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‘3 PAGEFOUR The Bismarck Tribune 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. Mann. resident and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Dajly by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North three years fOP....eeee + 2.50 ‘orth Dakota, per atte eeeeees were 1.50 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 paper, and also the, . local news of spontancous origin published herein, All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. LS ye fa ee ey Foreign Representatives ! G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Tower Bldg. NEW YORK (Official City, State and County Newspaper) y In the News " Journalism students in a western university placed Lindbergh and Henry Ferd at the top of the list in their selection of the most impor- tant men and women in the d. news. Next came President Coolidge, Mussolini, the Prince of Wales, Mayor Thompson, Thomas Edison, Gene Tunney, Governor Al Smith and Babe Ruth. Among the women Queen Marie of Rumania was placed at the head of the list,! with Mrs. Coolidge, Ruth Elder, Helen Wills and Jane Addams next. Ford undoubtedly heads the list. But the { Next position we would dispute. Lindbergh hs been the biggest news figure of the day, but his name in the news now we do not be- lieve attracts the same interest as that of either Gene Tunney, Al Smith or a man they failed altogether to mention—Herbert Hoover. Lindbergh is a waning news figure now. He DETROIT fi co Bldg. AYNE, BURNS & SMITE ae Huesca Fifth Ave. Bldg. —j|since wartime. fame is short. ing national topic. able quality, however. vids possessed. selected his name. for 10,000 miles. College-bred Steers (St. Paul Dispatch) Eight steers that went to college showed the value of an education by bringing $205.92 a head when they went to South St. Paul. jThey broke the high record of that market room specimens. tion. That is plete answer. the market educated cattle. through life. has been spectacular, but the quality of such OPERATION OF STATE MILL DURING tember, the best previous month. steers to make a $20,000 farmer. 1 lously low prices and, now and then, ; someone actually paid cash. Strug- : OCTOBER BRINGS $20,379.87 PR FIT gling artists could “cuff” their meals i and it was quite astounding how € Operation of the state mill and | Project and depreciation on the many artists began to struggle. More 4 elevator at Grand Forks resulted in pervert we jfrequently than one would imagine i. s ; nett reduction Double | they eventually paid. ee OF 52087987 tn October), caitieniat the mill was doub-| oe T and reduced the loss on the enter-! tod during October in comparison! ever. prise for this.year to $183,1 a) with any previous month of this’ ghost and went to Paris, or some- 1 report issued by the state industrial! year, the total being 74,612 barrels where. I saw Polly compared with 37,146 barrels in other artists ce, for the first nine months of the The mill record, as compiled by; upon thi € year totaled 2 but the} the industrial commission, shows! as one s profit for October reduced this; that the fixed costs of the ente: janother rises about $ ear total $20; reduced this figur The statement . O88 Loss in Auguust, 19 in September, 19 n in October, 1927 Ten Mo Net loss Jan. 1 to 0: Interest on construction bond Depreciation Operating gain to apply on f Bu. January February March ‘April 22202 C2mpmram ACartmwurwruooadsas s> September . October ... Totals .. a [IN NEw York | ee ee > Netw York, Nov. 28.—Of such ma- terials as this is the pattern of They are two of the funniest and highest paid comics in the world. Of course you know them—Eddie Cantor and Ed Wynn. _ They call ynn the “perfect fool.” He has merely to slap a funny little hat upon his head and cut a few capers to_send any audience into hysterics. Yet for years he has come to the stage door with a sad face and left the theatre with a sad face. His ‘wife has been seriously ill, and still is, Almost nightly between acts he will go worriedly to the phone to inquire concerning her condition. ‘as the curtain call sounds, he will grab up his comic hate and come drolly before the spotlight. He is unknown to the nightlife world. Now and then you will see him|. ping in at Rubins for a sand- wich after theatre. This “perfect fool” prefers the solace and quict of his great library. ;‘ ‘pdale’ Cantor “ey desperately” a nit Ml in ay New. York hespital She was about me a mother. i In the end he ha take a long rest. Just a few mot washed off his pai his apartment. to him. Greenwich Village.’ Polly. rare souls who re: tion is that artis QR ESSPERRSSESHES Reeermarseesene } we, ion of the mill his health was at the breaking point. comic of the “big street” left the stage, hurried to his make-up room, At the stage door he was stopped and a cable handed It told him that his wife, who had been in Europe, was dead. Ten years ago she was “queen of Polly was one of artists must eat, whereas the tradi- Polly opened as strange an eating place as the world has ever seen. It was completely and finally 100 per cent Bohemian. One went about) ground of Bohemia. (Copyright, 19 tonight. world. c jobs. eee old-fashioned family | appearing. {fashioned family. uae) Gain Loss or Gain course, she was on a 4] . eee Opinions differ. means he has brass. oe 8 ought to prove poy (Copyright, 1927, i d to give up and nths ago another int and started for yore? Are there none to fought, Everyone knew those ally believed that its must starve. ught ? Mother Earth, are gone? Thai + they wield, Jason may the eee The man, and the | OFF to Exactly to Byrd isn’t mentioned, either, and there should be a growing interest in his south pole venture. Smith and Herbert Hoo- ver are coming more and more into the news| daily, whereas Lindbergh is receding. | be some time before the tide of interest has reached its high point for Smith and Hoover. Coolidge, really, is a bigger figure in the news than Lindbergh, with discussion of and speculation on his 1928 intentions a dominat- The students’ choice of Lindbergh for second place as a news figure does reflect-one admir- It is a tribute to a hero who has brought tp real life the many fine qualities we had thought only story-book Da- That is a great point in his favor, and reflects prais¢, too, upon those who What this country needs is socks guaranteed The animals were fed at the University Farm, under the supervision of Professor W. H. Peters, head of the animal husbandry department, and were used as class- All steers cannot be given a college educa- The livestock grower will regard the big price these graduates brought and say, “No wonder, they have everything there to do with, book-learning and plenty of money and help.” is a fair answer, but it is not the com- What is needed is a little white schoolhouse for livestock on every farm in the northwest, where youngsters taught at the ‘ f University Farm will play pedagogue and give 5 . WASHINGTON LETTER And, as an afterthought, if a college educa- tion makes a steer more valuable, how much more valuable can it make the American farm boy and how much can it add to his earnings It does not take many $205 and selected one’s food at ridicu- Such a place could not go on for-' In the end Polly gave up the ight at a Greenwich Village She looks sadly out illage that was and sighs] vscraping apartment after Again she sighed as she \s lated how the quaint studios one could rent “in those days” for $10 a month now bring $85 to $100 from the cloak buyers and brokers who ,|now rush to the one-time camping GILBERT SWAN. EA Service, Inc.) f BARBS ’ ————————————_—_————+ Alll is quiet along the Rio Grande it. Mexico is being very, very good just before Christmas, xo There are lots of misfits in the Think how much better off ryone would be if Big Bill Thomp- :son and President Calles could trade Again we hear the wail that the doctor is dis- Yeah, so’s your old- A Tennessee woman who is 83 Per Bot, |Xears old used the telephone the er -. lother day for the first time. Ambition is a longing a lot of people have for a more pleasant place in which to do nothing. Some think that when a fellow shows his mettle, it We don’t know about a five-day week. But a five-day week-end ular. EA Service, Inc.) ¢>—______—_____» Old Masters Mother Earth, are the heroes dead? Do they thrill the soul of the years no mo! ? Are the gleaming snows and the poppies red All that 8 left of the brave of fight as Theseus Far in the young world’s misty dawn? Or to teach as gray-haired Nestor taught? Their armor rings on a fairer field in Greek and Trojan fiercely trod; For Freedom’s sword is the blade And the gleam above is the smile of God, So, in his isle of sels § delight, For the heroes live, an bright, And the world is a braver world toda: —Edna D. Proctor: From Heroes, [A Thought] Be ye angry, and sin not: sun go down w perk pom your wrath. Life, that hes for its firet duty to fergires: Lytton, [— Sustajingle Jj “Guess. I'll go in for skating,” said yo ay gerd It will | We're Trying Our Best to Patch Him Up—Ca on eke! ee St COEOCR "\ <x Be ts BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Nov. 28.—Some of the wets and some of the drys, who regard prohibition as an important national issue, are incensed because the two political parties are mani- festing the same degree of enthu- siasm toward grappling with the question as the ordinary Saturday night bather does toward jumping into the tub with a porcupine. One hears and reads their sneers and jeers every day. Biting re- marks are made about the “cow- ardice” and “insincerity” of the parties. Critics on both sides ad- vance the opinion that the party which declared unequivocally. for strict enforcement or modification, as the case may be, would ride atop a landslide in November. The ordin- ary citizen who is either very wet or very dry seems to feel that way. Amid all the hubbub, certain per- tinent facts are