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PAGE FOUR. MONDAY, AUGUST 6, 1928 The Bismarck Tribune I An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) N | eon by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis. BUILDING PACE CONTINUES are D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis: 5 bui is Gasten ‘lous soul todtter, Pot The end of America’s building boom does not appear . Mann .... lent and Publisher |*t® be in sight. When building was resumed at an ac- 0] celerated rate with the end of the war, many thought int preter agi) Payable in Advance that as soon as the shortago caused by suspension of Dally by inail, tar year, tin Bismarck) ee ptegite Hebd Moe ci fas eae 2 the bot ae ' would drop out of the market. Nearly ten years have F Dati Gate snide Bissacck) us passed and still the construction goes on, : ] ‘Fils penceal et piotae oreeitce an iia ane Wore aut require, 6 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Living standards are rising, bringing a general de- : - : / almost unbelievable amount of en-| close application, such as fine needle i A ling very small type. Weekl: mail, in state, per year ..... - mand for finer houses and more modern store and of. j ergy. is estimated that about/ work or readi Weekly by mall fn gtate; Gree veaee 200°. fice buildings, The nation is not satisfied with the old one-fifth of our nervous energy is f Ltsl Eee outside of North Dakota, and unbeautiful. > . , readily understand that where there ve lember Audit” Bureau of Cireu Bismarck, in common with the nation, is maintain- = is a definite defect in the vision, this much. Not to pay your debts is dishonorable under the American code of ethics and not to grant an unfortunate debtor an extension of time in which to make settle- ment is no less dishonorable, 88 ee a3 33 te tem Ss 38 - ing a ~xpid pace in building construction this year. Its strain may be greatly increased. the Tribune. Member of The Associated Press high rate of construction activity during the first seven The introduction of scientitically|| ““Eaclose « stamped addressed Bi] The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the f indi s be y envelope for repiy. ‘ soe] months cf the year indicates that the volume for the to the life of the average person. use for republication o: news dispatches credited Ff 4 . to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and| Yea" will equal, if not surpass, both the large year of ‘ Man can now continue to enjoy life Fos also the local news of spontaneous origin’ published | 927 and te record year of 1986. \y et say poiditional | Yeats) Reading on trains while objects are herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- Throughout the state there are being erected thou-|' Reon Foner t le for the end. | being passed is enervating to. the fer_herein are also reserved.| sands of fine homes, many large store and office build- bs The enervation from eye strain is| eves, a5 is sitting too close to a mo- Foreign Representatives ings, great apartment buildings and numerous indus- << an important factor in causing | tion picture screen, . sense, that I discuss this wit Do not wear improperly fitted N G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY teat baildings, The Mk of public works and public ) é . Z every patient who comes to me in| glasses. It is a poor economy to ent cutcacn=™ YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg. utility contracts is keeping pace with the record year . my private practice, _No diagnosis | pay 15 to 25 cents for your glasses mou Tr Bld XK ea of 1926. of disease can be accurate if the|when they may ruin your vision, EE rege Bldg.) Here is the repst convineing proof of Bismarck’s pres- f physician’ does, not yar | bene aaa BG (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ent prosperity and belts of future prosperity. : = =A: . be ee through ere Be 7 et patient to fit, Only scientific examination whic There is-no pessimism in this state. x The eye is a marvelous organ and| can determine the correct glasses, Sir A, DESERVED SETBACK é P is necessarily very sensitive to con- —._ Geon FIRE HOUSE ETHICS 5 yey the delicate shadow