The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 10, 1927, Page 8

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a Ms att F ES PAGE FIGHT The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) by the Bismarck Tribune Com N. D., and entered at the postoffice Bismarck as second class mail matter. Mann .~President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ............+ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). Daily by mail, per year, {in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Member Audit Bureau of Circul - Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to| the “use for republication of all news dispatches | credited to it or not otherwise credited in this per,-and also the local news of spontaneous ori published herein. other matter herein are also r pany, at | less great. All rights of republication, of all | shaped jellyfish, over a foot in diameter, which propel themselves by opening and closing like um- brellas; fish which change colors like ‘¢haméleons —all these were observed or taken’ by Bewhe,” The result of this work maybe fotpotten:-ex- New knowledge of the intvabitants of ; that baffling sheet of water, the ocekn, ‘had’ teen | gained, though the world may not acclatm this coh- waddle to scientific knowledge with * thé’ same It would bé a good thitig If we would |sensation and consider the scientist, uninterestiny |as his research may seem in comparison with th» news’ latest quirk. a IT Moral Examples Earl Carroll, New York showman, began. his Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK - : - @fficial City, State and County Newspaper) DETROIT Kresge Bldg. | | prison term in Atlanta -penitentiary Wednesday. He was given a one-year sentence, and. indications jare he will serve all of it. jthe prison. He has been in a South Carolina hos- Fifth Ave, Bldg; pital for cver a month. Now, with his recovery}. deemed complete, he has joined the company of un- Better and Cheaper Production {savory characters who cccupy the government's | prison. ¥ %, The beginning of this man’s term is hasteniny Ohne cf the most far-reaching developments of | : Me recent years in the realm of agriculture is undoubt-|'%e end of the worthless shows which have been edly the automati until he tired of the drudgery of the work. invention, after repeated proved that it can, without any than supplying gas, cil and water, plow huge tracts | © without any driver or attendant. Briefly, the improvement, when attached to tractopdrawn plow, permits the farmer to start the machine on a 40-acre field and then go on about The plow will | 7 A ; . o go on plowing all by itself until it finishes the|‘t W&S, and, as a result, a good many sensation- field, when it wilt stop. Or the attachment can be} ™ongers have learned discretion. . hitched to a self-binder and started on an 80-acre field of ripe wheat. self-binder will then go| “Orth # dozen padlocked shows, a dozen boards of aren until the grain is all | °MSors some other business, or go to sleep. around and around tk nicely cut. Stay inventor. claim; and! it; sectna «quite Amely; meant only increased revenues fer actors and man- | that his idea will revolutionize farming. Experts] ©. A at the Nebraska state agricultural college say it] Prison bars casting a shadow before then. is the greatest thing for the farmers in 100 years. ll eliminate the “hired man” in many in- ard will cut out the great army of itin- E n esters who annually “follow the harvest”{a time coming when this great ufiiverse will be up to and over the-Canadian bor-|cold and lifeless, when all things will have been lL cr. sel. cutting the corners rounding instead of squa tractor will finish the job. complished much for American agriculture. A Violent Remedy Philip W. Greee, New Jersey lawyer and for-| merly a judge of a juvenile: court in’ that state, plowman recently invented by| a. * era a Nebraska car inspector who had been a farmer| ‘han that, it sounds the death-knell for pubicity His| * emons ions, has | ‘ de ay aLHESoe other | oned in the hea@lines, he betran to regret it; His a| answer to an attorney's question opened the doors on of the new plow is simplicity it-;kncwn? This is a splendid academic‘question. It . Al! the farmer must do is to run one furrow| is one of interest genérally, but the vital point is around the outside limit cf the area to be plowed, | that we, of the present, really do not-have to worry :.