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eavveveser! i 1 i ‘The ~sers will only put their shoulders to the wheel PAGE FOUR An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune C.mpany, Bis- » N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- marck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann .............President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarc' Daily by mail, per y: In Advance (in state outside Bismarck) ...... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ..... Weekly by mail, in state, three years for . Weekly by mail, outside of North, Dakota, per year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press rhe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the » tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Make It a Good One Bismarck’s Fourth of July celebration should receive the heartiest cooperation on the part of the business men. It is a fine thing to put on a special day of entertainment in which the neighbors of this city can join. This city is situated centrally to a large area and if the program arranged appeals a large attendance is assured. It has been several years since the Capital City staged a real Fourth of July celebration. Care should be taken, however, to provide plen- ty of amusement and to see that the crowds are kept entertained and that the amusement is accessible. This can all be done if the community lead- and make the proper investment of their time and funds to create more goodwill for this city. By all means a real, resounding Fourth of July celebration for Bismarck and the Slope territory. The Unknown Street “Yes, sir,” said the talkative man on the street car, “I guess I know this town about as well as anybody could. There isn’t a street or an alley I’m not familiar with. I’ve been liv- ing here for 25 years and I know the old town like a book.” One can learn a good deal in 25 years. A city soon grows familiar. It is not hard to! imagine that your home town never can sur- prise you again. Yet the talkative car rider was wrong. Hel doesn’t know the town. Nobody does. No’ one of us even knows his own street. Any col- lection of human homes, from a cross-roads sett'ement to a great metropolis, is an eternal, insoluble mystery, and we are mistaken if we “ro of easy familiarity. _ Consider the street you live on. You waik » it every evening of your life; its physical ts are seen so often that you could get to * house with your eyes shut. ‘t the street, for all that, is a mystery. 1 house on it is the dwelling place of two : Fore people like yourself, with secret hopes, hicden struggles and unknown dreams like yo:r own. You do not know the street at all. It is not simply a commonplace highway lined with ordinary frame and brick buildings. It is the temporary resting place of some scores of aloof human beings, each of whom has his own victories, his own defeats, his own aspira- tions and his own little heart aches. : : Nothing is commonplace. You are mistaken if you think that wonder and romance are to be found only beyond distant seas. They lie Bismarck Tribune Oihas lost its glamour. at your very doorstep, unseen. In your own [" BARBS Los Angeles reaches canal zone, says a headline. Don’t tell us Los Angeles has annexed down that far! A man has invented a fuelless motor. But you still have to feed babies in the middle of the night. Strange thing—election time drawing nearer and nearer, andj? we haven't heard a single candi- date denouncing the corn borer. ~ It snows at 7 a. m., there is sunshine at 8 o'clock, rain at 9, @ blizzard at 10, small tornado at M1, flood at 12, hurricane at 1, freshet at 2, tidal wave at 3, sun- right in the path ters. Then—but Kathleen Kay, Ben Bard, The delegates to the Mis- tie convention weighs more than 400 pounds. He prob- ably lends weight to the gathering. One of the souri Democra s, group chiseled from ‘ble. Original application for writ of Some day a woman is ey A) me | mnaamas directed to the above = oo name respondent TREE 80 airplane ride. het will A THOUGHT . | Wri: denied, Fer-Coriam, Page des i . O. Hellstrom, Bismarck, 5 (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | ——-*! Dak, Attorney for Relator. God and Mam-| George F. Shafer, Attorney Gen- At the Movies ELTINGE SAEATER ‘Utopian city. i are Man; to the City abo dizzy so be glitter. Below, in endless » the workers. Between these city without heart, without »| his pocket, "Below, among the tortured, dull ses lives an & saint what happens when “Metropolis” is shown at the Eltinge theatre, on | Wednesday and