The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 30, 1928, Page 8

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PAGE FIGHT The Bismarck Tribune An ludependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE building, past the flames and the choking smoke, to help save the others. led two people to safety. back again. This time he picked up an uncon- scious man and tried to carry him out. own clothing was ablaze; the fumes of burning paint filled his lungs; but he staggered on, to collapse just outside the door. The man he had carried out recovered. But Carl died—died of the burns he had received in his rescue work. The boy was only 22 years old; and our first thought, probably is, “What a pity that so fine a young man couldn’t have lived to full man- How tragic that his life had to end so o FF Modern Alexander ooking for New Worlds Published by the Bismurck Tribune C-mpany, Bis- marck, N. D., and enterea at the postoffice at Bis- maarek as second class mail matter. Ceorge D. Mann . Subscription Rates Payable In Advance Daily by carrier, per yar : +e Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) ..... Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, vutside of North Dakota President and Publisher CHOOSING GOOD WORDS We are so apt to consider disease asa definite thing Weekly by mail, in state, per year .. a state, three years bject! eat words most com- utside of North Dako'a, pe° Weekly by mail, Yet Carl Mosley, dying of burns outside that Weekly by mail, flaming factory, had made a perfect success of “hardy,” ees 1 ete., he is already on the road to health, and the same mental power he used in describ- ing and looking for disease is then used in an earnest search for good health. The lesson in this article is this: "| Learn to think in good word pic- We don’t know a thing about his early history; we only know what happened in the last 10 minutes of his life; but we can be per- fectly sure that what had gone before was in every way fine. For it had been the kind of life that made him ready, when the test came, to forget his own safety and try to rescue his And Carl Mosley’s “sickness,” “complaint,” “disorder,” and such words calli + lady ty lentify ese d disease. directed thinking is done pictures in the m brought out by words with which we emotional “3 i itative ; express pain, fear, anger, love, etc. Another kind of thinking is thet “Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated tress The Associated Press {s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news «ispatches credited to ft or not otherwise credited im this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all otuer mat- ter herein are also reserved. one ee ee eee eee ec ee cree se ummm tions which we We like success stories. tures, and be diligent in your quest Dr. McCoy will gladly answer questions on health os feet * yune. "Enclose ‘ stamped addressed envelope for reply. for all knowl which will lead sss neenemsorse Foreign Representatives is bout the finest that has appeared in a long G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. which we do, in our dreams, wheth- sleep, or in what may be mi je lore, when we think of dis- Presidential Years to living a healt! life! You will then have no time nor inclination to think in terms of disease, and such an ex mn as, “I feel ill” will soon give way to “I’m feeling e today’ ease when we are talking or writ-| fn, President Madden, of New York University, has produced figues to disprove the tradition that presidential election years are always poor The public has anticipated a business slump in a presidential year because it supposed business to be cautious when the political stuation is uncertain. As a matter of record, out of 34 presidential election years 14 were periods of great perity, 11 found the nation in a state of ness depression and nine were normal with but the least feeling of uncertainty. In the days when the tariff was a real na- tional issue and a presidential election decided Jamp from one word picture to another. and ‘meditate we imagine certain ons with which we have been ing es us live of either ee (Official City. State and County Newspaper) business years. A Success Story The success story is the most popular story any speaker or writer can tell. We're all after success. \ that we're trying to make our lives as enjoy- able and significant as possible. invest our careers so as to get the greatest pos- q i asi of By that, we mean Chink wit whatever mate- scious thinking. ee rH a to . Thus we learn think of disease as a certain There are varied ways of doing it. tuberculosis,” ete, "t peeere QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS tion: Mrs. P, O. J. asks: a t foods cause diabetes?” In curing diabetes, it i sh to eliminate Lenin and sugars for some is io alg tre