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+ ath Road mh =+ «THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper (Established 1873) ldanger would be nil, Nevertheless England ob- jects. | That’s how these dear European allies love and’ trust one another. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Ham and Eggs For the Gods No authority on the classics of ancient Olympu: has ever reported how often the gods had stomach-| ache, eating such rich stuff as nectar and ambrosia | Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Pa , 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 Dakot Member Audit Bureau of Cir the way they did, but if these gods were anything | like our own Lindbergh, they relished now and then -20 an order of ham and, sunny side up, a good cup of | 7.20’ Java and a side of home fries. | 5.00! Lindbergh, dodging the hero worshipers and the « 6.00! newspaper men in New York, had such a break-| fast in the home of a humble flying person in New! Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entith the use for republication of all news dispatches | Couldn't take the hint, and so, when they set the ; credited to it or not otherwise credited in th per, and also the local news of spontaneous } published herein. All rights of republication - other matter herein are also reserved. York the other morning, and pronounced it the! led to | best meal he had had in weeks. But St. Louis | is pa-|festive board for the hero’s homecoming to Mis- origin | souri, the committee on lunch loaded the table down of all’ with a repast that would give even a French dic-| Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO * Tower Bldg. Kresge | PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK - - = (Official City, State and County Newspaper) The Naval Conference The representatives of five nations, Great Sain, Japan, France, Italy and the United States,| are now in ion in Geneva to discuss * armament limitation and there are good pro: that when they have finished their deliber se DETROIT Fifth Ave, tionary indigestion. Cast your orbs over what! |they asked the peor hero to eat: | Frivolities on Wings - \Tabrilati Melon Glace Elysee Olives et Celeri! Consomme Froid Armenonville Timbale de Filets de Scle Marquise Poitrine Devolaille Piquette a la Carignan— | Petit Pois Nouveaux a la Francaise Homard a la Parisienne Salad de Laitue Rachel Mousseline Glace en Escadrille—- Petit Fours New York Paris i Moka i All this for a man who flew to Paris on sand-/ ations wiches! If the St. Louis lunch didn’t stick his! Bldg. Bldg. Brit- | naval spects *a five-power naval arms limit treaty will replace valves, nothing will ever stick ’em. | the present three-power treaty. 2former aloof attitude is gratifying proof of wish to cooperate for the general good, but In the name of long suffering humanity, it is to) The recéhsideration by France and Italy of their be hoped that there was some Samaritan in St.; warm enough for tender new flesh. their | Louis with common gumption enough to take the! their poor kid out and buy him a batch of beans, a plate) }mere acceptance of the invitation to attend the con-| of hash, or some decent fried chicken, mashed po- | ‘ference is no guaranty that an agreement will be |tatoes and gravy, succotash, and pie. } reached. “not be on the proposed ratios for capital ship: * As a matter of fact, it is apparent in the very | | {beginning that the main point of difference mi Editorial Comment 8, but | . | {will be in the limiting of cruiser and submarine | classes, the very armaments aimed at by this new| #conference and the ones which both France and ‘Italy will be particularly unlikely to voluntarily | > limit. France and Italy are more interested in ies, especially the cruisers and submarines, than | they are in first line ships, for France and are both over the ratio in first line submarines and France's ex-| ;France is over it in fleet submarines. =ceptional submarine strength, taken together _ Japan's, is a critical factor in any attempted equal- tization of construction in this class and may he stumbling block that will end in defeat for the | ive-power plan. ; The United States and Great Britain and Japan Fcan, of course, easily extend the .present treaty to ginclude the cruiser class of naval armament, but concurrence by France and Italy would be highly iadvantageous and would be another notable step! toward general world disarmament. 