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The g An ludependent Newspaper ‘ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) = Published by the Bismarck Tribune C mpany, Bis- Barck, N. D., and oa at the postoffice at Bis- matte Garck as second class eorge D. Mann . Subscription Rates Payable in A lly by carrier, per y:ar lly by mail, per year, (io lly by mail, per ye (in state outside ily by mail, suteid Weekly by mail, in state, per year eekly by mail, :. sta' Weekly by mai ir ; Member of The Associated Press { The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all no ulspatches credited (to it or not otherwise credited ‘herein. All rights of republication of al] other mat- ‘ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. , CHICAGO DETPOIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) A REGRETFUL “OOD-BY Bismarck will say good-by regretfully to Col. Thomas W. Brown when he leaves this city early next month. As a soldier he has done splendid work at Fort Lin- coln. As a resident of this community he has won merited popularity for his democracy and whole-hearted cooperation in local affairs. Called here to regarrison an army post vacant many years he at once established cordial relations with the people of this city and became a valuable and esteemed resident of the Bismarck community. At the post he gave efficient administration. He has heen sincerely interested in the welfare of the men under his command. He is a high type of army officer who loves his work and takes its responsibilities seriously. Whenever he was called upon to cooperate in any local activity his response was instant and his work effective. Fort Lincoln is a considerable asset to Bismarck. Major General.H. A. Smith, commander of the Seventh Army Corps Area, calls attention to the fact that it is ideally equipped for a regimental post. Its location here is bringing us early in August 400 members of the Citizens Military Training camp. That is some- thing well worth while. Bismarck has certain definite responsibilities toward this army post. One of them would seem to be that the men garrisoned there receive more hospitality than it is now possible to extend them. Some day this city will have a community halt and recreation center. Such a place would meet a real need for the boys at Fort Lincoln. Bismarck is sorry to see Colonel Brown leave. Its best wishes go with him wherever he goes, for he made many warm personal friends here. STAND BY OLD GLORY Officially “the Flag of the united states,” reproduc- ing literatim a portion of the original resolution creat- ing the flag, is 151 years of age tomorrow. It is a curious feature that whoever penned the resolution capitalized “flag” but not the name of the nation, The flag adopted by the Continental Congress on June 14, 1777, was an evolution from previous devices em- ployed to denote the unification of the Colonies in a common cause. Nor has the flag remained as created except as it involves colors, stripes and sti Tt has undergone repeated alterations, though ‘13 stripes alternate red and white” “white in a blue field” adds a star for every new state. appearance it is still the flag of the days of the Revo- lution. ‘The flag is the emblem of our national unity. not merely so much bunting, nor a variety of colors.) not an amendment, Its stripes symbolize the beginnings of our history as| tion, ‘a nation and its stars the growth in nearly a century|Were sharp differences of opinion in the constitutional | its natal |Convention and on the part of the general public as to and a half of existence. It is fitting, then, day should be observed and that exercis youth of the land in its significance. It has had a history in which every American may delight. It is not the flag of conquest or aggression. It is the banner of a free people living under a gov-|tion except the prohibi ernment of law, It stands for justice and for equality | °F against the prohibition rlause. of opportunity. It has been followed by armies seeking the relief of the oppressed. the ruthless invader. meaning and mission will assist in keeping it unsullied. But on this Flag Day Americans should do some deep thinking. It is not enough merely to display the| submitted should understand clearly the effect of a emblem; that could be done perfunctorily—in the morn-| “yes” or “no” vote. ;ing and with no more thought of it until time came to take it down at night. Think of what it is the emblem > some other brightly colored piece of cloth is the force of sentiment that we put into it. f When displaying it tomorrow think of the ideals it ‘represents and of the thousands upon thousands of splendid young men who have given their lives or of|lie in their di their blood to uphold them. J While these thoughts are thrilling Americans, there also should be recollection of how sight of the Stars Need not know how to get on with the tribe and Stripes has thrilled other peoples to whom it has meant freedom and hope of a better age. what the American Flag meant to those who had fears that civilization was going to ruin in the World War. So, while priding ourselves in the thought that our National Banner has never