The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 16, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1928 An ladependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) — Published by the Bismerck Tribune C.mpany, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- muatck as second class mail matter. Ceorge D. Mann ..++...+s00+ +President and Publisher Seale alae alia ciel Diabet Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......+++--00 Daily by mail, per (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per (in state outside sk) ...00 Daily by mail, vutside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail, in state, per year . th: ir Weekly by mail, outai ff North Dako'a, pe" year ooo 1.60 Member Audit Burean of Circulation SESS sca tae ett Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news «ispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. DETPOIT Kresge Bldg. CHICAGO Tower Bldg. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) Mr. Shafer Changes Front George F. Shafer, Independent Republican candidate for governor, has enunciated the policy under which he will seek election as gov- ernor in June. It indicates a remarkable change of front so far as the state industries are con- cerned. At the Independent convention in Devils Lake two years ago the I. V. A. faction in state} politics went specifically on record as pledging | themselves to the policy of discontinuing the mill and elevator as soon as possible. In a speech on the convention floor Mr. Shafer cited its heavy losses. He declared it constituted a “continuing hazard and menace to the state.” Shafer voiced the sentiment in a | ringing speech preceding adoption of the report : of the,resolutions committee. ‘ Today he is definitely on record in a recent | speech in Grand Forks as accepting the state ' mill and elevator as a going institution, de- } serving of the best possible management that i can be had. Two years ago at the Devils Lake convention + and in other speeches, Mr. Shafer called the Bank of North Dakota a political monstrosity. | He declared it was “without a place in the state government.” He was roundly applauded. Today his position on this issue is modified to the extent that he opposes the creation of a system of branch county banks of the Bank of North Dakota financed by public funds to en- gage in the field of commercial banking. So, happily, is Mr. Shafer reconciled to an in- stitution that two years ago he called a political monstrosity. Time and ambition are most mellowing in- fluences. Yet consistency still is, presumably, a jewel. Probably Mr. Shafer has committed no grave political error. Certainly he is entitled to his opinions and it still is true that a wise man changes his mind but a fool never. Clearly Mr. Shafer has changed his mind. The Tribune is not attempting to roll the ' stone away from the door of the political » charnel house of the past. The facts are plain. | The issue in this campaign is clearly the + ambition of the “outs” to serve about the flesh- ' pots in the vantage points now occupied by the } “ins.” Motivated by ambition Mr. Shafer has skillfully trimmed his sails to the vagrant | breeze. They are filling rapidly. ) Meantime his friends have weighed anchor and are passing the hat. It takes money to | make the mare go. Mr. Shafer sacrificed his ambition to be the | Independent Republican candidate for the Uni- fi | ted States senate when his friends sounded the j recall in the interests of Mr. Nestos, another | gentleman of much ambition, made to order for ; trading purpose in the campaign now heing | conducted in North Dakota by the political | “outs” to hand the horns of goathood to the | political “ins.” Yet the situation is not without its hopeful aspects. It offers some opportunities for re- jeonstruction. No candidate in this campaign ‘ean longer declare that state socialism is an lissue. If it is an issue, all factions are recon- ciled to it. If there remain holdouts who still must kiss and make up they are far out in the t ' s. ; What a happy famliy we have become! The lion and the lamb, politically, are lain down to- jepther in our own North Dakota. Both the 8” and the “outs” beckon to the people. The “ins” are the more consistent. They go into this campaign with that distinct advantage. Meantime the status of the mill and elevator 44s unchanged. Without doubt here also time ‘will prove a mellowing influence. jitics is a great game. Personal ambition is a fearful and wonderful thing. A Truth in a Slogan Wells county is getting ready for its annual fair July 10 to 13. It has adopted as its adver- tising slogan, “See, What You Have in Your Own Country First.” Slogans are inevitably trite, but what would fair or any other undertaking of like nature ibe without them? The thought behind the ‘Wells county slogan is not new. Yet it is one that cannot too often be given emphatic point n North Dakota. - This state needs nothing so much as self- a tion. When it esteems itself, its re- ces, its opportunities and its future de- ment possibilities at their true worth it have gone a long distance toward worth- Beoierement. its conviction that it is one of the test and most resourceful states of all the i ot the west