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PAGE FOUR wor The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1872) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at ona as second class mail matter. i rge D. Mann.......... President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). Duily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota z Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches feredited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin ished herein. All rights of republication of all tter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH ‘NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Baron Cartier Quits The Belgian ambassador, Baron Dr. Cartier de “Marchienne, dean of the diplomatic corps at Wash- ington, will vacate his post and become Belgian am- Yassador to the Court of St. James, It is consid- ered in the*nature of an advance, the United States | having only “rated” an ambassador since 1919 \when Baron Cartier was named. Previous to that ‘time Belgium had only maintained a ministry here During his period of service he has done much ‘to further cement the war-born friendship between his country and the United States. He has had 4 distinguished career here and abroad in the service of his country. He was Belgium's only delegate to the Washington Arms Conference, selected not only because of his presence here, but because of hit intimate and profound knowledge of the far easi sand his understanding of America and Americans. Befcre his appointment as minister to the United States in 1917 (the ambassadorship was created two years later) he had served at the Washington Jegation in 1908 as secretary and had at that time won the friendship and confidence of many of America’s public officers and private citizens. His return as minister was as great a source of grati- fication to his former associates and friends as his imminent departure is a source of sorrow. Too often are diplomatic representatives men ; Whose chief thought is personal advancement and ‘ social distraction. But not so Baron Cartier. He has been always alert to find every way to solid | ify the friendship between Belgium and the United ; States, and, at much personal sacrifice, to work to- ward world peace and understanding. He is the| type of representative who reflects honor, dignity | and respect upon his country. He considers him- self fortunate to be a Belgian, yet, of the two, Bel- gium is the more fortunate in having the Baron ; as her representative. Tuberculosis Losing Out | Reduction of tuberculosis to a point where it either will disappear entirely or occur only as a rare disease is predicted by a statistician of a large ‘ life insurance company, who points to a probable { new low mortality record from this cause in 1927 * in support of his prediction. | . During the first quarter of the current year the death rate from pulmonary tuberculosis among the industrial policyholders of the company stood at the astonishingly low figure of 70.9 per 100,000 for | white lives, This figure is nearly. seven per cent leas than that for the same period last year and , is an indication that with continued Prosperity among the working classes and the maintenance of : high standards of preventative and educational work by public and private health agencies, a rate + of 50 per 100,000 may be attained by 1930, This same statistician made such a prediction in 1922 and every year since the trend has justified it as a reliable prophecy. If he is right, then it + would seem that the agencies which have beea fighting the ravages of the white plague are well on their way to ultimate victory. “ And it has been a splendid fight all along the line, The problem has been attacked from many’ angles and with complete cooperation from laymen and scientists alike. The success of the movement ; toward the elimination of the disease is rendered ; the more remarkable because the disease has itself } so long defied complete analysis, + The various agencies which have worked for many j Years toward their goal are to be congratulated on the victory which seems now to be in sight. It is an, instance where persistent work and ceaseless | against the vigilance have accomplished the desired result. “Lest We Forget” | | In our mad glee over the achievements of Lind- | bergh and Chamberlin, in the relief from stories of | ! misery and suffering, the disaster in the Missis- | sippi valley has been forgotten. | That disaster, however, is not all over. Flood | waters have raeched their crest and are subsiding, | But they are not yet confined within the banks and | the levees, Even as far north as Kentucky, notvall the refu- gees have been able to return to the desolate spots that were once their homes. Those who have re- turned are finding the damages greater than reck- ened, We have a debt to these people in the val- ley that must be paid in full. Shall we haggle and bargain, waiting to be dunned, or shall we pay will- Sinygly 7° bE A Boon to Mankind invention developed in the Massschu- titute of Technology is destined to be a mankind, if all the signs and portents ring E It is,called a colorimeter and