The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 17, 1927, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) —— Bismarck as second class mail matter. property. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Daily by carrier, per year ............ Lie Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)... i t Daily by mail, per year, jburg. All we have to say in this connection is ' (in state outside Bismarck). + 5.00 that if conditions in Keansburg, N. Daily by mail, outside of North + 6.00! Member Audit Bureau of Circulation a the use for pu enue of all news dispatches municipality and doubt! i] credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa-| 990. po. inaee poe te per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin | #¢Y has extraordinary powers. a published herein. All rights of republication of all |he is greatly mistaken. | a other matter herein are also reserved. representative of a governing board chosen by the a " - people. He only has that power which the people 7 é By tad DRONE COMPARS ‘give him through their elected representation. 4] CHICAGG me ees enor | cannot assume the Mussolini role legally, a Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg.| Americans resent censorship of any kind. 6 PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH inimical to the public interest, especially where it 4 NEW YORK - > -__—CFrifth Ave. Bldg. affects news vital to the public. rf ri nigh vf : struggle of the American newspapers against at- Efi City, State and County Newspaper) uae a H be at 3) nd s sie fs Ma tempts to limit their privileges has been upheld at jay #43 ‘all points by the highest courts. e S| n . 1 yi mA w ‘ ra eres ie biol eR SaNecaniee American liberty is a history of a free press, re- $ zs nears ates eee ne eann any ths flecting in its pages the true state of affairs of ee ee : ;| town, state and nation. Without this exposition of re Geneva ec site cei that rei the affairs of the community the people of Amer-| hee cconomie conditions may result in resteration 0 a would he subject to beteayal at the tunds of Maj pre-war status. It points out fi it the return representativer, fo tothe oldersc deity wa oliony otras Manager Lohsen, with his police censorship, has | Hw 1 NLA Seales lahat har dita iy lepend.| Viclated a fundamental principle of our democracy awe pul Rs world, which previously were depend: | inq should correct his mistake before, real mischief at ent on Europe. imaehal yet “The new distribution of the world’s productive | °° 0. oth al Pages fn activity,” it asserts, “is by no m simple con- mg ee sequence of the v It is rather a continuation of | Summer Arrives pa a tendency that was in operation before 1913. It! With summer actually here, there comes heart- us lly 5 e cl er has, however, been enormously accelerated by the! ening news in announcement. that the municipal ty War, which, in effect, has caused the world to ps *s/ swimming pool will be opened next week. ‘wor in a few years through stages of evolution which in| This summer, especially, we can look with special | ‘wee other circumstances might have occupied several | pride on this pocl, representing, as it does, a great T decades, Europe's troubles have hastened, they | achievement for the community and more particu- sin) liave hot created, these tendencies.” |larly for the Elks lodge. Fargo, as that a second and far-reaching change in compari-| despite an intensive educational campaign, the son with 1913 is the economic situation in the United If Fargoans who supported the swimming pool ; the States, which, from being a debtor nation, has be-|in their city could noly have brought residents of ing come one of the world’s chief creditors. The out- >) pouring of capital from the United States in re-{would surely have won victory. As time goes on, Wit ‘tent years has been one of the chief factors in! we are realizing more and more the value of this isi A ‘Without c.... it has largely assisted many, wer Bean nitiuns io restore their industrial activities | city, os and in other sections of the world has enabled de- | It is well for us to again give credit to the Elks tes! velopment to continue by practically filling in the | for their fine work. Everyone in Bismarck is proud Hay sap left by the cessation of British and other Eu-| i ropean exports of capital. whose efforts this worthy project was brought into ¢ It is very probable that a new equilibrium will be | being. . established in which America will put the products cf tropical countries on a scale large enough to en- | able her creditor position to be liquidated by a sys- Gum Shoe Divlomats tem of triangular trade. American diplomats and ge foreign affairs have dene much to spread the pres- The Value of Raiiroads tige of these United States, but the gospel of The railroads of this country are one of the prin-)Americanism, whatever that is, has best been prop- Sti cipal contributors to our national prosperity, W. G.