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} iH H 1 H é Bismarck ‘Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune C mpany, Bis- N. D., and ente! at the postoffice at Bis- matter, President and Publisher Py mm Rates Payable in Advance {Dally by carrier, per year . *Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) |Daily by mail, per year, 4. (in state outside Bismarck) 5.0 {Daily by mail, outside of North D 90 AAC ett cheetah tath tata Aaa at 1 Weekly by mail, in state, per year .....se+sees 1.00 ; Weekly by mail, .1 state, three years for . 50 ‘Weekly by mail, ou Ni a , Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the -vse for republication of all news ulspatches credited ts it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and vt:o 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. Bidg. 1ICAGO DETROIT wer Bidg. Kresge Bidg. ee } + (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ee Slope Auto Show : Necessity for some kind of a community building to stage industrial shows and assist in mechanical demonstrations which follow the conventions-is demonstrated by the in- ability of Bismarck to hold its own automo- ow this year. It is fortunate, however, that in cooperation with the Mandan dealers, a creditable show of the Bismarck-Mandan au- | tomobile dealers is to be held next week at the | State Training School gymnasium. This show will afford prospective buyers an excellent opportunity to view the new modele @nd to plan their purchases in advance. Ex- cellent entertainment is to be provided and the ow will be worth while. A large attendance mm the Slope counties is expected. ‘ Both cities have a large group of progressive dealers and the hearty cooperation evidenced between the Twins of the Slope guarantees an excellent showing of the latest in automobiles and accessories. This joint effort should receive the heartiest support of the people on both sides of the Mis- souri. It is the first intercity auto show and reflects the kind of spirit that means greater + growth for both cities; for where one pros- pers, so does the other. net behind the Twin City Auto Show next week. Fear of the Unknown Every time the leviathan of the air, the Los Angeles, flies low over the land there follow reports of runaway beasts of burden, barnyard cing and dairy herds sent galloping across ields. Were the huge dirigible to suddenly appear on the horizon of some wilderness peopled by uncivilized tribes the terror of those who be- held it would not be dissimilar to that of the dumb animals in this civilized land. There are mountaineers and “prairie rats’ in this country io ould be frightened by the awe-inspiring sight. / Man and beast alike fear the unknown and the unseen. Ignorance and superstition are as inseparable as Siamese twins—you cannot sep- arate them without killing both. It was but a few centuries ago that the most Tearned of men were struck with terror by every strange constellation, a total eclipse of the sun and an earth shudder. Had they un- derstood that all were due to natural causes they would not have been afraid. How wide is the margin of difference be- . tween the superstitious fears of the savage or the instinctive fears of the animal and the fear of new ideas which possesses many supposedly intelligent men and women? Some people are easily set to shaking like a quake by some thought that is strange to them and by a de- nial of some old thought they inherited from cae one oe alarmed ti i eople who grow every time a poli- tician invents a “burning issue” or a Fourth of duly orator discovers a new enemy of his coun- try are like those barnyard fow! which spread their wings and scamper for shelter when the Los Angeles casts its shadow upon the earth. Fewer Farmers Those who have seen cause for alarm in the farm exdous of the last decade should find some comfort and reassurance in the results of the 1927 survey of the United States depart- mont of agriculture covering rural and urban population. Last year 1,978,000 persons abandoned the farm for town and city life. In the correspond- ing period 1,874,000 persons deserted the city for the country. The net movement away from the farm was therefore 604,000, but be- cause of the low death rate and high birth rate in the country the farm population dropped only 193,000. This latter figure seems low compared with the 1926 decrease of 649,000 and the 1925 drop of 441,000. e, In only two sections did the farm population last year. They were the South At- antic and East South Central States. Those Ancreases are probably accounted for by the vas demand for Southern fruits and other products and an influx of northerners &@ permanent residence in warmer . Of the other sections the N land St-tes showed the least decrease pg Bay Istion and the mountain states, Kg utes western states, showed the greatest drop. New England’s industrial troubles have i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE mountain states. There is no cause for concern in these fluc- tuations in farm population. 