impressions] QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS plan College professors, artists, statesmen, poets, doctors, ‘i a ES from the outside world to the optic] Question: Mrs. W. writes: “My nais: lawyers «nd virtually everybody else but successful] The firemen of a certain station in Worcester, Mass., %4 nerve so that these impulses may be] skin is slowly turning a dead white Th stock market players, movie stars and other easy money | 8T€ having a terrible time because one of their number . impressed upon the center of vision|in patches, I have doctored faith- impe 1 caekinas in Stree ed {broke off an engagement to marry a Worcester girl. f in the brain, fully, and used several medicines, cant People are extracting a grain of comfort out of the fi- Not that the firemen are prone to worry about af- > One who possesses perfect eye-| both internal and external, but to no sti} ancial statistics covering the latest “battle of the : : y ; sight is indeed fortunate, because] avail. I want to get at the cause of iar, tury.” They have long been wondering why pugilists | £4!"8 of the heart. They have, one may assume, the Begs such an individual will usually live| the trouble, but I am becoming dise of ce are paid so extravagantly. typical fire department airiness in that matter. But £ a longer, have better health and learn} couraged and am going to give up oe The Dempsey-Carpentier fight attracted 90,000 cash |the dilted young lady is revenging herself on her ex- A ‘ more through observation than one| unless you can help me urs er A . = with imperfect sight. Where there} Answer: A good fast for a week sweetheart, and doing it in a way to disturb all of his Y is a definite eye defect, it is a pos-]or ten days will stop the acidosis buddies as well. = = . 5 oe fe of mated wasted vi- ves i Bee ood Hale ae very night, during the small hours, she turns in a 'y and even functional or organic) the coloring matter in your skin, sihen tie anew es\aueat Geremartans eves slaw: diseases. These defects are _also| Then, living on a good diet will keep 7 ae tt with ‘ = -t 4 possible through a straining of the|you from having any more of these ber. Night after-night the engines go rolling out, S eyes from faulty light and bad read- | white spots form. Sometimes, if the sleepy firemen clinging on, on a futile errand. The Z Ss ~y |. | ing habits, even when there is no| spots are not too large, they can be calls can’t be traced and the young woman can’t be : mA ye se nied slg Feat err Mart iy age * ‘ optometrists of lay are| from the ultra-violet lig! ine 1e found; but every fireman in the place is convinced that hightly trained specialists who have|skin pigment will at least partially he knows what is wrong. : New York and New Jersey were| become educated through an inten-| return. It is a fiendish scheme. One can imagine that the ‘once »grand old cirrhosis tes,| Sive training, and they are better} Question: Mrs. J. D. writes: tiner customers and had a gate of $1,625,590. The Dempsey- eral) Firpo bout found as many willing to pay for the show ever but the cash returns dropped to $1,082,590. The first Dempsey-Tunney go found 130,000 people present and worl $2,000,000 turned in at the box office. The second en- _Bi gaccm nt of these two fighters was fought before 145,- tiful 000 people who paid $2,658,660 for the privilege. That seems to have been the high-water mark. The Tunney- and Heeney match was witnessed by only 43,191 fans and seal: the gross receipts were only $691,014.50. The pro- ‘ tl; n- able to examine the eyes and dis-| “Please advise if oatmeal as it comes the moter and his backers lost $150,000, Fe ee ardently praying for a reco Ssaras DUT reanactivG cAbniean | coves iorerrors of-eisoncctiantis ths |deacrthe package is bad for the di- fait "Thin would vem to indeate thatthe day of big money |=iaton Herein were oly 08 to 9 and] SIMS PPAR oe ion canoe eens mn Serres ee cee 8 Pe: arpeiciest:essentiallor becoming ia going dataligetunl ee less substantial] only be corrected through using the| and claims it is healthful.” fret: prize ring in the future may not make a million in a| The first essential for & increases ‘were those of ‘Tossa! right kind of