in tho treatment in most ers. sugar appear- ing in the urine is glycogen from the tissues, and does not come di. tectly from the sugar you eat. Spe- jis-| cial articles for the cure of diabetes seeker after success will have a reasonably long life in which to pursue his end. But now and then it happens that a man can, by throw- ing his life away unlived, gain a greater suc- cess than many a man who reaches the three- score-and-ten mark in safety. There was, for instance, young Carl Mosley whether there would ‘be four years of free trade or tariff protection there was something for husiness to view with apprehension. Greenbackism, Populism and their legitimate descendant, Bryanism, were enought to strike terror into national finance and to stifle in- dustrial and commercial enterprise. This year the national election can have no effect upon busineess conditions. is not at issue. There is no radical third party. movement and the two major parties are not at war on any question that can in any way in- jure or help business. Madden disagrees with those who blame the presidential election for the slight increase in unemployment that ushered in this year. Moreover, he predicts that, notwithstanding its being a presidential year, 1928 will retrieve its early months and make a normal record of pros- perity by Christmas. eased states, and the more we talk } Se pot Dome looter, made a cont all the Salt Creek newable on Sinclair’s option. saying he no alternative, : has bad the Depart.| sical ment of Justice investigate to see if there were any taint of fraud in Then Senator Robinson of In- as been trying to smear second Wilson administration scandals, brought Bell’s report to the attention of the Sen- ate. Bell said that when the leas- ing act was before Congress it was Pi emphatically asserted that Standard Oil had no interest in Midwest Re- fining or any of the claimants (who iting just around the As-the sum total of Keys mental so largely upon our rd pictures, is it not} afte: be careful in our se- WASHINGTON LETTE BY RODNEY DUTCHER Creek, which will be investigated by the “au is a billion-dollar ocean Carl, who was 22, worked in the factory of the Alexander Airplane company. day there was an accident in the plant. blaze started, caught some highly inflammable stores of paint and devastated the building. Several workers were trapped. Now Carl was standing beside an open door when the accident happened. It would have been easy for him to step outside to safety. He was very young; surely the logical thing would have been to save his life while there was time. But instead he dashed into the center of the seer er seeeeeoee corruption is alleged, although at leas one senator and an Interior Department employe were later given fat oil jobs. Charges also have bee: made c* the payment of other hush money, for Salt Creek was so rich that the oil men could afford a paying off and buying o! yy. and -in this simple way of good mental Ith pictures which are not only Teapot Dome is almost a puddle alongside the Salt Creek field, which is said to be the richest oil deposit, acre for acre, in the world. They lie side by side in Wyoming, the general field laid out ir the shape of a bowling pin, with Tea- pot Dome-the knob. The charge of fraud enters in connection with the title claims that the lessors were forced to| were painted Presidential Campaign Portraits—No. 19 At Lawrence, Kan., he attended wil} be sent to upon request if you will send a forge, self-addressed stamped envelope. ' ‘ion: serpin i asks: you pl me the proper diet for a child two and one-half years old? He does not seem to be ill, but has rough red spots on his cheeks at times, and is usually cross and irritable after waking from his noon nap.” feedings ot milk day ings of mi , us or ten ounces of milk at eac! ing. At the second, third and fourth feceings give him a generous dish inced spinach, carrots, is a good plan to use also o the vegetables raw along with the one. a please tell ip is ery wi i. ee is swollen every describ-| morning were) but that Standard’s “1 limited by old land laws to very|trol” of midwest subsequently had small parcels, but it is charged that nceded. innumerable “dummies” were used b-| by the exploiting companies to de- the state university, teaching cer- tain classes to supplement his in-| Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska, whose resolution earlier year led to revelations of Sin- Senator William E. Borah Borah, the Unbossed, Still Far ars in a brother-in-law’s office at| ¢ In 1800—when 25— clair’s contributions to the Rep Answer: Have your teeth exam- ined. Perhaps you are suffering aad getivas or have some ab- se teeth which are poisoning such words as “vigorous,” “well,”| your lip during the night. lican campaign fund several ycars| feat that provisio: ago and who now dem: From White House Editor’s Note: This, the 19th in a series of Presidential Cam- paign Portraits written for the Tribune by Robert Talley, t-JIs the story of Senator William E. Borah of Idaho. Tommorow’s article will be about Governor Albert C. Ritel ie of Maryland. BY ROBERT TALLEY ASHINGTON, April 30.