2 Old Ironsides “Old Ironsides,” the United States frigate Con- <atitation, has been moved from her pier at the Bos- ton navy yard, where she has been rotting for years, into drydock, from which she is to come re- “juvenated in two years, Seores of dignitaries, leaders in civilian life and “high officers of the navy were in the throng of It was a galu ;6,000 that witnessed the ceremony. cecasion for them. It was a gala occasion for the entire nation as If there is one thing this country needs at this time it is to keep alive the spark of patriotism. Of late we have almost lost our respect for pa- triotism, so overlaid is it with “internationalism” well. and other schools of thought tending toward tion of national distinctions. Yet this should not be so. a theory, is an attractive one, yet we doubt it would work out well in practice. Human beings | accomplish their best work by laboring in groups | the group spirit throughout most fields of en- | Thus it would seem that mankind will ac- | complish much more by being broken up into na- :tional groups than as a huge super-nation of the :deavor. world, And, after all, our oyn traditions are precious. with a romantic and splendid beginning and ord of supreme achievement that well justifie pride we may take in our country. Somehow the old Constitution, so affectio ‘known as “Old Ironsides,” typifies to us the old | unbeatable spirit of the days when our nation was | ‘very young...Jt,is fitting that she should be pre- served as at inspiration to us and to generations to | ‘come. England Fears a Tunnel , One of the wickedest bodies of water in the | whole world is the English channel which separates ‘loathe crossing it in the small passenger vessels. ber cause nine times out of ten the passage is rough and the passengers become seasick. For years the question of building a railway tunnel under the channel has been mooted. ,years France and England, not being on extra good terms with one another, have blocked the plan. :day France is in favor of the scheme, but England objects. English military men still fear the i might be used as a convenient method of invading , England. { The tunnel could be built for $80,000,000. would be 39 kilometers long and 50 meters ‘the bottom of the sea at its deepest point. ° It accommodate 100 trains per day in either direction ‘and could carry 25,000,000 passengers and 8,000,000 ,tons of freight annually. The traction would be ‘electric. ,. Answering British fears, the French enthusiasts ‘say the exit of both tunnels on the English side would be under the range of all the guns in Dover. * Not only that, but power stations which would sup- ply current to trains coming from France would be England. The English could easily eut off the time of war. They could fill the tunnel gas. There. would be a that. ip case of war, the tunnel could be from top to bottom with water for » space|of purloined potatoes, apples, and without destroying the|city markets from the country. Internationalism, as We have a well defined national history | Prosperity Is Half Blind | (Toledo Blade) | Our people, the people of this wonderful coun-| try, talk easily of money in tens of millions. There | is so much money that hundreds of thousands do not mean so very much, any more. Not that every- body has riches, but the figures have to be large to attract attention. Here is a story of the other ex- treme. It has no dollar sign in front of it. It is a story of poverty. In the great, wealthy city of Chicago, in a rail- road yard, lived Sylvia Cervantes, 14, and her three brothers—one 2, one 4 one 6. After Sylvia's} mother had been buried and she had sent her father | south, because he was beginning to cough, like} mother, there was no money left. So the girl found) an abandoned box car, in the railroad yards. They were getting along until the baby pulled a pan of scalding -water over him. He died in his sister’s rms. Through this sorrowful mishap the little family was found. Yes, there is wonderful prosperity in the coun- try, but too often it is half blind. It goes along with its head up, and cannot see the little tragedies at its feet. Along with our riches we need a heart like Sylvia’s. aux Italy | with prove Wives College Boys Want (San Francisco Chronicle) Where does the modern flapper figure in the minds of college men expecting to marry? This question, of considerable interest to parents and educators, has been put up to the students of Santa Clara university. Out of 300 students receiving a questiomaire 284 responded. Some of their comments follow: “I hope to marry scmeone as