with it match- ibbon or a‘flower to a delicately:tinted gown me as easy-as rolling off the proverbial fact it will be“an exact science, eliminat- eleimed, human judgment in the meas- fg & and zeal to internal upbuilding;-Mttle mindful of external dangers of any sort. Oe sent his sample, and then announce that he wants a pair of old rose stockings. Obtaining them he will walk proudly home, receive the plaudits of friend wife for a perfect job and bestow his fer- vent thanks upon science for having so far eman- ated him from still another irkscme task. Seriously, however, the importance of the inven-' tion lies in its value to industries in which control of the calor of products is necessary. Accurat? measurements of colors is the first concern of man- ufacturers of fabrics and is of basic importance in the making of inks, paints, dyes, paper, confection:, cigars and many other articles. By means of the colorimeter the record of a color sample can be made on paper in the east and trans- mitted by wire to San Francisco and the original color can be reproduced accurately in the California city within a few hours. There ms no limit to the marvelous developments of scien Adventure Dying Out? Slowly but surely romantic and adventurous liv- ing is dying from the face of the globe and the! most significant sign of this degeneracy is that boys don’t run away from home any more to go to sea. At least that’s whats a New York city Y. M. C. A. secretary, whose work takes him among the seagoing cabin boys und apprentices every day, declares, This secretary knows hundreds of these boys.; And there is hardly 4 one of them,” he says, “who runaway. As a matter of fact, the way things ure run these days, it is almost impossible for 1 runaway boy to get a job on a big ship. " This world is really coming to a Pretty pas~ when this horrible state of affairs can obtain. Where is the spirit of adventure in modern youth? Can it be that high school fraternities, necking Parties and synthetic cocktails are able to sat: the youth of America? If so, then our civiliz: tion is a thing to despise and not to praise. It is not, then, building men, but lounge lizards, fit only to study interior decorating and master the intrica- cies of the Charleston. The boy whose dreams were those of a stout i deck beneath him and the whole wide world befor! him apparently has gone. thumped with pride as hi through a shrieking storm is no more. Boys don’t go down to the sea in ships any more—only via their newest sport roadster and their destination the Muretania for a little trip abroad, surrounded by all the luxuries. | Editorial Comment | En Carbon Monoxide (Canton Daily News) In spite of the warnings that have been issued, | in spite of the educational war that has been waged automobile exhaust hazard, men con-} tinue to be killed by their motionless “pleasure” cars, Not long fgo the Kiwanis club of Pittsburgh awaited the arrival of their President-elect. They needed his presence to go on with the installation ceFemonies. He did not come. Eventually the: found him dead in his garage, a victim of carbon monoxide fumes, Surely at some time this man had been warned of just such danger. He did not heed or thought the danger exaggerated or inconsequential. He was intelligent enough to be a leading business man, but not to safeguard his life. " Unless one intended suidide he would not step in the path of a train, Still men drink bootleg liquor, confident they will be the ones to get bj Others leave the automobile ~ engine running ai shut the garage doors. i The newer forms of gasoline are more potent than the ordinary solution. Workers in the re- fineries that make them are safeguarded against every contingency from the fumes. But the indi- vidual has no one else to look out for him. He must take care of himself. ’s no way to do it except by never—and “nevér” cannot be too! strongly emphasized—running the motor and hav- ing the garage doors shut at the same time. The boy whose hea ship battered her way | cy When Our Neighbor Is in Jubilee (Minneapolis Tribune) All Canada will celebrate on July 1 the sixtieth anniversary of the birth of the dominion. The day | will be heralded with beacon fires strung across the country from’ sea to sea like great illuminates beads. There will be felicitations, official and otherwise, future will walk confidently to the colorimeter, pre- | | man who believes, bitterly, that he THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE __ Can You Imagine That! BALL THAT BABE ‘RUTH HISSELF i dg8 . ae By Anne Hustin earmmas. ; There was an actual physical you left, Faith. Aunt Hattie simply’ wrench, as if her body were being, bawled her out today for being so torn in two, when Faith dropped cross and uppity. But I guess she! her arms und let Bob go to bring the feels better now. She was laughing} family to the new house in his car.) to peat the band when she bumped She wanted to run after him, arms! the garage door. . If I'd been Bob spread, a wild egy of pr ton her! I'd a-told her to pay attention to fi lips, begging hith to stay yet a little| what she was doifig—scraping the; New York, June 15.