glasses, but the ma-| "Answers The crushed oatmeal sold een single bout after taking off a year or two without doing | #8 42 allo : e rieti A | jority of cases can undoubtediy be| in package form is a good cereal to Bipourls sew, Hampshire, Pena-| benefited through developing. jrood | cue it ate de eet opel ibe casi ‘he Bie sylvania, Rhode Islan " . J 2 3 habits of reading and the add: sugar. Oatmeal should be cooked Editorial Co it thine wetaiaea Meee and| help of electrical treatments, for a long time by steaming, and mmen BY RODNEY DUTCHER but was still down |North Dakota.” eye exercises, j seasoning with only cream or butter. (NEA Service Writer) 8. pi is lowest of all I have prepared a series of oe Question: Mrs. K. L. writes: THE DOCTOR'S BILL Washington, August 6.—If the|with .9, but that’s three times the f ae SS ne ies ea ago I ioe small ake i i i muscles and improvin, e circula- ited (Nation's Business Magazine.) ratio of increase in deaths from alco- | number for 1920, IN NEW YORK PI ic mark on my breast treat holism in the first ears of pro-{ California, home of th 5 tion of the eye. If anyone desires} the electric needle. Now this piac: A doctor once was asked: “On what are your charges | hibition continues, al oholim wil be|8.7 yo 1910, only 1 i bts + a ————-==————===e@ i this article, he should send me is all healed up but stays tender and T a lick of work useful or otherwise. 2 tivel If there is a moral in this latest scrap it is that prices arct: should be brought down. If boxing is to become a pop- Jant ular spért, 5: should have popular prices. It is ridiculous elo: to pay an athlete a half 1aillion dollars for a half hour’s Ve work and to have another group of men take a corre- sponding profit for promotion. Se EAS eialiets sed?” the sole cause of death by 1970 and| worked itself back as far as 3.2 by| New York, Aug. 6—“What you| large self-addressed, stamped en-|sore. The doctor that treated it EXPERIENCE He answered: “There are no economics in a doctor’s|no American citizen Poa worry |1926, Indiana, with an excopHloenlly: writing fellows forget,” the tired] velope and I will be glad to mail him| says it is a keloid that caused the r fees. They are a mixture of factors, the gravity of | about any other ailment. In fa strict state enforcement act, went |Voice was saying, “Is that in this] this article without charge. trouble and wants to treat it with whit The world has ceased to laugh when Henry Ford the opergtion, the difficulty of the task, its success or | coholism will have killed us al J begging racket you fight the ele-| If you wish to preserve your eye- x-ray or radium. Another doctor done opens his mouth. It has forgotten his peace ship and | failure, the patient’s financial status—these and other Surprising? Well, let’s figure it|,’ Ke y’ ments every month of the year. It’s| sight, ee should avoid the glare of| told me the x-ray would only en- grip his brave pronouncement that “history is bunk.” The things play a part. out. cent more | one thing to tell how the old fellow | direct light into the eye, or a direct | large the keloid. What am I to do?” rece Reiitiiie wizard: is proof of ‘the truth of. bi d But if a doctor's fees are not based on sound eco-| The government has listed 900/than in 1920, Maine, where the na-|Who sits in the subway stairstmakes| reflection from shiny paper. The| Answer: Find a doctor who has ago. — Proo! ie truth of his words | nomics, there are tremendous economic factors in the deaths from alcoholism in 1920 and |tives show astonishing resistance to |$10 a day—or whatever it is. + And | best light comes over the left shoul-| the ultra-violct light apparatus and that if “you take all the experience and judgment of | relations of his profession to the community. 