Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘PATE FOUR ‘The z An Independent Newspaper =THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER f (Established 1873) Published Ad the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at marck as second class mail matter. 5 rge D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ........ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismar Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) - 5.00 Daily ea outside of North Dakota + 6.00 ember Audit Bureau of Circulation | ‘eaetione. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to| the use for republication of all news dispatches | credited to it or not otherwise credited in this per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin Published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives / G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CHICAGO DETROIT | Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH | NEW YORK - - - ifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | Another Flight | Little more than two weeks ago, a lone flyer! i his way across the Atlantic, to receive the rld’s acclaim. Saturday morning two others} Started on this trip across the zone of mystery and, landed late Sunday night at a little.town near Ber-| din. “The lone flyer was Charles A. Lindbergh. The| fiwo men who winged their way this week into the| eyes of the world were Clarence Chamberlin and} Tharles Levine. These latest conquerors of the Atlantic deserve | Bhe world’s praise. They, too, were risking thei lives in this trip. They, too, had to fight the mists, the dangers of that great, uncharted aerial way. _ But there is a question whether Chamberlin and Levine will receive praise in as full a measure as Lindbergh, although their achievement is, without ‘doubt, outstanding. =, There is not the romance in these men’s flight ‘That there was in Lindbergh’s. The Minnesota youth started off alone, started off to make a trip Rever accomplished by anyone. Despite the fact that there was just us much danger, just as much ‘Uncertainty in Chamberlin’s hop, the pioneering apirit was absent. ™ It is for this that Lindbergh should continue to @eceive the highest honors which can be bestowed ‘en’ him. He was a pioneer. Chamberlin and his gompanion were brave men, but they were not trail- Blazers. They, too, deserve honor—but the world hould not forget Lindbergh in acclaiming thes2 ‘new heroes. This Summer and the Slope = Encouraging reports are those received by the Bank of North Dakota from its field agents. While ithe eastern part of the state is less optimistic than it was last year, with “too much rain” the com- Plaint, the Missouri Slope country reports rapid Progress in the growth of crops. = Small grains are favored this year. The. abun- it moisture of the last month has had a stimu- iting effect on them and with a normal amount ef rainfall the rest of this summer, they should ‘grow rapidly and ripen into a bumper crop. The wheat acreage is showing a slight decrease in the ‘gentral Slope country, but there is a correspond- ape increase in flax and feed crops—things which fre of great value, as last fall’s disastrous crop demonstrated. * The southwest Slope country, especially, is op- Simistic. Seeding of flax and corn is progressing and other crops are doing markedly well. ‘ The important thing about these reports to the Bank of North Dakota is this: they all indicate a Plenitude of pasture and feed, with a correspond- ing improvement in the condition of livestock. This Means, if the rest cf the summer is normal, a de- cided increase in the dairy and meat output of this State. « The rains of May have scattered their blessing Broadcast, and they have also aided in turning the farmer toward a thing which is steadily growing $n: importance in this state. That is diversified darming. Burleigh, Morton and other Missouri Blope counties have made, great progress in this direction. This summer may bring even greater @dvancement, not only to this territory, but to the gntire state. 