The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 24, 1931, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARUK 'TKIBUNK, 'T'UKSDAY, MARCH 24, 1981 THE BISMARCK TRIBUN Ejeet eee cas ra ote Ger Hepbnalgrapied Newspaper man secret service. < | ‘3 OLDEST NEWSPAPER After a year of fighting, turmoil and intrigue, Fokker ' (Established 1873) rae ” OMIA Es Gib GRU Gas he tired of the game in which he was playing a more or lished by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| less unwilling part. He tried to leave Germany, but was , marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck |kindly and firmly requested to remain, and was made K mc COY ‘Bs second class mail matter. a German subject by military edict. Not until after d George D. Mann ............... President and Publisher : a oe Gain, Ge ce st the war did he learn of the $10,000,000 offer or the : Subscription Rates Payable in Advance world-wide fame he had won by his invention. C DIET WILL BE ANSWERED sorndlad otiee per oe ae Of such stuff is produced the romance of life, un- A eSES CAME OE Tins PAPER } ly mail per year jismarcl ” Daily by mail per matched in fiction.’ IOORESSED ENVELOPE fOr le maa outside Bismarck) ........ oe a0 G q Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .f he idle or - ip onal ; TRAINING THE MEMORY |» temporar- or permanent loss of the ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year . ain mar’ e advent of spring and gives promise a, memory. ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years of green pastures in the immediate future. peta! fortecgg trig? heard of some) In improving the memory it is im- Weekly by mail outside of North Dakot Warm sunshine, added to moisture falling upon the ibctiber (He Sasi, acerees, telepnseie|| eget oaoreeee, oe oF the Chane a Mit CSS fecund earth, means that grasses, trees and flowers soon number and occupation of everyone ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. “ will gladden the hearts of North Dakotans. to whom he has ever been introduced. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation It is true that some people are un- |} Personal questions on health and Here and there, in recent weeks, there hate been faint doubtedl: dowed by with || dlet addressed to him, care of Member of The Associated Press hints of green in fields and lawns but one of the driest phenomenal memories, although the |] The Tribune. th hk ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| winters on record prevented full realiaation of the claims made are usually exaggerated Enclose a stamped addressed f 1 for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or| promise which the open winter gave. The rain which ‘and are often the result of learning || envelope for reply. | not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the fell Sunday is the immediate augur of green pastures little tricks for refreshing the mem- ! local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All t ory. nels of elimination, overcoming anc- rights of republication of all other matter herein are| #Nd for that reason it is welcome. Tt 1s estimated that there are at| mia, dyspepsia and constipation Tht also reserved. There are other reasons, The agricultural prospect least 600,000,000 nerve cells in the | toxins from intestinal poisoning are is immeasurably improved by it. Spring plowing will be brain. Each of these nerve cells may | undoubtedly one of the greatest fac- (Official City, State and County Newspaper) made easier and the moisture in the soil will “start have hundreds of small branches | tors in producing a bad memory. a which form numberless combinations | The one who would @ crop. memorize must Foreign Representatives ‘hol é seaportalie with other cells. Sensations entering | learn to think properly, clearly classi- SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS The psychological reaction is still more important. the brain through the eyes, ears, or| fying ents in his hind and associ- (Incorporated) There is something about the greening earth which lends other senses are selected and carried| ating ne.- ideas with previously Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. confidence to every one. It is the first fulfillment of the Bees way to special I Raglecbod Cree learned facts. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON promise which spring brings. Men whose natural buoy- ., Through repet » these im- —_ ——T ancy of the spirit has been checked by the drab dress iT ca OntG, | AOBSTIONS “AND ANSWERS Population Trends in North Dakota | which winter wears, will be opimistic and hopeful again. Memory 1s undoubtedly a compli- eisai ie ae a ee “where ‘The upper Missouri river may not at present be good| There was a reason why the ancients wrote in glowing SRE Do Tea ANA onto Obs there are holes in the lungs can new for much except to furnish cities and towns along its| terms of green pastures and that reason exists with which has occurred before. We prob- oe be grown by the right diet and } banks a supply of the purest water to be found any-| US today. ably think by having the thought Taye all sis Rhus i where in the world. ‘This item is in itself considerable,| When the pastures turn green no one needs to be force travel over the group of cells | ,.