The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 16, 1928, Page 4

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p4PAGE FOUR — he Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) blished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- ek N. py and entered at the postoffice at Bis- warck as second class mail matter, ‘ rge D. Mann ............President and Publisher H Subscription Rates Payable in Advance aily by carrier, per year . aily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . aily by mail, per year, * (in state outside Bismarck) .......++ 4 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . pWeekly by mail, in state, per year ( Weekly by mail, in state, three years for . Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, PEE YOAT cee eseeseceeeeee renee eros : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ‘ Member of The Associated Press (The Associated Press is exc ; tise for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and .. also the local news of spontaneous origin published Cferein. All rights of republication of all other mat- fer herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives entitled to the) the ballot in a number of large counties, but will be there in the run-off primary. Victory for Love is not certain, however. Four years ago, Felix D. Robertson emerged from the first primary with a plurality vote that seemed suf- ficient to insure his election in the run-off. Yet Miriam A. Ferguson came out of the second primary with a majority of 80,000. = Anything can happen between now and August 25, and the outcome will be in doubt until the votes are counted. Texas Democrats must wait a few days to learn where they stand. HOOVER HOLDS HIS PEACE We hadn’t thought it possible, but it begins to appear that there is one man in public life in America who is even less talkative than President Coolidge. When Secretary Hoover visited the president at Brule, Wis., the other day, newspaper photographers swooped down on them and took a great many pictures. At last they asked the two men to engage in conversation. And then—wonder of wonders!—it developed that, lent Coolidge could fill in quite nicely with cretary Hoover was quite taciturn, A man who can make Calvin Coolidge look ‘oquacious ic, indeed, gifted with the gift of reticence, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Under New Management THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1928 _ STAMPED & CHERRIES AND MILK A few days ago, in one of my weekly menus, I suggested for lunch a combination of cherries and milk without the addition of any other food. A veritable small avalanche of letters arrived subsequently from all over the country, Here is a sample letter: . “Dear Mr. McCoy: I am surprised that a man of your great learning should be so ignorant about food combinations as to combine cherries and milk. Don’t you know this forms a deadly poison? I wonder how many. people have died as a result of this menu which you published. I hope you will correct this statement as soon as possible. Except for this parts of the country attacked my ideas by stating that food combina- tions were “all the bunk.” How in the name of reason can a man who Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on ith and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. claims to be a writer on health sub- jects make such an asinine state- ment? The proven rules about the digestion of food may be observed, not only in the laboratory, but also in the stomach and intestines of liv- G. LOGAN PAY. COMPANY " " combination, which must be an error | ing human beings. The business of A NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg. eM A SLs abl Mal daltt hake of your stenographer, we have found | the dietitian is to learn these laws 4 €HICAGO DETROIT] Dr. Harvey Wiley, famous pure food expert, charges your articles very instructive and| and to teach them to his student pa- 4 Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. au Ns Official City, State and County Newspaper) yt HEROES lie school supplies has happily low an inspirational verse for the report book in wide usage. The quo- A publisher of p propriately employed i who believes that cherries and milk,} Answer: The name “shingles” is sien nae looked into, at any rate. The pure food laws were put when combined, form a poison shows | given to the disorder caused by the ‘ id a Lives of great mena r on the statute books only after a very long and very that he knows very little on the sub-| deposit