2 Py To Industry’s Defense = One must applaud with enthusiastic vigor the Purport of the reply of John E. Edgerton of Leb- and ministers below the Mason and Dixon line, ‘Urging industrial leaders to build up that section’s ‘wages, shorter“hours, labor representation and the. Absorption of the mill village by, the larger com- Thunity.” « Mr. Edgerton, who is president and general man- r of large mills, has been president of the Ten- Bessee Manufacturers’ association for twelve years ‘nd president since 1921 of the National Associa- dion of Manufacturers, sounds the proper note when he says that “as a matter of fact American indus- today is about the only thing in America that looked upon. with envy by the rest of the world. fit-has attained a higher degree of success than any our professions or non-industrial pursuits, o- of our other institutions. ‘Yet it is the object of more attack, and more fforts are being made fo reform it than are made . any other direction. If the same degree of re 3s in the reformation of our political, re- ved moral and educational lives had been made has been made in our industrial life, America have very much less to worry about. But ists are more to blame than anybody else or the universal disposition of others to reform em. They invite invasion from the putside by weir very indifference toward the process of or- ey : Industry, without a samt urierertet by reason efficiency, improved Bismarck Tribune! 20 | anon, Tenn., to the appeal of forty-one bishops | dpdustry, “upon goodwill and cooperation, higher | Hite! iz Hitch-hiking, already under fire by the automo- bile clubs cf the country, have sustained another hit in the act of the United States army in decid- ing to issue only the actual railroad tickets to the thousands of youths who will be given transporta- tion to the Citizens’ Military Training Camps this summer. Heretofore the training camp candidates have been permitted to collect their fare in cash | at the rate of five cents a mile for the trip tu | camp and return. i By hitch-hiking, or the use cf their own cars,| | motorcycles, or bicycles, many saved the railroad | | allowance and fattened their supply of spending | money for ice cream, extra movies and other at- | The chief reason assigned by the army} | officials for the substitution of tickets for the casnj| allowance was that the change permits the gov-{ ernment to take advantage of excursion rates, thus | | saving considerable money that will be diverted to | | increasing the camp facilities to accommodate a greater number of applicants than originally | planned. | As a measure of governmental economy it is in| a class by itself, for it kills two birds with one | stone in discouraging the hitch-hikers who have become such a nuisance along the highways. At} every corner you meet them, jerking their thumbs | in the direction they want to go, eager to trave!—! at the expense of someone else. | | The movement gaining momentum against hitch- hiking is based primarily in the realization of the | autoist that he takes a great chance in giving rides | at all. The laws of the various states hold the} driver and the owner of the car responsible finan- | cially for anyone who is injured in the car, Thus | a hitch-hiker, who might be injured while being, given a ride, can sue and recover damages from | the driver who befriended him. It is too risky 9 business and every means should be taken to dis-| courage the hitch-hiking jfad. Coa | eS ay ae ¢ The’ Rise of Pafestine For a number of years rich American Jews have been vitally interested in Palestine and in the con- struction there of a riew nation to be a home for the Jewish race. Men like Nathan Straus have poured money and effort into the preject, and now | claim that they have made a start toward some- | thing really worth while. The problem of unemployment in Palestine will soon be remedied, it is understood, by the British administraticn, through the employment of a large | number of men on the construction of the Haifa harbor and also through the employment of many workers by P. Rutenberg in his great irrigat‘on and power projects. Mr. Straus, for instance, has planned a health and welfare center in Jerusalem for the. people re-| ‘ gardless of race or creed and he has expanded his P chain of milk stations. All through the Holy Land rebuilding is going on. The friction between the Jews and the Arabs is constantly decreasing as both begin to realize that they cannot get along without one another. What is needed for the building of a new nation in Palestine