\nsver:, tes a ce eae sip Rot but the river doubtless has many other qualities that| told that better times are at hand. Everyone knows it bent Hag) affected by previous ex- | cases heal through proper poprbconnd ’ 3 tend to attract the homeseeker. by instinet. Pere ie true that no amount of train- | The new tissue will be mostly scar A look at the 1930 census for North Dakota shows that) And we can have no green pastures without rain. ing will create a good memory if the | t#8sue and tubercle which are partly the counties bordering the Missouri river had a greater 3 ‘ brain cells are defective, bus it is CE SA AR a et erred aggregate gain in population than any other area of like The Unsociable Pocket Gopher See oa le to Sumpass one of ex, | St8s. ‘The formation of such tissuer | size in the state. The pocket gopher, who likes to build some of his cool the fevered brow in tropical cli- | ceptional ability through learning to | ‘8 Probably only of value in that it is ‘The greatest increase was in Sioux county, which 15|subterrancan tunnels in the fields of North Dakota, "has mates, We know that in Egypt, 2006 | train the mind more intensely. GrabenArin ie nity pou lane Pte credited with a gain of 41.5 per cent, and Burleigh) been found to be a very unsociable fellow. This rodent, pple th lonable hosts had spe-| A good memory depends upon the | ;- “A county with 268 per cent. These two counties have @N| according to the U. S. biological survey, is so snobbish fume cia” nl eae ene are power of grouping ideas so that they irae ee Lrried cae sas) ws Gad J uge | are in a rational order. The one who xygen may be al easy lead over all the other counties in the state. that when the tunnel accidentally intersects another Pay fans, In France the fan| thinks most strongly upon the things |Stbed and poisonous gases elimi- The population gains in other counties bordering the|purrow, he plugs it up to keep his neighbor out. phi webacaeinSCa a i ond oui ie we its Gevelooment he desires to memorize will have the | D8ted. aig e river were as follows: Morton, 6.2 per cent; Emmons, 10.1] ‘this does not improve the social status of the pocket great servi maintained by| used as a stable during the Civil ler Loul . We rei ‘Fans | best memory, if other conditions are 3 LON f per cent; McLean, 12.6 per cent; Mountrail, 11.4 per ceut;| ,opner, which has rena been branded as one of the| ‘® Bismarck ‘Tribune for the benefit | war but is now well restored. It con-|8re invariable accompaniment of | equal. tole eae asks: “Is mil 1 © anne ea per ote Widiewnade!| © > of its readers who may use it every|tains the original baptismal font | feminine costume and that they are} Many persons have remarkable ‘ Mt Mercer, 169 per cent; Dunn, 81 p ; | most destructive mammal pests in the country by the/day without cost to themselves. Ail| which was lost for many years but |0f Tare beauty, exquisitely painted | memories of all the facts Answer: In some cases of both “ 1.7 per cent, and Williams, 8.7 per cent. The little county| american game association, which recommends its| they have to do is ask for any infor- | finally reclaimed from a farmyard, | 8nd mounted on sticks of carved or | their particular specialties, and yet | Primary and secondary anemia pa- of Oliver was the only one along the river that regis-| destruction by every means at hand. mation desired and they will receive |The pew of Washington is reserved, |Painted wood, — mother-of-pearl, may have poor memories in other | tent receives good results from tak- tered a loss, the figure there being -3.7. 1 ket gopher is gassed in his burrow,|2ompt answers by mail. Questions — carved ivory, or gold. There are over | fields. ing a milk diet, providing this is sup- Pe Maree Eiiiabod naa theldlninstion of tesdingill |; Coote cern vita costae urTOW:! must be clearly written and stated @8| @ Was Mahomet married? H, F,|00 makers of fans in Paris and they| Your memory is created mainly by |Plemented with the use of non- ¥ 'y of it might be suggested that his social habits be studied by! briefly as possible. Enclose two-cent oag - **Jenjoy special privileges accorded to|impressions coming to the: brain starchy vegetables several times a day. other important cities in the state with a population! certain householders, who might profitably learn from| stamp for return postage and address |~‘a/ Mahomet had numerous wives, | ‘hem by the King.’” through the eyes, ears and muscle Rheumatism at 70 gain of 55.6 per cent. Minot was a close second with a/rim how to sidestep the expensive pleasure of enter-|the Bismarck Tribune Information | the first being a widow, fifteen years = sense. Most people do not realize how} Question: V. B. M. asks: “Will a gain of 518 per cent. Fargo came in third with 303) taining visiting relatives. Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, Director, | nis senior, whom he married when he |,,@, 19 what manner may orange | important the muscle sense is in| man of 70 years of age get over the per cent, and Grand Forks fourth with a 226 per cent| ~ a ‘Weshington, D. C. was twenty-five. Her name was | D!0ssoms be arranged as a decoration | memorizing. you speak | Theumatism or not by fasting, and it i Khadija. Mahomet did not become a | £°t the bridal veil? G. K. you are forcing the muscles of your |@ person is underweight is fasting een Q. In what picture does “Sonny | polygamist until after her death. A. The simplest arrangement is a | lips, e and vocal cords to act, | good for him?” A loss in population since the 1920 census was regis- ‘, 5 5 * || Boy” die? W. M. i wreath of orange blossoms which is|and the brain also receives the im-| AnSwer: It is always possible tc tered by 17 North Dakota counties, 12 of which are in Editorial Comment 1/°2" Sn Al Golson's Singing Fool, the| @. What became of the flag which | PIS2e@ over the tulle or lace vell. If) pression cf thelr movements, 2o that j eliminate ~heumatic polsons and get the eastern half of the state. The other five, located child, Sonny Boy, dies. draped the casket of the Unknown |“,omplete wreath is unbecoming ® | one of th» easiest ways to memorize }over the soreness which goes with EaAitortals printed, below show the trend of thought Partial one may be worn. When the | is to speak out loud whatever you are | any kind of rheumatism, but is is not in the western portion, showed only slight losses, and only} Fdltortals we gi) Soldier on its journey from France to | yell is i 4 * by other editors. They are published without regard vel arranged in cap effect, the | trying to memorize. always possible to remove the bony one of these—Oliver county—abuts on the Missouri river.|| to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- Q. Are there any special tours you the United States? P. M. F. orange blossoms may be placed on| : ‘The loss of memory which comes on | growths which have formed in long- ‘The census thus bears out a prediction often made by eee plieien: $Bn Recommend to persons Who desire | ston nes in the smphitheatre at | either side of the face as two rosettes. | in old age is usually due to destruc- | continued cases of arthritis. | Those The Bismarck Tribune, that the western part of the ss ‘A. Greely's Handbook of Alaska Z pas FST TTT tive effects of toxins in the system. | who are underweight get quicker re- state has before it a glorious future. Its agricultural Manners Versus Mannerisms says: “There are four Alaskan trips| Q. How old was Edward Bok when ete apaatsagee: APHIS |EBRTNRIS WOE ote and mineral wealth, scenic beauty and climatic attrac-| (The Spectrum, N. D. Agricultural College Newspaper) | ‘hat can be especially recommended | he came to this country? P. W. C. bao Disibt atthe tesin tahy oeiiee | Maine results as-one cians vince iahivet tiveness point unerringly toward industrial expansion| At present there is much discussion concerning the|‘0 tourists from the stand point of| A. He was born in the Netherlands : bad manners of youth. So far we can see it is the one| time, expense, and attractiveness. The | and was brought to the United States and future greatness. u Inside Passage from Seattle to Skag- | when he was six old. —Casey Jones, who has been flying pertinent criticism that we find justifiable in our life at ce JOHN POWELL'S BIRTH ‘since 1911 » today way is the best known, the shortest, i on 34 1896, Sohn W. Fowell, planes piswhine People’s Forum Something Wrong With the Right People| On the closing page of “Cakes and Ale,” recent book|#5¢ the most largely followed. She}. Where is Buffalo Bill's ranch? |. ", vorican soldier, £, geolo- as; tell ¢ Bo Maitig her: Rebels, the heroine, her dead| Prince William Sound and the Yu- |E. G. P. n in soldier, explorer, geolo-] A man is known by his Utopias; Bditor’s Note.—The Tribune wel- It takes an ex-criminal to point out some of the hid- USLAIRA eat ae caine gp ay camainerts kon-Nome trips, though longer, are} A. It is located in Cody, Wyoming, |8i8t and anthropologist, was born at|me what sort of a home he goes with-|| comes letters on subjects of in- den seams on the wrong side of the fabric of life. Such/ by calling him “a perfect sentismmai more thoroughly comprehensive and | It can be visited and is open for gen- mount, Latta NF out and I will tell you what he is—|| terest. Letters dealing with con- career 15 years ago and has ince earned an honest liv-|tinually confusing them. For example one of our/pscrottnough some frontier travel | Park. ee to Yellowstone linet discovered his bent towards| ‘The undisciplined life is the insane|| play ing. friends once characterized a man by calling him the best-11s involved.” natural science. When the Civil War|life—Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick.- || y"iters All letters MUST be signed. Black's indictment of the right people is that they go Pepin Tay eer ecar RESIST rae — @. ‘What percentage of the pa-|broke out, he enlisted at once as a ee * sigh tho psoudonym firat and: ur at the correction of crime in the wrong way. He con- d found the ate aurtaos anmnneriams | cot ot, OS did the last German | tients at St. Elizabeth's Hospital are |Private. He rose to the rank of ma-| Independence of purse strings has/| om name oe Ta abeoge oR tends that th 7 ‘et; et prasypersinty guy hebea ets enero bres | Kaiser reign? M. C. service men? M. B. W. jor. He lost his right arm in the bat-|brought independence from apron)| the right to delete such parts of en at the men who prey on society are paid back/the result of much diligent instruction on the part Of] 4. Kaiser Wilhelm II became em-| A. Out of 4500 patients approxi- | tle of Shiloh. strings—David D. Vaughan. ‘| letters as may be necessary to with interest by being wronged in turn. * @ conscientious mother, but not inspired by any sincere) peror in 1888 on the death of his|mately 400 are patients who have| At the close of the war he became conform to this policy, ‘The police forces in the big cities, he points out, are| 4nd honest feeling on the part of the man himself. father and ruled until 1918 when he | served in the World war. If one takes | Professor of geology at Illinois Wesle- made up of underpaid men who must do their work in|_ We all know college men who are careful to rise when! was forced to abdicate. *|into consideration veterans of oth- |yan university and two years later, in if BARBS To the Bismarck Tribune: i. ditions Of grat ond corm, th bea Ce ee ee college women who are most} er wars, approximately 50 per cent of |1867, made his first journey of ex-]4 0 patie to wunemployment = om a careful to perform gracious introductions. But these} @. Of wham was it said that “the | the 4500 are service men. ploration to the Colorado Rockies. In|" severything is subject to change, €X-| pain Peer mieniep alll ee of training they get, such as it is, does not supply them] same people are rude to their elders and sneer at their| english are cutting off the best head 1869, he made a voyage of great dan-| cent, of course, the taxi driver. Z pains of the country at present is with social vision, and their only code is one of violence.| Views whether they be expressed or not. of their country”? I. V. G. @. Was Paul Bunyan a real per-|ger and hardship through the grand aap ek OR Bross exageration. When times are The result is a vicious circle which engenders among| Respect for anyone, anything, or any opinion whether} A, Richelicu made the remark | son? W. C. F. canyon of the Colorado river, the val-| men there's the bootlegger who|&00d and everybody can have em- it agree with yours or not is the essence of good man-|when he heard of the beheading of} A. Paul Bunyan is a mythical hero|uable results of which brought him the hunted a hatred of the police and a mistrust of the) nos wero courtesy is not enough. It is surprising how] the Earl of Strafford in 1641. of the lumber camps of the North- |into scientific promint Co has been in business so long he calls| ployment people have three-fourths as Ae whole legal-political machine. Black declares that it) much we may learn from an elder person by “drawing west. ‘The legend is said to have be- | voted him funds to ponte * expen himself a hovilasacarres veteran. many pains as they have now, from took him the best part of his life to learn that the cop| him out” and making him appear to an advantage in| @Q. How long was the identity of|gun in the Papineau Rebellion in|tions. A few years later he made a ‘The speed of a new submarine is 17 one source or another, imagined or fis a victim of the same machine that breeds the criminal, | conversation. the author of the Waverley Novels|Canada in 1837 and it then spread |second voyage down the Colorado|«nots an hour. Tie that. actual, Only about one-fourth of the ‘This man claims to have learned, in his unique ex-| A little more sincerity and less hypocrisy in paying} kept a secret? E. C. D. throughout the Northwest, being col-|river, surveying an area of 100,000 ‘ee * People enjoy comfort, three-fourths * perience, that wrong ones and right ones tt compliments, a little more respect or tolerance for others} A. Thirteen years. ored by Scandinavian myth in Min- | square miles. By going on a vacation while his enjoy feeling or imagining discomfort, ¥ are pretty) _in other