The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 4, 1928, Page 4

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146 SISMAKUK TRIBUNS “he Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper | words save by a poet; most of us are unable to THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) bune C-mpany, Bis- ublished by the Bismarck Tr: tek, D., and entered at fck as second class mail matter. rge D. Mann ..-...... «...President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ly by carrier, per year .. vly by mail, per year, (in Bism dy by mail, per year, arké (in state outside Bismarck) ....... of”. by mail, sutside of North Dakota .. .ekly by mail, in state, per year ...... ekly by mail, :a state, three years for . ekly by mail, out rth Dako’a, re° Member Audit Bureau + 1.00 and the music vveeee 1.89) ab]e to sé t Member of The Associated Press Rt Orne Associated Press 1s excl published t ] otber mat-)| NEW YORK - - wan (wer Bldg. (Official City. State and County New: ition “Rer!Ping him cel 4¢ @It occurs to us that re of a celebr there reall For Sousa is one of the best allie will ever have tpt them keved No better strengthene: morale could be rain it would be inter sefany young Americ: ung Americans will do so in the future. | eig28 become almost a national song; it is the) preclude a reasonable amount of bi tropuntry’s greatest martial air, and ‘t is one of | ment, and that there are things in Shakespeare arlae most potent aids our militant patriotism; that may have their appeal for a regular fel- low if the regular fellow tries to get at them .* Patriotism is not necessarily a logical affair. | in a sensible way. ill ever know. dre omposi- iki the plays th Perhaps 1 ‘i ; 'It is an emotion that wells up in a rather Tal jarticulate fashion, It cannot be expressed in| Crystal Gazing say what it means to us. We see a flag float- ing high in the sunlight, and we .ee the gleam of bayonets as the soldiers pass by, and we e postoffice at Bis- cannot tell what it is we feel; we only know that we are caught up, for the moment, by something bigger and stronger than oursel ;—that we lose ourselves in a tide that swe .$7.29 us off our feet and makes the flag the most] + 7.20 beautiful emblem on earth. 8.00 And then, as we struggle for expression, the * g.99| band breaks out with the inimitably inspiring, heart-warming bars of Sousa’s great march-— es us our expression. say the things we are not/ 250 blaring trumpets why the anniversary of S | Congress might do} if it can’t, the W ~ position is worth hing about it Departments ican fighting man h an this likable, g bandmaster. | Editorial Comment | Tunney on Shakespeare Kresge Bidg.| (Grand Forks Herald) | gene Tunney lectured on Shakespeare the ner day to the students at Yale. nent is a litle unfair to the champion Sousa—What He Means ipugilist. He did not actually lecture, and he I did not pose as an authority on ousa’s Instead, he chatted easily an alf an hour, as one human being to five hun- others, telling of how he came to have a g for Shakespeare, and of the manner in d the radio stations are which some of the things which he found in impressed him. The students doudt-| y ought to be; less did not attend for the purpose of enlarg-| ng their stock of information on Shakespeare, al notice of the; but rather to learn more about Tunney. y ng for the after- did learn something about Tunney, for in a to the Marine Band play the natural conversation a man necessarily reveals ies our) himself. Incidentally, some of them may have learned things about Shakespeare which had} ng the number not occurred to them before. y, navy Dr. Johnson remarked that the important as a direct or indirect result thing about a woman preaching or a dog danc- d by “The Stars and! ing was not that it was well done, but that it must be tremendous. | could be done at all. hakespeare. | means built up many of America’s largest private fortune® In a succeeding story we wil! be- in the history of the public demain from the time of the Revolution, By RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, May 3.—Out of all ~ scandal about the |way Mr. Sinclair and Mr. Doheny] oil reserves and the! |way other enterprising oil men ob-| tained from the world’s richest oil field at Salt | | Creek, comes one sweet, consoling The learned doctor, tion a talk on Shakespeare by a professional ‘pugilist. We have not been accustomed to ex- esting to know just how, hibitions of that kind, and they seem incongru- ns have marched away to ous. Yet Mr. Tunney’s brief appearance at! r to that tune—and to know how many | Yale may have served the double purpose of It demonstrating that physical prowess need noi |ganized and more militant must also be taken into account. see Although the Democrats have! consistently undertaken to make po- litical capital of the looting of the public demand, the records of two great Republican |got the navy’s conservationists, | to provide the! brightest page in the whole story. if is also true