Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
N ( J ( A ame ee ee ee ee ‘ | preponderance of world power he was considered an : *peademic speculator. His prophecy that the United] from the Republican conven’ t City but PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE A FLAW IN OUR LEGAL SYSTEM An Ohio man was convicted of murder and sentenced to death. While he was awaiting execution another } THE DE eae ea convict admitted having committed the murder. So the eas HOEY Tie a rice crip through his lawyer filed a peti- Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| tion for a new trial, fmarck, N. D., ae at oy Postoffice at Bis-) The trial judge rejected his plea, according to news- George D ‘Mann srneseseressPresident and Publisher| Paper dispatches, on the ground that the action seek- —<—<—<$<—$—$ $$$ | ing a new trial was filed in a later term of court than that in which the prisoner was sentenced. It may be that this prisoner doesn’t deserve a new trial. It may be that the confession of the other con- 5.00} vict was a fake. We don't know. But we do know that £.00/ when a man can be refused a new trial, in a case which 1,00 | is @ matter of life or death, on a technicality like. that, 2.50] our legal system is in need of some overhauling. The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (i Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail, in state, per year .. Weekly by mi in state, three years Weekly by m of North Dakota, per year . ees seeeee seeee 1.50 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation WE'RE USED JO FLYING NOW The transatlantic flyers really ought to lay off for a little while. We're getting so used to skillful and heroic ted | " feats in aviation that we're losing our capacity to cheer. rlso the local news of spontancous origin es bergh. Then came Chamberlain, followed by Byrd, and. herein. All rights of republication of all other mat-| we did it all over again. There followed a long list of ter herein are also reserved. new heroes; and each time we responded to the best of our ability. Now the Bremen’s trip is followed by the amazing polar dash of Wilkins and Eilson. We're almost coming to regard these things as com- Member of The Associated Press The iiGoeiatad Press is exclusively entitled to the Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO DETROIT) monplace—which they aren't, at all, If the flyers don't ee OO BMS: give us a rest for a while it will get so that a man will (Official City, State and County Newspaper) have to fly to Mars, at least, to make us taken even a second look at him. MESSAGES FROM MARS sity observatory, doubts very much that we ever will] enjoy being miserable. get into radio communication with the inhabitants of He believes that Mars is inhabited, and thinks it pos-| looking into mirrors. sible that the Martians may have a civilization superior send us radio signals, And, if they are, he doubts very much that we'll ever understand them. Editorial Comment There is something uncanny about the thought of radio ‘New York He: 1 rald Tribune, waves being hurled at us through empty space from al ye ig gitticalt to tage aeyon ie bing up on a own earth has problems enough, and seems very big] ever eloquent, brought to him over the radio. William and busy; it is discouraging to feel that far on the Jennings Bryan would poy have swept the nation be ; convention had it been disseminated by waves of ether debating whether our planet is inhabited, and wonder-| and percolated into the homes of the people through in get us to talk to them, if it is. ing whether they can get us i spread w contagion te , “a is season the radio campaigns, familiar four years Indeed, many of us have trouble in realizing that our! ago and effective among eels wis like te listen and own continent is not all that matters. We cannot get] “think it out,” will probably be supplemented by the ‘ . " in carrying to the brain the messages of the candidates onan eaters eee tence Wereaa and their supporters. It is conceivable that in a pub- Prof. Frank Schlesinger, director of the Yale Univer-| There are people who never lose an opportunity to Mars. The best reflections come from thinking instead of to our own. But he does not think they are trying to i i ’s words are timely and to the point. 