The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 27, 1927, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR “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. - Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ...........+ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). 7.20 Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)... 5.00) Daily by mail, outside of North Dako‘ 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 credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, und also the local news of spontuneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of ali other matter 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) Europe Past Understanding There is no denying that the United States of America, by and large, does not know what Europe is all about. And if day by day events in Europe continue at the pace they have been going recently, it is probable that the United States never will! know what to expect of Europe. Jugo-Slavia and Albania, whose boundaries few Americans could give, are threatening to throw Europe into turmoil because of Albania’s arrest of ‘a Jugo-Slavian legation attache accused of spying. Italy, which has a treaty of friendship with Al- bania, insists on interfering, thus one of the great spowers of the continent is drawn in and the situa- tion becomes serious. Mussolini once successfully defied the league, and may do it again. In a town in northern Albania, four Italian en- gineers in charge of a street car system have been murdered by the populace. Italian Fascists are reported to have fired 30 shots at a Jugo-Slavian frontier guard. A Polish foreign minister in ‘Geneva reveals to the world that Lithuania, another, vague’ spot for Americans, is hostile over Poland’s acquisition of Vilna. has created a tense situation between those two “countries. _ Ten Rumanjan spies have been sentenced to death in Moscow. Thirty or more executions are reported from the soviet, which is trying to put down revolutionary enterprise. What does it all mean? You can search the “United States. Trying to interpret European events is a much more complicated business than most Americans care to engage in, for life is, after all, a short affair, and we have our own tax bills to-pay and our own movies to see. Perhaps the average European knows as little ‘about what it all means as does the average Amer- ican, but it was from just such a spark as any of those mentioned in the foregoing paragraphs that the world war was fired. Is Europe primed for a Tepetition of that catastrophe? Be that as it may, every nation except France, Germany, Spain and Portugal seems to be involved in some sort of an external fi and flirting with trouble. Mexico and Central America, the: most |¢@sily in nine cases out of ten. Justice seems to| influence governmentally unstable spots in the western hem- ‘sphere, are paragons of good behavior in com- parison. “4 Sportsmen to the Rescue * A‘plea to sportsmen throughout the country for ecntinued support of the American Game Protec- tive association in its work of restoring wild ani mal life in America has recently been issued. This ‘association has long been actively associated with conservation in the United States and its activities are in a large measure responsible for the increase in the last few years of game birds and animals. During the early years of the association the gen- ‘erous moral and financial support’ given by the manufacturers of arms and ammunition made it spossible for the association to carry forward its progressive and constructive program, As the work of the association became better known and its membership extended throughout the ‘country, the need for financial support from these companies grew less and they gradually reduced and finally withdrew altogether their individual subscriptions to the association. “ This association, therefore, is one now composed ef sportsmen and those interested in conservation from an unselfish angle, only, and thus deserves real support all around. The policies of the asso: ‘ciation, as outlined in its declarations and as evi- denced by its past activities, are fundamentally sound’ and constitute the basis on which the wild ‘animal life of America must be built up and re- stored. Safe and Sane Highways to gét.a Fourth of July that showed even a sem- Dlance of sanity. The campaign now has been fairly well won, and in the last few years the can- non cracker and sky rocket casualties have been brought from major action to minor skirmish pro- portions. Before the safe and sane propaganda Degan to take hold the fifth of July list of dead and injured was comparable to the size of the hos- roster after the Battle of the Argonne. * Though the firecracker fatalities are now count- gd in hundreds where once they were counted in thousands and tens of thousands, there is a new nensce to life and limb which in the last few years has threatened to equal the fireworks terror in its 4 malignant form. This