becomes positive and is in- in the terms gl 5 ang which is ww apace, its problems will near solution and it will the neem § sf its destiny. tely th Dakotans have been too d to ‘iveredit themselves. There LP inrielit’ smmsente to took propa: aia be futile to deny that it has not physical, steadily continued. It is wtvrtia increased momentum, . s the county fair is most use- i | 4 Tet lace of beginning, for it is a point of con- The Bismarck Tribune that where vnont differences can forgotten The Voice is the Voice of Jacob, But— and where self- appreciation may begin and be interpreted in practical terms. In every undertaking in life it is worth while to take inventory of our blessings. In North Dakcta we have so many of them that it is especially worth while. There is a great truth embodied in the slogan of the Wells county fair. A New Day Worth While The thing nearest us is often the thing we least appreciate. Too often the progress going on about us goes unnoticed until it has passed and is leading us. North Dakota’s progress in the last ten years id an interesting story and it conclusively proves this. The Tribune is indebted today to Governor A. G. Sorlie for some figures on North Dakota progress in the past decade that are ‘most im- pressive. They concern its agricultural produc- tion record and they indicate a steady growth in its wealth and the profitable diversification of its agricultural industry. In the period from 1918 to 1927 the value of poultry produced in the state increased from 33, 700,000 in the former year to $17,200,000 in the latter. The value of the state’s so-called diversified MOTEL PESKY PUS POCKETS absolutely free from starches and Many people who suffer with dis- Heed = ag? ae eet eases of an obscure cause have been | “et mus hay Uk taconaer 6 told that their teeth or tonsils must [202% 2nd it may be necessary to come out, or that their sinuses must be drained. These infections are now considered by many physicians as being a cause of diseases such as rheumatism, neuralgia, or neuritis. This means that a pus pocket with no external drainage has formed in some part of the body, and that this poison is absorbed by the blood and carried to other parts. This type of ised pocket is termed a “focal in- fection. The doctor therefore tries 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. take an occasional fast if there is any indication of the trouble re- appearing. Treatments with electricity or heat over the diseased area will assist in the absorption of the waste material. I am sure you will find this method is the most satisfactory one. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. H. P. asks: “Will to search out these poison pockets and to treat them with medical ap- plications or surgery. It is true that this method of treatment some- times brings a temporary relief, but it is also well-known that many cases do not respond and that even if they do, the results are not often permanent. products in 1918 was $57,000,000 and in 1927 $169,000,000. In 1920 there were 708 hives of bees in North Dakota. In 1927 there were 25,000 hives with an estimated production of 3,000,000 pounds of honey. This was the highest production record per hive in the United States. And the honey was the choicest. In 1920 we had 170,000 sheep. Today we | have half a million. North Dakota leads the world in the number Many diseases are accompanidd by this sinus or focal trouble, but then there are very few individuals who have not some point of focal infec- tion, and only a small percentage develop those diseases that are sup- to be caused by this condition. I have reached the conclusion that instead of the latter causing the former, they are both caused by a posed primary toxic condition. The sinus or antrum is a hollow, honeycombed space in the bones of the face or head which can easily you please tell me the best diet for tubercular bowels?” Answer: The diet must be well balanced, but with a minimum of Starches and sugars, The most ef- fective treatment is to use two or three warm water enemas a day. At the same time, it is necessary to build up the general strength of the body in order to overcome any form of tuberculosis. Strength can come only from exercising, so you must take calisthenic exercises, and walk increased distances each and value of turkeys produced. They sell in fill up with catarrhal mucus,!_ Qestion: H, F. writes: “You men- eastern markets at a premium. especially with one whose blood or|tion a food in your weekly menus These are facts about the state in which we lymph fluids contain much waste|called ‘zucchini.’ Will you please live that cannot be too often voiced or too much emphasized. Governor Sorlie has often been criticized be- cause he was not a politician. He has seldom been commended for the message of North Dakota's progress he has consistently voiced at every opportunity. The growth of diversification in the state is most gratifying. When self-interest keeps pace with it and when every citizen of substantial interest up- holds and voices the story of its progress as the governor has done it will be a great Day for North Dakota. In that day will its present consideration by outside interests as a branch state be broken. In that day will it come into its own. And that day is coming faster than most of us realize. WASHINGTON LETTER By fied st DUTCHER f the child which is born to rule Xa Service Writer over them. hington, May 16.