The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 5, 1927, Page 10

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e ho Ne no the ra be vin he be me ne Fa the is tio pil pit rag 1 fly an sot ko mo to be ime on an: Yo wir me en thi po. : An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by. the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. marck as se George D. Mann nd class mai] matter. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, , ‘(in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakot: Member Audit Bureau of Circulat jismarck ) ++ 5.00 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 p per, and also the local news of spontancous ori shed herein. All rights of republicati other matter herein are also reserved Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Finis for Sacco and Vanzetti Governor Alvan T. Fuller of Massachusetts, few words Wednesday, wrote “finis” to the Sacco and Vanzetti, Massachusetts It took a long time for Governor Fuller to arri his decision, He had to interview many wi nesses, talk with many lawyers. ‘The legal points of the case had to be carefully studied. His “ad- visory committee” had to be consulted.* ly decided case and no one can com- plain that justice was not given the two men. No one ¢an say that they were convicted and reconvicted merely because they were radical: This is ase which has aroused interest all over the world. It started back in 1920 with the murd: ofa M husctts factory paymaster and. hi guard. Since that time, thousands of words have been written, thousands of arguments made, both for and against the men, “The men were convicted by a Massachusetts jury. They wére sentenced to death. Then their friends ized in their defense and finally brought them ance to prove their innecence—a thing, + unparalleled in American judicial his- at t had i) y judge tid after the trial that the presi- was unfair, He was claimed to have et teen on the two men charged with mur- The prosecuting attorney, it was charged, had used unfair means to bring a conviction, Reputable witness pported these statements. But everything was carefully investigated by the governor's advisory committee. Witnesses were re- + -questioned and a sincere effort to ascertain whether the jury had been wrongly influenced in its verdict iwas made. leading Massachusetts men, open minded, and with- cut prejudice—only desiring to know the facts. They found there had been no coericon, no unfair- ness. Governor Fuller was eminently fair. He weighed The Bismarck Tribune! and entered at the postoffice at .».President and Publisher | 4e soing : 6.00 | little of airships lately, because: all the transatlantic The members of this committee were! in his pretty home in the suburbs of Berlin, cynic: ly chuckling over the fate of the exile of Doorn. | | Airships vs. Airplanes | Doctor Hugo Eckener, head of the great Zeppelin | works and the man who ‘piloted the ZR-3 to-this country three years ago, doesn’t believe that planes | to be used for regular air travel across |the oceans. Zeppelin airships, he ‘believes, will | the logical means and in a few years: will be widely: - -$7.20 | used. «+ 1.20) )| Dr. Eckner’s words have weight. We have heard flights have been made with planes. But the fact | remains that airships are destined to fill a very: it- | portant place in the future years. It is true that travel by airship: is not: absolutely |safe as yet, But whether there are as many hazards lat attend long flights in a plane is doubtful. By its very nature, the airship tends to be a surer’method of travel for these transoceanic trips. The race between the planes and the airships is It will be interesting to note which will gain the greater vogue as a passenger carrier, jon. | | Defending Amcrican Inferiority | America will be brave and strong, indeed, if: she |does not develop a severe case of inferority com- ‘plex, what with all the foreign sneers and: jibes at her “total lack cf tradition and culture,” her gauch- eri et al. and ct cetera. An occasional glove thrown into the ring: by a champion of America is therefore refreshing, Fan- nie Hurst, teller of tales, and a lady of no mean parts, threw her feminine glove into the ring of late, and theugh mantling curtness in clever words, practically said that all the to-do about American inadequacies is a story trumped-up by those who are jealous because we have a little spending money. Lady Fannic says, among other pertinent things— “The cld French fruit dealer who will cut a grape in half until the scales balance, is ‘quaint.’ The fruit dealer in America who will throw in a bunch for good measure is a low creature who has ‘become ‘Americanized.’ “Our half-literate population, torn hither and |thither 4: the great nickleodeon Everyman’s Univer- With perfecting of a new rion-inflammable gas: ; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CC WHAT A SCARE THEY HAND US WHEN WEY GET OSETHER. sity, has more pep de vie, more intellectual curiosity. earns a better living wage, and is generally noiser about his undesirabilities than any illiterate popula- tion in the world.” the millions of itching palms thrust at them every- where might add to Lady Fannie’s analysis that we have a pride, too, which works for wages and not for \“tips,” the largess of Lord and Lady Bountifuls. Does Leisure Make Culture? The shorter working day with its opportunities for “culture” has been and will continue to be ballyhooed. All the champions if the 3 or 4 or 6-hour work- ing day seem to take it for granted that more ‘leisure will mean. that the workingman will pick up culture much as he might pick cherries oz daisies. Allous Huxley shows ancther side of too much , leisure in a keenly pentrative article called “The Those who come back from abroad sickened by | “ve failed you, dear! I haven’t! isn’t normal for a man to be amorous! use the old bean. made you happy—and I promised us both that I would,” Bob said drearily, throwing himself back upon Faith's pillows and letting his arms drop laxily from their clasp of her body. Faith had been crying, but that jerked her up short, made her seize his shoulders while hegy frightened. voice pleaded: “Oh, Bob! Don’t say that! Of course you've made me happy! y, darling, I never knew what happiness was until I married isten to me, Bob!” you're happy, dear,” his cry so much? Why do the little things, the absurd, everyday little misunderstandings, wound you so ter- It’s Not Always WERE jall the time—” Fair Weather When Good Fellows— NOT SO BAD bab) THEYRE j into the ring over at Coney Island nd branded him the cleverest eather” that had blown to Amer- a. He was a wow! And what a irep he made! What a following he {had! And he made plenty of money. | But Broadway went just a little t his head... .-At any ‘rate he didn’t He would take the roll of s he had just made and “Oh Bob, there's no use talking if|show up in a bar room, kuying the you thought I meant that! was—that with—Cherry seem brighter, more interested, more | You don’ you do me—" meant eager. eda “What I take Bob interrupted her sternly, ‘ou are my wife, that it ‘is you 1) °°, for, am working mother of my you—not Cherry, because I love you! —not Cherry. able b any more! to have you making us both miser- . y. being jealous of: your sister. voice went on tiredly, “why do you| Now, kiss me, darling! Contrary to the popular idea, I've found that women’ do far| too ‘much thinking! What Ij boys round after round, and drink- you | ing a pretty stiff assortment himself. t take her for grant-/ Thus it went for a while, Nothing. but success! And a round of drinks to each new victory. Five years... ten years .. day a sloppy figure ambles alon, Forty-second street... a fat fi ure... . Soft and generally a_ bit wobbly. For he still takes a few drinks. Oh yes, it is our old friend Griffo. What a featherweight! Fall- ing away to a couple of hundred pounds now! Getting more down and oGt every day. If you stop to talk to him, as he for granted, be the married will 1 you children. And I'ta_ not going Don't think Kiss me!” "FRIDAY, AUGUST 'S, 1927 Editor’s Note: This is chap- ter 105 of the series of articles written by a former doughboy who is revisiting France as correspondent for the Bismarck Tribune. CHAPTER CV: Anyway, those war-time were good concrete-mixers. they did toss the cement! machine hundreds of pill box and many gun nests. and _ shelter: of these sturdy monuments standing today where the members of the American Legion may see them Up along the Chemin des Dames for a few pockmarks of bullets, it is as staunch as it was when it was built in 1915. The dugout of the Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria in the Argonne Forest on the road from Le Four de Paris to Varennes is in_a perfect state of preservation. Near Avocourt, there is a li seven hexagonal structyres— mi gun nests—and there are others on the hill of Montfaucon, near the church in Baulny, and another in the Bois d’Ormont. Back of “Cornwillic Hill,” east of the Meuse River, is a German hospital, the entrances to are | now there are but.a few. which and the vaulted rooms under the hill are stilk well preserved. It was built in 1916. is Not all of these concrete master- pieces of the defense systems which were taken in hand-to-hand combat by American troops. are stand how- ever, for the “recuperateur” is grad- Germans| ually removing them from the land- And how| scapes. All along| rusted iron arou the’ Hindenberg line, the Krienhilde| tures are built and his well-pl Stellung and. the Freva Stellung were| charges of dynamite quickly batter The “recuperateur” seeks the which the ae the monuments into bits. Where thére once were hundreds, One which was erected in 1918 to protect the railroad station at Romagne nN on their visit to France in September.