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“pAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune Aa Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published 5 the Bismarck Tribune Company, ymarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at marck as second class mail matter. OD. MAN -neeenennneaeceeenn-eePresident and Publisher ly by carrier, per year ......... ly by mail, per year, (in Bismarck vaily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ....-+. Chany by mail, outside of North Dakota .. ky: Subscription Rates Payable In Advance i Veekly by mail, in state, per year ....... Veekly by mail, in state, three years for. Veekly by mail, outside of North Dak FOAL nccccccersevenrtecseversees ru Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ah Member of The Associated Press a, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Wse for republication of all news dispatches credited to els or not otherwise credited in this papee: and also the wheal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All ' reights of ublication of all other matter herein are ae reserve pr Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY 2 CHICAGO DETROIT 3. ower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. : NE, BURNS & SMITH i! RAYNE BURNS & SNTitth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) le An Interesting Experiment he Bismarck is fortunate to be on the circuit of toohn Golden’s drama “Seventh Heaven.” Bet- ‘ter Play Extension is an institution that has i *taused considerable comment in theatrical cir- Br te} esles, It affords one-night-stand communities bun opportunity to see many of the Broadway hinccesses. Every play booked by this organ- pation is of proven merit and insures an eve- sting of clean enjoyment. fee A packed house should greet “Seventh Pdeaven” which is being played by a strong New intork company, several of whose actors were in dthe original New York cast. This play is being resented under the auspices of the American peegion Auxiliary, That alone should insure it be capacity house. ‘ at It is proposed by the Better Play Extension 0 arrange in the middlewest a circuit of from 60 to 180 towns, in which Broadway successes vill play two or three times each year. The Weception of “Seventh Heaven” in Bismarck dent Coolidge says he wants to whittle he means | he wants to be left alone with his thoughts for | a while, to let them run untrammeled. Man needs periods alone with himself. It is when we are alone, cut off from the circum- stances that people call society, that real con- centration on the meaning of life is ours. Back home, and a whittler, Coolidge can re- view his life and see where it has led him, and how, and why. Whittling, he can recall the deeds of his governorship, of his presidency— and go back very close to that boyhood when he was preparing life’s course. , Life isn’t so coMplex, after all, when a man can sit alone and whittle after he has been the chief figure in his nation’s eyes. Simplicity is a beautiful gift—and it comes to man when he is alone. Half a Trillion—Count It! A recent report of the Bureau of Internal Revenue indicated that 117,000,000 persons in thé country had a total income of nearly $90,- 000,000,000 in 1926. These figures mean some- thing. The report shows an increase of about $27,- 000,000,000 in income since 1921—more than 43 per cent. A total of $62,000,000,000 income was record- ed in 1921. This increased $3,000,000,000 in 1922, went up $7,000,000,000 more in 1923, and so on to 1926 when exactly $89,682,000,000 was earned. The figures show that today the national wealth of the United States must be slightly above $500,000,000,000. That’s half a trillion. Count it before you predict any “hard times” in this country. ‘ | Editorial Comment | The British Preblem (Lincoln State Journal) Whether business is growing worse or better is still the subject of animated debate in Eng- land. The optimists quote trade statistics to show that it is better and the pessimists quote them to show that it is worse. The facts are that there is improvement in some lines while in other lines no substantial gains have been made. Coal, cotton and shipping still make a bad showing. Nevertheless the optimists claim that taken on the whole business is on the up- grade, The debate is having one salutary effect. } t ' shnd other cities will determine the success of { whe experiment. This will arouse interest | fnmong the lovers of the spoken drama. To be ' abn the circuit of the Better Play Extension } 4vould be a community asset for Bismarck. y i qi “Seventh Heaven” is written by Austin ae Strong, author of “Three Wise Fools,” which J-aade such a hit in Bismarck several years ago. H ifere is a chance for this city to demonstrate its appreciation of a clean, humorous play, one that 4 ewill give a most enjoyable evening of entertain- i nent. a. & i a“ Restoring Our Faith ' € Tittle deeds of selfishness, seen day after SHay in the news columns, almost lead us to be- wiigve that the nobility of man has indeed de- ova\ed. There are so many stories, it seems, spt batditry; divorce, murder, embezzlement gthat we become nearly convinced fhat man hasn’t many qualities above the animals that prey upon one another. 