—One of the mo! remarkable things about politics is that in all its etrentials : eee “This is the mode of making presi- dents, practiced by both parties now. continues to be the same old It is the virtual election, And thus The fundamentals never cl eee: From the very outset, patronage has been the driving politicians; power, control and mate- rial benefit the motive force of the itical backers; sectional and class jions the battle lines of struggle, from the people to whom the prac- tice under the constitution gave it —and has gone to an anomalous, irresponsible body, unknown to law i 7 or constitution, unknown to the and ambition and vanity nearly al- early ages of your government, and ways the inspiration of candidates! o¢ which a large proportion of its incentive for Electrifying Farms In this day of supet-power developments, with enormous generating stations being erected for electrical development all over the country, it is interesting to hear the report of A. B. Crane, extension agricultural engineer at the State College of Washington. Many Washington farmers, he says, living far from any power lines, have made their own power plants and generate their own electricity. Where a little creek with any appreciable fall crosses a farmer’s land the process is easy. Much of the equipment can be made at home; the remainder is not expensive. As a result, a number of farms are thorough- of “volites has been almost equally/no other view either in attendin ‘3 Fevers Pegg lege pe heey or in promoting the nomination terations in ars of a particular man, than to get years as politics een adapted | one elected who will enable them to to changed conditions, but the old/eat out of the public erib—who will Serisat eauctle chs give them a key to the public crib. sidings’ 7 . | “The evil is destructive to the For 2 eth Be rights and sovereignty of the People, spondent has just “interviewed” the late Senator Thomas H. Benton of Missouri. Benton was one ef the big boys of his time. He led An- drew Jackson's administration forces in the Scnate and fought off Henry Clay, Daniel Webster and iplements are and to the purit; oe elections.” In different language the com- plaints against the convention to- day are those of Benton. For a hundred years, deadlocks and dark horses have beaten the most popu- lar convention candidates. In both parties, liticians are now conspir- \ i | \ the election has passed—not only’ Dear Mom: Thank you a heartful for the chicken broth. We enjoyed it very much, Florence and I felt entitled to have a little of it as Alan is greatly improved. He says he’s going back to the office tomorrow. I don’t think he should so soon, but it’s not very quiet around here and he doesn’t rest anyhow, he claims. T think he’s sore because some of the crowd came in last night and I started a couple of tables of bridge. goodness, hanging nothing. But my I'm sick and tired of around the house doing And he had the verve to get as mad as a wet rooster forgot what I went down there for. He had so many things he wanted me to ask about, and of course I forgot about half af them. And what do you suppose he did? He grabbed the telephone and called up the office and asked that new material. When this waste become filled with mucus and pus, as in mastoiditis. The pain of an inflamed sinus is sometimes almost unbearable, and the usual treatment is to puncture it and drain these hollow spaces. This relieves the situation, but un- less the patient’s system is Sar tl trouble, there is almost always a few of the material that caused recurrent attack after a months. There is only one method that I permanently empty out these cavities, and that is the fasting treatment, followed by | a rigid diet to prevent this leon fas should be taken for a week or ten days, and then followed by a dict know of that will returning. A citrus fruit is thrown out through the nose, the disease is called catarrh, but if it collects in the sinus or antrum it will produce pressure accompanied by pain and inflammation very much | as happens when the mastoid cells explain what it is, as I have never heard of it before?” Answer: You probably missed the menu on which a footnote was made explaini about this vege- table. Zucchini is a small Italian wash, similar to the ordinary sum- mer squash, and may be used free- ly as a non-starchy vegetable if cooked by boiling or baking. As this vegetable is sometimes diffi- cult to obtain in certain parts of the country, the ordinary summer squash may always be _ substituted when the zucchini is included in the weekly menus. Question: F. K. L. writes: “Kind ly advise through your question and answer column what will take acid out of the blood for good.” Answer: The blood is never acid until death, but most people who are ill have a lowered alkalinity of the blood. This can be corrected by living on a well-balanced diet such as eerommens in this column each week, sideration for a stranger—if she is a stranger. Dearest love, MARYE. TOMORROW: waiters must now pay for privilege of getting a In several eating places the “wait- ing privilege” is sold as a conces- sion, just like the hat check room jom defends Alan. a at [IN NEW YORK | becnties 11 ne New York, May 16.