words a little more concentration on man- nesota and by Indian legends further} Largely upon his recommendation, | o44, oy making important investiga-|1% ome way or another. And falsity, much alike, and that they all grow panicky when thelr/ ners and less on mannerisms might perhaps do much} Q. Where is the Pohick Church? | west. It was the American loggers, congress established, in 1879, the | ti Ss en Cake, mayor is said to | the festering sore that causes the most ‘backs are to the wall. Thus the right people, in their}toward making young moderns more pleasant people to) W. W. just below the border, who embellish- | United States Geological Survey, of areca ade a risky step. A. J. Walk- of discomfort never ceases. The White nervous haste, expect the crime engineers to build ef-| know. , A. Pohick Church, parish church |ed the myth and gave it most of its} which he was director from 1881 until ex, at it were. ‘s "| | House is correct that it is time now fective dykes against the crime wave overnight. They es of Mount Vernon, is six miles from | color. 1894. He died in 1902. - ‘eee to stop councils regarding unemploy- Agitation Without End She Mansion, on the Biehvey berweee und in Pennsyivainia| Ment, and Jet the | springtime of recommend more laws and more severe punishments, gitatio! Washington and Richmond. It was| @. Please give a short sketch about A man was fot mney) natural betterment take care of it- when the experience of past ages proves the futility of| (Grand Forks Herald) built from plans drawn by George|fans. F. R. f i Quotations i who sang while he robbed a store.| soir, such reprisals, ‘The Jamestown capital removal committee requests} Washington (1768-70), a vestryman| A. “Customs of Mankind” says 2] 5 een oh eae ae: A. McG. Bede, “ ” “ that the governor do not call a special election le| there for 20 years. Among the rec-|that “Fans have an interesting his- : aaa aaa Fort Yates, N. D. I arg lena ares, ‘that more laws and more) 1° ‘question of removal of the capital, but that he permit|tors of the church was “Parson” |tory. ‘The first fan was probably a| An airplane that is fool-proot even- Some hotels rate high, says the of- punishment, mean nothing but more crime. The| this question to be voted on at the statewide primary|Weems, who recorded stories of| palm leaf or some other natural de- | tually will be built, but there never fice sage, and others have high rates.| _ OFFICIAL IN JAIL right people are all for bigger police forces. I will gc! election next spring. The reason stated for this request| Washington's boyhood, such as that|vice appropriated by man to keep/}will be an engineer smart enough to (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc)) Fergus Falls, Minn., March 24—(P) them one better—I am for bigger and better police forces,| is that a special election will be costly, and the expense of the cherry tree. The church was | away flies or gnats, perhaps even to | build a plane that is damn-fool-proof. Seg oe ° —G. G. Watnaas, treasurer of Polden (<<< —————— Our police force needs men with a less punitive and|¢an be saved by deferring the vote until a regular elec- KFYR township, was in jail on a charge of more scientific attitude toward crime and criminals| tion. The committee also asks that the commission to ] |) falsifying public accounts. He was h "| be appointed take no steps looking toward the expendi- ——— 4 | accused of a shortage of $2,000 in his Such men are not to be had for the wages paid by most] ture of money on the construction of a capitol at Bis- ‘TUESDAY, MARCH 24 accounts, following an examination of municipalities. The right people are working on the] marck until such election has been held, as if the people Cat cles—545.1 Meters his books. Arraigned late Saturday " ‘wrong end of the problem. If they would give more at-| vote to change the location of the seat of government 7300—Farm flashes, weather report.| he was bound over to the district ‘ tention to the high chair, they could soon’ put cobwebs] any, expenditure on the present site would be wasted. 7:15—Morning devotion. court on bonds of $2,000. on the electric chair. They lay too much stress on what| Some interesting questions arise in connection with Hee Pe enesin Washington; ————_—_ thi Any the ts this capital removal petition. The proposed amendment ee reporter io WAHPETON WOMAN DIES le wrong people do, not why they do it; on what they| presented in the petition establishes the state capital at 8:00—Ghain Program Wahpeton, N. D., Match 24—(P)— ere, instead of how they got that way. Danny Ryan's] Jamestown. That is all. Assuming what seems next to) SUNRISE 1S JEU. 8, Azmy Pando. Mrs. Thomas Novak, 71, resident of mother said it all when she held out her arms o her son| an impossibility, that the people should vote es aver of RIGHT. PuRTY ot Sunshine Hour ae Poeleee eens, Aiea, Bun 4 lect @ 30—" af jookman . si Ts, pa na ala for a now buildlag. in lecting the creation of con- THIS MAWNIN'. 