3 Then comes a story like that of Lloyd Squire, awhose manhood stood out clear and fine above the panic and horror of the flood that ravaged the Winooski valley in Vermont. It restores that flagging faith, and makes us again take Istock in man’s bravery under fire. 8 Lloyd Squire was assistant editor of the Wa- qterbury Record. When the river went on its grampage, Lloyd Squire went on rampage, too. tMaybe he had been writing editorials about pheroism, such as this one, for so long, and ydespairing of finding it, had gone out to prove epersonally that such qualities had not vanished xfrom the world. i Driving a team of swimming horses through ithe areas of the city, for twenty hours ghe toiled, effecting rescue after rescue, swim- ming himself after the horses. f Swinging hand over hand on a steel cable across the Winooski river he brought quinine ond relief to stricken residents of Duxbury and forth Duxbury. Without sleep or rest, he Sworked wherever help was needed until he ydropped, exhausted. hy It took a catastrophe for the people of Wa- sterbury, Vermont, to learn that the man whose ipen dug into their weaknesses and praised their N himself is a hero. We hope they awon't forget it. The Glory of J. Ray Akers : ‘Overnight J. Ray Akers was transformed a street car conductor to one of the lead- ing figures ip the Fall-Sinclair trial. Now J. is a street car conductor again, and hardest part of the battle is his. Ed J. Kidwell, one of the young jurors in was his friend. Kidwell’s didn’t “get an automobile as long as of the trial” were repeated to a by Akers, who had overheard. and the case that the govern- for five and a half ‘ormer Secretary of the Interior rcens se tee sniniimnatgaiedilies tes that hurts. mot regret fe. if him were right, he because he “told on” criminal trial, he witness. Now he must stand it’s where the real will] advance of the latter's crime, for keeping him controversies to economic facts. A hundred 4HE BISMARCK TRIBUNE __ SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1927 rg Ts AODRESSEO EX BME j ' MANY TYPES OF APHASIA soon find that th> faked cases lll The police authorities in every | would be cured in a day or two, and Vi city are constantly perplexed by|the true cases would respond after MO Yi = true or faked cases of aphasia. The|a fast of from ten days to two YM Hk Ml news| almost, duy. con-HWweeks. (It is remarkable how youn, Yf q OM ( ts Cli tain reports of parson, "helge found children who seer. to be du nd who cannot remember their names. Yh YY Many of these people have simply Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Mle told imagin ry stories to account for personal qaetida oe health and / their voluntary disappearance, and j QUE \4 to sake: Gesitee GHW will ke mee diet, addressed to him, care of bi ZL cepted by their friends or relatives stamped addressed ¥ to account for an absence which||, aorepe ter “ve Yj 5 they ae net willine to explain in y any other way, % Wi} The true aphasia cases do not al- develooment will ey y ways present the difficulty over the n ovement after a memory of names, but sometimes | few days’ followed @ care- See oe y e Uf, Gf * the one so affected loses the power | full dit jidren ly restricte’ diet. Dull chi per / E G, of control over the veal One, oF who weuld otherwise grow up with : Ny over movements of the arms cr legs.| only meager intellectual powers can s “ql . They actually forget how to make|thus be help d, and ir whole —— certain motions, and when cured: of | mental lives See Sl by a few da: b Oo a + r-} . the cause of their trouble they must of fasting and then the establish = tate AnD THIS YEAR learn the movements el’ over again.|ment of a regulated, ( p Aphasia, in any form, is caused | regime. . f @ by some disturbance in’ the nerve Questions and Answers a ct N y centers of certain oriions of the| Questi Mrs. L. B. A. writes: brain. A blow on the head or the|“Is there a cure for goitre without breaking of a blood vessel may in-|the knife? If so, what is it?” terfere with the nerve impulses} Answer: All goitres can be re- emanating from the higher brain|duced by dieting. Please send centers which control the intellec-] your name and address so I can send tual processes. ou a special article on the sub- Where this trouble occurs in chil- | ject. dren, the probabilities are that with| Question: Mary B. writes: “What Proper care the patient will get well.