is more coordination of effort on the spot and the more liberal support by Jews the world over. After all it isetheir opportunity to establish their own naticnal home, for which they have hungered for centuries, and if they do not seize that chance, it will be their own fault. Curing Green Doctors A prominent surgeon has urged that the qualifi- cations for surgeons be raised, saying that there is too much evidence of poor surgical work being done by untrained, incompetent men. While agreeing with the purpose of this doctor’s remarks, it is to be wondered how much higher the qualifications can be raised. To enter medical school a man must now have at least three years of pre-medical college work. He spends four to six years in medical school, and two years interneship. He is lucky if he can hang out his shingle before | he is thirty. If he becomes a specialist, add five years more. The trouble seems to be that the science of sur- | gery has broadened so much that no human being can master the subject much before he is forty years of age. No profession has a longer appren- ticeship, and if the curing proeess for green doctors is to be further lengthened, young men considering ithe study of medicine must cither be independently wealthy at birth, must seck a personal endowment, or must marry money. | Editorial Comment | | High Standards in the Ministry | (Chicago Tribune) The National Council of the Congregational Churches has authorized a committee of seven of | its members to study means of establishing and maintaining in the ministry of the crurch the high- est ministerial standards. The Rev. E. E. Robin | son of Massachusetts said that in his part of the country there were several scandalous cxamples of unfitness in the pulpit from which the church should be protected. : There is hardly another personnel to which the individual character and conduct-is of such impor- tance as it is to the ministry of the churches. There are cthers of trust and responsibility, but occasional disclosures of unfitness, turpitude, mis- conduct, ete., cannot affect the whole body so in- juriously as is the case with black sheep in minis- terial ranks, Clergymen are ordained to an exemplary life. It is the pride of their calling that they are cx- pect to come most nearly to the discipline they indorse’ and the teachings they expound. The ex- ample of their habit of life must be consistent. with the. ideals of their faith. The black sheep are nov many in any ministry. A picaresque novel of the life of a lecherous rascal in the pulpit is not an in- terpretation of clerical life in America, It is merely what it is, the life of a ra: whose adventures may be considered the moré interesting for their background of evangelistic hypocrisy. The one to which refetence is msde is not so interesting as i a re ‘ed for the dozenth time. the record of the Lost Dauphin and the Duke of Bilgewater for the one sufficient reason that the author was not Mark,Twain and the book was not | Huckleberry Finn. But if this picaresque novel has made the ministers more sensitive to possible It would be-difficult for any church authority to too scrupulous care the gate by which for its cloth enter to obtaiit it and ordi- OREM CSS a RIES A | Another Ascension ° They were married on Sunday in} artha Lane had sent starched, shin- ‘ace little girls and a leggy little] the church where ®aith had taught a Sunday School class until her mother’s health had become so uncertain that her services were re- quired at home; the church where Jim Lane still paid pew rent and tithes, although he seldom attended services. ; Oddly enough, Faith wanted none of her family with her when she and Bob’ exchanged their vows. Possibly | it was becauseshe wanted him utter- ly to herself then, did not want to share that sacred’ moment even with the family. Bob didnot have his Sunday din- ner, with the Lane family that day. He ‘was at the new house, artanging the stock of groceries that he had bought; fixing the ice box drain, test- ‘ing.the cocks on the new gas stove, putting .a few electric light fixtures in the dining room to replace those the ‘decorators had broken. He. and Faith were to go to the new house /B0t on a new suit and a flower after they were married, or rather, | button-hole! ad soon afterwards as they could