4109 in 1926. Population also in-|rubbing alcohol cocktails, less than|it’s another to think what he runs| der onto the paper. ;_| he will know how to Treat your ing. __™en over 50 out of the world there wouldn't be enough} | At a recent session of the Congress of “American | creased, so the number of alccholiam |doubled—id. for 1920 cand 25 tre | up against. It’s what we all run up|, Do not try to read in a flickering] keloid. These keloids should "not us, j left to run it.” Phy: ins and Surgeons it was declared that deaths | deaths per 100,000 population rose | 1926, against, and we don’t make any $10] light or in direct sunlight. The best| form from the use of the electric from heart disease cost the country $1,500,000,000 a only from 1 to 3.9, Maryland Way Up a day, either. artificial light is from indirect] spark if it is properly used. Some- tabl His public statement on the occasion of his 65th birth- year, and that the care of such cases cost another ‘ i “ tos , i 4 F a H > But the increase was one of 390| Maryland’s increa: stonis! I mean this—if I’m on my|sources or from powerful frosted] times, the further treatment with ing day anniversary might serve as the creed of American $100'000,b00, How the learned doctors reached these per cent and it will make our fig-| ing, ldap onary ppcte rene i cosner today and the weather's bi globes. Learn to stop your reading| the electric needle will assist in ree business, figures we do not know, but we accept them contentedly, uring much easier if we say there | figures were .7 in 1920 and 7.6 in|! get soaked in rain, If I sit on aj.as soon as your eyes feel tired. It] moving the keloid, but be sure and and “The real profits of this or any other successful com- | P&using only to note that that totals more than the | were four times as many deaths from) 1926, Massachusetts, with her 6.4| Wet, pavement or a snowy street or|is not good to continue reading a|find a competent physician who, is nigi . d pie ai wholesale value of electrical machinery made in 1925, | alcoholism in 1926 as in 1920. showed a 400 per cent increase in the ;8" icy sidewalk, I'm just adding up| book all night long simply because| well trained in electro-therapy, secti Pany are increased experience, better methods, more | according to the census of manufactures, If there are four times as many|six years after 1920. Michigan went | more troubles. Maybe I'll come out forg skilled workmen, more highly developed engineering| _ We pick out electrical machinery because Dr. Paul D.| alcoholism deaths in 1932 as in 1926,|from 1.5 to 4.8 and dry rural Minne-| without pneumonia and maybe I]... SOO tp, brains, ‘Those are the best profits we gained from the| White of the Massachusetts General hospital blames jtiat will be 16 per 100,000 population, |scta, from "Be 'ts a? Gate nea |wort, Ber at the end at the eo | time the people knew the truth about |have been held in esteem by every 15,000,000 Model T Fords—money is not the best the automobile and the telephone and like accessories of And if the ratio continues through | Reed’ Missouri made a grand leap|if I've stayed at my pencil peddling, | beggars. Visitors immediately no-|good American since this country es modern life for the increase in heart disease, and exon- | 1988 it will be 64. And so on—266 « I'll have gone through every kind of |tice their number and endless va-|was founded. Profit. ; ke Pa coffee and most athletics. So,|in 1944, 4096 in 1956, 16,385 in 1962, 1916, had the startling | weather a human being can stand. |riety, and talk about it. New York- How holding the 1 Many American business enterprises are living up to me newspaper tells us that we shall use (65,535 in 1968—and in another year |ratio of 24.6. But she was down to | And I'll have chopped my chances of |ers get used to them. They stumble lowever, holding these gentlemen that creed. They are making money, but their greatest | 111,000,000,000 cigarettes in 1928 as against 97,000,000,-lor two there'll be 100,000 deaths in 1920 and only up to 3.9 in|@ long life into ten parts. over old women and old men, young in esteem and following in their 000 in 1927, we breathe easier. from alcoholism per 100,000 popula-| 1926. Wet New Jersey went from, “What I mean is that ten years is women and young men... on street | footsteps are two different things. satisfaction is derived from the public service they H . 4 ri ar ion. Result: N lation. 