—In restau- rants where the tipping is plentiful, the cert halls the minute they arrive; others try to take in six shows in three days and never so much as glimpse the city itself. To me the most interesting thing in New York always will be New York itself—its crowds and_its noises, its ironies and its comedies, the dramas that run into you at every turn, its beauties and its ugliness, its sheer humanity and its utter lack of humanity. GILBERT SWAN. i BARBS \ as A 2 E John T Calhouhs among others. i to do it once more. If they stenographer of his to come up or the cigaret stand. The conces-| Big Bill Thompson hasn't had a ly electrified despite the fact th at they -_ miles The interview was obtained dae succeed, they'll try to again ao sion holder collects a weekly amount word to say since that last Chicago removed from any commercial electricity-dis-|¢om the huge volumes in which] in 1932. He ae ines aes tno bere from each aes ie nen aslelection. | What Chicago needs is Bare . vriter was. He knows very | it ite ‘, tributing company. Farmers in the northwest,| Benton, about 1860, Pablished a eee well that it's always in the closet 4 : er seo ae aN : that waiters | more elections, : Benton proposed a remedy quite obvious, but one that never can be achieved except by a popular me it would seem, haven’t forgotten how to help ponderous aeeount themselves. times. “Political degenerated and os fee? members and a much larger r rangely enough, the machinery tion of interlopers attending fe have conventions - quickly politicians: when he isn’t using it because we’ve had more than one argument over it. Alan simply will not remember to put it away and it’s too darned During a court action for the col- lection of wages, it was revealed the other day that in one coffee shop in A man in Iowa traded his aute- mobile for a suit of clothes. So rises the tide of morality over the . Benton (on page 49). “Per-|direct election for president and al hesvy for me to lift. But 1 wont| tana central station the waitresses | Middle West. H + tended as delegates who had|second election immediately after- ‘| pay $10 a week in order to hold their Wi ctidles | Editorial Comment ne Pateataa attended |sraed hetween the two Highest can: | ret (© oe! (e* poaltlvely diarenat:| joa, No lynchings were reported any- upon equivocal appointments. | didates if no one has a majority on|" He had it ready on a desk when| , CUU pleaded the manager, “they where in the United States during Plant a Tree Double sets of delegai:s sometimes |the first trial. his little steno got here, but she poakosnpsto gis aatay in ane: the first four months of 1928. The . came from the state, and either were admitted or repulsed, as suited the views of the majority. Proxies were invented. Many delegates at- tended with the sole view of es- tablishing = claim to office, and voted acc “The eo thieds rule was invented to enable the minority to eontrol majority; and the whole Decame.s ‘anomalous and irres} aad and of sive of the will of the aving them no more econ- Fret eae the nomination than the Habjects of kings have over the birth It would take a constitutional amendment, Benton pointed out, re- ring support from two-thirds of ety and three-fourths of the (Mott Pioneer Press) If the people of Mott and vicinity would just plant one tree a year for each member of the family and give it careful cultivation, what a different looking town and country we would have in just a few years, how much more beau- tiful, how much more enjoyable, how property values would increase because of the surround- ings being more livable, how the birds would flock to this district and fill it with songs of joy, incidentally picking up grasshoppers and worms which destroy crops and vegetation. This is not much to ask, easily within the reach of everyone, just a pleasure for the whole fam- ily—one tree for the baby and the grandpa and everyone between, each to have their very own tree to care for and nourish and enjoy its growth. And it is a pleasure and health-giving. We might even have some squirrels coming and begging for nuts if we had trees for them to live in. The child who has grown to manhood and the welcome shade they give in summer has missed much. Enough have been grown here to prove that many hardy varieties of trees can be successfully grown. Next we shall interview John C. Calhoun, the great southern leader, on the same subject. One of the outstanding figures of nineteenth century music, Willia: Vincent Wallace, composer of “M itana” is to be honored by the ere: tion of a memorial in his native nd became obnoxious,” | heaval against all : of Waterford. [OURBOARDINGHOUSE—SSS«By Ahern [OURBOARDINGHOUSE—SSS«By Ahern HOUSE ovr “TH’ OTHER DAY You WENT Ifo A SPASM OF GLEE BECAUSE MY STOCK FELL OFF A FEW POINTS, He av WELL, I SOLD tT “TODAY AS’ MADE $215, PROFIT loc | ew Alo You LARD HEAD, MY RUBBER FACE, AN’ LADDER LEG,“ LETS SEE You OPENS “THAT BIG BISCUIT BIA OF Yours IW LAUGHTER! = The Flight Across (Chicago Tribune) There’s a little victory for everybody in the flight of the