27,699,000 people on the farm and the country is suffering from a surplus of farm products rather than from a shortage of them. ever and whenever farmers are making money there is no dearth of dirt farmers. If world con- 0! sumption demanded it, the idle farms would he tenanted. Overproduction, machinery and low wages have driven farm labor to the industria! centers. sent many back to the farm and agricultura! troubles are driving the farmers out of the The Mail on Your Desk The average American wrote 114 letters and spent $4.69 for postage, in 1927. That is a little more than two a week. The nation used mor? than 22 billion stamps or items of stamped paper, such as postcards and stamped envel- opes. That is a vast volume of mail, but its very vastness is one big reason why this is a uni- ted country. The man in Maine writes to his friend in Georgia, and the woman in Minnesota writes to her sister in New Mexico, and thus between all sections intimate news of the viewpoints and aspirations and troub'es of all flows, and mutual understanding results. It is the life of business. produced in any one locality speeding to an- other locality which needs them. Everything about it is merely additional proof that the mail service is one thing which should and must be at the highest state of ef- ficiency. istration. The farm leaders have had to face two kinds of opposition. Some of their opponents have thought, though they have not always said it, that nothing should be done by the federal gov- ernment to relieve agricultural depression. is that viewpoint which has prompted the farmers to suggest from time to time the re- peal of the tariffs on manufactured goods. They have said that if the government can exert itself on behalf of manufacturers it can exert itself on behalf of the farmers, too, with- out doing violence to constitutional principles. The farmers’ position we believe unassailable. More than that, it is to their credit that, though they have met one rebuff after another, they have continued to press for positive relief rather than negative and vindictive action against the industrial and financial interests which have opposed them. The throats against | Editorial Comment | The Farmers Simplify the Issue . (Chicago Tribune) The new McNary-Haugen bill has been re- ported to the senate with the indorsement of its committee on agriculture. The bill has the support of most of the organized farmers of the nation. The changes made in the bill since it was vetoed at the last session of congress in- dicate anything but the doctrinaire attitude to- ward their problems which farmers have been accused of maintaining. They have modified their bill to meet the criticisms of the admin- the tariff on manufactured goods thus fa’ have been made largely for rhetorical ef- fect, but there is a limit to patience. hardly conceivable that the farmers will con tinue to take punishment indefinitely withoui ; striking back. Those who conscientiously wish to do some- thing to improve the position of agriculturc, in this country have presented two programs The President and Secretary of Agricultur: | Jardine believe in cooperative marketing. They think the government’s credit can be loanei! to the farmers’ cooperatives to enable them to dispose of the crops systematically without severe price depressions at harvest time and without violent fluctations of price between lean years and fat years. The organized farmers have maintained that cooperation alone is not enough. They have evolved the plan of equalization fees to enable a federal farm board to remove the surplus crops from the country, and thus permit the rest of the crop to be sold in the United States at a tariff-protected price. The farmers say, with much reason, that the tariff at present does not protect them, bought at the world price instead of the tariff- tected price, surpluses. The new McNary bill departs from its prede-| °f Us The successive McNary- ugen bills have been concerned chiefly with| P< setting up the machinery for removing the] switched to the G. I. cessors in this respect: it withhoids the opera- tion of the equalization fee principle until after ordinary cooperative marketing, as recom- mended by the administration, has been tried without success. . Only if cooperation fails in achieving what its triends say it cannot fail to accomplish is the other method to be at- tempted. With this new bill the farmers have placed themselves in a strong position. Advocates of cooperation cannot oppose the bill and continue to state that cooperation is a certain remedy for farm depression; indeed, exactly to the ex- tent that they have confidence in cooperation they must lend support to the bill. Opponents of the earlier McNary bills could do so either as friends of cooperation or as opponents of farm relief of any sort. Those who oppose this bill will write themselves down as opponents of all edd Sf iar relief. e do not mean to suggest that the bill as drafted is beyond bettering. The farmers will weleome advice from economists, financiers, and others trained in such matters as they have hitherto. They will pay little attention to their so-called friends who have nothing to say but no. z laborers who have RES Fogle? ition of platinum ly stationary dur- the past five years, a minister- up one of the come from the escapement, use of the it number of Hite the farms of France, farmers are installing mod- place hecieattary machinery to re-| creaze the president’s power by en- ap labor. 