The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 15, 1927, Page 8

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\ a ee — — —— Ase Eee eres tos sucrose ees. ~ wane ecee mM sees Oe esos ‘PAGE EIGHT The Bismarck Tribune |ctaimed to have supernatural gifts, made prophe- | Ni An Independent THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published 4 the Bismarck Tribune Company, | Biemarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at | Bismarck as second class mail matter. 1 ann... President and Publisher | Subscription Rates’ Payable in Advance “wily by carrier, per year . daily by mail, per year, (in daily by mail, per enn (in state ‘outside Bismarck)... Dally 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, and also the local news of spontaneous origin Published herein, All rights of republication of ali »ther matter herein are also reserved. them survive to this day. with a mysterious box. national crisis. 7.90 | tion. Church of England be present at the opening. Poor Joanna! 6.00! than a pistol and some other trinkets. fcountless thousands. Her preachments sound wild | knowledge, but to some they still seem true. And when we pause to think of the people who are chas- ing after each new cult nowadays—adherents of Foreign Representatives ‘ G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETR | Brahmanism and others—it seems a. mite ridiculous, Tower Bldg. 1 resge Bldg. too. In spite of all our progress, there are .still NEW ee as NE, Hitch at Ave. Bidg | people who are wandering back in eighteenth cen- |tury mazes. And there probably will be, for cen- (Official City, State and County Newspaper) | turies to come. | These Terrible, Terrible Youngsters! My, my, what terrible youngsters we have now | The Storm Signs Are Out adays! The questionnaire craze has hit the schools | The storm signs are out in North Dakota. All and colleges, and earnest compilers of them are!things point toward a blow. The reason is the Tushing forth with conclusions that the youth of| coming of Smith W. Brookhart, senator from. Iowa. today is just shooting down a toboggan toward He is to speak at a Valley City picnic the latter degeneracy. | part of this month. Here, for example, is a writer in @ current maga-| It is as inevitable as the passing of time that zine, who gazes with alarm on what he calls the/Mr, Brookhart will talk on a subject’ Particularly advancing tide of atheism in universities and pub- dear to him. That subject at present is about 200 lic schools. He points a finger of horror at the| miles southwest of us in a mountain fastness, In various student societies which have banded them- case you haven't guessed his identity, it is none selves together for the, avowed advancement of other than Calvin Coolidge. skepticism. Our own University of North Dakota Mr. Brookhart has proven an apt talker on this comes in for a little discussion, with an organiza- subject before. He showed his aptness earlier this tion called “The Society of the Damned” pointed | ,.5, by appearing, like a death’s head at the feast, out as one of the many student atheist organiz: at a Sioux City’ meeting the day the president cele- tions. A magazine published by a seventeen-yeai | eaibe d his birthda: 4 : 3 : y up in the Black Hills. The re- See coer Telereyee ciel as “SOM OR | oss edligs Rlamenbied Well, WIHiGehe AaIQan ample of the alleged determined attempt to r | of one Calvin. He was rather uns; unde: " he paring in his de- mine the faith of our students. nunciation. Then, down in Minnesota the other day, the Min- ‘ . nesota Parent-Teacher Observer, official organ of Sessa apesige? sina oe fers hatte nA spe t-teacher associations in the state, printed an| © Wi) nave to say, about Calvin sho rine ate i terest. Undoubtedly, the “downtrodden condition article giving the results of a questionnaire an- of North Dakota farmers under the Coolidge ad- swered by students in the Spring Valley, Minn., ministration” will be part of his tale. high school. According to these youngsters’ re- ; plies, the greater percentage of them drink and Pietingcel meet has done bern suber smoke; their moral letel: ne, | things during his term in congress, it canno! je- BUSI) GicHMeTeEALaS 1Gke Acllcauese carer: (nial bat he bsstns to wowwadting Nici aea houuke id thi re irrevocably lost. And these answers ed taken if jconcentrates on Coolidge. A flow of rhetoric can- were printed as fact! es not efface the ability of the man. Words won't af- The crying need of today is a sense of humor, at fact itesipb das vol aaeatypanieg es least when it comes to tabulating questionnaires | “~ and seeking “student problems.” If you'd believe POE RES Oe a NEE these youngstef™ they’re a total loss. But the