—The “bigger- while. | But she stood, with her retl nt on that new door!” she nlodded| and-hetter” iden appears to have pressed against her month to keeg| severely. “But he just laughed at| °7¢-Petter : back that cry, on the steps of the|her. He looks like he's so happy he|*¢ized the churches, as well as the porch. The other hand waved to him| could bust, and—" she drew b: , the apartment as the car rolled down the driveway} gazed wonderingly at her e ings of Manhat- to the street. He blew her aki face—“so do you! It is nice being ly, regardless of neighbors} married, F ht be watching from behind ns. | She knew that a phase of her love{ b ing her neck and cheeks life hud been lived and had passed.| and bri “It's wonderful. being She could never know such perfect! married—to Bob! And I've found out happiness again. Such a litte time! why they call it a honeymoon, but —three days! She flung herself upon] it’s a secret that every bride has to the couch--their couch where hey, find out for herself. You'll know had read poetry and tallced an evend when you've been married to a man more beautiful poetry of their own,! like Bob. Hunery, infant?” : t , but which would now be the family's “Just. starved,” Joy was emphatic. | the mua Beetles mers the social halls couch as much as hers—and wept inj “Aunt Hattie gavé us a boiled jare Pepe aie to theater managers a trons of uncontrollable grief and} ner’every day, and nasty old bread | fr rehearsals. | foreboding. | pudding for dessert. Without any But when the family arrived at ins,” she added, in decp disgust. last, she was singing in the kitehen,'“What you got fo& dessert, Faith @ great yellow How! of bubbly waffle| Faith was about &o return to the tter ready for the smoking hot! kitchen and her waffle iron when jectrie waffle iron. The table, that! Bob and Cherry came into the dining had been set for two for three won-! room, Cherry with her right hand derful days, was now ready for five| entwined in Bob's left, her lovely people, little face flushed ,with laughter. She heard her father’s voice,| Boh was laughing, too, his blue eyes forcedly hearty—the voice of an old| twinkling, his teeth gleaming be- tween his up-curved lips. Faith, ar- rested by a pang of jealousy which she would have died rather than ac- knowledge, hesitated a moment be- fore she went toward her sister. “Hello, Faith, darling!” Cherry sang out, reaching for one of Faith’s hands without releasing Bob's. “I've just been teasing this husband of Vours unmercifuily, but he’s told me he'll. lock me in my room without a supper if I tease you. What a Meat ere, and I hope we ain't in-|enly blush that: is you’re wearing! truding.” ‘There ought to be a rouge called As she kissed him, protesting that/ ‘Bride's Blush.’ A lot of hard-boiled he could never be in the way. her! flappers would find it a boon, But} heart was crying, “Where’s Bob? isn't she the m Where's Cherry? ever saw, Bob, “Bob's letting her drive the ‘ed at me!” “age into the garage,” Joy panted. Faith’s heart plunged sickeningly almost bumped the door off, and then seemed to stand still. For She's been on a high horse ever the first time in her life she hated | cherry. She wanted to tear the clinging little hand from Bob's. And | he didn’t have to let her stand there | swinging his hand, as if she were s wife— Faith and Bob Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) Thus Dr. Fosdick’s’ new Bapti: church will cost four millions and will be equipped with bowling al- jleys, a theater and chimes made up of 60 bells. The tower will be about 200. feat high. - Such attractions, they say, are nec- essary in these days of high-proof competition. In a metropolis a church must be metropolitan. This is certainly the case of a church in honey,” And yet it is to the romantic and ‘olorful little places that most tour- ‘ists first turn upon coming te New York and it is to such that the sweet- hearts go to be married. The Cathedral of St. John the Divine may present an architectural icture unequaled on this continent, ut it is to the flower-clustered little Church Around the Corner that lov- ers rush when they wish the wed- ding bells to ring. From every part of the nation they come to this’ romantic’ spot. It is looked upon as America’s Gretna ireen, and clopers have the impres- sion that all and sundry who come there can have their knots tied on a@ moment's notice. Yet the Rev. Randolph Ray cenfly told. me he turns down as iny as 400 or 500 couples a year. fometimes they seem too young, ometimes they seem to lack sin- erity, or one of them may have been divorced—many obstac! ri Still the demand for nun 80 great that two assistant min- isters are necessary to keep the mar- riage mill running. Last year there were more than 2, 000 ceremonies, must earn his way hy being genint —and she ran out of the kitchen to greet him, a lump of pity tor nun in her throat. ell, well, well! How's the bride: He held out a hand, embrassment making his voice loud. Then he hur- ried on vhi that I smell? Fried i Your Aunt Hatt: fsga good cook, honey, but she ca: toh you with a ten-foot pole. Well, naive thing you 's actually ae | car “She New York is a place to make