—For the! better part of 20] he was admitted to the bar and he started for Seattle to seek his for- tune in the new country of the great But Borah never got to Seattle. At Boise, Idaho, his money ran out, so he settled there. He made a suc- cess at the practice of law and by 1900 he was one of the biggest men Borah first came into national fame when he was employed as a company,” wrote Bel, “but now it requested to dis; this object of charity and bestow upon it leases to the most valuable known oil acreage in the world— rty to the value of at character of claimants Congress meant to relieve?” see oe ong, Nessa and the] ous sums. A nate’s Tea me ati committee want to reas iis a [IN NEW YORK _{/S _ New York, April 80—If Tin Pan Alley e.2r goes in for statistics the ill show that every third counters. The chances of the out- sider can be rated accordii of Ti heynetsion tee oere terested trained to ial Assistant Attorney Gen- Robert C. Bell reported to At- torney General Palmer in 1921, af- ter an exhaustive investigation, that application of the Midwest Oil Com- pany and ten other subsidiaries of the Midwest Refining Company for acres of the field should be denied because the be-: plicants were yuilty of fraud. scoffed at their original claim for on the ground that the money invested had beer derived from the Salt Creek oil lf. Midwest Refining, he ly on Salt Creek oil. f the Standard Oil company of In- The president of ing was then Harry E. Black- mination whether any of the in this 30,000-acre field were illegal or fraydulent,. whether they gave anyone a monopoly on Salt Creek nd whether any of them sh be cancelled. Senators Walsh and of the Teapot Dome committee handle the investigation. In 1909, when the navy we to consider seriously its fu- supply, President Taft ublic oil lands from try, refusing to permit further in- iminate exploitation. roup of oi] men bought. Creek, denied the president’s thority to withdraw the land went right in and took out the oil. It was not until 1915 that the agreement” by which they were sent into that country. Has Time For Study The fact that Senator Borah rep- resents one of the smallest states in the Union—there are fewer peo- ple in all Idaho than there are in a few city blocks in New York or Chicago—allows him a freedom of time for the study of national and international questions. not faced with worries about po- litical expedience, as Id: Borah as an ins! manner as would seem to guar tee his reelection perpetually. This allowed him time, for ex- ample, to learn to read Spanish at dynamiters in the labor war that. a raged in Idaho. For the dynamit- ing of the home of Governor Steun- enberg, in which the goverhor was killed, he sent several men to the In Senate Since 1907 But this did not weaken Borah in the eyes of the law-abiding labor Tin Pan Alley, by the way, is a| Sweet Mom: William E. Borah, sort of myth with most strangers to of Idaizo, as a can- The most thrilling thrill! I’ve New York and a rather boastful] talked with a girl who flew with 61 so he could better understand mer, fugitive witness in the Ts ice man, ribbon clerk and bootleg- element, as ‘shown by the fact that when. he firat ran for tl ywed great strength in He entered the Scn- Dome oil trials. wart was then, as now, chairman of | Th, Standard of Indiana. Stewart and supreme court. upheld Then the oil men, instead of being forced by Congress to pay for the Latin-American problems. Like the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial, Senator ger has aspirations to write ie number of verses that the mails of. the major song-pub- q man in the U. 5. that he got.his start|@!l air rides and if heaven didn’t of “Will You] biess her that day there's no heaven. oil they had taken went to Congress lief.” whey, said they for their invest: Blackmer were in on the myster- Trai deal, which provided Libe Sinclair to Secreta of the Interior Fall and Will Hays. Stewart is now involved in Senate contempt proceedings for his refusal to tell what he knows about Since the oil leasing act of 1920, the government has collected $63,- 000,000 in oil royalties, most of it from Salt Creek. millions in oil have been taken from the Salt Creek field. Borah is one of the “show places” ath con g In whispers, the ti guides point him out to] ¢: tourists from the Senate galleries. There he sits at his flai-t desk on the Republican center aisle, four rows bac the vice president’s rostrym. v , dark hour is parted in the middle; his bi lishing concerns: is fai the