that, although the CTheir Letters Republicans have generally been in/ 2 GR oF —€£@§ Presidential Campaign Portraits—No, 23—. Senator George W. Norris Norris Is Senate’s Leading Champion of Liberalism disagree, one ma pur-| pose or cease to For Norris—in- | S¢' dependent, insur- irreconcilable or whatever you i is almost every- that the public expects a sena- L1@r to be, and which a lot of them) t. i Ei ‘Even his opponents in the Senate | has no enemies there) admire fearlessness of this man the La Follette forces crown in the But this veter- candidate for presi- Describes Him he best description ever fen of Senator Norris was writ- by Ray Clapper, noted Wash- correspondent. have a grand time dis- in Washington "y encounter George W. Nor- for how are they to be cynical over a man that wear any scenery, out everything that he . patronage, taunts the and even campaigns against e if ish: ‘fe party Aes and he once smiled in t! Alway He is engaging! yezrs he has foug! Shoals out of private hands rve this great natural resource jfor the people through government F a But he!a roving tea on fighting, hoping that some |frontier familie : ion will.sce the light./to smile w | Personally, Norris is one of the! back. se tors. Courte-|braska, and began the practi ous, genial and candid, he never | law. the n |most likable of se tries, when interviewed, to hide be- {hind that famou w-don’t-quote- | ing attornes n,me-on-this” line. Anything that! for eight yea | Senator Norri he is perfect: lelected to Congre: He has been in TOMORROW: ly willing for the world to hear. Although past 65, he looks much younger. His hatr is gray, his eye-| , his eyes are deep| is face is broad, his manner | fable, his smile contagious, his | ‘brows are bla ix shirts and neckties incline toward a rather loud hue. He smokes enjoy a good story as well as tell one. He is now rounding out 25 years the Senate in 1912. Party Ties Not Important Party ties rest lightly upon Senator Norris. Theoretically, he is a Republican, but actually he is a Norrisan. All of which means that he does what he pleases politic- ally, regardless of whether his course takes him into the camp of the Republicans, the Democrats or ives. One thing is cer- always be found in the direction to which -the liberal view inclines. Though a Republican, he led the historic fight to overthrow “Uncle {| Joe” Cannon’s czarism in the House in 1910 and succeeded. He changed the House rules and thereby accom- plished one of the greatest reforms in the history of American politics. Of course, there was a price to pay. Taft cut off his patronage, Republican leaders disowned him. Politically, he was an outcast in Washington. But the people of Ne- braska felt differently; two years later they promoted him to the Sen- ate. ‘The same independence has char- acterized his course there. He even |to the House in 1902 and to the | war against Germany and today is the only member of “the wilful twelve,” as Woodrow Wilson branded them, who is still in the Senate. In_ 1926, after the exposure of slender|the Vare scandal in Pennsylvania, | Cow: , who lives modestly in a| he took the stump for Vare’s Demo- . near the| cratic opponent. iffers From Borah as a senator. fabecited a million dol-| Senator Norris and Senator he course|Borah are often mentioned in the conversation, “I think] same breath as champions of prog- to a first-class restaur-|ressiveism, but between their po- how it feels to order is litical records is a gulf that abysmal. The explanation is this: al | Boral battles AGAINST measures. Nor- fox and| ris, in addition to that, has won re- a] in his|nown for his battles FOR meas- case of Teapot Es ast hate eee or peaisioirs Sere ? does ion of Muscle Shoals, his voice in the Sen-| He has made a tireless fight, now apparently near victory, for aj me duck” amendment to put an -Jobby, the “bread'end to legis‘ating by congressmen i | fini ,;power during the looting that has | “{gone on since the Civil War, the} Democrats were in power most of| have|the time before that, when some of | ce looted by far the better;the best gouges were dealt the pub- |part of them and if any of value! who have been discredited by their tuents and who | ing out their tes now fighting for an_investigati |of the Salt Creck oil leases. | A Romantic Life | romance and | oy, The public lands, property of t!. people, offer little more to worry Enterprising pirates BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES Try and do it! Shake a Latin, I Surely was kidding myself when I wrote to you yesterday. was about as free of Pede as the ‘roads are of Sunday drivers. was suddenly an immovable object | The original public domain has} computed at acres, more than five. mein, someone must have blund- © ns of the Senate Public mittee about the Fall- clair cases and the rea- Born on a farm in Ohio, his fath-| er died when he was bare! . Vacart and unappropriated in-|publie lands now amount to about Creek leases ap-| 190,000,000 acres, most of which is indicate the heart-|comparati ficulties faced by an or group of gentlemen|under ju : hope to amass huge land|Land Office in one way or another.