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BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1927 PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune iteseewpites Prisoners Bus: Brite’ cana Newer. prisons self-supporting give promise of success. THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) iy in the way of making federal Men confined in penal institutions prefer ac- tivity to idleness, and it is not surprising that Published by the Bismarck Tribune C.mpany, Bis-/ prisoners should manifest a desire, when once y marck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bis- matck as second class mail matter. Ceorge D. Mann ......... +...President and Publisher expert [hh ~ diester letras” habla : started in a productive industry, to excel their Youve GiveN ME own accomplishments as they become more Apour EVERYTHING LUN 1s es hae Rates Payable in Advance 8 It is a ue of this inborn arte ben ‘ DIDN'T rpcenay No \\ PRIMARIES iy OT, DET Year ....-ssrsarveee +-97-29! produces “champions” in every line of en- i i Te aa “uC 729) deavor, that the production of cotton duck in TAKE EM AWAY A DEFEATS / them indigestible. They are profit. (in state outside Bismarck) ...... vai 6.00/the Atlanta penitentiary is constantly grow- \ i] hich able articles for commercial pur- Daily by mail, vuteide of North Dakota . 6.90/ing in volume. Prisoners in that institution 7 LPG! Uf : Saba and io [ao Od for Weekly by mall, in state, per year ..... 1.00 take pride in beating their former production y ag Page Was So in using. salt is that Weekly by mail, <a state, three yeats for . ......2.50| records, : . 7 it ites the flow of saliva Weekly by mail, outaide of North Dako‘a, pe- While the object of the prison factories at - ! and digestive juices, an! increases year ..... ER Ee pe en eer Ty 159! Atlanta is to produce a sufficient quantity of Z = Member Audh Berean of Circalation coarser cotton materials for the needs of the Member of The Associated Press federal government, Leavenworth is striving The Associated Press heck entitled Fier to increase its use for republication of all news a es credite! ¢ to it or not otherwise credited in this epaper, and the demands of production of shoes to supply the Indian service and’ all fed-| * {i i i but of Iso the local n of spontaneous in published |€ral prisons. In the course of a month this : herein, All rights of republication of all other mat-| shoe factory increased its output 40 per cent yes ter herein are also reserved. without materially increasing its working force. G. foam raves course Prison factories, if properly operated, can NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. perform a twofold service without working \ j f 190, CHICAGO DETPOIT | any appreciable hardship upon free labor. They ) A f ( quantities of liquid must be a Kresge Bld6-! aid in the rehabilitation of fallen men and ede hee ae tee (Official City. State and County Newspaper) women by teaching them how to work and how = 4 0 put Waid the ive | to earn an honest living. Prisons cannot re- \ ey ‘ a lunch counter knew his business. Sabbath Madness ‘3 form those it schools in the demoralizing habit a . —- : The Sabbath, once the day of rest, is now] of idleness. Moreover, it has been demon- = ( ae ee . fast becoming known as the day of eternal rest.| strated that prisons can be made self-support- . =p For more people now go to an untimely death|ing through utilization of their inmates in \¥es : iburn all summer. Can you on that day than any other day of the week. | useful production. Z f o - bp gest @ way to make my skin Mad motoring is responsible for this ghastly change. The Sabbath was made for man, to be sure, but not for the exercise of his uttermost folly.| cabins have. Yet as surely as Monday rolls around we have sed Saal tn front page ele A the dead, ae lying and the injured who have apparently iat gone mad over Sunday and have paid the price. | Editorial Comment This is not the full extent of the bad uses Americanism: Trying to get ‘rich enough to afford an open fireplace like the poorest Answer: Your skin will \d- & z s 7 ga5 2 knowledge that the blonde u Signs For Air Travel Soles “tuys of “the en te cine to which we are putting the Sabbath day, al- igns For Air Travelers ‘ sco though they are the most spectacular. Add to (New York Times) , brunette who tans wo sraickly. When Will Rogers is so much in the air nowadays Levin : this list the jangled nerves of many a good wife, the tired body of many a husband, the unnatural stimulation of many children of the families that rise early and start out on a quest of distance. Fast and furious driving is likely to mark such a trip, with many near accidents. The mind, body and soul undergo almost every experience and emotion except those of rest and repose and recreation. Then the home- ward journey and the sleep of exhaustion or, what is more likely, the sleeplessness of ex- hausted nerves. The pendulum swings from extreme to ex- treme. The deadlike silence and stupor of the flown over the of hours spent His latest bit peal to towns their names on any town has ing when it will Sabbath of the past is gone and probably gone} attractions on vast roof spaces for the infor- forever. But the deathly clamor of our Twen-| mation of air tourists. The hotels, even the Shortly after that, Michelet re- tieth Century Sabbath is equally impossible.