5 Rea cane 5 WITHOUT TUMULT OR SHOUTING , pin point of light away off in the outer darkness. Our] chair and cheering wildly at a political oration, how- ith his “ im other side of the sun there are men of science who are| With his “cross of gold” speech as he swept the Chicago a set of tubes and an amplifier. Enthusiasm usually We like to feel that we are the center of the universe, along with the idea that life is a tremendous, star-| ‘‘movietone.” Thus the eyes will supplement the ears lic hall, or even in a private living room in which fif- ‘When we eliminate the mystery we can go to work. teen or twenty people are gathered, a speech accom- ‘We have a good many things to do, and we can’t help} panied by the moving figure of the speaker will awaken feeling that some of them are rather important. We] Vocal applause, Yet such an “audition” will never i ‘ 1 lly, blot out the sight of distant stars with factory smoke, ~~ ia orObably, all for the best. The speakers, know- and we overwhelm whatever distant signals may be| ing that their words will fall not alone on the ears coming to us with the noise of Jathe and drill. And, ee the oe a oe wel a4 of ae ue ala ‘on a i those of hundreds o: jousands of people sitting een we ectialong ey arya in touch with| @Wietly in thefr homes, will doubtless avoid the oratori- But suppose, just once, we should get in cal tricks and gestures which have the strongest ap- Mars. Suppose, in other words, that each of us sud- peal toa Fa wee the ae AD a and ae denly should get a glimpse of this universe of ours as} haps see them at their best mark and inwardly . digest what they have to say without being swayed it really is—a mystery that we never can fathom,| @'8' loaded with meanings too big for us to comprehend,| '™ the least by the shouts of people all around them. dwarfing our mundane affairs and convincing us that we are heirs to a limitless universe, too high-born to (Minneapolis Journal) waste our time at our customary pursuits of getting ae ape wile inv eeMaating: ined ou als i ildi i ernor Alfred E. Smith made as a member o: jew and spending, building and using. ilaay allies become York Assembly a score of years ago, now expunges of factory smoke and turning lathe then? from his compilation of criticisms all reference to any It’s just as well we don’t get the signal. We aren’t] votes against bills which purported to be measures ready for it, Our heads would be turned, our wits a ce rnrenea of Ceeviee eve Laker polar ' e Kansas editor concedes that opposition to bills would ‘become eee nana Tet siHipe eae of this character might be inspired by unquestionably Schlesinger is right. Some day we'll be ready for the} good and high minded motives. He can conceive of revelation, But not yet. situations in which a legislator, moved by no desire to protect vice or gambling, might vote against so-called reform measures because he frankly, and perhaps cor- rectly, believed them unconstitutional, unenforceable, or likely to encourage police blackmail. So Mr. White, good sportsman and fair fighter that’ he is, withdraws all criticism of Governor Smith’s As- sembly record that has to do with his attitude toward MR. WHITE PLAYS FAIR UNDERGROUND WEALTH Men who has studied the world’s mineral resources agree that the extraordinary increase in the consump- tion of coal, iron and other minerals will produce new Political arrangements between nations in the future as | pilis dealing with either gambling or prostitution. in the past. Be Mr. ee sticks a ies guns fet a matter na os At present there is a deal of hypocrisy on the part of | Saloon, He reiterates his charge that Governor Smith, ' 5 ‘ 4 while in the Assembly, did vote consistently for legis- governments with relation to the exploitation of mineral lation that was ppeillly by the saloons, oe against zesources by their nationals, Throughout the world, as | measures that were opposed by the saloons, the demand for minerals increases, the relations be-| We do eons pragadgeed eee pies a dat tween nations with large supplies and those with large | Sportsman | & fair ir, will dispute seriously @emands will undergo changes. the factual basis of Mr. ite’s revised criticism. As i stead- The world little appreciates the part played by min- A. eoeeey nes wate phe Sat Stacen yb seed erals in modern civilization. Obvious as it is that this is an age of steel, it is difficult to visualize the enor- Mmous advance in production and consumption of the Principal metals within the last few decades, ‘When the late Brooks Adams thirty years ago de- Weloped his theory that there is a direct relation be- ween the control of large supplies of metals and the is_ politically logical course was naturally to vote with Tammany on all questions involving Tammany’s interests. And when, pray, was Tammany, in the days’ of the saloon’s existence, not vitally interested in the furtherance of the New York "s welfare and prosperity? a P(St Paul Dispatch . Pai patch. The fai did not everything they asked for Rept “e ition at kansas Btates, owing to the development of its coal and iron snone patie snags tag Grong home was a promise i stined ome t! ii i revise the tariff in favor of agriculture. America panei sre so -pacorne, the, maoet.satioential