4 . the limit in this racket. Then it’s heir i i . render and their achievements in engineering a&d pro- THE NATIONAL AND BTATE TICKET coupe re ls “renee pepe epee or tay Scag aang eh ee eS apo ie Peele operate ees eae aver ang pert sriayatoans duction, (People’s Opinion, [Valley City].) One is justified in assuming, of | This was the Righest for New York| don’t last more than that—and a lot | scores ‘e been found to .have|if adopted by the nation, would be a Henry Ford is one of innumerable Americans who be-| With the closing of the special League convention | course, that the ratio of increase will since registration began in 1910, ex-}0f them don’t last that long. ’ll healthy bank accounts and health: i lieve and prove by their own lives that a man’s best | held at Jamestown on Monday of this week the last of |not continue. The pre-war alcohol-|cept for 1913. Rhode Island rose|Probably last a little longer than| incomes when arrested poe haled int ee ee seething turmoil work may come after ‘he is fifty and even after he is| the state tickets have been brought out. At the June|ism death rate, running from 5.4 to|from 1.3 to 7.1 and Pennsylvania] most because I don’t take so many| court, the legend has spread that : 4 Primary the Republicans of the state nominated a full |5.8, may be as high as the prohibition | 1,2 to 5, chances.” Manhat “ | America’s greatest danger,” sixty, There arp many such _men who can work longer | ticket, part of them are of the League faith ant part of [tare mil can The fact that, generally speaking, sc ene garvattan boasts a “millionaire beg- | rather Hubert says, comes not from and accomplish more than the hustling youngsters of | thi I. V. A. faith. The Republicans of the state} Nevertheless, these figures on al-|the alcoholism death rate ii That, if it interests you, is “Bos- eee outside the country, but from within business. The Detroit manufacturer boasts that he will yoted their choice and they present them to the voters |coholism and cirrhosis of the liver| most rapidly in wet areas probably | ton Slim's” sermon for the day. Bos-| ‘There's the old fellow in Brook-| ut borders, ,People go about the 4 the t five years than he did the last for their approval at the November election. The Demo- recently published by Mr. Hoover’s| isn’t surprisin; ton Slim is subway beggar. He’s lyn for instance, “Peg-leg Tom,”| country offering cure-alls for our jo more in Dest Sve, Tears ten) he © last | crats of the state asserted themselves this year and they | Department of Commerce certainly Figures for cirrhosis of the liver|a beggar, he will tell you, by neces-|who keeps an automobile waiting | troubles. We need no such cure as twenty, and he probably will. have a full Democratic ticket in the field. The faction |do offer possibilities for analysis. |remained nearly stationary. The| sity rather than choice. He's a beg-|round the corner from his begging | they offer. What America needs to- ae seaeie preheat gat aa who were not ; Met as Gey a9 gals alike manne rae oad Flog increased ae but not a bum, tied one of ar post. He goes to work and leaves | day is to go back to the principles of satisfied wi e result o! e June Primary met at |have mn affected by the increase | 0; rom 7. 2, to . “| York’s vi army of rs. And/work in his car, is 103 TIME THE BEALER Jamestown on Monday of this week and they brought|in deaths from alcoholism. Few Por some reason or other, the Cal-}he’ll tell you, as quick as the next|to have $15,000 th ny bane ed | hist gree 02: men aha xeeneree at ‘i 4 cy tt as, . if jiladelphia many years ago to During the week of September 16 the national en-|out candidates to oppose the Governor, Secretary of |states haven't doubled their rate. |ifornia cate is highest: 11.8 in 1926,/fellow, that the city’s filled with] Boston Slim knows all about these. bi itution.” campment of the Grand Army of the Republic will be | Agriculture and Labor and Attorney General who were| It's rather surprising to find Wy-| as compared with 9.5 in 1920. Natu: fakers. », | But the point he in is that there eer chipe og the prin- + held in Denver, bringing together once again in happy |20minated at the June Primary. This paper is of the |oming leading all the rest, with 8.9 ally, the Department of Commerce] He'll tell you also that there’s|are beggars, like himself, who aver-| “°° pon] 0. ibe ¥ ny ‘d anion thy “boys