|2#ated by gum shoe salesmen, Besler, first vice president of the American R: cyele in a very convincing way. “That the rail- A Toads are an important factor in the industrial life|bYWays cn this globe, and you will find in sod ast of the nation is shown by the fact that in 1925 they |houses, igloos, and palm leaf huts, surprisingly ae Lought about 22 per cent of the total coal output|/@tge numbers of American phonographs, sewing Att of the United States and scme 20 per cent of the| Machines, safety razors, jackknives, movies, foun- jur fuel oil production,” he points out. “They also tain pens, cosmet typewriters, and patent medi- Cn took about 15 per cent of the total amount of lum-|‘iNes- Every one of those articles got there through | ber and timber cut in the United States while their|the efforts of an American drummer. ira direct and indirect consumption was close to 25 much as the diplomats, have put the United States | wat per cent. In addition, railroad purchases accounted |i" the forefront of world esteem. aa directly and indirectly for a quarter of the total picture of the extent of the influence of the rail- in wages, which are largely paid out by railroad employes in purchasing the products of industry. : eae tications. = Five hundred employes and not a single telephone | go and 70 degrees, ; that is the unique distinction of the claims divi- = ‘sion of the general government accounting office, which is presided over by Comptroller General Mc- = Carl. . e It seems that Stewart B. Tulloss, chief of the = division, believes that its business is best trans- = acted by correspondence and by that alone. There- = fore, while his office is equipped with typewriters, calculating machines, mimeographs and all other | That should not interfere appurtenances of modern business, the ring of the " “The department. of justice, however, so violently § disagrees with General Tulloss that he has been g ee eae Te s2e has urged the elimination of cor-| tion of Washington hot a © >> he ‘up it out, New Yi Gieplriting as Washington, The Bismarck Tri bune! Police Censorship on News The action of Borough Manager C. B. Lohsen An Independent. Newspaper of Keansburg, N. J., in denying access to the: po- lice records by reporters, is to be emphatically ¢cn- demned. Certainly it reflected poor judgment and Published by the Bismarck Tribune, Company, ‘ite likely a disrespect for the law whieh make Bismarck, N. D., and entered at.the postoffice at all information contained on a police blotter public, sry The excuse jriven by Manager Lohsen. for this! Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | rigid censorship is that the printing in the news- $7.20 | Papers of the information contained on the pol.ce . 7,20; records would reflect against the borough of Keans- J., ave that | bad it is high time some publicity was given them we Fon ee ———— so that the decent citizens of the place could de- Member of The Associated Press mand that something be done about it. The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to, Mr. Lohsen is new in his job of managing a he believes that a man-| In this, however, | He is but the appointed | 4; doughboy French translation, means For years the/| The history of | det | the witty conversation will degen- F ; last winter, voted | tied In this connection it might be well to point out! down a projected bond issue for a pool in that city, | Daily Health BAe AuUstifpiess rmmase. | Bismarck to talk with the project's opponents, they | At twelve o'clock that dreadful; her. “Now, I'm going to give you a night Faith telephoned for young Dr.