Thursday. e AT THE CAPITOL and creator of costumes worn by! the players in Fox Films tions, is said to have surpassed all previous efforts in the apparel she roduced for Olive Borden, starring in “The Secret Studio,” coming at- traction at the Capitol Theatre for tomorrow, Wednesday and Thurs- day. Particular stress is made on the costumes which the lovely ae. wears ip G peries of Sableaux which are the highlights in the di- vertissements are ball , in the role of an artist. e first costume is a Grecian effect in a tableau titled Faun.” In this Miss Borden is ac-! stri companied by a coterie of dancers,! ficient as not purporting to be a also in Grecian costumes, and the artistic quality of all ° in hot pursuit have hasted | goal of , THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE block are a hundred unsung Odysseys. The man next door may wrestle with the prince of the powers of darkness, and repel him; but since he gives you a casual, “Morning, neigh- bor,” next day, his victory goes unnoticed and you think him a plodding, ordinary fellow. Because our modern world has so many di- versions, because its wilderness is removed be- yond our daily paths, because it insulates us so well from the dangers and shocks our fathers knew, we are prone to assume that it But that is a mistake. Life remains what it always was—an everlast- ing mystery. For all its familiarity, your own street is as strange to you as the Khyber Pass. Your neighbors, like yourself, are immortal souls fighting the long, unchanging fight to make dreams come true. { Editorial Comment | Minnesota Adopts Plan (Fargo Forum) Minnesota is patterning after North Dakota in one respect, at least. It has just perfected the organization of the “Greater Minnesota As- sociation,” the body being formed along the lines adopted in the formation here of the Greater North Dakota Association. The Minnesota group, like the North Dakota body, plans to give its whole attention to the job of promoting the interests of the state, with special reference to the matter of adver- tising and the attraction of home seekers and tourists. Hoover in Ohio and Ind‘ana (Minneapolis Journal!) If presidential primaries are any good at all, it is to give a free ficld for the expression of individual dsires,° But if a favorite son is put forward in some state having presidential primaries, and all other candidates, through courtesy or fear of starting a factional fight, stay out of that state, then the whole purpose of the presidential primary is nullified. The managers of the Hoover campaign have, decided to enter their candidate in at last two states that have been staked out as the per- sonal and private claims of favorite sons. This has been done, no doubt, with the full consent and approval of Mr. Hoover himself. There will thus be primary contests in In- diana as well as in Ohio. The individual Re- publican voter will have a chance to say whcth- er he is willing to have his state delegation tied up in a neat package and presented to Sen- ator Watson in one case and Senator Willis in the other, to do with as they will. It has required courage to make this deci- sion, because other candidates have elected to stay out of Indiana and Ohio in the expecta tion of profiting as second choice, when Sen-} ator Watson and Senhtor Willis put their bunch of votes on the political market at Kansas City. The entry of Mr. Hoover’s name in these states means abandonment of any hope to profit by later accession of delegates whom either favorite son can control. But the Hoover strategy is sound, because it is frank and above board. It will determine how many Republican voters in these two states prefer Hoover, despite the favorite son jugglery. In each state it appears that there is a strong and pervasive Hoover sentiment. Full voice is now to be given to this. If it proves that a majority of the Ohio delegation, or even a good-sized minority, are chosen from the Hoover list on March 24, that will give the Hoover movement a strong impetus. And if in May the Indiana delegation should be tak- en away from Senator Watson, (it must go as a unit under the Indiana law) the nomination of Hoover at Kansas City would be all but certain. The Hoover managers are wise to come out in the open and try for these results. They have far more to gain than lose. The Re- publican masses the country over are in no mood for dark horse legerdemain at Kansas City. They want a real “people’s choice.” of the rising wa- you'll find out | Decisions of Supreme Court State of North Dakota ex rel J. G. Manning, Relator “V8. Robert E. Byrne, as