| dynamited just a few days rich Frenchman bought the property there's a huge abutment and except|and will build a new home on the ‘ site. Some, however, far from the’ begien paths, wit] always remejn. will mark those “permanent” lines of defensc—built with the idea that the occupied territory was an absolute possession—the lines of tl ft | Americans took at the ine | onets. And th monuments testifying to the, fact that those war-time German privates were the best little concrete-mixers in the world, . TOMORROW: The Man Who Knows' the Argonne; 7 PORT TEE NES Ee | Daily Health { Service By Dr. Morris Fishbein Editor Journal Medical Association and of Hyg the Health Magazine The average attribute the conditio to say that it is just a slight cold and will disappear. Hoarseness is such a common early death, Dr. George D. Wolf has» recently considered some important -aspects of In children the sudden appearance of hoarseness may be due to the fact that some foreign material, usually a coin or some ‘other metal substance, has been swallowed or in- If it is found that a child has suddenly begun to choke and turn blue and that these symptoms have cleared up at once and been followed by hoarseness, the swallowing or.inhaling of a foreign; this subject. haled into the larnyx. body should be suspected. Fortun- ately, the presence of such a sub- by the use of the X-ray. hoarseness is’a prominent tom. In grown-up persons, the sud- den onset of hoarseness is usually due to some inflammation of the x. If there is shortness h accompanying this, the phy- sie scess as the primary cause. Not infrequently the onset oO of the American person whose voice suddenly becomes hoarse is likely to to overuse, or affliction that it seldom receives the attention that it should. On the other hand, loss of the voice or hoarseness may ‘sometimes be the first and only danger signal of some serious disease in which prompt treatment may save the patient untold suffering or even stance can be promptly determined In certain diseases affecting the| throat, such as diphtheria or croup, sypm-| of n is\likely, ot think ‘of an -ab- of HAIL DAMAGE: : - 18 EXTENSIVE More Claims Filed This. Year Than Any Previous Year Except 1923 ~~ Claims for hail damage received by the state hail insurance depart- ment are greater this year than at any time since the record year of 1923, statistics compiled at headquar- ters here show. Despite the increase over recent years, however, the. to- tal number of claims is only_a little more than half the number filed ;at the same time in 1923. During the week ending July 20 a total of 1,855 claims were received and more than 1,000 have been re- celved since that time. In. fact the number of, claims was so great from the storms which. occurerd toward the end of July that difficul eas experienced in getting enough. ad- justers on the ground to do the necessary work. Z The total of 8,193 claims recanged on July’ 29 compares with 6.990% at me time a year. ago; 4,662 in 6,799. in 1924 and,. 15,228 in Stark Is Heavy Sufferer Stark county, with 915. claims, has been the heaviest sufferer from hail this year, the report - ‘shaws. Dunn county is next with 782, and Divide county third with, 606. Only Grand Forks, Pierce and Ramsey, show no losses reported |sits in the gathering shadows of the t hoarseness, which gradually increases, |gay white way, he will shrug his is due to tuberculosis of the throat lumbering. shoulders and tell you . . .!or secondary to tuberculosis in the “Ya, T had lots of money then. Blew!lungs. In such cases, it is absolute- it all in like a sap. 4nd here I am.” |ly necessary to have at once an in- os spection of the throat by a competent physician. Persons who smoke a great deal, who use the voice excessively, or who work in occupations that are dusty or smoky, suffer frequently with hoarseness. Obviously the first step in the treatment of the condition is rest of the voice, the second step be- ing direct application of some reme- dial agent. The inhaling of medicated vapors is sometimes extremely help- eatin mild inflammations of the vocal cords. for the season and in those districts the state hail insurance department has very little. land under its. pro: tection, i The incidence of hail during the. week ending. July 29 and to dategfor the season is shown by the foll@fag. table: Loases for anc TOMORROW: The happiness of by reconciliation and of shapping for a lovely. dress. (Copyright, 192 the facts carefully and his decision can be taken as one made only after an impartial study. Undoubtedly. there will be demonstrations by rad- icals in other countries, as well as th Sacco and Vanzetti will become martyrs. Their lives will be-| come enshrined in glory in the minds of these rad- icals. But they are not martyrs. Twice they have been found’ guity of a brutal crime. All the fairness and NEA Service, Inc.) Yes, there he is. Five years more. ++. tem years more... The round, lumbering figure still ;comes at nightfall... comes and mbles up the street, sits down a ; while and watches the crowd go by, gets up and waddles away again. \You wonder why! Well, the old fellow hasn’t forgotten the crowds. They used to sit around the ring- know side and cheer him. Now they just you won't notice him. He's like aj pass by, but they’re crowds just the thousand others you will mect shdm-|same ... gay crowds going to the bling along the side streets toward |theatre and sad crowds ambling like the beckoning lights. He’s heavy,|himself into the side streets that paunch, aging. He isn’t exactly un-!lead to the waterfront. kempt, but he’s a bit threadbare. For! The other night I saw him coming & moment you would recall some of |down the street. All along the main Losses for_ County wk, ending, Adams .. Barnes New York, Aug. 5.