like my mother aa possible.” { “An old-fashioned girl. I have her all picked t that out: All I need is my college diploma and some! money.” “A flapper—there are no more old-fashioned girls.” “One that can cook good meals, by all means.” “The modern girl, minus the flapper traits.” “If old-fashioned means sensible and level-headed, | though bobbed, certainly.” | “If there is an old-fashioned girl to be found,; en pul marry her.” aboli- iand we have found that it is necessary to preserve | ‘a rec-| be up to date and not eccentric.” ns ony | “I hope to marry a flapper, i. e., a nurse.” | {Something in between, a girl who is educated, gcod-looking and has a rich old man.” “Flappers give me an awful pain. I want a good | girl, but a live wire.” nately | | “A girl inclined to be old-fashioned and from the country.” “The happy medium for me.” “Love knows no type. } The Saturation Point Advances (Nation’s Business Magazine) | Whether the automobile is the cause of good iroads, or whether the building of better highways invites the increasing number of cars, there is no lack of evidence that the locus of the automobile saturation point continues to vanish, and that high-| | way expenditures contiue to expand. At 40,000,000 jcars, the saturation point now stands in the cal- To- |culations of H. F. Kingsley, a Chicagoan. That! figure, doubling the present registration, should be reached in fifteen years, he thinks. For founda- tion he finds that “more families can afford two cars today than were able to buy one car ten years ago,” and that the national income is increasing at the rate of $2,000,000,000 a year—a whale of a market, as the saying goes, if Mr. Kingsley has his figures straight. For highway construction in 1925, the states spent $649,125,000, surpassing 1924 expenditures by. $43,460,000. Good roads have had a diligent lvoeacy. For the most part they fire so regarded, but in New seem to make it easy for crop farmers. Their losses in fruit, .the French coast from that of England. Travelers For tunnel ik below could water sibly the farmers will discover that the truckloads carn come to the “The old-fashioned type, though I want her to}, 'm waiting for love.” _{ Tearle in “My Official Wife,” which | eomes, to the Capitol Theatre, com- proposed. “City motorists” are suspected. Pos- |. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE F Saint “Sinmer Cherry had left the house at three "clock that afternoon, a particularly | mild and springlike day in April, | bound for the shopping district, ac- cording to her casual announcement to Fuith, Cherry had taken no inter- est as yet in shopping for a layette for the baby that was ‘een in August, and Faith ha ‘a throb of nope that Cherry would come home with her arms full of fascinat- ing parcels. It was still incredible to her tha childish, tiny Cherry was to be a mother, and Cherry’s own attitude | toward the approaching event wai such that Faith hardly dared men- tion it to her. She longed to talk with Cherry about it, frankly, won- deringly; to know how Cherry felt in her mind and heart about the child that was to be hers—hers so strange- ly and completely, since she had} elected to thrust its father out of her life. | Faith wondered, too, how Cherry felt now about Chris Wiley, her hus- band of a day, her co-defendant in a murder trial. She wondered, know- ing how her own heart leaped at the| ‘mere mention of Bob's name, how! Cherry could have loved Chris so utterly and then lost her love so completely. Was there still a trace | of the old fascination, a memory of | the old thrill, to tug at her nerves and to bring the tears to her eyes, which Faith so often surprised in, them? . And so Faith waited for Cherry's | return with shy hopefulness that Sat- urday afternoon. She was eager to/ get to sewing on the baby things.| Her fineers ached to be setting tiny stitches in mist-sheer batiste and in cream-white flannel soft enough and Secretly, as if it were for a child of her own—oh, heart-stopping thought! ithe key in the lock of the big, oak- | yoom in great, angry strides. “Where | Cherry’s laughter. she was already knitting a downy, f ti white nightingale, om w forget-me-nots. It was odd how she | felt that the eee, was to be hers, ather than Cherry’s— "alWhere is Cherry?” Bob asked as) they sat down to dinner that eve- ning. She said she was going shop- ing,” Faith worried. “I suppose he has let the time slip away with-| wi realizing it is so late,” ‘An appetizing plate of dinner was et in the warming oven