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smarck, N. D., smarck as second class mail matter. eekly by mail, in state, per year . ~, or not otherwise credited in this cal news ta i lished herein. All ‘ica Y ht epublieaton ot ait ttier matter herein are} Let every politician remember it. lerer forever. n bout our brains and our bodies; no longer we automobile, all for the evident purpose of sav- _ ve believe that emotions are gencrated in th« ieart, or that impulses of anger proceed from| {ified them in running the risk of being struck. aed we can have ours. room for wonder and hope, and their problems. AGE FOUR ‘he Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) the Bismarck Tribune Company, ‘and entered at the postoffice at bvonsnssensrenwnssesesoveves President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance ily by carrier, per year ........ ++ 687.20 uly by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) uly by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ....-+.. ally by mail, outside of North Dakota . Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the e for republicction of all news dispatches credited to|__ond there will be a response to shake the Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - « Fifth, Ave. Bldg. DETROIT Kresge Bldg. a (Official City, State and County Newspaper) od Think What Yon Wish urea a the street i i i Chi are | Nave develope at a large per cent 0} em 1S Sees caries of eoparnecis designe avoidable; that they are the result of careless- Mihess Bar comand ph niger the pedestrian who is the worst sufferer when a| ! ions, and d, as one of them ca wat wrehought enceabes nate no more| Men and women rush across the streets iysterious than the contraction of a muscle.” per, and also the THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | tween the troops of the two nations. The Eng- \lish soldiers, he said, were carefree and jovial en route to France; the Americans were sober, serious, “like crusaders.” ~ That was it. “Like crusaders.” Whatever the historians may have discovered regarding the causes of the war; whatever may have hap- pened since then in the rooms where treaties have been signed; the fact remains that we.en- tered the war because the common American was convinced that by so doing. he was serving a loftier cause than he could know otherwise. We were asked to’ give ourselves for an ideal and we responded. Is that spirit dead, then? Have we lost our not. We are still looking for leaders. We have had a dearth of them of late. But we are ready for them. Let a Man arise again—a man of genuine greatness, with a call to real service on his lips world. America is waiting, now as always. “What's Your Hurry?” | Automobile and other street accidents have j become so numerous in many cities that cam- paigns have been commenced to teach the pub- lic, pedestrians as well as drivers of vehicles, the wisdom of exercising care on the public streets. Investigations of accidents on the streets »|ness on the part of the driver of the vehicle or collision occurs. *|between street cars and vehicles, apparently o now they are going to make the human without any thought of the dangers they face rain give up its last secrets. The human race has progressed quite a dis- ance since the time when it was believed that he soul left the body each night, so that if a ide, aan were awakened suddenly his soul coule sot get back to him but would be a lost wan-| matter. Many of them take chances in rushing in doing so. Many persons can be seen leaving a street car at the rear door and crossing the street behind the car, thereby running the risk of being struck by a car passing on the “blind” 8 i)" Automobile drivers are not blameless in the We have learned a few things! across a street ahead of a street car or another Looking For a Leader great leaders, Your reply is as shadow of -|kind of a toad, could live for 31 years without ing a few seconds, as if the saving of time jus- Drivers of vehicles are blamed for many more So, having emerged from blind ignorance,| accidents than should be charged to them. Pe- vur scientists see no reason why they cannot|destrians have a_ responsibility which they lve the ultimate mysteries. If man is ajshould not attempt to evade. It is much easier nachine, why not take him apart and see what|for the individual to wait a few seconds than it nakes him tick? dri mule Rane Easy, perhaps. It may be that the thoughts prevent striking a person who has rushed into chat led to the writing of “Adonais,” for in: stance, were no more mysterious than the hemical reaction that makes seidlitz powders fizz often Lig pour ae. oes ak ae yose that these scientists do lay bare the nachinery of our brains; what then? Will they Popular Idols ye able to prove that we are mere mechanistic accidents in a heedless universe, ticking our ives away in blind obedience to powers that we cannot control? Make your own answer. zood as another man’s. We are entitled to be- ieve what we wish. Those who think thst! on who became the idol of the country by his life is a mere chemical formula may think so and those who believe that it is a strange, in-|1ehmainen