manage, for there would have to be a short session at least with the fam ily. Their only honeymoon would be}, three days alone in the new hom alone with him, three precious da stolen from the family, Faith whis-| —— ered to herself, as she stood before) TOMORROW: A brid er old-faghioned dresser, getting ready for hér wedding. { “Can I help you, darling?” Cherry; came languidly into the room, her! peacock-blue chiffon negligce flutter- ing about her tiny body. | dress, ing the wedding dress. cherry stood back. tears i eyes, ranged dark hair. that fell. three k & “Bob's here, Faith!” Jo Banging on the door. nswered. Then, “Cherry, aaind leaving me alope is last minute? I—I-®h, York, before his murder on the day | lows: that was to have been their wedding! Jamestown; day, had been returned to her, re-| Rev. A leased by the district attorney. The| ler, Alfr magnificent trousseau which Ralph| Jamestown; Rev. Safut “Simmer “I won't need much of a trous- the parsonage of the little church on’ seau, really,” Faith answered cheer- Myrtle Street, the church to which| fully. “I never wanted a big church | wedding, with all the expense and | bother. Will you hand me my dress j out of the closet, dear? It is a pretty isn't it, even if I did make 2” she asked wistfully. 's lovely and it suits you,” Cher- ry told her, throwing her arms about her sister, regardless of the danger mash all the pleats out of Faith laughed, but she held her sister close as sbe kissed her on eyes and checks and bright, curly hair. er and watched Faith slip her wedding dress over her carefully ar- Tt was smart in its simplicity, an afternoon frock ot golden-brown satin-faced crepe, with tong, snugly fitting sleeves, a long, | bloused bodice, a knife-pleated skirt inches below shrilled, “He's got a jouquet of flowers for you and he's Ss “Pl be there in a minute,” Faith | ,, would for just T want ‘to pray!” she burst into tears, turn- s ing sharply away from her sister, prayer. rrr { CORPORATIONS | t ’ Articles of incorporation for non- Cherry's trunks, which had been profit organjzations have been filed sent with Ralph, Cluny’s to New/with the secretary of state as fol- Lutheran Charity Association, Joseph Johnson, W. A. Keller, Rev. Otto Kel- ed Johnson and F, J. Koehn, Rev. H. A. Michelke and her —<—__>_ + | Daily Health | Service | —___ 2 BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine Medicine has progressed amazingly in the past 25 years. That form of systematic organization which is dis- tinctly American has brought the benefits of medical science to the American community. Medical knowl- edge has increased so tremendously that specialization is required in many fields since few men are cap- abla of comprehending or putting into application all the intricacies and refinements of diagnosis and treatment The past 25 years have seen covered the causes of syphilis, sl ing sickness of the African type, whooninr cough, infectious jaundice, scarlet fever and nossiblv ‘measles. Discovery of cause in most instances means a method of control. The constituents of the human body have. been analyzed. down to their fundamental substances: The modern hospital is, built about«the patholoric laboratory as its center. Pharmacology today is studied by medical schools to throw light on the fun ental phenomena of life, to permit the study of discase by jucing artificial disease, and to furnish more efficient tools for the treatment of disease, In 1915 man's expeetancy of life was 35 years. Inthe: period of 100 years this. expect as increased ‘by 20 years, so that a child born to- day may reasonably exvect to reach the age of 55. The life expectancy after reaching the age of 50 one hun- dred years ago was for 21 additional years, whereas today the life exnec- tancy after reaching 50 ts for 21 2410 years. If additional life expectancy is to be accomplished ,after middle age it will have to come by overcom- ing the hazards of early heart dis- ease, high blood pressur® and other degenerative diseases that have been mentioned. Such control must come through the riodie physical g Cluny had bought her was being| William Kapp, Medina; Rev... J.