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PAGE FOUR “Fhe Bismarck Tribune ie | An Inde; it New japaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER or (Established 1873) |, Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. ‘ Bigmarck, N. D., ard entered at the postoffice at j jarck as second class mail matter. F rge D. Mann..........President and Publisher i Subscription Rates Payable im Advance * Dafly by carrier, per year .... at +. \Jaily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). : Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck).............. 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota +» 6,00 t Member Audit Bureau of Circulation } Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to ; Qe use for republication of all news dispatches gredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa : » and also the local news of spontaneo! origin All rights of republication of ail : vetlished herein. ether matter herein are also reserved. : Foreign Representatives i a. LOGAN. PAYNE COMPANY + CHICAGG DI $7.20 | | some unpleasant experience he himself may have ‘had in being reported for the public press, | One swallow doesn’t make a summer, an old fable | tells us, and one experience does not give sufficient grounds for such a sweeping and absolutely un-| ‘founded statement. Newspapers are not perfect, | but considering the manifold difficulties under which | they labor, they turn out amazingly accurate word pictures of the swift-moving events of the modern world. That newspapers make mistakes, goes without saying. That sometimes people are not correctly quoted also goes without saying, but we contend that any man who makes the bald statement that | 80 per cent of all newspaper stories are lies, him- selfgis guilty of a flagrant untruth. When explaining apparent discrepancies in the | Bible, ministers are quick to find excuses for any | \inaccuracies that are apparent in that Piece of re-| |porting, but for the modern néwspaper, working | ‘under difficulties a thousand fold, yes, a million fold, | greater than those under which the authors of the | books of the Bible worked, the same ministers hav? | no word. ETROT i ity! i | Bldg. eople, in speaking publicly, cftentimes sav | heard Bide, LYNE, BURNS & i. © | more than they intend and. yhen it appears jn ‘print NEW YORK - - . Fifth Ave. Bldg. |it is 2 favorite excuse to say that they were “in- | Leen ea eae (Official City, State and Cranty Newspaper) —<—<—<——— ++ Vaecation—and Juvenile Delinquency { It is a curious fact that in many cities the sum- fmer vacaticn period for school children results in jan increase in the cases docketed by juvenile courts “and other tribunals. ‘ It is also a fact that the mothers of children who ‘never are placed in the unpleasant position of fac- bell rings in September and their progeny again tart the long march toward the schoolhouse and the blessings of education. t=. To anyone who gives the matter a thought the ;guestions present themselves: Why do children foo often encounter trouble with the law during the yacation pericd? What is the remedy—if one is {0 be had? 4, Adults whose memories: are sufficiently clear to fecal! the most charming incidents of their own youth should know the answers instinctively. . :7? Children get into trouble because their minds fare nct actively occupied with things more accept- “able to the law and to the peace and comfort of ithe neighbors. ** Nearly every man can still recall with a smile {the pranks his “gang” played on Halloween, the thanner in which he raided Old Man Smith's or- Fghard or watermelon patch; the time he put oil in ‘Widow Zander’s well. If he was a normal active thoy the average man of today might even blush at ‘the “front” he presents to his own children when the reprimands them for the very things his father ecnvicted him of 30 or 40 years before. i$ But father had a remedy which is fast going out cf ‘style. Conviction was followed by execution in ¥a most startling manner.