en- couraging part of it is that conditions aren’t as they’d have you believe. It is the desire to shock Editorial Comment their elders, to have a little fun, which actuates Camping (The New York Times) This is open season for camping—a fact received with mixed emotions by many. There are the in- different, for whom camping in any form holds no: appeal. There are the envious who do their camp- itg in their office chairs or ‘on the parch rocker ‘on a hot summer night, and think longingly of cool streams and pleasant wooded valleys. There are the professionals who travel lightly and go direct to the wilds to put in effect the pent-up dreams and carefully made plans of an entire year. There ate the adventurous, whose inexperience is com- pensated by irrepressible enthusiasm, and wifo have provided against all possible tertors of the wilder- ness by purchasing all the latest “gadgets” and “doodabs” and fancy devices that are offered to Rrospective campers whose purses are longer than their heads. Finally, there are the blissfully ig- norant, who, in response to the nomadic spirit that is the heritage of all beflivvered Americans, adopt the motto “Let's go!” and start off into the coun-' try, trusting to tuck and to the advice of the near-; est gasoline station agent to find an agreeable| camping place. | It is this last category: of campers which has in- spired most uneasiness in the guardians of the wil-| jderness and in the “old-timers” among the hunters, fishers and campers. The. automobile has given: them the widest possible range of activity.. They started by thousands on their gourneyings yester- dey and the day before. Tomorrow) they will be cluttering the roads between the Atlantic and the Pacific, and turning off into byways which have Previously been secure from invasion. trail can ye tell them.” Cans, newspapers, card- board boxes line their camping grounds. Forest fires grow out of their camp fires. They are—or to the “regulars” assure. us—a dangerous and dif- jficult lot, who mar the countryside and annihilate: jusion. students to paint themselves as black as possible. ‘They aren’t that way, but if they can kid someone into believing they are, they do it with a chuckle. If you take the answers to these questionnaires with a grain of salt; if you pause to remember that students today like a prank just as well as they did when you Went to school, you'll come to only one conclusion. That is that the youngsters of to- day stack up pretty well alongside the youngsters of earlier days. Dancing and Work Dancing the fox trot now has new dangers for the timid. A Finnish professor has discovered that this seemingly innocent pastime takes more energy | than laying bricks. According to him, it is as ex-/ hausting as moderate or even heavy bodily work. The esteemed ‘scientist has figured out a table in which it appears that the waltz and the now ob- solete shimmy are the least exhausting of dances. Next, in order, come the black bottom and the schottische. The fox trot, the polka, the charles- ton and mazurka come next in the amount of en- ergy expended. Despite these apparently, damning facts, it wi!l be hard to convince most of us that we're working too hard when’ we dance. Ask the young folks which they'd rather do: dance or lay bricks, and you’ve an answer to the effectiveness of the pro- fessor's investigation. Germany Turns the Corner Germany is getting back on its feet. The despair with which this country set about rebuilding itself the year after the world war ended has shifted to a feeling of confidence—confidence based on the miraculous success it has so far had in reestablish- ing itself. So writes a correspondent of the New York Times. +: Germany has set her feet on the ground again; she believes in herself. And the growth and prog- reas she has made during the last few years give _ her good reason to do so. z> “There has been an industrial boom in Germany of late. Factories -have adopted American effi- ‘tiency methods, and they are working remarkably “ well. Savings banks are growing, railways are being electrified; toal is ‘being mined in increas- ing quantities; canals are being dug to help trans- <:portation, and commercial aviation is proceeding at a rapid pace. i +> In six years, as: The Times’ correspondent points out, the German merchant marine “has risen from **"pemetically nothing—from a» few vessels capable sc,@mly of cobstwise teading—to 2,379 steam, metor > and sailing veneels, ‘abgregating some 8,500,000 ~~ tons.” This is little below the pre-war level. The remedy lies not in abuse, but in education. tomobile or by horse, foot or canoe, is increasing every year. This is the expected result of the larger number of state and national parks