—Just after sun- |down—about the e the first Broadway lights, like evening stars, anticipate the coming night, there ap- pears in certain haunts tne wreck of ‘what was an American ido]. Unless you know him, of course, Outlook. for American Culture.” His contention is that the'very machinery and’ must be my fault. I'm sorry.” Faith drew away from him slowly. also produces “canned leisure” in the way of the very straight and very still for | ee movie, radio, amusement park, one mechanical )'0ng minute before: she: angie: [IN NEW YORK | ins faink, dea” she bog as tes IN’ NEW YORK | chance to exist as in the regime of the 8 or 10-/ successfully tried to keep from |@————————— > hour working day. 9 ing through the adujstment, period “Leisure makes culture |'that all married couples have to live _ justice ever given any accused persons has been pone aK sae ht lei Manens ae slow—or sometimes quick—pass- ‘tendered them. ‘They must pay for the consequ-|- achinery has _brougl leisure to America, anding of romance. No wife wants to| 4 & . husband’s mistress. And so all the! - ‘rest assured that justice has twice been done. jwe honestly say that this leisure has given birth! tittle things, the tiny, insignificant, i | to a corresponding culture, or that there are any " 5 eens change in the quality of her |immediate future? We cannot. Leisure makes peepenard cveanert her intolerably at culture possible: but this possible culture has not ribly? You don’t look happy—and it wholesale production which makes leisure possible then sank down beside him, lying “I think, dear,” she begin at last, thrill after another, sc that “culture” has as little _ velco) (aa eben sounding sad, “that we are only go-| He writes as follows: | not automatically create it, |8Fough. A woman especially resents | Be: i A . all enn badiilay: hina be a wife only; she wants to be her. :ences of their deed, and the American people can| oe einuceswith enctalaly, tend tosinerease: Urey things that point out to her the clear signs that culture is destined to spread in the Paul C fi ‘aul Cook—Sportsman first—until she learns to yecept mar- | in fact become actual. ‘Bismarck can well be proud of its representative : riage for what it is and make the in the state golf tournament at Fargo, Paul Cook. best of it Do you see, darling?” fesse: zosse. This 17-year-old youngster set a mark for many older and more experienced golfers to aim at. Although Cook did not reach the semi-finals, his ing up to then showed all the steadiness and Judgment with which we credit older heads in the ‘,game. He was not ruffled, he played hard and “earnestly and his: record in going so far in a state tournament without any such previous experienge ‘is one which will stand a long time. The main thing about ‘Cook’s.fine work in‘ the tourney was his good sportsmanship and his equ- In his final match with Jimmy . Barrett of Devils Lake,’ when Barrett had drawn 4head and he saw that his chances of victory were He did not com- Dryaiveuns in disgust. Instead, he played on able temperament. : ey, very slim, he did not falter. steadily, to come out finally only two strekes behind It is this coolness Cook has shown to be one of his * gtttibutes which should carry him far in years to come. All the things which go to make up a sports- ‘man are possessed by this’ youth. The Case of ‘Liebermann nation. Fer instance: Liebermann. Monarchists, Liebermann has just. been made a free itizen of Berlin. Big German papers have printed long articles by experts celebrating the eightieth birthday of the master and telling why he has en- during claims to renown. ‘Now at first blush all this seews commonplace It is by digging into the facts that lie behind seemingly unimportant events that you sometimes +>» get the true picture of what is going on in a mighty -«in Berlin right now on Unter den Linden there ix a big exhibition of paintings by the veteran Max| Over the futile opposition of German “Let me advise anyone who belicves in the near approach of the social millenium to go to any great American or European city and note what the majerity of men and women do with their new-found prosperity and leisure.” : ' Chinese warfare is, funny. Last week,, several; Shantung troops “again ‘turned. ovor their. allegi-. ance and attacked the nationalists from