for he} bsent girl, and Mrs, Lundy whirled through her work in the kitchen, then came scowling into the living room for a last word with Faith be- fore leaving for the evening: “lve made her a custard, It's in ‘the ice box, She'll need it to keep up her strength. ‘Traipsing all over| town, wearing herself out!” she add- ed in a grumbling voice that ill concealed her anxiety. Faith and Bob sat hand in hand throughout the evening, making a pretense of casual, carefree talk, but their ears were strained for the ring- ing of the telephone or the sound of beamed front door. “Oh, Lord, I can’t stand this!” Bob jumped to his feet at last and went charging up and down the living the devil do you suppose she is?” They waited, tight with suspense, miserable, looking at each other with fearful eyes that glanced quickly away, And then, at last, at half past twelve it was, there was the sound of 9 car stopping at.the curb, followed by the high, sweet music of TOMORROW: Defiant Cherry tells of her last ing.’ (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service’ Inc.) | | IN NEW YORK |, oS New York, June 25.—The chimney| sweep is about again, plying trade, He generally appears shortly after he lust nip of frost has made fire- laces no longer necessary. He walks the byways of Manhattan, an incon; gruous figure in a rushing, modern world, crying his street call which sounds wery much like this: “Chim- ‘sasweep . . . Chimsasweep.” he carries his brushes und his ropes, his face is soot-streaked and his hands blackened. To most folk he is a figure almost as mythical as Santa Claus, Since his visits are seasonal he is used by many mothers as a sort of “Bogey-man.” He's the fellow who “will get them if they are not good.” And he has his “ropes all ready to tie them up and tuke them away.” ‘The .sweeps’ names appear in the telephone books and they carry on business in a modern and efficient manner, yet there is something fanciful and unreal about this call- ing, suggesting the story bouk p ple of old tales, though large num bers of them work for big organi: tions operating out of skyseraper offices. pero Most of the world has heard about the bright ligts of Broadway, but) little «is said of the picturesquely antique street lights to be found .in ather sections of Manhattan. In MacDougall Alley, jutting off] from. Washington Square, old Eng- lish street lights are still used. At dusk a lamplighter goes about his| rounds and bret the night the street enjoys the illumination of oil lamps flickering in the wind. Patchen Place, in Greenwich Village, boasts | of one of the few remaining lamp. posts of the venerable vintage as- sociated with comic strip tipplers. On the East Side kerosene torches still flicker from the sidewalk stores | even as before the corner medicine show in Brown's Corners, Manhattan Snap-Shots—A eafe that hires only brunet waitresses and c ries on its menu a little note: 3 you prefer blonds, eat elsewhere, We! furnish service.”, Another cafe’ menu asks patrons kindly to refrain from engaging the pretty waitresses in wisecracking ex changes. “We require our waitresse to be ladies during working hours, the notice ends. And after working hours... 4 In four ‘Broadway skyscrapers a fine of $10 results if one is caught smokin> Millions in movie films are in these buildings. . . A flreworks company, in the down- town ‘ommercial belt has a sign in| the window reading: “We will make! any battle scene to order.” Just} waik in and order your own war! A bootlegger had advertised a shipment of genuine “pre-war stuff?" | . + . “What war?” asked the wise guy. . you sap!” snapped the bootlegger. GILBERT SWAN. —_———— At The Movies, CAPITOL THEATRE Irene Rich, featured with Conway + “The Chinese revolution, | mencing Monday, wears a galaxy of gowns of dazzling beauty. She is seen at first as Helene, Countess | Orloff, the courted beauty of artisto- eratic Petrograd society. Then, in the quaint brilliant garb of a Rus-| sian peasant. There are the later) scenes when she is a singtr in the} glittering Viennese cafe, and when) she comes 96 a guest, in all the regal | splendor of the past, to meet the! humble young nobleman whom she| had sought for years that she might avenge a past wrong, but whom she now loves, though he wears the severe livery of a waiter, instead of the gold lace and epaulettes of the days before war. “My Official Wife” fs one of the outstanding melodramas. of the sea- son, A splend‘d cast supports Miss Rich r. Tearle, * ELTINGE Coming to the Eltings is Bebe Daniels’ net “Senorita,” in which Mi presented in an entirely new type of role. In this colorful story of ro- mance and adventure in South Amer- ica, the- fascinating Bebe Dan “The Campus Flirt” appears in the character of a dashing caballero, a swashbuckling, high-spirited, hot- tempered f tl paps iacy Mh masquert that leads rges in true Daniel: is 4 role -that presents # nev Bebe Daniels, 6, suegestion ef whom was found in “The bolo Flirt.” In feet it was the f | sports. 