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cae eee ee rere TAIN SG oheHEX Ie agent 1? Skee KV Ey ey ere PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An ladependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) in biighed by the Bismerck Tribune C mpany, Ris- marek, N. D, and entered at the postoffice at Bie- matck as second class mall matt Ceorge D. Mann ...+......-+-President and Publisher LISTE setad DEA II cl hehehe tar Sian Subseription Rates Payable ta Advance Daily by carrier, per yoar ... 83, Dally by mail, per year, (ia Bismarck) Daily by mall, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ...... Daily by mail, vutside of North Dakota . — ‘Weekly by mall, t1 Weekly by mail state, per year ... 2 ata! Weekly by mail, Outside of reo years for . - = Member of Tho Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the tse for republication of all news ulspatches credited to {t or not otherwise credited in thin newspaper, and alno tho local news of spontancous origin published herein, All rights of republ jon of all other mat- tor herain are also reserved. Forelgn Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE iil tans BW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bile. cHickao DETPOIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City. State and County , SENATOR MOS! sr Senator Moses alclivercd a great speech to the Na tional Republican convention yesterday, In it he voiced the Republican faith that is in him. He may be pardoned for a bit of flamboyancy, for fever was there a speech on such an oceasion that was fhot the better for a little touch of lavender. Too many people today base their political partisan- ship upon their prejudices, It extends no further than that and usually is easily detected. Not so with Mr. Moses, He is firm in his Republican faith, He was firm indeed while the very walls upon which it is built rocked around him, Best of all ho said something. eularly effective when he reviewed the party achievements along all constructive lines. Republicans everywhere warmed to his eulogy, even those who would park the Republican past at the door of the Kansas City convention and seek more to shape the future than to live in memory. It is not necessary to agree with all Senator Moses’ pronouncements to recognize his address as a classic of that sort of partisan polities that is built upon prin- ciplo rather than upon prejudic From our blind partisan prejudices may the good Lord deliver us all. He was par THE FARMERS AT KANSAS © The farmers of the strongly Republican middle west tro making themselves heard most effectively at the Republican national convention at Kansas City. Their demonstrations may not be lightly set aside. There aro only a handful of them there comparatively ry . aponking, but without question they speak for other thousands less privileged in the matter of attendance upon the national convention of the party they have made and kept great. Yostorday’s incidents at the convention called forcibly to mind similar demonstrations localized in times past in North Dakota, The big parade may have dwindled from the pro- Jected 100,000, That was quite natural, There are could afford the time or money to participate in the demonstration at Kansas City. But most of them are rooting for it. Ridicule of the farmers’ voice of protest at Kansas City is beside the point. Where else should they voice their legitimate de mand for farm equality than at the national conven- tion? Should they sit suppinely by and lapse to silence upon the widely recognized issue of farm equality as they are interpreting it today? In the heat of the situation that now exists it is in- evitable that some things should be said and done that ate ineffective. There has been some of that, of course, But in the main the farmers’ demonstration is ground- ed in tho utmost sincerity, How effective it will be remains to be seen, Perhaps in its positive aspects it is just beginning, THE “OU ND SCRAMBLE Few things have ever fallen flatter in a North Da- kota stato campaign than the effort in this campaign to brand T. H. Thoresen and his running mates on the “Republican state ticket rsed by the Nonpartisan League as dangerous radic Time was when Nonpartisan League tickets might havo been thus effectively indicated, but it has passed fn this state, Thora is nd dangerous radical on the if of which “Mr. Thoresen is the head. It is made up of men of tproven ability who think straight and in terms of the freatest good for the greatest number of people in ‘North Dakota, It would be too much, of course, to expect to pass ‘any gampaign in this or any other state without the voicing of a good deal of demagoguery. Yet in this there was, tate money, “tleket he leads. ‘There is nothing