* The tales some wood- ; sheds still standing could tell about some of Bis- tamarck’s most prominent citizens! Perhaps the old tem of applying copious quantities of strap oi! ‘Was not all it might have been. Unquestionably, _ preventicn is better than a cure and this brings to ‘mind an obvious “cure” which might be offered to the children of Bismarck to keep them from com- ‘mitting,. not only the misdemeanors listed in the , etiquette books, but those more serious offense: i Which might bring them into a ccurt of justice. i { The cure is more legitimate avenues of activity “for the growing boy and girl. For instance, a ; survey of Bismarck shows that it hasn’t a single public tennis court. Tennis is a game which re- ;quires not only skill and agility, but considerable “energy. After a few hours on the tennis court the (Average boy and girl is more willing to adopt the “motto “early to bed, early to rise” than otherwise j Would be the case. : The argument that children can get as much ex- tdreise pushing the lawn-mower or weeding the gar- ,den has merit. Still, it is pointless, Somehow, the ithought of weeding the garden or pushing the j|awn-mower lacks appeal—even to the boys and igirls of yesterday. Nearly every modern city has some public play- round facilities, for both children and grown-ups, ;and no playground is complete without tennis jgourts. In large cities the demand has been so igreat that public tennis courts are to be found ‘wherever the municipality can acquire the use of sufficient land. They are used by thousands of *People, adults as well as children. Helen Wills, | Bill Tilden and cther maids and men have made an ‘impression on American youth. Modern boys an‘) girls have the same yearning to emulate their | ‘achievements as the average 40-year-old boy of to- :day had to emulate the deeds of those mythical Heroes of the Alger books. Fi } There is much to be said for public tennis courts. They cost little. They are not difficult to build or yexpensive to maintain. They offer clean, whole- “some recreation to a large number of people. Ten- inis not only offers recreation, but a fine opportunity for social contact between boys and girls on the thest possible basis, that of honest rivalry and com- _Petition. No boy can be blamed for resenting the fthought that a girl could beat him at any athletic | game and no girl who acquires some skill could re- | taist the temptation of trying. 4.) Still another point to be considered is that of Fpublic pride and civic spirit. Bismarck cannot af- pford to be less progressive than its neighbors. Mi-}makes tax reduction possible from time to time. fabot, Grand Forks, Fargo and other cities of the atate have public tennis courts. These cities are) tmaking = bid for the interest of the younger gen- jeration with the idea of interesting them in the ity and eventually contributing to igrowth and prosperity. Bismarck should do the} ; youngsters. bonds are bound to lose a few dollars each in in- terest, through failure either to convert their se- curities into the proposed new three-and-one-half its | per cent obligations, or to cash them outright. |correctly quoted.” Perhaps Bishop Richardson has | | been too correctly quoted for comfort at some time | jand he is throwing out a smoke screen. levee The work accomplished by the various traveler aid societies throughout the United /States worthy of more than passing notice, is More than 1,300,000 persons received help last yéaY in travel- Parisi waste: juilpy uted: are>giail when ‘the schtel | ing from one place to another in the United States, j according to the annual report submitted at the meeting of the directors of the National Association of Travelers’ Aid societies and it has cost $1,000,- 000 to accomplish this work. Practically every human problem imaginable was jincluded in the cases presented to the association: There were 49,380 children traveling alone; ‘1,252 | marriages that had to be witnessed; 4,833 runaways were aided; 30,830 travelers, most immigrants, had trouble with the language; and 4,987 lost their | tickets or money and needed assistance. Those who applied to the various bureaus received valuable advice and information, medical assistance, legal assistance, directions in regard to securing trans- portation as well as temporary and permanent lodgings, help in making connections with relatives, jete., ete. In fact the limit to the activities of the | societ has not yet been found. This year the national association celebrates its tenth anniversary. The last ten years have seen a tremendous growth in this work. Volunteers have given their time and money to the activity because it serves a vital need. | | So efficiently has the work been carried on dur- |ing the last ten years that the travelers’ aid units and the national