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ep SID 6 ‘| OPAGE FOUR *“Phe Bismarck Tribune ise ae rete ovettine to ain) An Independent Newspaper ; Let us call a halt to this foolishness. A little of .THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER this stuff goes a long way. In the beginning these | ea (Established 1873) specially designated days and weeks had some sig-| Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, "ificance, but now they have become so common: Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at as to be annoying. { Bismarck as second class mail matter. : pines ae cs George D. Mann .- President and Publisher The Radio Situation Subscription Rates Payable in Advance With the house and the senate apparently farther Daily by carrier, per year ....... -++++-$7.20/ apart than ever in their conception of proper leg- Daily by mail, per year, (in Bism 7.20 islation for the control of radio broadcasting, the Tins kkaté outside Bismarck). . 5,09 National radio coordinating committee has sent % ; Daily by mail, outside of North ; 6.00 long appeal to the members of both houses of con- Member Audit Bureau of Circulation gress urging the enactment of some kind of an Mimber at Tha Ault Pies emergency | radio control bill, prohibiting the issu- , BS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to &nce of station licenses and turning the actual con- the use for republication of al! news dispatches trol of the ether over to a federal radio commission credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- or the department of commerce, pending a thor- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin survey of ' my tine | published herein. All rights of republication of all CUBR Survey of the needs of the radio broadeasting other matter herein are also reserved. Be Daily by mail, per year, Without taking up the cudgels for any of the ; GT OUAR PANE COMPANY various bills that have heen advocated for the con- CHICAGO DETROIT trol of what has now become more than a mere } Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg. purveyor of amusement, it is yet possible to join a PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH with the national radio coordinating committee in NEW YORK - > -_—Fifth Ave. Bldg. ackthg congress to do something to relieve a really os (Official City, State and County Newspaper) chaotic condition in the air. Stations have jumped | a crisis i —— their waves and increased their power, with the re- | : Traffic Lights sult that in many areas proper reception is impos- The regulation of traffic by means of colored |sible due to heterodyne whistles created by two lights’ seems to be very practical, having been | stations using wavelengths of almost the same value. | proven so by numerous tests under very severe con- This condition is not only very bad just from | ditions. Yet it is not at all certain that the best the standpoint of the listener, but it is even more P method of operation has been achieved. In fact,/deadly to the broadcaster. The life of broadcast- after observation of various systems in force iting is, and is bound to be, the advertising fees that would seem that the synchronized method, where {can be charged for the buying appeal to the ul * all lights are turned-off and on together, where all} mate consumer. Of what value is advertisi traffic either goes or stops together, is not the | “space” in a radio station if that station cannot be i * most effieient scheme. Too much time is wasted | listened to in comfort because of a whistle that de- ' ? in stops by following this idea. stroys the reception? , | q What seems to be a much better plan is what! Under proper regulation it is possible to iron g : is called the “ripple” system which enables a car|out many of these difficulti The department of | going 25 miles an hour to travel indefinitely and | commerce had things in fair order for the time it | ! never be held up by a red light. This is accom-| was regulating broadcasting and what is needed is | plished by alternate one-way streets and so regu-|some kind of immediate emergency regulation that | é : lating the lights each way that as a car proceeds | will restore order pending a review of the whole | , at 25 miles an hour on the green light the next! situation and adequate plans for the future of a block is automatically given the green signal as he | great public service, } apprcaches the crossing. | { | q i ‘Thus a person could start off on a green light Increase the Airways : and go a block.” As he reaches the next corner the| Jt is the hope of the department of commerce | a light flashes green and he proceeds. When, he! that another 6,000 miles may be added during the | q j Teaches the next corner the light flashes green and! next fiseal year to the present 5,000 to 7,000 miles q he goes on—and so on across the city. The light=/ of airways now under operation in the country, ac- { are arranged so that they are always aiding traffic cording to the annual report just prepared. Accord- | traffic regulation. private enterprises,and there were 2,665 miles oper- ated by the postoffice department. Probbaly the most important step in the develop- | Our Lost Children In an editorial in the April issue of “Children, the Magazine For Parents,” Mrs. John D. Sher- ‘Smhan, president of the general federation of wom- en’s clubs, says, “Every day some of us lose our “children beyond recall. We had the opportunity ,, to be their friend and guide and refuge and first! said in every time of trouble, but we didn’t see it mail. By this means_a very large. postal loss will be turned into..a_postal profit and. the postoffice viding its own transportation. 