is evident in the grow- The Bismarck Tribune The assassination of a soviet envoy in Polandj It took twenty years of good hard campaigning | works, they sHould be intelligent epough to listen to and practice the doctrine of safety and sanity on the highways. It takes a killjoy of the worst variety to tell people that the only sure way to avoid trouble on a holiday-crowded highway is to stay home, but some such drastic commandment seems‘to be. the {only plausible solution. Between the ‘firecracker Mann..........President and Publisher and the automobile, the firecracker sgems to be! the less deadly of the two evils. Only 3,000 suf- $7.20) fer injury or death from fireworks every year,! while the automobile” accounts for over 20,000 ; deaths and 500,000 injuries annually. | Newspaper Business The newspapers of the United States, for the | first time in their history, are doing a billion dol- lar business this year, W. P. Beazell, assistaht man- aging editor of the New York World, recently told members of the Pennsylvania Newspaper Publish- |ers’ convention, The income from. sales, he said, | will be $260,000,000 and from advertising $750,000,- , 000, despite the setback reported from most .sec- tions of the country during the spring. The in- | crease over 1926 will be about $20,000,000, In connection with these figures it is interest- |ing to note that daily newspaper circulation is; | growing at an unprecedented rate. Last year the {numerical increase was 560 per cent greater than |the growth in population. One newspaper is printed every day for every two persons over 10 |years of age who are able to read. | Every morning one newspaper is printed for every other family in the United States; every eve- | When weekly and semi-weckly newspapers and pe- \riodicals are taken into account the whole circula- |tion reaches 225,000,000, or nine ‘publications for each of the 25,000,000 families of the land. | These comparisons serve to indicate the increas- | {ing importance of the newspaper, which is the poor | man’s university. Newspapers are being read as| The papers have had to enlarge the| {never before. ‘scope of their appeal. An increased educational standard has found response in the desire of the reading public to know more of the world, particu- ithe readers formerly had no information and n> appreciation, must now be treated exhaustively in A new journalism has evolved, a Jess personal | but a more informative journalism, and we canno: | but think that the change is for the better. \ Front Door Stick-ups bell, and command you to “stick ‘em up,” it would seem that we had about reached the limit in crass crook nerve. Just this thing happened in New York the other day. Fortunately, the intended vic- tim of the stick-up was a policeman who was able to swing his right with disastrous effect and send the sticker-up sprawling. If this holdup is a sign of the time, telling us which way the wind is blowing and what we are coming to in modern society, we had best begin to prepare for it. Housewives should tie six-shooters to their apron strings, mount machine guns on. the first landing of the front and back stairs, and pre- pare to meet the relentless robber on his own terms. Nonsense to one side, however, it is high time that we stopped sentimentalizing about the “un- fortunate,” who are criminals “because they have diseased minds.” ey are too lazy to work hard for an honest liv- ing. any circumstances, for they get off entirely too be in need of harder boiling, and the harder boiled it is, and the faster it works, the better it will be for all concerned. Rainfall, Not Politics (Minneapolis Journal) Only a few ifs need be overtaken, it appears, and we shall have political forecasts as well as weather forecasts from the weather bureau. For it has been discovered that rainfall is a determining political factor in the United States. More than normal rain? A second term for a president. Less? A change in the white house. These are the conclu- sions of the discoverer. 3 It just shows how benighted we are. we have been believing it was the tariff, or the money standard, or keeping out of war or out of the league of nations, that determined succession or change in the party in power at Washington. We have supposed we reacted to spellbinding, when in_reality we were swayed by spells of weather. From a study of weather records over a century, and comparison with election results, it may be the quadrennial rainfall predicted the next presi- dent. According to a writer in the Nation, this relationship of weather and political success has held good in eighty-eight per cent of the presiden- tial elections. | For sixty yearsefrom 1825, in ‘seven cases out of eight the party in power in Washington. stayed in power when the quadrennial rainfall in the north- ast region was over the mean of 42.95 inches; in ix cases out of seven when the rainfall was less than normal, out went one party and in went the | other. | Then the center of agricultural importance shifted to the west north central region. But the principle held true; from 1885 onward the four wetter-thap- normal periods were all followed by a continuati: of the party in office, while the six drier-than-nor- mal periods, when the precipitation was under the mean of 26.79 inches, produced political upheavals. So it all depends on farm relief, after all. But not through Messrs. McNary and Haugen, not through congress. On Jupiter Pluvius alone do the political fates depend. The political necroman- cers must turn from subsidies to sprinklers, if they are to work their magic to real results. And if it is the rainfall, how weak and- wrong is ‘mere man!’ How vain, in supposing his political ‘or economic theories controlled the destinies of a nation! How sordid, in trusting to a campaign fund, however huge! a z All the fault that the Nation finds with every in power is so much breath wasted, if writer for its columns 1s right.: All the stren- endeavor, all ning one newspaper is printed for every family | | larly of foreign countries. Subjects upon which | | | the daily papers. | When robbers come to your front door, ring the! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | f FRANCE 9 |. Editor's Note: This is Chap- | ter 71 of the series of articles | written by an ex-soldier who is revisiting France as a corre- spondent for The Tribune. CHAPTER LXXI | Bill Manning and Walt Royed were |pals. Pals back in Pennsylvania and | pals when they shipped out to the | Philippines with the regular army in | 1915, Nothing very unusual about it. Just a matter of cracking hard tack |together, borrowing each other's fags, swapping news about the folks back home, cursing the heat, the mos- |quitoes and the quartermaster's -de- | partment. That's about all, just the regular ups and downs of army’ life two years of it. Then Wilson’s _proclamatton. anc the rushing of American troops to- ward France. Bill and Walt were in that. Went over with Troop K, 15th | Cavalry—regulars. Then that march? ing around France. More bully péet more bouncing ivories that wouldn'’: back, PAUL ADAMS @ MEA Seves come seven on pay nights more bor- More cussing about “why they don't give us a ghot at the Heinies, any- how!” : ‘ Finally, they did. Only some six months and it got Bill. Just a turn of luck, that was all. Walt Royed gritted his teeth, said very little and went on fighting the war. Some- how Walt came through, fell in love in France, married and settled down. But Bill Manning and Walt Royed were pals. Bill sleeps up on the sunny slopes of Suresnes, beneath a white cross in the last row that is back near the ¢rees. Walt is a member of the Ameri- ‘an Legion in France—one of those who are going to weleome the thou- sands at the Paris convention, Week Jays he works taking care of the American graves at Suresnes. and none receives better care than Bill Manning's. TOMORROW: Beware the “Hawks” of Paris. — TT | Daily Health | Service ' BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine Basing his opinions on experimen- {tal investigations of the conditions of the stomach and intestines during seasickness, the Russian physiologist, W. W. Boldyreff, has outlined a sys- tem for the prevention and treat- ment of seasickness which seems well worth an extensive trial. He has found that the absence of digestion and of the acid gastric juices the stomach will inhibit the periodic activity of that organ and of the intestines. Such inhibi, tion is also brought about by the mental state of fear or fright.. On the sea when the boat is rocked, fear or t may temporarily stop the periodic activity, but this comes back with greater force when the inhibi- tion is discontinued. The greater force of the attack produces hiccups, nausea and vomit- ing, which are the chief symptoms of seasickness. Fiom his observa- tions on the sea for a period of over | twenty-five years and from his spe- | cial experiments, he is convinced also that persons with diseased conditions of the digestive apparatus, especial- ly of the small intestine, are likely to become seasick on the ocean. He therefore presents the follow- ing outline for the prevention of sea- sickness: The digestive apparatus should be kept in perfect order; |abundant and heavy food should be avoided. Everything capable of pro- ducing fright or worry should be [ avoided. If necessary, the person may go to bed and be kept warm, taking sour drinks such as lemon or orange juice in small amounts. Certain drugs such ‘as atropine en ae ea eT | NEWS BRIEFS |; oO Wayne B, Wheeler, at Washington, threatens bolt of drys for own candi- idates if both parties adopt wet plat- forms in. 1928 conventions, Direct radio service inaugurated as General J. G. Harbord, president of Radio Corporation of America, at New York sends radiogram to Man- uel Quezon, president Philippine senate, in Manila. Soviet union designates July 10-17 as defense week in gampaign of mili- tary preparedness as Moscow sees war