The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 2, 1927, Page 12

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5 pa +: felon. ~~ “Stunt” flying in plancs is all right when the flyer is.out over open country. It is not all right is done over a city. Some day, a “stant” is liable to crash, and if he crashes in a eity, PAGE TEN The Bismarck ‘Tribune! An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1875) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bistparck, N. 1)., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann...... «++.President and Publisher 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 Dakota Member Audit Bureau of Circulat Member of The Associated ress The Associated Press is exclusively entitled t the use for republication of all news dispatche credited to it or not otherwise eredites in this ps rer, and also the local news of spontaneous ¢ published herein oth n Representatives : G, LUGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROM ‘Tower B'dg. Kresge Bldg | PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK : : - Fifth Ave, Bld (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Set a Thief to Catch a Thief _ Every person who has traveled in Europe knows what cur forefathers must have felt like when the gan the gauntlet set for them by the redskins, 1 peor old Yankee enters the land of rapacity when de enters the land of French hoteldom, The supercilious gentleman. who is the clerk sizes him up and ¢ as much for a tiny room as he thinks the fie will bear, The flunky whe runs the élavator bends a ninks the t ash WHY BE ij: The head waiter, with an itch on his |’ «palm, gives the gentleman a decent table or one where the dirty dishes are pil estimate of financial generosity. The only comforting thought the victim has i that in mest French places 10 p is addet to the bill in lieu of tips. No loager will he stum’ “hie ever the chambermaid on the day he is ty 1 No longer will he trip over the feet of the seig I, acesrd'ng to his the beaming smile of the ch But it this, too, is ~The tipehasing horde is o aListied with the 10 per bill, The nis that certain of the hetel proprietors “ab seb’ part of that 10 per cent and the tip-ehasers Vase no way of cheeking up on him. Wherefor tie French League of the Rights of Man has the minister sf labor to draw up a bill whi compel the hotel kings to give an aeccountin “ihe hotel princes. And the pr ere to sur pats.” snare aad a delusion : It is net p who does his “It's a fine idea. We wich them luck. We hope | the princes and the kings of hoteldom will have! oo time of it. More power to their ¢ and their strong ever our 1G per ¢ nt, the better we will like it. The Government and Aerial Service “With the end cf government operaticn of air mail and inauguration of an air exp im aviation in the United State point where it is second to none in the world. shipment sys- - “With the government out of the aviation busi- mess except as a guider and planner, the industr; Should coatinue to ge. forward even more speedily, _. We have been fortunate in this count: have not had a group of _ charge of ovr aerial in other countries and _mMent operation cf pi mail service, th elferving politic This has happened s for passenger. will continue to be aa avia' ‘system which will move haltingly. The govern- ment of any country should keep out of aviation, >for it is a thing which private enterprise can be! ter handle, better make suceeed, It is a good thing, therefcre, that this country has taken the lead, -udanger. ou Dark Places of the Heart We pride ourselves this is a civilized era—-in spit: ~ of the great war. We point to our educational s - tems, to our churches, to our institutions and arre-| conlin gate to ourselves a pride of place and of advance- +. ment far superior ty anything the world has ever known. gergAnd yet there are in human beings dark places | ef the heart that make one shudder for the race. | ‘TPpeylamentatty, man is not so far removed from the shatlow-fcaring cave man as he likes to think. there dwells a beggar woman. She is a harmless e!4 thing with her sunken cyes, her toothless mouth her shriveled skin, and her bird-like claws. :.t7 But the local pez of evil omen. Stcr seen having colloquies with the devil. ~ ged men saved her from a horrible death. ~ of the human race a humane race! Stunt Flying A Washington aviator has been founf®gu'liy of violating flying regulations and sentenced to pris-n ; whirlw: ++fer doing “stunts” with his planc over the city of | Lawrene~ perseveringly at his task until he tri- Whence, came the wherewithal for the! purchase of materials and labor?, Whence came t is consid- | the breed and mcat that. kept;him: alive: through: the z@red carefully, only one conclusion can be tea:hd,| years cf slow progress..toward his goal? . and that is that he deserved prosecution and sen-| ~ Washington. s szccAt first sight. it may seem harsh to impose a; “sentence on this man, but if the subject ~stenge «cn a ci ++-when it flyer there will be loss of life. __ Ht is Just THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The First and. Second. A. E. F.