annually imports about two billion dollars’ worth of farm products that come into competition with crops raised in this country, and ‘iculture has a right to believe that when the Rep ns promise tariff pro- tection against this foreign inflow omy. mean to keep it, pation in the world affairs, was ignored. The enormous Wealth of the American continent in the essential bulk materials has given to the United States the opportun- ity of loading in industrial development and political uldance of the world. a at sone vague time in the future, but at the earliest America’s present prosperity and strength are due he earliest opportunity will arise when Congress fot so much to the fortunes made during the World war | meets next December. Republicans will have an jis to the rapid development of its natural resources and | °bligation then to throw the tariff open to revision in 13, ‘ ‘i accordance with the terms of the ‘orm, which prom- their utilization in such @ manner as to derive from | ices upward modification not he oi agriculture but al- (hem the largest possible amount of power. so to industries at present either neg jected entirely or t tpadequately, Protected. BN ‘oolidge snes inne ‘AT THE SIDE OF THE OLD TRAIL seem to appreciate the unfortunate impression which is aT, ‘ ip- | CTeated by an: rance of desiring to postpone the ips e BO, ei vision on bel of agriculture Postponed a r "s best known sail men, died the} year. a aig al York. a : Eresident Conliden thinks this cs pecennary be- : jt | cause Congress mee! is year only in sion, He had retired a number of years ago, and had built| This means that the adjournment is automatically taken home near the entrance of New York harbor, so that on sere 4 and oe ee il be ite time i. Gan front porch with his gla: nd | legislation such routine ness as votit obey ae Fal that entered and left sae Didget. The dtticutles of successfully dealing with so Day after day he sat there; he had a system of signals complicated & eubiors aa tasitt Feriaion at the short ses- ¢ nM i 5 sion are admit y enormous. It may well be, as Pres- arranged, so that he could exchange greetings with cap-| ident Coolidge thinks, impossible to arrive at agree- eb eer. j favorable to the ese of the filibuster aad other aittoncts avorabie to the use oi and other obstruct Dues sounds to.us like 0 pleasent, ia old 88°! ing tactics of opposition. Nevertheless, all such con- To retire with the memory of a useful and satisfying] siderations must yield to the fundamental question of zareer, and to sit where the panorama of -familiar| good faith in keeping platform promises. Tariff re- ships can pass before your eyes each day, waving your| Vision this year may not succeed, but the Republicans hand to skippers who go down the trails you no longer| 27°, cade sooniy of omitting no effort for its ac- the best jor, sta: m fe me a dozen a _ A iy Re hoy Rete THE FRANKS FUND sentative Selvig of the Ninth Minnesota district and by The late Jacob Franks of pony, has left a fund of praca Diagn fle ware of pra $100,000 to give “pleasure, help and encouragement prea joreover, jpublicans go not stand alone their ibility in this matter. Democrats are to boys,” as © memorial to his dead son, Bobby, who also pi Pig tform pledge to make these revisions, and - was murdered by Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb. | even if in advance on the actual rates proves (op y poe pin geengieg heed [oo SR ORR Ee yi 5 mi inable, question thus ye ined ora alleen iage Magrabe ad beh there is 2 reason to believe that action by as deeply as we should have. Of font ae pthisisstde: ea case, he was the most tragic. He} Fort V’orth Star-Telegram: No doubt many married heart; and who can nee were Senay they SE Feet Hie cnsiont way t6 money. Durham Sun: Politics are to a pretty pass. The lve party conventions t even mae an 4 Dallas Journal: The year has taught us that pil mag- ‘ials, too. © i. * | Off for Another ‘Klondike’ | ularly over the betterment of condi- tions for the industrial workers. Mexico’s immediate future, how- ever, seems to be in the hands of the stronger Obregonistas, who have not been publicly as bitter or noisy Soto y Gama and Manrique. IN NEW YORK —_———__—________—______@ New York, Aug. 7.—Not, perhaps, that it makes a great deal of differ- ence... but $100 a couple fs now being charged at the classiest speak- easy Manhattan has known to date. It operates in Park Avenue’s very swank rich-man’s row. former exponent of fashion- ince steps in ritzy supper clubs, and hence has a wide ac- juaintance among the gay old boys. place was opened only for the summer months while its lessee, a prosperous cloak-and-suit man, is in Europe. ‘The admission price of $50 covers the dinner, the BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Aug 7.