| gz the govern- His car was parked at my door all this morning. minutes he rang me up from the building across the street. he could see me if I tried to sneak And he sent in a bunch of vio- {lets and then a box of roses and finally a corsage of orchids. I had to give the orchids to Flor- ence and let Alan think Michello sent them to her. enough to get them to keep her I guess she wants to California, | use them as a suggestion to “Mich,” Norman's aunt New! got the roses and I guess won't be cut up if he thinks I bought myself some violets. Then a stream of notes, ing me to see him. at bombard me until I gave in. kind of nervous after awhile think- ing about how it would look to Alan it Pede kept on sending flowers and epistles all evening. So I had to let Dal for which it expects to He attended pub- And every ten ing c 0.000,000 acres remain n- ing certain at | diction of the ajhis career, oning and Norris went there to seek i vhat_ was then the that the cards|territory of Washington he became her for the children of but fortune failed ent also retains more! than 180,000,000 acres of national} forest preserves along with various j lesser tracts held for government She was glad The fact that Sinclair and Doheny °}had to break int v's. of idence of their des- These reserves had|in Arizona, Arkansas, Je for use only in great |Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Minnesota, as she calls him. ;|national emergency; the navy cher-|Montana, Nebraske The public lands now vacant are|mouth shut. And the long, hard fight which he Salt Creck oi! men had to make!and Wyoming. them-'lands now in @pri those hundreds of | acquired legitimately millions of acres, according to au- acquired by fraud business of obtaining pub! nen, of course, came up-|lands by theft or bribery is the jas old as the reported impossibility | The land speculators, the|of convicting a man with a million jrailroads, the cattle men, the iron dollars. coal and other mineral-digging pio-! outh Dakota, Utah, Some of the publ te hands were ashington since. could establish millions in Wyoming oil similarly {indicates that the field isn’t what it | thorities, Bills Allowed by | City Commission j{on the scene rather late You can score one, Mom. For this time you guessed right. In the beginning, when the white|a South American is | n neers and the timber looters had a! man first came, there was enough|as blowing bubbles with a boy like ‘for everybody and our natural re-/ Billy. cigars—lots of them—and, unlike | many men who are prominent, can | ary Hayes, board an He'd just been waiting for | head-sta:t on them. 4 e 8 Land| me to give him a signal, it seemed. In addition to the fact that not'sources appeared 8 much is left to grab, the fact that/ speculation, however, began prompt-|But when I told him we must stop First the hunger was for land,|seeing each other he knew it was and then for the resources of the|time to speak or keep silent forever bribes and that conservationists in| land and the passing of both into| after. this century have been better or-: private hands by varied and devious in Washington, having been elected; Harris & Woodmansee, sup- probably more honest and certainly far less susceptible to Underwood Typ Cross my heart I had no idea he Mrs. J. A. Montgomery, J. O. Fredericks, board and Gussner’s, groceries . Montgomery Grocer; { “NES, EGAD~ KANSAS CITY AND HOUSTON WILL MAKE THE NIASTH CONSECUTIVE NATIONAL CONVEASTIONS I HAVE ATTENDED! ~~ AND MARK ME WELL DAVE, | PREDICT “THESE | “Wo, OF BEING “HE Most sPiRITeD “To DATE! YES, ~~ Nou SEE DAVE, WITH THE AVERAGE CITIZEN, A NATIONAL COMVENTION, GURv 115 LAPSE OF Four YEARS, \S MADE INCOMPREHENSIBLE-, ee = Pe sg A POLITICAL, LYTICAL RT, He PROCEEDINGS OF NOMWATING ROUTINE ARE QUITE SIMPLE !~ awl WILL Co., grease and Street Dept., pay roll M. Wildes, labor .... Copelin Motor Co., su} Bonny’s Cafe, meals . Mine Safety Appliances C VEMTRILOQUISM, ay Hallard Atkinson, Service Drug, batteries Fechkeimer Bros. Co., sup- Mrs. Geo. Schul John Gordon, rent . Mrs. Mary Burch, re: Special Electio1 A. E. Slupp, labor Quick Print, Inc., supplies he| Frank Schloemer, guard at A SHAVE !. voted against the declaration of Wn. S. Koller, milk samples Jones & Webb, groceries... Association of Dick’s Grocery, groceries St. Alexius Hospital, services Mrs. A. E. Ward, laundry .. Bridgeman-Russell dairy products A. W. Gussner, gi Wachter Transfer Co., wood Waterworks Dept. rental ... cee Standard Oil Co., fuel oil... Business Service Co., plates "s Service Station, 5 8. Simplex Valve & Meter Co., suppl ae Standard Oil C ‘Standa: Capital Laundry, laundry .. Weterworks Dept., pay roll.. has won renown for his iD BARBERS ALWAY: “THE RAP FoR BEING GABBY < (© 00s, ey Ket eemvics, me, SAMSON AND SILICON A full head of strong hair has al- ways been considered a mark of virility. Many methods have been tried by thin haired people in an