often obscured. The easiest answer to the whole ques- tion, of course, is: What can you in a country operated by Holliday the Washington Politicians and, to some extent, for Politicians? y A prohibitionist is a prohibition- ist first and a polit in afterward. A polit: is a politician first and a prohibiticnist afterward. If it were demonstrated that there was country as a whole for either strict enforcement or modification, both parties would topple all over each other to prove to the voters that the popular will could find expression sooner and more effectively through one party than the other. It may be that such a majority demand exists. There are many spokesmen for both sides who in- sist that it does. But no one can Prove that the sentiment can be consolidated into voting strength sufficient to insure presidential and congressional victories to the party which aight crusade on the strength of it. - The most important fact is, to the politicians, that) while they know that a strong stand by either party which was not duplicated by the other would affect the ballots of millions of voters, it could not be foretold which side would reap the most benefit. There may be more “drys” than 2. Of party line, ' ADVANCED, A COUPLE OF Sou the heroes a strong majority demand in the) WELL Gus. T SEE -TH’ TWo LIVING EXAMPLES OF How “TW” WORLD HAS ARE STILL HERE! e-THEY HAVENT CHANGED pucH, AN” “THAT GOES For “HEIR all its anomalies, should overlook’ the fact that neither wet nor dry leaders are howling from the house- for a national’ referendum. Both sides probably would go into one with fear and trembling. It’s all right to have state refer- endums, but a national referendum might go cither way and no matter’ which way the cat jumped anything more than the barest majority would affect the issue for a long time to come. The wets may seem to be, slightly less certain about the oftcome in the drys, but the latter are more opposed than they are to the referendum idea. See Rivera ne ee f At the Movies | Pb lee | CAPITOL THEATRE Anna Q. Nilsson, often called the “Brderecnannteantied ce the Ss A ‘was the first Swedish player to gain That, at least, is the way the) fame and fortune, and while others politicians have to figure. In their, come and go with monotonous regu- own home territories they may be Jarity, she still retains her popu- as wet as the town drunkard or/Jarity as one of our foremost act- as dry as Death Valley, but in na-|yesses. Miss Nitsson is cofeatured tional politics the boys must have|with Francis X. Bushman in the internal harmony—or else they'll Universal-Jewel production “The nominate John W. Davis and take} Thirteenth Juror,” which comes to a terrible licking. ~ the Capitol Theatre tonight. There’s something to be said for) The piquant blonde star was born the boys. Why break up a perfectly] in Ystad, Sweden, but came to this good political party? Can't alcountry ‘soon after finishing her Bahaist and a Seventh Day Adven-| college education. After several epee and keep peace in the/ seasons on the legitimate stage she family without either demanding| turned to pictures where she has re- that the other swap religious be- mained ever since. liefs? Incidentally, there is more ' and more demand among Dempcrat- ic leaders for a harmony program, but one would be’ quite silly to pre- dict its success at this early date. Among Republicans, it is note- worthy that Senator William Edgar’ Borah and Dr. Nicholas Miraculous Butler are out on opposite limbs bawling for firm enforcement and modification planks respectively— and also noteworthy that neither Borah nor Butler can properiy be called Politicians. | <A “wets,” or vice versa, but who knows which side can supply the greatest number of voters willing to disregard all other issues and vote only on the wet-dry oye? if The question already has shown its tendency to split parties. How can the Republicans ride into large,| important wet cities like New York, Chicago and Philadelphia on a bone dry platform or, for that matter, into states like New York and I]- linois which have voted “wet” in referendums? The same question) goes for the Democrats. > PALACE-MANDAN Stage entertainment of a differ- ent kind will be offered at the Palace Theatre in Mandan on Tues- day evening in the “Syncopation Show.” Don Adams as master of ceremonies cpens the show with a comedy anwouncement and _ intro- duces the Melody Pirates, a seven- piece ladies’ orchestra, who furnish music for the entire shew. He then introduces in order Stuart & Davina in a dance number; Dale & Decova, singing popular harmony number id doing dance; next the Lovettsin, Recon juggling and diablo spinning relty. Stuart £ Davina and Dale Decova offer further dance and harmony numbers. Melody pirates follow with three girls Coing a dance number, saxophone solo and comedy rube band number, i Don Adams then does a siecialty using parodies and some clever hokum. All the acts appear on the stage for the finale. The