|better-class restaurants, will have their signs ceived a letter from. Benjami1 T. Wise motorists avoid Sunday travel as muchjout. There will be luxurious private airplanes Affleck of the .iational Municij as possible, or seek byways and unfrequented | with chauffeurs places. Or, what is best of all, use the fo a|*Where in the _ to take them a relatively short distance to a| “Where shall we stop for the night?” “When reduction of the number of voters spot where they may make the most of the day; do we eat?” assertion in the rest and recreation of body and spirit] public service by his exhortation to the Ki- ity of voting. 3 which alone justify the Sabbath. twanis and Rotary clubs. do Tichelet has fired back at both oops were late for an engagement —__————<—_——_——— fined 3 Presidential Campaign Portraits—No. 14. Charles G. Dawes Dawes and His Famous ‘Hell an’ Maria’ Editor’s Note: This, the 14th musician and a scholar, but who is ina ere 2 Sackremge agro sufficiently shrewd to realize that oT ortrai' ri . Prifene by Robart Talley, is |™O0re can be accomplished by tak- the third of four articles dis- | ing the offensive and throwing di cussing the career of Vice |lomacy and decorum to the four Tie eras Sa ‘mss a oj lied Dawes was wearing his mask ee ee. again—and it worked. BY ee ON, Dawes Had His Own Ideas April 24. —“Hell | In 1921, Dawes employed much the an’ Maria! We) same tactics of super-salesmanship ose eid se) when he took office as the first di- ade: igh ke rector of the budget, that inflexible books ne in the | coHomy arm of the government. try’ pene ik tiL| ,. Dawes arrived in Washington and the business of -an| invaded the Treasury Department Y ary is to win the| 2, much the same manner as a } war net to quibble| Police riot squad. There was no} nedhey th’ s lot | Particular need for hurry—the na- Sf cheap buying!”| tion had done without such a bu- “e ied iad at reau for nearly 150 years—but der ‘th ae ‘of | Dawes had his own ideas. ii the ‘capitol dome.| , A% office ws found, desks were e eape ‘ome.| dragged in hurriedly, temporary electric lights were strung, a force rett n | was recruited post-haste and soon questioned by a staid congrt:sional| typewriters were humming and committee that was prying into war! adding machines clicking. nditures. The electicn of 1920) Again it created an impression that Dawes meant business—and to! won a first page story in the news- papers. ee and thereby get campaign A year in the budget bureau—i Beatarial, Bat Dares, pole Re-| which his selene 7) he enved the 8 government —suf fice had chai of the bu; and Dawes resigned to return to his bank in Chicago. ‘or several hours General Dawes! Conditions in Europe, economical submitted tamely to question-|1y stagnated since war, were waiting for the appropriate| approaching a crisis, Germany, to launch his sensational: down and out, was unable to pay And then he suddenly turned} the high reparations demanced cf 0 committee with s lecture) her. It was up to the United States! considering the choice of ex-|to help bring different nations to- tiv toy Md arouse. ¢ the jealousy gether in solving the probiem. It worked. Newspapers blazoned Dawes Plan Formed from coast to coast.| The choice fell on Dawes. With ii .| Owen D. Young and a host of lesser experts he sailed for Europe. Out of this venture emerged what ‘is called “The Dawes Plan” of revised | reparations and better understand- ing, all tending toward economic stability. Owen Young was the real author of this monumental piece of financing, but Dawes’ super-sales- manship “sold” it to the nations of Europe. aE, Ce ee ee that he succumbs to temptations to make a pulpit of the airplane. By this time he has States. He is the oldest air commuter in point oe vad Areata that air travelers will always is rl eps coe pea now just where they are. jess” voters. “Lots of towns can’t afford an airport,” but “our uplift organizations, in, their; known to flying strangers. The time is com- \the best ever »:athered for a single land his performance of a sailor on . curative chemical rays of the sun W. supple cf goed thiuss tbat kapoes ri J. W. b. ask le y . J. We 8: IASUI NG hwo unusually large numbers of see} any certain foods which ‘ citizens turn out to do their stuff. be the vitamins?” of practical wisdom is an ap- I F , | | i R proud of themselves to int the tallest buildings so large BY RODNEY DUTCHER litical machines depending on a hington, Eich percentage of dumb and “prop- greater part of the United aloft. HE i FEB H i A i ao FF A Py bble-: ins i tc ‘harry paint enough to make itself ‘ the perehency the pe an £ loping the abdominal musc! nes it is a good plan to go pay all cities to proclaim their to bed for two or three weeks and take exerci: wr main ind - i A i 5 Fy. sé RE icffll Hy? £ fe eF He a? & at the cintrols. After a long League, opposing the get-out-the- air questions will be asked:| voters—sometimes more—often vote movement and recommending ‘ i i H and boosting voting age from 21 to} cnitto... dret3. Will Rogers has rendered a 25 in order to obtain a higher qual- I le i : Munro and Affleck, charging them Senor Alvarado—that’s with encouraging “the ago-old dan-| name nied the SS ae ger of ernment by a self-a) f At the Movies _|| pss Pointed cian Who, he “damand, ELTINGE THEATR. “Rose-Marie,” which comes to the Eltinge for Wednesday and Thursday, means fully as much to the screen as the famous musical ef a5 i F it FERSSET EES pil il i Cs PY 8 5 ry efi bE iss333 H 8 EB 2 a = play from, which it was adapted took considerable issue with fmough fake bal. oa: ard it through « Tin ster monk ils chara onl junicipal Review.| voters who didn't vote for them- reached [the show ss : Arthur Hammerstein’s stage presen- elves. In one precinct, some 300. 5 Ee i Ht, Bre tation, has lost none of its original ballote were marked for persons charm in its transition to the| came right and the} who never came to the screen. Though all of the marvel- booths. Which, Michelet dem: ous and elegant society backgorunds | * in a letter to Affleck, are best — ace missing from this play, these - | 300 legal votes, or 300 illegal votes? are made up for by randeur oi . the scenic backgrounds in the Michelet then looks over . the French Canadian north woods story. world and finds the only first-class Joan Crawford and James Murray i country where universal suffrage are seen in the featured romantic 2 4 is denied is Ttaly. He points out roles and each is ideally suited to that the voting age in is | hadn’ course the role, Miss Grawford has oft 20 the Aesamied Of talking 80: Bin etree proved her ability on the screen in German h the polls. || know you can tell a other productions but she clinches the matter wtih the manner in which she has portrayed the role of the daughter of the fur post. Murray, almost unknown on the screen, proves to be a rea’ screen find which we hope producers will not cureless- ly lose in the shuffle when future Pictures are cast. The supporting players are among iS 5 & i Ht os i ZETETE ae ; | : S a a Fy i z | i B°sE i i i é | [ cast and include a film aoues tent at House Peters, Gibson Gowlani Polly Moran, Creighton Hale, Ger- I guess the girl who brought trued Astor, Lionel Belmore, Wil- tea thought we were one party be- im Orlamond, Harry Gribbons and others. The picture is lavishly presented at the Eitinge Theatre with the full OUR BOARDING HOUSE musical score by Rudolph Frim! and Herbert Stothart. Bie it # Alte #e 3c See 5 H Hi Laughter and thvllls ond t er = 3 mance are to be had at the Capital AW WAN-VY--YEE 7 OLY NATURAL, ; the Theatre, where Fox Films “A Girl , dat A Guy pesching in Every Port,” with Victor McLag- Wt way * : Would be a len in the stellar role, had its first] — “““—“~ WHoseE IDEAS witness to eel Les teres nea es one XN YolKs, w THE New ARE AGED 1) -TH’ 1 of the len appears an sar, in bis oa \} SNLE WIMBLE WIG WooD LIKE Vi me, Suet jody depen markable performance as Captin| f\ FOR MEA, Is A MOLL Hahic of the nation ’ in, What siee Glory.” REVELATION iate|'( © aaiee 4 the ouchboy, seldee of Torta, Et IN WIGS !. miner and Briss shia ot Ny lite MS ") " surpasses even hit part ret ic whi fame. j EXACTLY A WORK OF water Ae te part ‘ . ART, I ADMIT, BUT, : i PRACTI i wh A; i of the other sailor who at first is the rival, then the friend of McLag- len in their various love affairs, ze Refusing to abide by the leisurely tactics of old-fashioned diplomacy, Dawes followed his own dramatic methods. He had the committee convening early and staying late.|@. He spoke plainly, acted decisively and stayed with the task until the new agreements were made. Returning to America, Dawes was asa hero. The Republicans, meeting at Cleveland in 1924, nom- him for vice president. He into office on the Coolidge Dawes, who had jarred the in so many ways, was not for long. He soon jarred it » on inauguration day, the “show” ay from and told the Senate of the States what he thought of tiie i i E : f Te eP ig H a E i Lear leaves sparkles with color and ate ¢ itt life, i H $$» Incorporations | cd tne al ear e ucts company, 3 C. L Stuart, 2°30 Hendra at Scott ‘ameron. com oper- ate the Lucky Strike coal pk purchased from the receivers, and plans to establish machinery for processing lignite so that it will tain its lerdpeee after the moisture content has been ag pe G Oa i E i oF ad The Pate 000; Helge ram B Homan and Hilda Carlson, . : Herman Hanson Oil Syndicate,| Turtle Lake, $300,000; to for oil near Turtle Lake; i ii i sft estar i in ICDA CATE v a ee