blue.” Though bent with hese | Republican faith and at the November Primary we are |deaths per ‘100,000 from alcoholism | offers nothing to show that Cali-|many a man who's begging because | age $15 a week and live in $2.50 back ‘iPles of religious liberty, truth an xeunion the “boys in blue.” Though bent with age, these going to support Herbert Hoover for President and|in 1926. Maryland and New York | fornia liquor “4 worse on the liver /he begs or goes hungry. And, he'll/rooms, Three major operations re-|iustice should commence in the heroes of sixty odd years ago will tramp the streets of | Senator Curtis for Vice President. We are for Senator |are wet states. They’re next, with|than an; liquor and there is {finally tell you, it’s pretty hard to] duc; ‘i “ to a| school and the teaching of these : y ys ed him from a salesman Denver in proud procession, Frazier for the United States Senate and Tom Hall for|7.6 and 7 respectively. Then Flor-| probably no other way to prove it. |diseriminate between the false and beggar hobbling about on crutches, | ideals should start at once, The nation derives a great deal of satisfaction out of | © We for the straight Republican state | ida, which has rum-runners, with 6.8. lew York Rate Lower the true. There are signs known only |The last operation removed a right : ‘i ited at the June Primary. We are} Massachusetts is fifth with 6.4. The next five states, all above 9,/to the dyed-in-the-wool member of |ieg, but saved him from gangrene. aay Wey av all naan, | the fact that it has been many years since this encamp- | against the bond issue for refunding of money lost in| ‘The good old dry state of ‘Tom were - Louisiana, Missouri, New| the Teak crew. , H her that || ° vies ment has been marred by the waving of the bloody shirt. state banks. We can see no reason why the taxpayers | Heflin, ‘Alabama, deubled its rate in| Hevepebie a Ye Th ae |e eeewINE CCN shat it's about age oem oston sil, Somsaatier: thet At the Mo ! pays pal ige assortment of It is to the undying credit of the venerable veterans of | of the state should be called upon to refund money Lost | —£ £@# —@&@& —@£ <_< mendicants in Manhattan—that one banks, if they are entitled to a refund, how = i rried to a teleph ELTINGE THEATRE the northern army that they have done most in erasing Be alee cae ako. have D ho} is ma a phone operator hig 5 st money in national banks? dis so well known hundred penned the old scars and stamping out the destructive and fool peta OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern ||tnd is s0 wel ingwn to a hundred Tentucty ish sectionalism engendered by the Civil War. AS A SLOGAN, IT’S.A DUD "4 Mountains in Civil War days, “The Teesrork “dows the faland® heeanas| Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come," FA ha ronda, with dh cope in the) Oo Serr oat reals aoe orion "UM MAN «2 DEM 1S Mage | thenter belt’: that a certain fake is| "this favorite story has now been The unveiling of a monument to a Civil war hero in- (Minneapolis Journal) apired a discussion of this sectional hatred by President |_| George H, Moses is all right as a United States Sen- wSASON, LT WANT. YOUR: RE-, Al. Coolidge a few days ago. He blames it for retarding | 2t" He is all right as a po in. And at the re- Z ATC -NOUR RE: ACTION cent Republican National Convention he showed marked| — ' ONTHIS: PARAGRAPH OF MY POLITICAL ti Th till ho should i ' . } brought to the screen retaining all Deed he oe ae ee ere enema otous is about co| fe SPEECH FOR NEMT FALL! AHEM IM NOBLE, WoRDS ! saothar peddle bap on the sie and tee resid of 'ecee nd romans ot “The time has long since passed when to hold or ex-| helpless as was the eminent Mr Thomas Heeney in the ~~ "FELLOW, CITIZENS, 1. SEEK-No- JES” LAK DAT MAN spends his waking hours on a little|the original story, and adding the mae nas longa bi ; eleventh round of his encounter with the efficient Mr. MARD: ‘ ' DANIEL INTH’ LION'S _ crate, at the mercy of wind, rain and | beautiful pictorial atiects, marvelous Press such hostile sentiments should ever be permitted| ‘Tunney. If the specimen at hand ie « gare Hanes REWARD FoR SERVING Vou. FAITHFULLY f pee snow. It isn’t all gravy, then, in