young- from Canada’s friendly and admiring neighbor. Greetings will come, too, from the mother country on the cther side. All will be merry as a marriage bell, and woe be unto Rudyard Kipling if he should say anything that sounds like “Our Lady of the Snows.” The dominion was proclaimed as an established fact on July 1, 1867, but with only four Provinces | federated—Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Quebec | and Ontario. Canadians are pardonably proud of | the progress the dominion has made in 60 years. | Like the American republic, the dominion started | comparatively small and grew big. There were! provincial jealzusies and disaffections to overcome, there was a rebellion to put down, there was a great area of western territory to acquire by pur- chase, there were political animosities to live! through, and there were questions of boundary and other international issues to adjust, before the do- minion became the expansive, orderly, progressive country it is today. When the sixtieth anniversary is observed, Can- ada will have been represented for six months in Washington with an envoy of its own. ‘It travelel far toward substantive political autonomy before the war, and it has made further headway of that kind since the war. In its remarkable development Canada has been fortunate in having such a neighbor as the United States. The builders of Canada have had.small oc- casion to think of fortifications on the border, le: slone tp have them. They could give their genius te is some’ ill illiams OUT OUR WAY me ~ By W THERE OU GO» WURRMIN' ‘BOUT pe Nenitiod ‘ u \ THEM UTTLE THINGS. | MADE HIM « ATS WHY LINDBERGH] SUCH A BraAve| = MADE IT SO EASY / FELLER—cyz Cuz HE DION “THINK 'BOUT SUCH LITHLE THINGS. Course I KNow HE WONT NEED NO SAMWIOGES ON SUCH - & SHORT ore : iN HE Ime N' HOW 'BOUTA PARASHOOT, o TOMORROW: Cherry's jealousy of' takes © strange Carn, Editor ———_————_——_—_———————_? IN NEW YORK | > OO Fditor's Note: This is - | ter 61 of the series of artic written by a correspondent for | the arivune wno is revisiting France. CHAPTER LXI Louie was blind, Slight of stature, a pitiful figure, he'd feel his way with a stick along the road to the isquare where the Y. M. C, A. tent ,was located in Mont-les-Vignoble in those after-the-armistice days of 1918. When he reached the door some soldier would take him in charge and lead him to a chair in front of the tiny campaign organ that was used for church services. And there Louie would sit, hour after hour, pumping diligently and ying tunes that he made up as he along. His delicate ears: act- the movements of his slender fingers and, while his harmonies were | sometimes ‘questionable, they were jtolerated in sympathy. And when the infantry outfits lined up late in {the afternoon for “Retreat,” he fol- }lowed tho buglers—precisely. His “To the Colors” never eould be criti- | eized. He Was Forgotten Late in January, 1919, the area from Charmes-la-Cote to Blendoles- | Toul was evacuated. Orders were re- ceived at Mont-les-Vignole. _ The! | outfits were to move out on a Tues- day. On Monday, Louie played a3 usual. After he had accompanied the |buglers at “Retreat” an appeal was made by a group of soldiers to the “Y" secretary that he present the or- i gan to Louie, But the secretary was accountable for his equipment. The organ had to be turned in. The sol- diers talked of stealing it. But, in [the excitement of leaving for home, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 15, 1927 Buck PRIVATE: f FRANCE 9.283% PAUL - ADAMS the matter and Louie were forgotten. Until recently quickly no American _sol- “| dier has ever visited Blenod-les-Tou!, But, the other day, one went back. He found a marble monument where the “Y” tent had been located. He saw some cows drinking at the vil- lage fountain and old women gossip. ing in the warm sun. He remem- bered Louie. Louie's house was pointed out. The visitor opened the front door and walked along the stone-flagged hall to a second door. He pushed his way in, The room was dark except for a little light admitted through a tiny window. Bat in the gloom the figure of Louie could be seen. He was seated in a chair near the fire- place. The soldier could spea's little French, but he greeted Louie warmly. Louie was pleased. In a aed itched voice he spoke feelingly of his “bon camerades”—the Americans. He re- called many phrases they had taught him. And then—and his face lighted up with a smile that could be seen even in the semi-darkness—he asked: Al regen Vhat, did they do with the or- gan?” ; Louie, the blind man of Mont-les- Vienoble, has not forgotten. And many of ‘the ex-doughboys who used to hang around that Y-tent still re- member the picture of happiness he presented when he fingered the little instrument and stared into utter darkness with his sightless eyes, Maybe one of those wheezy cam- paign organ still gxists.. Maybe Peters ene Po pel one aad next September. The deed woyll be worth while. teed ret TOMORROW: Belleau Wood. | i sters ponder before leaping into the | Marriage net. If they have dwelt long in Man- attan they have learned the lesson | of high rentals and high livine costs. | Generally