'Fargo Man Heads 18 of | B might lie in a story in which she would don masculine guise and give full play to her love for all kinds of Gloomy Outlook Is Pictured For Cooperatives Chicago, Sune 25.—(P)}—A gloomy outlook for farmers’ cooperatives was pictured today by W. H. Settle of Indianapolis, Ind., general manager of the Central States Soft Wheat Growers association, in a paper read before the American Institute of Co- operation, “Until some means is found by which the whole crop can be required consistently and equally to share in the cost of carrying and marketing the surplus, and of creating orderly marketing, the cooperative can mere- ly establish a better price level for the whole crop and put all the bur- den on its membershi: said Mr. Settle. “How long the membership will he content to accept this sort of condi- tion is problematical, There are lenty of signs that it will not be for long.” ‘Mutilating Grave of Floyd Collins’ _ Brings Indictment WAR VETS MUST ACT QUICKLY TO GET INSURANCE Time For Reinstating Gov- ‘ernment War Risk Insur- ance Expires July 2 Fargo, N. D., June 25.—()—Warn- ing that the opportunity to reinstate insurance, offered by the government to ex-service men, will expire July 2, has been issued by T. O, Kraabel, state veterans’ service officer, who urges every veteran to reinstate-his Insurance policy before it is too Bate. The insurance protection is off at cost and can be had on such terms that no veteran should be with- out it, Kraabel said. = * “During the period of the late war the government insured men in the service to the extent of $10,000 or less each, ereeelng a nominal term rate per month which was deducted from the man's pay check,” Kraabel said. “After the cessation of hostilities this privilege of War Risk~Term In- surance was extended, and later seven standard forms of life insur- ance policies were offered to those who wished to convert their term in- surance to a permanent form. The reason for this was that the term rate increased from year to year and at the older ages would become prohibitive in eost. A level rate in- surance was instituted, available to all veterans who served during the period specified and in the amoufits for which they were originally cov- ered. Reinstatement Is Simple “As the matt*r now stands any veteran in good health may ‘reinstate and convert any amount of his origi- nal War Risk Insurance by submit- ting properly completed applications for reinstatement and conversion, re- port of medical examination, and an amount sufficient to cover the term premium for the month insurance was dropped and an advanced pre- mium on the new form of insurance chosen, on or before July 2, 1927. For an example, John Doe was dis- charged in July, 1919. His insur- ance age was then 24. He was paying $6.60 per month for his $10,000 War Risk Insurance. The last month he paid for this was July, 1919. At this time he wishes to reinstate and con- vert $3000 of this insurance. He will first have to pay the back premium on $3000 for the month of lapse— Augpat, 1919—at the rate prevailing at that time: 66 cents per $1000 per month or $1.98. He wishes to con- vert to the five years Convertible Term Policy and to pay the premium in monthly installments. His age now is 32. The rate of this policy per $1000 per month is 73 cents. The first monthly premium in advance on the new policy is accordingly $2.19, Hence the total cost ‘of rein- statement and conversion for Mr. Doe would be as follows: Reinstatement of $3000— Premium for month of lapse Conversion to five years Tei Premium for first month .. Total Cost Convertible in Five Years “Thereafter. Mr. Doe would have to pay $2.19 per month for five years to keep his insurance in force. At any time during’ the five years hg may again tonvert to any of the fol- Brownsville, Ky., June 26.