2a warning to let broken glass alone; we salved the|!mportant centers of population will be intercon- burn with reproof as well as an ointment, but have, ected by a vast network of. air routes, over which Ewe been as quick to salve hurt feelings, or tie up planes and airships will- transport: mails, express j,mission meanings with anything in life that would|®"d Passengers with a speed and, safety that will Simake them clear? Having put away childish be surprising to those who consider air travel today as unsafe and unreliable. things, have we forgotten how much they meant Fito us in childhood days, while we pursue other ob- In order to encourage expansion of the air trans- pects which may some day seem as worthless? , | Port, however, it will be necessary for the govern- “It is not enough to be parents; we must be| ment to actually, if not literally, “subsidize aero- i @friends, too. It is at least as important for us to, nautics by means of air mail contracts and other establish friendly relations with our children as it| methods which may legitimately’ he ‘used without ‘ is for our country to maintain friendly relations| setting aside an actual subsidy fund.. The develop- “with any foreign power. .Friendship must be based | ment of aviation is an important one, intimately Gon understanding and a sufficient sense of equality | bound up with industrial progress and with national | ' of réspect if not of acquiescence. When the parent |change the fate of men and nations as did the | is interested and concerned in whatever the child railroad, or the steamship. | « regards seriously, there is ground for hope that the} | Schild may be patient with what doubtless seem to! Throughout the length and breadth of the United _,him strange adult aberrations.” States a wave of dissatisfaction with’ the archaic Little can be added to such a concise arraignment | methods of school instruction now in use is discern- - of a present-day evil—a complete lack of under- | ible. The demand is being made that @ more up- standing between parents and children—except to | to-date and unified system of education be evolved gatress the tragedy of the situation. It is really | and put into effect. | | igh time that parents and children found each; ‘There is no doubt that constructive, creative gother. thinking for all normally constituted children and With that an aim, much can be done. All youth is the challenge to our forward looking vements begin with a foundation. If every par-/ teachers and educators. It is a monumental task ent will resolve to create a new atmosphere in his | confronting educational experts, this unifying of a lation with his children an enormous and bene-| whole system of instruction, yet, it is a step that icial change can be! effected. must come in the swift development of our civiliza- tion, which demands so much of constructive “ United States Autos thought and trained intelligence. More than 22,000,000 motor vehicles were reg- x wed in the United States in 1926, according to] Major Seagrave, who recently drove an automo- ports received from state registration agencies | bile over 200 miles an hour, says that in a few y the bureau of public roads of the United States | years the average highway pace will be 150 miles partment of agriculture, This means that one/ an hour. Perhaps it will, but who cares? All the person out of every five men, women and children | pedestrians will be killed off by that time. this country theoretically owns an automobile. -Of the total, 19,237,171 were passenger automobiles ind 2,764,222 were motor trucks and road tractors. f Some idea of the magnitude: of the registration Editorial Comment iness itself may be gained from the total re- ceipts from the licenses for these cars, a total of “Custer’s Last Stand” 282,352 in 1926, as compared with $260,619,- (St. Paul Dispatch) 2621 in 1925, The traditional account of “Custer’s Last Stand,” = It is easy to see that automobile experts are | when General George A. Custer and his 260 follow- ly correct when they say that the United jers, as history tells us, were overwhelmed by num- oo. nowhere near the saturation point for|bers and massacred by Indians in the battle of the sane as yet. Perhaps when there are three | Little Big Horn in 1876, is shattered, if a new ver- _asteaercemeg TERME to carry every five persons in popula- | sion, contained in an article in Hearst’s Internation- on there may be some justification for the satura- bugaboo. ‘Cosmopolitan for June, is authentic. | The article is by Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, | of the Blackfeet Blood tribe, who. says he recently The New Calendar learned from Indian survivors of the battle that ‘There is talk of devising a new calendar. No.