both bride and bridegroo1 | have yous and have to keep then Jong (after the ceremony has been spoken. New York is no place to “live on ee GILBERT SWAN. —_—__________—__+ i Daily Health | Service | +—. —* BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine To the public as a whole, the ques- jtion of medical ethics seems a good bit of a mystery. he average man [believes that medical ethics were developed primar: for the physi- \eian, and with little regard for the patient. If this average man believes that there should be a code of con- Vduct—a set of principles which should govern the actions of the medical profession at large-—he is! often at a loss to know how to tell t!an ethical and scientific doctor from jan unethical and ignorant one. In many cases, public, judgment is based on the kind of a car the | doctor.drives, the church he attends, this wife’s social position, his whit kers, or the protuberance of his jabdomen. Frequently a forty-eight- inch waist measure is taken as the equivalent of a forty-cight caliber brain, The fact remains, however, that a man may score high on alli these points and still not be able to tell whether a sinking pain in the pit of the abdomen is due to an in. flamed gall bladder or tric ulce: The. recognized princi of ethie: for the medical professi first of all the dutie he phys cian to his patient. These duties in- clude service as an ideal, patience and delicacy as highly desirable, full assumption of responsibility once a case has been und Solicitation o: its is consid. ered as unprof, | but the customs of the community in which the physician lives should govern his actions. If it-has dee the custom to publish a busin in the local newspaper, there reason why he may not do so, Result fter ail, govern a ph: cian’s sanding in his community, Fortunately, the men who are great in medicine are also likely to be great in heart and mind and spirit. | Introducing i the Governors | ——_________+4 Little Rock, Ark, June 15.—4?)— Information tha see's out te lunch” Breets callers gt Gov. John E. Martineau's offices. For he is one governor who never eats lunch, Not only does*he ‘remain on thi job nes ne negn hours, but he is el tatt are lunch. peri ‘that. the Stites ea ae hy Bees ipeat eee 3 4 tinuously’ from c. tney on opened: in the ,_ time med are morning unt! at night. 1c closed He has found that he feels better and thinks more clearly when lunch is skipped. re becoming governor Mar- jtineau was 20 years on the chancery court bench in Little Rock, Many times he made lawyers uncomforte ble by not giving a recess for lunch, ee || AT THE MOVIN y 3 é ELTINGE THEATRE The tragedy ‘hidden behind th any “Dosinges'” ian of the h ii ativally ees in “The ci aa at the Eltinge tonight. rat le 4 That the situation as i in the plot oF the nick a4 Proven which have and with much city in the past) F. thi i ef American girly to of bargain’ marrige Bh et ct, tia ~sesesion bidder fo; jastrous!: sensational publi Pi ional and. unethical, | h a few years ago, but she retived from pictures shortly after her mbrriage. aded to play the “The Wild Horse Stampede,” by her husband, but when she had fin- eral other Universal directors to a pear in their pictures. i “The Wild Horse Stampede, Hoxie’s latest picture, provides the star with the type of characteriza- tion which has made him one of the foremost western stars of the screen. The story is set on the cattle ranches with a herd of wild horses playing a prominent part. Jack demonstrates his prowess a a fight against a whol lains, and ext: dangerous originality. Fay Wray, one of the most prom- ising of the younger screen actresses, plays the leading role opposite Hoxie. GIVE US snIPs! A special session of Congress is to be called in autumn. Maybe they are going to build more warships to bring back our non-stop flyers. Many a drive in the park ends with park in the drive. , There are 8,000,000 pianos out of tune in this country, it was revealed at’ a Chicago. music trades conven- tion. These ontimistic gentlemen are always making us revise our figures. Eighty per cent of the members of a certain prison band were paroled before their terms ended, Even in a penitentiary peace, it seems, is blessed, The man who said days atop a flagpole city evidently is a 'd fast eight New Jersey triotic cu: When Pilot Chamberlin landed in Germany his most pleasant sensa- tion was the taste of German beer, e said. Maybe after all the trip waa a bar fly, | = A hat in the ring sometimes re- sults from a ring in the hat, Pea pe bia ca mac A | Old Masters | Days of my age, Ye will shortly be past; Pains of br age Yet awhile can ye last; Joys of my age, In true wisdom delight; Eyes of my age, Be religion your light; Thoughts of my age, Dread ye not the cold sod; my Ho; of Be ye fixed on your God. 7 St. George Tucker: “Days My Youth = *F 4 Justajingle | “I be that you were here,” she rote, + But then, there was a hitch. Ci nes. whem. she wrote the postal, Was sitting in a ditch. { A'Thought. 1 —_— Be of cheer: It is I not afraid.—| xiv: 2, tM Fear is implanted te us as Preservative from evil.—| ol ES “1D WiKe to man -arder ‘t, further || hock, +} , %