threats, cal Fire at Long Beach, Calif., wipes Ou. wave vil Wes una uamages equip- ment of many others, with loss esti- mated at $1,000,000. —————_——_———_ FLASHES OF LIFE , . (By The Associated Press) New York—Water is to be turned into wine at Columbia University— into champagne, sherry and port. claims made in behalf of two Bel- gian visitors are correct. Having promised to destroy their product, Brutaeye, a lawyer, and Georee ingerhoets, steamship officer, have obtained permission of prohib authorities to demonstrate in the university's chemical laboratories a secret substance which, combined with water and sugar, it is asserted, makes wine of one per cent alcohol in three days and 13 per cent in 39 days. » London — Will the incomparable Suzanne go to Wimbledon to see Helen Wills or Betty Nuthall play? She is just as enthusiastic about it rowed cigarets and borrowed francs. | weaken the periodic activity ef the 2s Hagen would be watching a match stomich and intestines, but nicotine for fun between two fellows who senarently increases the activity and could not beat 100. “Women’s thus encourages the anpearance afj matches never thrilled me; I should MONDAY, JUNE 27, 1997 F Saint “Sinmery Faith and Bob looked at her, rig-| iid with anger and amazement, as | Cherry stood jtist inside the door, j her light coat—a beautiful coat that Ralph Cluny’s money had paid for the autumn before—falling open to show the crumpled little gold colored georgette dress that scarcely cover- ed the dimpled caps of her knees. Her hat was in her hand, her bright copper-and-gold curls tousled as if swift winds had rushed through them. Her cheeks were flying flags | of excitement, her round, red mouth | still parted over the laughter with which she had bidden her escort good night, her golden eyes wide, biazing, triumphant. “Waiting uj the challenged them, in a voice electric with excitement. “I old dears?” thought I'd give you two an evening to yourselves. Heaven knows you've hinted often enough that you'd like | for me, you funny one! Enjoy it “Cherry!” Fait strangled cry preceded her jerky rising from the couth where she had beeh huddling “Where in the world have you been? We've been worried sick about you—” She walked toward her sister stiffly, her limbs still tremu- lous with relief and anger, then she reached out her arms in a sudden, overpowering rush of tenderness. jth!” Cherry gurgled. ere “up Woman, darling. Don't be an idiot! I simply went shopping, ran into Selma Pruitt, ac- cepted her invitation to dinner, then went dancing with George Pruitt. Is there anything so terrible about that?” “Come to bed. Faith,” Bob rose and stretched with an elaborate pre- tense of unconcern. Cherry's small body stiffened, an- ger darting hike sparks of fire from her golden eves. “So I'm in dis- grace, am I, Mr. Bob Hathaway! Try- ing ite turn my own sister against in fright. | IN NEW YORK | “so ee TPS Ee New York, June 27.—Down where Manhattan’s money marts end sud- denly in rivers rimmed wth wharves and cluttered with steamer traffic, there appears suddenly a slice of Su- burbia warranted to bring longings to the heart of the hardest boiled city dweller. Here, in zig-zagging streets that find a peak at the tip of Greenwich Avenue, is a dizzy display of garden equipment. Shrubs are piled in bales, and tender slips, bulbs and twigs are piled, lined and paraded. Lawn mow- ers appear in long columns, like bent soldiers. Miles of hose are tucked in great baskets, like huge snakes. Blades of, grass pop from sidewalk boxes and seed packages flaunt their gay’ promise of flowers that, some- how, never look like the pictures, Commuters rushing to make their boats stop to grab a plant on the run. Apartment dwellers stand sad-) eyed, wistfully wishing for.a garden, while harness-broken suburbanites recall the job of weeding that awaits suade them from making the ‘flight, as weather conditions were unfavor- able, @ drizeling rain and strong wind, 2 at is understood the Americans will visit”Moscow from Warsaw, ‘PRESIDENT: I$” MERTING MANY AT GAME LODGE Summer Home in Black Hills Bringa Him in Touch With Western People — .. me, aren’t you? “I'd like to know what business it is of » yours if I choose to enjoy myself for one eve- ning? God knows I've been sicken- ingly good since Thanksgiving Day! It’s the first time I’ve danced in pub- —" ° So you danced in public, did you? And expecting a baby in just four months! I thought you had better sense,” Bob answered her, his voice clipped and stern. “I¢ may not be any of my business, Cherry, but from now until after the baby is born you're going to do no more dancing. Come along, Faith.” | “I'm going to help Cherry get ready for bed,” Faith answered in a small, low voice. “It was the first ime she had defied her hu:Wand, the first timeshe had ‘pitted herself with Rapid City, S. D.,.dune 27.7, The summet residence of President” Cherry against him,'in» even the] 000.5 : ; g : ge in the Black Hills promises smallest