3 enough | ¥est and huge lodge emblem... ,/ other countries seem Pos the scene |, Tirenty-three cardinals attend mass an narerasticsentyn sis Dock not go-| You really don't believe they exist |r \o¢ the world within, reach, coin- dare vena srereeey cee ce did so. 5 ” | 0: stage until you see them 4 Ti, papal secretary of e, on “ 7 pe day! ts the same paper. Just now the paal, : ‘And I arrest you ee vard| Broadway has a hundred of them ments piajagll eer occasion of his fiftieth. anniversary driver in the Henin Bripr,, anged somatd land all in some branch of the agency Scepter we're worrying most about] of entry into pricsthocd, 2 voice, “es an accessory before pace, epntertaa saan after the fact. I have your n and if you manage to escape jis the one ele by Acarteln rieet fielder for the New Yor! ‘'ankees of watching this endless|the only thing copped’ so far in He's seen it go by for! Europe is a headache. Mees in some thet Yee 42°! Those gentlemen who removed Now he has his own show .. . paintings valued at thousands from starts at 9 in the morning,” he tells,;# Russian museum perhaps only me, “and never seems to end. . . .|thought they'd live right up to the teke! God, I feel sorry for those poor! letter of “Take-a-Picture Week. er.|He followed her to school one day. devils. . . . It’s been a bad show| —— Nope, this one is anothe ter. . . . And they really need | i racket, ps | And on TOMORROW: The taxi driver} door: makes a startling confession. ‘weary (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) | Parade ear and rage. At Lockport, Ha Loan dies of injuries rece; is car overturns speed trials. 'd Van when during dirt track now you wili be arrested within ten min- tes. The police are instruc pick you up within the next ten utes if T do not bring “Don't try to make a ge Hutchinson, alias Phil Sch: dtc Car of Steve Penjuke jumps from speedway during race at Pottstown, Pa., cxashes through fence and cri cally ihjures girl spectator. k, Earl Kilpatrick, chief Cro » the crippled beggar!” he barked out. “Get ——— i Justajingle | ———_— out of that cab, driver, and your place alongside your m And qunt try any funny bu of rehabili- $8, One reason why newspapers give added ¥ 1 tation for Red is. killed i There are three of us, It's mot the rhyme on Mary's, work. Just think, theyre tryi |so much space to affairs like the iiled in cgtienDs ake (eontennea | castes ree ret inte a shea that at bere ete | Snyder trial is that many readers are crash of seaplane near Baton Rouge, t ut the heart of Hutchinson.) ‘Twas only her brother. [open until next August. What the| Weepers. . ‘The taxi driver obeyed with ail pos-/ — sible speed. joining Hutchinson with his arms above his head. “You're crazy! you're talking —————__- {devil will they do this summer In 1903 there were 68 books for! “The whole theater racket hasn't each 1,900 of our population. In 1913 been so good, except for musical I don't know what' there were 89 for every 100; today|shows. Take my show! Tt cost bout!” Hutchins»: nj there are about 125 for each 100. ; 850,000 berries cold. Well, it’s gone By Williams ~ Two men shot and killed in Phil adelphia by gangsters using pump guns from automobile. To some people the word bank means "house of correction.” Unintelligent Dorothy deems only those bowlers who wear bowler hats. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) io Brauer aah 7 | Old Masters | ifecdGoaree Weight a He ol e} i 1 Vea *| Committee, thet Presiiest Mig nitely decided ti if ay Rae spend vacation in Brainerd, Minn.—Judge C. W. Stan- ton of Bemidji is critically ill here with pneumonia. Fatgo—Three drowned ii ro men were drown in Cotton’ Lake, 11 mile: the f Detroit Lakes, Mina, st ° OUT OUR WAY | Aloof within the days enormous He holds unshared the silence of bleak, relentless eyes empire ‘and the falcon’s bie? views, the galleons of sunset A THOUGHT His inaserdt on the % of morning Man is born unto trouble, the sparks fly upward—Job'y 7) Troubles, like babies, ES dead larger \ a | Serene, he hears the broken tem- pest sigl Where cold sierras. gleam like scattered foam. And least ‘of’ all he holds the man swarm— . : Unwitting now -that envious men|(FLAPPE Prepare To make their dream and its ful- fillment one 4 1 When, poised above the ealdrons of, the storm, , R { Their Ged contemptuous of death, ire His road petpnen the thander and’ ul * 4 t {The Black by nursing.—Lady Holla: ——_—-+

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