| sedative and “make Faith leave you Atkins, who had attended her mother | alone. t yeur of her illness. Cher |had been weeping continuously for] and nothing that Faith j could say or do could stop those ter- rible, racking sobs. she’s going to. make elf so ill that she will lose her y,” Faith told Bob when he joined chen where Faith was preparing a hot water bottle and BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine The British physiologist, Ernest H. na thorough consideration ffects of alcohol human. body made in 1923, summar-| irmly upon himself and his! ized all of the evidence thus far | available as to what occurs when this substance is taken into the system. He agrees with most, other inves-| tigators that alcohol doubt a food especially valuable in cases when ordinary foods cannot be On the other hand, he says that the concentration of alcohol in the blood and tissues can be con- trolled only by regulation of the is drunk and that if this is not exercised, any beneficial effect of alcohol as a food is more ensated for by its dele- Stop that crying this min- ute, or I'll spank y enh hastening the cecnomic reconstruction of the world.| cl, not ‘only as a civic asset, but as a thing of Tas UE tend tooud bes hima tbe real value in providing recreation for the whole brusquely out of the room, closing patient. Faith walked on slow, lead- en feet into the living room, where she found Bob seated in the big wing chair, Joy cradled in his arms, fast 8 face, leaning against ; Joy’s tow head, was gentle again, but the eyes he raised to greet her were so sad that she wanted to cry. “VIL put Joy to bed with Dad,” She could hardiy so terrible it was of the pool, and they have not forgotten thrcugh! is without a she wants to do, mouth grim and Faith whisvered hear to look at amount which ed him almost sternly. ill—you ought to be sorry for her "t let's quarrel! T en so ghastly hard for statesmen mixing i hopeless look in his ey ‘ | had glowed and sparkled with happi- |ness and love no more than seven Oh, darling, don night has bes di Depressing Effect lea that a plentiful use of beneficial for heavy workers,” said Professor St ding and mischiev- He considers its chief value food in certain cases of diabetes stages, although | Joslin, who has had one of the gres iences with diabet inclined to consider the cohol as a food in diabetes in general as not helpful. ling. considered it also as a food in the weakness of old age, but said that for the normal individual the cohol is not of ‘im- firmly, Then his face softened, he took her in his ai over her comfortin; d Cherry to rest her icy little feet on the hot water bot- Recent news thatthe first American soda foun- TI way association, believes. He traces the status of |tain in Czecho-Slovakia had been opened in the city his own industry in relation to the general business |°f Prague was therefore important, whether you believe it or not. Visit any of the highways and ins should have finish- ture to Cherry. They nd his hand, loosely ing hers, seemed like other flesh than ‘that which had made every cell in her body sing with j “Well, that’s tha briskly, as he stepned into the li: he'll sleep now, two can go to bed, did not go in there again, Faith. T want vou to promise me one thing, Don't pamper Cher- ng and well, ind it won't do them any good for you to coddle her and give in to her every whim. work and exercise and see people—if that won't be too painful, consider ing everything. TOMORROW: stand with Cherry. (Copyright, 192' A Thought A prudent man covereth shame.—, Proverbs xii; 1 ds, Faith was thinking dr il her fears of this fi with the family had not dared picture anything so terrible as had actually erry still loved Hathaway, to whom s been engaged and whose jove had forreined in philandering other men? Oh, dear Lord, not tha’ Faith prayed, her heart like lead in young woman, food value of Dr. Starling, saya that the, action | Uday when that deft, rear went flat. of alcohol from essentially depressant; fect is to dull the perception of un- pleasant feelings, of surroundings, to diminish self-criticism and the fear of undertaking any action which may excite remarks or be regarded by other people as not appropriate to i Thus, under the i fluence of alcohol, an individual be- more communicative, He is more receptive in the conversation and affairs of his fellows and his emotions are more ea: When the doctor arrived at last] he did not mince matters with" his He had already had a talk Hathaway before he | hon iron and steel output of the country.” j ne ao Statisties are usually dry reading, but the fore- Editorial Comment = going ones are graphic enough to give an accurate —_—_—_—_—.._.._ ee! cha | . | Cool Evenings.in South Dakota Bob takes a firm NEA Service, Inc.) tered Cherry’s room, and hi when he spoke to her, was Vhat’s all this ashamed of you. thought you had more consideration