difference of “opinion. — mote aditnete: ai Séeheatey. cous bit She did not dare at him as ey to bring him in touch with great numbers of the people in the north and. middlewest. ’ The visit of several hundred edi‘ tors a week ago and of 260 South Dakota legislators Saturday seems to have been only. a s because ad- ditional requests for mass receptions have se Rect. the executive offices in Ci The president Banas arranged she preceded Cherry to the littie bathroom ‘at thé end of the hail, the bath that belonged to. Cherry nnd Joy alone. Her body still felt stiff and queer as she bent to.turn on the hot water, as she spread the gay little bath mat for Cherry’s feet, us she arranged towels and soap for Cherry’s convenience. As Faith turned blindly away from her ti of Jove, Cherry flung her-| ¢, greet tia, more rimages, one st her sister's breast, clung] i? fy des thetvallowetane sres and to her shoulders. hate me,| Hii up delegations en ropte to Rapid Faith! 1 had to hove one last fling! | (ity, amother te Jeave Chicago, both I just had to! Teeouldn’t go un liv-| 0 Scene the state game lodge July fing—like this—just —_ waiting—for| 59." The delegations will comprise something—I don’t want—oh, it isn’t fair! I'm tricked! I’m tricked! Save me, Faith! Do something! T tell "t bear it to be a mother! it! Oh! Ob!” Her voice was rising on a crescendo of terror and shame the nails of her tiny hands dug into Faith’s shoulders. fOMORROW: Cherry opens her heart and mind to Faith. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) 3 RELEASED FROM PRISON THROUGH HOAX Wardens Tricked Into Giving Men Liberty—Prison Di- rector ‘Is Dismissed members of the Atlantic Yellowstone Pevifie Highway association, which will hold its unnual convention at Hot Springs, S. D., July 26. Added to these groups will be the thousands ‘the president will meet on the various trips he has planned, From past attendance records it ap- pears he will be seen by at least 30,000 petsons at the:Deadwood days 7 tion, Bellefourche rodeo, rmers’ pienic and a half {dozen invitations not yet accepted, and more should thev/be aecepted. HEAT CAUSES COOLIDGE TO POSTPONE HIS FISHING TRIP Rapid City, S. D., June 27.—(#). Fishing and a hike through the woods were postponed’ by President Coolidge today until tomorrow when the weather man promises cooler weather. A heat wave which came over the summer White House area early Saturday continued through- yesterday and today with the ther- mometer reaching 90 Sunday after- noon and 85 at 10 o'clock this morn- ing. Considerably cooler tempera- tures und perhaps some rain were forecast for this evening. ; The president had planned a hik- ing trip with Cecil Gideon, his South , Dakota guide, and E, W. Starling, secret service man, but decided in- stead to come to his offices in Rapid City. Here it has been warm both day and night, but at the summer White House up in the hills a blanket still was necessary during the night. Paris, June 27.—(P)—Leon Dau- det, royalist leader, M. De Lest, an- other royalists, and the communist Semard, for whose benefit the gates of Sante Prison were opened on Sat- urday, were still at liberty today and the government was working en- ergetically to obtain a clue as to how the wardens were tricked into re- Ano leasing the three nriseners/ ber of witnesses have been ques- tioned but no light has been shed on a future Sunday. oat Ye on the hoax, which has caused much All this is staged in the very lap POLA NEGRI'S For years,! seasickness. He therefore Sabra the giving by a physician of smal! aoses of atropine and the avoidance tobacco smoke by the non-smoker, The smoker should reduce his usual amount of tobacco. Since the mental influences asco- Ness ‘are important, he suggests ad- vice by a specialist who is capable fidence, and the training of the per- sonnel of the boat so that they will the passengers favorably by their behavior and conversation. At present the tactless comments of persons who make remarks suggest- ing seasickness sometimes bring on the attack. ‘The hiccups may be prevented by the swallowing of much saliva or by the use in the stomach of small doses of 0.1 per cent of hydrochloric acid. A physician can administer this easily. |, Foods which are taken should be in small portions, thoroughly chewed and moistened with saliva; indigest- ible parts of the food such as skins and seeds should be avoided, and also any considerable amount of fat. Atropine, as has been said, may be administered, but it does not al- ways serve to check an attack of seasickness, particularly in the pres- ence of the causative factors that have been mentioned. It sometimes persons who have not. particularly good appetites, especially older per- } sons, ° —— ng [—— BARBS] = Scrapping of navies seems to have started the best scrap on hand at present. A crowd in St. Loufs didn’t know serves also to destroy the appetite of not trouble to see them,’ she re- marked, after a cross channel pas- sage. | Spokane—It cost