association have received whstinted | The work the societies do is something the police would find great difficulty in doing and it is surely ;@ work that requires doing. v Let us hope that the! societies will grow and prosper and ‘that more per- | Travelers’ Aid \ | jaccount for Cheri praise from police officials throughout the nation. | ;. |for a long minute while the lawyers i wrangled over the Jer the question wa: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE steron ) « NOW SIM-THAL cons; WILLGOVER S 3 HAT Th Hos Awpee * CNERTO LONDON To; FELD “for TRA-AND-HERE- / “WE TILK ROUTE. | Since Transoceanic Flying Is So Common #/Saint of Sinner ® “What in the world does Chufch- ill mean, torturing her like that?” Faith demanded of Bob Hathaway, in a furious whisper. “You must remember, honey,” he soothed her, “that Churchill has to and Chris’ quar- wave of laughter swept j audience. was he not?” Churchill went on, cution counsel and audience. isn’t to be spared anythii Faith's brown eyes blazed. 9 ‘Cherry had kept from answering er employers, Mr. Bohn r the disrti point as to whet. “leading” or nol ly Judge Grimshaw instructed to answer. Fini sons will give their time and moriey to this most | useful activity. | More Light—Fine Now it is announced that Governor Al Smith of New York will shortly make a detailed announce- ment of his position on the prohibition law, telling just what he would and would not do about it if he were president. a next Derhocratic convention. We ean’t know too |much about his views and policies in advance. After |” jhe makes this statement we'll be better able to tell |} just how to regard his candi ey. | | The contribution of 10,000 children, between the | ages of 10 and 14, who attend the 15 junior high | Schools of New York ‘city, toward the decoration of a new babies’ hospital, just finished, has been completed and the ideas evolved by them will be used in designing the decorations of the new structure. * Tt was a unique and very reasonable idea, allow- ing those not so long since children, to devise an interior that would be most likely to please sick Certainly they will have a better in- sight into the needs of the children than a paid architect, working by ordered rules of architecture and decoration, would evolve, | . " | Editorial Comment | Second Liberties (Minneapolis Journal) Newspaper advertisements, radio ai and posters in banks and postoffices arg all calling the attention of holders of Second ty Bonds to the-fact that these government obligations are called for redemption November 15, next, and will| cease to bear interest after that date. The treasury department contemplates refinanc-- ing this debt with securities bearing a-lower inter- est rate, effecting a saving of close to thirty mil- lions a year. That is good, sound finance. It is just such slicing of government requirements that ments | But, for all that, a great many holders of these Of the total Second Liberty issue of 3,800 mil-} _ This is good. Governor Smith, Swhether we like |, it or not, is going to be a méjor ‘candidate at the| Nn ; had been infatuation, Iried him,” Cherry to answer. y—infatuation fom “I cknew that they were : wedding night, \wealtgy men, rich, I would after we were married,” Cherry gr mem \ Cherry answered steadily. swered bravely, but her voice was} “That,” Bob whispered low and straingd and her golden eyes\“is\ brought out to darkened with dreadful memories, “Now, Cherry, we will leave the ject of y husband temporari- Churchill said very gently, “and urn to my previous line of ques- tioning. Did you tell Mr. Bohn why you could not marry him?” “I did. 1 fold him that I was in- fatuated—" over goldsdigger, was marrying su! | n of Mr. Ralph Cluny, Cherry?” you use: this ‘infatuated, in preference to tte word ‘love.’ Can tember 1 nephew, Mr. Robert Hathaway, Tuesday evening, September 14. why lized after my marriage to that T had never really that my feeling for him I tried a great many times to break his hold over me, but could not—until-after I mar- answered with painful conscientiousnes “Now, Cherry, after you left Mr. Bohn’s offices, where were you em- ployed?” “By Mr. Curtis Preston, an archi- tect, erry Feplied. “I worked for him. until the middle of September.” “And why did you leave his em- ploy at that time?” Churchill prod- ded. Tears of anger and pity. stung Faith’s eyelids as she watched Cher- ry’s lovely little face redden again with embarrassment. “Because—because Mr. Preston| ing when Mr. Cluny came back fr. tried to make love to me,” Cherry|luneh. He had bought a solit: faltered. Reporters . Ww loved him, tary. Mr, Cluny and got the position. worked for him until September 29. ploy, Cherry?” “IT was engaged to be married him,” Cherry answered steadily. ly, “On Monday, September 27. befor fused. was very unhappy and—and to marry him and I had glared at Stephen] fort’ me, he over the “Mr. Preston was a married man, gardless of the amazement of prose- “No, sir, Mr. Preston had recently rel on their wedding night, the night been divorced.” 4.‘ of. the murder.” 4. “New, Cherry, what did you know “She fof the financial status of your form- and Mr. Churchill .asked signifi- ict attorney's yelp of tion that the question. was a leading one, Cherry was instructed both call to Faith, counteract the state’s evidence that Cherry was a, merely id you enter the employ | Cherry did not change color at the mention of the dead mag's name, nor did her voice falter. “I went to work for Mr. Cluny on Wednesday, Sep- T had met Mr. Cluny’s He told me that he’ would speak to his mewerny cf eumtorable fo unele, who was in need of a secre- The next day I went to see Wednesday, “And why did you leave his em- him, and he did not think it looked well for me to continue working for. “When did this engagement take |, place, Cherry?” Churchill asked soft- had asked me on Friday, the ~ff Then on Monday, because ' IT jorry for something I had done, I was cry- om ring and when he was trying to com- slipped the ri: nm Churchill with amazement; a faint | finger ‘and—and I decided te do iw “Cherry, will you tell the jury whether you were in love with Mr. Cluny when you accepted his offer of marriage?” Churchill astounded the crowded courtroom by asking. Tomorrow: Cherry amazes all with the frankness with which she \discusses her love affairs. | (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘IN NEW YORK | (te a New York, May 24, t favorite topics: of the. Iwrid. movie confession tars and meh is the New York studio party. Here are pictured’ mad rois! a? half’ dressed m s upon tables, sullen beauties hiding their jealousi confetti rain- ing like snow, serpentine _ paper tossed abdut the- chandeliers and all the other hectic ingredients. I have, returned, but a few hours | since, from!a typical studio party. And, with no attempt to disillusion those starved appetites who, viewing the films ‘or ‘reading the ‘cheap magazines, thirst for a “Bohemian thrill,” I am forced to report, that the guests and. their antics were something as follows One football coach of an impor- tant eastern’ uni i a clumsy settee fl per visitor from Chicago. No models and nowaose. .undre; than one sees upon Fifth: avenue. A m lined with... rather good. 8, all the work of. the ho: re- on ae who can afford to be an 3 tist. A young’ man svhose fiction ap- pears now and then in the Amer- ican Mercury,, but who must read copy on a newspaper in order to pay the rent. young grand opera singer boring two or three’ listeners with such comments as, “Does he really write poety * | know I to <a 22” ete, ad Tid, ; Three bibulous young ‘men who have discovered they we me college songs. ‘vit i are re the by. singing ing college r, now engaged Singing negro witone. poet and a news- paper columnist trying out close harmony and being rewarded with frigid glance of ire A six-foot e: OUT OUR WAY. ITS NONE oO WoRE JUMPED “HET ARROYO. » DANG WE'LL HEP Yur loon FER Business EM_ON OUR WAY BACH STIFFYA WHOT IM YUH WONT-NEED'EM FER THs: CAWN ROAST —ILL EAT YORE ROASTIN' EARS FER Yo He NO SUOH-NO! + PUFFER T’ HEP IM Git EM ‘NOW. ‘VIM EATN A POPCORN BALL ONCE WITHOUT EM AN' T. COULD NEVER LIVE rine telling j By Williams TL WATKHED “THRU THAT AGIN» *, A GUMMER AT A CAWN ROAST- EE -HEE, One of the} . TU Editor's Note: This is the 42nd chapter in the story of an ex-dough- boy who is revisiting France as a correspondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER XL war has many unwritten stories. f Take, for instance, the tale of Jean LFleurur, 16 Rue Hartbise, Compiegne, France. He has a telephone, too, No. | | The | 4 6. Fleurus is a taxi driver now. But in 1918 he was a Poilu. Among the other duties assigned to him that ar_was to participate in a drive on German stronghold .in Tracy, a village on the Oise river. He worked