The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 22, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT CONVICTS ARE SENTENCED TO HANG JULY 151) “Supreme Court Denies New Trial For Men Who Killed Coolidge Discovery of Dakotas Reveals Wonder of Bad Lan De fs nacre "= ARRAN NANG NAAN SC RENE ..L._ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE om N. Y. Financier ay # /AIR PASSENGER TRAVEL WILL BE STARTED SOON Bellanca Contracts to Build Five Luxurious Planes For had 43 copper needles lodged in his abdomen, They had been thrust in, two ot three at a time, over a period of four years, as a treatment for indigestion. CHANGED LAND WILL. BE SEEN po WEDNESDAY; JUNE 22, 1927 here any day.” The officer stood at attention, saluted, and said, “Pass, American Legion. ‘ St. Nazaire Changed There are changes also at the first ort of American debarkation, St. jazaire is now in the hands of the British. Kell dat. thts and mechanics from ovee the channel are vee) the finishing touches on the Frenc Line’s huge new liner, the “Ile de Fi . The “mon exchanged” 1 oken” signs put up for the A. » have been retained for them. The most impottant reminder of the Yanks and their coming to St. jazaire is a huge water reservior, with accompanying filters, built by American engineers. Before the war St. Nazaire was often threatened with drought, but the American wa- ter works has a capacity of 7,000 cubic meters a day, while the town's ‘normal needs are only 3,000 meters, It doesn’t pay you to throw away your old mattress— Bismarck Mattress & Reno- vating Co. 513 Broadway- Phone 605. ~ BY DOUGHBOYS Legionnaires Returning to France Will Find New Features Noticeable ° Deputy Warden New York, June 22—()—Air travel ‘de luxe from here to Chicago in seven and a half hours and to Miami in 10 hours was held out as a prob- ubility within four months. Giuseppe M. Bellanca has signed a contract with a young Wall street banker for éonstruction of five 12- i ‘aft. he financier, A. R, Martine, said the planes would be the most Juxur- ‘ious in the country, costing $28,500 each, They will have porter and dinner ervice and a wash room, and will ‘avel at 100 jles an hour, gers sitting be able to nd,” Martine said, Martine predicted hourly service to Chicago and thrice-daily service to Miami within two years. At least one trip per day at fare slightly be- :law one and a half times the regu: jar railway fare i: em to return, But those were the days the startet |S cont bel before marked highways traversed ‘The designer, who severed rela- the state and civilization had moved tions with Charles A. Levine, presi upon the area, dent of the company owning the Col- The tourist today passes through ymbia, before the take-off of that; the very center of the picturesque pinne on its transatlantic flight, expanse without the slightest dan- the proposed Chicago and Miami ger. In fact, one of the loveliest craft would be similar to the Col-! views may be had at Cedar Pass, ymbia in type, but would have three! where a well traveled road takes motors in place of “one.” the motorist through a cleft in the’” Martine said he expected the Chi- wall where five or six cedars are cago route will be opened first and| the only bit of green against the that he was prepared to operate both wide sea of creme and pink. Mines Toad then! lekden aie omy OPEMEE eh wees oneecrnea most interesting formations. There is hunting of a sort in these Bad Lands, “but the hunters do not go armed with rifle or shot- gun. Instead they take pick and shovel. Their quarry is sabre- toothed tiger, three-toed horse, di- nosaur, and such game that in- habited the Bad Lands thousands of years ago. They wandered into the Bad Lands at some prehistoric period, go} in its quicksands, i y ure the tales that are told} and are today splendi. preserved i iby the nioneers of white men who! fossils such as museums prize high- pie-| went through the high wall never Paris, June 22.—()—“American Legion” is a magic password into many sacred corners of France, but doughboys who return this summer ‘o attend the Legion convention will find themselves in o vastly changed land. ’ The war is inctly a thing of the! past, e at Verdun, where 400,000 Germans ‘and Allied soldiers are buried within a radius of 25 miles, Buses bear signs equal in nrominence reading, “Man Spricht Deutsch” and “English Spoken.” Dog Makes Truce Even “Petit Michel.” a canine vrisoner of war tured at Fort fter the retreat of the crown forces, has capitulated te For more than a year migtice Petit Michel sing to respond to food and caresses. He is reconciled at last, but still looks for his master when there are German visitors. But the war is fresh in the recol- lection of soldiers. A