—()— ir. Harry B. Thomas, Horse Cave dentist, was indicted by a grand jury jay on a_ charge of “multilating the grave of Floyd Collins.” Trials was set for the. November term of court. ADr. Thomas, who purchased Crystal ve from the Collins family some months ago, also is being sued for $60,000 damages for removing the casket from the grave to the interior of the cave, allegedly for exhibition purposes. The Collins brothers also have asked for an injunction tb re- strain the dentist from exhibiting the casket. Jones Working Hard . to Get World Record With fess than a week remaining in which to establish a world récord for number of Apelicarions taken in a single month, B. E. Jones, repre- senting the New York Life Insurance company, is doubling his efforts to fill his quota and bring to Bismarck the distinction of having the record. The present world record of 311 ap- plications in one month is held by a Vancouver, Wash., ag During the progress of Mr. Jones’ campaign he has received an Applicata from Maine and one from Portland, Ore- gon, The campaign closes at mid- night June 30. Red River Singers Grand Forks, N. D., June 25.—()— | Henry Hanson of the Orpheus Chorus, Fargo, was elected president of the Red River Valley male sing- sociation at a business meei- ing of the organization held in the city auditorium this morning. Louis; Waag: of the Norrona Chorus, Peters- burg, was elected vice president; E. 0. Od rd of the Bjarne Chorus, Grand Forks, was elected secretary and H.-P. Halvorson, Fargé, was re- elected treasurer. : W. P. Rognlie, director of the Bjarne Chorus, was reelected director in ehief of the association, and Prof. 0. J. Hanson, Fargo, was elected as: sistant director in chief. elected as the city for ngerfest which will be held. in.June, 1929. It was decided that the term “male” would be sub- stituted for “Scandinavian” in ‘the name of the organization. Trustees’ elected are as follows: Knute Johnson, Grand Forks, re- elected for two years; 0. A. Hielle of the Morden Chorus, Devils Lake, reelected for four years; Andrew Thorson, of the Kjerulf Chorus, Hat- ton, elected for two yea! _. MUST BE.GOOD Customer: Cam you give me something to arrest the development of g cold? - Di Certainly; I cad recob- bend ad udfailig rebedy.— "ANY PLACE BUT HOME id (disgusted with loafer): Jowing permanent forms of policies: Ordinary Life; 30-year Payment; 20-year’ Payment; 30-year Endow- ment; 20-year Endowment; and En- dowment at 62. He also could convert to one of these plans of policies at the time of reinstatement and pay his pre- mium either monthly, quarterly, sem annuaHy or annually. The five year convertible term, policy is recom- mended for purchase by those wl... find it temporarily, incdnvenient ‘to pay the higher premium on other forms of converted policies. 4 In me case of i plsetied vet- ran, not permanently and total; disabled ent whose physical disabil- ity is the result of an injurv or dis- ease suffered in active service, it will be necessary to pay all the back term premiums from date of lapse with interest at rate of five per cent rae annum, compounded annually. if the veteran is unable to pay the amount due on account of such back premiums, makes a showing to: that effect, and-meets all other require. ments for reinstatement and conve: sion, his application will be a proved and the amount due will placed as an interest bearing jebtedness, against his insurance.” “These are the salient points rel- ative to Government Life Insurance. It is urgently requested that all ex- service men who read this remind their comrades, and get in touch with the local Legion Post, U. S. Veterans’ Bureau at Fargo or the Service Officer, American Legion, Fargo, North Dakota, © Blanks and further information will be furnished by any of the above.” iP ‘Mr. Coolidge panes to reduce his waistline if trudging from his car through marshy trails to trout streams rants it. le -scales somewhere in the 50's, New ‘York.—Tea to reduce weight id at Neaperh Southamp- ton and other social centers under the direction of Miss’ Mary Brown ‘arburton, who has quit society. to id a sister of Barclay Wa: whose divorced wif en linked with W.K. Vanderbilt.) theta Troy, N. Y.—There'’s a ‘bunch of 50, 100 and 1,000 dollar bills totalin, $20,000 at the county Jail along with some bonds awaiting an owner. The honest persons who found them on a road turned them over to the sheri! who advertised the: discovery. New York.—Albert Rutstein, orth- odox Jew, has obtained an annulment of his marriage to Gertrude R. Roge, Episcopalian, on the eagles she did not keep a prenuptial promise to embrace his religion. They were married by a justice of the-peace, —— GEOGRAPHI ney “Jack fell out-of dis carthe other! ¢; day and almost broke bis peninsula,” the reason you must come ieee ree with a. wife Mint a. wite and six chil vi x chil- i veason t—Tatleer, ‘HOD 't I borrow, week?” “Peninaular—& “ld “His what?” as ae ’ neck ‘stretch- ing out to see.”"