ell, and, with other soldiers, cap- tured a German officer—a majcr— in the church of that village. They Meet Again Late in August, 1926, Fleurus was at the depot in Compiegne tooking for fares. tallish, well-dressed gentleman emerged from the depot accompanied by a comely woman. He \dickered with Fleurus in very bad French and, when a price was agreed upon, directed that he be taken to Tracy. . Fleurus drove on... out through the forest of Compiegne ... over ‘the Oise at Rethondes where the | British blew the iron bridge. . and on into Tracy. There the man and experiences in Hayti and being baited by n prétty young radical. A press agent for the anti-capital punishment league and a half dozen painters, illustrators and such. three rounds of bacardi, mixed with lime juice and ginger ale—a favorite tropical concoction, t ,am_ told. Studio parties, as I know them, are largely a routine of discugsions, ar- guments on the ‘new thiugs of art and literature, some singing and piano playing, dancing to the tune of a phonograph or radio; an occa- si8nal outburst of-hilarity “Wild parties” in Manhattan are very likely to be either very pri- vate or very public, The ey pal vate ones are duplicates of similar wild parties anywhere in the world and the “cutting. loose” reaylts from the fact that the participants know public ones are the elaborate affairs given in the big hotela and halls where the freedom is born of the fact that so many are present and so many are reveling that individual cases go unnoticed, Few—not even the time ‘hardened —trot out their antics in the mixed company of @ studio party and, if they did, many would leave in dis- ust. Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) GILBERT SWAN, — i! ‘Daily Health = | Service | >————___________ BY DR. MORRIS. FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the America Medical Association and of Hy- ela, the Heatlh Magazine. A person with diabetes should have a scale for weighing food. order to determine his tolerance for sugar, he begins with a diet com- posed’ almost exclusively of green vegetables containing 5 per cent of carbohydrates. : Among these vegetables are let- tuce, spinach, cauliflower, sauer- j kraut, canned’ string beans, celery, asparagus, brussels toma- ‘toes; rhubarb, ra Although these tain but little « etables con- nutriment, the; stomach and thus allay the pangs' of hunger. The person is given from 150° to 200 grams of these vegetables, about five grains of which will be available carbohy- drate or sugar. If there is no sugar in the ex- creted fluids n this diet, he is given a’ diet on the second day : Then the diet is increased by five pans of cargohydrates every other jay until the sugar appears, or until the patient is of sugar équi' for every 1,000 weight in 24 hour: After the first two or three days eiving an amount! ams ody ‘| Vegetables cohtaining 10 per cent of carbohydrates, such as onions,| a turnips, carrots, beets or canned peas may. be added to the diet in order to ‘make up the in- creased amount of’ sugar. Subsequent to that, foods con- tainin 16. per cent, such as) canned lima beans. or Rarenins, or 26 per cent of carbohydrates, such as potatoes, baked . gree! corn, boiled rice or macaroni, may be added to make up the amount, of sugar. eat Fruits have also heen’ classified according to-the amount of su; they. contafn, und many other id foods have been listed for this pur-| Fal pose. It is vossible for a. physician who is iliar with the amount of protein,*fat and carbohydrates that different foods contain to develop a varietd diet for a diabetic patient, and to control accurately the amount of sugar that is taken in, The vegetables should. be cooked! ferably by steaming in a double as in this day all the juices rea iIdom included in_ the! diet of a dial it k PRIVATE As for the wild drinking I recalt théy are among friends. | The very |. have a large bulk and will fill the ce ESDAY; (MAY 24, 1927 © : a PAU! b FRANCE” 9.28% © MEA Serves the woman got out. Fleurus re- mained close by: The gentleman talked volubly-—in German—pointing here and there with a cane and evi- dently describing an incident of con- siderable importance. Fleurus was inquisit: At an op- portune moment ied a few questions. The explanation was gar- bled somewhat—owing to the dif- ference in the tongues -but he learned that his fare was none other than the majér whom he had helped