Moroccan soldier who halted a Legionnaire on| advance business for the convention | was scolded by an officer and told! “American Legion is the countersign| ——————— VULCANIZIN Tires and Tubes, Oil and Grease Auto Accessories Phone 944 Bismarck Accessory & Tire Co. Next to First Guaranty Bank said they anticipated little diffi- culty in rcunding up the rest of the fugitives. , REWARD The Board of Park Commissioners will pay $25.00 reward for the arrest and conviction of any person destrdying or stealing plants or flowers in Custer Park. ; Springfield, ML, June 1m Three of the seven conviets who : i eee ee killed Deputy Ward N. Kle é . oe : : : : 5 | preme court t appeal for e hb M. H. Atkinson, Clerk. From a drawing made by F, V, Hayden, naturalist, in 1882. How the Bad Lands looked to the pioneers. Q Mines. Beoray, tte dey He Leproduced in a bulletin of the South Dakcta School of in dered. Bernardo Roa wanished when the convicted men broke from the Will county jail last Shader eluded the tempt June 13. turesque beauty spot, fantastic, ma: id C ; jestic, crazy, cruel, inspiring, | good Gp cone: for nothing but to look at. coe aee Ue ee The traveler first sees the Bad splendent, artistic, many-hued black! Lands as he emerges from the roll- in the middle of South Dakota's! i And if he has not iries lie the famous Bad Lands.| advance, he will be Staleauy) ex Dusch-| They have been there for thousands : overcome: gf the unex- Melticcid Raves Tosvec -are, ch-| and’ thousands of | pecte “Before him will be al rn ining three whom the supreme! just been dis light beige wail several hundre feet court has decreed must hang Fri-| 4! an people at large by in height, with-here-and there stand aay) Ja dge’s pilgrimage into the B ing out in bold-reljef a jagged pro- WOMAN'S PARTY o:iicSi'(8°8 eae ct oem TO HOLD MEET IN COLORADO They ure from|to be towers, domes, arches, spires | 5 wide and about| and minarets—or on some — mighty hey have history | d mountain side a fortress or, Ccnventicn Will Be First Since Suffrage Amend- ment Was Passed By NEA Service after sulked, the dD, June 22. Gregorio magnificent, re- » plot, Rizo never “he would Paul C. Remington _ New Loan Plan On improved City and Farm Propert: > Low interest rate and prepayment Privilege Bismarck and Mandan Office, City Insurance Afency 103%, Fourth St. lone ands are some forty] NEEDLES AS CURE Pyengyang, Korea—The X-ray machine in use at the Christian hospital here has disclosed some of the amazing treatments once prac- ticed by Korean doctors of the old school. One man recently examined ® Chinese empire, bu' udal with perching tur- xpert geologist to real] rets and i y in the hieroglyphies of! There are parts of this vast area of unconsolidated | that human foot has never \ trod and cerie seg ° the Indians and early settlers outs fossils, pinnacle | | their ste frock, dried mud, Phone 220-W tions. Bad Lands was an appropriate nam Once all this land was the bottom | for ¢ wild life would not subsist of al Along came glac rn id oftentimes fleet Indian two ynd filled up the | 5 A river then began through the mud. E the rest-—created a rough, . Who uses oil? Everybody! The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) supplies products of petroleum used—directly or indirectly—by every one of the 30 million people of the Middle est. pike ‘ ee j | barracks where the drt of war was! taught to young officers have dis- GUARDED ROOMS NEAR SENATE ARE ci." ” said Lucien, “we “to see them back new how to do things. ; . erything, monsieur, ev- Funeral Services For nto abath room.” \ : Lucien 4 Joan \Louise Tufford j size scainst, the sentry who fired on him one chilly autumn evening to Rest, Visit and Make) to Be Held Thursday |when he was returning home from « Last’ summer the International ke )German prison camp. | Gee Women’s Suffrage Alliance refused! Dee — Rooms De-|_ Funeral services for Joan Louise} “It was this way,” he said. | “I to admit the National Woman’ i | rutford, was crossing the park in the direc- Party to membership at the T signed For Comfort and) yrs. ba tion of the cottage where my mother Convenience of Senators | Colorado Sprin; Colo, June 22. (P\—The first national convention of the National Woman's F 5 the suffrage amendment pas six years ago will be held in Colo Colo., July 7-10. A new constitution w ed, national officers elec! plans for international coope: with foreign feminists will be ranged. “Oh, monsieur, shall a || There Members of Nation’s| Lawmaking Body Gather The two majar-products of oil—gasoline ahd lubricating oil—are essential to motor transpor- eat tation, to industry and to commerce. In addition to the major lucts of petro- leum there are hundreds of by-products which fill a great variety of needs and, ‘by eliminating waste, help to make poseiine the low price of the major products. man who over an asphalt road-the woman who oils her sew- ing machine—is using a product of petroleum. The wheels that are busily. whirring in fac- tories throughout the land, manufacturing the ‘how I learned the Americans were pion Spark Plugs— necessities and luxuries of life, must be lu here. 1 would:have been shot in the they're ble. ; ; bricated. morning if they hadn't found my . 2 oe mother who had moved to another| Champion is the beter Oil plays i in the fact and ar because of ks Oil plays its:part in the manufacture an EUTier anata hus’ chasgeds banils| ohne Fsu ena distribution of practically all the products in since Pershing left it. The new | eamatructon and is ape- use today—the food we eat—the clothes we 9 wear—the houses in which we live. — we move on oil. owners take pride, however, in. the fact that it was the first general 60F As a nation i trucks—are lul oo ducts of petroleum. headquarters of the American army. Madame Bizot, the mistress of the “iF Engines—in millions of automobiles, trucks and tractors—are fed the products of oil. chateau, says she is always glad to In palatine pricoleers peaucte for the le of the Mi West, the Standard Oil pany (Indiana) is welcome men from the A. EF. F., es- helping:to unite the pecially. those who come to show their brides what they did “in the mpany (I : nation, socially and industrially. The great war.’ miles done last auto- cel a TRAGEDY INDEED ae bad about poor Smith, wasn't | gene, See eae own country. ‘one sec- tion vit other ns, An lee of the ten states of the Middle West. widened—sympathies broadened— the fabric of our’ national life more closely knit together. : Industrially the Standard Oil Company (In- diana) ia Helena fo unite patie UE and oil being the city to the and the country to t! ae — ll-months-old daughter of Patzman Tufford, who died following short illness, The Doctor In fair weather or foul, sero nights or rainy days, I have always found that my car starts instantly and coctectly cap aera ntion. The former body con always lived. || Suddenly 1 heard i held Thursd: morning at 9|someone cry out in a foreign jan- st SN church Father |euage. I never felt until then that & poor peasant like me needed to know a foreign language, 1 couldn't t the two groups e same working methods. feminist urged up ernon of executive Woma international - nus,” anid Miss} Washington, ilmington, Del-|that the of the! June 228-(/)—Now | cattered to the the eur- ylimpse r into | in St. oo ed ‘was the cert * R. Ww. en there was the crack of a didaugh-|rifle and I th myself on the | of this;ground. Two pairs of strong hands} laid hold of me and dragged me be- fore the officer of the guard. That's be lifted for J the scenes of ity cha feminists joak rooms, the lounge Lady ys, of Betty of ON anxious for the Ame’ to form such a group, ly is schemes. negot filibusters and |s or- not devoted wholly OF ARMY NOW A RESIDENCE Caretaker Says He'll Be Glad} to See Legionnaires Re- turn to View Place re jm. “Lady Rhondda of the Open Door/f Council of Great Britain has written the National Woman's Party that = believes our decision in regard to in ternational activity would have ‘great repercussion throughout the world Lady Rhondda is on the Internatio Advisory Council of the Nationa! Woman's Part Madame Maria Verone, France's militant suffragist and president of the League for Women’s Rights, would like to see the Woman's! Party play an international role.| She also favors the formation of an international group which w lobby for equal rights and fe action at strategic points in Europe, trom the democratic cloak roon such as Geneva, \ $4 ‘probably. is occasioned by “ eenke age i. Ba palmant Treddaént Heflin, of Alabama, accounted the Peratars are gt Ale Ne Las a {senate’s best story teller, relating Renae it an, pels Ame: the latest funny one in his reper: c _ feminism | toire, abroad by a more aggressive policy,| If the laughter emanates from the she believes. A "I 4 f ; republican cloak room, the star re- Miss Anita Pollitzer, national sec- conteur, “Jim” Watson of Indiana, retary for the party, will go to the aye eng . Colorado Springs convention straight | Probably is regaling his colleagues from a year abroad to talk on the in- Of cronies with the new ternational situation. states While uxed at times for serious Cam ade sptntes |conferences, the cloak rooms were Hittin ee KS |designed for the comfort and con- venience of senators. Each is in the | shape of an L with individual lock- | ers and a wash room on one side | and lounges and easy chairs on the | other. In the lockers are stored the sen- | ators’ hats and overcoats. As each | senator enters the chamber, a page | ights over leg senators jbe at ease, throwing of dignity which must on the floor, and puff pipes, ited. by the swap. experi-| ences, exchange j and josh each | other, They talk the language of the average man and have his im- pulses for human com, ionship and intimate social contacts. Sounds of | laughter frequently float out to the | senate chamber to momentarily dis- | turb proceedings there. e Heflin or Watson If the evidence of mirth comes! : cf “What happened to him?” “He got so far behind in his rent that he had to marry his landlady.” —Tit-Bits. Gondrecourt, France, June 24.