| Custer was not killed by the Indians, but committed with 18 months and an extra day every so/j suicide, because of fear of torture by the attackers | but a calendar in which there will be no days | when he found he was the lone white survivor, . The | nor months of the year, a calendar in|manner of his death has been kept secret by the | designations will prevail. Indians, he says, because they feared for their own instance, it may not be an impossibility fifty | peace in raising a discussi: read that on National Child Health| - Pakadoshen, Sitting Bull's chief scout and aid, is| Week, such and such a; quoted as saying that Custer’s former friendship few more special deys| with Sitting Bull caused the latter to order Custer’s we shall have enough to go around |life spared, but that Custer did not know this, and e ‘we'may ‘do away with|turned his own gun upon himself, believing that mundang designations as Monday, Tuesday,| otherwise he would be tortured to death. ‘ It is hard to believe that a man whose bravery had been proved as often as had General Custer’s f IN NEW YORK | o—________________e New York, May 25.—Straw hats with bright bands rounds wheezing their topical tunes : . . coasters coasting... . ‘ger and better breathless rides . colors and blaring voices . flirting maids and flirting r : enreless crowds, shiv- vering just’ a’ bit in the sea damp- n “If she answers 4 and not “bucking it.” Thus the ripple system of |ing to the report on January 1, 1926, there were | Secimaes even though the truth 4 contrel would seem to be the next logical step in |3¢9 mi i esi [eves orete Saal 369 miles of air transport services in operation by j draw the fangs out of ‘the prosecu- | tion,” Bob whispered to Faith, who was weeping silently, heart-brokenly. love with Mr. Cluny, question| Marlboro County and tried to per- suade me to elope with him. fused, and he warried the marriage license about with him. He was al- ways showing it to me and urging me to marry him. with ‘him, but I was afraid of him, too, because sometimes he was cruei and harsh with me. he went with other-girls—” “Did you go witl Churchill prompte: ent pitilessness. “Yes, sir, I went with Mr. William Warren and Mr. Chester H: I was infatuated That's Conynge Hook just now. What, you never heard of Conynge Iso knew. that | Hook? Well it’s our old friend Coney | d, but its real name was given atch colonists and the transition .. ro ‘ a 4 but.1 was ver: ment of true commercial aviation in this country, | began in a:low voice. jis the letting of contracts for the carrying of air | of myself, afraid of what I would do if I didnot marry him, or someone else who was kid and good.” hat, were: you afraid of doing, ?” Churchill probed other men, too?” by Dut ‘her with ‘appar-| from Conynge to Coney can be under | stood without. explanation. The Indians liked it as a play- | ground, too, and called it Narrioch. later with —with Mr. Robert Hatha-|The Dutch colonists presented it to ” Cherry confessed, the red of; the town .of Gravesend and, even- | tually, Brooklyn got it. f A roe | Cherry department will..berelieved of.the.necessity of pro- | thetically, fraid I would marry Chri Cherry's hands knotted in her lap as if she were again feeling; that old fear which had har % as an opportunity. We tied up the cut finger with| The time is coming, although too slowly, when aut | ing her white chéeks. ju become engaged to any men, Cherry?” i “No, sir, not formally Cherry. answered, her da flicking’ a glance toward Bob Hatha- “What I mean-is, there nothing really definite. way had told me several times dur- ™ ing the week of September 19 to 26) #5 nd he took it for! re months Ae Coney has a regular list of Sunday Now, Cherry, will you tell jcallers, winter or summer. ‘ of your relationship wit Churchill took his seat, as made up his mind to allow hi to tell her story undisturbed. “I met Mr. Wiley a year ago this iey waters once a k whatever the temperature. e girls and boys who have ed it upon a hot day and, ars have sped and they ave grown older, return to the play- |ground of their youth as to a shrine, the frantic Sunday crowds rying in the smells, noises and hectic atmosphere. on the Marlboro road,|‘that he loved m Mr. Wiley immediately began to pi a great deal of attention to me, con ing to the house and taking me for drives in his car and to dances and One evening my father asked him if he were the same Mr. Wiley who had been connection with the suicide of Helen| ¢ who had had an illegiti- pivay testify that he was engaged to you and thet you broke the engage- ment? Were