and for- este, and of the facilities which these ‘put at the disposal of campers. -Roads have deen built in the patks, and rest cabins put up at frequént The Forest Service has built many miles lent trails and provided camping sites for ‘This is us it should be, for jthere is mo detter ! iil | Sie¢ and generally conducted herself as the world’s promised—as she claimed—lesder. She died in |ammimn 1814 with a large following. Evidently, some of |’ ~ ‘When Joanna knew she was to die, she called some of her friends together and entrusted them It was not to be opened, she said, except at some time when .there was a What was in it would save the na- She also specified that all the bishops of the | None of them were. And the famous box contained nothing more enthralling Nowadays, when we hear the story of Joanna Southcott, we laugh. But in her time she was a | natidnal figure, a leader of a sect which numbered and fantastic, in the light of twentieth, century The number of campers, whether they travel. by au- |~ | He Sure Is a Tough Kid to Wean ly, while her rcustody of the ‘that 1 am—un: drearily. ce that , can he? have to prove that your conduct ince your marriage has been such as to make you unfit to rear the baby, and you know he can’t do that. Don’t cry so, darling. Bob will know | ; what to do. “I'm going to see Churchill!” Cher- ry announced, raising her flushed, tear-wet face to wild, defiant eyes. —fight!” The thought flashed across Faith's mind that fighting in the courts was terribly expens had no money the let him in for? ; Cherry whirled through her dress- ing, stopping twice to press a quick, passionate kiss upon the tiny, con- ‘tented face of her baby as it nestled in Faith’s arm: “You don’t get for me, do asked coaxingly. “Of course not!” Faith reproached her, fore this “But you'll tonight.” nar ol impulsively. be done. the precious!” rou do love the midget, don’t you, Cherry?” Faith asked, a lump in her throat making words difficult. “You didnt want h rained Cherry’s baby to her breast, ‘Oh, he wouldn't dare to try ‘to the baby away from us—you!” she added, with a moan. “Churchill says he’s going to sue ‘on the grounds of desertion and claim, “He plans to use the evi- anning brought t_me during the trial. Oh,| inner, won't you? s Thursday ‘and Mrs, won't -be back, so I'll have to be cook “Tl hurry back and cook the din- herr “But I've just got to talk-to Churchill and see what can Custody of my ‘baby! divorce?” Faith demanded {ndignant-1 tiny, f arms — instinetively| toward the door. ly back!” baby on the. p Cherry told |her indeed that th faintly. she tho Chris out ley! ever. the baby— ed! the gorgeous start at Faith with Bob had bought. “He's got to fight ‘tions for dinner. ¥| ry would not return to Faith's heart. looking after Aiid- you, darling?” she believed in the oracles. try to be back be- You know Lundy in their opera promised her Me came wanderin, Oh, ing.’ Tt w: “I'm med about her! And she’s so| catefully observed. And so good! laughed Cherry Faith, she. knows “You certainly look like a moth Faith scoffed fondly, as Cherry's utterly beautiful!” huskily. “Look,| the wings to c: her lit mothe sf The riably it was so. cathe laughing but well-pleased. For mi Fo: now it had a perambulator time— the ancients fallibility of their Life courses were chai by the whisperings Broadway, some thousands of years later, clings to superstitio: of the One time like body whirled lightly When Cherry was gone Faith sat Wea! for a while with the baby held close to her troupled heart, held so close infant whimpered How vile a man could be, it, sick with apprehension. long months his name had signified all things menacing and evil a new and more terrible sound than But of course he couldn't take When the child. whimpered again ‘otest of her passionate embrace, Faith amiled at it through her tears, then hushed it to sleep, laying it in which Then she rolled the stately carriage into the dinii room :where she could keep an eye of it while she went about her prepara- course Cher- f IN NEW YORK | —_______________« New York, July 1 simi in nature and has the greatest faith aeee mn, In the Knickerbocker theater, for instance, Lester, the theater cat, set- | thes the fate of many 2 produetion, in from an alley some time ago just as a produc-|. tion titled “Listen, Lester” was open- | * Crees and the ¢: credited wi ringing Thoteatter, ‘on the opening night of any play, the actions of Lester were if he turned hi on the show and ran off into th mice the man. lay would: be fy rtered | Th gods. a He wandered ing Jew.” Lester liked the perform- so well he wanted to be in it. on the stage. By! way of punishment he wns sent. to the country estate of an actor. The | ot the season. Erlanger, the ne payroll, week and his agers to buy choice cul f, meat. horseshoe the piano. 