— a tn nee eee anne a. Bismarck and the Tournament pleasant to learn that the baseball tourna- here was a su ment is to be made an annu son for pleasure affair is also a rea- vn ts pat on the ‘tournament. Those members who worked hard and long to mak: ould be given due - HATS WHERE © THESE CAME redit, for they did thely work should draw & In its first year, it was natural that comparatively ss i North Dao.a know ihbout th: tournament and they are taking a.deeided interest w people all over there should be doub he nember of entr A word about the geod sportsmanship of fans and players would net be amiss. team did his best to help win. tefeated took: their less like sportsmen. but instead an cvident Was apparent. Every player on! no complaining. make the event a sue e knew that i as well es in other acti and it is fine that the interest was such | making th: tournament a reg THE BOYs AND THEIR, WINES VISIT NO MANS IS27 2 1—~{, WATCHA. GOIN’ TO BO! BUY ALL THE h HATS IN PARIS? ae “hi AFTER THIS (LL ‘STAY IN THE Editorial Comment The Clarinet and the ‘Awl (Philadelphia Record) What was it that Tennyson said about “kind | hearts” being “more than clarinets and simple faith; Oh, to be sure, it was “cor- than Norman blood?” * not “clarinets.” i * to mind in consider’ | to do with simple faith, a ck «f Italian blocd. Vincenzo Gentile came to this country in 1923. inet player then, and was admitted as st. the immigration law at that time exempt- 1s from the quota restrictio: “lor so he toured the country merrily tooting away Then he met the pretty daughter of a Staten Island shoemaker why cwns a chain of He married her, and she induced nim to abandon the clarinet for the awl. tered the trade and then became manager of one} He made good, but net ond a young man of i parte Jon his clarinet. who sweeps the halls. No longer will he gaze into} ss prosperous shops. SAIN = almost hysterical ple: y Bob and her sister on their trip to Peach Tree Hollow, in search of the old negress, known as ter ef his father-in-1 (Editor's Note: This is the third of a series cf five a on suicide. Tomorrow: Causes eo. Suicide.) BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN — | ;o1, r Journal of the American teal Association and of Hyxeia, wih what she ancnymous per gration author m calied the attention of the immi- s to the change in Gentile’s status. vlemnly decided that et, has forfeited hi: ou think maybe we'd het- n bureau has longer an ar this free land, and so he 3 a devoted wife and Faith firmly advanced the following! row ni “My hunch that Chris has taken on its right to live ii he baby to his old n deported next and ‘determined lawyer can s avery American with red blood in his veins and} d for common justice in his a i {that the reformed clarinet player may eseape the Chi fate planned for him. etter keep this fuesday—unl to commit | P heart will hope for many years. In ten years, from 1911 to If might be there and a. terrible scene result. right arms! The mere they fight) a i. . you're go-! | Conqueror of Ocean Skies (Minneapolis Journal) Colonel Lindbergh has won from the wi unprecedented Chamberlin and the others who this year have dared ythe winds and fogs and storms of o rightly worn lustrous laurels. But the cheering public does name cf the man wh» made these exploits poss’ "| the man called by the Review of Reviews the “ the unsung conqueror of the} problems that had balked. past efforts to bridge the seas with wing This man is iat sai had com-! der tr n Unsung De ue ages often to lourteen there: were 185 boys and 145 girls. In the next age period, however, ) min: fifteen to nineteen years of boy! age, there were 1885 women and 1614) Women at this particular age likely to be disturbed by disa inas reached a , On the same pr hed her hat with a voluminow f. and Bob attempted a slight | ing with Chris Wile: n skies have not even know the) Line that baby back Faith's hands, leach other convuls le old slouch felt hats and a p: rmous motor goggles. s W From the ages of twenty to twenty- jturn of that old fear that had never | four there were 4991 men, as com- “! quite let her al fallen in love w | nx so obvious af all ocean tlig’ rried Boh : : ng quarried Bev ias compared with approximately 3000 ver there is. overn- erever there is. fovern women, The gre number of reasoning is surpr Charles Lanier Lawrence, designer ! ites > whirlwind motor, the engine used by all the an transocean flyers. Since aviation’s