total that clutterat the waste, baskets of the ma; 907, and has been there ever since. His present term will Senato Borah is chair- rful Committee on of Washington. nearer the nomina- in December as You Do tion today than he he will be, although ite House doubtless color his for the simple reason that he has felt himself unakle to afford it on his salary as a sena- tor, which is about ais only income. Despite his recor for liberalism, Roosevelt. bolted the party in 1912. Yet, before and since that time he has often been one of his party’s severest critics. Only recently, : dj his customgry i :| generous of frame, stands up to ik there is something zbout him reminds one of a huge be: it is an instantaneous jimpression ‘| that even the stranger cannot es- Not a Fiery Orator Borah, admittedly one of the Sen- ate’s greatest orators, is no which would lease all oil lands on ving them the preference af Salt Creek. The iate Senator Robert M. La and filibustered against the oil men’s bill for six years, despite a powerful and per- sistent lobby. Finally it was pass- ed by a Republican Congres under Democratic administration. was all bi-partisan and no outright song t Far from attempting’ to discour- the members of the muse wooers’ union, a recent, meeting of the American Society of brows overhang a pair of k party leaders who star penetrating blue eyes. scenes at every nati: and pull the strings from Follette fought The agitation over Salt Creck be- gan through a 1923 lease by which Harry F. Sinclair, the alleged Tea- Sometimes Borah marches with one lican kaders by ite fund to repay campaign con- he marches with and thus erase the other and just as often he march- tributions of 1920 ut the same time be sent publican - presidential can- didate a questionnaire asking his views on. prohibition. nounced purpose. was to place all candidates on record in aavance of ys he marches [DAE © TELL You DISTINCTLY, fo PLAY “THAT BIG MEGAPHONE OF Yours ON OUR NEW NEIGHBORS 2~TELLING MR. WENDELL You ARE IN THE DIPLOMATIC SERVICE,+ AND SPEND MOST OF YOUR TIME A {ur AND HIS WIFE IMAGINES Nat I. ACCOMPANY You fo EUROPE On “YouR DIPLOMATIC MISSIONS! WHAT A SPOT You PUT ME INS ux HMF a You BIG BELLOWS! ALL RIGHT,~ TLL STAY HOME “THE NEXT “Time COOLIDGE SENDS You ABROAD, <<. AND Not) CAN EXPLAIAS | “To THE WENDELLS, WHEN “ey - DISCOVER You that he has set out for himself after bang the desk, or make motions like @ man going though his morning exercises. is limited to an occasional shaxe of his bushy head or a slight pause— ever so delicate—just before a word that he wishes to stress. ? __ A Political recluse, Senator Borah is much the same socially. He ac- cepts few of the invitations fur din- ner engagements and the like, with which every prominent man Washington is showered by artful diplomats and aspiring hostesses. He maintains a home in neith Washington nor in Boise, Idaho, li ing in a small hotel apartment at He does not drink or smoke, although he chews gum. Plain in actions as he is in looks, Borah rides to and from the capitol every day on the street ca: lugging a heavy load of books, under le does not own an auto- motile, ro when the White House wants him for an important eonsult- ation on foreign affairs it has to’ president’s limou- bad Borah oat horse— animal na “Governor.” @ familiar, but solitary, the bridle paths in 7 A RECALL No SucH “ToPic: iS MY MEETING Wirth WENDELL!« IN FACT, T Dip ALL, oF “tHe ¢ pe EGAD!« WHAT. A LoQuAciouS on HE Q yt PE! A SHAMELESS radition or po- Wi litical expediency. Another Objection Another objection raised Borah is that he is “an which is easily understood, of his great battles during his 20 years in the Senate have found him opposing measures, rath- than proposing them. sed t America’s en- vague of Nations, op- Posed to the child Jabor movement, opposed to the soldier bonus, op- Tithe World Con > 1e. orl Ou) Brit 3 British debt Houston, Texas, i tito salt the Democrats’ tails HAS BEEN ¥. there, or. use it. to By SAME ific pact, opposed One thing abovt those elections rt, opposed to the in Chicago—it’s easy to hear the]. lunding arrangements on many other big is- le sas opposed to the a8 i amendment and is now opposed to modification of the Volstead act ed to American interven- icaragua, but more recent- from that country. has initiated so little leg- and fought so much } x sini Xda seen i] “free trade all around.” But, 't trade one of those 1922 jing, unless it be old af g ae Once Had ‘tuberculosis Fate and an incipient cage of tu- atalished the ict | rain why’ Berth ane eg Prager eevtngrs You'd think she'd have gone flut- i i 3 os iF F E yi oF rf ite f z E * i L F i iF i i i E t H if fr ir i E ¥ # f : if s z 5 y 2 EF i pee La ai i E sd é = a8 } s i “MAR at iE 5 : i : t SEgTit., iB nit af

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