these statements true?” “In a way,” Cherry answered, her es dropping to her twisting hands. had told Mr. Hathaway it was during the week of September 19 to 26—but we had not discussed getting married. September 26, the night “after I—I was brought back from my sister and Mr. Hathaway, he told my father that he and I im then in my fath- presence that I would not marry “Why, Cherry i “Because I knew that he did not ne, that he loved i Cherry answered simply ‘In the sudden absolute stillness of, the courtroom, Faith broke into ter. tiblé, uncontrollable weeping. TOMORROW: sion of her elopement to I ,| Albert Ettleson, (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Tite.) Strangely enough, there jes, just behind all this noise and tinsel a quiet, home town, from which thou- i|#ands commute to New York daily. Home life ts not generally associate ; with Coney, yet away from its board- walk is a ‘pleasant little town, the residents of which figure seldom in the boardwalk life, In many of the Coney homes there .. im | Bailey, wh , 80 that each may speak his mind frankly, sure that |defense. It is not an interesting experiment, but | mate heb: $his opinions will be received with a certain amoun:!an embryo economic force that will do as much to, Was, and my father ordered him out j of the house und forbade me to see “When was this, Cherry?” Church- | iL interrupted. “Tt was last June. had committed had begun to go wit ” Cherry answered daughters to keep away from the roistering. of Sunday when half of New York seems to be ing itself upon the Coney sands, reds of the good folk of the are preparing “And did you obey. your father?” “Go right on with Churchill asked. ye II did not obey my father, confessed, her beautiful head dropping for a shamed moment. Jim his season the pride of Coney is ‘aywew hotel where Gov, Smith will have’a suite of honor for the sum- For all the world goes to Coney. istinguished visitors to Amer- Authors, artists, opera By Williams he took out a marriage OUT OUR WAY | MAD-NOT A BIT OF \T—BuT LooK | HOW HES STRETCHIN HIMSELF. STRETCH LIKE THAT? “NO SIR-T STOOD CTHERE JUST NATURAL: HALF AN INCH: TALLER THAN. PA.) Here's PAS MARK AND. HERES HIS, ME RIGHT IN THE EME ANOTELt ME YOU'RE NOT JUST A TEENY WEENY Bit HUFFED— NoT EVEN A TEENY ANEENY WE! t, Dental Week, Save-|gardless of the truth of Chief Buffalo Child’s story, y Day—these are just a few of| we'ptefer ‘to think of Custer as dying by the bullets Editor's Note: This is the 43d chapter in the story of an ex- doughboy who is _ revisiting France as a correspondent for The Tribune, | | CHAPTER XLII : “La Guerre Fini”— : Regardless of position, whether it was “au front” or far back in the |S. 0. S.. those words were exhilarat- ng, and it makes no difference who | does the talking now. “La Guerre Fini”- And the war was finished at) Rethondes, which is about 7.7 kilo- | jmeters from Compiegne; finished | met the arechal Foch” met ntiares Allemands” in a it” parked on a sidetrack in the forest. On Nov. 11,1918, the location was just a spot.in the woods “Le —today it is hallowed ground, Many Legionnaires will go there this Sep- lel Hundreds Go There Compiegne .is only about an hour's run out to Paris. Catch a train out of the Gare du Nord at 8 o'clock in the morning and you're at Com- piegne shortly after 8 o'clock. And 7.7 kilometers is just a nice hike. The -French do it every day; hun- dreds,of them. Along a well-paved road; through the trees. Except for the chatter of the birds there is a respectful silence on ‘the part of nature. There's a statue . . . ‘WEDNESDA k PRIVATE, t FRANCE back, a wounded. eagle . . . marble slabs mark the position of the car of Marshal Foch and of the German supptiants for peace. jetween the two slabs is a flat monument. The inscription on it reads! “Tei Le 11 Novembre 1918 Succombe Le Criminal Orgueil de Vempire. Allemand Vaineu par les Peuples Libres av'll Pretendant sservoir” In Other Words: “Here, on the 11th of November 1918, died the criminal orgy and as- pirations. of the German empire, con- ' quered by those who love liberty.’ hy is the place where the papers were signed. And the tidings were Joyfully received by every soldier, Germans included. And there's a j thrill for any soldier, regardless of his affiliations, to stand on the spot where .a few scratches of pens brought a finish to a war of grief and regrets. It's ‘fhe spot—in the quiet of the woods broken only by the cheeping 1 of birds--that will brine solemn thoughts to those of the Second A. |E. F. who pass that way in Septem- ber TOMORROW: In Belgium. singers, movie stars—the whole of Europe seems to have heard of it. Many a ship news reporter has been startled when, in the midst of an interview with some internationally known intellectual, his questions are halted suddenly. by the request of,|, foacat the way, where. is Coney one GILBERT SWAN. CO | Daily Health | | ‘Service Editor's Note: This is the sec- ond of a series of four health talks on diabetes, ; BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Eéitor Journal of the American} Medical Association and of Hygela, the Health Magazine The chief symptom by which a physician determi: the presence of diabetes ‘is’ the appearance of sugar in measurable amounts in the fluids excreted from the bod; The exact cause of diabetes than the disturbance of the pan- creas resulting in degeneration of lank Scotti through the cotton acres of the Rob- Introducing the Governors ‘| Idaho, May 25.