infancy it has been apparent to ard to laymen and even! knowing that th well, that the airplane's utility woul | § atio with the spread between That is to say, regardless cf improvement in wing design and arrangement, the advance of aviation has depended largely ox! progress in engine design—on making the motor |! Pes . deliver more puwer for ench pound of its own And aviation should progress accordingly. | : tea 1 thought. you-were i giving Hope back choked, unable to keep | whereas the largest number of men e{ between the ages of thiry-five to . | thirty-nine. . his hands, tha 1 aeronautical enginecrs, Ty mannceecnte Bob interrupted, as f he had not sensed the undercur- rent in her protest. Peach Tree Hollow now, honey. not abso rear to ii te that married people | Royal | commit * Nest: Faith and Bob in‘the nor- \ rors of “Shantytown. i | Justajingle t moon just fills me up with! tin OWe'r ering _ Gelonel Lindbergh has often, in his tour of tlie| Nwer end waa country, stressed the idea that a government sub- | idy to advance aviation really did not advance it “at all, but simply made it subject to the whims of | Petitical groups. This country has avoided that ly and the one rson who, in hi: with taking The first cf all successful airplarics, that flown |} iby the Wrights at Kittyhawk, was driven by a | four-cylinder water-cooled motor. And for many | no effort was made to get away from water- &--to switch to a type of motor from which} | the heat is dissipated directly to the air from “fins” ed with a calmness that sur-, “That and delighted Bob. Pullman cars are named by a com- ; mittee of Pullman Company officials. she One group’ of cars is given names of lakes, another of rivers, another | of mountains and.one of famous men. he, “A wondrous sig full of something else,” up with such a fondness that Faith's | heart was lightened—sang for) “That's just a corner light” PLENTY MORE goin farm. tion, rath dry ARMY he w none powe: AY os "A re 4 ——} > Sha! Daily Health ||’ Service | Jana p.m. the the Ex Th & the Health Magazine Vv ng college age.| da ¢ has not varied greatly ¢ reported in the six cases of c luding four boys and from five to nine years 0 Love Disappointment It's pointment in love, the expectancy ™ of illegitimate childbirth and similar] Ste Rreat some’ ith 4358 women: at the ages five to thirty-nine, 8123 men suicide between the | ™2¥ ive to twenty-nine, icide less frequently than or single people, and that jeu the cylinders. Even the end of the world war, with all the rev- olutionary developments in airplane constructio which.that conflict had foreed, found aviation almost entirely dependent on water-cooled engines. And go Jong as the airplanc had to carry the! Weight of its motor's watcr-jacket, radiator and) .F water, transoceanic fying necessarily lagged,. for the reason that the cooling system cut into carrying 5 i Jeapacity that was necded for “fuel ‘for long distances santry did not think so. Thev | voyaging. Suspected her. They feared her, She was a thing | OUT OUR WAY * Near the little village of Ungvar in Slovakia} But all this time Charles Lanier Lawrence was Beginning in 1916, he worked for.six years sien engine before he had brought it to a point that warranted the beginning | | of commercial cr pluitaticn. It was this. moter—-or, at leust. its direct descend- ant—that drove the Spirit of St. Louis to Paris, \that Drove Chamberlin and.Levine to Germany, tha: drove Conimander ; Byrtl:t> “France, ‘that drove the Army and civilian planes:from-California to Hayai' Tt is this.man, Lawrénec. who is’entitied at least to henorable mention in that chanter of the history ‘of aviation which deals with.the-marvelous achieyo- | ments of the year 1927. hase, n , Ard how was the daggod work that Jed to the 4d mactor made possible? MOVE OVER Acar Sovas \CORY- were whispered that she was | busy, So one night they raided the hut of this poor old creature, dragged her t» the ferest, tied hor to *-a’tree, piled rubbish and hay areund her and set fire to it. She was a witch and there is only one: way to get rid of witches—burn them! Only the chanc> passing of a hunting party of more civi'- ‘The toilsome ages we have labored trying to make | What sustained Chiefly these things camo fram the United States riminal charge just as much as any | government, fromthe navy : in the form of experimental contracts. -Andthe -le- partments continued giving this, aid in the face,of the almost. unanimous views of, perts that air cooling would. nev in motors yielding as hizh-as war department: otier. civilian :@x- | | Prove successtul | | vendred and fifty | 3 _A good thing ‘to remember the mext time the |statement is made that the war and ‘navy.depart: ments have been asleep“at the ‘awitch inthe matter criminal to endanger ‘lives from the the ground. The sentences should serirh elemento ent asda to loss he Char) nust once, Perhaps. some plain why there’ during the bedtim story or sermons, They swt degide whether to ride or walk 4n ansas City Labor Day parad .