The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 14, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company,| Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Daily by carrier, per year ... y by mail, per year, (in Bisma Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Advance | 7.20 | 20 | 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 pa- | *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 R | G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CHICAGO DETROIT | ‘Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. | PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH | K - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. City, State and County Newspaper) | “§ Flag Day * Today is Flag Day and this year Old Glory is just 150 years old. In its shadow has arisen, ina century and a half, the greatest nation on earth. | Wnder its beneficent influence the nation has pros- pered, grown, progressed and achieved. For it and | for the principles for which it stands, thousands of brave men have died and other thousands have Baced life physically bankrupt. In its folds has| bated the germ of what has proven to be the izhest type of representative democracy the word | has ever known. | = We Americans think it is the most beautiful | flag in the world—but it is pleasing also to know that from an artistic standpoint it is also the most peautiful flag in the world. The combination of olor, the symmetry of design, together make it ‘unique among the banners of the nations. For it-' If it is something to view with appreciation. | = But as a symbol it is much more. The Stars and Stripes has journeyed to the far corners of the! earth and everywhere its mission has meant justice and right, security and the advancement of hu- ‘manity. e The legends surrounding the flag are precious to! ‘us. We like to think of Betsy Ross painstakingly, stitching on the thirteen white stars for the original | colonies while Washington looks. og with a smile. We like to think of it waving triumphantly that misty morning cn the Chesapeake when Francis} Beott Key wrote “The Star Spangled Banner” and| thus immortalized the flag in the song that has| ‘become the national anthem. We like to think of the flag pressing forward in the Argonne and float- dng grandly above all Paris as Captain Lindbergh ‘makes his epochal flight. = We like to think of our flag as the emblem of democracy, as standing for the common brother- food and equality of mankind. Perfect Gentle Railway Knights i = ‘There is always a tendency, when a public utility is run by the government, for the employes to get he habit of thinking that the public exists for them, instead of their existing for the public. Long- headed men in control of Germany’s nation-owned »railway system are determined, however, that in the Fatherland every railway employe shall be, the pink of courtesy. “To this end they have recently issued to every ‘gmploye a booklet on the treatment of travelers. Tn the future when a traveler asks any uniformed Jan a question, the employe is to acknowledge it by touching his cap in respectful salutation, He awill stand with an attitude of attention. He will fever under any circumstances lounge idly with his Sands in his pockets. He will treat the passenger in a fourth class car with as much civility as the Were fortunate person who can afford to travel first class. The new democracy of Germany will fhe exemplified in the fact that all female passen- gers, whether countesses or scrub-women, will be Addressed as “My Lady.” And it will be an un- gprsivable sin to address any passenger: “Here, you!” Wise old birds, these German railway directors; But they’ll never get a vote of thanks from the Grusty, hard-faced, old noble-women who sigh for ie good old days when Somebodies were some- ir" and Nobodies were nobodies. Schools For Grownups % Cleveland’s plan for a public school building t> devoted largely to adult education starts a move- fhent that should find favor and imitation in any number of communities. = All over this broad land are countless people who og been forced to drop their schooling early in| fe and go to work. Arrived at middle age, they alize that they have missed something. Enter- ; Ee high school with youngsters is not to their lik- | Bg, and their requirements, also, could not be met} ‘the average high school course. | Here it is that the adult school will fill the gap. ‘will not compete with colleges or universities or the junior colleges. Many of the people who find that the adult school fills their needs will ; people far from ignorant. Having worked at y trade for a number of years is in itself an edu- ion of a sort. It is a school of practical expe- and upon this experience the adult school no doubt add the theory necessary to a ccm- liberal edueation. ; ‘whole program of such schools cannot e until the experiment is tried. As the work ys on it will develop. It is possible that such will be open at all hours of the day and fight. Cleveland’s pioneering, at any rate, should ‘watehed with no small amount of interest by the at large. i | are | prohibition laws, and to enter “wet” candidates in bes 500,400,000 trees were planted this year on | state land, while 16,360,000 were set out by private | individuals, counties, cities, towns, villages, school | districts, boy scouts, sportsmen’s clubs and other | organizations. This is truly an impressive and inspiring reccrd of one state’s effort to prevent the denuding of | | our forest lands. Coupled with the large purchases | | of forests by the state of New York in the pas.