|is the roseapple?” A form of aphasia ° often present| Answer: ie rose apple is the with young children of decidedly | fruit of an East India tree that is Nervous temperaments. Many chil-! grown in California for its foliage. dren have difficulty in developing Fhe fruit, although tri it, the power of speech. They are is insipid and of no f value. It sometimes bort. with an improper|is used in the tropics fur making development of the speech centers| jelly and preserves. y in the biain, but by careful training,| Queston: E. W. writes: “Kindly such defects can be, at least, par-|advise me if there is any harm in tially overcome. using non-perspirants for checking e adult person who develops | perspiration under the arms.” rr Th v FAD * | aphasia has very little chance for a| -Answer: Your system is bound to WASHINGTON | IN NEW YORK | complete recovery unless radical] be harried by. anyHiag which will : e constitutional treatment i adopted.|check elimination of poisons from ————<—$—$— New York, Nov. 12.—Stay away|If a bloodclot has formed on the|the body. Stopping the elimination from Manhattan two months and it| brain, this must be absorbed, and|through the pores will huzt you in takes you six: months to catch up|the fasting treatment has proven|much the same wa as if the flow ifthe erent Leda ne murnose of se ie dke of pee! ‘were Lethal si 2 |, or BY RODNEY DUTCHER * y away from Manhattan two) sorbing bloodclots, but for getting|in the same way as ‘f you some- NEA Service Writer eat aay teeny mereerieity months and it takes you all day | tid of the effects of an injury to the| thing to make _your bowels more * A Fy A Prat z Washington, Nov. 12.—The blow-|of j shadowing, wit! morning just to read the ads of the| brain which may have been caused|sluggish. It ° “all right for you to It is diverting attention from fruitless class |... "ofthe Fail-Sinclair trial turned |disreced tf the eaiiiy Tenneet| new Broadway productions “that! by a. blow. use some deodorc..t or just. plain : ~ 5 : the spot-light on more peculiar sit-]or more might spill the beans, It| ave been born. It takes you the| If lice would start fasting | talcum powder whic~ will keep the years ago the discussion of such a situation|uations and circumstances than any|seems obvious that if anyone was | Test of the day consulting friends| every arhasia patient, they would| sweat from soiling your clothing. would have brought out a flood of panaceas.|incident in Washingtca since the| trying to tamper with the juz en teat ; feillusi Teapat Dome, Doheny and Daugh-|a method would indicate either | kes you until midnight to go over But democracy “1 pest GLU ales Not erty scandals’ were first uncovered. hes aesperatin ce-diiditfereoe ee the list of new cinema attractions, even the radicals have any cure-alls to propose.|” yor instance, it brought that most |to whether or not a mistrial were | NW art exhibitions and new musi- Both the right and left wings appear to agree|astonishing person,, - William J. |declared. cians, By that time you take one Ame Aus om, such | Tesarding what is worth seeing. It that the only hope lies in intelligently directed |Burns, back into the stocks of no- ore glance at the mountain of books effort. : toriety. Only one brief sequence of} Your correspondent talked for| that has piled in the corner—merely . The gray-haired, efficient-looking] “Oh, excuse me, please!” a soft, Philip Snowden, one of thé leaders of the there is no possible way to make the nation self-| had supporting. The suggestion that a revived agriculture would afford adequate relief he dis- food could be considerably increased by inten- events is needed to show that the| half h ith He the installment of the “win- i hl n Burns career has been with parallel, Day, ate tinder $25,000" bond ee on ter list”—and you fall into bed to] Woman at the desk in the recep- Socialist wing of the labor party, holds that|In 1912, it was revealed that Burns | alleged fixer, before he went be-| toss through the night in the throes] tion room of the employment: of a jury which convicted a man|almost swarthy, apparently power- named Jones. In pardoning Jones, |ful and sartorially immaculate man| In the morning you are ready’ to| ing notes of Faith’s costume as her| the roons had joggled her elbow. 4 1 President Taft accepted the con-|of the world, t tured but| admit that things ha; just, encil jottec d \- : misses as manifestly untrue. The amount of|clusions of Attorney General Wick-| suave. He seemed alternately esky little, too fast in Manhattan, But, bai : own less personal de-| Something. about the girl frightened voice begged, “I didn’t Bet “ py tl e ‘aith smiled as she made way agency made short work of the in-| for the girl who in trying to slip terview, her eyes apparently mak-| as inconspicuously as possible into been involving in the picking|fore the grand jury. Day is a tall,| ot confused nightmares, arrested 8. i s and/or penetrating and boyishly naive.) at least, they happen. By the fol-| “Four in the family? Any chil- Sa eis: the looked Pa: zi i sive cultivation of all the land available, and ad-|7¢ferred to them as “the most bare-|One felt that one would rather have| lowing morning, after a hectic|dren? Oh, a baby! How old?| ened and out of place in the-eme faced and unfair use of all the ma- for all workers manufactured goods must be is to lower costs of production and at the same make :t hard—the address? Thank] self, Her big eyes were polished turquoise marbles pushing into the white face. Ropes of pure gold hair has mixed with cabinet] every other land in it file. then looked up at Faith with) plump. She was very young and members in various parts of the] In London, it took little effort| keen, -neasuring eyes, “I sent you!” “Are you looking for work?” ids for vast} playwrights—the rest were Ameri-| A flush/swept over Faith’s ivory cite hr snes oo z enon ends can be attained only by greater industrial; Ment charges were used in a plot} fortunes in oil, For instance, Sin-| can importations.' Returning to colored cheeks, “Not at all. She| os che awaited inspection efficiency. Signs of a get-to-gether movement to Pe ees melvaiielal ld clair left himiia Russia in aie to| Broadway, I found all the new Lon-| was exti2mel, capable. She—she| “Oh yes, a . ae 5 0! ie sae iy a ave visible, The very probl lem which precipi-| persons, "The attempts aga Ionic S ieee concession tons 5 bisgs sleet one ona hated left me only to take a position that} breathed. “But the lady outside tated the general strike may in the long run|reau to “get something on” sena-|days ago, Day was better known in| to keep Tonion 5 ma'am,” the girl aid more,” she explained, painful-| said there wasn't hardly ever any layhouses going] ly aware that the woman so casual-| call for ‘untrained girls. 1 come bring about permanent relations of cooperation] trs who sought to expose corrup-|Europe and Asia than in the United | for tyo seasons. I found the bright ly discussed as a servant was now| here from « farm in Minnesota to ‘xlan hope wi! lestroyed. vestlatan of Department of Jus-| If the government proves any of| rois—lecturing in our market you willing to | ay, Mrs. Hatha-| “Do you like babies?” Faith ask- What Are Ethics Between Crooks? (Minneapolis Journal) files during the Senate in-|its jury-tampering charges against pace \J found the most eminent] way? I’m afraid. ies revealed some hair-raising|Sinclair or Day, the question will ed. “There’: a five-months baby in Prowler, Stephen Graham,} “Not over eight dollars a week, 5 i _ my family, my sister’s baby—” eae petbeds and Passlts OF promplly arise as to what the jury-| deserting his native Soho for our] if she lives in,” Faith answered. “Oh, ma’am,” the _ girl fixing rates would have been had| colorful corners and rushing to] “No one available for less than breathed ecstatically. cthers ain’t, In Chicago and in some other cities, so an|to “get something on” others, little |the plot gone through. press in America with a volume he investigator has found, it is the practice of many a firm of busy criminal lawyers.to employ in its office a girl whose job is described in the The duties of this gir: are simple, but im-|the portant. She sits at a little desk, equipped with| Burns man shadowed and reported | plenty of money wes available for| ways all over the world, mother of|” When Waith opened the doorain. i i ten. Sorry,” the woman answered) nothing I love better'n babies! of which was never publicly ex-| - Day hired hauffe for Sin- “ ” nothing n posed because of the prominence of ane ke ona “of $27 8 aay, and sy OP atl ge oegery briskly, her eyes peceens concerned, aj 3 ni ~ saben 4 ie) r jow, as_@ gran investi- ” jargon of the profession as being “on the box.” | gates the Fall-Sinclair ‘trial. fiasco, | socks “and cepenes of the deter | London” ard innumerable essays on flicking toward| Would you give me a_ chan And, from the taken into consideration! of “London Nights” and “Under impatiently to tel! her own needs. | added, with pathetic eagerness. “My ‘Please let me interview some- used to say I was rs si as by- of England, I read: ” Pop fate} government reveals that, a|tives, that fact would indicate that| “Broadway is the mother of Broad-| Sf tata to steas fuilane ta Bak | 2 mule, and-there ai ci ie ong 4 ; ‘ i ; | she ously, “My name a list of names and time schedules and a tele-| tre Untel Sta eee a ot [one Purpose or another, Bee ahs ot any iceman dicsted she was seized with embat-| is" Rhoda Jenson, ma'am, “Jonson phone that has a blind number and an inde-|rades were trying to establish con-]@———__—_____—-» aaiey Plotechad. "The Great White irhegies i porres a peek without an H.” pendent wire that does not lead through the aE bape aut epareee thee Justajingle~ Way is the greatest white way.” | helligerent-looking women who sat} NEXT: The first clash between law office switchboard. department official. to “investigate | rma al ae |. New York columnists could do no} about the room. Rhoda ard Cherry. Each professional criminal who is a client of | this assi encralf | He cash for his-auto when | more. this assistant Sttorney