ef- fort to grow luxuriant hair, but tonics and massage will fail to bring about the desired result if the hair |roots are not fed their life giving: {minerals in the form of silicon and |calcium. Bobbing the hair has been found to be unsuccessful in most cases, for |the barber's shears cannot by any magic restore the silicon to an im- poverished blood stream. For a short time after the hair is cut there may be a slight stimulation of growth, but always at the expense of other tissues in the body, of which the silicon has been borrow- ed to feed the shortened hair. Thus, the rest of the bodily structures may |be actually weakened to some ex- tent, although this reason is not sufficient to account for Samson’s weakness. when he lost his luxuriant tresses. Having strayed far from; his native land and the coarse food jhe had been accustomed to from early youth, he suffered from a muscular breakdown due to a lack of the organic minerals in the dainty food given him by his enchantress. But as soon as he was put to work he was no doubt given the unrefined fare of the other slaves, and soon regained his normal strength. If Samson’s captors had_ under- stood the part silicon played in his regeneration, they could have kept him as weak as our bakers are un- knowingly keeping most people to- day with the sale of so many de- natured white flour products. Why do you suppose we do not find a single bald head among primitive people? The answer is plain. It is simply because they use vegetables and grains in their natural state, and are not civilized or commercially interested in chang- ing nature’s foods into queer dishes, Every bald man you see is starv- ing for silicon and other organic salts. This is not only because they are lacking in his diet but also be- cause of the fact that the blood, suffering from a deficiency of al- kaline properties, seizes upon the bones, hair, and all of the strong tissues of the body, and the result is a generally lowered resistance to disease. The bald man is never a healthy HEALTH@DIET ADVICE sp ie Sat 32 a FRIDAY, MAY 4, 1928 man and can never become strong with abundant vitality unless the vital salts such as silicon are sup- plied to his system through the use 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. | i ‘of such foods as the whole grains, |milk, eggs, and the — succulent greens which are all so rich in the bone-building and hair-building ele- 'ments. If the hair roots have been ‘entirely starved to death, there is no treatment or diet which can re- store life to them, but the rest of the body will quickly respond as the | hungry blood seizes upon these life- giving minerals, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: L. H. G. writes: “I have tuberculo: in an advanced stage but am 30 pounds overweight. I eat lightly. Do you think a fast would help me?” Answer: As your assimilation is {so good, you can no doubt be en- | tirely cured through the proper diet- {ary regime. Take a fruit fast until jyour weight is reduced to the normal, and then live on a diet free from starches and sugars. Others who read this will see that those who are overweight can develop tuberculosis. In this discase, it is not so much a question of lack of i weight as of enervation and a tend- ency to catarrhal mucus. | Question: Mrs. R. G. B. asks: “Would the advertised remedy be good for diabetes?” Answer: I do not advise “rem- edies” either through this column or in my private practise. Proper food is the only remedy you need to bring about a cure of diabetes, If you will send me your name and address TI will be glad to forward general instructions for the cure of diabetes. Question: H. L. J. writes: “About four times a year I have spells when I ‘see things’ in front of my ey They look like Kittle electric spar! At these times I also have indiges- tion. Could this be the cause?” Answer: You have answered your own question, as the disturb- ances coming from indigestion are no doubt responsible for the bilious- hess you have at these times. was batty about me. But when he did say it he didn’t stop with flowers. He had a few gestures to make, too. > To tell the truth, I don’t think he meant a word of it, though I never heard such a stream of lov- ing language in my short but not colorless life. I couldn’t take him seriously because I’m sure I'd have kn it if he'd been really losing his head over ‘me. i Well, I got him out finally but |he says he won't give me up. I hope he won’t be a menace. Dearest love, MARYE. NEXT: “Let that be a lesson,” writes Mom? ° New York, May 4.