Germans, Captain Koehl and Baron von Huenefeld and the Irishman, Commandant Fitzmaurice, from Ireland to Greenly island. There is victory for the flyers in being the first to cross the North Atlantic by plane from ea:t to west. There is victory for the two countries from which the airmen hail. There is victory for German aircraft manufacture and for the German government, as Foreign Minister Stresemann suggests, in having brought about the repeal of the allied pro- hibition against building planes large enough to cross the ocean. And there is not a little victory for America’s Colonel Lindbergh—if it is not bad taste to re- call his feat at the time of this German and ign triumph. The missing of their course|’ y 400 miles by the westward flyers makes Lindbergh's faultless landing on the precise spot for which he set out even more miraculous. BILL You owe Me! didn’t like it there and started to move it to a table. Alan jumped up and moved it himself. Said it was too heavy for her. Now I ask you Mom, yesterday speak of ‘ightin; That was afternoon, so I can it. now. But it was a subject then. For I’ve lifted that thing dozens of times at Alan forgot to put it away. What's the matter with men, any- way Does marriage cramp their sense of justice, I wonder? Here I’m supposed to be the woman Alan ALL RIGHT, u.now AAT You'RE Wl Bié A MONEY, MAYBE YouLL BY Gone ITo “TH” POCKET For $1.15 ON A LAUNDRY cherishes and he shows more con- To learn what the “Visitor is most country certainly is losing its en- thusiasm. likely to be interested in, I recently eee engaged the attention of members of from that they were making ie Manhattan a seeing-New-York rty Stroudsburg, Pa. I ed visit for $10 a perso With one day to ak in the city, what did they do with it? Well, they started from their mid- town hotel, toured the length of Fifth Avenue and Riverside Drive riding atop the sight-seeing busses, then rode the length of Broadway, attended a Broadway matinee, ate at an automat and went ate he of the two Broadway “cathedrals movies.” eee That's really quite a day, and per- hao a typical day out of a visitor’ There certainly is no_ bigger dime’s worth in the town than the A man named Sir Leo Money was freed of a charge in a London court. Probably he got off because he has money in his own name. . . »| Dictator Primo de Rivera of Spain fined & newspaper $200 and sus- pended its publication for three days because it printed a eure showing his fiancee’s ankle: It’s a good »|thing we haven't a Primo in | America. eee The House has been investigating pneumatic bread. But we haven't seen the headline “Bad Bread Aired” as yet. eee Mr. Hoover and Mr. Smith seem to have found a place in the sun— in California at least, Fifth Avenue bus and the round of Broadway is certain to be in de. mand. By One, to the foot of Broadwa; notion the widely advertised movie palaces. But somehow, if I had my way about things, Eel mg iy ‘atte O’Neil and Owen Moore featured is at fone: skyline fi Brook; ithe skyline from Brooklyn Bridge - it going to Brooklyn Bridge. Nor om fe fa ht until an hare ae tely caught until you have seen iE be secugele of the immigrant aod the movie visit, or the matinee. er all you can get movies And you can't see the can the flavor of New the milling barterers of the cart belt. Nor should one mi Square shuttle.” And shuttle. like the Battery; Avenue just after the when the races of the world are on parade; and I like Gramercy Park fashington Square Rraitin'« ds living Il in @ day. A frend tale me To, al wet, and Wi down— ‘And, oh well, human could do it, » if he had a day ts the Stock Ex. ts a pretty good | da: All Street batt and| ba he n> et At the Movies { h in the Times -| Maryland had a@ spring snow- storm the other day. One of these person is going to get sun- burned and that will be news. showing at the Eltit and oe, with Say the adaptation of Raynor feiss newspaper serial of stage ite tle Miss O’Neil plays the title role of a little Irish-Jewish shop girl with an ambition to become a opera singer. Discharged rom the department store, by an irate floorwalker, she meets a fons, man of doubtful character— fact a very crooked crook. Through his love for the girl he is regenerated and it is not until after the heroine’s adventures on the stage and in society that she spurns the hand of a rich man to wed the now Topenarated pickpocket. Owen Moore plays the role of the crook and Mark Swain has a com- edy role. CAPITOL THEATRE “Ladies Must Dress,” a Fox Films ‘a production featuring nd Lawrence Gray, wii The onl Pa to be slightly dismayed, per- a 5 haps, is d. Germany and Ireland to- home Bettie by ‘ie gether . AS despite Sir Roger Casement, executed and buried these dozen years; talk of this international flight being an opening aes for an agreement by which Germany shall ther spots. Nae a penchant for antiquities and for Ages T know loads of people who, a cae rig workii the eve her wee Sere of her dresses. allowed to use Irish landing fields. Things can- ari pe New York, can’t be nat be entirely peaceful and calm in the British fait etound a Urchin fand‘a tot | foreign office. : more who begin to haunt the con- a - . -— e—— Virginia Vall

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