|about it at all, for if the: sun’ does burn out, it The automatic feature is then adjusted and the| will be so many ‘eons hence that it will cause : If the apparatus works | neither us nor our immédiate families ariy concern. as well in practice day after day as it has during its demonstrations, then the inventor willhave ac-| according to Charles G. Abbott, director of the Astro-Physical Observatory, Smithsonian Institu-| + | cluttering up Broadway for the past year. More Carroll‘ wanted his name in print. Hé | got it there. But after he did see himself emblaz- | nttempt to justify himself through the federal | courts proved a little too strenuous, anda casual \of Atlanta prison. It is not likely that Carroll realized that his pub- licity stunt would also prove to be his swan son. The moral example of this prison sentence is A padlocked show, a censor’s ban, has too often agers. But the thrill-sellers’'think | soberly with The San Burning Out? Is the sun really burning out? fs there really blighted by a cold more severe than man has ever Another interesting ‘feature about the situation, | cept to a few scientists, but its value isHeMN> the! gusto bestowed on men who have worked! more | $7.20 | spectacularly. ’ ye ut f | Students, seekers after knowledge, do'ndt go un- . 6.00! rewarded’ in this age, but as a rule their reward + 6.00/ is tardy. | turn our eyes now and then’from the éreators ‘of | Carroll had a nervous breakdown on’ his way to} ii This is Chap | hourg!( The chauffeur coult. @isily ter 81 ot Ne sietien of, art its covet. Por.-all is roin—8tl’ ts a written ‘by a correspondent for ' j The ‘Tribune who is revisiting these eleven pearas gees “* off a gine, he \PTER LVI midday, is com| | isis upponable te dete ort] RO rah abt halt age rors = picture of the derolaticmne out of| the wat-blasted lime of the Chan 7 ; for it is a desolation that /PA 7 | e Bnet or ute not described. ‘ feo Me Lr igh! nbd Say a rough, this. shell-blasted terrain | peine' on for almost 25 kilometers, line Frenel have built a road over! Reine, on for ait ee ito cane : ° which the motors of tourists and the| Not one. |The, fast person, go come Yj | busses of the travel ee el LS tin T'Hereux—the Happy St. Martin. j d y t Tas the guides point, out places o ae) intsyrt, de Pompelie ts over on the| ‘There may be-placen in this worit’ heights to the feft. ‘Then comes the| that are lonely. Travelers say it of village of Beine.. After Beine—the| the African dese iat there atc Champagne. | Lines of trenches ie stretches: of ‘the western din. Deep shell- raivies Tight and lef ipniimtered™ trees p Bus out ot Rheims and throw d dead. the Champagne loneliness lives o Naurog—one village of 300 in-| “it's a lonelingss that is thickened ‘ S J / | habitants. A few stones remain. | by the desolation—and it's a desola- ' : ; on Moron: s completely de-| tion that must be felt to be known. | " stroyed. The Champagng from Beine to’ St. ‘ Still Is Desotate Martin 'Hereux—and not a single Here was: the heart of No-Man’s|human soul along the road in all Land. The glib-chauffeur Hear those kilometers: rtain day in 1915 the — that on a tt'Hrench’ artillerymen| TOMORROW: A Drima-of the fired n total of 285,000 shells in eight | War. { | time preventing the possibility : of { spread of the infection:to other hair follicles, Repeated formation of styes indicates that the body has little resistance sagainat, infection and may be the signal for good ad- vice as to hygiene and general care. The following new books of fic- ry tion will be ready for circulation ut P| the Public: Library today: a | BARBS Rental Collection i > Boyd, Marching On. A war : story. "The herosis the son of a poor Was New York disappointed be-/farmeg of North Carolina, and the cause Lindy didn't stop there first?) story of. his love for oo ls j ‘ .|of a great slave-owner r | Well, did you read about those earth-| 01° fi°Course throughout. the war. quakes down in Jersey. after he said| "Brown, Dear Old Templeton. The . |he’d go to Washington? story of Templeten, who feels that see he has never really liv ion- Girls in the country face the same|ary , wife and charming daughter, i » says | Sally. temptations as thelr ty aiateey Mta| Colby. Green Forest. All of the be sure there are bridge games and bey cast oy eg eek re et 1 blunt instruments in the farmhouses, | voyage, made by Mre, Challoner and | bes gdh en er re { Daily Health tan anc leas iubtlestatethad Sims |e HOFROT Ane, ABET “18” a a Service a len, says a psychologist. The wri-| woman of the hills, who lives ‘among BY DR.. MORRIS FISHBEIN ter evidently hasn’t been around es of the moun- rae jor Journal, of the American aia Sl At the Bismarck | Public Library | They drove the four blocks ta the aeebvas putting We platinum wed. parsonage of the little neighborhood | ding ring on her: finger. His hana, Thurch in silence. Faith