show moves along in fast style, fourteen numbers being given in an hour and from reports, no better show ‘been seen at the Palace this season. The logical result of yielding to \ such extremists would be a new | politital lineup in which the coun. try would be torn between a Pro-| & hibition party and an Anti+Prohibi- tion party. It is true that party lines dont’ mean much, but perhaps a nation of 120,000,000 persons should not be divided on the issue of some beer or none, especially since even the Anti-Saloon League will not insist on special reference to the éighteenth amendment in either party platform. No one who muses qver the present prohibition situation, with 4 VEU, THEY AN” “Th” PLUMBING ARE OLD FixtuRes)( MUL BILLED AROUND HERE! £33 pons NOTES WAITING “To BLOW ! = away; the sky is let not forgive— oH 18 REGARD ASTHM& CAUSED BY FLATU- LENCE breathing. Patients suffer from an inability to draw enough air into the lungs. .Exhaling air usually is easy, but the patient struggles, during an attack, to draw in enough oxygen to supply his blood with this indispens- able element. He is literally gasping for breath, and is suffering for want of oxygen the same as a fish when out of water. The primary reason for this diffi- culty in breathing is because the diaphragm cannot be lowered far enough to draw the air into the lungs. Breathing is accomplished by the raising and lowering of the dia- Phragm, which is the flat muscle separating the lungs from the abdo- men. During exhalation, the dia- phragm presses upward and con- tracts, forcing the air out of the diaphragm lowers, and in this way, draws air into the lungs. | If an excessive amount of stomach and intestinal gas presses upward against the diaphragm, it is often impossible for the diaphragm to de- scend low enough to draw in the needed air. In short, if there is too much gas below the diaphragm, the diaphragm cannot draw enough air into the lungs simply because it is interfered with by this excessive gas in the abdomen. The heart is often affected by this pressure, and this form of asthma is then called “cardi- ac asthma” because the lungs and the heart action are both affected. Bronchial asthma is another con- dition often present, in which there is a large quantity of mucus present which fills up the air passages, and intereferes with the free circulation of air through the lungs. This ex- cessive mucus is produced from the patient using too much sugar and starch, and too many of the fat foods, which load the blood with catarrhal material. .This is thrown out through the delicate membranes of the lungs. , The exéessive stomach and intes- tinal gas is produced by using too many of the starch and sugar foods, or from using any foods in bad com- bination with each other. Foods which are gas-forming in themselves, such as onions, garlic, cabbage, Brus- sels sprouts, turnips, ete., will also create this excessive gas, and these foods must be entirely eliminated by one who has a tendency toward asthma, : Drugs are entirely uscless in the cure of this trouble. Of course, it is possible to struggle along for years using adrenalin, or smoking powders which contain opium, but this cannot bring about a cure, and Asthma is a distressing ailment, characterized principally by difficult : he est May. GN os evcsose Sleneee DDRESSED EN I find that patients who have taker these treatments are always ir. worse condition than those who have not, Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on diet, addressed to health and the Tribune i = ‘Enclose < stamped addressed envelope for reply. and their cases are always more dif- ficult to cure: ‘ The cause then of asthma is too much stomach and intestinal gas, ite excessive mucus in the bronchial tubes. More about asthma tomorrow! QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Roy W. asks: “In what manner do three drops of arsenic, in a glass of. water as a tonic, effect a relief from pimples, y Answer: Arsenic has @ definite effect upon stopping skin eruptions, but I do not recommend the form used in medicines. There is a slight amount of arsenic in carrots when used raw and unpeeled. Use a prop- erly balanced diet and a_ liberal amount of raw carrots. You will then get the same effect as you would from taking the medicinal ar- senic, and have no results, ie fe Question: Miss R. asks: what value is a peanut butter?” Answer: Peanut butter has a high food value, containing as it does a large amount of oil and dextrose, Peanut butter combines well with any other kind of food, including whole-wheat bread. Question: A Reader asks: “Is it possible for one to have a serious kidney trouble, such as albumin me- dium—a chronic condition—and not have it show up in the urine?” Answer: Your question is a per- plexing one, as of course you could not have albumin in your urine with- out it showing in a-careful analysis, There are many kidney disorders where albumin does not appear. Phosphates and pus cells will often show enough