| the novelty of i , Admiri | bur wi I from risking their lives, maybe they'll get around to sailors, Hot pi iron workers and pedes- trians. ‘} If you’re gotig to be married, give your prospective for music and i Goyernor Alfred ¥. sentiments will be easy to predict. Fon if either of these gents com to live in the White House, there to be a demand for a large supply of such brass receptacles as are seen most often in male smok-! ine rooms and male barber shops. Reed and Smith dre two rugged, One of them ped- {dled fish and newspapers on city streets in his youth and the other hoed corn and pulled weeds on a a jbull fighting he-guys. s no cause for astonish-+ 4 : nd them today the two|a dry cigar, sometimes lighted but foremost exponents in national poli-i never long lit. His favorite method tics of the manty art of expectora Each hes an enviable priva‘e, Thus it ment to sulivary achiev Some promptly suggest that here lips, ‘ excellent method of choosing a Dr dential is going to be a m breaking task. Let Reed and Smita shoot it out, and may the best man William G, McAdoo, is altogether too ‘ r to have ‘any and that Governor Ritchie's ability‘ is totally there is another ‘ object 0 Smith and Reed represent two dif- ferent Smith has always gont in for dis- Reed has been content short .strokes. tance work, with the s altogether likely that id require years of earnest effort before he could acquire Smith's vastly sup NEW YORK New York, Sept, 2--No visitor to Manhattan should fail to peep in on 20 minutes to be anywhere under the sun with’ exception perhaps, of the Stock ng a market raid. n be witnessed almost, imply by walking to 44th The time is 8 to 8:20 And the place is Joe Leblang’s' sicket agency. Here come all the last minute com- bargain seats A bargain counter is a quiet and peaceful scene by contrast. Out of the streets mill all the good most hectic found ange duri 4 evening Broadway. cles | batants theatres. d to high pitch.'From Recently newspapers carried wuch{hotels and clubs and apartments on rela to the suivide of} come and clerks who about like ai Actually, the suicide rate for persons| changes with the rapidity of light bits of paper that act a8 “open Broadway theatre doors. is hoping for a last The names of pro- pon scores of | om! eses and made, however wrong they may even- tualy prov utes, but during that time—Oh, ! * iwas ‘hell.” And so it went. About ten years ago, or more, he bobved up in Hester Street-—heart of s He was a young fellow singing ballads, But there was i ~ the way he sang them— no, it was more the fellow himself, Anyway, within a short time the whole/town seemed to hear about Tommy Lyman. ing over at Jimmy Kelly's. perhaps. ment lanes to hear him. ‘About a year ago, dropping in at youth. the Ambassador one eve! ‘As Concerns Marriage tertainersto the Suicide in old age is relatively in- quent as compared with that in stepped forth—It w Well, that’s New York. got something and they ever find out are even more prone to|about it, you'll travel far. fulcide shan imida aon | In all of the groups concerned, the |. oe i 7 ‘days and-the first snowfall, when 7 ep aaledis MAN Ser the buyers descend upon Manhattan. “Buyers” is right! They bring with them plenty of “expense money” and those with goods to sell the buyers loosen! money she might have made, If—but , go jin her case, the if vanished from a sight in a hurry. e c yi 3 polish it up. up on the expense roll, forth to the Lootleggers for old stuff’—whatever down the. gay-light lanes the cabarets make ready for a Theatre: sales pick up and who double as entertainers prepare a lot of sleep, In the small towns they wait- for the farmers, with crops harvested, to “come to town” to spend their money. out-of-town | buyer has become the spending tra- n't. classified because he comes prepared | © toss a certain amount of his. roll | way and asks féw questions concern- ng its destination so long as he ha: GILBERT SWAN. PERE) aa tn EET “aio giadicing (oasters have decided leston and Black Bottom fition, ‘sucker,’ asgood time» =o: R24 annual decision now. ou ar aes ae We are not concerned about Cool- ‘dge running in 1928. But we wonder if, during his western trip, he’l over to Nebraska to greet who -chewed 112 sticks 1$10. to spend buys “Home, t Home,” marry him, an artist »| advises. But, suppose he 8 saxophone. to_pl. (Copyright, 1927, A French watchmaker has invented 8 wateh that tells time without hands. ‘Even the -woman ; A moving dial turns inside a station-| looks onthe bright vide atc mlsror, Service, Inc.) _.____RIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1927 | WASHINGTON LETTER 54 BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Sapt. 2—If the Demo- cratic presidential nomination goes | to either Senator James A. Reed or on mere marksmanship, it is to be Smith, the 1928 feared that the proceedings would brass industry be more unfair than ever. -The Smith On the other hand, the senator can give a much better imitation of a machine-gun than the~governor. If the contest were to be based partisans insist that their man ean deliver with unerring aim from a ‘point 18 fect away. He is. such a perfect sharp-shootcr, in fact, that ‘he long ago abandoned the simple f merely hitting the customary eye and has since taken great delight in just clearing the brass rim on the far side; making a hurdle out of the receptacle. Reed, one is led to fear, ean lay claim to no such control. Smith delights to chew all day on of going into action is to remove his coat and hoist his brogans higher than his head on a convenient chair or table. He then uses his shoes much as a hunter uses the sights at the end of his rifle. One of your correspondent’s most precious memories is of the appear- ance of Senator Reed before the ‘Mas- sachusetts supreme court many years ago. Its dignity is.one of the most painful aff recorded since the But, quite aside from the fact that; Spanish inquisition. Imagining a spittoon in that court room is to ac- leept the possibility of a semi-nude chorus girl sitting on the arm of the president’s chair at a cabinet meet- ing, And to imagine any Massachu- setts lawyer spitting, just even once, on that courtroom floor is to imagine him in the electric chair just as soon as the court could recover enough breath to sentence him there. But Reed minded not tradition, dignity or jack of facilities. The floor stretched out before him and Reed accepted the invitation. Furth- ermore ,he got away.with it, although he lost his case., ary rim. The minutes appear‘on the rim and the hour is shown through an opening in the dial. Our friend Aimee, after a brief respite from the horrors of the print- ed page, is back again, Unlike her previous squabble with “Ma” Ken- nedy, this one is a case of the lady being m the sinner than the sinned agai inst | ee The worst part of it is that one of the Legion of Satan, as Aimee would hably call ‘htm, is the one who is causing the reverend lady all the trouble. The unfecling creature is ‘Bert Kelly, whilom proprietor of Bert Kelly’s Stablex, a cabaret in Chicago toward which the college students and the habitucs alike turn their steps. ~ . Some time ago, Aimee preached in Chicago. Sevgral times she made {statements which were decidedly im- polite, She called Kelly “a leering devil“with an evil face.” His cabaret pposed to be “a trapdoor to Business increased for Mr. Kelly, what with all this pub- licity, but it now seems that he has heen decply wounded and mortified. To assuage hig acl ing wounds, he is asking batm the form of a $100,000 libel sult. This seems to be one case where He was sing- the reverend sister has bit off more And for than she can chew. Mr. Kelly may Broadway be a devil, though visitors to his sravel through the East Side tene-|cabaret claim-he is a very entertain- ring one He may be a corrupter of ut he has the edge in Chi- ng, an en- cago. What with all the damned hotel crowd souls with which Aimee has peopled Tommy Lyman. the city on the lake, friend’ Aimee Some one told me that he had gone sis apt to get a jury with 12 benighted ‘ sa ade A »jabrond and made all Europe take creatures on it. It may be that Mr. Se one ieee ct lage: This season it’s the Salon Kelly may be, the one who will ad: Jat RBY if you please. id that once took them over California evangelist. sinigle. that widows commit|to Hester Street! se elati cide more often than do married ninister the “coup de grace” to the ‘ CHANNELS TO CROSS The channel season is with us |again, but this time it is attended by much less of a fanfare of trum- “ ‘This is the season, between the hat pets and bugles. A goodly number ,have made an earnest attempt to” wim from Calais to Dover, but no And everyone ‘one has succeeded this year. ‘Trudy with amusement te sell begins to Ederle, who has done it, is cold. She jis out’ playing the five-a-days and thinking regretfully about all the ‘The only solution to this: chan: nel prohicm seems hd ‘be Unis wth £ Rendreksmepsicwbent ox cach feg. If ‘across, would have pes to: Dolster.up her tottering *fimances. If ahe couldn't ‘make it, there wauld be a new mark to aim at, anyway. And we might have another. crop. of “unofficial ambassadors.” ‘There is-no fear in'love; but per- Weve love casteth out fear—1 Jehn Love is a thing full of ‘anxiow fears.—Ovid. Bee oy 4 | { *

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