the reer.” Napoleon's saying might well be, “A Chinese army fights on its belly for the side that fills it.” * Further items about Mr. Coolidge from the Black Hills will be edited by the society editor. She can keep track of the style of garb he wears. each day,. and whether receptions are: held: on the front porch or lawn, ‘ Editorial‘ Comment | Canada. Advances (Duluth Herald) Publicists cf all naticns and intcrnational lawyers are writing much about the status of the Dominion of Canada in the British empire. There is much hair- splitting, much defiping. This follows the recent somewhat cbscure definition of the status of the self- governing dominions at the London conference. But there: is no real obscurity in the status of Canada. She isa free nation, making her own laws, her own tariffs and having, if she pleases, her own army and navy. And now it pleases Canada to have a minister at Washington and the’ United States; reciprecating, sends a minister to Ottawa: Thus questions arising between these two North enough. is It is just the ordinary homage paid to a an who degerves it. But the significant thing, none of these things: would have happened, perhaps, if Wilhelm the Second were still on the Amcrican powers may be discussed and settled’ be- tweem them. It is to be hoped most carnestly that the busy diplomats will not muddle North American. affairs. It is also to be hoped that the solid good will exsiting between these two Western powers will not be disturbed by statesmen. seeking the limelight. While it is clear that for all’ practical purposes Canada is a sovereign state, it is equally clear that Bob stirred and sighed deep! suppose so, honey. But I'll be darn- ed if I can see any difference in my love for you. I'm crazy about you, darling—” “But the casual touch of my hand no longer thrills you. I can kiss you while you’re reading and you searce- ly look up—” To save her life she could not keep the tears out of her ‘voice: “But good grief, honey, a man can't play the lever gvery hour of his life at-home,” Bob protested. “It in the films’ by has that way of Now let’s cut those pudgy, unkempt parts played | stem as they say in the movies! | Out of the Antipodes had come ajand on... battling featheweight by the name of Young Griffo. ,men were hailing taxis and He speeding away to the stadium for a 8 Emil Janning: } world’s championship fight. Men slouching As he nears Broadway he sits down | stood on the corner,and talked about on the side-steps of a movie theatre. the big fight and Griffo just stood When his hat comes off you notice |and listeped and went on. that his hair iy graying and thin, Nobody notices him Other crowds for other men! Well, he had had hid... and others | would have others . . . and soon he'd back 25 or 30_years,!shamble away down the dark street jand leave the crowds to go on... m GILBERT SWAN. They tossed him | (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘she-maintains her position as an integral. loyal and satisfied part of the British empire without any wish to alter that relation. Legalists will search for the: bonds unite Ottawa t> London, These will be.easicr to find than to define. i ‘The American people are pleaned with every: step that the Dominion takes in the direction éf sover- yy -and> they -ate. By Williams A society known as the Irish Jews of America has been formed in Brooklyn. do about this. | The time has come, it well known “crystallizing’ sentiment. A couple asks for a divorce be- cause “they have equally minds.” Is it impertinent to ask how two people of equally strong minds ever came to marry? | * political The dispatches from Grand Anse, Quebec, fail to state whether any of the newspaper men were injured by the tableware thrown by Mrs. Stillman, Sr. There wasn't a line either about whether or not the newspaper men were Anseried men, Our advice to the ‘men of the ‘Ameriean Legion going to Paris is to a couple of buckets of take alon; water, They may want to take a bath, . A section hand in New York state inherited $500,000, but finished the day’s work after he had been formed of his: new ric was trying to get a 1 publicit (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc. — , | SERENE Sao | A song to the oal Who hath ruled in the greenwo foe to talk of cabbages and kings and the | LaMoure strong in: Maybe he. Here broad green crown, And his fifty arms Eddy. Emmons We're waiting to see what | Foster the Irish Lithuanians are going to|Golden Valley . lettinger . Kidder Logan .. icHenry .... Mech; tosh * Mountrail Nelson Oliver Pembina Ransom Renville Richland Rollette Sargent | Sheridan Sioux Slope Stark Stes the brave old | I ‘a. Health and renown “to his strong. There's. fear in his frown when the un down, 3 And the fire in. the, west fades out; And he showeth his might on a wild midnight, }: When ihe storms. through his branches. shout. . —Henry. Fothergill Chorley: rave. ‘Old Oak. The

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