to be visible to the naked eye, but albumin is seldom visible except through a microscope and by careful analysis. ‘Question: C. W. writes: “Have been troubled for two years with an itching both winter and summer under the arms, Please tell me a cure, * Answer: Do hb agers | you can to produce more, skin . elimination. Take a sweat batil two or three times weekly, or induce a daily sweat by vigorous exercises, Take onc or two shower baths daily. Local applica- tions to these parts are dangerous, and are not necessary. SAINE 2a, SINNER “Why are you dressing up?” Faith asked, amusement rippling her throaty, contralto voice, as she walked into Cherry’s room and saw her sister trying to choose between the three most ravishing dresses in her entire wardrobe. ¢ It was Wednesday night. Nils Jonson was to arrive in the city on the nine o’clock train from Min- nesota and could be expected at the Hathaway home by half past, ac- cording to his terse wire received that_morning. “He’s a man, isn’t he?” Cherry laughed. If “I’m going to reduce the young bully to absurdity I’ve Ff to be dressed for the part, ven’ I? Shall it be the jade green chiffon or the amber? The ambey matches my eyes, and that bronze-colored flower on it is ex- copper-and-gold curls hdd been crushed until they glinted and shim- mered with a living fire, and had then been expertly tousled, so that beneath their rioting glory her face looked as fresh and innocent as that of a child who has just awak- ened from sleep, _ Rhoda stopped her nervous switch- ing about the room and stared at Cherry, as if she had never seen her before. “Oh!” she breathed, her hand closing about her plump, cream-colored heck. “Did you dress up—for Nils?” she blurted out. “Nils doesn’t like girls! He says they make him tired.: But all the girls within twenty miles of our farm are crazy about Nils. It makes him so mad!” she confided. Then nervousness shook her again: “Qh, I wish I hadn’t run away! Nils is actly the color of my hair, but men like green, I’ve noticed. I believe Til wear the jade, with silver slip- pers and those new moonlight chif- fon hose of mine, Lend me your Japanese pearls, won’t you, dar- ling?” “You're incorrigible,” Faith laugh- ed, but she went to get the beads. As nine-thirty approached, Rho- da’s nervousness grew almost un- bearable. “It's pathetic how afraid of Nils she is,” Faith whispered to Bob when Rhoda had again begun her restless wandering about the room. Bob whispered, his eyes narrowed with speculation. “Oh, hello, Cher- Many happy returns of the ! Is it your birthday or Christ- mas?” Cherry spead her foamy green skirts with her rose-tipped fingers and made him a deep curtesy, her face Sparkling with delight in her own breath-taking beauty. Her “Something more to it than that!”| tha: goingeto be so awful mad at me!” “Sol” Cherty laughed, but her golden eyes snapped prously. “Nils doesn’t tike i ls! The impu- dence of him! it a conceited country bumpkin this precious brother of yours must be! So you think I’ve wasted my time, Rhoda? That there’s no chance of my be- ing able to interest Farmer Nils Jonson? How can you break m heart thus, Rhoda?” she mocked, anger sharpening her light, musi- cal voice. Rhoda, deeply flushed, was about to retort a little more spiritedly NEXT: Nils himself! “Ladies, Beware,” a mystery story of the romantic adventures of a gen- tleman crook, is the screen feature. ELTINGE THEATRE “American Beauty” is all that the name implies. Which means that the picture of that name at the Eltinge Theatre today and Tuesday has beautiful Billie Dove, who richly deserves ‘the title, in the starring role, a capable ‘|cast of players and an excellent story in which an abundance of|the comedy and touches of drama and. pathos are intermingled with skill and dapied from a short story of the a] rom a short si same name_ by Wallace” Irwin, “American Beauty” is the whim- ical story of a beautiful girl who 5i story o! 8 fact but conceals husband. When she finally has the millionaire in her net, of course, discovers ‘ he whet. at 03 ughes personality snd someness to the leading lends his pleasant role 0) ién’t such a catch/afte: masc hand- “Ben-Hur” has Tmegination of Amica Wee" fitte nesday, Thi urday, the 8) irk icAvoy, aire if MeDowell, story, which is just as engrossing as ‘con battle or even the chariot race. Miss McAvoy, who previously was os her role of Esther, daughter of the a charming Merchant of Antioch, who. secretly has saved the Hur fortune for the heir, and Ramon Novarro in tie Wee dlar soles teeta \e ur 2 ual nature. they go away to save him from the AVS. John, Edythe Cha reed bi el Shich is theirs. White, Yola d’Avril, Loretta Young are few dry eyes the and others are in support. priacicoyraped ee the “BEN ._HUR” COMING TO ‘THE incovers Bs Vale of Se at, fine charac-| Healer whose Renedictinn cures it terietion tnd ’ the happy four are re- and clarify the skin in a 16 year old lungs, while during inhalation, the} boy?” ! iy