|ination, physlealiigxare worn by, the wife of another man, a] Mithun and A. Struxness, Woodworth. - man with whom she had lived but} Whiting Telephone’ company, |@ one disastrous night. Scranton, to operate 10 miles of tele- | | BARBS - “I wish you could have worn my|pone line; William Wegner, Herman trousseau, honey,” Cherry comment-| Miller and 12 others. . ° “But of too small for you.”. M. Ludowese and N. “But | Normant Investment company, Wil- course every single garment is miles) liston, $25,000: A. Michelich, Isabel B, Ludowese. IT’S NOT FAIR, CHARLEY Lindbergh will come straight to Washington on his: xeturn, It doesn’t OUT OUR WAY F Tallon FAamus | Yeas 29 5 a od 5 GOOD SUFFERIN Gosh! Hi TH CROWD IN~ HE GOES'N GuEes A MIQDLE AGED MAN A NINNY,BODDLE~NOW WE CANT GiT 1 AWAY FROM HIM~ i i H I SUCH DUMBNIES! . JiSS}/Tay NA WNEN WERE GONNA LET] MAME. |] AN I-— WELL, US LOOK |couLoN We PuT c—) ANELL staat ee SoME SWEET TEA Int Gort . SOMI : On HIS NOSE 7 Lid Kd WEDNESDAY, JUNES/1027: ropped in an arch. His aksleton Bands clutched the-throat of his dead adversary. Even with his death wound he had-killed. The b were not found until two ycars afttr the tragedy... . 2 Editor's Note: This is Chap- ter 55 in a series of articles writ- ten by a former doughboy who 1s revisiting France as a corre: spondent for, The Tribune. CHAPTER LV — | dules Pechenard is the uniformed | sen grace, one may hear many) urd on the foof of the Arc de | ‘or ‘riomphe. He takes up’ the tickets | McCabe, investigator for the] sold below for two francs each. | He. blew the bugle signaling the charge in 1914 of the French on Ros- signol. Three thousand were killed in that battle. Jules’ left hand and .eft arm were shattered. But he has four medals. He wears two one day and then alternates the following day with he others. x TOMORR Z Entertainment, | Bills Allowed By - | Graves Registration Service, tells of iit ery of two, dried and bony in a_weird ‘attitude in the of Bouresches Woods, nea: Vaux and Chgteau Thierry. 5 One was a’ former U. S. Marin: who had been bayonetted by a Ger- man, The other was the German. The Marine had coll:e#cd on th: German’s ~un and against a tree ir such a manner that he remained seem just fair to leave New York out of it like that. The same thing holds for Detroit, St. Louis, San 2 tho , p Diego, Little Falis, Peoris, South Commission | Bend,” Fort, Worth’ and the ‘Thou- ! City ss ! sand Islands. . . . Lindbergh will need more than a compass in Wa ington, though. ‘They say the cro: currents of air there are-xery devai ating. Washington is. pla ning entertainment for the ‘young Why not call a special session of Congress? . . . There ought to be at least one good picture in the fact that Lindbergh will be Cool- idge’s guest, but we fear the pho- tographers never will ~et it. That would be a pictuze of Lindbergh in the President's pajamas. Standard Oil Co., gi A.C. MeCling & C for libraty . Bismarck Tribui tion hosp’ Odex Pub. library ... Democrat Ptg. for library Gaylord, Bros. library. Kardex C brary ... Wachter Trai We saw a picture the. other day of the 15,000,000th Ford. There must be some mist e counted 15,201,636 of them, last Sunday, © supplies, for A girl won a national orato contest. It's nice to know the ladies are learning to talk a little, Teo many boys are training for the white collar job- a pro-| ing garbage to do fessor. Well, somebody has. Rollin Welch, that kind of menial labor. ners... P 6. PM ~ Police Heed Had roll. 264.50 The president going to South Da-| Jarrell Hdw. Co., supplies. 15.65, ‘|kota for his vacation gught to ec! Blue & White Cab Co., taxis. 17.10 some song writer an inspiration Square Deal Store, groceries. 10.00 about “the White House in the Black Mrs. C. T.-Kavanaugh, labor. 6.50 Hills.” Finney’s drug store, supplies 46.00 3 4 Bismarck Capital, advertising — 1.80 You'll know it’s summer some eve-| City Kuditor! jum, pay roll...: 72.00 ning when you come home to the/F. A. OWeli Pub. Co., books.. 5.58 aroma of boiling torhato catsup. Waterworks Dept., water for. eS library ..... 640 Peaches Browning bobs up again, Mrs. Marth Wetmore, asking for counsel fees. We don't Dave Smith, labor.. know about the fecs, but she certain-] Friedman's, books |. ly needs the counsel. L. S. Fredericks, se dog catcher TIN wEW Yor’ H.'J. Bonny, mi IN EW. YORK | Accessory Service Stat Fs : labor ..... } ©. W. Bell Tele. ( Mrs. Anna Byrch, laundry 1 New York, June 8.