known defeat in war, we | enough to lubricate it. H a must be on the alert to see that its honor is not low-|8"d now has managing his campaign at Kansas ered by desertion or neglect of its ideals in peace. Here is where every American should examine himslf. as our soldiers and sailors stood by them in war? Is he permitting without protest anything that would/ nomination at Kansas City. Can euch things be and reduce the, blooi-bought victory? ARTIFICIAL STARLIGHT A Berlin scientist has invented s means for making ms artificial starlight. The mystic glow of other worlds | shown him th: that blankets the earth on a cloudless summer night | others. He may have concluded that if he was go! now can be made to shine in the corner of an unroman-| ‘© engay tic laboratory. This business of doing nature's work for her seems Bismarck Tribune lent anc Publisber this newspaper, and! also the local news of spontaneous origin published) { time when the material facts of exist: closely about men. civilization has many discouraging aspects. it aright. that city’s vast automobile factories. p.achines, each unit tended by a man whose function it was to become as much like a machine himself as the whole of modern life. It seemed as if all human endeavor were being reduced to the level of the auto- matic steal contrivances that chattered endl y in the great factories. who served such monsters coflld ever realize their divine potentialities? None. The prophets of disillusion were right. Man was a machine. But, late at night, when the young man boarded a steamer to continue his jou~ney, things looked different. The ship swung away from its pier and dropped down the black tide of the Detroit river, and the out. The shapes of the factories and warehoi the bank grew indistinct. Detroit's sky hugely against the horizon; but it wa: and forbidding. Under the stars office bulidings became soaring turrets and spires, and the glare of their incandescents was dimmed in the reflection of light from universes far across the b! ky. Detroit was no longer a mechani: nbol of dis- illusion. It could be seen for what it ly was, the temporary dwelling of many thousands of immortal men, striving in a new way to remake the world into a |closer image of the place they call home. THE JAY-WALKER UNCURBED Apropos of taffic accidents, the past year has sup- plied some interesting and illuminating statistics. Al- though the number of motor fatalities last year in- creased at a greater ratio than the increase in popula- tion and automobile registration, the number of acci- dents and fatalities at grade crossings decreased. The increase in traffic fatalities was over 7 per cent while the increa.e in population was Fardly more than 1 per cent and the increace in automobile registration was 5 per cent. The total number of grade crossing accidents was 5,640, in which 2.371 fatalities occurred. There were 250 fewer crossing accidents and 120 fewer grade crossing deaths, Automobile fatalities are increasing in strects while they are decreasing at grade crossings. This showing calls for better traffic regulations. The railroads have been more successful than municipal governments and the police in their respective safety first campaign. Pedestrians are the most numerous victims of auto- mobile accidents, and the driver is not always to blame. In many cases pedestrians kill themselves by walking | in front of cars having the right of way or crossing the street at unexpected places. Control of pedestrain traffic is becoming a necessi Experience has shown that pedestrians cannot be | pended upon to save their own lives. They will not obey traffic signals unless compelled to do so by law. Why is the jay-walker and traffic-blind pedestrian protected and the motorist fined for every infraction of | traffic rules? Rheumatism may have been Nature's first- primitive effort to establish a weather bureau. | | Editorial Comment : | | CONFUSION OVER THE AMENDMENT crowded so By daytime the twentieth century It is at night that we can see it in its perspective and judge Not long ago a young man had occasion to visit De- tpoit, where he spent two days going through some of The experience was acutely depressing. The endless lines of whirring | possible, stood out like an impressionistic sketch of What hope was there that the men] / fHE BISMARCK | | TRIBUNE | Holding Their Own WEDNESDAY, JUNE 138, 1928 BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer and what to believe. expenses committee, spondent might pass along ports that are going the rounds. effect that the virtuous Investigation revealed that mer assistant lately attorney tour was $2,000. year, of course, money. that’s (Grand Forks Herald) The Herald has been informed that some vot pear to be confused over the meaning of the prop ap- ed a fixture and the Union|) It is disapprove is the prohibition clause in the state con: ‘ommemora- | of liquor. tive of that for which it stands should instruct the|of the constitution preferred that the old license sys- Its colors have inspired|amendment, the prohibition clause was also adopted. millions of men marching to repel the aggressions of | Because of the form of voting