The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 19, 1928, Page 4

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| PAGE FOUR. The Bismarck Tribune An ladependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismerck Tribune C mpany, Bis- marck, N. D., and enterea at the postoffice at Bis- marck as second class mail matter. Ceorge D. Mann ...... Daily by carrier, per yar . Daily by mail, per year, (ip » Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail, sutside of North Dal Weekly by mail, in state, per year ... ‘Weekly by mail, Weekly by mail year Member of The Associated Yress The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news uispatch: to it or not otherwise credited in this also the local news of spontaneous origin 9! herein. Ali rights of republication of al) other mat- ter herain are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bide. : DETPOIT Kresge Bide CHICAGO Tower Bldg. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) LANGER STROLLS IN MEMORY LANE William F. Langer is one of North Dakota's promi- nent lawyers. publican candidate for attorney general. Also he is one of the most able and forceful advocates of the issue of farm equality. ; Saturday night at Jamestown Mr. Langer took a stroll down Memory Lane. The result was impressive and amusing. He producea wii indorsement from George F. Shafer correctly calling him honest, fearless and truthful. once considered him a Sir Galahad come to the cru- saders in North Dakota politics. And if you have tears, prepare to shed them now. For Langer had upon his person and held in his Forum. All the endorsement and the eulogy was given, when Langer was a candidate for governor. are most valuable to this state. Forum ever gave him. litical expression in the political field then. today. fice Langer seeks Mr. Nestos is silent. engages in a frenzied paroxysm of tub thumping. “outs” and the “ins” fall out? TUB THUMPING AND THIMBLE RIGGING of the “outs” to succeed the “ins.” will be governed accordingly on primary election day. The Forum is missing a bet, however. Bankruptcy and loss of credit to the state? directed? walls and face the east. with their very best blows. Yet it cannot change the situation in this campaign. The battle of the “outs” to succeed the “ins” con- | tinues. Mr. Shafer fishes for place with worms from | Mr. Townley’s bait can. The Forum cuts bait. Mer- : wily goes the battle. > But the hustings smile at the thimble rigging and the tub thumping and the play of the marionettes. For to them it is what you would call old stuff. The people see the issue as it is, clearly one between the “outs” and the “ins.” WATCHFUL WAITING FOR FARM EQUALITY Senator Gerald P. Nye, home from the Kansas City convention, declares that the fight for farm equality ‘will go on. He is also somewhat skeptical as to wheth- ©. eg the Democrats at Houston will give the issue more + consideration than it received from the Republican convention last week. His impressions are valuable as those of a keen ob- Server and a militant partisan of the farm issue. He also thinks it is too early to talk of a third party until 4t has been determined whether there is a second party. . That is a pointed way of putting the case. Altogether too many of the forecasters are basing * their opinions upon the conclusion that at Houston the | ambattled farmers will be received with open arms and given everything they want. There is nothing in the Democratic party record te guarantee anything of the kind. The Democrats must / have issues, of course, but it is pretty well deter- the equalization fee was fought to iMiant of Demo- than +eoeePresident anc Puvlisber | In this campaign he is the League Re-| He exhibited documentary evidence that R. A. NestoS| ruin the long-suffering country’s best prospects in two hands sheaves of editorial eulogy from the Fargo Such two-fisted political fighting men as Mr. Langer The things Mr. Shafer and Mr. Nestos said about him were well deserved. By his outstanding record nd vigorous campaigning for those things he believed to be right he won and merited every eulogy The Mr. Langer has never changed. He was the s‘eunch friend of the farmer and his attempts to secure po- He is Yet Mr. Shafer no longer endorses him. Upon his virtues and eminent qualifications for the state of- And every time Langer’s name is mentioned The Fargo Ferum Isn't politics a great game, especially when the With a confidence born of desperation, the Fargo Forum continues valiantly to assert that there are issues in the state campaign greater than the desire The Forum is, of course, entitled to its opinions. Yet the news from the hustings is that an increasing number of North Dakotans are weary of thimble rig- ging and tub thumping by the political conjurers and Master of all the thimble riggers and esteemed by Mr. Twichell and his friends as their very best tub thumper, The Forum is doing a pretty good job at both. Lightning struck the Bank of North Dakota building Saturday and dislodged a few bricks. Here is an opportunity for The Forum to thump the tub a resounding whack. Is this not an act of the Almighty, forecasting ruin, If not, against whom are such shafts of Jove " Sound the hewgag, beat the tom-tom, thrum the -tuzzy-muzzy—here’s good stuff gone utterly to waste. Let Ringmaster Twichell, boss of the Cass county elephant, crack the whip, let the wailers mount the Let them wail their best cadences upon the theme of ruin, bankruptcy and im-|>Y paired credit. Let them knock a great and good state ONE GOOD TURN DESERVES ANOTHER =, Mrs. C. K. Bryan, manager of the Bismarck Race) and Rodeo Association, has demonstrated that the | way to get a thing done is to do it yourself. | She decided Bismarck should have a track and fair grounds. So she went to work at the job. The | race track and fair grounds are to be opened tomorrow with @ race meet, the first ever held in Bismarck, with |58 horses from seven statcs entered and with added} | attractions. | | Bismarck doffs its hat to Mrs. Bryan and con- gratulates her on her enterprise. She has promoted, | financed and built a racing and fair plant that is a credit to this’city. It is a remarkable demonstration | of initiative and a fine thing for the capital city. Mrs. Bryan did not “call a meeting.” She did not | say “this town is a dead one and we ought to do thus| and so.” She resolved in her own mind that this is the best city of its size in North Dakota, that it was an ideal place for an annual race meeting, that it had all the| natural facilities and the added advantage of location. | So she invested largely of her own money and the} thing is done. | There is a lesson in her example for a lot of folks! in a lot of towns. It is impressive as an investment | in futures and every citizen here hopes it will be a splendid financial success. One of the best ways to assure that is to patronize |the splendid racing cards offered this weck. Mrs. Bryan has that coming. CHI CHANCE It begins to look as if China at last might be begin- g the long-awaited unification process. When the Manchurian war lord evacuated Peking, the last obstacle to complete control by the Nationali was removed. That party controls the country now. It has a tremendous opportunity. For the first time since the decay of the old empire, China has a prospect {of becoming a united nation. It will be a long, painful process, of course, and the {job won’t be accomplished in the next month or so. |Indeed, the various Nationalist leaders may get to fighting among themselves for control and thereby sts jdecades. But the opportunity for great things is there, | at any rate. It is up to the Nationalist leaders now. | DEPRIVATION’S LESSON | Nations, like individuals, are often benefited by being | deprived of things. It makes them develop resources | of their own. Potash salts are very essential to agriculture and | industry. The United States always used to import | most of its supply from Germany. But when the World| j War came along this source was shut off, and some new | source had to be found. It wasn’t found right away. But the Interior De- partment began a search that has lasted ever since; and now it announces the discovery of rich deposits in| Texas which _mey eventually make us independent of all other potash beds. Doubtless we wouldn’t have found these if it hadn’t been for war-time deprivation. When a man sits down to wait for his ship to come in, it usually turns out to be a receivership. | Editorial Comment | A DISTINGUISHED JUROR (Green Bay Press-Gazette) J. P Morgan, biggest banker in America, was sworn in the other day as member of a grand jury at Mineola, L. I. It was not a special grand jury either, but an ordinary one cailed in the usual way for routine work. Mr. Morgan had cut short a European trip in order to get back for the express purpose of sitting on that jury. Not that jury-sitting is his favorite sport. He refers yachting. But when the officials offered to Ret him off, he demurred, and said he was willing to serve, because such service was the duty of every citizen. If Morgan, with his range of interests and stress of work and personal importance, can do that, a lot of other able and busy people might find the time. He points the way to one of the things most needed in American courts tod: REPUBLICAN DISSENSIONS (New York Times) All the Kansas City dispatches agree that there never was such a band of angry losers as the Hoover “stoppers.” ven Republican correspondents and edi- tors are alarmed at the bad feeling and are calling upon the leaders of party factions to bury the hatchet —not, as at present, in each others skulls. Reasons for the left-over bitterness are as thick as blackber- ries. The upset was both unexpected and resounding. Great political reputations fell with a sudden crash. Old party strategists found themselves outgeneraled man whom they had contemptuously looked upon One unmistakable element of their been praised to the skies for the adroit he brought about the nomination of Secretary Hoove: without in the least seeming to force him on the Ni tional Convention, or speaking one word openly in favor, but the effect on the morale of his party was certainly not bracing or unifying. Never have so many delegi threatened to go away in their wrath and let the party shift for itself. President Butler of Columbia is the most outspoken prophet of disaster. It was after the Hoover nomina- tion had been assured that he declared that the Repub- licans are ‘ the worst defeat since 1852,” when the Whig Pa: on the eve of dissolution, carried only four States. Butler takes the threat of a farm revolt with the utmost seriousness. He has been made simply “aghast” by a intensity of the feeling among the farmers of the West. They say that they will not vote for Hoover at the polls, and President Butler admits that “I believe them.” Naturally, after that he views the prospect in November “with gravest prehensions.” This represents the mood of gloom At its blackest. But no one familiar with such displays of pessimism in previous Presidential elections imagines that this bitterness within the esd can last out the Presiden- tial campaign. The turbulent passions that have been aroused will somehow manage to wreak themselves upon the common political enemy. It will be as it was with the fierce factions in the Italian cities of the Middle Ages, which left off fighting each other when it was necessary to join against a formidable assailant outside the wal Senator Moses, in his remarks as Permanent Chairman of the National Con- vention yesterday, gave a hint of this process. He had the delegates cheering wildly as he poured cynical scorn, with omens and epithets, upon the mo- cratic Party. 'e Republicans, he said in effect, may have our troubles for the time being, but we are agreed that the Democrats are a pitiful lot of incompetents whom it will be the easiest thing in the world to lick to a frazzle. This is convention oratory of the old Tamhorent style, but it meat and drink to the wearied and despondent audience which Senator Moses addressed. If anger is a beiet mipdiness, litical syaer Js of tee . Uni all foregoing ex! ce 0: liticians is at fault, the anti-Hoover lions of today will soon be roaring as gently as sucking doves within loover . For their part, the Hoover mi are already talking moderation and a concilia- spirit. The machine with which they ran over they now propose to deck out with olive This is the customary line of the victors in hard party fight. They have at their disposal the Music to soothe the savage breasts of the defeated by offering them minor nominations and Pairansee, maney,, bitter-engyrs will Jae Saneee City submit part; iscipline or yiel the blandishments of party leaders, but their deter- is not so ice cold that it will not be melted are wise, will dissensions not | ‘ Allin the Day’s THE BISMARCK | Dear Mom: | Cousin Julia has just departed | and it was with a feeling of regret ARYE. I have an idea that I'll need her again soon. getting along too well. something ominous in our felicity. The fashion Show ended Satur- ey iis aR Teen a se glory and a dinner dance at Ito ‘i 3 ‘ country ‘club that would not have [tte Cait genres srumon™ select to take a back seat for any Bohem- ian revel I have ever attended. And the belles of the occasion were what you called the people” of the conservative ranks, but two chorus girls from the most popular musical comedy here. They simply mowed down all before them. Toward morning, I won a place in the spotlight, doing my black bottom dance. all wrong for me. seriously for dancing if I do for any- thing, for it is the only way where I have ever made first base. And right here and now, I may; as well confide to ygu, mother dear, | dise, not because it that I am going to get a job of some sort. I don’t care so much what it! or impressive than al is, just so it gives me something to | do that amuses me and keeps me out of mischief. | It’s perfectly silly to think that | a little apartment such as we have, with a good maid, requires any at- tention from me. I can’t bear to stay at home alone. Also, I hate the things women to amuse themselves during the day. I get so sick of bridge, lunches and parties where there are just women. After a week of women’s society, I’m just in the mood I was when I pleasant situation very neatly, and |o in t There’s absolutely no‘ reason why I shouldn't have something to do as N IN MY LUCK AT PLAYING POKER !~ ~we HMM ~~ SEE THIS OBSECT I ‘well as Alan. \an interest, he would have been oes in a padded cell long before | this. ey | I don’t have to care whether it | pays well or not, or whether it is vitally important. And I can walk He ie anything I don’t like—and will. Until I have something in mind, I shall not disturb Alan’s peace of pene ae will Ay kept uk ane ope you will sympathize wit! |my plan. Doubtless: T shall need your moral support when we really have the show-down. | Lots boa that I waved farewell to her. She! NEXT: The new job. managed to get me out of an un-| (Copyright 1928, NEA Service, Inc) ——_——_—___» Alan and I have been ,_IN NEW YORK | There is New York, June 19.—Ninety per cent of male visitors to Manhattan, if given their choice of something the ball game. Just as Broadway suggests to the world the radial center of the Amer- ican theater, just so—for some rea- son or other—the Yankee Stadium seems to be the goal of baseball fans. One may have watched the national pastime from every point of vantage, from the sand lots of the home town to the contests. One may have the Giants or the Yankees perform on any one of the outside gees ;& glamour attaches to the exhibit j when staged in Mant:attan that can be found nowhere else. ; The Stadium is the fan's para- is any more “best I think uplift is I ought to go in jelaborate, comfortable, rk, Regendary in its way as Broadw: or Park Avenue or the Fifth Ave- nue shops. A ball game, bad, takes on a glitter, a excitement, a sort of trail to the visiting fan. Viewed thoomal, the cold, unil- lusioned eyes of the columnist, the games at Yankee Stadium still carry a certain amount of a!lure. It doesn’t. e And steps away runs the sluggish river. in amateur. inty in| flirted with Pede—just desperate for | Standing on your toes to shout, or ‘ 7 course, that inevitably brings |can lest moment as regards his own in oe aie ha trouble into the home. and the funny little river boats go reepit 5 Ifthe Pines oi the same palls GooD NS You EVINCED GREAT INTEREST HOLD IN MY FINGERS 2. tT THE BiG TOE BONE OF A VooDoo WITCH DocToR oF UMGABA, AFRICA !~<T CARRY tT AS A “TALISMAN Work : If he hati only me as{ ° watched poreteed dust over the fence and a few ee, upon you, you can meditate upon the huge signs that rise at every side, informing you of the virtues of toilet soaps, motor lubricant or breakfast food. Where an outfielder waits myth for something to happen, the blac! skeleton of the elevated rises and, now and then, the shouts of the crowd are magnified by the crunch- ing of the elevated train wheels as they come and go j You can watch the conductors and motormen leave their trains and run to the railing. You can see small boys and passengers do the same. know three train crews that possess binoculars so that, in the few moments between schedules, they can get a better HOW TO USE MELONS In the summer season it is a good plan to cut down on the heavy foods and use the more watery fruits and vegetables. These are best when used by themselves and not in com- bination witl. the hearty foods of high caloric value. lelons may be used freely dur- ing their season, if this rule is ob- served. Although classed as a veg- etable, they should be used as you would any of the acid fruits. All melons are of the gqurd family and contain about ninety per cent of wa- ter, the rest being composed of su- gar and the organic minerals and vitamins. The casaba, which matures in the late summer, is the melon which keeps the longest without spoiling. It can be kept for as long as two months after gathering. This mel- on is the largest, outside of the watermelon, often measuring seven or eight inches in diameter, and weighing seven pounds or more. The early meldns, generally classed as muskmelons, are very perishable and should only be used when ripe. If not properly matured they are tasteless, and if over-ri will cause severe digestive disturb. ances and poisoning. They must be handled very carefully to avoid bruising, and the housewife should use the greatest care in selecting those not already bruised, and with @ good odor. They are best chilled in a refri- gerator, but if cracked ice is relied a to cool them, it should not be vlaced inside of the open melon, but the melon should be packed in- side the cracked ice and opened and cleaned when ready to serve. This method will preserve the naturally delicate flavor, and not dilute the juice with ice water. No seasoning should be used, with the possible ex- ception of a little salt. If the mel- on is fit to eat, its flavor cannot be improved even by salt. If not prop- erly matured and ripened, it should not be used under any circum- stances. The Rocky Ford melon is one of the best varieties and one which can be depended upon to be of a super- ior flavor. However, market styles are constantly changing, as the crossing of varieties is very easy, and has worked many trans- formations from the original types. The watermelon is a native of Africa, so the craving of the colored people for this melon seems quite natural. The southern part of the United States raises by far the larg- peep at the tiny figures on the ground below. By this time, perhaps, you get my point. There is a certain pa- geantry, that typifies New York which adds a tovasco flavor to the routine of pitching, catching and running bases. Even the vendors {of vop, peanuts, and hot dogs seem to have a circus twang to their viase peddling of wares! ar Outside the grounds the players’ entrance is an interesting point to watch, before or after the game. Babe Ruth, by the way, never leaves the grounds by the regular exit. This would be the sheerest of follies. For he would never get to as » which Seer o curb, gua y @ special man, Were he to exit by any familiar ate the mob would be upon him. ey would have baseballs to au- tograph and cards to write upon. They would literally swamp him. Yet the crowd waits, not anv too patiently, for a glimpse of him— which it seldom gets. The fact is that the Babe escapes each cet by means of a secret by- say. le has a peephole through which he first peers to see whether anyone,is watching. When the road is clear he ducks out, makes a wild dash for his car and i: on his way to his Bronx dwelling before any- one knows what it’s all about. Thousands of small boys have turned detective to learn his se- cret, but he changes exits on them from time to time — and they’re never been able to find it yet. GIBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ee Sweden was the first country to recognize that a wife’s services in the e had a legal value. | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ne By Ahern| S EGAD SASON, I HAVE NoticeD NY “THAT Of YoUR FREQUENT TRIPS “To MY ROOM LAST NIGHT, WITH N GINGER ALE AND CRACKED Ice, 1% MISTAH MASOR, AH CRAVES LUCK, BUT AH AW COMBUSTIBLE ABOUT “ToTIA” A SKELEKON Bone NW MAH POCKETS | me No SAH, I Don't WANT, No HATED Pockets ~~ MAN, You IS GOT A SPook Fo" A BUDDY, ~~ aw AWM “TELLIN® ALL Sfus RIGHT. Joo GHo est crop for commercial purposes. All animals will eat the water- melon at every opportunity, and even the carnivorous animals, such as the lion and the dog, will devour it with great relish Any of these melons can toe during thetr season, if one satisfied to make one variety. use one kind of breakfast or lunch, eating as much as desired. If any other food is used at the same time, the notice- able result will be excess quantities of stomach and intestinal gas. While this does not create a po! con- dition, yet the pressure af excess gas should be avoided. This is often the cause of serious congestion of the abdominal organs. Get the good of this succulent vegetable and avoid any possible harm by using it by its#if. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: O. H. writes: “I can’t digest my food and I feel nauseated all the time. The doctor said it was my gall-bladder and gave me some medicine. I do all right as long as I take a dose before eating but feel I can’t take that the rest of my life. I always have been able to eat everything: Now when I have a bad spell I can’t eat anything for a few days.” Answer: It is because you have eaten “everything” that you are now not able to eat anything. Just ‘ive nature a chance by taking a fast and allowing the gall-bladder and liver to il A out and catch up with their work. If medicines re- lieve you, it is a sure thing that a fast will cure you. After that, regulate your diet scientifically, and stop eating “everything.” Gusstion: Mrs. J. P. J. writes: “T have had a mastoid operation which for several months relieved the pain, and terrible fullness and dizziness, but I am beginning to suffer from these same symptoms. The doctor says this trouble I now have is probably due to my teeth. 1 don’t think so, as it is exactly what I had before the you suggest any relief?” Answer: It is unwise for me tc make a guess about your trouble which has been guessed about: enough already. Have a good diag- nosis made and thus ascertain the real cause of your symptoms. If you are then not helped, write me the result of the diagnosis and I will advise you again, either through this column or directly by mail if you will enclose a self-ad- dressed, stamped, envelope. operation, an {BARBS | —_—_____.¢ And did you hear about the two Democrats who stopped off in Kan- sas City on their way to Houston and, seeing the Ho.ver banners all around, thought the town was en- tertaining a vention of vacuum cleaner agent: . cee But then some of the Republi- who go to Houston, if any, cal ho g probably will think there’s a sales; meeting of cough-drop people. Probably the International Union of Ladies’ Garment Workers wants | a five-day week because it takes them three days every week to find somthing more to leave out. A blurb on the jacket of a re- cent book calls it “a search for an! hat answer to_ the riddle of the uni- verse.” We were disappointed, though, as the book really doesn’t say a thing about national political conventions, $ os Four lions were offered for sale by a New York zoo the other day. There’s a chance to get even with your neighbor's chickens, . We eat a dozen barrels of air annually, writes a well known phy- sician in a current magazine. And some people store up their supply for four years. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) € as | At the Movies } CAPITOL THEATRE Pa] Chaplin in “The Missi Link” now showing at the Capit Theatre is one of the biggest laugh- ing. thrillers of the year! It is a riot!. A god old-fashioned slambang burlesque where trousers are lost, labels accidentally pasted on prominent portions of the anat- omy, paste buckets and brushes ap- plied ad lib and stuffed club wield- ed with deadly effect to the humor- ous sensibilities of the audience. The picture has the distinction of being utterly devoid of any aa noth- Everything is Bach laugh iis pounded bam with the same Justy, réd- Plot? What does it matter when Syd Chaplin is busy every moment outdoing a simian clown\in monk- ey-business But te @- just jot give you ELTINGE THEATRE old friend, Adolphe Menjou, is back on the screen at the Eltinge theatre, for Wednesd Thurs- day, this time without his dress suit—although he contim to ex-. | hibit his suaveness in the (uniform of a French army officer seeing Algiers. ca “Captain Ferreol.” itisa oa Menjou appearing on es Cy PERU ELSEE ERE it Hen ail of fF ing the reputation of the married woman, nor injuring his fiancee, forms a thrilling climax to a well- played picture. PALACE-MANDAN Vaudeville is again featured at the Palace theatre, Mandan, on Wednesday. this week. The five acts will come well recommended for their entertainment qualities. The French Sisters open the bill with a variety offering called “Lit- tle Bits of This and That.” j. Willis and Whiting are two fast colored boy dancers, who have ap- peared in Mandan before, much to ithe delight and pleasure of Palace patrons. Fuller and Vance will entertain with comedy talk and song, and will win as “Candidates fo. Laugh.” Emma Raymond & Company close the bill with “Surprises,” an aero- tie offering staged in a novel manner. Bebe Daniels {s featured on the sereen in “The Fifty-Fifty Girl.” In the of Gottfried Kikul, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned, administratrix of the Bs- tate of Gottfried Kikul late of the City of Bismarck in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dako- ta, deceased, to the creditors of, and ing claims against sald jem with the necessaty vouchers, within six months after thé first publication of this notice, to administratelx at her restdenci Main in the City of Bismarck in said Burleigh County, or to the Judge of the Couns ty Court of Burleigh County, at his office in the Court House in the Cit: ot prearon, Burleigh County, Nort! cota. fou. are hereby further notified that Hon. I. C. Davies, J1 aes of the County Court within ‘and lor =the County of parce and State of North Dakot the 8th da; of January, by ie at the nour of 11 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the Court Rooms, in the Court House in the City of ‘Bismarck in said County and State, as the time and place fo1 ¢ all claims ood. Fepaiars presented and re 1y before: provided! Dated June 1ith, A. ? Hat, Anns 2D ot on the Ary tay ‘Io: Attorneys, Bismarck, N. D. TOONERVILLE TROLLEYS New ‘k—Streetcars, i i nt ““s <2

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