was emulated by every young man comprehensible mystery, founded in the great] i, Finland; he gave his time to teaching boys deeps and striving painfully upward in obe-| how to run; and today Finland has many great dience to some inner spark that defies all funners. janalysis—they, too, may think as they wish. A few years ago an Irish patriot wag con-| Lindbergh, in America, is stirring young men demned to death by the British. Seated in his/to new achievements in aviation. If we are * jcell awaiting execution, he penned these lines “I would boldly teach the antique faith that| from now, Lindbergh can take much of the ‘fighting is the only noble thing, and that he} credit. alone is at peace with God who is at war with EEE tes te otay tank 10 reduce. that | It wi no easy task to reduce that man °, . .to a mathematical equation. A cry like that, Editorial Comment ‘ hurled in defiance from the death, bespeaks something more than a mere a plus b equals c. In that man’s equation there is an x—an unknown quantity; puzzle over it} About that Texas horned toad, if you please. » .as you will, there is a residue there that will) The issue is not just one between laymen who * escape your test tube. The wise men of science have their theories;|couldn’t have happened; it is between scien- And in ours we can leave|tists and scientists as well. is for the driver of an automobile to stop to .|the middle of the street in thoughtless haste. Every person, driver or pedestrian, who uses the streets has it in his power to aid in miking the streets safe for all. Charlie Paddock, sprinter, writing in Mc- Clure’s magazine, explains why it is that Fin- land, a small nation wrapped in ice and snow for the greater part of the year, is able con- sistently to produce such marvelous distance runners. He gives all the credit to Hannes Kolehmain- +] sensational victories several years ago. Ko- A popular idol is a good thing for a country. pre-eminent in aviation half a dozen years That Horned Toad Controversy (Minneapolis Tribune) say it happened and scientists who say ‘t Most of us are not much interested in horned toads. The world probably could wag along very comfortably if the species should become Senator Burton K. Wheeler, the energetic|extinct. The cynic may ask: “Why is a young man from Montana who drove Harry \ Daugherty out of the cabinet, is discouraged|the controversy go wagging on its way be- about the American people. -» The nation, he believes, is selfish and inert.|vants or naturalists of the rest of the world. ‘If Lincoln himself were to appear today, the} The thing, however, is not so easily disposed : senator declares, he could do nothing, because ee people would be too indifferent to follow| bate on the question whether or not a horned horned toad?” and be flippantly inclined to let tween the Texas laymen and the learned sa- of as that. And so we have a first-page de- toad could live for 31 years immured in the It is hard to blame the senator for being pes-|cornerstone of a building—live without food, He courageously made war on cor- * ruption in high places, and was rewarded by - _ being indicted on trumped-up charges; nor was ‘there any great outcry of popular indignation _over the treatment he received. Yet it is possible to disagree with him. - _ It is true that we seem far more interested ‘in baseball, criminal trials, airplane flights and : new flivvers than in our governmental leaders 1 2 But this may not be our|story, anyhow, and nobody has disproved it, : fault so much as the fault of our leaders, without water, and without air for nearly a third of a century. ‘ The Texas laymen are entitled to credentials for veracity until somebody can prove that they aren’t. They saw the recess in the stone opened. They saw the hortied toad lying i it, apparently dead. In a little while, though, the toad showed that it still had life in it, and only what they think, not what they know. The chances are that some, if not all, of these Texas laymen will believe to their dying days that this horned toad lived after 31 years of imprisonment. The disputing scientists probably will keep on being skeptical on this be established to the satisfaction of every in- say that the scientists do not know what they are talking about. Around many just such things as this have lenged each other through the centuries. If it were proved to the unanimous satisfacti n of the race that a horned toad, or any other air, food, water, light or activity, ? This is to say what would iy & about it, or what worth-while conclusions could we yd | WASHINGTON LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Feb. 27.