—Europe- bound liners that take their depar- tures in the early hours of the morn- ing have become the latest play- grounds of Manhattan’s midnight sons and daughters. Each departing steamer has be- come this year the occasion for a sort of sublimated Mardi Gras. The after-theater crowds, instead of go- ing the night club rounds or visiting the dance resorts, now grab taxi- cabs and go whirling down to the docks. Whether or not you happen to know anyone on board makes no difference. It’s a simple matter to come upon a convivial party, and crashing in is much simpler than breaking through the barriers of the usual social affairs. eee At this season of year each out- going liner carries at least one Broadway celebrity, and frequently there is an entire troupe. Any one such dignitary can pull a crowd of a hundred or more merry-makers and half the night-life boys and girls now go parading in their wake, fully certain that a merry time awaits at the dock. __ Going down to the piers the other night to see a writing friend upon his way, I found the wharf jammed to its outer doors, while a line waited to go up the gangplank. Po- lice were letting the dock crowd c2 the boat one at a time, like line- waiters at a crowded movie theatre. The boat was already overflowine. Crowds of strangers and friends were milling i.» and down the gang- ways and around the docks, poking their noses into staterooms and jamming the salon. Hip flasks were as prevalent as in a night club. Ser- pentines were tangling up the shuf- fling feet and confetti wis flittering colorfully across the ship’s lights. On the dock merry- were, dancing to the tune of harmonicas and ukuleles. ‘ ‘i 4 Word has passed along the gay white way that this is “quite the thing to do” this season. Supper clubs, already bruised by the fickle neglect of the pe are feeling the competition keenly. For why should one pay, expensive couvert charges when, for the price of a taxi, one can “make whoopee” upon the boats until the early hours of ine decent take 1 for new pleas- loesn long for ure fads to catch on in Manhattan. Before the sailing season is over, the originators of the vogue will smoke and soft lounges; the next {season sees a demand for the gar- ish and blatant. And sometimes fads change many times a season. One cafe installed canals, which flowed beside the dining tables to ‘ive the diners an indoor impres- ion of Venice; another, after du- jPlicating the deck of a ship, found the raiding squad at its door after about $100,000 had been spent on equipment; a third reproduced a jungle and had monkeys chattering in imitation trees; a little place in ‘the Village has something like 200 Ispecimens of song birds who some- {how manage to survive the cigar jand cigaret smoke and go warbling merrily on. And so it goes. To- day’s hit is tomorrow’s failure! - GILBERT SWAN. ee [BARBS ° | Japan will spend $8,220,000 in jovember for the coronation of Em- peror Hirohito, And Japan doesn’t | produce so much oil, either. . A prominent visitor in New York says Chicago envies Gotham her jsubway system. Well, it is good training for mayhem. o- Sales of the Bible have shown a@ great increase during the last five years. Lawyers defending murderers have to have some sure- fire quotations. . . Isn’t it about time for some clev- er fellow to cast his vote for Major Hoople for president? |. Buddha would be 2,472 years old in May. And probably he would say he did it by smoking opium. . ° These are good days to stay late at the office. Friend wife is: be- ginning to remark about how gray that rug is getting in the living room, eee Peggy Joyce threw.a glass of champagne into a young man’s face in Paris. Over here the popular practice seems to be throw it into your own. —_—— f At the Movies | CAPITOL THEATRE Edmund Lowe, who plays the de- tective-reporter in “The Wizard,” a Fox Films production now being shown at the Capitol theatre, is said to give one of the best perform- ances of his screen career in this absorbing. murder mystery. Leila Hyams has the leading feminine role. Lowe, always keen for an opportunity to give the pub- lic what it wants, is convinced that this type of story is the most in- teresting for picture purposes. ELTINGE THEATRE Johnny Hines, famous for his comedy screen characterizations, is said to surpass ajl previous per- jformances in “Chinatown Charlie,” sat the Eltinge today and Saturday. In-“Chinatown Charlie,” which from the pen of the prolific play- wright, Owen Davis, the comedian is said to give an exéeedin ly ‘real- istic interpretation of a guide on 2 New York t-seeing bus, a wax dummy, a nese mandarin, and s have long since tired and turned to | lover. something new; while new hordes will just begin to play the game. This eternal search for “some- thing new” is a decadent quest, but it’s what produces an ever-cha! ing kgighls 4 To cater to tastes of the sated ones, the agencies of amusement strive to grab novelty ‘on the wing. One season the crowd demends that its tea. rooms have soft lights, rich hangings, incense The. last is not. the least, for ir order to win the hand of the hero- ine, ‘portrayed by Louise Lorraine, Johnny, puts up some ‘fights worthy of @ western villain, and performs the thrilling “stunt. .of . walking across a human bridge—the bodics of five acrobats swung together | from a second-story: fire-escape to. the balcony of the mandarin’s | palace, twenty-five feet across the st canara a Ee

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