| few years, this shows a very progressive effort; on the part of the empire state and one to be com-' mended highly. | The work accomplished in New York state should | be an example to other states which have lagged | behind rather badly on programs for reforestation | and conservation, and in many states where a start | has been made the work has not been well planned. | The result is a more or less unsatisfactory com- promise wherein nothing is really aceomplished, The problem of reforestation and of con ya- | tion of present forest land is a puzzling one, but | is one that must be solved. The most difficult fen- | ture is the avoidance of duplication of effort. This can only be accomplished by the state itself | having a definite and comprehensive program | worked out in advance, in which each step is de’ nitely planned to accomplish a certain result. This | is the way New York state has evolved the program | which is working out so well there. Rumania’s Robin Hood History has a queer way of repeating itself. Old! English ballads and stories are full of the doings | of a certain outlaw named Robin Hood, who robbed | the rich and gave to the poor. What was prob- ably merely legend in England has become fact in Rumania, where all the police in that troubled king- dom have been mobilized to capture a certain no- | torious robber named Terente. | They have scoured the country for him. They| have offered a big reward for his head. But they | skeptical of their success, because like his} famous English prctotype, Terente has always been good to the poor. There is a widespread conviction among the lower | classes that he is their champion against the in-| justice, the corruption and the brutality of Ru- manian officialdom. He translates into action thi revolt that is seething in their hearts. He strikes where they fear to lift a hand. The result is that | they would do anything for him. They will feed | him. They will give him a night's lodging. They | will guide him to safe hiding places. They will put | the police off by false scents. Terente is -their | hero. Two hundred years from now folk will be singing ballads about him. {h Editorial Comment Where the Alfalfa Waves (St. Paul Dispatch) | More than 200,000 acres of North Dakota land are planted to alfalfa this year. Compare that with the 116,279 acres of 1925 or with the 58,356 acres of 1920 and draw your own conclusions of what is happening in North Dakcta. No small amount of irritation was,noted among the farmers of that state under the préachments of more cattle and hogs at a. time when cattle and hog feed was scarce, Farmers were induced to buy livestock and found themselves without means to feed the animals. This year it will be different. With feed provided, with safety and assurance of a profit instead of a loss. The farmer knows his business and seeks his way to money as naturally as tree roots seek un- derground moisture, What has helped, this year, in the sowing of alfalfa has been the difficulty of seeding wheat in sections that had too much rain and late spring weather. It gave alfalfa a chance for considera- tion. And this sort of weather will make the al- falfa crop a tremendous one. That is not the only advantage. The soil, rested from wheat, will be almost rehabilitated for next year. There are three distinct profits in the deal: the direct profit from alfalfa and livestock; the profit in renewed soil; the profit in a restricted acreage of wheat, which will insure a higher price for wheat. Canada’s western provinces have reduced their wheat acreage 18 per cent this year. The northwest farmer is doing his bit, also, with alfalfa. Not an Issue Here (Grand Forks Herald) | the common | cious days alone with her husband] | Faith Havhaway felt that she wanted | yo to hold them, wanted to ery | its course, to make it pass so slowly | that every day would be as long as/ | day the famil | them, shatteri pin to si cally that and herself. the whole world for Faith Hathai ; was bounded by the tan-colored stuc- co walls df a new houge in Enfield. too swiftly passing three days, what Just the sight of his strong, tanned hand holding a fork or reaching for one of the crisp, golden biscuits she " had baked could thrill her with such the livestock can be bought'a sharp realization of love that she had to around the table to him, to seize his hand and lay it\cagessingly against her lips.or her cheek, the edge of the bath tub and watched him shave, note of love and tenderness, at the grimaces he made. the kitchen with the deftness of long to be told just why she did this and organdie collar of her prettiest house dress, took an hour of those precious, fleet- and admired in his apron, they sat together on the big couch jin ithe living room, rie her, with poems which had nourished | since he had been an ideal | ster. for them, though the: the author, genius though he might be, could never have loved as they. + THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TT WILL BE AS HAZARDOUS AS CROSSING THE As the hours of those three pre-| passed with dream-like swiftnes¢,{ a mother holds a be-j for iid in her arms. 