The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 6, 1928, Page 4

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e Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) marked with unbounded belief in their future greatness. He lived to see his optimism and faith rewarded. From the raliway shops to the halls ot | congress—wherever he appeared men turned to one another upon his leaving to say —‘ ‘There | Published by the Bismarck Tribune C-mpany, Bis- k, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- osarck as second class mai} matter. was a man.” deorge D. Mann ........ -+oePresident and Publisher; There is a missing svoice today in a New York home. There is a missing wit that has} Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Jaily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) . daily by mail, vutside of North Di saved many a railway directors’ meeting from | chaos. There is a missing wisdom at the) counsel tables of the Republican party. There. see ay is a missing champion of modern youth. But} echoing over all is that optimism and faith| veal hh goes not with the body but lingers on. 2501 Faith and optimism is the heritage that! ;Chauncey M. Depew, the man, leaves Pests: +. 1L50/him. Editorial Comment | How to Put America First (New York Times.) ; For the fifth and $7.29 eekly by mail, in state, per year Veekly by mail, .a state, three years for . . Veekly by mail, outside of agit Dako'a, pe year es te Member of The Associated Press Kv The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the g58e for republication of all news dispatches credited n2 it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and md80 the local news of spontaneous origin published _ gerein. All rights of republication of al] other m:t- © gier herein are also reserved. 1. in; Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. DETROIT Kresge Bldg. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) | time the objective has been the home cr person of some participant in the savage politics of America’s second city. The first four projec- tiles were launched against members of the ascendant Crowe-Thompson facti#n; now Sena- | tor Deneen’s rival group is thus recognized, ‘for the fifth bomb was planted in Mr. Deneen’s laSHICAGO stCower Bide. The “Youthful” Depew iB Chauncey M. Depew is dead. The incurable mobile from which his candidate for state’s 2 y4Ptimist who looked upon the world with the attorney against Crowe, Judge Swanson, was ieiewpoint of youth has answered nature's alighting. goummons. i ! New York has had its outlawries, and in 8 The man who numbered friends in three the ’40s and '50s it was a tough city. But not meenerations, whose after-dinner wit was world ‘goamous, whose real abilities were cloaked by a ‘mohilosophical tongue, has joined the wraiths of | Severed Americans. Tammany is entitled, and which even its polit- » , 8° More than anyone else, his leaving will be ical opponents cannot deny, it is the upholding naourned by modern youth. For Chauncey M./of order. Yet there is no more public senti !14epew, with a youthful outlook on life and who; ment in favor of order here than in Chicago, “hamped at the restraint of age, was one of; for it is inconceivable that the overwhelming vane first to hurl the gage of battle into thejportion of Chicago's citizens do not resent the for many years has lawlessness been practiced here on ‘such a reckless scale, and in the name of politics. If there is one distinction to which + ‘enerations. | : tr “T have seen many generations of youth,” | a shite grand old man once said. possible with impunity to those responsible. Mr. Crowe, the district attorney, the ob- “T have seen ihe jective of the Deneen attack and — more even Sathers of these youngsters who are criticized. | the city, gives his opinion that the bombs were have not yet seen any difference in any of | thrown by “gorillas” of the Deneen faction in There is little to fear in the youth | order to cast discredit upon his own organiza- it ovement of the 20th century.” |tion. If so, the remedy is heroic indeed, for Faith was Chauncey M. Depew’s great the machine which damaged the home of Mr. “Dsharacteristic. Just as he had faith in youth |Crowe’s opponent, Judge Swanson, was hurled o had he faith in everything he attempted. His! idirectly at the judge himself. Strategy is ptimism was great because his faith was | seldom carried quite so perilously far. Teat. |_ “America First” is the slogan of the Chauncey M. Depew had many faiths over!Crowe-Thompson organization. Since they con- thde long span of years he trod. ‘Years ago he| \trol the peace authorities they are responsible clead faith in the Illinois backwoods lawyer who! for the security of life and property in Chi- $2%d the nation through its severest crisis—the:cago. The only effective way for them to fo vil war. Lincoln came closer to being his!translate their slogan into meaning is to hunt man than any other hero of history or|down the miscreants who assassinate and de- didiodern