half a million to ut the D’Autremont brothers be- ind the bars. Their pictures gird- Criminals are criminals because | ciated with the production of seasick- led the globe on more than 3,000,000 of the great skyline that rises: from the foot of Broadway. The steel and stone enemies of growing things seem to glare down upon the lan of delicate plant-life, Nowhere New York do the forces of the arti cial and the natural meet on such in- congruous terms. The sidewalks posters and there were other, -ex- penses, The United States, | the No one needs to feel sorry for them underjof inspiring the person with con- American Express and the Southern| skyline cries of Mammon, of impris- <fonment to toil and of the city. Pacific paid for the man hunt. eh eee ear a A re) ry |’ Radio’s Rialto | i (By The Associated Press) A history of instruments will be given over WCCO, the Twin Cities xtation, at. 8:30 p. m, today, followed at 9 o'clock by an orchestra pro- gram. A New York program will b rebroadcast at G p. m., and a di concert, featuring several sol: and an orchestra, will be heard at 7 A variety program is sched- uled for 10:05, with a dance pr gram for 10:30, and an organ re- cital at 11:30. ' WAMD (225), Minneapolis, has a dinner. concert for 6:15; musical program at 7, and the opera “Pagliacci,” at 10 p. m., with a dance pega for 10:45. WRHM (261), inneapolis, has a dinner concert at Pp. m.; popular program at 8, and dance numbers at 9. WDGY (261), Minneapolis, will feature its pep hour from 7 to 8 p. m. WOC (353), Davenport, will fea- ture a trio at 7:05. A quintet will be heard at 8 p. m. from WHAD | (204), Milwaukee, WOI (265 mes, has a musical -~e~ram at that hour, and WHO (535) Des Moines, will feature Salon C. WOS (394), Jefferson City, will breathe'vf the countryside, the quiet suburb gardens and shady lawns; the Nothing gives greater pleasure to the year-round apartment dweller than ‘to go slumming in the plant and flower markets. Even the poor- est place seems able to afford a lone geraniu Dusty, sickly looking plants some- how manage to cling to life under! the very nose of the passing ele- vateds, i} And in those tiny courts that pass for back yards in New York may be seen many a pathetic effort of the city-harnessed man to’ get back in touch with nature. Fire escapes are lined on every step with potted flow- ers and little seven-by-ten square attest to the patient hoe and rake of the flat dweller. i T know a girl whose mother sent her a shipment of plants from Calif- ornia. The plants failed to survive the rigors of city life but moss and weeds that surrounded them clung tenaciously on, So she carefuljy tends the weeds which remind her of a California hillside. It’s a touching picture, sure to bring ‘tears to the hardest boiled eyes. GILBERT SWAN. BRITISH HOPES OF REOPENING TREATY FADE laughter at ‘the expense of the gov-| ernment, Some of the newspapers declare| the affair is doomed to remain a mystery unless M. Daudet’s royalist followers decide te tell the story. The police version is that a royalist, representing himself as M. Sarraut, minister of- interior, telephoned, or- ders to the director of the prison to free the men. ‘As a consequence, the director, M. Catry, has been di missed but the newspapers insist he is being made the scapegoat; that the blame lies higher up. “Who says the telephones work HUSBAND WILL ~ PROVE TITLE Threatens to Sue ‘Magazine Which Questioned His Right to Be ‘Prince’ ba Los Angeles, June 27. — (P) — The badly in Paris?” the Matin says.| Times says a sheet of paper which “They work so well that in the min-|Prince Serge M’Divani, husband of istries communication ean be ob-| Pola Negri, film star, declares is the ey to other documents which prove ry ~ k tained even with persons who are- not he is »-real prince, was sent by him there.” ‘ .|to New York. Saturday as the open- aly ley ee ee culoua | ing shot in a batgle RIEh he eatects to establish his lineage. The newspaper quoted him as say- ing that within a week he would file suit in New York asking $100,000 for damages from a magaziré whieh called him a “nobleman with a ques- tionable title.” The paper which M’Divani exhibit- ed to reporters, and which. he says in but one of the many papers that prove ‘him to be a real prince, pur- ports to show that the title “prince” situation, TROTZKY AND ZINOVIEFF TO BE DISMISSED first entered the M’Divani family in 1758, having been bestowed upon * i one Solomon M'Divani. ; 7 ile ithe film star's husband be- Treasonable Speeches and Vi-| an the attempt to prove his right : to title, former compatriots, of both olation of ‘Discipline he and his.father openly took issue ¥ with the prince and declared that while the M’Bivanis are of noble birth, they are not of royal blood and that the title was unheard of in Moscow, 27.