the prohibition clause It is our flag. Lessons in its| has frequently been referred to as an amendment, and ‘and realize that the only difference between it and|To vote “no” is to vote dry. Think of | daughter of Mark Hann: Is|cians known to the Republican Party. In addition to he standing by the ideas of the American Flag in peace| all this, Mr. Hoover has had a long conference with to be progressing beyond all reason; but perhaps a|long years of patient study and practice, should dream complex civilization makes it necessary. Many city | that ‘ dwellers never spe, the stars on account of the factory | Opportunity smoke, For such people artificial starlight is more or | concluded as played in the south in bygone days, it was then up to some anti- constitutional amendment which js to be submitted on/|land’s footsteps and sow the acreage ; who | June 27, and as to the method of voting thereon. The all over again with bigger and bet-| William M. Butler as Butler allows allot will contain a statement of the subject matter to ter seeds, whercafter the crop pro- any of his lieutenants to Kansas City—One can hear any-{has helped them with thing here. The trouble is a fellow{Lowden has helped them in their} has a heck of a time knowing who efforts to work out ameliorations tured If it weren't for fear of being: . called before the Senate campaign! your corre-jmittee on agriculture, some | Congressman Gilbert N. Haugen of |of these weird convention-eve re-/Iowa is chairman, are photograpns | general | e _ ett rking for Hoover, paid to; Republican nomination than many | any negro leader on his southern | writers profess to believe and the; In an election; pre-convention period brought a just pin; recrudescence of the ' WASHINGTON LETTER Jden as a farmer himself, with their linterests at heart. While Da legislation, yby. themselves.” o of which jof Dawes and Coolidge. The pho- office during the year believe that the halo is just where it belongs. Dawes has a better chance of Dawes talk In the office of the House com-! i He might be able to dig up, with- | tographer rather cunningly fash-' out much trouble, a story to the/|ioned a halo around the Dawes head, Herbert {a fact remarked by all observant: Hoover didn’t bid high enough forj visitors. Most of the farm reliefers | Republican delegates in the bert who troop through the committee | the largest sum Rush Holland, the for-| i Political implications of farm relief especially of the equalization type, are enormous. Naturally, the midwestern mem- bers of Congress who have fought so had for the McNary-Haugen bill realize its probable effect if it be- comes a law and privately admit the likelihood that it would bring about serious political realignments. But they can’t see why, if the people must pay high prices for manufac- products protected by the tariff, the system shouldn’t work in one way or another for the farmers as well. | jamong politiciins which your cor-| Dearest Mom: mer. By all the rules of smart politics' respondent first noted last sum-/ I know I am a trial to you, at times, and possibly, as you suggest, ! “The east isn’t sore at Dawes,”|I am sometimes more than my hus- Hoover worker to follow in Hol- explains a Massachusetts politician|band bargained for when he 80 it. be voted on, followed by the question “Shall said con-|duced would turn out to be one of |“They know he would be satisfac- While time has made necessary additions, in general | stitutional amendment be approved?” | It appears that some voters have the impression that | the amendment which they are expected to approve or| stitution, This is a mistake. - The prohibition clause i but a part of the origin§l constitu- When the state constitution was adopted there| the propriety of prohibiting the manufacture and s Some persons who approved the main body tem should be retained, while others wished for out- right prohibition. In order that there might be a fair expression at the polls it was arranged that voters, might vote for or against the adoption of the constitu- ‘ion clause and, separately, for In cash case the ma jority vote was in the affirmative, and the constitution | was adopted and as an integral part of it, and not as an this fact is doubtless responsible for whatever confusion on the subject now exists. Advocates and opponents of the measure now to be The amendment which is now proposed is to repeal that section of the state constitu- tion which prohibits the manufacture and sale of in- toxicating beverages. To vote “yes” is to vote wet. HOOVER THE POLITICIAN (New Fork Times) The so-called “allies” at Kansas City have no lack of sources of pain, but their most acute pang seems to covery that Secretary Hoover is now One of the stock objections to him has mself has never been a politician, and Imagine, then, the astonishment and horror of politicians like Senator Watson of Indiana and Mrs. McCormick— r of Mi f Illinois, to find that Mr. Hoover is sitting down with the politicians and beat- ing them at their own game. Why, the supposed inno- cent Secretary of Commerce has now got a high-pow- ered political machine, He is easily able to raise money He has had working for him, playing polit een that he two or three of the most experienced, adroit and, to take the word of their enemies, unscrupulous politi- Senator Borah, who is now said to be in agreement with the Secretary, and to be ready to advocate his overcome the simple and straightforward “Jim” Wat- son li a summer cloud without filling his ingenuous soul with grief? It is true that Mr. Hoover had no special training as politician. Yet it may be that his experience has at some things can be done as easily as 9 in a‘political battle at all he would have to use political weapons, P: ly he may have smiled to himself at the notion that politics is a complex and esoteric art which no amateur, until after he has had can master. Secretary Hoover has had the for eight or nine years to observe the American politicians, and perhaps he has that there is nothing so very wonderful about hem. He may even have dipped into Burke, and read tl insubstantial commodity in many | that politicians. as a rule do not even know their own the noonday sun is cannot |is no good reason for » If ich are essential to our | instruction in 8 |tician, but he so, Mr. Hoover has been giving them a little He has not been a professional poli- has been a great efficiency man, And in this business of going after a Presidential nomination shown the old-stagers that there are rapid and jective business wa: percsening the object which into their pi ophy. But simply be- cause he is illustrating for them the policy of Thorough them to ask fo: sympathy be- cause they feel that they have been betrayed by one be a tenderfoot, but who they found two guns and knows the values of all the cards. anti-Hoover delegates, assuming that Hoover didn’t meet the raise. In any event, the seeds would be gone for good. But this is a highly moral age and no one would ever suppose that such undercover tactics were being employed today—exccpt politicians d cynical newspapermen. And if y such shocking story is being i culated here it will no doubt be di event, please remember that you can’t prove anything by me. ee. “The leaders of the farmer organ- izations are for Dawes,” says a ader in the “farm revo!..” “They know what he has done in Washing- ton to help the MeNary-Haugen bill through Congress. They konw that if it hadn't been for him the Senate} aa have passed it last year at all. ‘ “But when you get out in the tall grass you find that the farmers themselves are overwhelmingly for Lowden. They don’t know so much about Dawes and they regard Low- roved by the balloting. In any} tory to their interests except per- ‘haps on farm relief and they sup- | pose he woul” work out something on that, if he were president, that. wouldn’t make anybody sore.” oe 8 Somehow the real crux of this farm relief question is kept care- fully concealed. The principal reason for opposition to material aid for the farmer is that the Amer- ican people must pay more for food ;a8 soon as the farmer can get high- er prices. Farm prices are now kept down by overproduction: and economic laws. Efficiency and its machinery have increased farm pro- duction faster than consumption and, unlike industry, the farmer has jbeen unable to organize to beat the law of supply and demand. When and if the farmer gets the higher prices he wants by virtue of legislative action, a fearful roar is ex, to arise in the cities. | Politicians will be able to take ad- vantage of the dissatisfaction and a reaction against the party in {Power is fairly certain. Thus the Pa who is perhaps as close to Chairman | blithely escorted me to the althr. But I’m about to reform. Perhaps, after all, I have been riding for a fall, and deserved the slightly scrambled face I now exhibit. As I told you, Cousin Julia came in on Alan and me just after our big scene, when we had all but hurled the crockery at each other. Alan was so furious with me, and with Pede, and’ with life generally that I think he would have ducked, had it been anyone but Julia. She is a woman of poise, for she came into our troubled midst as though she were ente: a calm retreat, and the way she poured oil on the troubled waters was nobody’s business. Alan and I were able to say quite rationally to her what we never could say to each other. In my brief but brilliant career as a wife, I have learned that the hardest person to talk reasonably to is my own husband. I can wheedle him, I can scold him, I can jolly him and kid him, but when it comes to talking sense to him, at a time when a little common sense is |, he never will listen. We seem always to lose our temp- ers or become personal when we try about Dawes and they regard Low-|power is fairly certain. ‘Thus thej ers or become personal when we try | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | Ey AWARE WHO EGAD SIR, BECAUSE I HAVE LEPT MY PRESS CREDENTIALS BACK IN “THE HoTEL, Do I UNDERSTAND “THAT You ARE DENYING ME “THE ENTRANCE-To “THIS CONVENTION HALL 2 . ~uMY MAN, DO YoLs REALIZE “THAT MILLIONS OF NEWSPAPER READERS EAGERLY AWAIT MY GRAPHIC STORY OF THIS GREAT POLITICAL MEETING?.h POWDER, BEFORE I ‘“ INDEED SIR, ~~ ARE You WELL, You AIN'T LINCOLN, ~~BECAUSE I KNOW His FACE ON “TH” PENNIES! wee WHAT DOU THINK THEY'VE GoT ME ON “THis GATE FoR, ~~"To FLAG PICNIC “TRAINS 2 mae Now G'WAN AN” “MuMB “TH LAW THE FRAMEWORK OF THE BODY into a shapeless mass very much as a tent falls down when the poles which support it are removed. During infancy and childhood the bones are flexible and easily bent. As a child becomes older, the carti- lage out of which the bones are first formed hecomes filled with a lime substance and thereby becomes hard and brittle. After this hard- ening has occurred, it is exceedingly difficult to change the shape of the bones without breaking them. For this reason, babies and children of- ten sustain falls without serious in- jury which would completely disable an adult. The positions of the body are con- jtrolled by the muscles which move |the bones. It has been found that |many children develop slight curva- jture of the spine from carrying | their books habitually with the same arm, or from sitting at desks that are either too high or too low. The clothing of children may likewise in- terfere with the proper development of the bones This is sometimes caused by tight belts, tight hats, and tight shoes. We all remember seeing pictures of Chinese women who had their feet bound as babies. Special carc should be taken that children form the habit of carrying their bodies crect while the bones are hardening. The shape of these bones may be altered to some ex- oe until about the age of twenty- ive. + When a bone is broken, the brok- en ends are soon covered with a jelly-like cement. In a few days this begins to harden, and it is very important that the broken bone be held in its correct position until this hardening process has been completed. A physician should be called to set the broken bone. If it is necessary to move the individual before the physician arrives, a pil- low or blanket should be tied around the limb, and then boards or canes tied around the outside to keep it straight. If this is not done, there is danger of he powerful muscles pulling the two ends of the bone past each other, ripping through the Muscles, blood vessels and nerves ‘which surround it, and making a |very. serious, complicated fracture i Which is difficult to heal. | When the bones slip out of their ; Sockets we have a dislocation. ;Some people, these joint sockets are | Very shallow, and the bones may be ‘dislocated without breaking the liga- iments. With most people, some of |the ligaments are torn at the time of dislocation, inducing a very pain- ful point. A dislocated bone must be put back into its place and kept there until the ligaments are firmly reestablished. In some joints, such jas the finger, it is possible for the average person to stretch the joint and allow it to slip back into its The main difference in the ap- pearance of people is produced by the shape of their bodily framework. If the bones were removed from a person’s body, the flesh would fall In! proper place, but usually a physician should set the more important joints. In sprains, some of the ligaments or fibers are broken or torn loose. Both dislocated and sprained joints ————— 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. jshould be bathed in either hot or jcold water or, better still, in hot ana cold water alternately. This keeps down the swelling and reduces the ain. be A dislocated or sprained joint should not be kept entirely at rest. Lightly exercising it, even though painful, keeps up a good circulation jthrough the part, and this carries away the congested blood and dead tissue, hastening the healing pro- cess. Once a dislocation has taken place, it is very easy for that joint to slip out of its normal position again. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: H. V. writes: “I have friend who, three years ago, was in a sanitarium for tubertulosis. She has been home for three years and is a frequent visitor in my home. She has a habit of kissing my chil- dren. She claims she is cured, but do you think there is danger to the children or to myself in having this lady visit us?” Answer: Authorities now claim that only one out of one hundred is susceptible to tuberculosis through kissing. As ten out of every hun- dred deaths are from tuberculosis, it is apparent that there is some other more important cause. Keep your children strong and healthy by proper care, and they need not fear infection from any source. | Question: Mrs. D. H. J. asks: ;“Are_ onions, kidneys, - and liver [harmful foods? If not, what is the particular usefulness of eAch?” Answer: The onions are tqo gassy, and kidneys and liver have their best use while in the living {body of the animal. Question: Constant Reader asks: “What causes a young man to take cold so easily, and to be troubled with boils? Tonsils and adenoids re- moved a year ago. Has good appe- tite, sleeps well, but does not gain weight and always has a pale, sal- low color. If this means a rundown condition, what tonic would be ad- visable?” Answer: Do not depend upon the removal of tonsils and adenoids to cure boils. The toxic cause of the boils and the enlarged tonsils is the same. The sallow color will Pear as soon as the blood stream is thoroughly cleaned of waste matter. A bodily