more to say. There are, of course, questions of public polic: ; this state not yet settled, ‘occupy exactly the same position upon them, cannot be settled now. i | office between the “outs” and the “ins”. | On that basis Thoresen and the Republican League E candidates have much the best of the argument before the people. The people are seeing the issue rather clearly. They will determine it. And for the good of state it is greatly to be hoped that whatever their ict it will be decisive all down the line, for in our { state campaigns we should be concerned with greater + things than @ mere acramble for office between “outs” whi verd' end “ins”. , (‘THE WOMEN OF THE CIRCUS Bismarck Rotarians y he paid a tribute to the women of the circus. and especially its women, ‘women ho has to go on for her act. done in exquisite taste, ecales ae relatively few farmers in most of the middle west who |! campaign there is less of this in both factions than once Mr. Thoresen is saying in his speeches that if he is ected governor there will be no wild speculations with That one statement meets and answers every charge that is being brought against him and the| . But the dominant factions They So the atate campaign becomes a scramble for state esterday heard an enjoyable “The Soul of the Circus” by Al Priddy, director | the university. often we hear of the shortcomings of the circus|and her little car, christened “the Spirit of Florida”, @f the interesting people that make|carries her for long stretches, sometimes nearly 850 are among the finest women of the equestrienne in the abbreviated skirts often} In colle; just kissed a baby goodnight in are-among the finest needle women They make most of theif own costumes | before the State Press Association, she is an educator none know ance students. Her course ji © perch pole or climbs | public with caxy grace to the highest swinging bar is often more skilled at embroidering than many of the women who watch her act. Every feat of skill and strength in which circus women participate is a certificate of character. Only those who live clean can do these things. There is a real arixtocracy among the nomads of {the big tops and it is founded on worth-while things. It is always interesting to h of these things and Mr. Priddy tells a story that eannag but improve the public understanding of, and interest in, some of the most interesting people in the world, ANOTHER RUBBER DIBCOVERY Discoverics useful to industry often are made in strange ways. The process of vulcanizing rubber came because an experimenter hanpened to drop a bit or rubber on a hot stove, Now the War Department announces it has found a way to extend the normal life of rubber to approxi- mately 36 years. At present rubber deteriorates badly after a few years use, The discovery will be of great importance to industry. s how it happened to be made. The chemical ce was trying to find some way of pre- apid deterioration of the rubber parts of army | gas masks, In its experiments it not only solved its own problem @ makers and users of rubber every- where a great discovery, venting Sound Judgment: The faculty that sprout collection of blisters. from a Naughtiness is not more p is just less sneaking. alent than of yore. It} Editorial Comment | OUR PUSHING AMERICANS (Time) Among practicing British actresses F f | indignation was | intense, last week, at the presentation at court of | Monologuist. Ruth Draper. W. eoany the less an “actress,” they stormed, because during her Is she assumes essively all the roles of an en instead of confining herself to one s to speak to the Lord Chamberlain should let the bars down in ably some relation to Coolidge. Fiddlers in s smiled away « F They called that Edward of Wales attended a recital h Draper some 0 and later spoke fave her in his family cirel Therefore in July royal command, Monologuist Draper perfo Windsor Castle, The fact that 1 permitted to} be presented at court, was a well-weighed tribute to) the refined emotionalism and intellectual aristoer: of her art, Incidentally the king-emperor, who only the very slightest precinte the portability of Miss Ruth Draper, who bring an entire play into Windsor Castle at the Re Scottish estate at Balmoral as easily as a music could enter with a flute, MORE TROUBLE IN O10. te for music, cannot but ap- |; CHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . i to papenn Ste BERNER THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1928 [ All the Air’s a Stage! this year by the dates for the p dential nomina- | (New York Times) going to be one of the warmest spots in these | this summer and fall. Aside from the} that stirred such passions publican Buckeye brethren, tw« chosen. ‘The Hon. keynoting im him, couldn’t be elected a de! large, wants { ‘eed himself in the Senat time ago he “filed” his nomination papers for t atorial primary in August. The Hon, Carmi A, Th son, head and front of the Hoover-stoppers in th is determined to to the late Senator Willis’s term, which expires if It is supposed that Chief Justice Marshall of Ohio i: United recent even he $ Supre tourt has the same ambition. Wh ld have thought that was so much n hief in Representative Theodo: é. Burton's bo: as to lead him, an old friend of y to renew the | with Carmi, whose name recalls the father of the! gentleman “who troubled Israel". It is Mr. rho who is now troubling Israel. Mark his sinister cours He talks with Mr, Coolidge for half an hour, goes and talks with Mr. Hoover. Then he be- fore a wicked world the news that he is going to be al candidate for Mr, Willis's shoes, Was there not wrath and horror enough in Republican Ohio without this new, dos In affairs national and international, both | houses of Congr in many ways for many years,! Mr. Burton has shown a ripe and various ability and| oftener an admirable independence. | These are not qualities that qualify him, apart from} ny personal reasons, in the large minds of the Ohio A i} not have been pre- lecent re ‘Thompson's lacerated m again proclaiming: dis high op noof Mr. Hoover? Republican Ohio needs peace more than Sheot needs water, Curiously enough, Mr. Burton speaks of “the promotion of peace” ns one of his mo: tives for wishing to go to the nate, Pei prond; but for the next few months in Ohio, des vindictive fighting. From Pioneer to Procte Conneaut to Cl » from Fort Recovery to Ming jtion, north, east, middle, south, west, the 1: flyin’ through the air, You can tell an Ohio Democrat by his grin. no he » from RUTH BRYAN OWEN CAMPAIGNS (Christian Science Moni Down in the fourth congressional distric: A woman is campaigning for election, Her procedul jis unique in the history of the state and is noteworthy in many ways. In the first place she never mentions her opponent from the platform and she does not stress the fact that she is a woman secking an office her fore held only by men, Also she refuses to enpitnli one of the most widely known names in the Am: political world. She is Mrs, Ruth Owen, daughter the late William Jennings Bryan, Ruth Bryan Owen is something new in politicians in Florida, Refusing to capitalize the reputation of a distinguished parent, Mra, Owen rarely refers to her father, the late William Jennings Bryan, in conver- sation’ with voters or from the platform. | She has no manager, preferring to map out her own f paign, relying only on a group of advise munity she visits, and on her own i nt no one to vote for me becaus she says. should excite comment. I am running for congress because T love Florida and understand its needs, be- lieving I can present them favorably in congres But it is impossible for Ruth Bryan Owen to take away from her campaign a certain picturesque quality, for her whole career by virtue of her own individuality and background has been filled with color and romance, She spent three years as a nurse on active duty in the near east during the World war. Personal friend of such charactors as General Allenby and Thomas E. Lawrence, “uncrowned king” of Arabia, she gained those three years a vision of objectives conceived and executed in heroic terms, while her experiences in hos- pitala and army cSimps lighted in her a zeal to end wars forever. “As the wife of an army officer and member of the Women’s Overseas Service League I recognize the need of adequate national defe "says Mrs. Owen to leg- jonnaires, “but I feel that ultimately a saner interna- tional understanding will make arbitration the logical development of the future.” At 20 Ruth Bryan had a play performed on the pro- fessional stage. A few years after leaving the Uni- versity of Nebraska she was an extension lecturer for of Flori as a speaker Tama womar wi Every summer for many years she has been a Chau- tauqua lecturer, traveling in every state of the union. Once for 18 weeks she did one night stands, driving herself between towns by day. She knows how to work, miles a day. She thinks nothing of rising at 4 o'clock in the morning, driving 100 miles, apeaking and start- again for an cppolaamant in the evening. she held an intercollegiate record for the Perper y jump, was an athlete of unusual ability and t de hies for horsemanship, polo and In college towns like Deland and Winter Park, or public speaking at jsop to t Smith, mn erate and | & “The time is past when women in politics | tion. favorite son candidates are obviously ‘or the vice pre denials. second nomination problems fort bly. governed for ly to its man. In! ty of doubt- sectional | 1928 the: ful stat problen The face the d rm states along with their worries about eatrying New York and the east against Governor , on on the other whether to make agricultural states by a running an The Democr and, must. ¢ 1 bid to the finding for Smith} Mi among them or wheth jof below the Mason-Dixon line in an! attempt to keep the dry south happy. At this writing the strongest vice residential candidates pr Asi edly has the edge. He is a Cath- hia supporters eve his pn would spl the Irish which Smith ald get the reat bulk: in Nov The Fish boos their vole of Harlem, whie! fore been controlled by; This, they say, would give the publicana. New York state, without which Smith can’t win, Massachusetts — presumably support. Governor Alvin. 'T but there is as yet no disposition | be to regard Massachusetts as a seri+ ously doubtful state and Fuller is. in tis .|{ blossomed out 2s a presidential eat didate, of course, but it was always understood that he would gracefully accept what he could get. Se will And, of course, some of the| Senator Walter E. Edge. first | waned somewhat when Edge failed | candi-| to produce a solid New Jersey dele- ency, for all! gation for Hoover, but Edge isn’t be counted out of the picture | presents | entirely. s. It is; Coolidge delegates were pro-Hoover. sectional | There itions and usually goes to|and hardly any Democrats in Penn- sylvania, the party has no dispo- sition to do any shopping there. Virginia jenough, are proposing C. Bascom Slemp, the expert on patronage and negro delegates, about time a southetn man was put Perhaps the honor and ly that this co-daiddy of the MeNary- hardly likely to arouse any enthu- | Haugen bill w he placed on the; WASHINGTON LETTER DNEY DUTCHER — J siasm. ‘The principal other New| Service Writer 'England candidate 1s Senator | - June 14. What George Higgins Moses of New| p ates for | both; Hampshire. Moses would not; parti spurn the nomination, ‘ut it. id} The army of second place aspir-; doubtful whether New Hampshire | ants has been énormously swelled!has enough electoral votes to at- aucity of candi-| tract it. New Jersey once had hopes for; These The several New Jersey being no farm revolters Republicans, strangely They contend it’s the ticket. As far as Slemp is concerned, the idea is rather humor- ous. Gradually we get into the west omitting mention of many cand dates for lack of space, Indiana, nois and Ohio appear about out the race, though Senator Sim- of Ohio’ doubtless has s A desire to placate anti-Hoover element would be re|the only excuse for giving a nomi- would not eoncede Hoov- ion, though the selec- pne in’ this section med rather logical, neh nost likely candidate enator Charli Senator the west * of Kansi nator Charles for the it, was thought mentioned lik Cur- Charlie $ Linza McNary uller, fof Oregon was one of the first to necondary ticket with Coolidge. But McNary’s chances fell in exactly the : ame pro- ortion as did Coolidge’s and he was lost in the shuffle as Hoover, an- other Pacific coast man, began to harvest his delegates. Dear Mom: It’s a real pleasure to be able to ages which temporarily festooned my visage have -been removed, and I am almost as good as new, get back to normal, sweet charity's sake. word, Cousin Julia has been giv- ing thought to my case. She in- troduced me to a friend of hers, a Miss Evans, who is very much dispensary here, As soon_as she saw me, she de- for it. stant. Attorney Gen nation to one of these states. The|the clothes, and she is assemblin, Bill Done and — Congress same goes for the rest of the mi Is to wear them. She sai Hamilton h, dr both of New|west farm belt, generally speak-|[ was just the type to wear some York. ing. Few agricultural candidates) real Patou sport Lees and coats Bo have raised their heads when the|that are warranted to fill every- Of those two Donovan undoubt- » presidency was mentioned be-| one ‘under 90 with envy. The show is to be show folk, Most of the other are at the top-notch of real societ Alan was quite impressed. part in the affair. 1. wondered if T were really going to lahors, have never mentioned husband. - Personally, T don’t quite \ A PickPocKkET, suH, LEARN “THE CULPRITS D, ~——* “THEN “THIS : Bo asl has led to an invitation from’ pub- it Mrs. Owen write a textbook on poblie “her teaching methods. \\f HAW MISTAH DoAH-MAN, Y COLONEL MASTERSON, DELEGATE FROM KAIASTUCKY, SUH f we LAST NIGHT IS el SUFFERED THE Loss OF MY BADGE AND “TICKET, THE EVIL WORK OF WILL ANSWER-To MY SHOOTING IRON fluc awe KINDLY ALLOW ME TO PROCEED To MY SEAT, NUMBAH 17,~SEécTion CALL AT MY HosTeELRY AND Soins) ME WITH A’ FROSTED GLASS: | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | um Co! we AND IF 1 IDENTITY, HE EVENING SuH, OF OLNMPUS ae A MINT OULEP, 7 — SUH !~ Cod WILL FIND You Your SEAT ! + KENTUCKY DID RIGHT BY MEc ONCE, wr 1 Won $21 ON A HORSE STEP RIGHT IN LONEL <TH’ USHE! . X It is quite necessary now that I because next week I am going on display---for 2 y to her interested in working for a babies’ cided that I must be one of the man- 'nequins at the fashion show that she is putting on to raise money One of the best shops is providing at the smart- est country club here, and we go on twice a day, just as if we were how he would feel a model, and get actual cash for my That is something I often have thought of trying to do, but it to the under- stand that attitude on the part of EGGS AND RQGS When the average person speaks of eating eggs he usually refers to heris’ eggs, but the ontnivorous hu- man appetite also delights in the eges of many other creatures, For example, the eggs of ducks, geese, turkeys, and many wikt birds such as gulls, guineas, and ploverta are considered great delicacies, Some | hotels specialize in ostrich eggs, but they are rather expensive since they are so valuable tor hatching pur- | poses. Terrapin eggs are considered a very attractive addition to the meat. Caviar is a very expensive dish prepared from the eggs of the sturgeon, and the eggs of other fish are usually kn@wn aa roe, and many varieties are appetizing. It is apparent that primitive peo- ple have always used eggs for food. These were obtained from robbing | the nests of birds and even reptiles. j Many centuries before the domesti- cation of the hen, which occurred in India about the 25th century before Christ, the natives of the jungles learned to catch the wild fowl and keep them in confinement so that their eggs could be gathered more conveniently, without bili § the gatherer to the possibility of beii a banquet himself for some wil animal. Eggs form a very valuable addi- tion to out diet since they contain one of the finest proteins that is ob- tainable. The whole egg contains about 12 1-2 per cent protein and 12 er cent fat, and is entirely free rom starch. It contains much min- eral matter in the form of phos- phorus, sodium, potash, lime and chlorine. American people understand the value of eggs in their diet, for they consume about $5,000,000,000 worth of eggs per year, each individual consuming on the average of sixteen dozen per year. Preserving eggs by drying is 8 very satisfactory method, since thirty-two eggs may be concentrated into a pound of this waterfree ma- terial. This is usually the type of egg which you eat in bakery cakes. They may also be preserved to some extent by closing the pores of the shell with an airtight material. The most common covering used is water glass or silicate of soda. Cold storage of eggs is an industry which has developed greatly within the last few years, and eggs pre- served by this method are in almost as good condition as when fresh. The ee ere a Sect of pre- serving their eggs by a pickling pro- cess which keeps them edible with- out cold storage for an “indefenite inform you that the manage and |, Te andl the inhabitants thereof are doing | Periods actually inapeov te ea with nwerws The unsightly band-| the passage of years. The eggs are immersed for two or three months in a thick infusion of tea leaves to which linie, salt and lye are added. drained and coated with a mixture of clay and rice husks, When these eggs are only moderately old, per- haps a year, the yolk is brownish green and of a soft almost pasty but I ame too much interested in this idea to cogitate much on it now. And’ Miss Evans has assured me she can keep me busy all sum- mer, doing various things that need to be done for the babies of slums. Cousin Julia is determined that I must leatn some language, prefer- ably French, and has found a French teacher for me—a'gentlewoman who has fallen from her high estate, it appears, but has never lost her 100 per cent Parisian accent. That part of my uplift, however, will not begin until the @shion show is over. Oh, yes, I forgot to state that I have had a telephone conversation with Pede, in which I told him that since he was such a bono of -con- Heh Y>| tention in our family that I thought and when I mentioned shale naliee le seemed very gind to have me take he had better pase quietly and pain- lessly out of my life. 2 Most politely, he said he quite understood how my husband must feel, and hoped he might have an opportunity to meet Alan some time, and to become a family friend. I’m sending you a little gift—a peace offering for having worried you. It’s w little choker of crystal, cut like the links of a chain. I hope you will like it—it looked like something for @ lady, that’s why NEXT: Mom approves. (Copyright 1988, NEA Service, Inc) fle lisa = eee [TIN NEW YORK | New York, June 14—Upon a rain- night, “Mac” his horse and his cab seem like drenched, mist-hut At the end of this time they are} be Joanaistency, and the white is a stiff jjelly of translucent amber. Eggs jaf fen yeara or more are considered very delightfully flavored. At this time the yolk has increased to such i Dr. MeCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. ja size by the absorption of water |that the entire shell content is a deep brown. The eggs are eaten raw {sometimes, accompanied by vinegar jeured ginger. While we often joke about Chinese eggs, there is no more reason they {should be objectionable because of the changes that have taken place in jthe egg meat than there is to the | transformation of milk into cheese. In fact, the Chinese preserved egg is a very mild product compared to some of the popular strong cheeses. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. J. H. writes: “Will you please advise me what to do and what causes my stomach to have a rough raw feeling that seems to extend up to my throat and even to the nasal passages? My throat looks rough ahd red, with a burn- ing sensation, and I have ulcers in my mouth. Am very nervous and cannot sleep after eating even light food such as toast and milk. Have as on my stomach and my heart eats hard and fast after eating.” Answer: Your trouble is at least gastritis and you possibly have the start of stomach or duodenal ulcers. The cause is over-acidity of the stomach which is created through dietetic indiscretions. Milk and toast are not particularly a light diet, but an exclusive milk diet should prove helpful in your case. Try taking four ounces of certified milk every hour for a few days, and then double the quantity used each time, so that you take eight ounces every hour from early in the morn- ing until you go to bed. If this does not relieve you, consult a good diagnostician and have a careful ex- amination’ made in which the X-ray is used to determine exactly your condition. Question: A. P. M. asks: “What are the non-mucus-forming foods which will cure ringing in the head?” Answer: Head noises ate usually caused by catarrh of the inner ear, and will es ton as soon as the excess catarrhal mucus is thoroughly drained out. The diet for such a condition should consist principally of small amounts of meat, fish, fowl, eggs, and non-starchy vegetables cooked and raw, and fruits. It is best to avoid all starches and sugars, as well as milk products. These may id to be mucus-forming if used in excess quantities, and the one who is trying to cure himself of eatarrh should avoid the carbohydrates and hydrocarbons as much as possible un- til the cure is effected. baby carriage. There's nothing strange about that. But upon the carriage hung a siggn which read, “Little Bobbie asks you to buy his daddy’s books.” Now I have heard as much gbout struggling authors, and all that, as the next fellow. But this unique method of getting sales seemed to me to merit attention, ‘| For ten cents, I learned, one could buy, “daddy’s book.” This turned out to be a pamphlet, cheaply rinted on cheap paper, and_en- | titled, “The Destruction of a Mod- ern Babylon.” It was written in pretty bad verse. And therein I read again that Manhattan is another Babylon, 3 Sodom and Gomorrah in one, doomed to inevitable destruction because of its wicked ways. The author trusted’ and prophesied that this destruction would come about by ‘means of an earthquake—al- though geo’:gists seem to differ on this point. rapes But observing the number of people who smiled upon the baby and dropped their dimes, I wondered if the poct was entirely right. 1 wondered if the young wife really believed he was right. The real kick came when I asked her just why she took this means of sale. “So that my husband will have more time for his writing,” she told me. “He hasn’t_ anyone to handle his works, so I attend to that. And since I have to take care of the bahy, I sell his poetry while wheeling baby out in the sun- shine, He’s working on a beautiful piece now that he calls ‘The Soul of the Artist’ and there’s another one rr at the Central Park roadway,|he calls ‘Necropolis’ that’s on the {fot ra eae ee hey aaight| And ee they say all the poet s os so much as catch your oe ut\are in Greenwich Vilage! s col of yom ‘UpO Hi Hershfield rainy night is like passing a spec- ele flower shop. wintow ‘and ter. placard, ich first intrigues you J thith ‘a night fs the ‘licker trom| overs” ape at the side of me on such ani the tiny oil the cab. The dle. tan it resembles a lone firefly mak- , YOUr!bombshells are released durin ‘Say it with “But the only lowers they showed were orchids at a dozen. So I only ' whispered,” observed Harry. ach GILBERT SWAN. Sheaves of grain will drop fro: the clouds when “Pharaoh's dream” which will climax fireworks display the July 4th celel ration in Bismarck,