days, the aged man once stated. stroy with bombs and machine guns and reduce Ane His faith in the Republican party, in hisjone of the greatest cities in the world to the wative city of New York, in his business days jlevel of a lawless mining camp or feud town. Y bel a ing, although the frost is not en-| typical of the uneducated who are Welch’s Spur } adore as beers ae serie struggling for vision above and ——_— ae acres of wheat last] beyond hard labor. The entire story swe ee er The Ladies’ Aid of the Swedish| Sectes with the flaying of the cen route, drives the entire| Mission church was entertained at|SPirit which the sensitive dreamer ance now in one day. This) the L. M. Nordquist home last] is compelled to undergo. Bevzs the anal on Mondays, Wed-| Thursday adterhoon, Mr. Sed AS not only Sees way 05s an ridays. follow 6 ical farm boy of the early part Gime and Mrs. John Welch and| ane Aptis ret rag of the twentieth century, but he has ic@aiiiy called at Robert Welch’s| N. P. Carlson and Geo ge Wicklan.| Caught in a mesh of words the faikon der and children of Washburn, Mr,| SPitit of the prairies in every sea- and Mrs. Alvin Ghy!in and smali ene a North Dakota year. son of Re; Mrs. John Sandelin,| Te@ders of this s Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Lind and two| ‘8 Tich in local color, introducing small sons, and the Mirses Velma ne ia yeu neal Johnson, Alice Tollefson and Aun mention of Hillsboro. n Several of the minor characters are typically drawn from life fa- miliar to this part of the country The social activities and business | deals all ring true of “the North} Dakota prairies in that period of our rapidly changing history which just preceded the present predom- inance of the rusty flivver, when the dle pony was still the prairie idol, and a visitor to the prairie farm was a sufficiently im- Portant event to make the reticent children rejoice and the dog dis- tracted ah excitement.” David Grew is also author of “Beyond Rope and Fence,” “The Two Coyotes” and “The Mare of Pandora.” f At the Movies | 25 | Oo ——$ $$ ne ELTINGE THEATRE The haunting loveliness of an old song, the fragrance of a ro sweeter than its native edelweiss, a love story of a boy and a girl ree in the grip of the iron fist of tradi- tion, with the background of a whole great nation — that is “The Student Prince” shown at the El- bod ( ito Ayers, mail carrier for the - reg tior ity attended the bai iven the Rotary club at rand zine hotel in Bismarck Tuesday Everyone reported to have the evening very much, Capt. Bloomquist’s lec- ty “A numter of the ceynae's of eal Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Erickson re- turned from Turtle Lake Sunday evenin . Erickson has been iting at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Hanson, since He death of a sister-in-law a week home in the evening. p Mr. Doppler sold a team of horses eyohn Law and J. C. Nordlund Mr. Smith, a horse buyer from| broadcast programs of sacred songs Mey Mrs, Robert Welch and family Monday afternoon with Mrs. felch’s mother, Mrs. Doppler. Leo og Theod lore Dorman took this week. r. Smith] over the broadcasting stations in carload from Brittin Fri-| Bismarck and Mandan Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Johnson called at the home of Mr. Johnson’s is] parents, Mr. and Mrs, John John- son, Monday. The Misses Dorothy Little and 40} Agnes and Ida Tosseth, who are at- tending high school in Bismarck are ing Easter vacations at parental homes near Still. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Thor and children, Miss Alma Benson and J. C. Nordlund were Sunday at the L. M. Nordquist home. ty met at the home of Mrs. Otto! Miss Lorraine Ecklund, a grad-! There| uate nurse of the Bismarck hospi- tal, is spending a week at the home ah, Shoredey mscaeneoe. Thy very many present as yal and roads improve] of pat parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar 3 will be able to attend. Eckl and Leo Doppler called ‘ske, a teacher of Miss M the home of their sister, Mrs.| Estherv: township, spent the Mace Ra’ Wednesday. git heoled a load of on ec Menoken. ‘The Presbyterian Missionary so- om ped in in the capital city, return- ing to her school duties Monday morning. it.| Miss Alice Tollefson, who teaches in Chapin, visited at the Sandelin home over the week-end. Mr. and gia Porter Nelson and ad Pg ye are ding a few days in the comm ty visiting relatives. nel itr Nelson is just out of th tal where he has been for s ford a bad hand mented . The are preparing to move a new home south of Still. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Ghylin and Gerald were callers at the \ on. and Saturday. happy Prince Karl Heinrich and his fa ome just as it was told on the stage ful costumes, rs. n€| Harlan, Lionel Bel Arthur, ite | Ate, De more, George K. i CAPITOL THEATRE E i Fox Films reissue, i g, : i for a two day run, Gilbert is in the title role as a youn; i faithlessnes8 of sweetheart, | with the New York Central fuilreald all were/| sixth times this year! ;Chicago outlaws have thrown bombs, and each | ‘house and the sixth was thrown at an auto-! ‘1arathers, the grandfathers and the great-grand- | than Mayor Thompson — the political boss of | tinge yesterday and remaining for he famous story of the un- Pathetic sweetheart of the inn are ichard Mansfield, but with a Bap that the stage could never reproduce. Hundreds of color- re seen on imperial suardamen, diplomats, nobles of the and on the picturesque vil- e cast includes such celebrities as Jean Hersholt, Edward Connelly, ing | Edythe Chapman, Bobby Mack, Otis Gustav Von Seyffertitz, Lacy and many others. John Gilbert scores again. In the Elmo,” which opened at the Capitol Theatre st is whose happiness is shattered at the his friend andj THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE lad For Mrs. Busybody to Do at Home Instead of Gadding "Round i | aths of those who held no hope for future|public conditions which make these outrages | { BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, April 6.—Because Governor Al Smith has not yet ex- tional issues, it is worth while to look at the platform which he nominating convention in South Da- kota, It is most improbable that Smith hadn’t carefully scrutinized it in ad- vance. State law required that he promise to adhere to it, South Dakota nominating conven- tion in 1924, had himself been al- lowed to write the platform which he “accept It isn’t likely that Smith’s friends were any stingier h their candidate. As platforms go, it’s not so bad. It is quite likely that all its points will be embodied platform framed at Houston. | It declares for the ri; ee oe of man as against the rights of wealth and its most urgent recommendation is on behalf of agricultw “must be placed industry” by “immediate adjust- ments in our economic system.” Certainly, Smith’s best policy is to | make such a bid for the farm vote. The next four points declare against excessively high tariffs, religious discrimination in public life, federal encroachment on state rights and governmental invasion of individual rights. Imperialistic ventures | small nations are denou is interesting for the fact that Smith will have to s; up on his opinion of our record in Nicaragu: and Haiti. “Honest and effective enforcement of all law” as demand- ed by this, seit will surely be echoed by ith later on. The demands for efforts for world peace, honest government, a fair deal for labor and a national policy for practical idealism are not exact- ly sensational, but the twelfth plank demanding conservation of water power resources and “a policy of watchful vigilance with refer- mee to the power trust” squares with Smith’s ee in New" York and is one item on which the party arity with against |, which “AND AOW MY DEERING NENDS,~‘OURS ARE “THE s vaot eas OF THE ouTsiDE COFFEE OUT OF “TH” WORLD “To BEHOLD MY ANIATOR'S: ware 8 SUIT fume POURED / THATS ONLY §: ALL MORTALS wHAw,<<TRUE “TO in the Democratic | AND HUMAN NATURE, You WOULD Bet FirsT ol A the Neighborhood LET ME CATCH YOU SETTING FOOT ON _ WASHINGTON LETTER might be divided, considering the numerous votes by southern sena- tors against the Walsh resolution to pressed himself publicly on the na-| investigate the “trust.” eee Smith will elaborate on that pro-) agreed to support after it had been| ram, but he probably won't go adopted by the Democratic state| much further. He might make more! enemies among Democrats— and he Already he is assured of more enemies within his own party than any man who has been a candidate for the presidency for many years W. G. McAdoo, endorsed by the! back. see Some hopeful optimists believe that small groups of powerful politicians who have dominated con- ventions in the past won't be able; to dictate the party nominations this June as they would like. They base this on the fact that the coun- try now knows how Harding w nominated in 1920 in a “smoke. ed hotel room” and that the “peo- ple” will insist this year that every- thing be conducted right out in the *h | open. It is true there were admiftis- tration scandals subsequent to the Harding election, but that method of nomination has been going on for years. ce that Calhoun refused to be a candidate. In 1873, the Marquis de Chambrun, who had studied our} institutions, wrote somcorning nom- the most insignificant, minority that rules the majority.” And aga’ “It is not to be wondered that handful of adroit managers do the work, and that the conventior generally does nothing more than give expression to their will.” vig |{_A THOUGHT | HE For the sti givers ye have with you—John Poverty persuades a man to do and suffer everything that he ma; escape from eer ing i Te! surt, << tT can’t afford to make many more.! In 1844 a convention} was so thoroughly corrupted in ad-} ‘\CTheir Letters] BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES | Marye, my dear: The kind of lecture you need is; a good one from Alan on extrava-| gance. Thirty dollars to listen to ‘a Swami—whatever they are— preach a lot of nonsense about love! I never