8. He inva 'y crushed hat, though the swellest “io topper. Many vaudev' tthe box, in which thi has bi ifts or fal taken as an ill omen. s In one Broadway theater common practice, used tirely by non-Catholics. e accident large laugh. formance, Around sneakeasie: the Broad of July. . . one will be opened the town: 7 smoke, but women tack.) ually, -_. A woman with a long causes a hundred people aroun id wape. . . . S girl with long red curls. . lop. | Cartie on. Fifth avenue. . ‘rone | Cabbies grow fewer and fewer. In Tin Pan Alley there is a song composer who will not work unle: Morris So rs} does a horse standing in front of bf i Powers was presenting “The Wander-| The ol stand in front of Pennsyl- lay, which up to tuat moment had nm a success, began to flop. Lester was recalled, When, during the past season, | Lester strolled out on the stage on “That’s af right!” Cherry retorted, the opening night of “Honeymoon “I have! Lane,” he was rewarded with an a plan that may prove I'm very; extra portion of hamburger. much grayn up. Just wait till I get; show had one of the heaviest runs A season ago A, L. dueér, put Lester on income Was $1 per The this refuses to be seated at the opening of any of his produc- wears an ancient he could afford Iie hoofers go fear- fully on stage if, by some chance, rub: ry isplaced, Aj b: clumsily is the pregence of a veteran doorman at. rehearsals is almost demanded. His failure to be there presages disaster. — Une of the outstanuing successes TOMORROW: Bob strikes terror J The success of a certain dancer was -attributed to the fact that one slip- per ‘was Sloosely tied. When she kicked it flew off into the audience. 5. the spectators a hereafter she‘ kicked off a slipper at almost every per- “Real beer” reopen by the dozen in belt with the ceming. There is rumor that “for ladies only” oe already is a rest room in a big hotel where men may not . Grad- men surrender this earth. . skirt] to turn jo de a OUT OUR WAY. SNEAK INTUR TH RANCH Wiese wa Se ’ mt STA ‘Gat OUT. ‘| “More than the lish FRIDAY, JULY 15, 1997 ue «drives as they dovjih the States... , Viltancourt statisn is. mext . . | and many others. : The boat shoves its pointed nose Note:: This is/Chap- Editor’ Zz the series ‘of articles ter 87 6! C written by The Tribune's corr- spondent who is revisiting France as an iadvance guard fcr the along the quai. . . the pilot— “ ” like all true French pilots—toots Sp hblie tile BA While (0. Oda dee CHAPTER LXXXVII gangplank . . . a rush of the pas. sengers « . . another todt of the whistle . . . and the boat glides on, ‘Therés & cafe—’Au Pegi: Rouge"—“The ‘Red Fish.” There's another—“La Peche Miraculeuse”. “The Miraculous Fish"—just what the (fish did no one knows, -except that «he might have been the one that jumped from, the frying- pga § into the fire. > And you “Remettre Votre Billet a La Descente”—and, also, “Il est Interdit aux Voyageurs de parler au Pilot.” In other Words you give up your ticket when you leave the boat and you are not permitted to carry on_a conversation with the skipper. This is Suresnes—the last stop. That hill up there is Manf Vale- rian—once a Roman fort, On the slepes of the. hill is the America: cemetery. And it costs another franc and 20 centimes to make the return trip. To some the fare for a ride from the Louvre stop to Suresnes on the Seine might seem, exorbitant, but then—why quibble even if it is? The one-way ticket costs 1 frane and 20 centimes—roughly, 4 cents and a frac- tion It requires an hour and a half of gliding slong through the scenery make While this is not writ- ten as a glowing advertisement for the company, that operates thos swift steam cutters, it can truthful be said that the ride is one of ex- io s will be i Past the Bois de Boulogne—Auteuil —under Napoleon's bridge —under jevres, towing a string | an old lady on | ing her week's’ { washing on the line. The next stop is Bas-Meudon, and it costs 50 cen- A tu of six to ride on a fininculaire to the | | - isaeey real ie: hill, St Cloud, where the TOMORROW: Where Ramors Americans play golf and dub as many | Were Made. vania station has been given up. .]