his suspicion, There may be hot afternoons in Montana, as certain of our younger poets have assured us; but across the border, in South Dakota, the evenings, ister than this.” ask her to do anything Cherry sobbed. her not to call you!” “All you had to do to make sure che wouldn't was to sten erving and behave yourself,” Dr. Atkins scolded OUT OUR WAY fluence of alcohol the shy and diffident person becomes less fearful of pressing on his mind and may even Where shame is, there is.also fear. revealing what out the cooling forecasts of Mr. P. C, Day of the} jdebted for a mest suggestive study of the climate of Custer State Park, site of the summer white house. The weather bureau has operated a station at Hermosa fer thirty years. As Hermosa is only {eight miles from the state game lodge, where the president is to live, and as the altitude of the two places is about the same, 3,300 feet above sea level, Mr. Day was abie to furnish authoritative prognos- ut roads’ purchasing power, in addition to their ser’ Tari ice as transportation agents. It is notable in this (New Sark simes) ace ~ connection that purchases of fuel materials and sup- sep plies by railroads im 1926 amounted to $1,559,032,- wi 331, the greatest amount ever spent for that pur- | i i A Pose by the railroads of the United States in any ered tales. are spol. . The: snawatorm dust reported ite Gear, with. the exception: of 1028, “| from the Black Hills is a happy augur. It bears _ cha i ia { The railroads are undoubtedly one of the control- ally ling factors in the economic welfare of the nation, | Ve*ther bureau, to whom President Coolidge is in- | Not only with regard to a number of important aol commodities are they among the larges purchasers, au but they also render a vital service to the public in Cre : :the form of transportation. In addition to this het they distribute nearly three billion dollars a e A Phoneless Office The mean summer temperature averages between While the thermometer once in thirty years climbed to 106, the chances are strongly against its repeating that mistake this year. The daytime temperature runs around 75 or 80 degrees, fairly moderate for the summer sea- son, while the nights are usually about 30 degrees cooler, assuring comfortable sleeping conditions. Only cccasionally are high winds recorded, the av- erage velocity being about eight miles an hour. aa tags fh the cast of a gossa- mer fly. Or does’ the ‘president use worms? The Fs telephone is a sound unknown. | correspondents did not tell us last: summer. Best as all, humidity is “rarely oppressive at any time of day, and is agreeably. low.duri ° * asked to alter the situation. It.seems that attor-| er portions The ou bromide pti angle a ‘neys for the department often, are required to study midity has a peculiar force for ‘Washingtonians. files sent up by the claims division and. frequently | The president, wha knows what the capita] can do Puzzling situations are encountered. Instead of|in summer time, must relish Mr. Day’s assurance ig able to reach Tulloss immediately by tele-|that, although the: temperature in the Black Hills » & trip to the claims division is necessary,| may occa: ionally be as high, the lower humidity further delay is encountered while cards are | gives opportunity for evaporatign,:“the cooling ef- sent Lstherolg-eperianas apc fect of which overcomes mucl of: the oppressive ‘s " Mneys insist, runs coun-| mugginess that frequently. aecompanies tem- that of General Lord, director of the budget, peratures at Washington.” That is a tre doer spells. They dull the in- of interdepartmenta!|tellect, and there is a quality about ‘them that and increased use ofthe telephone. - makes life seem ether mean and unprofitable. Talloss is} Tt is said of Mr. Hoot-that, when:he was secretary sivable that the! of state and one of the eapital’s summer offerings found him engrossed, in some particularly baffling ‘would put his papers in a. brief-case to his Srereeent én ‘Fifth Avenue to can be hot, but never so cocoa Te '| York some such slap-atick | Editor’s Note: This is chap- ter 63 of ‘the series of articles written by an_ex-doughboy who is revisiting France as a corre- spondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER LXIIT “Sur la route a, Montpelier. Il y javait un cantonnicr Qui cassit des | tas d’cailloux—” | Which, in a more or less liberal | that on the road to Montpelier there | is a cantonnier who makes big“rocks | into little ones. This informatin | is essential