—During the }|and they seem to want that. ‘| offering rating cars, country homes + | situation’ may ,be appreciated. Fire Dept., pay roll.......... winter months one of thé popular Capital Steam Laundry Co. bright light resorts hired’a team of spies aicihccbsy) ceaae ae oriental fakirs to tell the fortunes ‘of y , of guests and “read their minds.” gf iain be sane cabanas is, of course, gave them the en- piiahs Gas aap: tire, Broudway amt slong’ which ae Carpenter Lbr. Co, sup- run. their psychic talents. J i ” "| Brique Teeibieh, no the male intra) Tee munemeey corps iandiside ber of the duet titles himself, told ‘modern Machine. Wor! "39.95 me that the question most frequently Lewis Motor Co. part: 29.72 asked him, by the average Broadway ‘4s \ Tite Service labor 31.20 rounder was this: “Who loves me Soo Line, telegrams 5.0L most—my wife or my, sweetie?” But J. °w-' Stratton, = he made it ‘a point, not to answer. |" jabore ns 42.20 Visiting °chorines, inguircd most Kwanten Pomp A /Meshit- m . i ery Corp., supplies |... 4.0.5. : 950 j frequently feneetniny thesnumber of: Waterworks Depts pay reli" 10003 awaken cee 7 oo, rum IR. P. Logan, supplies . + 2.80 though a tw were anxious to know 'Watceworks Dept, water °,... 806.25 about fortheoming gifts from “sugar Humphreys & Moule, printing’ 87.50 _ Butt and-oggers. from: the “prov. Bie * . inces” seldom inquire ut affairs . at home, he learned. Invariably they - A Thought | ask, half ‘facetiously, about the re-! > sult of Some amorous adventure upon’ yea which they have embarked. { For whom the’Lord loveth He “Gold-diggers’! seldom ask any chasteneth—Hebrews xii:6. questions—they're pretty certain, out; | aaa of long experience, what fate holds’ Sorrow ‘makes men _ sincere.— for them, Beecher. : Several chorines, by. the way, tell = a me at whenever eir pictures ap- i pear in the. New York Sumday “rote” News Briefs I sections they are swamped with pro-/@————________® posals of marriage. One such, shown to me the other evening,-read-in part: “You don’t know how Jonesome a” fellow gets for a real pretty girl When I was going to ‘high school inj Kansas, just before I came to New York, | knew a lot of pretty girls. 7 But they're harder to get in N York. don’t make. much money and..can’t take. them-out very ta | like to get married and settle down and your’ picture certainly looks goed to me. ” Rotary International at session in , Ostend, Bélgium, nominates Arthur H. Sapp of Huntington, Ind. for president. 4 Pumic dust covered on streets of is eruption somewhere in , Alask: thougl t volcano to Juneau is 700 mij \ | presldem Caolidga in proclamation nami et “ta as “Fl Tuesday, yas Flag { Day. Believe it or not, the chorine all! 4a barseg : but shed a tear. There ‘are sae wilt abe Berd, filed at thousands more in Manhattan lik Pe! the young man who penned the lettor, Betual trust for care'of grave of her And. since the same mail had !@ther, of whose murder she was ac- brought the chorine two proposals Witted many years ago. from brokers’ sons and three others jointed to iol it » prohibition “direeter for Paul — Indicatio LW. F. Rhinow etal and what-not. the hopelessness of her | reder: as [norehwest, despite offer to hehd new The status of the broker, I might state bureau: of criminal identifioa- add, has been greatly changed in late ie. St.- Gloud, Charles A. Gil- 1:94, former lieutenant governor was when a broker could open ' ,, iof Minnesota, dic an office on $150,000. The other day a Youngster, awinging into the Wail reet gam 15,000 for a se: on the exchange, And'the price geest °,_, FIGHT OVER BRIDGE up-;each season; he more active! Dudapest — Br has . aroused must maintain branch down town of.{ ®¥ch a storm of interest and rivalry fices and recently there has been a/ *@One women ‘here that they are rush for-dpeceria. the Fines Bene from card clubs .by an offi- district, particularly since Wall |C'at decree, The decree was prampted Street and the films made’ heavy al- PY # free-for-all fight in, which. two liances. And with the exchange grow. | Prominent women. exchanged blows ing stricter. concerning the amount ,°Ve? aM error in their score... of ting. capital,’ a brokerage] ——=—> needs about $1,000,000 to get under way. : «GILBERT. SWAN. ; -ee wed the Governors | ’ Chirleston, W.Va,” June 84) ‘ : —A te hy "Thon asattet ace #4