@———————_________ » . You must now.go up to the bith Bereat entrance of Central Park tal Naughton | Daily Health Service BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hyseia, the Health Magazine For ‘the first time in advertising history, posters of women smoking cigarets a red on the billboards ‘. F. ‘Williams, however, points out that smoking by women has not yet general approval, for women do not smoke openly on the streets, although innumerable ings, when they appear elsewhere on] mit Johnson was in the city on and Ruth were supper guests Mrs. Hugo Solberg, Mrs. Chas. called on Mrs. Charlie Hepry Thurs- Solberg Friday evening on business. son's farm to do some repair work y- Johnson and children went to le Friday find them. except on Sunday morn- | @—————_———__x, Fifth avenue. . ciueenr swat: | |sinees Wadnestay: a Helen ‘Rue, Mrs. R. A. Johns: y the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Sol- berg Thursday. Johnson, Harvey So! » Isabelle and Ruth Johnson and Helen Rue da: boty has. Johnson cajled on Hugo Mr. .Grewer of Mandan and Mr. H. Hicks came out to ©. A. John- on, his fractor Saturda: Mr.-and Mrs. Emil morning and stayed until Monday. Lester Johnson did the chores while ‘women may be seen smoking in . were 5 hotels. restaurants and in the lob- ir, and Sirs. Frank Johnson and bies of theaters. son Edsel motored to the capital The hygienic aspects of the ques- tion are still a matter of doubt, In general, the statement may be made that smoking in moderation never jap- pare shortened the life of ay uman being. the other hand, smoking to exc brings into the body significant amounts of poison- ous substances, so that trainers of athletes are inclined to warn their charges against smoking. There are also individual differences to be con- jidered, because some persons are more sensitive to the effects of nico- tin and the sage igredients of to- mg Saturday. ichard Erickson and ‘his mother were in the city Saturday. { Ellen ‘Johnson of Wilton, Edwin Johnson, Paul Carlson, Mary Mar- tineson, Evelyn Alice Jesse and John Barker were supper guests the home of C. A. Johnson Sund: evening. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Johnson and Isabelle and Ruth motored to Bis- marck Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Henry were in the capital city Saturday. Paul Carlson and Mrs. P. A. Carl- son_ and Mrs. Joe Fisher motored to Bismarck Tuesday. Mrs. Hugo Solberg motored to the capital city Monday. Mr. and = Mrs. Robert Solberg were in Bismarck Tuesday. J The school officers met at the home of C. A. Johnson to hold their meeting Tuesday. - Mrs. Uharlie Henry called on Mrs., Hugo Solberg Tuesday. ‘, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Solberg and children and Mr. August Solberg Sr., and Helen Rue visited with Robert Solberg’s’ ares y y. Isabelie Johnson and Al, nogle called on Mrs. C. A. y evening. Emery Lundin took his mother bent te C. A. Johnson's ‘ta attend ool _ meeting Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Kattaon were ws who smoke ex- cessively, nicotine may be found in the breast milk, and obviously may fect the infant. A French physi- cian has asserted that wet nurses who amoke or chew t olson evidenced ‘restlessness, nd similar disorder: other hand, in the experi American specialist in dise: f shildren. harm has not been observ- ed in babies nursed by mothers who emoned a great deal. Dr. Williams is inclined to con- sider the subject fi logic side well as from the physi: cal aspect. He feels that the secrec; associated with smoking by women i: detrimental to character and that a bad effect will be had, unless the woman who smokes will do so openly. whenever she desires to do so, re- garding only the comfort of others, and without regard to their disap- val on what are called moral lines. Nurses and professional wom- ff in the capital city Friday. en engaged in service to the public must naturally ¢ ler first the Helen Rue Ma Supper public that they serve, es HamonBa y ; "Mes, Alfred Karisén.and mother ——$—$_—________.¢| Mrs. Eliza Johnson called on Mrs. BARBS eS | C.-A. Johnson Tuesday afternoon. Frank, Koeher of Baldwin: call at sri poe tn Johnson “O1 hat jj il h fe ly on busi 8. Pei ype ag 2 a Was | appointed ~~ Accidents ‘will kill 300,000 in the clerk of the school of this town- next ten years, according to safety|ship Tuesday. K men, You'd think people would learn -_—_————. to quit trumping partne: pret- | Sterting De eee and family were It doud! rope'’s affection for, iscoll callers Tuesday. Ameciea, all pau hove to Go'is take]. Mr. and Mrs Hleesis Ellie and @ non-stop flight to make sure. family visited at T. N. Johnson's -Great Britain, C. J.Johnaon and : ain pete poe ey 4 shopping in ‘Driscoll f y's: ee sine 3 ‘Max Lang vetted if th 7 he ieogra-|s0n’s Tuesaday. ¢ din soe eer ee eae per golf foreigaotier F hole | is wistting » : 5 cap and x pe oe postadt 3 ‘Magnes Old Masters Ji Bt ‘! ‘are on my brow; | Bef your And fail Fr Tee- arisen it of eve- Maybe Cal wanted a little cowboy experierice to hel~ found up the mav- ericks next year | > > have the cruis- have the best . rd and low; | t, ee "tox yeaeps ate Boot with hare

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