Secretary of State of the State of North Da- kota, Respondent. (1) A nominating petition of delegate to a national convention must affirmatively show that the signers thereon are party voters of the political party to which nomina- tion is sought. , (2) Where a petition for nomina- tion for delegate to a national con- vention of a political party is presented to the Secretary of State, upon which the recital that the peti- tioners are members of the parti- cular political party has been stricken out, such petition’ is insuf- noted designer Produc- young given by | “The petition of the party voters of such suggests aj party. | Not These Kinds of ‘Levies’ BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, March 18—One of the most interesting indirect results of the Pan-American conference in Havana was the confirmation of re- ports that the United States had a miniature Mussolini in its front yard who had established an iron- handed dictatorship over a repub- + little more than our protectorate. + Cubans who managed iv get up here without being shot or jailed had been telling us ex- traordinary tales about the rule of President Gerardo Machado, and American newspaper men returned from the conference with the re- port that they were all true. that any Cuban who values his life loes not set up shop as a political enemy of Mister Machado, = eee Cuba became an independent re- public in 1902, subject to our Platt amendment, which provides that the United States “may exercise the power to intervene in order to preserve the independence. of Cuba and to maintain.a government ade- quate for the protection of life, prop- erty and individual liberty.” Various Cubans have implored the United States to intervene to maintain guch a government, but there seems no chance of such in- tervention. They ee al that in spite of civil service laws estab lished by us, Machada has sup. Planted Gus mre Hy pe salts ‘ary and supported ry banks from which he obtains money to ef- fect enactment of laws necessary to maintain his dictatorship. dictatorship as from Cubans competent American journalists: Machada has suppressed all op- force. He has forbidden and pre- vented operation of any panneition party. omnia of hi pe may be made by imaginin; esi- dent Coolidge suppressing the Dem- ocratic party. Police have brutally routed attempted political meetings and a petition of 30,000 voters for a meeting was refused. The Cuban Congress has with- drawn from the people the right to elect their political choices, wreck- \ N So T CAN SLIP ON \ eral, and George I. Reimestad, As- sistant Attorney General, Bismarck, N. Dak., Attorneys for Respondent. wealth, but have/| becca as thor I ft | ft Ne ” = gold, ‘the re 4 one apples of | State of North Dakota, ex rel Hus. enjoy it-—Tupper. ROOKIE DETECTIVE LOSES OWN CASE: New York.—With a diploma in a shiny tin star under power to| ton Thompson, et al, Relators } - | Robert E. Byrne, as Secretary of yin State of the State of North Da- kota, Respondent. A nominating petition, under Sec- tion 910 of the Compiled Laws of 1913 (relating to candidates for president, presidential electors, del- egates to national conventions and had} national committeeman), must be signed by not less than five hundred voters of the political party in which the nomination is sought. | Original speeaee for writ of mandamus directed to the above lat F. fer, Attorney Gen- ral, and I. Reimestad, As- istant Attorney General. Bismarck, N. Dak., Attorneys for Respondent. es JUST AS GOOD Bride honeymoon): This x cits fleas cod you et me |" Brig ): But 1 om ters, dung Jean on my rhoul- — HA, WASHINGTOR LETTER They seem to agree, for instance, | This is the picture of Machado’s; who oppose it, and from several) position to his regime, largely by! \ HAVE YouUR LILY WHITE HAND $300 DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RING !.<T WANTED “fo set A- $500. ONE, BUT —~THis THEY WONT GET TH! ANEW CROP OF DIAMONDS W UNTIL NEXT FALL! ~~~ BUT WAIT, W WHEN 1 PuT OVER A Few DEALS IN CHICAGO, You'LL GET sd A“ spa « j | i ing the election laws esteblished by Americans. Dr. Cosmo de la Fer- riente, once pres dent of the League |of Nations, and Enrique Jose Va- rona were among those who band- ed together to protest various abuses, but Machado sent his army after them. Machado and his Congress are having their terms extended two more years, Freedom of the press, as ‘n Italy, has been abolished. Many opposi- tion newspapers have bzen sup- pressed. Editors have been assassinated— Armando Andre and Antonio Te were two. Others have been jailed, try. eee