—@)— | their country. ie Charged with treasonable - speeches) General Anatole Kalisheysky, now and violation of party discipline.) a chemist for a Long Beach oil com- Leon Trotzky and Gregory Zinovieff,| pany but formerly attached to the once powerful figures in the coun-|Czar’s forces at is, Georgia, cils of the all-Russian communist | M’Divani’s birthplace, said he kn party, now are threatened with final| the family and was a military asso- Bring Action shown that in twenty-two cases out of twenty-five 1 Lindbergh, but gathered around to look at his new silver-gray roadster.! Oh, well, St.Louis is a pretty big’ resent musical selections at 8:30. WSaAL (961), Cincinnati, has a studio mat 95. [Sk (341), Hot (Continued from page one) tion of the gentlemen's agreement and the subsequent refusal of the dismissal from the party. Their expulsion, has been asked by the praesidium of the central control ciate of the father and that the noble isle was not in the famfly at that ime. . the elaborate campaigning of town. res A Dutch professor has set the limit on world population at eight billions. Guess some of us will have to take the ai Raat Who remembers way back when Chiang and Chang were having a war in China and took most of the first page? Pi George Bernard Shaw has looked up English dialects and snvs there are 42,767,500 of them. to come over and hear ours! The president used worms on his hook and brought in some nice trout (plural). Mr. Coolidge, there goes your fly-fisherman vote all to pieces! | Old Masters | pI i We, the Fairies, blithe and antic, Of dimensions not gigantic, Through the moonshine mostly keep us, Oft in and peep us, Stolen s1 are always sweeter, ~ Stolen kisses much colppister, Stolen looks are nice In chapel Stolen, stolen be your app! When to bed the world is bobbing, Yet the fruit were ‘scarce worth peeling Were it not for stealing, stealing. ited by Leigh Hu: Thomas Randolph. He ought . rings, has an ensemble; KMA (270), Shenandoah, the Marimba Trio and KOA (326), Denver, a rodeo at 9 p.m. !| A Thought Ye know not what shall be on the morrow.—James’ iv:14. and Tomorrow to fresh woods pastures new.—Milton. | American congress to permit any juota immigration of Japanese into the United States, In some quarters the conviction prevails that a treaty outlawing war etween the two nations. might later point a way to solution of the im- migration problem, which is known to have wounded the Japanes- na- tidnal dignity. JAPAN MAY FAVOR BRITISH PROPOSAL Geneva, June 27.—(P}—It was re- ported, though not confirmed, t! afternoon that the Japanese delega- tion is now’ disposed to British proposal to —discu: present naval conference sibettions concerning capital ships which wei settled at the Washington conf ence of 1922, Viscount Isbii in a statement ‘to- night denied he had received instruc- at the Then's the time for orchard robbing;*|' tions to discuss capital ships, but anid he ‘had requested instructions from Tokyo because the British pro- posal appeared to have merit, prom- ising to contribute to diminution in naval expenditures, Famous Gate Crasher Is.Held lin Liverpool Liverpool, Jung 27.>-) —Jamei Connelly, hown in the United Sta ‘one-e} nne! ipreme te’ crnaher, who boasted on leaving lew York that it would take a whole tice nad ke Seen Sis See ein. é M all Micht free, is being detained person likely to become a public One méek looking Briti oleae! Sh ele committee, and inasmuch they have been demoted, disciplined and warned several times in the past few months, there appeared ‘little doubt today that the praesidium’s recom- mendat would be followed by the party whole. The praesidium ba: its recom- mendation, among other things, the allegation that Trotzky and Zi ovieff had engaged in continuo! attempts “to break periy. unity at time of serious international comp! cations, aggravated by partial failu of the Chin revolution and of f. litating the activities of anti-sovi gitations within, th unioi ‘The praesidium patience Resigns 5 Offices to Give More Time to Six Other Jobs Upton, Mass., June 27—(P)—Ben- jamin C. Crocker has resigned five town offices in order to give .him more time t6 fill with efficiency the other six civic positions he occupies. He gives up the duties as ca taker of the town hall, public library, fire department headquarters and of Upton common, also the job of fire warden. He will continue as chief of police, chief of fire department, sealer of weights and measures, and caretaker of three: schools, The vacancies will be meeting of the selectmen July 5. ASHING Dishes GETS ONE INTO HST WATER, over a period’ of four yea in spite of numerous warnings. —— ‘American Citizen Is Killed By Chinaman Washington, June 27—(#)—Assas- sination by a Chinese last Friday of rt Howell, an American citizen and president of the Matoo Boyd company of Los Machis, Sinaloa state, was reported to the state de- by the American id Ria’ voueocied. ihe pabrertor ef the jue! el Ls state to take imm ae a, En Route to Warsaw} American | transat- lantic flyers, hopped off this more for Weres i tha ae K filled at a g- oo a ai

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