'y out to stop the sun in! loved, dying 1 week of normal time. On Wednes- tho first shimmer- ing, iridescent bubbles of their hap: them, she told Bob apologetir but he forced her to . admit been conscious of nothing but Bob For those three days iy, She leafned, during those precious, it means to love, and to be loved. leave her chair and run She sat on laughing, with a rich If she. was cooking, flashing about practise, he was at her elbow, having ‘that, kissing the little throbbing hol- low of her throat above the round Just washing dishes always ing davs, for Bob had to be kissed On Monday and Tuesday evening Faith’s head Med against Bob, while he rend to in his deep, rich voice, vibrating tenderness and passion, the is soul ic young- Every love poem was written agreed that She vas pain thought gratitude. Cherry won't tease us too much, don’t think I could bear it. few more hours alone, darling! Prom- fze me you won't let anything change but both knew that with Bird’s-eye View of Airpla PLENTY OF WORE POR EVERYONE IN EU TEE CO SQQess 4 Ci. And before those three days had run their inevitable Lane had indeed become Faith Hath- had passed, led by the! ntlest love that a man can have woman, from girlhood She} womanhood, and s! glorified, so deeply at peace that her voice was muted to a low, throbbing note of happiness. a new dignity, proudly, a woman be- would descend upon] joved and wholly in love. On Wednesday morning, as coiled her shining, Ut course sne wou.a ve giad hair into a knot on her: neck, Bob pcgod eine ast me hands anion E Kher shoulders, his blue eyes looking she had not missed them. had Pinto hers through the mirror. “You are the most beautiful. wom- nin the world!” he cried suddenly, with a break in his voice as if there in too much Look at yourself, love, enntiful!” She looked and saw that her eyes ere like stars, that peace and joy ‘Jay like a crown on her brow, that er skin was luminous, her lips like he petals of a dark, red velvet rose, “Not even Cherry can feel awkward and plain again,” she sudden, Aloud she said, “I hope you—anything!” He promised. a cloud had fi in:their eyes. TOMORROW: The family invades the newlyweds’ paradise. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) | [IN NEw York 1 oO * Mew ‘York, June 14.—They “a ted in Manhattan that the day of “millionaire waiters” and nation: famed chefs will be done when the present quota of famous food hand- jlers has passed The pessimists certainly seem*to have something to wail about. newest eating pieces little seems to remain of that pride of cuisine that made Delmonicos, Sherrys and such on, ne’s Influence on Europe ] t k PRIVAT E FF YEP eTANce. i | CHAPTER LX, | 7 'YOTLAND OB. YOU MIGHT GET os IN DUTCH ) Rev wv) Tae "PLURIITS wath BE HITTING THE BARBECUE STAND ~\ BREADLINE IN GERMANY . names known about the world. One or two who have attempted to appeal | only to the aristocratic palates have found the public unresponsive, A few of the famous hotels still pride themselves on their dining rooms, but Broadway has been taken; over almost completely by Chinese! chow-mein parlors, armchair quick lunches, drug-store counters and! other quick-and-hastys, such as would bring tears to the eyes of the gour- mets of old. The average supper clubs have made no pretense at food, catering chiefly to the eyes, ears and feet. Outside the dining salons of those few flag-bearers of an old tradition, the best food to be found in New York is in little foreign cafes of th East Side and lower. waterfront belt. Here people actually go for the pur- pose of eating, a consideration prac- tically unknown’ to the uptown belt. course, Faith into he had emerged She walked with she smooth brown Meanwhile those veteran artists of gastronomy and table etiquet take on the flavor of grandees. They are bowed to and enshrined, and go about} their affairs after. the fashion of efficient business chieftains, Thus Oscar of the. Waldorf, one} of the most.famed, has a: secretary to attend to all his affairs. If one’ | wishes to get Oscar on the phone, the voice you will first hear is that of Martin, Laffey, who relieves the chef of business details. happiness. Say you are make me assionate P Speaking of cafes, I. walked past what once. was Delnionico’ only. to find that it is now occupied by one of those places where you turn in your cigar coupons for an alarm clock. a safety razor oro lamp shade. I Only a Continuing up Fifth Avenue, you may note that wreckers have left nothing but broken stone crumbs of what was once the aristocratic and beautiful Vanderbilt mansion. And everywhere ae go it seems that the colorful and picturesque places are passing in favor of those standard- zed 20-story apartments and, in a few years, it may be that there will be no more chummy blocks about parks and squares. kp GILBERT SWAN, right, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) o—___________y, | CORPORATIONS | > Super Six Motors, Bismarek, $25,- 000; Gustave ‘F. Kielhack, Theodore E, Senness and Randolph. Kielhack, all of Minot. across the heaven In the According to the executive committee of the or- ganization opposed to prohibition in North Dakota, the prohibition question will be made a “real issue” in the next state campaign, With all due respect to this committee we don’t believe it will be anything of the sort, any more than it was a real issue at the last session of the legislature. For any proposal to be made a real issue in any campaign there must be a reasonable amcunt of public sentiment supporting it, and there is very little sentiment in North Dakota for the repeal or radical modification of the state prohi- bition laws. In the last campaign the only interest attached to the candidate who made his bid for the United States senatorship on an anti-prohibition platform was in connection with the question of which of the other candidates he would draw the most votes from. In this sense only his candidacy was an issue‘in the campaign. He received only- about seven per cent of the total vote cast on the sena- torship. If the leaders of the wet movement wish to put in circulation petitions for the repeal of. the state the political race they have a perfect right to do so. Similarly they would have a right to circu- late petitions calling for the burning down of the state capitol. The‘latter move would have about as much.chance for success as the former as things now stand. ‘Under these circumstances, which must be recog- nized at least by the heads of the North’.Dakota . OUT OUR WAY — BY GEORGE Boys, I CANT UNDERSTAND HOW YOU CAN RIDE” SOME OF IT: ,HE HAS A HARD TIME KEEPIN’ ; monument i| Daily Health | blood pressure in Editor's Note: This is Chap- ter 60 of the series of articles written by a correspondent for The Tribune who is revisiting France, The famoos Toul Sector is quiet. E. Didelot still ins a cufe and billiard parlor in the Rue de la Republique of Tou! and blue-uniform- ed Poilus march, now and then, through the Metz Gate of the for- tifications, According to a sign in Toul, Nancy is 23, Colombey-les-Belles is 17.6 and Vaucouleurs is 24 kilometers away. Madame Henriette Can opens and closes the gate at the railroad cross- ing near Charmes-la-Cote. She's the “Madame Chef de Gare.” f A bill advertising Thomas Meighan in “Salome” is on the wall of an old A.E, F, billet in Blendod-les-Toul. Familiar Shrine There are seven tall pines in the yard that surrounds the birthplate of goan of Arc in Domremy. Aimee Girardin, who is 78 years old, still unlocks the door to the house just as she did when thousands of Amer- ican soldiers made ba aaa to the shrine in 1918 and 1919. Vauthon-Haut is that village on the hill and Vauthon-Bas is the vil- i valley. t sells bieyclettes in Gondrecourt. The Ornain river is thick with weeds and ducks dive for bugs in the shallows. Paul Pittelot runs the quineaillerie here and the was erected by public PAUL ADAMS @ UEA soves subscription in the village of Bou- dignecourt, Demange-aux-Eaux and Tourailles. Vaudeville is the name of a town in this region. And there’s another village —“Delouze”— which should have a kick in it for every A. E. F. veteran, The train from Gondrecourt for Bar-le-Due leaves at 20:02 The train rcp eds sagnal leaves earlier, at 13:59. Anginie Thieret has sold her cafe in Pagny-sur-Meuse and has pur- chased the Cafe des Halles in Colon bey-les-Belles. Camps Are Gone brgh That huge air service and dispatch riders’ camp at’ Colombey-les-Belles has disappeared’ completely, It's a plowed field now. Workmen, after these nine yea are now etldel § the 10-wire te’ phone ling the Signal Corps erected from Colombey-les-Belles to Neuf- chateau. Neufchateau is on the Mouzon river and not far away, on a hill, ig the church of St. Elophe the village of St. Elophe with a statue of St. Elophe on the steeple. Bv- low in the valley is the village of Soulosse, which, in other days, was the Roman town of Solimariaca, And Leon Naishu, who used to box with American soldiews in Gondre- court, has. only the blouse to his Ameriean uniform left. The breech- es wore out last year. Something should ‘be done about this The famous Toul Sector is quiet. TOMORROW: A Blind Organist. 1 Service" | —> BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine A study of the incidence of low relation to the presence of various diseases and var- ious body types indicates that there volved in the presence of this con- dition. : Blood pressure falls during sleen, paralleling the depth of the sleep. When the sleep is disturbed they ‘are many factors that may be = |may be a sharp rise in blood pres-; sure; when the nerson dreams of some active effort, the blood [ged sure rises. There seems to be a definite relationship between the | blood preswure and the body weight.