—Both Soto y Gama and Aurelia Manrique, who into such prominence in Mexican news after the assassina- tion of Obregon, are crusaders of the Utopian type. Haters of social injustice, neither is willing to wait upon the slow rocesses of evolution. But fire- ands as they may be, their intel- lectual integrity and their honesty in government affairs have never been questioned by their most bitter have been far more thorough irfte- Living and working to- larger cities, it was much easier to organize them than to organize the millions of agricul- turalists over Mexico who never come into close contact with many of their fellows. ation of Soto y Gama iqu against the rank and file of work- heir bitterness was in- creased by the attempts of Morones and his lieutenants to get the agri- into the Labor movement—with a certain success. Agrarian leaders complain that the interests of their people have been much neglected as compared with what has been done in the in- terest of the industrial workers. Thus, one observes in Mexico an- other episode of the old féud be- tween the town and country which fo developed in nearly every na- ion. Since 1922 this feud has grad- ually grown more bitter in Mexico, in spite of the fact that Calles has never been charged with lax en- forcement of the new land program been more lands dis- is administration than But Calles recog- none Siac a hexane Dolltienly Rd a thoror ing way, putting the head of the Labor movement into his cabinet in the the Department 0! They have failed in their efforts to make the Agrarian party the dominant force in Mexican politics, fact that in Mexico those who till the soil are the vast majority of the people. The small farmer and the peon are not politically minded and both Soto y Gama and Manrique have refused to recognize this. A Compared with the usual check at the couvert charge resorts, the gay old papas are getting off Furthermore it is all very dis- creet, polite and as refined as a few cocktails will Rermit. And, again not that it makes a great deal of difference—but one of the nation’s outstandin; The bitterness displayed in their attacks on the Laborites after Obre- gon’s death did not arise spon- The assassin’s merely gave them a chance to at- tack the Laboristas, led by Morones, in a more effective way than they | ii had been able to do in the previous i They were now allied with the powerful Obregonistas, Part of their bitterness was caused by the fact that they be- lieved Morones and his two score|d affiliated leaders, Group of Action, Labor movement both politically and industrially to their own en- minstrels”—who is known wherever vaudeville is known. In_a day when the old-time fan is all but extinct, Eddie is indeed a worthy representative of the fans He passes up sum- mer contracts that would bring him $5,000 a week in order to whet his appetite at the Yankee Stadium. The point is he was a ball player what were fans. werful post of Labor and In- known as the Notes from a week’s dii eee had used the ere Got my trout rods out, in prepara- tion for a vacation in Canada. only to find that, as usual, either the tips were broken or the reels had rusted. «+. And so to the tackle store, where the clerk convincingly proves that one might as well get a few new outfits, wuich I can ill afford. So, in the later afternoon, to the rooftop of the Hotel Navarro, terary Guild was cele- brating the eddition to their board of editors of Burton Rascoe, once-upon-a-time wrote a New York letter, even as myself, bui under the Obviously, it was an enormous victory for Soto-y Gama and Man- rique when they were able to drive Mor®nes from the government. Now they seem determined to drive from political office every repre- the Laboristas, on the that they have served the interests of a small clique, using the Labor ish and sinister purposes. After the sweeping denunciations of Soto y Gama and Manrique, there is room for fear that the are not worrying partic- | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern a4 SAY MISTAH MASOR, AS YoU VALET, WE AIT MADE No "GREEMENT AS~To FINANCE WITH MY SALARYSueT Air WORRNIA” ANY, 4 BUT IS You MEAN “fo PAY ME EBERY ITH, HOR SEMI ANNUAL, ~, OR ONCE AYEAR, LAK ° A SoRT OF DEPAHTMENT \_ STORE INVEMTORY SALE 2 = thrown in their lot with Obregon and the Obregonista Revolutionary party saw in his election a chance for fuller recognition and added Enmity between Obregon and Morones had been becoming more and more bitter up to the time of the former’s death, has cut a much larger political figure in Mexico than the Agrarian party. The Laboristas EH Qi. ER AH Me meme WHY SASON + HAR-RR-UME ww WITH SEEMS, MY FORMER VALET, “We HAD A MUTUAL A UNDERSTANDING, THAT HE WAS f) To SHARE IN MY ERA OF PROSPERITY, + AND