wag, grate. | felt cold and mofet.as it tumbled th A judge decided a wife's seven 5 isses a year did not constitute “rea- re.” But judge, ‘you cer- . The story ble. lov. —_ Ellen Dacey gramaaly ee H that women have become isolat ol tainly couldn't say she was mad‘ heir domestic islands, and the strug- about him, either, could you? le that she makes to keep herself F Dr, James Eads Howe, the mil-|Snd her young niece from becoming i one to Manila tol" Wrevon, ‘Twilight Bleep. A golf club locker rooms much. How she comes to a ledical Association and of Hygeia, ‘ hining loop along her trem! fin: the Health Magazine ful to Bob for that little breathing eer. why Bob hs ser too.! Because a spell of silence, for she felt that! she realized suddenly, and she looked ticularly seri she would have burst into tears if he| up at him, a tremulous smile playing cause it gives oun 5 had talked casually, She wanted to|over her face, her eyes wide with, somewhat ribald appearance, _its| ), Dt James hold tight to that sense of peace, the | love and tender amusement. resence is usually greeted with} oite the “1 feeling that she had been messed us|. When it was over and their ‘union|hoarse guffaws of ridicule from| QiPeren, ‘Chanter known she knelt beside ‘her bed, ctying out| had been blessed by a. quavering friends and enemies. The skin-under| iMG; ia" been unionized to God and to her mother. i! prayer, they lingered a while, saying: the eye is loose. and any blow that cde The preacher, the Rev. Mr. Kin-| the usual things in strained, queer: will iniure the blood vessels causes) wast this country needs j¢,a radio ney, a gaunt voices. The plain granddaughter, to deposit as a clot in the'loose| | nouncer who hasn't a Mark Twain em through rn ioc , Srittune essen | "The. ordinary black’ tye, _imme-|SOMPICE. may lenly, 4 iF war tiated Bob on tie tips: ear f akg, diately after the wallop that causes| (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Ine.) ‘vere impelled by something stronger] its appearance, is best treated wit! abby parsonage .| than herself. Wharton. ie story of modern New York. The fig- ures in’ the story are, ae ag) of moneyed men ‘and women 0, fear- ful of suffering pain, either mental j or sical, live in a ‘world of self- delusion. Mrs. Wharton then shows fhem for once face to face with reality. z insol- tion, is that even if the sun Mould suddenly “go out” there is already sufficient energy generated speaking on “Juvenile Delinquency” before the So-| ‘#ke it out of our list of worries. ciety of Medical: Jurisprudence at the New York The usual deduction is that when the sun' finally Academy of Medicine, has advocated the killing by | °¢* ive out, that all vegetation and all life of any the state of the most vicious and criminally inclined peering’ morons and mental defectives as a protection to| ttousht has been expressed, to the effect that when society against their increasing numbers. Mr. Grece declares that the number of public in-| VeTY gradually that animal and vegetable life will stitutions for mental defectives that can be built|%@Ve an opportunity to adapt itself to the new en- and supported by taxaticn is almost at the satur-| ViTonment. é “It may be brutal,” he says, “to sug-! gest it,,but the only way I see to reduce the grow- ing number of mental defectives, potential crim- inals and hold-up men, is to: kill them off. Society : has just as much right to protect itself against | theory is at all reasonable, why is it not rea- mental defectives who commit atrocious crimes as it has to protect itself against smallpox, yellow | ‘hat a new race would evolve that would be able ation point. fever, leprosy and other dangerous diseases.” Such a conclusion could only be reached by «| . ‘3 ee person whose experience had ingrained in him a|‘iful and so impossible and usually so difficult of deep pessimism concerning the present sitaation|Procf. Yet many theories once held ridiculous have | and a despair that future conditions would be any| lived to see the day when they hive been accepted | better. Perhaps - Mivi@fsee's experience has been | #8 truth. : Perhapaaiie“has not achieved the| perspective that comes with a more varied expe- ("Wattecial Caeenane At any rate his conclusion bears the earmarks of i too confining. rience. being a hasty and far too severe one. Life, not death, is the answer. brains. problem. They Deserve Praise Praise is due the Burleigh county commissioners for their decision to finish graveling Federal Highway 10, the county’s main road. They have authorized the highway department to ask for bids on this work which, when completed, will mean a fine highway