cap- ture in the church in 1918) He had returned, with his bride, to go over the ground and reminisce on his out- + + standing war experience. Drank His Health Fleurus didn’t recognize the Ger- man major. Nor did the German ma- jor recognize hini. But after each , ‘ haa related his story, there was a mutual recognition ...to the keen enjoyment of both. And, after they had returned to Compiegne, the once- captured majér bought oa glass of /¢ wine and his one-time captor drank to tis good health. That’s the story of Jean Fleurus who lives at 16 Rue Hartbise, Com- plegne, France. He has a telephone, too. The number is 6.78. Try and get it. \ Tomorrow: Where Peace Reg Introducing the Governors Columbus, Ohio, May 26.—A)—A ‘ country printshop didn’t yield reve- nue enough to feed Vic Donihey’s big family. He hedsm wake money, so he ought and won the county auditor- ship at New Philadelphia. His en- ‘trance into politics, he says, was on 4 dollars and cents basis, He became state auditor, then governor of Ohio—three times, His iriends say he may be democratic nominee for president—for he's the democratic favorite of a big repub- lican state, 24.—(#)—Ari- had only one governor be- W. P. Hunt, and that unt was minister to Siam under appointment by President Wil- son. Arriving in Globe, a budding min- , ing cat on a burro 46 years ago, \Hunt’s first job was that of a waiter - lin the old Pasco jaurant. His Progress continued cowboy to ' farmer, bankér, legislator, diplomat od and eentnar, Eight times a member of the ter- ritorial legislature, he became an outstanding political figure and is ft serving his sixth term as chief execu- tive. He is a pioneer of the west and a descendant of a prominent colonial family. e ea I. A’ One of these days a hen is fo- ing to refuse to nurse a litter of {wolf cubs, That will be news. — Two~of! the : le: thankful st sons in the world for-their pers recent "\ buggy ride are perhaps Ruth Sny- der and Henry Judd Gray. “Britons Praise U. S. says a headline. our bookkeeping. raries,” ~) « But they don't like A Paris scrubwoman fs, rated as 9 millionaire. She must have cleaned The lamp posts in Paris are to bear numbers corresponding to the houses nearby. How is a man going know where to hang his hat at 4 a.m. after a hard night with a sick friend? % Certainly Jonah could live in the belly of the whale, says a scientist. And there area few million Ameri- cans living if’ apartients who. will verify it. . {which contains five more grams of — carbohydrates, and this is increased] |A woman arrested as a carelesa until 20 grams of carbohydrates are| driver said she believed in the being take: equality of sexes. She got 60 days, < ’ She'll have to think by partido ink up @ better an- . Two men arrested in Detroit de- nied they were robbers, eH to be bootleggers. The police thought - at first they had caught some law- breakers. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) | Old Masters O—$—$ $$ <—<$<——__. “What is the real good?” T asked in mysing preli Knowledge, ssid the 10" y Truth, td the i ' lave a id the malaet Hom ‘Spake my heart full sadly, “The answer is not here,” Then within my bosom, Softly this .1 heard: “Each heart holds the secret; Kindness is the word.” 3 cee Boyle O'Reilly: “What Is etic, becar tains mounts Special breads are on the market made of gluten or diabetic flours, -; There is just one way for i: and loyalty and that is to earn it. The com-| fmpunity owes a debt to its children. If it is. paid, if returns handsome dividends when they grow up. {A few cheap public tennis courts would be a city to engender civic installment on the debt which Bismarck its children—and at the same time a it | lions, there are still outstanding approximately 1,700 millions in original fours cr converted four-and-one- halfs. Doubtless bonds representing hundreds of thousands of dollars, and possibly millions, now’ re- Pose in trunk bottoms or household strong-boxes, their existence all but forgotten by their owners, who patriotieally bought them in 1917, in the. first really great war-time loan drive. i with the amount of carbohydrates and proteins usually mentioned on tl e a, aio in th en sugar appears in the ex- creted ‘fluids the physician realizes that the patient’s ability to assim- ilate has been e: coded. th becomes nece: to fast briefly until the _ (Maes sugar dis: rs, or he A which aids in chosing it to be given near