heard of such foolishness, | Frank told me that Genevieve later to one of those lectures when she was in the city last fall and that she hasnt been normal since. Always talking about soul matings jand some mysterious power to at- tract affinities. It looks to me as; is and I only hope that Frank isn’t in love with her. He never says anything about that. : There is some excuse for a girl/ e Genevieve when she gets ex- ited over a lot of crazy cults and ms” because she hasn’t yet “found” herself, as some of your j friends would But how a young woman who is happily married to a_ respectable {man can take an interest in such | things is beyond my comprehen- sion, You may be sure that hus- bands never appear to their wives as spiritual lovers, Marye. And when you turn away visual the <ealities of life to seck diver-|| sion and thrills in the teachings of} * a person who has nothing in com- mon with you and your mode of life you will find yourself in trouble.* I suppose you didn’t think of Alan | while you were being “transported” that’s what Genevieve says that Swami did for her—into the “realm of love eternal.” An everyday, money-grubbing husband would ave been “out of picture,” I gine, But just remember, Marye, that you wouldn’t have been there in one of your pretty dresses and nice ac- cessories if you hadn’t a husband like Alan. Real men may not be as romantic as you'd like them but DusT A MINUTE fe NoWRE DRINKING TH’ SAUCER, BEFORE (TS (sir _ PROVEN PRACTICAL . NET! © Nou Sus, , BEFORE WAGERING| HAVE AN ADMIRALS ON VYouR Fettow | HAT, ~~~ onLV. LACKING A eet, if she doesn’t know what real love/ IMPROVING THE PHYSICAL Have you, who are so concerned about investing in valuable real estate, ever considered what a fine piece of property you possess in that body of yours which you h ve failed to cultivate and improve? Our capabilities for accomplish- | ing and enjoying ourselves during our lives depend almost Sonal Voty up- on the health of the physical No wealth we can obtain, nor omer we can receive, can make us happy further than we have health with which to enjoy them, and the value of all we possess diminishes in proportion as we become sick. The efficiency we develop, and our ability to commune with our fel- | lows, depend upon the way we can express ourselves through the phy- | sical body. We speak with our | mouths, we see with our eyes, we hear with our ears, and through | these mediums of expression we are jable to make our contact with the world about us. Who would take a million dollars | for the loss of an eye? And yet how true that thoughtlessly do things which hurt our eyes through bad habits and practices which émpair our sight, cutting down our enjoyment of the things about us which we might see and understand. Our ears become stuffed up from {eatarrhal diseases so that we can- ‘not hear and learn as much through | that sense. When in health, with what zest we enjoy delicious food which only nauseates when disease has de- stroyed our appetite! All who are healthy are, there- fore, rich because their fund of life turns all surroundings into means of j enjoyment. The poorest servant | who is healthy is so much -richer than the feeble millionaire master | who has no means by which he can | enjoy his riches if he does not have | health! If you were sure you were going to die tomorrow, how much would you not give for one more year of {health and happiness! You would, | Without doubt, give every dollar and every piece of property you own if when sick you could once again re- | gain health and all of its pleasures. | Health is a fortune at interest, | the income from which, economically | used, will support you. Spending | health foolishly draws on the prin- | cipal, and you will soon find your- self bankrupt. The more you draw j exhaust it, so all over-eating, over- | working, loss of sleep, improper | habits, and whatever injures the | health will expend your fund of life, and death will summon you to your final reckoning. A strong body is a natural heri- j tage. If you have lived haphazard- ly up to the present time you can even now develop a stronger body. | There is a science to physical de- velopment, and you can learn it the same as anyone else. If your desires run to mental work, and you are occupied in some sedentary occupa- they deserve better than to work| for money their wives spend to hear someone tell them how to attract a lover. And instead of thinking of hav- ing your portrait painted you'd bet- ter make the first payment on a house. bias 4 NEXT: | Billy is is vamped. ¢———____________» IN NEW YORK | “New York, April 6—Once you cross 125th Street in that section of Harlem that is outside the “black belt,” you come upon a small fove life, quite as communal, solid and provincial as any to be found west, east, north or south. Here tens of thousands of fam- ilies dwell in rows of monctunous flats and apartments. Here graund- fathers, fathers and children live and grow up. They are no more a part of New York life than the most frightened tourist .frum