house-cleaning is what this young man needs, and not a “tonic”. I will be glad to send an article called “A Cleaning Diet” if you will oe a self-addressed, stamped en- velop. CSESEAs aS eRe na LOE Seat SEES to be reasonable. Then we have a violent quarrel. After the quarrel, we always have a reconciliation, but it is an-emotional one rather than an intellectual one. And the real issue that caused our quarrel is never settled, and hangs there, dang- ling before our eyes, and furnishes oi for another quarrel before long. Julia took no sides and acted the role of the impartial and impas- sioned judge, who rendered no de- cision, just left it up to the contest- ing parties. But I felt just as Alan said he felt—like a cheap ham actor before the evening was over. Julia agreed with you, that I have too much energy, and too little to do. ‘She said it would be better for me to have a job that gave me some outlet for my activities, if I couldn’t adjust my life without one. But she also agreed with you, that since I had the time and the oppor- tunity to develop myself and sup- plement my education here, it was too bad not to improve my oppor- tunities, and be more myself, to help me work out a scheme where I cém- bine work and play and become one of these all-around persons. So mark out, I may be a knock-out yet or the show fails, or something hap- pens—and the income is indeed slim. * Then there are those thousands who make but medium salaries when they do get work. Often they are on a payroll but twenty weeks or so out of the year. They have to save! They have to learn the value of money. No profession teaches sterner les- sons and, hence, none is quite so charitable. Few indeed are the per- formers who escape being called upon many times a year to contrib- ute to comrades who have come upon ae days. roadway is often lined with “have beens,” quite willing to ac- cept a dime for a cup of coffee. They belong to a never-say-die bri- gade which, in the face of dire neces- sity, will tell of fat engagements that wait just around the corner; will lie like gentlemen and casually comment on a visit to David Belasco that is to be made on the morrow. All their bright prospects are built upon the tomorrows which never come. It is slight wonder, then, that faced daily with such pictures, the sensible folks of the theater store away their dollars. . Sighted about town—those grand Loads of love, MARY: NEXT: A “Model” Wife. f IN NEW YORK | _ OO New York, June 13.—Chorus men are to wear whiskers in next year’s musical shows, according to th comes direct from Paris where this summer's gentlemen of the ensemble have been growing their own. rs The demand for “he-men” types has been steadily growing.’ Only a brawny athlete could engage some of the chorys business de- manded by last seasons’ shows. E.Jing. .. new stockings the girlies are wear- The color is named ‘grege.” ..... It’s somewhere be- tween beige and gray. ..... And combines the Dest features of each. aoe Also those lavender hose which, hey tell me, will be what’s-what this summer. me Sort of .a mauve shade. ..... And the straw hat bands are appearing in is the Broadway gossips. The fashion moneeniste designs. ..... So GILBERT SWAN. BARBS | in| @—————_____6 Might as well abandon the safe musical Og and sane Fourth idea. Firecrackers feats a set of whiskers and the|p legislated o ut there seems to as chorus man will finally succeed in| abolishing the honking PAB § of ee living down an ancient reputation for effeminacy. * . A savings bank in the Broadway Has belt advertise that more than 1000 actors and actresses have healthy, denosit There are, generally speaking, theater: one pictures them as profli- gate rs who never have an’ other endows them wi money; fabulous salaries which they are| into obscurity, why d totally unable to squander’ because of its size. Both slight basis of truth. The average actor is a bit careless with his means and a few performers enjoy a very| right, after all. fat income. But the great rank and fe = surely is badly r theater folk have learned by bi ex; e the moral of “the rainy day.” Savi than sign o! stage world, Evén the mightiest frequent as the fat seasons in the [sae fallen and continue to fall. It is not uncommon for an entire sea-| Miss Zona Gale, was ‘son to find a very important per-| L. B: , Portage former without pny to work, a eg tind Hany tactores; io The right show doesn't come slong, | bride two | have legends concerning the people of the | has a few pennies is more | sists ii thrift; it is an utter ie eee necessity. ‘The lean seasons are as| (Copyright, Miss Earhart has earned the nick- name, ig Girl Lindy.” Great for some news] to a prize for “the girl é vine ial There’s a rumor that China is to Brno) ae that Cheng Tso-lin . ives Chinaman’s chgnee. i cians If Lindbergh really, warts to sink * to break into the “Letters ee i have a| Editor” columns? eee Wilbur Glenn aielivee must be and if the world really isn’t "atk Sometimes a politician who per- on the fence gets 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) AUTHOR ‘WEDDED Portage, Wis., June 18.—(AP)— married to W. quiet ceremony at the home 's father today. gs ry ie