—Answers, coi ae f a telephone ‘SATURDAY; JUNE 25, 1987 This is Chap- s of articles oldier who is Editors Note: ter 70 of the se written by an €: revisiting. France as-a corre- | gpondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER LXX While thousands of American war veterans are looking forward to a happy pilgrimage to France, their comrades who never got back home groups, in the battlefields of France. Recent’ searchings by the scouts of the Graves Registration Service have discovered over a: score of bod- ies of American boys who have been lost for nearly nine years. These discoveries brit the total number of bodies located during the past year to about 260. There ore atill over 3000 “lost” Americans somewhere in France. Finds Kept Secret Recently 11 American bodies were found in an old trench at St. Thi- bault, near Fismes. Also in the Argonne Forest was discovered a grave dug by Germans in which five Americans were buried. At Boure- sehes, near Chateau Thierry, two were found together, and another was actually found yery close to the Chateau wall in the village of Bel- leau, near Belleau Wood. ‘ The particular discoveries are kept pie PRIVATE es rb FRANCE 9.28% back, PAUL secret by the Graves Registration Service. There are good reasons for this. This long process of absolute identification must be undertaken, yand the feelings of the beloved ones of the fallen soldiers must natural- ly _be taken into consideration, In the search for these bodies {the Graves Registration’ Service i, ‘doing a humanitarian work, and relatives and friends of the lost late day everything possible is bein done to find them. . Others Found, Too Many bodies are found which ara not American. If they are found to be French soldiers the proper French ‘authorities are notified. If German bodies are discovered they are re ‘buried with all-reverence. The Graves Registration Service {hopes _ that). when the Legionnaires come over this summer much valu- able information will be gained from A. E. F. veterans to ere the scouts in finding. bodies still missing. Many officers and men will probably be able ‘to tell where their buddies fell and under what circumstances, and ossibly where they were buried. ‘his data will be carefully filed land worked upon, and it will cer- tainly prove useful to the searchers, TOMORROW: Pals. are still being found, singly and | boys should know that even at this Service BY.DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal ‘of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine There are as many views of the cause of. seasickness as there are specialties in the practice of medi- cine. Neither the. pyschologic nature nor the causes of the condition are known. Attempts to treat the con- dition by all sorts of medicines have failed in most instances, and mechan- ical appliances of one type or another or iuits of life have been equally without effect. The Russian physiologist, W. W. Boldyreff, has recently considered the various lable views as to the nature of this disturbance. Boldy- reff points out that seasickness is not confined to people on the ocean, but may be associated with various types of land occupation. Some per- sons develop the condition when rid- ing on street cars or trains, some by swinging and seesawiny, some persons get it when houses are shaken by the wind, ‘others by rid- ing up and down on elevators. Rocking is not the special motion most frequently responsible, as is obvious from the fact that babies do not get seasick when rocked, and that rocking chairs are widely sed without producing seasickness in adults, Some persons develop the type of a associated with seasickness climbing mountains or look- ing down from high places. Many persons become quite sea- sick during aerial flights, so many. indeed that the airp.ances flying be- tween London and Paris are regu- larly equipped for taking care of, the nausea of passengers, Nor sickness confined to human beings. ree oay a since ‘this type of dis- turbance has been seen in most do- mestic animals and even in birds. The Russian physiologist has noted that the attacks come on at regular intervats and that they accompany an abundant secretion of saliva, A series of experiments on the move- ments and activities of the stomach