Thanks to the American Federa- tion of Labor, atrocities against Cuban labor leaders have gained considerable publicity. Many these leaders have been mysteriously murdered, others have disappeared under suspicious circumstances and many others have been imprisoned, ; The A. F. of L. can supply the names of the victims—and has. It) has been estimated that at least a. ‘hundred of them have disappeared jor been killed. | It cannot be proved legally that the Machado govern- ‘nent encompassed these outrages, [but the victims were its critics. ; With the aid of the army, Machado | suppressed labor unions, with spe- al attention to the Brotherhood of Railway Employes and the Long- ; shoremen’s Union, which were the | strongest. Conditions are said to have im- proved a little for Cuban labor since President Green of the A. F. of L. protested publicly. Ferrara, Cuban ambassador here, answered Green, but did not deny the charges, . ° The Havana University has been closed twice in the .last year be-| cause of ‘student protests agains! Machado’s suppression of libervy. Members of the Cuban Congress are kept in line by the granting of profitable concessions in the great lotteries, by which nearly $25,000,- 000 a year is said to be raised. ; Some Cubans opposed to Machado who Have been in Washington de- clare that Cuba faces a revolution. If that is true, American business | firms wijl be interested, as our in- | A DIAMOND? *} trol of the island. deported or forced to flee the coun-! aged of ioned conventions you would know ; tinue to fall in love. vestments, amounting to some $1,- 500,000,000, give us economic con- Mf 4 and heir Letters BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES What do I think? edith, are you out of your head? Marye Mer- You must think you're a middle- woman, calling young men who make love to you mere kids. * 4 certainly you're to blame. If @ weren’t so sure that it’s all ri,ut for you tc do just as you ..a-e and flaunt all the old-fash- that such a thing as a boy falling in love with a married woman docs happen. it’s because you want to eat your cake and have it too that you think you can run around with other men, whether they’se boys or not, and expect them to forget that you're @ very attractive young woman. I don’t care what new-fangled ideas you try to harness onto the world, you can’t get away from the fact that men, and women too, stil] con- If you had paid attention to what I said you'd have known that this co man meant something when e played up to that story you told the police officer. But it’s my opin- jon that a lot of your fun would be spoiled if you didn’t fool, your- self with these modern ideas.” Such little familiarities as that don’t mean a thine to you—because you don’t want them to. Well, r-v denr, you ate your cake when you got married and that ought to sati the single girls go to lunch and tea with such nice boys as Norman and “Billy.” It didn’t take you long to call him by his first name, did it? Your cute for him may be as bad 2s the one you gave Norman. Ever since he's been home he’s been drinking, I hear, and everyone says ’s because he saw you in the cit; Sha they're all wondering what yo' did to him. His aunt wrote to his LUESDAY, MARCH 138, 1928 As I explained in yesterday’s article, an inguinal hernia is caused mainly by the weakness of the ab- dominal muscles and the fact that they cannot properly retain an un- usual pressure due to intestines either distended from food or gas, or which have prolapsed so low in the abdomen as to make a heavy burden upon the weakened walls of the lower abdomen. ‘ If the hernia has not progressed | too far there is a possibility of a cure through first the development of-the abdominal muscles and, at the same time, a reduction of the 'y you. Hereafter let} OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | sonia (YAN ETHEL, LIGHT OF MY” CARE WORN EYES, LET ME EGAD, ~EVEN (AN N awn OH SA ROMANCE, HE i ms RESORTS “To His FRIGHTENED, PREVARICATION AND ALL. NV $300! HME |, AFLUTTER ..]'/ ~AND HE HIGGLED MAKES OBR So REAL KLIEG EYES FROM ALL “TH” DIAMONDS ENGAGEMENT AND SOLEMAS! wWitd MY FRIEND MARVIA,. LIKE AN OLD CLOTHES DEALER -fo BUY IT FoR $25 bow BUT FAR FROM eaten internal pressure, As soon as a hernial sack begins o its2lf either by symptoms by palpation, it is wise for the pa- tient to immediately secure a good rupture support and wear it con- stantly until he is assured by his doctor that the cure is complete. The next thing to do is to start developing the abdominal muscles through taking a careful course of! “setting-up” exercises, All of those exercises taken while lying on the} back will be helpful. Any book on physical culture will explain these; exercises, or I will be glad to send} you a special chart of them if you! will write to me in care of the! Tribune. These exercises must be taken; very carefully at first and used at least twice daily, gradually increas- ing the exercises each day and adding new ones as the strength of the abdominal muscles permits, 1 At the same time as the sxpport is applied and the exercises started, patient should vse all measures nec- essary to produce as flat an ab- domen as possible. The quantity of food used must be kept to the minimum of the body’s require- ments. All especially gas-forming foods such as onions, cooked cab- bage, ete, should be carefully avoided. Only good food combina- tions should be used, such as those I_ suggest in the weekly menus whicl. are printed each Saturday in} this column, The menus are always outlined for the following week. Watch for them and learn how to combine your foods. It is a good plan to take at least one enema each day and _ perhaps better to take two, one in the morn- ing and one in the evening, using only one quart of plain water each time. The enema should be taken in the knee-chest position or while! lying on the back, and the rupture support should be worn at the same time to prevent any undue pressure which mav be caused by the tem- norory distention of the intestines! by the water used for the enema. These enemas should be continued for several weeks or even several sister about your voing out with uum &nd she spread it all ever town. I do wish you’d be more careful, Marye. F The best way to help a man for- get you is to give him a chance. He can’t do that if he sees vou. I know you don’t do anything to make yourself unattractive. And if your young friend is jealous of your hus- band don’t you think it would be more cruel to bring him into your home than just to dr-p him? With ali my love. MOM. NEXT: Gossip! Pen ADEE CBO ip ciiee is a AE IN NEW YORK; _ Seen rater Coretta 16. New York, March 13.—Just after midnight, if you were to haunt the neighborhood of 46th and Broadway, you might notice a lad of 14, or thereabouts, tucking himself into a doorway to escape the chill bite of the March night wind. You would him by were you not looking for him. You would pass him by as you pass by the dozen and one pescdelary. urchins of the Broadway elt. For he is not the only young- ster caught out in the night. Watch- ing him, you would see this par- ticular youngster dart out from his shelter now and then and look up and down the street or across the street, as a seaman on a ship’s bridge would look out into a fog. And whet with the fleets of passing taxis and the fag end of the theater parade, the lad might as well be ° = te Ie ast Hey. 70 Seiad QUESTIONS IN REGARD TO HEALTH € DIET WILL BE ANSWERED ‘PAPER SEP IR Sitiee ee AF oe CURING RUPTURE | ad pain or through being discovered V’ 'and drink it just bei out to, sea. | rl Just after midnight, if you haunt! the neighborhood of 46th and Broadway you'll see a little corps of , blind men slowly feelirg their way through the crowd. They are blind beggars. Their coats or their hats carry signs asking the passing pub- lic to help them. They will not need these signs until another day. Their night’s work is done. They have crawled up from subway stair- ways, they have come by devious routes from this corner and that corner where they have stood in the stinging March wind rattling their cups and crying for alms. They know their Broadway. Their sticks go tep, tapping by, feeling their way’ from block to block, They cross streets, aided rererally by some pedestrian, and they go tap tapping on toward their ‘1 They are less confused than most of those with eyes to guide them. They know where they’rt going, They're going to some flop- house to the west—to the west, where even gold diggers are will- ing to make silver the medium of exchange. Small money is import-| They ant to the west, toward the river. Rooms ‘are to be had for two-hits, A Fotis, according to your lack eee Just after midnight, if you haunt ae neighborhood of 46th and roadway, you'll see half a dozen blind men in the process of being met by 9 lad of 14, or thereabouts. The lad has run out of his doorway 2 dozen times and looked. And one by ene his Shanaes | bass stee fe one they have r= ed _in the doorway out of the epld. For this lad has just about the a and mhost wistful errani to orm in all New York. Each he steers the blind men to their respective flo they. possessed AON months if necessary as it is worth while to use all of these measures in attempting to cure the hernia so as to avoid a surgical operation Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him. care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. which may become necessary un- less every helpful precaution is taken. Long walks should be taken each day to increase the general strength and produce a better tone of all of the muscles and organs of the pel- is. The patient should have his doc- tor examine him at frequent inter- vals to see if a cure is being cf- fected. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (question: Esther writes: “I have chronic appendicitis and have heard that olive oil is very good. How much should I take and how often?” Answer: Olive oil is a good oil to ure at any time and if used in large quantities it does have the | effect of lubricating the bowels, and is a good remedy to use in over- coming chronic appendicitis. It may be taken on salads, or in a large dose of as much as four ounces at bedtime. A good way to take this large dose is to combine it with an equal amount of ES et juice, ‘ore retiring, as far away from the evening meal as possible. juestion: Mrs. W. K. asks: “Why is the sulphur‘on dried fruits harm- ful?” Answer: If any surphur is left on dried fruits it may prove harm- ful due to the excessive gas which is produced when too much sulphur is used in the diet. Very little sul- phur is used at the present time in drying fruits, and the only ones of which you may be suspicious are the light colored figs and raisins which are often bleached by sul- phur gas. Question: Miss B. writes: “I am a person seemingly in good health but on arising in the morn- ing, underneath my eyes is very swollen and puffed. During the day this seems to go away, only to leave creases and marks. I drink hot water in the morning about a half hour before breakfast. Is this all right?” Answer: The swelling is due to some congestion in either your blood or lymphatic circulation. Such con- gestion may come from either kid- ney or heart trouble. Do not guess about it, but have a good diagnosis made. baffled regarding their exact ad- dress. Most of them ask merely to be taken to a plece where they can ~t a bed for two bits or four bits. And so the youngster takes his Iistle troupe. They turn the cor- ner and disappear into the dark of 46th Street—westward, toward the river. eee Broadway Joe says—About tho time a ham actor is able to pay you back that ten bucks you loaned him, he gets so upstage he won't talk to you. GILBERT SWAN. {Tips For Taxpayers | ¢—_—_—_—__ ———_ No, 24 Traveling expenses form an im- portant item in the income-tax re- turns of many taxpayers, To ob- tain the deduction, certain regula- tion; must be observed. The taxpayer is required to at- tach to his return a statement show- ing the nature of business in which INCOME TAX IN A NUTSHELL WHO? Single persons who had net income of $1,500 or more or gross income of $5,000 or more and married couples who had net income of $3,500 or more or gross income oi $5,000 or more must file returns. _ WHEN? The filing period ends March 15, 1928, WHERE? Collector of in- teral revenue for the district in which the person live: or has his paneipel lace of business. HOW Instructions on Forms 1040A and 1040; also the law and regulations. WHAT? One .nd one-half er cent normal tax on the first 4,000 in excess of the personal exemption and credits. Three r cent normal tax on the next: ,000. Five per cent normal tax on the oilance of net in- come. Surtax on net income in excess of $10,000. engaged, from home during the taxable number of days away year on account of » total amount of expenses incidental to meals and lodging while absent from home on business, and total amount of “other expenses incidental to travel and claimed as a deduction.” Among the “other expenses” are tips, which are held to be a part of traveling ex- penses, provides they are reason- ne sing ef deductibl weling expenses are deductible only when the trip is on businezs. are limited to such expenses as are reasonable and necessary in the conduct of the business and di- rectly attributable to it. weling ex) ineurred in connection with Srey to another’ city to accept or seek employment a not ible. Suburbanites who commute homes to their ing when by the Commission of Taina “ree: by records showing in detail the amount and nature of the expenses incurred. there's STOR, THAT! eres somet ‘ gear-shift doesn’t a ad “That isn't the gear-shift, Jack, but became | It’s—er—it’s my: knee.—Life. 4i £