LIKEWISE STAND-BY “THRU THe LULL OF DEPRESSION ! wee FOR INSTANCE, w WHEN HE ACCOMPANIED ME ON A POLAR EXPEDITION FoR A NEAR, “~I MIGHT Just AS WELL PAID HIM OFF IN ICICLES ~~ WHAT COULD HE Do WITH Money 2. OL BE PAID A WEALTH oF ~”” MISDOM PROCRASTINATION PREVENTS oi RELAXATION It is important that you build a determination in your mind to ac- complish what you have chosen for your goal in life. Many people are failures in their own business be- cause they are lazy about coming to work on time, and yet if they were working for someone else they would not be troubled in this way. Opera singers are seldom sick, because they have to set aside their personal feelings and put into mo- tion every power oftheir will to meet their engagement with the public, A strength of character to meet your engagements and obliga- tions is essential to any honest suc- cess. The determination of accom- plishment is an attitude of mind necessary for feeling well. Many people fall into the habit of feeling tired or sick, Man is natur- ally a lazy animal, and one of his worst diseases is chronic laziness. We must organize our minds and our bodies so that they shall be in top-notch condition when they are needed. What would: happen to an army if the general only drilled his soldiers when he felt like it? And what Saat ties would happen on a railroad if tl trains ‘whenever they didn’t choose to smoke or play checkers? Let us substitute thoughts of health, energy, vitality and indus- try for those of vacillation, discour- agement and idleness. Not only must we have a determination to work, and a responsibility for doing things well, but we must also have our periods of relaxation if we wish eee a well balanced mind. have a number of friends who have reached the high pinnacles of success and almost. invariably they tell me that they have made more money and enjoy life more since they learned value of vacations and recreations. This does not mean that you should fritter your life away in a vain pursuit of pleasures, but means that you can work harder at your occupation, and concentrate on your work with more enjoyment when you known that you are not chained to a prison rock pile. There is a magic in a clear brain anda Ob eohe physique. There is a rest a cure brought on by a contact with nature that cannot be accomplished by all the drags and sanitariums in the world. ‘through the majestic forces of the eternal we can contact the surge of life. Man was originally a free individ- ual, roaming the hills and valleys. He climbed the heights and swam the lakes. The confinement to an indoor occupation or a slaving pro- fession which uses all of his strength merely to make a living is certainly unnatural. The postponement of a ~acation has sent many a person to a ‘pre- mature grave. The brain celis need rest and recreation. They lose their elasticity through confinement just as an automobile tire will rot and e engineers ran their waste as much through disuse sa from use, There is nothing so destructive t¢ happiness as monotony—nothing 80 blunting to ability as stagnation. A Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. fresh point of view, a change cf scene, fresh air, and physical move- ment are effervescents to life, with- out which it would be as flat as bread without its leavening. Employers are realizing that it is not the one who slaves the longest hours who does the most efficieat work, and the old idea of filling the day with monotony from morning till night, month after month, and year after year is dulling to hope, fatal to health, and a hobble to suc- cess, . QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. L. B. writes: “I have a continual soreness in left side and left chest. Please tell me what my trouble might be.” Answer: You may be suffering from some form of heart troubl such as angina pectoris. You shoul have an examination made by a com: petent doctor, as it is impossible ta diagnose’ your case by mail, Question: Mrs. C. M. B. writes: “I have a friend who is suffering with goitre—the kind that hurts worse when lying down. What would you advise in this case as to diet or otherwise? We have found your advice very helpful and want to thank-you.” Answer: Fasting and dieting may be used in either simple or exophthalmic goitre. It is not al- ways possible to entirely reduce the swelling without the proper physio« therapy treatments. Question: Reader asks; “May fruit or ice ceam be eaten between meals without interfering with di- gestion?” Answer: Fruit and ice cream must both be considered zeal foods and should therefore be used in place of a meal, or may be used in addi- tion to a meal if combined with those foods with which they are harmon- lous, Question: Miss Pat writes: “Will - you please tell me a remedy for persistent bad breath, I have had all my teeth taken care of and am in a healthy condition, so I cannot understand this.- Will you please give me a - emedy?” Answer: If your teeth are in good condition your breath may be a result of diseased tonsils, catarrh, or auto-intoxication. If the breath has a sweetish odor, you may have diabetes. Before I could give you a remedy you would have to tell me which of these things is causing your trouble, title of “Daybook of a New Yorker.” + « Then he became editor of Book- man, but soon found himself in ar- guments. And there was present Mrs. Maristan Chapman, who comes from the hills of Tennessee, and who has written as beautiful a book as I have read in many days... And it is called “The Happy Mountain.” - +. And we fell to talking about the trials and tribulations of a writing career. .... And she told me how for 18 years she had tried to sell to magazines tales of the mountain folk of Tennessee..... But none would buy her wares be- cause there was nothing in them about moonshiners or feuds. .. And since Lagclagpe zoom ves of her ats mong People, she was amuse: and Smbitiered, somewhat ‘by the attitude, since she had trieg hon- estly to tell what she had seen and experienced,... But none would have it... I wager that, now that she has produced a best seller, things will be different and perhaps readers will see something of an- other side of the picture. T SWAN. GILBER’ (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) — if BARBS | New York’s health ‘commissioner, the effects of alcohol, te : eae sre excellent speeches” by speakers who were far gone in liquor. Can it be that he visited Kansas City or Houston last discus: says June? Chicago's new chief of police an- nourices he will enforce Pall laws rigidly. Let’s see; wasn’t the last chief there going to run all crooks out of town in 60 days? Rock River, O., woman ruled she would drive the family car /here- after, when the court allowed her to pers jotzmeet on husband, pinched! R. for dri toxica‘ion. The back-seat iver moves up front. City folk usually have this ex. with raising baby chicks: per cent die; “ifty per cent turn out to be roosters and the rest are hens, A man was bitten by a bear at a filling statjon in Marlboro, The bear went up to get his fill, Nobody has ever explained why a a tot, who falls in a pr cries and gets that much wetter. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘Wednesday In ‘addition to being wonderful s & story of I= Bolling interest, “The Road to Ruin” with a svbject that is close to the heart of every normal American —the welfare of our girls—and as such, it hag been include Bis Occ aon |__At the Movies '|tcite” Bateiny”dpshy "aat _—_—_ Combs, pss Lewis Seiler directed the Juvenile Authorities and Police all over the country. From the mo- ment the two lovely girls start their trip down the primrose path that leads to the Road to Ruin until the final fadeout, therei s not one unin- teresting moment and the audience sit_spellbound, Rarely in the history of the screen has a picture been so beautifully cast and perhaps never has a sub- dect dealing Went a delicate opic as sex delinquency been so cleverly handled, The thrill seeker will get his full quota of emotion, the senasation seeker will not be disappointed, yet the thoughtful will leave the theatre feeling that they have seen a masterly tation of the most serious problem facing the American people today. “The Road to Ruin” is well worth while, PALACE THEATRE-MANDAN The stage entertainment for Wed- nesday, at the Palace theatre in Mandan, opens with blue songs and ballads as well as accordion num. bers by Cora Walsh, “The Singing Accordionist.” Rutledge & Taylor, pied, a oy Peach of a Pair,” get eir title from the perfect unison which distinguishes aes mambers. obey, tome a salen, cole ored dance team wit! it; throughout their act, iia Anna M. Scott presents “Seott’s Diversity Five,” a novel assortment of song, dance and musical nume bers. Those-five versatile young People anche the Bott Sisters, Wes ogers, Don Mac! (Sonia » Yes,’ Warren & Inman, a comedy sketch which tells ‘ie story of a small town wise and ing, talking and encing ate'parh oe ing, Ing an are thé sketch. Tittle feathered aad tainers will be seen as “Ramsey's Canaries.” They have a rej of tricks that are interes and amusing, ree — CAPITOL THEATRE ‘bert Armsti Brown and Dorothy Dwa La wes crook seen in a thrill “Square Grooka eek Aes the Capitol Theatre tomorrow, Wed- nesday, and Thi ' The members of trio tablished. themselves as screcre fa Armstrong won fame as the “pug” in the stage production of “Is Zat B Jackie convinced that the white bird a leghorn cata wa ee ee ee anaes cioutn 2 The two dissimilar games with @ mallet and ball F srOQuel, esa ul ag