1 There are still Wher- It keeps goods It It is because their crops are] was tempted to use that old line you} Fifty billions electrons could sit "IEALTHeDIET ADVICE & Dr Frank Mc > witite ee Fast hey. 10 EATING OF TEE GREENS cans as to be cooked on stove Our Irish brothers will probably] except, perhaps, where the’ water- be singing tomorrow about the| less cooking is wu which doubt- “Wearing of the Green,” but all of our health writers are singing a son, every day about the “eating of the greens.” What a chang in eating hab few years! DR. LUKAN 8 UNDER ARREST IN AUSTIN, TEX. orities Awaiting Sentence ersonal questions on health e we have observed its during the past ibune. to a limited degree by the ancients, worthless checks, is under arrest at it is only within the past ten years | ), ° that the leafy green vegetables raed argue Sat bielbgis now been made thoroughly scien- opened of- Rome did all they could to teach 7 : the value of the use of green vege- fears food pcisoning from canned) around that he was a near-famous of great value in his medical prac-|, 2. in vogue. ti tot the qreseetatnts oe nie whole ee matt Rave an ater chucks at lous places here in Lala an Pty Gee |i” P| emf rah ktsce colin jt" ore" Cie] QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Musa also esteemed lettuce highly + He Su- ie Wis., where he abandoned his in the treatment of hypochondria.| Question: X. Y. Z. writes: “I and Romans who carried this vege-| tion. ‘There is a hard lump on the|®0uthern states, but managed to| ers. These physicians and warriors} Used to break every little while, but Austin, did not of course know about the|has not done so now for some kno.r that the green vegetables} would advise me whether you think that time until the beginning of the] the. necessity of having the tooth| has not decided whether he will “put ealegisene ot the cetiae ‘of non-| Answer: The abscess will doubt-| -2nce is completed in Texas, starchy veretables, but thelr, value ene enough, but it will surely returs| Charlie Chaplin Wins ing is century, and especially in! im ie iecayed condition st the ena) JUdgment for $75,000 grocers during the winter carried|0f the root canal. It is best for you — stores Nee lettuce, oot spinach, od the slightest kind : lants, cucumbers, ant e dg cu caution squashes. L Question: Mrs. K. asks: “What| Jackie Coogan starred. this increase in the use of foods contain starch?’ tional Exhibitors and the First N cating the public in the use of those | vegetables and sometimes to whole/ as due him from foreign showings of foods. containing the vitamins andj grain foods. Starchy foods may be/ the film. . a and that the green vegtables are in-| bard squash are the only vegetables valuable of all of our foods. Question: put up in cans are equally as nutri-| intoxication which may affect all — county off! Prine Fisher has held his present coroen ate office continuously since 1909, and found him without an opponent, A lot of fuss is being made over ne else who has had long- he Boston talking dog, but it’s the id a count sing cats that make all the -ouble. could not be beaten. eo i orge Carson, the) Four Men Killed When CTheir Letters tim beeawe be|Powder Mills Explode we ‘ ° hair. —Four men were sl No, Twasr’t hurt because a few] oe iy after 8 o'clock this morning when ln\‘ag friends panned me, but the} A headline pga ines sunbadan = injustice Fs blaming me a what ta Find Moth: in-Law fi at The” buildings Aaisexel. wane xf oe: ves me the rank-| Accident.” 3 promi Ne "The peekian in case you don’t| the gentle art of crowd-following. small frame structures know, are ingrown heebe-jeebies. eee ek Blagg oe the eon peer tard BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES i eee a But I tried following your advice] The modern girl can dress in pers threw a guard ‘aro rt Ape Bly, he. saeiny 508. tat ot fa paves, ae a Mba writer. pry oat eine after Popeater ang © mal any “Mowing two fo gee, Mom, he took it like a dose of es ty for and no one was allowed to enter the castor oil. I hadn't th> heart to rely she doesn’t waste a tick to it. Like taking candy out Of a baby's mouth, f-‘T've decided AON: EE A. to be a Good uence to him. I omg f At the Movies co vatiee IG girls used to pull about