in leading up to the in- | trodueation of Ernest Chellon, | Ernest is a cantonnier—a road- ng the route from Toul Mousson. His particular treteh of highway that in front of the old Toul [runs along ) | aerodrome where Princeton's famous | Hobey, Baker crashed on the day the | Seawbtien was signed—and past the crumbling buildings of the ancient | French caserne that was used by the Americans as an evacuation hospi- | tal. | Gets Early Start Ernest is 77 years old, and’ it must said of him, in all fairness, that is the best! little cantonnier in department. He drives off with levery morning and he continues to | hook and slice along until 6 o’clock | & FRANCE at night, with an hour off at noon for his bread and a bottle of wine, Then he: puts his sticks away and trudges on into Toul. Ernest was asked recently regard- ing his success as a cantonnier. “Well,” he replied, “I was not such a wiz before the war, In fact, dur- ing the first 40 years of my work, I bobbled most of my chances. I couldnt make a hole in par and [ was always getting myself stymied by carts and automobi! Helped His Swi: ° “However, along in 1918, an Amer- iean soldier who was billeted in my house gave me a leather vest. I tried it out. Then I discovered what had been ailing me. For the sfétst time in af career I was able to swing freely, did the trick. I found that I could follow through perfectly and that I could get my shoulders: into my drives, Coincident with this revéla- tion I adopted a new stance. The sleevéless vest “After that nothing could stop me, Now I hold the national open cham- pionship as well as the premier honors of Meurthe et Moselle, And, among all the cantonniers of France, including that baby sur la route a Montpelier, I'm the ace.” So, if that generous American sol- dier ‘comes over with the legion in long-handled adz at 6 o'clock; September and looks up Ernest Chel- Jon, he'll see how a leather vest can improve one's gamie. | seem temporarily t--be a brilliant| | conversationalist or a witty speaker, It is not surprising therefore that alcohol should commonly be regarded as a stimulant. However, the same {action continued further affects ‘the {next lower ‘levels of .the nervous | system, causinng interference with co-ordination and i at increased, if the dose of alcohol i: rate into tiresome loquaciousness nd the blurred speech of intoxica- tion, Alcohol is therefore unsuitable for S E Regan last week visiting his sister and family. - ing gravel near Hazelton, returned home Wednesday. ily were callers in Moffit Satur- day, the highest mental efforts or during the performance of prolonged mus- |trol of the body by the highest icessive degree, so that their con tution may actually interfere with | acquired by constant practice. To | such individuals aleohol acts as a | relaxation, diminishing the nerve |tension. ‘A man of this type who technic by a small dose of alcohol. Alcohol, * BARBS ry HAS HE A GAS MASK | Oratorically speaking, Lind bergh’s homecoming is likely to bi the occasion for more than one en. durance flight. . ... One of the ying in Paris, . Now that the flyer. has suc- on the side. Pad just for the change. | 100 he'll take up golf. It does take a lot of moral courage to go in for! that game, gine pipe now finds he can get along with mother’s cigarets, i : The universe seems to be runnii Confirming our suspicions of last! Great Britain is\a country where the word “comrade” dees not mean friendly. New York, June. 17.—In the two or three night clubs that seem to sur- vive the general disaster which swept this hard boiled industry during the winter, one of the secrets of success seems to be the impolite game of “rough-housing” important people. of the city’s remaining night pla: grounds has as its star attraction a stick school. I have seen some of the nation’s most prominent men and) women folk submit to astounding an-' again. . The other night a:group of chorus’ girls appeared’ dressed as policemen. They carried stuffed “billies” and went from table to. table “socking” the guests over the. head, with the | baldheade as their particular victims. On this particular night I noticed | among the guests Lord O'Shaugh- nessy, visiting Canadian; Samuel Untermyer, the famous traction law- er, and any number of other prom- inent ones. When. the antics reached their height three swallow-tailed old) boys were dragged from their chairs to the dance Il while ‘the girls Played leapfrog over them, During the course of the evening Oren, called on Miss Hazel Nelson cular feats. In some people the con-! Saturday evening. |nerve centers is developed to an ex-|with Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barkman i Saturday evening. j the carrying out of complicated acts | yj; the ball game at Driscoll Sunday } afternoon, |plays golf sometimes improves his! p, Starr and Hrs. Hegebush and daugh- | ng ter of Mandan, also Mr. and Mrs. P. | TOMORROW: When to Prescribe! Lathrop of Driscoll, Mr ard Mes. | Sawyer and family, Bernice and Paul | Pasley and Ben Ore: | BARBS | Mrs. Carrie Nelson and daughter, { Hazel, visited at the Ed. Erickson home Sunday. Sunday evening at the Dallas Bars: nan home, reasons Charley made such a big surprised Monday to have Mr. and i i e is that he didn’t , Mrs. Fry from Jamestown, N. D., and He’s a champion in the air, but he; Franklin, of Fountain City, Wis. can keep his feet on the ‘ground.' drive up to visit them. ceeded he can do a little banking, Clear Lake school No. 2 Monday. . the Albert Christensen: home Mon- Maybe Secretary, atu apelaet, Bay ater a - fee eee , 0 cu e size o! james Johnson’s ten’ irthday. At ' ie Be iee cheat ee Leiden teeta waa ewan eee ehh being centered with ten candies. Captain Robert A. Dollar, 80, the! James received many beautiful ard ship magnate, says that when he’s|useful presents, The old-fashioned® college grad F. who used to borrow hig father’s|hoon they attended the sale at tha 4 George K. Shaffer home in Steele. 1 Regan visited at the H Smith home . Monday. vicinity left Tuesday on a fishing trip near Pingree, John Carlson, to Bi > [TEN NEW YORK {32 soprtt Se fortron “ei |Panied them, iJ. W. Beye- motored to Bismaysx Tuesday, nd 8, Leo othe: Frank Shaffer home a few days before leaving for Missouri ahd then on to California. The most, successful and “fastest” SHOPLIFFERS. NOW WEAR BUT x LITTLE Program of stunts bred:of the slap-! new wrinkle or two in the gentle pis of shoplifting. but a system uncov- ered here by police has department r ; i ties, What's more they seem to like! to rofl sine omen ine as to how it, for: more notables frequent. this ; place than any. other in Manhattan rested, When # small fortun and Keep going back, again and! tomary ng, was found in their old up adress and go to a dressing room to “try it on”—and then walk out in it, Anyone who -protested. cold search the suspects and would find they had no extra dresse: Roy .Smith spent several days at Clarence Olson, who has been haul- Mr, and Mrs, Henry Olson and fam- Bernice and Paul Pasley, also Ben Mr. and Mrs. Henry Olson visited ‘Hans’ Klucksdah! was a caller in titarck Sun Mr. and Mr: Ifred Olson took in } Callers at the Mrs, Marie Olausen ome Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Olson spent iss Priscilla Olson called on Miss yrtle Christensen Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Van Vleet were rs. Krause and sons, Arthur’ and Township meeting was held at A number of friends gathered at Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shaffer and i Vivian, also Mr. and Mrs, ’ hag Hargrave and fa A ner Saturday with Dr. and Mrs. B. Lodge of Steele. In the after- Mr, and Mrs, J. E. Sharp and Fver- | | ett Chappell drove to the Albert Christensen home Monday evenng down, says a. Scottish profe: and visited. | Mrs. John Carlson and children of ‘ A number of young folks from this H. Smith took dis daughter, Mr: and Mrs. George K. Shaffer id Max, are visiting Cleveland, O.—There’s alway: Two women, ar- in cloth- of their operations, to pick ‘A calf, Tribune Piebe three months old, frought Papoose, $2,375 for. Hargrove and Arnold of erwath, Iowa, from Shore Acres ‘arm at White Bear, at the Holstein sale here in which 47 head of cattle jof the famous Ormsby strain went ; under the hammer, one of Manhatta leadine judges, seeming to have sip; a bit of “hip juice,” insisted on singing in a voice Teast. < ‘From somewhere in the room came the ery, “Throw the’ bum out!” But of course they didn't. Nor did they: bother the young. man who had"made the crude ‘suggestion. Texas Guinan, who Sly ed New ricks, has become. one of the world’s best known resort proprietors a3 reault, Recently one of Chicago's more-or- less celebrated LY in New York and fe heatrica’ qalciae keane about it and, thea farred’ C8 the. groom = Fred. e m Chicago hardware merchan! cards oo} Manhattan in, bootltgaer the. : variably prrit 4 ware.” that was a bit off key, to say the]; %

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