—One of the most absorbing performances which; the two political parties are about! to offer a mildly interested nation in their quadrennial competition for, the spoils of office and such per-| quisites as those may entail is that in which the Democratic appear as a Magpie and the Repub- capacity for rising to high ideals?) We have Cie party will take the role of a That is to say, one party is going to talk and act like a magpie very; angry about something and the other will talk and act like a cla: This strange stunt may be enact- ed several times, but it observed as Democratic orators dis- embogue at their best and loudest against the oil scandals of the Hard- ing administration. called that when this issue arose in 1924 the Democratic party followed is of magpiedom and the Republican party took its cue from clamdom. ‘ In 1924 there were still some hard-boiled politicians—of the type that sent men to Montana to “get” Senator Wheeler—who still main- tained that Fall was a farsighted and conscientious i hil Doheny and Sinclair were super-! patriots who had taken the navy’s! oil merely to save us from the Yel-| The supreme court has spoken since then, however, and has denounced those involved in very strong language. In 1924 Harding was dead and! Coolidge, the candidate, had been a mere vice president, when the oilland the voter, who frequently mang got the oil and Fall got the Whether or not the oi! scandals! and the new charge that Sinclair} himself. helped pay the party debt about the! inistration gave him have any effect it is probable that) i election day will come without men- tion of the oil scandals by any im- Coolidge May Spend Summer in Minnesota time the admini Teapot Dome w portant Republican. The G. O. P. attitude is that although it may have been > skeleton in the closet and although the Democrats m: have been indecent enough to br down the door that hid it, a dign! fied silence is the best answer to those who still drag it around the streets or dangle it before them, Not once has the administration expressed itself upon the subject, not even to pat on the back the two able lawyers who have recover. ed the navy’s reserves and kept t! bloodhounds close at the coat-tai of Fall, Sinclair and Doheny. It has been as if no highly placed of- ‘ial or member of the Congress except he be a Democrat or a Re- publican of independent stripe, was at all interested. Of course, the light of recent charges that cor- rupt oil money helped pay party campaign debts, it was only human for the gents in power not to be especially enthusiastic over further: Prosecution and investigation. Being always subject to the at- tacks of the minority party, the G. O. P. will also receive plenty of abuse in connection with the Vare and Smith scandals. Here, too, it will maintain dignified silence, for a party is only as strong as its political bosses and any attempt to weed out the corrupt ones might be diszstrous. ee Signs are that the Democrats will also paint as a scandal the current unemployment. Secretary of Labor Davis savs the estimates of the un- employed army are exaggerated, knows what's going on about him even if not what happens higher up, can size up that situation for But again, as concerns unemploy- ment, the Democrats wilj be by far he most voluble. President Cool- ise, who learned long ago that: silence was an excellent defense. has furnished the party’s keynote, Miss Marguerite Nelson, local girl, was ordered today due to the con- tinued illness of State's Attorney H. E. Johnson, who is to participate in the case. The investigation will St. Paul, Feb. 27.—()—President. Coolidge may spend his summer va- cation in Minnesota, Governor Chris- tianson said today upon his return from Washington where he inter- viewed the chief executive. The governor extended an infor- mal invitation to the president to devote his annual vacation to Min- nesota’s 10,000 lakes, suggesting that the outlook for the fishing sea- son is better than ever. The governor said that President Coolidge indicated deep interest in the proposal and the governor in- tends to issue a formal invitation Names on Petitions Authentic, Stone Says challenge to the League of North Dakota to check and re-check the names on the wet! petition recently filed with the secretary of state was issued here today by C. P. Stone, president of the Better Citizenship as: wet organization. The petition ask that the matter of repeal of the prohibition clause of the state c stitution be referred to the voter: at the primary election in June. Commenting on the statements! of Thomas Gales and F, L. Watkins |-Saloon League, who are, checking the names on the wi titions, Stone said every one o: signatures were authentic and gen- uine and had been carefully checked, rechecked and then double checked before the petitions were filed. He said he wished to “cal atten- tion to the fact that the circulators of the petitions were voluntary workers who served without com- pensation because of their conscien- tious objections to what they deem a vicious and unenforceable é that the expenses of the Better tin Klungtvedt, bachelor farmer liv- Citizenship association were borne ing south of Berthold, was found entirely by North Dakotans without dead in bed at his home yesterday. nd that the more the Minot official pronounced the death investigate as due to natural causes. Livestock mers the more on the farm was badly starved, and they will be satisfied that in North it is believed that tha man had been Dakota prohibition has encountered | Meanwhile Gales and Mrs. Eliza- beth Preston Anderson, Fargo, head of the North Dakota Women’s! Christian Temperance Union, held a conference with Attorney General They are under- |BACHELOR FARMER FOUND DEAD Anti-Saloon Leaguers signatures and George Shafer. stood to have taken up questions regarding the legalit 8 of petitions suc! Gales made several addresses in Bismarck churches yesterday and is planning meetings to organize for the fight against the constitutional repeal movement PLANE PILOT KILLED Deming, N. M., Feb. 27.