being a sis- the point of a pin, says a sci- i ‘APITOL fer to the poor wretch, but remem-|Cntist: ‘And would they swear? § bering some of the brother stuff a ae rol "rank handed me in the past I} This is the time of year when a| i instead. I'm/| man’s ambition goes to seed. ? m sure it will be interesting for both In a_weak moment I told Alan IN NEW YORK about Billy and that I wanted to oe ask him over, thinking muybe if saeeniiiaasiiiaiiea he saw me in a domcatic atmos-, New York, March 16—Not so vhere Alan would secm more like ago we tearfully recorded that a real impediment to him. Work- ing on the old theory that while there’: no chance, there’s no hope. But Alan wouldn’t stand for it. Said he’d push the young purp’s face in if 1 had him hanging around the| ith a sandwich ‘and beans house. Child’s and that lobster and cham-| Price Glory. Now why is it, I wonder, that! pagne appetites belonged to those] There men treat a boy’s love like a joke? wicked days of our grandpas and T'll bet Alan went through the same | grandmas. stage whcn he was Billy's age. ‘Now, we are told, le might have a little compas-| trai] forms at the ni "ily. Break ot ike rash every tilly. Breaks o1 a rash every: ELTINGE tine we're together. It makes my; Valley of poo a B “The . t oi] does not begin to burn un-| Kyne's romance of the 't nigh ht hence, lasts well ee ee rere ayound floating, and I feel like ¢ 4 I think introduce him to Alyce Smith. She’s the wildest little man- If he falls for her he : : HH _ NEXT: “Mom” on “father fixe- ons. it UE lf th i fi Ba WANTS_ CONSTITUTION CHANG: Warsaw, March 16,—(AP —Pre- mier conferring with the governmental bloc of the new diet Wednerday. might, declared he wished to chenge e constitution to in- al oepaete pethy fae : E : E abling him to decide certain matters being ly from Bis: al a year ago,| When it repo hopelessly | championship of the Gold . immediately decided upon another = Enclose a stamped addressed || word today that Dr. R. Lukan, who iberac While green vegetables were used|| envelope for reply. is wanted here for passing several pt PORT abate lofi e Mig at intermission with McClusky hav After tracing him all over the Dr. McCoy will gladly anewer || United States since his sudden exit The first jury was discharged | ents won a 35 to 28 victory and th: 0 foods as sho did a few years ago| phys: When fou.d i, March 16.—()—| ed 16 of his team’s 35 point: tables. Hippocrates found cabbage! before the new methods of canning ingens beri ven avean PAs Gas 11, 67, bane of ‘ed reat elude the lice until he reached | Khartoom, E, in-a relief part; table into Gaul and Britain. SALI pred Seat A ge Ee to aid General hdone Pary | er Volkman, © eg Tt ae Hei fa saan “ ee Russell ie cod zeus re oes oe i itami id | time. Sheri: ich by exas of-| a claim in som county. In art eee mysterious vitamins but they did| time. I would be very glad if you fila Dr amit having and ier? te wae employe a on the ‘si 5 i i inci the orange juice fast would dis-| P® worthless ¢ s lcorhead Star and the Grand Forks ‘otal ......-.. 000 Sree, petted by tha bay eves | perse the abscess and do away with | during the past year. Sherit¢ Welch | Plain Dealer. * HeChusy w de-| extracted.” in a bid” for Lukan after his sen- U. Until Next Thursday. St c: Judge Andrew Miller and the| Hirsh, & sagt of Abu! ; out Chetan Hubble, g - . w only cabbage, turnips, parsnips and|to make up your mind to have the| New York, March 16.—(AP) — Bismares. for the “pat two weeks beets, they now decorate their dis-| tooth extracted, as well as any other| Charlie Chaplin, film comedian, ob-| will begii ‘ play spaces in the front of their] dead teeth in your Imguth, aA Li aoe a judgment “ bod for Thursday, at ta _ saehdle Referee: Robertson, Js | royalties and interest m his pic-} Judge Miller Thursday directed a INDE! The Kid,” in which he and] verdict of $22,276 in favor of the| BANK EMELOYES WOUNDED laintiffs in th - : The health magazines have con-| is meant by the term aoe in|” A sealed verdict opene’ in Ford-Kennedy gp card pcoduaei ae Elmer Baltz, 41, cashier of the tributed in a large measure toward | connection with food? Also, what|preme court ordered the F.rst Na-| Havelock Lumber company. i thie! highl, hy. — rea a re | Sarat Miya atta, Mo cere aae | sun ee, Sues se i i = | i is? And what part of the cou! urleigh county, w! tee ” ” ines tables the abcd whe terete body docs it-attet?” @ candidate for reelection this year.| Peter Michaels, farmer, and five educated to the use of al kinds of| Answer: Zymosis simply means Ree ee: GLA peliegin OLDS vegetables have found that those/a kind of self-poisoning or auto-|from a recently ‘actin ed list of Rigor ahd ‘of head or chestaremore easily ——___ ~ ng little Ashes le in winning a i al elect: ver goponent { I BARBS In act the last two dleetiene ve ‘i a | FRIDAY, MARCH 16. tyze Man Tried Times WILTON BEATS Fees Al Dine HYGLUSKY 36-2 Redding, Calif, March 16—()— The more or less successful attempt Sieh Sacto n tets Puch Ormnty Team Co 80 sharply outlined that three ain tures Gold Medal Tourney Man Wanted by Local Auth- & Fn aie ‘Miss Octavia Hufford, the k issee, . | caused the arrest of H. L. Gimblin, . D., March 16.