the |drama and splendid acting of Rich- to work out to the advantage of anyone. Those who|the New Hampshire Senator's handiwork in the watter ASSUSTICE OF PEACE $m BUT FRiEIDS AR JEN, we DEY: Come AT New York begging racket. ard Barthelmess_ and a cast of resort to them should find that their standing in the | of fabricating rallying cries, then Mr. Moses would do “HE. OFFICE IS LIMITED. FoR is: HIM SNARLIN’ AN’ SHowit’ GILBERT SWAN. _ | stellar players. The picture comes public confidence is thereby seriously impaired.” well to go out of the slogan business and into something EXPANSION OF MY ABILITY! eT ONLY BN “HEIR Tee TH, wa DEV- (Copyright, 1988, NEA Rervice, lec.) | the Eltings for todsy and Toss emmenne on boi aides of ht Meee end Diss avs refer, of course, to his production of the phrase ASK THAT THRU “THE PoLLs, You Placed AIMS “To ROUGH HIM UR : dont Little | Shepherd dct xing; a 0 m 2 ; 5 ; bitterness, Riscl und Tactioeal ectesatiion St a tha lant Panne oma “Atter pockape much tries MEIN A Postion OF WIDER SCOPE, we BUT HE SES LOOKS [2 homeless mountain boy, and of ‘wake of the Civil war were stimulated and kept alive for | Senator Moses brought forth something. which aaa 1 BE GIVEN A BROADER ATM AN SAYS, ~*SAY the ‘amazing and unexpected ad- the political advantage of the, unscrupulous. trait Hel ehe ieamatit, of originality and which in no RANGE “fo SERVE Nou, AND CATS, BE YSEF!- HEY- pile | eure Wen bere Game ke eS wi ‘its situa most it. “oy ps ™ q Md “MOV picture ‘ ———_ Whether Senator Mos 8 consciously nears of it COMMUNITY, wee APTER ~ ALL we DAT HAS NUFFIN’ that grips the Mice start AN OLD CANARD REVIVED or not, he was merely a phrasing Colonel George FRIENDS, "THE GREATE! ‘-Do wir Yo" SPEECH to finish, and it provides Barthel Di i f America’s loans has revived | Harvey’s “Coolidge or of the 1924 campaign. \ mess, one of the screen’s finest ac« Reenenee: Fs ie) . joolidge or Chaos” at least meant something, ONLY LAK L SAID, tors, with perhaps his best rolec charges that Colonial America obtained several foreign years ago, with three tickets in the running there aaa DE. M's * NOBLE : 2 paella loans which it forgot to repay. Such statements are | a chance slight though it may have been—of a deadlock i A CAPITOL THEATRE unfounded, the only foreign debts the United States | in the Electoral College. } _MORDS {. ‘ No such ‘situation exists this year. (‘Hoover or Havoc” * government ever having refused to repay being those ia susceptible to only one in re terpretation—that the elec- : contracted by the Confederate States during the Civil | tion of oven Altred E. Smith as President ead war for which the national government was not liable. | let the United States of America in for four years of The United States has not borrowed any money from | havoc. governments since adoption of the Constitution. pad a ations Lod New Century Die, 16 has paid its own way by taxing its own people and] And nobody really believes that ME: Seithy nergy by duties on imports. of the White House would brin In the country’s early days of struggle the Conti- congress obtained four separate loans from for- (ign countries. Tho first was for $181,500 bearing 5 e it. per cent interest. Principal and interest were both paid} As Senator Moses’ magnum opus ‘fall, Botir principal and interest were also paid on a | i an effort at’ succinct statement, it‘is a Joan of $3,267,000 drawing 5 per cent interest, flop. an example of glib alliteration, it may have its points. But campaigns are not won by glib allitera- A orpes ie hornet Leigratag pre ae Bes and d especially when such alliteration is achieved at of fourth . | @ palpal of accuracy. Hons of these loans remaining unpaid in 1795 were Santa Barba News: A country lon't going to the dogs mn : Pali : Be c into domestic stock bearing 4 1-2 and 5 1-2]',ni10 ¢ majority still reads the last chapter first to see (ORE 2 - Sey : WASHINGTONIAN IDEALS y cont interest. These converted loans were sub-| if the right. z w CURE FOR COUNTRY’S ILLS i ; paid with interest. - : ingfield, Mass. - mizy. bas always paid its bills and will con- jpceeeaels, Nese, Aue. tc-Riashe : cock, moulders of \o “ » j 4 I «< i ‘ t { ’ ‘ ' ' ' .)