—47)— Green, of Wichita, illed and two other flyers were injured when two air-| act lanes collided in the air near Cai 35 miles east of planes crashed an the toad is now on exhibition. This is their| kK: although quite a company of believers havelP. As a matter of fact, there is no country on| denied that it can be true. They are telling|p, earth where the average man looks so long- _ ingly for a capable leader as in America. Our trouble is that too often, of recent years, we " have learned that our idols had feet of clay. - We have grown somewhat suspicious; we have . become clever at detecting shams. But let aj pr _ really great man arise, or even a half-great| Rip Van Winkle story. The truth never will _ man, and we are ready to go wherever he asks. | be » _ This explains, undoubtedly, our tendency to|térested person. The scientists will say that + idolize our industrial captains. We look up to|somebody “slipped one over” in Texas when men like Ford, Sloan, Farrell, and du Pont be-| others were not looking, and the laymen will cause we recognize that here, for all their shortcomings, are men who are in their own _ way genuinely big. They may move in narrow fields, but in those fields they loom large. We|the credulity and the unbelief of men chal- are hungry for leaders, and since our politi- on” ont wo we Se teeming be business man. ‘The American does not readily lose his cay KIEF BANK CLOSED the First State Bank lenry county, was an- ut capitalized at $10, had a su of” $3,000 aha epee! depleted reserve caused the failure, banking oft DERAILED Feb, 27) —| four _slee; of the Seaboard) by the Farmers Wife, publication of| into the recent death in be resumed ag soon as the attor- ney’s health ig improved, according to C. B. Davis, acting coroner. Box Car Society Head Favors Preparedness Fargo, N. D., Feb. 27.— (AP) — Declaring that the United States never had been prepared for any war it had ever entered into, Major Pelham St. George Bissell, chef de chemin-de-fer of the “40 and 8,” ad- vocated an increased budget for the building of ships and preparing the army for war, in addressing the Fargo Li ‘lub here today. Major Bissell is a guest of the American Legion and “40 and 8” and will speak at a Legion meeting to- night following a banquet in his honor. He also will speak over sta- tion WDAY at 6 p. Man Is Arrested For Buying Stolen Bonds Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 27.—(AP) —Frank DeMayo, alleged by govern- ment agents to have been the head of one of the k st bootleg rings in the country, y faced a charge. of buying and selling $9,000 worth of Liberty bonds stolen in a train robbery at Toledo, Ohio, seven years ago. 7 DeMayo was arrested last night by government agents and was roleneadl on $5,000 bond. He produced a re- ceipt showing the bonds were pur- chased from J. A. Connolly, St. Paul, Minn., broker, December 1, last, Minot, N. Feb. 27.(7)—Aus- dead several di bef die peae fore a neighbor LEVINE BACK IN NEW YORK Mitchel Field, Feb. 27—P— jCharles A. Levine in his transat- lantie monoplane Columbia, with Wilmer Stultz as pilot landed at 3:10 this morning from Boston. The flyers were almost frozen as a re- sult of a temperature that hovered not far above the zero mark. They said they had to fight a head wind of 40 miles an hour for almost the entire trip. The plane took off from Boston at 12:05 this morning. STEFANSSON IN HOSPITAL New York, Feb, 27.—(7)—Vilhjal- mur Stefansson, arctic explorer, been admitted to Bellevue hospital for me of an ailment, the ex-| ible of which wa’ not dis- - !closed. pe New rote pine J how- today, |Over, says understood - eee ment, ‘which al was PRINCE LICHNOWSKY DIES |being the Berlin, Feb. 27.— (P)- Prince | tenance Max Lichnowsky, who was German ambassador at Londun when the world war broke out in . As ambassador at that time he took an ppesing position to his attack on him, H. A. Guilford, pub-, Usher of a weekly paper, asked HH paid fog widow * County Attorney Floyd B. Olson to drop assault charges against the two, Guilford recently visited Chi- cago and there identified as one of his assailants, Jack Gold, who wes captured in a gun fight with Chi- cago police. TO HONOR 4 N. D. WOMEN Fargo, Feb, 27.