general! i ‘enlarged. ese the firm calls in on this phone, at stated inter- vals only a few hours apart, with the same regularity with which a patrolman or a night watchman pulls the boxes on his rounds. So long as every crook on the list calls in on schedule time, the girl has nothing to do except check him off on her list. But let a crook’s scheduled call become five minutes overdue, and she promptly reports the delinquency to the head of the firm. This failure to call means that the delinquent has very likely been picked up by the police. Does the head of the firm try to ascertain whether this has actually happened? He does not. He assumes that it has happened, and immediately sends a clerk to the nearest judge with an application for a writ of habeas corpus, directing the police to produce the man, and either to place a charge against him at once or liberate him. And, under the law, the judge must comply. Now, the privilege of examining’a suspected man at length without formally charging him with crime, is one the police find immensely valuable; so valuable, indeed, that here in Min- nesota a twenty-four hour leeway is provided before the habeas corpus machinery can free a suspect. On the other hand, the writ of habeas corpus, descending direct from the Field of Runnymede, is an indispensable instrument for the protection of innocent men against official persecution. Which in no way excuses the offense commit- ted against society by any ctiminal lawyer who maintains any such automatic habeas corpus machinery as that discovered in Chicago. When an attorney accepts pay from a criminal, in do|out of.the’ hands of the police, that attorney comes mighty close to being the criminal’s part- ner. Every accused ane innocent or guilty, has a right to be defended by the’ best legal The question continues to be infec he og Op te | ante months and I come back to find that Si _ely_thing he charged. __| months and I come back to find that OUR BOARDING HOUSE nd of wrecker has reduced] he didn’t take a girl friend along Away from Manhattan just two hagrgre} fas my favorite Fifth on his flight. structure—the Mrientalear- Finck s » with} Until this Teapot Dome -thing its intru-| started we didn’t fev what crude By Ahern sion of the far away upon the close| oil producer really meant, at home. . . . I find that Ethel ees Z ——— . Waters has opened*a night club and| Blackmer and O'Neil, the missing FA o's AL Lm ZZ, | Texas Guinan has moved into the| Fall-Sinciair witnesses, are’ jast 7 Sounla cf oih oee, Sarieg ho Saep HA-HAW~ WHEN " DUMMY WAS oft FIRE AN’ SOMEONE : OSH TSH YELLS FoR WATER, ED MCGIMP COMES RUNAIA” UP WITH A BUCKET OF GASOLINE !s se 8 his The British list who wants the United States to agree not to “aid, abet or comfort” an aggres- sor nation, ly means some- thing about money. es ¢.8 New| Bangs in front, is the new Paris style edict for the ladies. The trouble is, the husbands are the banged. rise; | ones usually é, res Day as a friend than an enemy. His! plunge into the night-life you know| Hm! A five-1 s i ji ? ditional workers would be needed on the farms] chinery for drawing a jury” which official titles vice president of the that Broadway aie g . > mad- Fe ne a eaY pices] Ployment office as did Faith her. but there would not be enough food, for all nor|he had ever encountered. Sinclair Exploration Co., an organ-| dest, noisiest, snappiest, jazziest| you. Serenity Boulevard is a little would the army of unemployed be provided with}, Yet, when Harding became pres-|ization of Sinclair geologists. Day place upon this earth. By contrast,| far out but—the maid will live in, jobs. To get enough to eat and employment ident and Daugherty was named at-|is not a geologist; he is much more.| the joy spots of Montmartre are| of course?” U 5 torney general, Burns was put in} One gathers that Day is soporific. Broadway has gone over} Faith nodded eagerly. were wound about her round head, a i ¢ | an extremely important position of|mander-in-chief of Sinclair's for-| the world and come back with both} The head of the employment] under a badly fitting cheap blue sold in domestic and foreign markets at a prof-|trust as head of the investigation|eign forces — a fixer, as*it were,j the bawdy and genteel gayety of| agency ran briskly through » card felt hat. 4 it. Competition is sharp and the urgent need parent of the Department of Jus-| who ts rt. z 4 a r4 "np Now we have Burns, again a pri-] world wh re is oil or inter-| to take stock of the drama. e idn’t 1? ‘i time increase consumption by raising wages. | vate detective, involved esaam em. | Carty Wee te ee rena rg et: | £0, take stock of things by British cheered a 1? Was she| Faith stopped her as she was seek- Capital and labor appear to realize that botli} ployer of men whom the govern-|clair in the latter's 4 yielding plut..pness of her pink and” 1 of this author! another woman who was. waiting| ma’am? I’m strong and.willing,” she : 7