- in Southern State ona battery charge, sileging: in (seuriit ha Ke TKubihe — Steppin swain have resulted in jury Championship torn her dress in the osculatory Saar cg * away from the McClusky quint it the last half, the Wilton Independ ‘he Wilton crew were in arrear ing the better of an 18 to 17 score The third trial ended yesterday . Austin, Texas, and is awaiting sen-| with the same six to six deadlock. es “trough ple, but Wilton led by the S. Kursh, right furward have taken diteit proper place on| ‘The canning of vegetables has ar, driving| Horace G. Russell, aie Viptdetllnake r "a priced cow not v the doctors of ancient Greece and/ tific, and the housewife no longer|fices here after spreadiny ‘the word Fargo, Dies Suddenly Kureh ‘and Gilmore, were Wilton’: chief tallymen; the former acc Berg collected the major puuts fo. get 3 his record elsewhere he left | the northwest, a resident of Fargo| the McClusky crew ind with Moyer ity suddenly, after having given | since 1871, and owner of consider-| led the Sheridan co:nty team’s of- ble residence and business section | fensive. ‘argo and Moorhead,| Mercer defeated Underwood in : ursday of heart| consolation tilt when Drake anc Velva failed to clash for runner-up ras born in St. Paul January | honors. i oy ae ual his igre i a i ee ee me Cy oy The lineup Vie is wi vi have had an abscessed tooth for two| there before cers began looking | tain and Mra. A. ussell. is a served Oy Sa Cretan ant owes years. That part which shows is pad him. He was heard from by| father served 20 years as eo of a ue He at many of their meals. Cabbage | quite sound, hence I hesitate to part Sane Gon, authorities in at boats on the Mississippi, o. was highly esteemed by the Greeks| With it, as it is ig a prominent posi- raska, gia, und several other| Assiniboine and Saskatchewan riv- Gilmore, f 8. Kursh, t Polonski, c C. Volkman, Red, Later his father went to S. Court to Recess |B Beef p--+-- Berg, ny elocconocey al coomms co] a Total ......-e008 12 iL Robertson, Jamestown. First National bank, was shot in the abdomen and dangerously wounded y The of thi i ti . green vegetables. Research labora-| Answer: The term “roughage” |tional Distributing company to pay| F. C. Turner ct srl oetli ct she and Frank Smith, bank watchman taries have added their share in edu-| usually refers to the non-starchy | royalties which Chaplin had sued for| federal court Thursday afternoon. Arguments of opposing attorneys organic minerals. Thousands of| remembered easily in this way: —_—— UR odin) ¢ ig, Bea $23,000 and $25,000. ; National bank of white rats and mice have been ex-| Any grains, or any foods made i i nd : perimented .upon to prove that|from the flour from grains, are Veteran Court Clerk Seaiy “vere, being ‘hear cia | ‘ evitalized | foods) ate _smbmavaral| BArhy. t00ts. | Cane reat to Seek Reelection) ed before recess tod: smartest colors are awaiting was shot in the hand today by fou robbers who crowded Baltz's car tc the curb and escaned with between Easter Millinery in the your inspection at the Bis- marck Cloak Shop. who would| night when a gas lamp exploded i rts of the body. It is not a spe- reelection was entirely unin-| with such force that several logs in treated externally with— saaatation yt bages an caked tific, disease jocated in any ne tentional, the error is regretted and | the cabin were blown from the walls. vegetables are used it is just as| part, but a general condition, the _ ee: a state (that shit gen tegs iT prc vr % 5 » Fishe: fav , were well for them to be cooked in the! same as autotoxemia. the rab gna et ay tet | baraed. Warorothte rimaeae, VAPORUS | of policy independently, especially also were badly burned. Over 21 Million Jars Used Year! Buy Canned Goods | Of Finest Quality NOW —At Your— Red Owl Store There’s DOUBLE ECONOMY in these Better Known Brands Specially Priced for the Quality Canned Foods Campaign P. & G. Soap, Big 10-oz. bars, White Naptha—10 for ................. ... 39C “Cool Springs” Van Camp’s | Country Genttemun matoes Kidney Beans or Syaet fare “Cool Springs” Fanty Rel 'Biee Hominy, 10c A Quality Corn 3 cans SLC|S cans SSC|Z cans 23C PINK SALMON, Alaska Pink, Ib. tall— DAMN ais oso seas sans bank 37c JAPAN MACARONI GREEN TEA Spaghett!, Noodles or Shells “Rosi-Bond” - —“Minnesota” Highest Qual- Fancy Pan Fired ity, 100 tees, 29C |. 3 ne. 2Ze . Kraft Cheese “TEMTOR” PURE 'm the economical no-waste Preserves rackage—American, Pimen- STRAWBERRY or to, Brick or Limburger. RASPBERRY “our Cheles .....22 4». 95c ay Sg FLOUR, Kitchen Tested, $2.25 4 Serer rrr rr rrr erry THE WONDER LOAF... _,, Is Wonderful WE SELL THEM Now 183 Stores in the Northwest