causes BoldyreS to believe that the, symptoms of seusickness.are in- ted with periodic , activity the’ stomach due to irritation of the lin- ing of the intestines by the digestive juices, which come into’ it in large. quantities. Disorders of the stom- ach and of the intestines predispose to seasickness and he has found that persons with such disorders may be caused to have an attack of sickness by filling the small inte: tine with a large amount of sali or of water, The periodic activity of the stom- ach and intestines, which seems to have something to do with seasick- ness, he believes, is-more pronounced in young people and in animals, more noticeable in women than in men. It is increased by coolin pain, but coming back, as these sen- sations cease, with greater force, TOMORROW: Prevention and Treatment of Seasickness. | The soviet government of Russia has forbidden importations of razor blades. If it was lawnmowers that would be news. | A woman who has had eight hus- bands attributes her. matrimonial success to her cooking ability. We do not like to question her. Some day there's going to be a tidal wave, Then “ome, of those ladies on the beach - Baseball isn’t such a simple ga nee all, There's usally a Ses in it. Water’s good enough to drink, if. you take it in the right spirits dal sug- non-. Eight golfers out, of ten a-= ma Sleds. seceding to eae af istictans, at’s what they talk about, haze ae, mere me The question persists: “Are the echoes very Lowden the Black Hills?. Col. Linabsrah, Srste his pene, in oot’ at Btreator, Ill, January 3, 1996, W. ‘some sin would find im oa izes es |, Girl Sues Motorist,” line. Ofttimes a miss inthe bese Now Chang Tso-} mhust hay wn, ‘They igh ne well have peace, with no lace’ tt on the ront page any Jonger, SP A barber in ‘New. York ‘was run over, his own car. Well, that'll iV " ino shea sentence: '“%'m choos- ee ol Daily Health | $5,000,000 estate. e — ee. ? | Justajingle | Sr ) He bought himself some new shoes a | Began to dance a jig; right out of He promptly dan : them" "Cause they were twice too big. S—_—_—_—_—__—Coo re A Thought | —_—_—_""e Tribulation worketh patience; and | pe experience; and experience, Romans v:3, Hope is brightest when it dawns from fears.—Sir Walter Scott. Ege ane em Toe | Incorporations | Dakota-Dubuque Oil company, Mi- not, $150,000; to prospect for oil; | William F, Stanover, Dubuque, Iowa; ler fru and.G, J. Taylor, eA. Wiper company, bells, $200,000; to deal in real estate, automobiles, machinery, ete.; A. (. Wiper, Loujsa Wiper and Raymond C. Wiper. | Old Masters \ Sweet are the thoughts that savor of content, The quiet mind is richer than a crown, Sweet are the nights slumber spent, poor estate scorns” Fortune's angry frown: Such sweet content, such minds, such sleep, such bliss, Beggars enjoy, while princes oft do migs. Robert Greene: to Folly.” in careless From “Farewell -—_. i» » NEWS BRIEFS: ———__—___ With his plane America battened down on the runway at Roosevelt Field, N. Y., Commander Byrd awaits reports of favorable. weather for hop off for Pari: Navy: diate ree: marines warfare. tment announces imme- from Nicaragua of 500 sent there during recent Ray Marsden, held for stealing sacred imag ‘rom Carey, Ohio, church, confesses at Upper Sandusky, Ohio, he and four accomplices robbed and burned 25 Catholic churches in Qhio and Kentucky. Dr, Frank Fisher Moore, surgeon of jana, Pa,, is shot and killed by John Ammorian, coal miner, whose of the body’ broken back he mended seven years and stopped temporarily by fear or ago. James Theodore Walker, heir to is killed’ and his cousin, G. L. Lambert, son of owner of Lambert Pharmaceutical company, is injured when Lambert's plane crashed near Pottsville, Pa. Moorhead—Dr. W. H. Remel of Crookston was elected president of Northwestern District Dental Society. Crookston was chosen for 1928 meet- ing. Mrs. W. Carlson, Detroit Lakes, was elected president of women's auxiltary. . Mentor, Minn.—Henry Anderson, 10, farmer near here; was seriousls injured and his wife shaken up and sfarm. buildings destroyed by tornado. Minneapolis—Fire destroyed three story warehouse and 300,000 pounds ae are going to wet of cotton owned by: Minneapolis Bed- ding company, with loss of $130,000 THAT'S THE DOPE Stranger: Gimme a cup of coffee. T've got to stay awake tonight. ‘Waitress: "What you gonna do? Stranger: Defend my title coffee-drinking champion of world.—Judge. F the PPER FANNY SAYS: ew is better than two in the tomcat.) Ser te a ieee oe A sy eg ae Ne