— (AP) —Four North Dakota rural women will be honored by being designated “mas- ter farm homemakers” Thi at a recognition dinner given here Paul. The women are Mrs. C. Fullerton, and Mrs. W. H. Bubr, here today for the return to Ram- sey county, North Dakota, of Charles) Rider, who is accused of having em- Feb. ther postponement of the inquest| bezzled $3,500 from a Devils Lake| Hinkler, Australia: Minot home lesale house, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1928 a ship Me Fast Way. 1o Maal ALTHeDIET Dr Frank Mi GR.MCCOY WHO CAN GE DIET OF FIRST AMERICAN: {falo and deer meat, to; Many of the best authorities{ fish, were the flesh for ’s common- claim that it was in North Amer-| ly used, the woodland tribes depend- ica the first primate originated. By primate is meant the type of ani- mal which at least first resembled man, whether it was an ape, mon- key, ape-man or a sudden develop- ment from an ape-man into what was later to be known as man. The North American Indian is doubtless a descendant of this type of first North American primate, We are able to study back sev- eral thousand yéars in our attempt to understand life of these primitive Indians, and the history of their eating habits and food develop- ments should prove intevesting to students of modern dietetic: In the Northern part of this con-| tinent the Indians’ diet was made up of three-fourths animal food to one-fourth of vegetables. Southern part, where there more growing vegetation the used was about three-fourths vegetable. Among the tribes’of the coast, mountains, lakes roportion of ani- stand} mal and vegetable food varied ac- cording to the food supply of that BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES don’t be too sure that you're thinking only of the good of your children when you say you'll | extra work to"do before you decide a you Your view sounds kind of selfish to me, but of course I grew up an age when mothers their babies and never! would have entertained the thought of turning them over to a nurse to Very rich women raised their children by proxy, I know, but there weren’t so Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him. care of Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. ing upon deer while the coast river tribes used more fish other products of the lakes The Irish potato was first tivated by the Indians who brought it from South America to Virginia. The Indians’ method of drying meat and their cultivation of corn and potatoes have been the prin- | cipal contributions to our | dietary from these natives of ‘North have so much to do keepin society that they had to but you are not in the Sunday roto- gravures you know, Marye dear, and nicest thing in a woman's life in order to run around to bridge games and dinners and dances. Children might like nice looking parents, as you say, but th ing paren’ them too What bo: wants “dad” to be old enough to be his grandfather? Neve that a young daughter wants ionship of a mother who is so uld she can’t remember what it feel® like io be a girl taken. Tomorrow's article will explain ithe evolution of our present Amer- and plains, the 'S AND ANSWERS Mrs, J. F. writes: “My husand has a slow but strong pulse of 40 per minute, or serious when he has an even temperament with naturally steady, jdeliberate movements? He is 58 strong and healthy, His pulse runs as high as 50 when actively engaged. | Blood pressure is 130. He is a buil Would lighter work, with re; {ulated exercise, be better’” Your husband's very stow, but as he seems his blood pressure is normal, I am sure that he is one of those Particularly low pulse is not harmful. Physical culture exercises would doubtless increase his heartbeat to some extent, and should ful_in making him less p! é B. L. writes: “I work This} in a store and am very frail. My Indian corn is one of the original] employer insisted that I have a American foods, and the cultivation] medical examination to see if I had of this grain by the Indians prob-| tuberculosis. The rey ably was the first influence which | active tuberculosis” led to the building of settlements.| employer says that I have it and The early white settlers in Ni And if you be- early white settlers in Amer- Is this abnormal ica found a total lack of dairy food. The diets of the different tribes were always regulated somewhat by local taboos against eating the flesh of certain animals. stance. an Apache or Navajo would not eat fish nor the flesh of beaver seems, people who have t! of bringing up children get along just as well, if not some of you who don’t have to think twice about what you should you wouldn’t be buying imported dresses if the cag Lge coat or bonnet. Thi For many years the Indians’ vegetable supply came mostly from yots, the more succulent of which were eaten raw, the others cooked. often requiring several hours of time to soften some of the hardier As the Indians learned to till the soil, they cultivated some of these roots and herbs, but their principal contribution to our present dietary was when they learned how to plant and cultivate the wild maize. "t¢ mean so much when jomething better to spend Some frivolous women never can think of anything els but in most cases chi great influence for thrift; and the ire that influence 1 be for you, There money just for yourselves. People "t agination, ordinarily. to see themselves in the old-age Perhaps so a Cad thing that it is only arrested. in danger of losing my job, please explain what ‘no active’ means.” The report of your examination simply means that you do not have tuberculosis. no evidence that tuberculosis is de- veloped from infection or contagion. If you are frail you must build up your strength and at the same time avoid those foods which are known to be catarrh-producing. will send me your