nearly all the way across the county. There will be considerable expense connected with this work, but any far-seeing citizen must realize that the cost will be more than compensated for. The value the road will have in enabling cit- izens im the eastern part of the county to reach Bismarck_will be augmented by the favorable eom- ment of tourists. Burleigh county, to the automo- hile traveler, will no longer be remembered as juct| farm Activities, it: provides g year-round cash flow another county with bumpy roads.: In addition, the! cf income and keeps tnlateat and’ other charges road will cemént more firmly the “relations of Bis- marek and that part of the county lying to the eaxt ity es AS ss aids Seal ool Su enables the growing of more grain and other prod- We must develop new methods, new technique, in the handling of morons. We must find a way to repair damaged i = m Curing, not killing, is the solution to this American agricultural betterment told President y| counsel of agricultural eduéators;"ineleding sert will suffer extinction. “Lately, however, a new the solar radiations do cease they will cease 50 This is not really as far-fetched as it sounds. The theory that man is descended from fish is now receiving considerable credence. This would in- volve a complete change in environment. If this! sonable to suppose that with.the failure of the sun to live and thrive on oxygen without the sunlight? Theories are attractive things. They are so fan- | A Far-reaching Development (Minneapolis Tribune) Representatives of 13 organizations interested in Coolidge in a white house visit that the great need is for better and cheaper production rather than for greater production on the farm. i This is a valid statement’ of basic truth, and there is no sounder prescription for better and cheaper production than the intelligent diversifi- cation to which farmers of the northwest are in- creasingly lending their efforts, Diversification makes ‘for better and cheaper pro- duction: 2. Because it. keeps down weeds and reduces the charges entailed by dockage. Because ‘it tends to accommodate agricultural supplies to detiagds for agricultural products. 4. Because, when it includes dairying, poultry ing, livestsek’ produétion’ and other relevant down to a minimum. 5. Because—and this is a variant of No, 1—it ucts to the acre. Diversification in the northwest is accompanied |. in a large way with better and cheaper marketing of farm products, and thet is a very important complement of rational bajancad. Best results derive.from when the the county agents, is heeded as ‘| care of livestock, as to ity, we to-kind of seed ‘an to maintain the present rate of solar radiation for b azout fileén ‘trillion years, ‘or &ohg ‘enough to| Witness, 4 1, Because it conserves or restores soil fertility.| ‘| ited ti mb: lv Bob's the mysterious death of a well-to-do them. Their granddaughter, a plain Lauipiven Ae sar rf ‘eouclugion’ of jatter several hours have passed, the English gentleman. irl with thin, nervous wand: the ~ She ted to, lize; 2pPlication of two or three leeches to! New. York, Tune‘ 10.—Awaiting in elley. ‘Home, James. The com- ungry, envious eyes, was the. othi that this, ge fg rage leer ing oie Siackenbd or swollen spot or thelthe early hours of dawn the coming] Plications ~ Seg ype phn gahead f : hands and saying conventional things | Withdrawal: of. some.‘of*the’ came upgd—aquite} @ ihe told the ‘h wea, Day Books fi rea trongerlthe ‘application of clotiva wet with < ; Crofte, ‘The Ponson Case, A well- fe, a little round damp: | sult toit damp on Faitherchcek: sne/ iced water. If the clot has formed|| IN NEW YORK || written mystery story beginbing with ling of a wonrén, was waiting for land the eye can first be treated omly)g 9" EH % ir oO! a Bob talked easily. Dear Bob! How] was her husband—-her husband! ‘She|Dlood by a sterilized newdle mav he| of & tardy liner, ome, chauffeur are fall and splendid he was, how’charg-| repeated the word. It seemed tojttied by the physician. Then it is|by happy accident—the man who, it of the rege C ed with life in this room that-seemed| have no meaning, What an odd word| Recessary to apply a sterilized dress-|seems to me, ritigs up the curtain on Sy! pesiet with shadows, Behind his| it was—husband! indliness and his professional cheer- fulness, the old preacher looked ut- terly tired, defeated, through with] saying to old Mr. Kinn via of the Mit 5 girl jing and the patient gets by with tl ine is an i idea that he has been wounded. in- "4 q Bob was| Stead of merely assaulted. He's an old fellow and he runs a) teacher among 4 After a day. has. passed any such| tiny news stand due Dutch, to make the acquaintance, un« life. Fadith'wondered if he still loved| “Ready, dear? The family will be| treatment is usually futile. ere bap ok the) Bee nehegeized, | ot eee teat his little old wife. Could love last] expecting’ us,” Bob turned to her. {the time for the application of some|and | Staten J 1 bara lang Sear ly bad { that long? Would Bob always look|”**Yes, I’m’ ready,” she whispered.| *Ttistic painting to disguise the dis-|$¥® pot wishes her to marry. ut her with gladness and passion} Bat she wasn't ready. She was| Colored appearance and to make the; Woodsman. | of: CL a ed Be leaping in his eyes? seals nfrata skin ‘look like, the normal tissues. gag ett 1 adage Juanita Espinosa “Dearly beloved— Rk oo fe aes fone ppayaiel ns hive ceveliped e bowi bine yay: ates tha : wale 4 Sage Bee pane Waa) ataio ‘i # * leellent artistic ability for this o = preacher nas reeding from hit ors | (Coprrignt 9ST, NEAT Semmens Tne) | Bose but in-general the résulta"are| Mamhattan it's the early taxicab that] heritage wan not prayer-book, his voice intoning the pila Aa sce ha noth ing fo brag abouts es Laoag ey neh ae. Si ee service which he had read over so|4#———_____________|/ A stye on the eye means an A patie Magic Garden. The i When this man begins work the) *ullt. 9), muny, many couples— fection of ofe of the hair. roots on “Robert, do, you take this woman | 3 Old Masters ML lis, @ child whose e the margin of the eyelid. The course | &teat city seems like a shell of co of Amaryl! to be your lawful wedded wife, to’ | it follows is ‘usually that. followed id, steel from which all’ life) tom ge, divided be airatte ta y a pimple or a, small-boil, After suddenly Vanished, had driven out the and found romance th a day or two it gets soft. and: bursts, ‘ifliame, Immertal Manhattan daily life. v jusky. love and to cherish until death do you part?” Who carried me about the grass, Bon's voice rang out confidently: |Ang one fine day a fine youne man z. , z 4 Came up, and kissed the pretty lass: Faith, do you take this man to] She did not make the least objection! be your lawful wedded husband, tol’ ‘Thinks I, “Aha! < love, honor and obey, to cling to in nlekness and in health, for betipr or for worse 2” “ —Frederick Locker- fi She tried to speak as Bob had/ Terrible Tranter et spoken, gladly, confidently, but the words stuck in her throat.’ She felt b’s fingers close over her cold right hand, as if to give her courage. “Ido.” The words we re little more than a whisper. I recollect a nurse called -Ann, jague i A light fog swings like ces ede aiecnitaeayr sy lagna dancer's, vll fram the shyscrs Unfortunately the styes tend to| ers. couple afl-n' come in cro} tg the bacteria’ infect. | ants are lighted and tugs and lighters “ling one hair root after b the gle fore the stye has softened its d x lowmrent Cte Soares Oe fevented | 5 y pu oul 1e air at ru through it and” by. treating ithe spot | Houettes. iarsay with tisepti : Trading rights of the Moravian | Gangersus to theme wach ft "tl The old . Back to Hurch. in Labrador have b c tang) “Iwi Gencude. Berend Di church .in Labrador have been sold qT re o ‘avi s a to the Hudson's Bay Company. The | troublesome, ad ati oes int tat? [of sea, and Kelp, hours. later| vorce, church had maintained missions and/ tured, a physician can: open i¢ and|¢ven the, water begins.to smell ‘of| Bincoln, Shavings. posts in Labrador since 1771, evacuate the contents, at 1 et cit; Latz. / Cloudy Jewel. co 5 : eaeis z Norri Sisters. OUT OUR WAY pres Willi: BukEAd Deets sf the Nighi, T3115 ar Pe ast. wcnai Porter. At the Foot of the. ‘Rain- Ww. ‘ eth Porter. | Optio: Vreven | BREE HAM ce see > ; S| of bread. a i ints i ( ; rumbe, . jr A Ce yet circle about his news. stand. . Gulls and pigeons, seeming to have had previous acquaintance with this signal, als “are id ys trv wheral is boyhood sted end- \Gokey in the Maine cor he was born,. He meets When I can talk, I’ll tell mama.” ~And that’s my earliest recollection. ‘Tarkington. Penrod and. Sam. Wells. Prilligirl. Willeic, Heart of the Desert. Mocett: Wass tien with a8 ee and on outburst oft. ittering. D _ moment tie man is: surround-}¢- bird parade circles atiout a are he swings} _ Moi ite mechan-| lad, pile up his stacks iggy many are he envisioned himself trange thing}: ea months ae his boyhood . ‘Was graduated of Alsbama, as atten of mi civil engineer in 1608. He a of. tad a dasen slen e University of Texas and’ in: 1806 sou! L, B. Sages ‘at Yate, “Bums amble opt of no-}¥' orn oS ice sports: rots, the oublestones. and] He feturned to ae et ay rae

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