of toxic substances aloag , ‘d . We can make our lives sublime, hard fight. It would be an outrage if they were being ject of food combinations. certain nerve trunks, It always oc- And, departing, leave behind us, . Footprints on the sands of time.” e Hitching your wagon to a star means making a model A: of some great man or woman and then perseveringly * striving to emulate your ideal, Knowing the great @ traits of gre n we unconsci acquire them for te that the recent prevalence of food poisoning in various parts of the country is due in large measure to the fact that the pure food laws are not being enforced. Executive orders, Dr. Wiley charges, have crippled enforcement officers from obtaining strict observance of the federal laws. It is hard to tell, at this moment, how far Dr. Wiley’s charges may be justified. But the matter should be allowed to lapse now, Editorial Comment ST, LAWRENCE FOR FARM RELIEF | elas snd explain why this ap- peared in the paper. Mrs. M. B.C.” This statement, which appeared in the newspaper, was not an error of my stenographer. It was purposely placed there to offset the popular superstition that cherries and milk form a bad combination, Anyone Milk and acid fruit make a very desirable mixture, principally from the fact that the acid of the fruit helps to curdle the milk, and this milk-fruit combination can therefore be digested with greater ease than sweet milk taken by itself. Curdling of milk must take place as the first tients, That health writer would do well if he wrote in to this newspaper for my article on food combinations, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. Brown writes: “Will you kindly explain in plain language the cause of shingles, the symptoms, and if i g there is a cure?” curs on one side of the body at a time, and is more frequently found on the upper back or around the ribs on one side. The nerves are in- flamed by the toxins, and the skin breaks out in a rash wherever the most irritation exists. The cure is through diet, and no local treatments ir ourselves. For the child in school there is no stronger process of digestion. This is usually |are very effective I yi S y effective. A fast taken at 4 urge than the ge of some great man or woman, liv- siannnalbinie sn Gaeta eo raerivatiial eer done by the gastric juices of the|the onset of the disorder will hasten 2 Me br dead. Fern ee oe ies apemeligraleteoeicel ate stomach which break the milk into|the cure, but even under this treat- h Unfortunately, young people of he formative age h sometimes choose their model unwisel, Bandits, pi- ts yate chiefs and other unscrupulous adventurers too of- 7 ten are the appointed heroes of the adolescent age. ti When these are not worshipped by youth for their crimes an! atrocities but ‘or their daring deeds and adventuresome spirit they are not to be discounted as valuable incentives to growing boys but their place should be taken by D’Artagnans, who have all the cour- age without the rascality of the oth “In a peace-loving country such as ours it is note- worthy that the world’s military leaders occupy the topmost pedestals in the hero-worship of boyhood. A place in history as a warrior and soldier is a passport into the hearts of young America. It is not that George Washington was the “Father of his Country” and a great patriot but that he was a brave soldier that es- tablishes him as a hero in the minds of American bo; The sam holds true with a great many adults who RYERSS E Ree a Sai - west provinces to Montreal. Reduced to figures, trans- | 196, and enthusiastic. William A. Com-|@——————————~_~—__-6 i 2a Feber A 3 have not lost the romaticism of youth. oriatianieoets ab Gat aiiaigraintiow avecagerapneox: 1 Bs that year the democratic as-|stock, national’ committeeman, is | IN NEW YORK | peed vile slow aie Ne digestion pou chu: a person can get in good ? 1 We can all benefit from following in the footsteps of | mately five cents per bushel less than the rate on|pirant came within 60,000 votes of |@iving generously of his time and| 4 Racthes Taeettieds qeoeatation ee PALS feces ster he *, @ great man but let us choose our model with care. American shipments from farm to the world market. |wyinning Michigan. The issues were|Fesources for Smith. To show the Saag or ga NR lane Sbiseebubedetieiiets undoes [tana an: lOne: by eoaye b Peat ies orth and west of Buenos Aires, inland along the | amnesic iean ue ioenem was/extent of their optimism, the state| New York, Aug. 16—The day of |Prrrape, be excused for not under. | tai. ty dick and oxoeroe ae 3 x ae Sa valley of the Parana river, lies the rich wheat belt of |bitter. State republican leaders ad-|ticket, on which normally there are|the old-time race track plunger is | ¢j ‘ aaah eae rato slbatk j > THE INTERLOCKING WORLD Argentina, Compared with the great distances from|mit’ that the ‘Smith. Hoover cam.|t™any blank spots on the democratic | gone. ~ * |tions, but what about the physician} Answer: I strongly believe that p { - Since the ~apid development of modern methods of |tidewater to the granary of America, the wheat pro-|paign, unless conditions. change |side, is clustered with candidates! Such names as “Bet-you-a-million” | fe Hoth eee a ae Loot eee a Te eon lat + jommunication and transportation the world has shrunk |ducers of Argentine are near the ocean. The port of |rapidly, is the first parallel. While|for state offices. Men and women} john Gates, Pittsburgh Phil and|simple facts? si 5 Meee Tats Grdees cand obuneeamicanatre: 1 % that, with the people of the earth continually grow- | Rosario, 20) fae up the navigable Parana river. lies /they express the utmost confidence jeer Sheed awaited swing | Honegt John Kelley belong to a day| The other day a health writer| ments, wherever you live, angibal: 2 ‘Ag larger one nation, be it ever so small and appar- |? ortina ¢ the region. The average farmer of Ar-|that Michigan will not go demo-|t0 democracy are after every office| remembered better by our grand-|whose column is being read in many! ance your diet accordingly. 4 es gentina can place his grain at shipside at Buenos Aires | cratic, they concede they have “a|jfrom United States senator down) dads than by our flapper girl friends. y f vatly insignificant, cannot turn over, nor squirm, nor |for about ten cents a bushel, shipped by river or by | fight ‘on their hands,” and are gird-|through governor, lieutenant gover- No. more.does the turf produ Z . thoughtt. fs ty & streach, nor jounce out an elbow without jostling the |rail. The cost of transportation from the Argentine |ing for the fray with the most thor-|Nor and congress. ene shite clk “big minis” Pees eee aoe concerned, | nature aml bid It ane it not : Sher nations, Indeed, the interlocking relationships |farm to Liverpool was determined by the Great Lakes- | veh organizatvon in many years, |. Religion will play its silent part| Who’ nade ‘millions sand lost. them, | ethene ie, eee eget one | hus Ife comes a. pathetic chat Ae 3 aren ches : |St. Lawrence Tidewater association in 1926 to be from] py tic chief tend that|in. Michigan as elsewhere; farm] °o ct wverni m,| There is, however, at least one/his life comes a pathetic character, j, have become such a mazy network that it is not merely |25' to 7 conts a bushel, or ten to fifteen cents a bushel | +, lemocratic chie: hi 5 seni h ri relief is an almost aubmerged inaue. almost overnight, on the length of |left to puzzle the brows of the|a beautiful blind violinist. In her, 4 the adjacent nations on all sides which are affected |Jess than the American farmer must pay. ae poy ep omg Meare The selection of a United States|* boxoals nose. ; a Broadway “Tin s.” This is an-|the gangster sees a ray of hope. She By movement or movements of any given nation. But he Great Lakes and St. Lawrence river together _ senator to succeed Woodbridge N.' -timers will tell you that, taken | other WNick, otherwise known as|cannot sce his face and her idea of z if one nation progre: f it retrogrades, if it trembles with a convulsion, or expands with an effort cr a de- ¥elopment of any kind, all other nations, nearby and Yemote—even to the uttermost parts of the earth—are affected. » If one country were the sole producer or source of ‘one necessary commodity and some disaster should re- duce that p:. luction to nothing or wipe out that source, when the distributed supply in other lands should be- come exhausted the world would be affected in business Gnd in living conditions by the famine in that one com- modity. And the same principle applies to nearly all articles f trade: Drought in areas in Asic. has its effect on American business; a strike in England has its effect upon b. ess in South America; legislation touching certain lines in America will mean much to Australia. ‘The nations cannot live unto themselves—even in busi- mess. And through other interests the same principle jolds with perhaps les; tangible grip but with no less gertainty of fact. This is a world of people of one race of humanity—an ever-shrinking world as measured by natural or invisible ties that bind the tribes of men to- gether. Aaencenm compen tention upon the St. Lawrence waterway project. Do- mestic prices American farmers receive for their grain are measured by the world price, based upon the play of supply and demand in the great markets of Europe, mins the cost of transportation from the production point. So far as the western hemisphere is concerned, the chief sources of competition with the American grain producers are two, namely, Canada and the Argentine. In considering the St. Lawrence waterway’s benefits, it is worth while to compare the American grain pro- ducers’ position with that of these competitors. Canada offers certain transportation advantages to its farmers not open to American grain growers. The larger of the two great railway systems of Canada is government owned. Freight rates on agricultural prod- ucts are fixed below American schedules. This can be done because deficits created for the Canadian National railway are assumed by the government and paid out of public revenue. Canada is completing a railroad route to tidewater on Hudson bay over which a great deal of grain is expected to flow in the future at less cost than the present lake-rail haul from the North- provide a waterway leading from the heart of North America directly toward the world grain markets of Europe. By flooding out the rapids of the St. Lawrence and admitting ocean shinning to the Great Lakes, deep water transportation can be provided from upper lakes ports clear to Europe. The transportation disadvantage on the American farmer as against the Canadian farmer will be largely removed by the St. Lawrence waterway, and both will be given a cheaper route than they now have. The saving of seven to twelve cents a bushel in freight charges on export American grain would overcome also most of the advantage enjoyed by Argentine com- petitors. It would increase the American advantage over India’s and Australia’s competition and diminish the threat against the American farmer’s position from Russian wheat, movable at cheap rates from ports on the Black sea. American agriculture’s interest in the St. Lawrence waterway is direct and important. It is not surprising that the project is stressed in the political campaign of 1928 as a practicable measure of farm re- lief. ON THE JOB AT 99 ‘ (Philadelphia Bulletin, Actively on the job at 99, John R. Voorhis, commis- sioner of elections of New York city, is more than a local figure. Governor Smith’s acquaintance with the sidewalks of New York is scanty compared with that of Tammany’s Grand Sachem, who was playing about them in the ‘30s of the last century and whose first job MICHIGAN, G. 0. P. STATE 75 YEARS, TO SEE STIFF DEMOCRATIC BATTLE) ier was stuck ottement when This is the sixth of a seri of stories on the political situa- tion in the various states. Lansing, Mich., Aug. 16.—()—A state so heavily republican normal- ly that in recent years it has given 75 per cent of its vote to republican presidential candidates and has not expressed a preference for a demo- cratic standard bearer in 75 years is prepared this year to witness a po- litieal dispute as sharp as the fa- mous Bryan-McKinley contest of will swing Michigan into the dem- ocratic column — and incidentally carry candidates for state office with him. Two issues will play major roles in the Michigan campaign—the St. Lawrence waterway and prohibi- tion. On the face of them they ap- pear to favor Hoover and indicate the retention of tbe state on the republican side. The state as a whole is heartily in favor of the development of a lakes-to-the-sea waterway, which would make lake ports ocean ports, and Hoover is being pointed te by his adherents as a champion of this development; Smith as an enemy. On the pro- hibition score Michigan would have to make a complete turnover. It has voted dry time after time, and went dry before national prohibi- tion. To offset these paper advantages the democrats point to recent dis- closures showing the alleged huge exportations of liquor from Cana- da; they claim Detroit, with more than 300,000, or one-third of the state’s vote, will go almost solidly for Smith because of his stand on prohibition. Hoover. has behind him in Michi- gan a functioning republican orga’ ization, headed by crest of a wave of popu! and day for Hoover. ernor Green, vigorously in the Hoover cause. The democrats, ordinarfly lethar- gic in Michigan, are rejuvenated Ferris has been left to the gener: election. Appointed senator, Van- denberg has no opposition in the primary for the republican nomin: tion; nor has John W. Bailey, mayor of Battle Creek, for the democratic. Governor Green has an opponent for the republican nomination for a@ second term in the person of former lieutenant George Welsh, governor. Comstock is alone the field for the democratic guber- natorial nomination. ° ————— And now we're to have radio mo- tion pictures right in our own living last hubby will be glad rooms. At to take friend wife to the movies. Tunney stepped out of the ring, down all engage- e one which let his thereby turnii ments except tl bride-to-be step into the ring. Gov. Al Smith has started gambling battle with Saratoga Gov. Fred W. Green, which at present is on the larity, The governor, with working followers in every community, will fight night Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, appointed by Gov- likewise will work} $4 | BARBS county officials. He just up and knocked the Saratoga chips of their shoulders, the first cable of the new Ambas- sador Bridge, connecting Detroit and Ontario, was set in place. Folks just can’t get over it—until it’s fin- ished. ee * Kansas City man is accused of stealing an airplane for a joy ride. No telling where he'll land. + * Newport, R. I., woman discovered the loss of a diamond plaque at the ‘close of a society ball. The bawl usually comes after the jewelry is lost. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) by and large, it’s a “shoestring game” today. In New York the agents for bookies have been content to pitch their tents in the mid-Thirties, can- vass office buildings ‘and take bets of 50 cents and up from telephone girls, office boys, stenographers, clerks, and taxi drivers. Such sums would bring blushes to the cheeks of a dyed-in-the-wool plunger. I _am told, however, that these small sums, taken in the aggregate, run into daily fortunes. Something like 50,000 persons are said to be | regular customers, al a- in nd twice as many are reported as being off-and- | on-ers. From all of which I gather that “Nick F.” passed on at a good time. To Nick this sort of gambling must have been a bit distressing. Nick was one of the few glamorous old- timers left “in the racket.” Broad- ‘way has known him for a generation, both as a spender and a giver to charity, He. was “old school.” He was not a racketeer. He was one of that strange breed, in so far as a curds, but these curds are often too large for quick digestion. Whereas fruit, taken at the same time with the milk, breaks the latter up into very small curds so that the diges- tive juices of the stomach can work more readily. The simplest study of physiological chemistry will explain this action, but most people appar- ently do not make such a study until they really become sick and are forced by the driving powers of ne-|I cessity to investigate: the laws of digestion. Many people who combine milk and fruit also add bread or cereals. When they feel bad as a result they blame the fruit and milk, whereas the real fault lies in the combination of the acid fruit and the starch of the cereal food. As I have explained many times in these columns, the use of an acid fruit with bread or any starchy ment it often takes a week or ten days for the eruption to disappear. Question: Mrs. Ed. A. writes: “I received the impression from one of your articles that milk should not be given to children having catarrhal jtroubles. I have given my 6-year-old son, who is slender and has a nervous disposition, one quart of milk each day. There is much mucus from his head all the time. Now I wonder if should stop giving him milk, and what should I give him if Ido?) Am learning much about food from your articles w is new to me.” Answer: I do not recommend the use of milk for a child who is troubled with excessive catarrh, I have prepared several special ar- ticles on the feeding of children which I will be glad to send to you if you will write me again, giving me your name and address. Question: R. J. C. asks: “Don’t “Nick,™Mthe Greek.” A few cronies know that he actually is a Greek. The rest of his name is Dandolas. When last heard from he was some- where out west, flat broke. He dropped a cool $50,000 or more in a couple of hours at one of those exclusive dice games which Broad- way holds in a small room behind barred doors. That was but one of his flops. The story is that he first hit Broadway with something close to a million, won at “low ball.” Whenever his, “stake” ran out he disappeared in the general direction of the west, invariably turning up again with well-lined pockets. No one has ever solved the mystery as to the source of his come-back fund. ** * “Nick F.,” however, belonged to another generation. He is credited with being the first follower of the ies to take on a staff—that is, e hired “rail birds,” as they call those clockers who rise at dawn to watch the early morning training activities of certain horses. He had clockers, jockeys, stablemen, and others under his eye—and often on his payroll—to “tip” the condition of him will be the result of his per- sonality. How his plan turns out, furnishes one of the most intensely interesting dramas colored with gang warfare, hijacking and thrills. ELTINGE THEATRE Milton Sills, without resorting to a dual role, enacts two distinct char- acterizations in his starring produc- tion, “The Hawk’s Nest” which will be the feature at the Eltinge for Friday and Saturday. It sounds impossible. But in this underworld drama, Sills is first a disfigured World War veteran who owns and runs a night club in China- town, and then, through plastic sur- gery, is restored to his former ap- pearance, and undergoes a lil change in personality. Doris Kenyon plays opposite the star while the well-selec sno ing cast includes Montagu ve, Sojin, George Kotsonaros, Frances Hamilton and Yola d’Avril. DRAKE MAN LOSES ARM IN ACCIDENT Drake—Fred Jans had to have hit left arm amputated and the index and middle fingers of his right hand ‘ FEWER CRIPPLES was that of office boy of John Jay, # famous lawyer of horses. There’ was nothing crooked as a result of a binder accident here ean : veut He the time, grand: f the Revoluti i about Nick. What he wanted was 7 4 + Cripples are a relative rarity in the United States, | himself piga he taundere, of the Repub papeeet ona |OUR BOARDING HOUSE “information.” And he got it and Bite Geta was brought to a ompared with the rest of the world. There are only . 315,000 physically blind persons in America. The leg- * Jess are seldom seen and a man having one member 4 missing is a curiosity, The same is true of the de- { formed. But American visitors abroad return with { gtories of the hordes of blind, crippled and deformed } ghet with everywhere. { One of the principal reasons for the greater numbers | @f the physically handicapped abroad is war. Few coun- | fries in Europe and Asia have not participated in more | han one war within the time of the living generations. | . Another cause for the comparative scartity of de- | formity and of cripples in this country is the higher | @tandard of sanitation. Skilled medical service for all and rapid advances in surgery are preventing and cur- ing the diseases which leave their victims maimed. Many persons are made blind or otherwise crippled through industrial occupations, but this, too, has been zeduced to a minimum in the United States by the in- troduction of safeguards in all factories. } In the great numbers of maimed and disfigured Voorhis has been a light of Tammany for many years, but, like many another stalwart, earned his standing in the Wigwam by first fighting it vigorously as one of the pillars of the old county democracy, Old age, as Mr. Voohris enjoys it, with mental and a reasonable amount of bodily vigor, is the objective today of a good deal of medical effort directed along life extension lines and many will be curious as to how he has achieved it. The first part of the recipe might well be to take the recaution to come of sound long-lived ancestral stock. Mr. Voorhis came from one of the best racial stocks ‘hat have made up the American nation, Holland Dutch on both sides. His paternal ancestor emigrated to thi side in 1660 on a ship picturesquely called in Dutch tl Spotted Cow. H:: forebears were among the numer » Dutch settlers of Northern New Jersey—where the name Voorhis or Voorhees is still common—and the commissioner, though a New Yorker from the age of is a native Jerseyman, born in Pompton Moderate living, including in later live only one yea Plains. two meals a day, and never worrying, are Mr. Voorhis’ own recommendations to have a try at his record. “CHARGE IT” (Spokane Spokesman-Review.) ; QUICK iw ASSISTANCE = ME HAND “AND HELP. Mi THIS. TWENTY POUNDER | Wis: WILL: HoT: BA “Mis FeLroul,< I 'witt Have IT MOUNTED. AND ,SHELLACKED, THEN DONATE (1 “To “HE:: oWL’s: CLUB “To ‘HANG IN-A CONSPICUQUS PLACE. AS A S(LEAT BoASTOF. MY SKILL’ As A FISHERMAN fo played it. And, about 20 years ago, working the New Orleans track—his favorite hang-out—he came out with half a million, or thereabouts. I’m told that when he had run his fortune up to $400,000 he staked it on one race—the result was pretty close to a million dollars, When the year 1921 had ended he could boast of a million and a half. Yet, not so long afterward, stricken with typhoid fever, his wife was pawning the fam- ily jewels to pay his doctor bills. Write your own sermon. He became a bookie himself, and went up again, only to fall. When he was “on the up” he staked his friends. One sea- son he paid the railroad fares of all his friends who had been “taken.” And when death took him he was neither rich nor poor. It was said that he had come from a wealthy English family, that he had started life as an accountant in a bank. If it means anything to be known wher- ever the ponies race, then Nick left ATTEMPT ROBBERY AT STANLEY Stanley—Thieves entered the An- derson Bros. store here recently but man before any goods were stolen. In their effort to get away, the burg- lars left their car parked in front of the store. Upon investigation the car was identified as one stolen from Indiana. SEALED BIDS will be received by White School Dit» trict No. 42 for moving schoolhouse and constructing full basement, ce- ment porch and steps. Bonds must be furnished and work completed September 15th, Bids will be opened Wednesday eve- ning, August 22, at nine o'clock, at the home of the clerk, seven mileq Southeast of Sterling. . The board reserves the right to re« ject any or all bids, MRS. BERTHA SWINDLING, p er 4-Wkly. Driscoll, N. Dak, were surprised by the night watchs, A lady in Washington, D. C., bought a fur coat. Her behind him a sort of monument. method was simple. She went to a store, picked out the r road there is a lesson for this country and in every And that’s that. ‘cripple at home there is a lesson in safety first for | oo; and had it ch: to her huabe GILBERT SWAN. ‘every man, woman and child in America. A nee have 2 charge ¥ coms Hy sane ree, husband (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, In¢.) hi ut S } la i} | D« ) ut she opened one. SS é ¥ ‘TEXAS MAY SURPRISE ’EM So far the stor: commonplace, but the next chap- @: Is a question that must be + Democratic politics in Texas are never in the bag. | Sent so mtste) Pes Mood snes te, pay fer | Atthe Movies | ‘answered by, every young ing The issue e upheld the husband. he unexpected happens there with annoying fre- | allowance, to be exceeded at her own risk. » So the cheering over the nomination of Dan | became a legal one, and the judg loody seems premature. Appeal was taken, and judgment is being awaited with some interest by wit erchant Moody’s nomination was never in doubt. The two-| Not all wives are BM cr) ee eet tradition has always been strong enough to in- |ately, for economic stability, are more parsimonious the weakest executive a second term for the ask- | than their husbands. But a wife of th , spending type heigl ts. our CAPITOL THEATRE if You Are One of the things that will Employment awed 7 Opportunities for Advancement is a BUSINESS TRAINING ' Jf you have not such we ofter ‘you age There is.a great audience appeal | to the plot of “The Way of the Strong,” which will be shown at the Capitol Theatre for the last time to- night,. Thursday. It presents an in- Lest f angle in the life of a gang- ster and. shows the tender heart that lies hidden beneath a rough, un- couth exterior, “The Way of the Strong” is un- like any of the underworld pictures that have previously been shown here. It:deals with a’ phase of life familiar to“everyone—the dawn of love. The gangster falls in love and’ what. a heart appeal there is to his love! He is a man so battle-scarred that he is repulsive, even his.tender |. , and Moody’s record ranks him as one of the ablest |S2 SPread her wings and soar to uni , ‘Charge it” is th ‘Texas has had in twenty years. The two op- biegest and lovellekt heater Ds te canoe onan candidates, both of whom had declared for pe sr “gest to eager fur coat-bu ladies that a , were without political strength and had little | Pandly 0. K. wou! be desirable? yaddestrain rre..feleu. sntearloantap}y “acs owing. | i If the District’ of Coi But the voters reversed themselves in nomirating| be a victory. for i husband, ir migee tas eile ase B, Love, an anti-Smith man, for lieutenant-|nificance. Husbands everywhere who chose to object . Barry Miller, who was defeated for nomina- - copiave baytie on credit would have a court decision Will enter a run-off primary on ae am rey iM athe ess ot tos Beeesoen

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