—/™)—Desire jow the “why. and wherefore” 2 ’ along.” He has successfully been a grain, hardware and implement merchant bank president. After politics go round,” so he moved into the governor's office by one of the Beet pluralities ever given an Idaho executive. “Inveterate curiosity makes for thoroughness of thought and action,” says Governor Bladridge, “but” it leads to a lot of work.” Rgleig! N. Cy, May 25.—(>)— Dreams of a day when he would run bank and own a railro: inter- spersed gee and “haws” of ao h youth piloting a mule , the islands of Langerhans, is not known. It has been found, however, that overeating and lack of exercise may be prominent points in the his- eson county McLean: Two score yei later, Angus Wil- ton McLean, 57, looks back upon the day when both dreams came true. tory of the individual concerned. The sugars come largely from starch and other foods, The person does not manufacture more sugar than usual, but cannot use properly that which he manufactures. The excess of sugar -that accumulates is then oured out of the body, through the luids. . . Sometimes a severe infection may be the insult to the body that results in degeneration of the pancreas and iabetes. Sometimes tumor of the pancreas or a stone in the tube which carries the external secretion of that gland: into the intestines. will cau: a degeneration of the gland that sults in diabetes, The disease ap. parently runs in families because of some peculiarity of body structure that is inherited. Before the discovery of insulin it | was customary to treat diabetes largely by lowering the amount of tics early. He irded polls with Thy winds, thy wide gra: Thy mists, that roll and. ri Thy woods,’ this autumn day, that And the state of North Carolina looks upon its first millionaire gov- ernor. Governor McLean dipped into poli- rifle in the famous “Red Shirt” days of the late nine! : Later he went to Washington with the Wilson ad- ministration as director. of the war finance board and then assistant ‘secretary of the ‘treagur. | jee are his, favorite diversion: | Old Masters -———_______. Riding, hiking and big game hunt- © world, I cannot hold thee close enough! skies! ] ache and sag food, and particularly the amount of! And. all but ery with color! That sugar taken in. It is still customary to rest the diseased organ in this manner, so that dietary changes are made even when insulin is used. Insulin makes it possible to take part of the burden off the pancreas and to permit the patient a somewhat more varied diet. Most of the quacks who sell patent remedies of one kind or another for the treatment of diabetes get their testimonials from persons with mild cases who are apparently helped by any medicine, provided they.: also modify their diet. The directions idccompanying the rem: usually imple diet, and the person bly feel better if he fol- gaunt crag To crush! To lift the lean of that black bluft World, world, T cannot get thee close enoyelt! Long have I known a glory in it all But never knew I this. Here such a passion is As streteheth me apart. Lord, I do fear Thou’st. made the world too beauti- ful this year. My soul is all but out of me—let No burning leaf; prith wer pj ea! prithee, let no —Edna St. Vincent Millay: “God’s lows the diet, whether he takes the| world.” medicine or not, The competent physician changes the amount of food that the person may take according to the amount. of ,sugar. that -he * excret Thus it~ is mecessary.. to make repeated examihations of both the blood and the. excreted fluid to determine to what’ éxtent the by en is being utilized properly by the body. : Patients who have beer, sick for many years with diabet learn to’ perfc In tomorrow's heal Fishbein will discuss for patients suffering — iy of note school may i Dear Principals, Please excuse: gtr * Mini sence yesterday, as I gave her mission to go to the. murder tri 2 We can stand for almost ides: from the headline writers but thii that “Craek China Troops” is a little too much, pent Now that bootleggers must pay their income taxes, large collections are seperted: many of the law-abid-| rs. ing boot ishing to ki e of the federal rovern: Sean Bi: gett ass Amerene lee Opera, Pewity soon this may erican & an Am institution, “Wha ale pan TO YOUR YEARS ageton. Danville, Ill.” foun burdened with a backache” took Fe 5 ee diuretic, ys. “After n I felt. better, could work a. Z with more ease, jeep Me prerrntare are using and recomm e ing Foley Pills, diuretic, for fault kid .. In.conatant Bey Satisfaction guaranteed.—