10:00—Opening markets and weather] all of Wahpeton, are left, e truction commission the legislature did not have in . 0:10—Aunt Sammy. ireag carpe rae taind the construction of a building anywhere except at x ingrid Rigg SAID o:s0—0. Devt, at Agriculture ©. §, WEALTH 320 BILLIONS How Germany Almost Won the War | Bismarck. The commission is expected to erect a building You RALY fe:se—hiliaston time signals. Pr gedit ogre ciccaeapate na: In 1915 Germany almost won the World war by gaining| 0n the ground now owned by the state. ay ib net ae ABOUT BEAUTIFUL 11:05—Grace Duryee Morris, organist. | titted at $320, 800,000, Mr Ee ena : ni re if p - undisputed control of the air along the far-flung battle | ed to pick a few fa that cite would have to be acquired SUNRISES. ABOUT SUNRISES, bs 30 —auale, sp tional industrial conference board, lines. That period of Germany's supremacy in the air] on some terms by the state. Who is to judge as to the WILO OVER THEM= Fee ane Wallace Hopper the per capita being $2,977. ¥ fs inseparably linked with the name of Anthony H. G.| suitability of the site and the propriety of the terms on ° 2118—Markets: nigh, low, and close; Fokker, a young Hollander, whose name will shine even| which it is acquired. Certainly the commission has been IN FACT THERES pew ‘weather; livestock mar- FLA e Pe ‘iven no such authority. 2:80—Evening Stars . i Bese aies an ioe dimeliens of f5me mhep the rosy 6 Bis F ain, if the proposed amendment should be approved, ONLY ONE THING F ‘00—School of Music PP, ER, FANNY SAYS: Be erento the pubic. whether at a special or a regular election, and the com- $:20—Mable Wayne Hour Ri In 1915 French and British airmen, who up to that| mission, having obtained a site by some hocus-pocus, Sete ance point in the war had been used mainly for observation, | proceeds with preliminary plans for a building at James- 5:15—Uncle Paul's Kiddies rime began to disappear as they crossed the German lines.| town, how is anyone to know that such election is o-—Stooks ax 4 , The alr had suddenly become very deadly for the allied | Permanent? ‘There would be nothing to hinder the fing 6o—Grace Duryee Morris, Organist of another petition for the removal of the capital to, 5—KFYR Lone Scout Troop air forces, and the allled commanders tried to probe| °F another peution i Fe Citvrinot, Fargo or Devils Con W. Roberts, Crop Forecast the mystery by offering rich rewards for its solution. | Lake, or to each of them in turn. Enough signatures to nin Program oe ‘The secret was well guarded by the Germans, and| any one of such petitions could be obtained. According 5—Trinity Lutheran Chutch ‘was not revealed until one foggy day when a bewildered| to the Jamestown idea it would be the duty of the com- 0—Sammy Kontos, Clarinétist German airman landed by mistake behind the French Prog to Tr giaig Noemi bara meet 5-—Casper Guttenberg lines. The German tried to destroy his plane, but was] Gecide on another move. captured before he could accomplish that object. 2he| ‘The filing of a sufficiently signed petition for the sub- secret thus revealed was the synchronized machine gun| mission of a proposed constitutional amendment creates which shoots a stream of bullets between the whirling no presumption that the amendment will be adopted and This creates no obligation on the part of the people or any was Anthony Fokker’s great invention, | ("treis constituted bodies to themselves on the ¥ which had given the Germans such a tremendous ad- basis of any such presumption. If it did, the whole vantage. ie of government could bée brought to @ stand- ‘The discovery proved an especially bitter pill for the still by anyone sufficiently interested to carry on & per- { ‘Italian war ministries. Both had been of- filibuster. ee hd wife commucion, to be created will have before it the fered Fokker's epoch-making invention and “anon | $3 of providing the sate with « suitable capitol buld- e ft down! ‘The 26-year-old Dutchman had then taken/ing’t the present seat of government without needless hhis invention to the German high commiand, where it |delay. The legislature which the creation of ' jwas eagerly accepted. ‘ |the commission expressed itself on the subject with un- ‘After the startling discovery of the synchronized gun, |mistakeable clearness, and it will be the business of the | recognized as 9 military gem, they had commission to carry out the intent of the legislature to) fwhich the allies Z the best of its ability. If individuals choose to hamper When thet thrown away, an effort was made to reach Fokker be-| the commission by placing legal obstacles before it, they pert yell beter oy airy { pind the German lines with s British offer of $10,000000} must shoulder full responsibility for thelr course, * Saale ‘i 2

Other pages from this issue: