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PAGE FOUR BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER c- (Established 1873) \ Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- ( as second class mail matter. -George D. Mann ............President and Publisher ee : Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Baily by carrier, per year ........... . e+ $7.20 * {Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) ° Daily by mail, per year, 5: (in state outside Bismarck) ....... .Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota "Weekly by mail, in state, per year * Weekly by mail, in state, three yea ~ Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakot: per year ... 1.50 L Member : Member of The Associated Press F - The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ‘use for republication of all news dispatches credited “to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and talso the local news of spontaneous origin published *herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ‘ter herein are also reserved. ne: Foreign Representatives m * G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ve NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg. es ; CHICAGO DETROIT A: + Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. eb Si': (Official City, State and County Newspaper) iit Ue Albedo pl: THIS EPIC WE'RE LIVING Of all the men in this republic, perhaps the least en- im © {Viable is the man who writes. ta:* To be sure, he has a chance to become prosperous. st’ . Books enjoy an excellent sale. Yet the scribbler is, at i: best, an vutsider looking in. When a people is living a *magnificent epic, it seems slightly futile to content wu ‘ “ oneself with trying to write one. tit;: If the writer tries to fall in step with the times and dl 1+ sing of his country’s greatness he is in no better shape. that’s all. The ideal of sincerity and truth is hard to ¥ discover. Perhaps it is only a dream, after all, but in rTy-| Roi our pursuit of it, we have not lost but gained. Me Go- und Pyle’s runners, in their way, represent an ideal, de- spite the attendant bally-hoo and get-rich-quick aspect I tl of the affair. They are men running several thousand é | it mY miles, from one end of the country to the other. They j are athletes with a grim determination and endurance . pbb? about them that must be admired. If we pay ridiculous prices to see them, we are learning; we are getting nearer to the truth we seek; we are seeing, at least, what we pay for, and learning what we pay to learn. We might pay a million to see Prince Carol. But our n.otive again could be admirable—that of hearing from his own lips the story that we always have vaguely guessed at, a tale of old world romance, intrigue and adventure that, to most of us, would be worth the price. We pay a tremendous price for our curiosity. But only through satisfaction of the desire to see and learn do we advance. CNEESE WITHOUT PIE face with oiled paper or a cloth wel Most households use cheese as a|With brine and standing in a cool Jace. The combination of cheese and kind of condiment to, add flavor to Pl otherwise insipid dishes, or to be eat- en in small quantities with crackers or pie near the end of the meal. You ea ae bl gladly Sealth, may have heard the saying that “A eae diet, wadrerasd "4 pie without cheese is like a kiss with- care of the Tribune. him, out a squeeze.” Cheese need not be ‘Eacloes stamped addressed s'nply a garnishing in our diets, as envelope for } it is quite a wholesome form of pro- P* reply. tein when used in the right man- |‘ ner. wholewheat bread is quite a whole- The most easily digested cheeses | some one, being the one excention to are those from which the cream ‘as | the rule not to combine proteins and been partly removed. Seal cheese | starches. As I have ali stated, is very wholesome and is often used| some raw green vegetable should be by vegetarians as a substitute for |eaten at the same time. meat. Cheese should always be ac-| Celer~. spinach and lettuce make companied by raw green vegetables | the best combinations. Try chopped as it is. very concentrated and needs | cheese as an addition to your com- this type of food to provide the|bination salad. I am sure that you needed bulk and vitamins. Whole | will like the flavor. milk is slightly alkaline forming, — but when we separate it into the] QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS curds and the whey, the curds are} Question: Mrs. A. asks: “Will acid forming and the whey is alka-| you please print in your interestii line forming. Since the latter is|column what will remove a mole thrown away, it should be replaced | Also, what causes little white spots by the greens, to form on mv hands? Will they Cheeses are manufactured in an|spread? What will cure those I almost endless variety of shapes, col-|now have? Are they symptoms of ors and flavors, each part of the| anything serious?” world having its own particular] Answer: I would advise you to fancy. The art of cheese making | consult a physician who is skilled in seems to be almost universal, as|using the high frequency spark or every race has found that milk in the | the electric needle for the removal of THE HUMAN SCRAP HEAP Secretary of Labor James J. Davis, in an article in the North American Review, deplores the growing practice in American industry of arbitrarily discharging workers when they reach the age of 50 or thereabouts. This practice, if continued, will create a “serious and alarming” economic problem ef national proportions, he believes. Undoubtedly it represents one of the major issues that our times face. Some solution will have to be found before we can sit back and hymn the praises of our industrial civilization. The solution, probably, will come in due time; possibly through some form of in- dustrial pensions, more liberal and extensive than any- thing now dreamed of. Industry is rapidly reaching the point where it can afford such a thing. Explanation of the great fortunes made in rubber: Americans yearning to be where they ain't. Courtesy is just a subtle business of leaving the other si:!:The manufacturer and the trader again are ahead of 0c ;+him, No poet can sound half so rhapsodical and in- wc" spired as a business man, hymning a paean to the go- tit’: getter. A statistical report on such a thing as the au- se js tomobile industry can, and usually does, grow highly ali) ° lyrical. fei: Dr. Julius Klein, director of the Bureau of Foreign oti! 7 and Domestic Commerce of the U. S. Department of, = Commerce, recently wrote for the Magazine of Wall A1)* Street an article on America’s foreign trade. In it he 4 eems to forget that he is a hard-headed business man; be ,>he becomes, for the moment, a slightly inspired poet. rie 4 + Listen to this excerpt from his article: ne “The Great War may not have been in fact a holy ar ‘- war to end war, but it certainly was a war to abolish Ja ‘2 moss-bound tradition and social fixation. Inertia has pa i given way to action the world around. The patient, = passive folk everywhere have begun to look for some Is 1 - of heaven while they’re on earth. bu “It’s no longer, ‘What was good enough for father is No, Zood enough for me,’ but ‘What was good enough for hes father certainly is not good enough for me.’ In short, do } =it’s a new world—newer than America when Columbus gr{ landed, And with it, opportunities that make the loot tec< Sof Mexico and Peru look like the proverbial 30 cents.” Ad % Those two paragraphs were written by one of the sy, 1 most business-like, precise statisticians in America. Yet ing *there is an exultant, singing note in them, as if the 0, writer were a combination of poet, and seer. Gazing ings on the wonders of the modern world seems to induce a om! kind of intoxication, in which one can talk and write am; ~only in superlatives. The plain truth of the matter is that we are just at t =the dawning of an age so marvelous, so splendid that * all of our superlatives will not do it justice. “The pa- “tient, passive folk everywhere” are indeed waking up. “What lies ahead can only be guessed; certainly it is going to be a great time in which to live and work. The hapless writer of books, with his criticisms and his vain imaginings, is in a swirling eddy at the side. The main stream rushes past him, heedless. IS HEROISM SO RARE? This seems to be an age of heroes. The airplane has provided a new outlet for the spirits of the adventurous. Not in years have there been so - many demonstrations of the glory that can be won by a man who is contemptuous of death. Snug and well- padded, we are making a cult of bravery, and we re- «ward daring as we reward no other virtue, % Yet, after all, not all bravery is spectacular. There “are countless thousands of heroes who never will see ‘their names in the paper; whole armies of men who fight overwhelming odds all their lives, and fall, at the wend, without ever hearing a wave of applause. And —d « the record they leave is just as inspiring as any tale of > - : @ lone flight across a storm-swept ocean. @* You meet these men every day of your life. \ ‘There is, for instance, the stoop-shouldered, rather 3 meek-looking man who lives in the flat over the drug 4; Store down at the corner. He is a bookkeeper, and has been one for 18 years. His income is never quite enough to meet tho needs of himself, his wife and their three children. It has been a hard struggle. He has had to gee his carly dreams fade and vanish while he plugged away at the task of bringing up a family. He has had T « to live wit: the knowledge that he is a failure; has had to realize that, after all, he doesn’t amount to much, Ne but through it all he never has complained or grown ‘4 bitter. He walks to and from his work, and lunches on ES milk.and crackers, so that the children can have pre- sentable clothes; now and then he goes without lunch 5 : for a few days so that he can buy his wife a cheap box * That man is a hero. His Odyssey is uneventful and » drab, but it is as fine as Lindbergh’s. Incompetent and 1, lacking in force, he is nevertheless a living proof of the divinity that dwells in human clay. Born to defeat, he has never given up the fight. He was chosen at random. There are myriads like jim—men who plod along, day after day, always pinched for money, always compelled to make petty es, always bound by the chains of penury and ppointment, but always fighting. Some day, when we have finished building statues to our aviators, we might build one for these men. They deserve it. In { their own way, they have demonstrated the nobility of : humanity. tee I, I I. zy E re RACKED bad : weesere nana KCAROSSUCRREEEVEBERYERES 7 ETCEY T ‘THE COST OF CURIOSITY of American curiosity is tremendous, writ:s critic in a long comment on the way the countryside | bas flocked to see C. C. Pyle’s coast-to-coast runners as through nearby towns. Rumanian cast-off, should come to Bow for a lecture series, he could wheedle us million dollars in a month,” the writer ‘went on iwe do pay a tremendous price for curiosity, “all, is it-a fault? And isn’t the price we pay it? we haven't remedied our gulli- deal since P. T, Barnum brought his. mermaid and woolly horse to our attentioh, | mermaids and woolly horses and are wiser { sesking the genuine; and if we must with ois of ft find Ss wal, we mast, PSL IO ROLE country, with an insatiable desire the country’s and state's laws eventually lead to an- learned at least all that we care to know Alfred E. Smith, born December 30, 1873, and Her- form of cheese can be kept a long|the mole. The white spots on your time and is very handy to carry in| hands are caused by some form of traveling. Even the Japanese, who| acidosis by which the skin pigment are too crowded in their picturesque | is destroyed. They will not spread islands to raise cows, have a kind of | if you correct your diet and use other cheese manufactured in much the|hygiene measures for improving regulation manner by souring soy | your general health. bean milk. Question: Hopeless writes: “I All cheeses are subjected to some |4m a young woman 25 years of age, type of bacterial, enzymic, or mold-|five feet, three inches tall, and ing action. The variation in these|weigh ninety-one pounds. I have ¢ are largely responsible for the dis- | tried everything on earth to put on | IN NEW YORK tinctions of taste that are noticeable | weight. Was on a milk diet for in the cheeses of different lands. | three months and took on twa In some cheeses such as the Cam-| pounds. I have consulted several New York, Aug. 9.—In no place |embert, the mold is almost entirely | doctors and they all claim I am per- upon the globe do people have to|confined to the rind, and the ripen-|fectly well. One doctor advised me work so hard for their pay as ining process is caused by the absorp-|to remove my appendix and that Manhattan, a * tion of the enzymes produced cn the | would sharpen my appetite. I’ve done was also the implication of the Houston plank. For, The mere business of reaching &|surface; in other cheeses such as the |s0, and no success. I walk from if the Houston Convention accepted the McNary- so-called pleasure resort is, in itself,|Gammelost, the fungi grow all|three to four miles per day, and Haugen Plan, why should it not plainly say so? And almost equivalent to a day’s toil. The tarongh the cheese and actually ab-|very seldom do I feel hungry, and if Governor Smith could and would sign such a bill as = ee .,| Seemingly inexhaustible patience of | sorb the casein to such an extent that |then, if I take a drink of water, my Mr. Coolidge twice vetoed, why not plainly say so? BY RODNEY DUTCHER . long diplomatic contest on the oil|the dyed-in-the-wool New Yorker is| instead of eating cheese flavored by |appetite is gone. Please advise me But Governor Smith’s proposal to start all over (NEA Service Writer) question between Mexico and the ad-|something to marvel at. In fact, at|the mold, one eats the mold flavored | what to do.” again didn't exactly strike twelve with the professional} Washington, Aug. 9.—After the ministration at Washington. It has/times I have questioned whether it | with cheese. Answer: You may be perfect! as relievers. It gave them no plausible basis for|Agrarian leaders had held the floor |been recognized on all sides that he|be patience or a form of imbecility.| The sizes of the cheeses vary | healthy and yet only weigh as ate advising Republican farmers to bolt Hoover. on the Mexican scene for several|handled his part with great intel- sas greatly, some of the smaller varie- |as you do. However, the average thin Chai Raskob then took a hand. He announced days—long enough to force Luis |!ectual ability. His firmness in| ff, for instance, you wish to |ties being only a few ounces, while | woman of your type is usually unable ase tudy of the McNary-Haugen Plan, he|Morones and his chief men from the |Standing up for what he considered plunge in one of the many in-town| the larger types will even reach two|to put on weight because of a sys- ety sothin senadaa or uneconomic in it. He inti-|government—other elements among Mexico’s sovereign rights never de-| pools, to be found variously in ho- | hundred and twenty-five pounds. The | temic poisoning which she gets from saw Mees the Democratic candidate would in due|the Obregonistas, much more prac- scended to trucul » He kept his |tels or parks, you must be prepared |art of cutting the larger cheeses, so|a sluggish colon. One of this type fay mae a clear declaration, George N. Peek, of tical in their handling of affairs, as-|¢nd of the correspondence on a high|to face a line of sturdy waiters, | that they will always present a fresh | usually has adhesions holding these fellow’s sense of importance undisturbed. | Editorial Comment | THE McNARY-HAUGEN PLAN IS OUT (Minneapolis Journal) = The education of Governor Smith is making pro- ss. When, soon after his nomination at Houston, he was asked to state his position on farm relief, he frankly admitted that he knew little about it. But he promised, in the event of his election, to call to- gether a commission of experts to agree on a plan satisfactory to agriculture. is _ This seemed to imply that the McNary-Haugen plan was out and some other plan must be devised. Such riety serted their influence. plane until a way was found to ar-| ready to stand for hours, if need be,}and unspoiled surface for a long|organs down. When the adhesions : Illinois, head of the Corn Belt Committee, tenia tor: Aided by the. carafe but firm |Tive at a common agreement. for the privilege ‘of spending their |time, is considered quite an accomp-|are broken loose by manipulative eben pb eal opines! etna aos policy of President Calles, they ap-| ,Saenz’s achievements are of the| money. lishment. treatment the organs may be in farm relief economics. And his pupil pear to have forestalled the possi-|Character which would seem to} Or, to take a subway to Coney on|_ Next to cottage “-----. the most|brought back to normal position out with this declaration: bility of serious outbreaks. justify his election as provisional]a Sunday, is to crash a mob, the|important is Cheddar or American | through exercising. The patient will Control of the sale of agricultural surplus is The announcement that Aaron | president at this period of Mexican| proportions of which are difficult to|cheese. Cut cheese may be protected then soon begin to gain weight with- recognized in our platform as an essential Saenz would probably be the choice |history. He is not of the ruthless|realize unless you've been pulled,|from drying by covering the cut sur-|out any stuffing diet, need, its cost to be imposed on the unit to be jof Congress for provisional pres-|t¥pe which might seek to impose his|mauled and pushed about a subway benefited. That principle is fixed in our plat- ident has, tempogarily at least, put ot on 2 people who are still living|in which the humidity threatens at|pen which, you feel, have no right|and colorful. The action is al form, on which I stand, Only the detail of its the extremists im the background, |™entallg in a more or less feudal/any moment to break.the thermom-|to happen in the presence of the| plausible as it is spectacular. accomplishment remains. Saenz is less than 40 years old.|tmosphere. Democracy in Mexicojeter. One glance at the Pennsyl-| quiet serenity of the hillsides and} Meighan was never better cast iq “ | \ series He is primarily a civilian’ although |i @ hope rather than an accomplish-|vania or Grand Central station of a| the gorgeous green-pold of the wa-| any picture that he has wade Ad } This seemed to Mr. Peek ground enough to stand|he holds a military title. Of all;ment. Sunday must prove ‘discouraging to| ter, the handsome police officer, he is i] on, and he announced himself for Smith. But the/those who surrounded Obregon he Will Avoid Bloodshed anyone caring to go to a beach. The| Eyery form of ear torture known | singularly in contrast with his arch- { reporters got after Governor Smith, seeking more light| was the closest to his chief. But Saenz ought to be able to in-|Long Beach, Rockaway or Manhat- ivili ivilized must | enemy, Nick Scarsi, portr: on his attitude, and he thereupon declared that the! with Obregon when ppeastie fuser duce the various factions to com-|tan Beach train entrances present steer Dre chloe te Louis Wolheim, the “ugliest” wis Bs New York World had accurately stated his position in|his farm in Northern Mexico to be-|Promise their differences and avoid |scenes of chaos destined to take away | juxurious beauty of a Hudson shore- | the screen. these four propositions: come the most victorious command-|Plunging Mexico again into the|what little joy may be left after the|line, One must be ared for a] The long and exciting feud be- ic Party is committed to er in the revolutionary ranks, chaos of civil war. He is an Obre-|effort required to get to the railroad| savage mixture of outa banjo-| tween the gun-toting ond hair-trig- That the Democratic Party is Hope yoni Obregon's Right-hand M, gon man and apparently a Calles|station. And when any one of the| guitars, harmonicas, nose-o-phones,| gered Scarsi on one hand, and the the principle of controlling laregrae ea ‘the H ae oe man, as well. With the living sup-'popular beach resorts has been| secordigns, none-to-close harmony| fearless Captain McQuigg on the tural surpluses, the cost to scale He became Obregon’s chief of port of Calles and the unqualified reached, there follows a struggle for| hummers, shrieking babies, raucous | other, as personified by Wolheim group benefited. staff and entered Mexico City at his| backing of the followers of the dead|a bathhouse locker and then for al eiriies, frantic mamas pursuing | and Meighan is one of the most mel- That the plan for applying this principle commander's side'when the Western|Qbregon, he ought to get off to a|place on the beach. It’s just as well their young and such other discord- | odramatic highlights of the cinematic contained in the McNary-Haugen Bill is not army overthrew the reactionary good start. to take an anaesthetic along to make lied by arrel-| season. The plot concerns the scooriatls os sie a ll ea aseatarine pr scrarlame, Euerta, we There seems to be no doubt that |the operation as painless 2s possible. ms gneve yer os esr 4 be iates | struggle between McQuigg and re ie 1a: mo pla s " ay revolution ended, | President Calles is sincere in his se 8 and imitators of the Ten Alpine | Scarsi for supremacy of a gang-rid- out tl principle. ss nieces erick oar jaenz returned to civil life. Obre-|resolution to leave the presidency} Ona week day it’s different. But | Yodelers. den precinct and the inevitable in- Teas Nene DOmiags Aer e ee =| Ron maee Bia under-secretary of|when his term expires. According |only the idle have time to go upon} By the time Bear Mountain is|trigue and gun-play provides the - such @ plan, fel a Hines popu an sa made him |to informed persons who know Cal-|a week day. _ reached, one looks wistfully at a/ fireworks. (4 rn So the McNary-Haugen Bill, twice vetoed, turned! ‘erred from that post to the trans-|les and Mexico, only an attempt of| Perhaps, with a gesture of de-|ticket which gives your destination| Marie Prevost is the night club ; down by the Kansas City Convention, and now rejected |ury So+w, Nl did Le ‘0 the treas-isome faction or factions to create a|spair, you determine to forego the/as Poughkeepsie or Albany and pond- entertainer and supplies heart by the candidate named by the Houston Convention, is rq that Call ee — perform his | condition of civil war before his time | joys of such bits of seashore as you|ers whether to jump overboard, go| interest. She is the only feminine at buat eae 4 they ees les, when he aeeinaed expires would cause him to continue|can call your own, and take a Hud-|ashore or become a student of mob/ Player in the cast, but performs the Mr. Peek, who is accused of being a Democrat any- teteiaiee of ppm] aieia He ped in office after his legal term is up.|son River boat. ee ae fi seta: ee ee ae way, feels sure that Governor Smith, if elected, willl the post in 1927 to t aire. Sheer Serer And, for sheer natural beauty I when you cgme to New! finesse. . Tee The farm protien ait inealiactaal noneaty” p ahs to take the gover- BOXER REBELLION know of nothing, lovelier than the|York and wish to look upon a most Peace ‘solve the PI m, ad poe ip of his native state of Nueva| “Are you th? man who boxed my|Hudson shores in mid-July or Au-| New. Yorkese assemb! in one of CAPITOL THEATRE On the other hand, Senator McNary, co-author nm and to take charge of Obre-|ears 7 gust, when the greenest of hills and| its playful moods, by all means take] Tingling scenes, hairbreadth es- the discarded bill, stands firmly by Mr. Hoover oe the i 's campaign for presidency. “No.” the gentlest of hills curve gracefully|the Sunday boat up the Hudson. | capes and a double-barreled man best fitted to find and effectuate a sound solution.) Saenz is a realist, in close con-| “You are not?” down +- the water’s edge. Even as a| Otherwise, choose a’ Monday, Tues- | is what one sees in “! Crooks,” It only remains for the farmer citizen to make his|tact with Mexico’s internal prob-| “I have said so, isn’t that|loyal ex-Californian, and one who|day, or any other week day. For|a comedy drama of the underworld choice between Governor Smith, whose knowledge of|!ems, as well as ee problems | en: a7 once contributed to the journals of|we have no lovelier sight to offer| which had its first showing at the the problem is fragmentary and superficial, and whose|Which are constantly in the fore-| « ‘who are you?” the Californians, Inc., I am forced to/ you in all the great Empire state. Capitol theatre last evening. natural sympathies are all with the Eastern consumer,|ground because of the great amount| “The man who is going to box|tone down'my ex-Californian adjec- GILBERT SWAN. There is abundant comedy, with q and Mr. Hoover, who has solved knottier economic |f foreign capital in the country. |your. ears today.”—Buen Humor, |tives in the presence of the Hudson. | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | many tense situations, which give 4 problems with brilliant success, and who, in the post- It was Saenz who conducted the| Madrid. Yet, upon-a;Bumiay, thinga’hap| ———— it variety, war economic crisis sav y for merican 5] story is about two former farmer, | BARBS | crooks, Eddie Ellison and Larry —_—_—_—_—, _ . GLARING HEADLIGHTS ree EA atti go straight . {ttis'no fault of taeiee (Devils Lake Journal.) ‘wenty-five people were ro! in| that a dying friend of Larry's steals According to newspaper reports many of the auto, avi 6 ett CO aaa neces | @ iamend peckiers sual begs Lary bile collisi the high the state, and of 8 : t band ispose of i se Pro- the nation, for that matter are caused by glaring head-| A HAW -BY DOVE; “THE BLINDFOLD: Yg@ SORRY MISTAH MADOR| itnews, cegds to his wife and family lights. One, therefore, might wonder why auto- rf aa E a BuT DAT eT uspicion on ys, as | mobile manufacturers ine alarears on all automobiles test! HAS BEEN EXCEEDINGLY D CIGAR’ 1 fi j Dr. Gerald Wendt, chemistry dean | they fa been discharged a day { now turned out by them. They might just as well save SUCCESSFUL ¢ [ee MY : Is BURNIN? A HOLE « at Pennsylvania State College, says| before the robbery. Complications | all thas ation axpenee sae boone Siete SARRAtRElY Bet RERS NOSE ASD DOUBLY I Yo” BLINDFOLD. toon bo. furnished. with aynthetic|sislen by Mike Mots” a cxotk wane ti tl i it i 7 a ne len & crook want thet oe splendid ace ‘ses when applied iy a rome SMELL- HANKACHEF ! wwe is prodncta, Some basements are right ed for murder. The. manner fe the drivers. We were interested recently i news » rf is uch they unravel mystery story coming out Of Minneapolis when z numberof NEVER. FAILS MES. No, TH” HANKACHEF No” f Ae capture Ross form the basis fora -- automobilists were tagged by the police for using glar- ot ‘SMELL BURNIN’ Georgia man lost his voice after | thrilling and emotional comedy ~ ing handlights. It was one of the few times that the NEVER ! THIS? CIGARET L A hayes Sirens. fy ht, eee ik rae i law enforcement authorities of a city took drastic ac- i - : man here is an excellent cast, with tion against glaring headlights. Yet, there is, appar- q I AM, Now Z:SMoKING R sonably these days. : Robert Armrtroag as Eddie Elli. ently, no difficulty on the city streets because of glar- THe SAME BRA eee son; Dorot! P| as Kay - ing headlights. One may well a through the siesta BLINDFOLDED, 1S “THE ND i "Tis a funny world. The heat we son, his wife; Borotky Dwan, ewe of Devils Lake at night and face strong headlights AS “THE : SECOND CIGARET YoU are: all kicking about right now is| im’ vivacious as, Jane Brown, iu uel i - = nny Mack Brown, the street lights, which sintaise the hacads "Bur on GAVES ME mT CAN TELL BY : foine to comt.us all plenty per ton cracts the role of the other crook. f Z Par paca ald tai told, and with its slant of tragedy. the highways outside the city a different story may be , We SMELL | . ° Only this morning we were discussing this matter “ a" -A Racine, Wis., man reports one FAMILIARITY COMPLEX of his hens laid an egg with three Fede before we with an automobilist, who stated that he has bec: ks, At least it isn’t a white lie. [re wasn't ane discouraged over-attempting to use his dimmers ea ene ‘4 was white lie. | other like me in the world. a car with strong lights approaches because, nine times She: I know; and now I should = - ‘ Night clubs often ha, ha the law, |hate to think there was—Tit-prts, but when a padlock is put on the jt ‘eal (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ADVERTISEMENT > o | | At the Movies ;|Relief from Curse Begidryrd TERATES oh —_ Action thrills are super! A i picsried in “The Racket,” ‘Thomas rere el rele foe more leighan’s latest starring effort,| misery than any cause.” is featured at the Eltinge| But immediate relief hes bee foe Trieay aod Saterday, No under-| found, A tablet called Rexall world ‘has equalled this stir-|derlies has been discovered. ring and realistic interpretation of| tablet attracts water from the Pa , municipal graft and g: play and| tem into the lazy, dry, c Thomas Meighan {s unfolded in the| bowel called the colox. The most convinci haracterizati loose: Bi heiiinnt cntace en | eens ee es ar. food waste ‘and As Captain McQuige, fighting and movement’ withsut fetce Pht Honyed Piles © ficer, the spalae or Ruud increasing the dose. ‘Shown in a new top suffer'ng from constipation. role. Rexal’ Orderlie out of ten, the approaching driver refuses to return the courtesy which former has offered in dimming his lights. The miracle is that there are not more trage- dies to automobilists on the highways, what with the refusal of drivers to use their dimmers and give the other fellow an even chance with death. We think there is a definite state law regarding auto- mobile lights, but, it is evident, like many other state and federal laws, habitual violation brings on practical nullification. We break a law once innocently, but it sneene that after wie pet away wilh Mi that tens, the next come wit much difficulty, and without fiat Os Sos compaloaet., We enaee if we are al) law. breakers at heart, or if we accept laws carelessly or without the serious thought that reckless violation of It is a great problem for psychologists to ponder over. | “The Racket” is one underworld | Next in brig’. at night. able to ask votes on the ground that his is too r : lext day brig’.:. Get £4 for 25¢ Old ovundetake the ateeouous doin cf the presidency, are veal ‘and ta characters enna ay. 2t he Mencet Rexal Drug ea,