| Thus persons who are obese tend to have a higher blood-pressure than persons of normal weight. The factors controlling the blood ressure are the force of the heart eat, the condition of the walls of the blood vessels, the volume and physical state of the blood, and the amount of the resistance that the blood meets while circulating throueh the body. When-.a person takes. an anes- thetic his blood pressure tends to fall. In most of the acute infec- tions diseases there is a fall in the | blood pressure, more serious in some conditions than in others, During the height .of fever the flow of the blood, particularly .in the smaller blood. vessels, is slower than in health. This slowing of the circula- tion naturally tends to diminish the blood pressure, The same is true of many of the more chronic infectious diseases in which fever is a promi- nent sign. In the advanced stages of tuberculosis there tends to be a low- ering of the blood pressure ap- parently associated with the general poisoning of the body by the pro- duction of the bacterium that causes this disease. On the other hand, diabetes appears to affect the blood pressure but litt! ‘ Many drugs are known which will lower the blood pressure, but these drugs do not have the value of keep- ing the nressure lowered’ or 01 the fundamental physical is of the body which are for either high or low blood pressure. Apparsaily all of the various glands in the body that have se- cretions may be concerned with the maintenance. of the blood pressure at a certain point, hence a disorder of any of these glands modifies the circumstances and may raise or lower the bleod pressure. At present, re- search all over the world is endeav- oring to define accurately the effects of these glands and, of their secre- tions on the state of the body in health and. disease. ‘ “CAME, THE DAWN, ETC.” | A new camera en e movies possible in four minutes: ; But they'll surely. fail because. the lady in the the titles ‘alonds::.... . Aud no movie ean get very. far which doesn’t bfing “into this valley of diyine love a human jackal stalking A id long as the pantry holds Chi thing anyway for Germany. was reported to be a-great increase \in necking parties, “Many Guns Salute Coolidge,” a headline. But he was only ing the fleet and hada’t gon {Chicago at all. f % ybe that's the sec! of these boxers’ terpsichorean tendencies, Go through life see'fing “kick” *|and you'll probably get several. Crop Reports | The North Dakota for 1927 is estimated on June first at 16,588,000 bushels, fnerease of an perce bushels over the May first estima the June fi Feondit ki Pict ae ag small grain crops is below the ten-year average, although the condition Feported: a er dur- adjacent seat won’t’be there to read |The indicated production of 15,588,- 000 bushels compares :with , 9,287,000 bushels harvested Iadt year, and: the | five-year average of 16,981,000 bush- jels. All hay crops and pasture shaw an excellent condition on June.first. Pastures have come on slowly and |have been of no great value in off- setting the short feed supplies to date. The plentiful moisture sup- ply, however, makes prospects very good. For spring planted small grains in North Dakota, though the June first condition is above the very un- favorable spring of last vear, they are below average. Cold tempera- tures and above normal rainfall in pee all sections of the state ave held back spring seeding opera- tions. Although very little drowning out and rotting of seed are reported, the seed has been slow to s:rout, land stands are vather ragged and un- even in some sections. Spring / weather conditions have been favor¢ able to growth of weeds, particularly sow thistle and wild oats. Wild oats have already taken many fields which will be cut for hay in,all probability. Considerable revision in the prospec- tive acré&ge report of March first will be necessary due principally to the decreased spring wheat acreage. ' i| Introducing the Governors ' Helena, Mont, Jane 14.—()— A charactertistic willingness to face: facts was indicated early in the career of Governor John FE. Erick- son of Montana. As a county prosecutor, Erickson had convicted a murderer. The man entered the penitentiary doors swear- ing that, when he got out, +e was going to “get” the prosecutor, The prosecutor became “a candidgse” for district judge and, during ‘he campaign, visited the little oil town of Shelby, His friends recalled the threat and told him the man’s pris- on term had. ended and he.was in town, Erickson determined to hunt the man up. He found him playing cards in a bar, went up to him called him by name, offered his hand and found his supposed et y most affable, The man had d ed in prison that his threat was senseless. — OO \ Old Masters | | Golden bells of welcome rolled Never forth such note, nor told Hours so blithe in tones so bold, As the radiant mouth of gold Here than rings forth heaven. If the golden-crested wren Were a nightingale—why, then , Something seen and heard of men ge ae be half as sweet as when ughs a child. of —Algernon Charles 8 Child's Laughter. | Justajingle “I think the road ends just aheld,#*’ |, She screamed, with trace of Trighty? hey landed in 2 valley, ghd « ‘The fellow said, “You're right!” A Thought Write the things which thou hast _ 4 ind the things which arest? Look then into thine write.—Longtellow. ¢ t | n. winburne: A heart and There are 90,000 orchestras in the fy |country, says a \statistician. winter rye crop |

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