the small towns, Thousands of them seldom cross 125th Street to look upon the rest of New Yor! Park Avenue, with its miltionsire flats and its $20,000 rentals, is al- ey Me saya place. i: Rerhape a zen in this great pulation have so much as been on Park Ave- nue. They are content to spend their days in the small tasks so well known to the thousands of little towns of the land. Their lives are a@ part and parcel of this zone. They know the butcher by the first name and have traded with hira for years. His sons have carried on his business and the whole fam- ily Seipa. when times are bad. very ity life is to be found here, though the subway runs under the street and connects it within a few mo- ments with the bustle of up-town New York. Many avoid this bustle as they would the plague and talk about it as though it were some- every day we! | on the principal, the sooner you will) element of small commun-| be FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1928 ee ele racticing one of the professions, does not keep from also exercising the phys! Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and ede Enclose a ped envelope for reply. body and developing it to its utmost perfection. We have so departed from natural living that it is necessary to make a scientific study of health build- | ing if we would obtain the highest {possible mark of ret até The great thing for each of us Tes member is that we have a body for development, and that this body is the finest piece of property we will ever possess, the cultivation of which will bring us far greater div- jidends than any real estate or business we can develop. Make the preservation and devel- opment of health the parmount in- terest in your life! | QUESTIONS AND ay ANSWERS Question: F. writes: “The t winter T have enjoyed unusual- good health, due I believe to your wippeations and menus. However, I have a queer feeling just at my throat as if something were press- ing hard on my windpipe. Just above the two small bones above w chest. Also have vains in my hands and arms whenever I put them in cold water.” 1 Answer: You are doubtless suf- fering from some derangement of the thyroid gland which would pro- duce the symptoms you write about. I would be glad to send you some special articles on the subject of the cause and cure of thyroid troubles. Question: G. J. asks: person eat too much celery? one bunch too much in a day?” Answer: I do not believe anyone ever hurt himself eating too much celery. This is one food that seems to agree with everyone. I am sure a good-sized bunch is not too much to use in a day. Question: N. E. asks: “What ! causes gas on an empty stomach?” Answer: The large amount of gas which forms in the stomach and intestines comes from the mixture of the acid digesti juices with those which are alkaline. For in- stance, the gastric juice has an acid reaction and the bile of the intes- tines an alkaline one. If the bile overflows back into the stomach, the mixture of the bile and gastric juice will produce gas just the same as when baking soda is put into vinegar. Question: Mrs. L. F. asks: “What. is the cause and cure of dandruff like cigar ashes? Have-a very oily scalp.” Answer: I have written on this subject several times and will be glad to send you one‘ of the articles upon receipt of your full name and address. “Can a Is grossed in making out his income tax when his wife suddenly cried out: “Heavens—baby’s swallowed the ink! What shall I do?” “Use a lead pencil, you sap,” was the absent-minded gent's reply. There’s a new York hotel that changes the nationality of its din- ners each night. Thus, for instance, one night there is French cooking, one night Russian cooking, Chinese, Hindu and so forth. The menu travels around the world in the course of a month and then starts all over. Chefs from each land take turns arranging the menus. One has merely to wait a few days to obtain some favorite dish, whatever its geography. Former dwellers in every corner of the globe can be found there. T am told that orchestras from each nation soon will be added to ae an additional international or. Incidentally _ this “international dining” is getting to be quite the vogue, even though (ie es remains the great Manhattan bev. erage. GILBERT SWAN. Lindheca’: dooan't Jave to members of Conazaee have been up in long while. The Republican pa a well-oiled mact mi The League “ot Nations has journed. And nobody even know: who won the seriou, 3 Jimmy Walker arri ahead A) Schedule: fort 4 Fes vide, They nthe air for'a good pean. to thing far away and apart. Yet this 8p) rest. Well, New erk's district is well within the time limits sod. is as definitely a pare| Tazo ae 00 vind of Manhattan as Broadway and Greenwich Village. in atisian men who eam their liv- at cag New x a reminds me pe Pe laborers. ei beet heavy. hse a great number towns, Miomen fast Past 45 can sco the suddenly plunged ther by the accident of a landsl or earth up- fortis i ( heaval. These nei, Yearly

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