—(#) Lue Patheir, who learned from a sentinel’s bullet that the American troops had arrived, will be here, where the first headquarters of the “i F. in the field was located, to # the American Legion in Sep- tember. Besides the chateau and its lodge, with the American wiring still im place, he will be about the only re- minder of the place as it was when General Pershing and his staff lived here. The chateau on the hill and the CHAMPION Spark Plugs ‘TOLEDO, OHIO e present as well as other ‘countries Paper Carriers Are Expert Salesmen Atlanta, Ga., W. E. Perry MORTICIAN AND FUNERAL DIRECTOR Parlors 210 Fifth June 22.—(P)—Boys ae et who carry daily newspapers into mil- Iions of American homes are expert salesmen, honest, loyal and do effec- tive work, the International Circula- tion Managers’ association was told today, Two papers read to the con- vention from Oliver King of the Re- ublic at Bhoenix, Arizona, and W er, of the American, Chicago, said boy carriers did more effective than men or women solicitors, that their work was more effective and that newspaper subscribers who patronized the youthful agents re- édived better service, ed” less and—best of all—remained on the subscription lists. <*Two implements of modern culture have contributed heavily to the prob- fems of newspaper circulation, the managers were ‘told. The radio gives the country the news before the newspapers can get on the streets with it, thus requiring iter salesmanship, said ‘harles , president of the I. C. M. A. and circplation manager of the In- The go! cou! Proves such a profitable field of endeavor for news- paper carriers that it is hard to keep job, another speaker Flin, policemen who are able to French and English wear white 4,|make a fair catch. meets him and races away with his hat and outer coat to place it in his | locker, ‘There is one senator, the colorful Cole Blease, of South Caro- lina, who rarely permits his hat to/ be taken from his hand; he tosses it to the page to test his ability to ~ The Lounge The lounge, a long corridor be- tween the senate chamber and the ornate marble room which is en- tered through heavy swinging glass doors and is protected from public view by large screens, also has its easy chairs and couches, together with a ready reference library and tables where senators may sit and dictate to their stenographers, The marble room is the prize of all, Here is.a cozy fire place faced by an overstuffed lounge and flanked by leather covered settees. Be- hind the lounge is a long table where scores of daily newspapers are place: ‘ The walls are of brown marble | and four great white marble col-/ umns are grouped in the center some eight feet apart. Scattered about the room are easy chairs with bridge lamps and a small table here and there. Tucked away in. one corner is a vat filled with ice and bottles of aperient waters, with which the elder statesmen ap- pease their thirst. Phone 687-W . WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers _‘ Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge 3 Day Phone 246 - Night Phones 246-887 ‘Capital Funeral Parlors 216 Main Ave. Licensed Embalmer Phone Day or Night—22-W Jos. W. Tschampertin | Prop. Busy-hours are saved when you use rapid long distance telephone service which is provided to many towns. You often get the distant person you want almost instantly. And when your call is handled in this faster way, you will be asked to hold the line as you do « when calling a person within the ity. ee will help is! to speed. uy all if the namabec a ‘the tel ‘or with anyone available at the use— ake ; furni one you are calling.’ you want to talk with a s e operator hone called, mer chan nt consumer. Prwvidiog petaicas products for the ‘peopie is West is a job made up of women, united and enthusiasm, are work of the Standard mindful of great of hich must be and whole- and tness of the t fence of every deta iis the importance of every detail, : , of workers is daily putting into Oil Com; ) ss

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