name and address I will be glad to send you some articles on the subject of the cause and cure of tuberculosis which will show your employer a new view- point about this disease. starved if it had not been for the plentiful supply of corn which they were able to secure from the In- Many of the Indian tribes “used | wild roots and herbs stern necessity, few of these food heing "sed at the present time. The North Pacific tribes ate the sweet inner bark of the hemlock and In the Southwest of the stitutions of the future homes for poor folks, elements of the food supply. With love and hope, aho and other fungi were used for food by the Eastern Indian. Marye is “ashamed” of afternoon, from to spend, they drift into New York. You sce one spending in the flesh pots and the other waiting for mid- night to come so that the Chinatown ES SUh ca errr ene | Additional Markets ||} of Sg =a AES EAE $$$ —_____—__-¢ { Tips For Taxpayers | Mission can appease a gnawing Just now the army of jobless is If you can take the Manhattan indications as warn- inz, then all is not so well—or, all is not likely to be so well. either are not so good like to believe, or they are on the That’s what the prophets would tell you from a slant over the Five Corners at midnight. Too many men are Every charitable concern finds a at its gate. They whisper to you that it has not been like this since 1916. And von're rathe! You're particular! Ne aid employes consti- on the increase. largest items of CHICAGO CASH ones No, 2 hard 1.36 5 northern spring 1.16. Corn No. 3 mixed .93 to .94 1-4; No. 3 yellow .95 to .96. Oats No. 2 white .58 to .60 1-2; No. 3 white .56 et to .59. business expenses, as a deduction such claims" must conform closely to the wording of the statute, which provides for the deduction of “a reasonal ance for’ personal The test of deductibility is whether the amounts paid are rea- FARGO LIVESTOCK Fargo, N. D., Feb. 27.—(AP)—| Hogs 150 to 180 Ib. 7.25 t to 200 Ib. 7.50 to 7.75; 7.50 to 7.75; 225 to 250 lb, 7.40 to 7.65; 250 to 300 Ib. 7,35 to 7.60; 300 to 350 lb. 7.25 to 7.50; packers 6.25 to 6.75; stags 6.25 to 6.60, . Good bulls 6.25 to 7.50; medium bulls ¢.00 to 6.50; top veal 18.50 to 14.00; medium veals 10,00 to 12.00; cull veals 8.00 to 9.00, _—_— | IN NEW YORK INCOME TAX IN A NUTSHELL WHO? Single persons who had net income of $1,500 or more or gross income of $5,000 married couples who had net income of $3,500 or more or gross income of $5,000 t file returns, The filing period Collector of in- teral revenue for oe Alsat person live: or lace: of business. itructions = on Forms 1040A and disappear in a black, cork-screw twist that scenes like this recur but iodically. For it’s hard to stand h rhen coming like scare- crows out of the night. And all use this is up- permost in their minds they do not speak, Now and then one grunts something to the other. inquiry concerning the time, Then H i The night grows They file in for their cof- And, after a while, they file out and disappear into the shadows. shodows in a vividly real Hours later dawn comes ahd catches one of them mn rags in a doorway. the mission workers know they have come and gone—1000, sometimes 2000 men in a night have come and gone, And, with the next out again on their iring search of work and food GILBERT SWAN. a Maybe the reason Mr McAdoo is Smith is because Al is the candidate from the great pen silence, again! —— New York, Feb. 27.—They fall into line just before midnight. Sleep has been erased from their eyes by| yj; They are men, wearing flesh and clothes, like the rest of us. And yet they thanks to the half-light, to look like In a sense they are They are, at least, the symbols of the shadows that de- spair and ineffectualness and want} q cast over the world. excess of $10,000. sonable and whether they are, in for personal services of a col for which other of or serv town, They come out of the Bowery just before midnight and the; toward a little Mission » as though drawn by a mag- There is an aimlessn a aparenens ay speaks vivic lost courage. ‘ount|) worked word—“derelict”—tha best describes them. A derelict is a ship without port; a ship flounder- i about against the ithout purpose and without They fall into line just nd there is a silence for! about them that is more poignant of pain or a wail of despair. Men who do not talk speak r sometimes than men who shout their revolt and their gricf. fe are men who have nothing to Almost a hun- You can call Europe now for $5 a minute, but it’s very hard to get Mussolini’s number, a These downtown parking lations are proving @ ship on bank robbers, The Prince of Wales has been ap-. pointed “master of the merchant navy.” Man overboard! ingland newspa} 88 are col in better and shipped to New York.” Why not ship a few of them west? New York seems to have, plenty. Well, things could at all by insurance men. say to each other. dred men, and not one with a word to say to the other! stand, like shadows into which the >. anid of life has somehow been 8 This is the midnigth breadline! This is the breadline that forms while the rest of us sleep, or step merrily about Broadway when the This is the breadline that ios in QUICKLY STOPP: