The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE The Bismarck Tribune An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., ed are at ited postoffice at Bis- marck secol class matter. ». ‘Mann President and Publisher jon Rates Payable in Advance jer, per Year .......-..00 Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . 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 mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako per year ~.. lember Member of The Associated Press 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 also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY RK -+- Fifth Ave. Bldg. cHicaco” a. DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) DEMOCRACY During the World war the United States and even the world at large heard a great deal of democracy and its salvation. In fact as the war progressed it was ac- cepted as the struggle to the death between democracy and monarchy, That this was so is not surprising since the people of the United States and the other republics of the world have ever preferred to identify their countries as democracies. It will be surprising to many, however, to learn that they have been laboring under a mistaken identity. Political science defines a pure democracy as direct government by the people and a republic as government by the people through their chosen representatives. In true democracy there would be no president, congress, legislature, parliament or other such legislative bodies as exist under the republican form of government. The seventh-grade history teacher used to tell her class how Switzerland was a real democracy where all the people met at certain times, enacted their own laws, made their own treaties with other countries, levied taxes upon themselves and decided how those taxes should be spent. But Switzerland now is governed by a government very much like that of the United States. Representatives are elected for a national assembly on the ratio of one to every 20,000 population, The Swiss probably approach a pure democracy nearer than the United States does, for in Switzerland they have adopted the initiative and referendum. By the initiative the people directly make laws and submit them to the assembly for ratification, By the referen- dum the people act upon laws made by the assembly and may veto them if they desire to do so, If the United States elected representatives to con- gress on the same ratio to the population as prevails in Switzerland, instead of a house of representatives num- bering 435, we would elect more than 5,000 representa- tives to go to congress. The state of Pennsylvania, which now sends thirty-six representatives to congress, would send on the Swiss ratio of one to every 20,000, as many as now constitute the whole congress. When the fathers charted out the governmental course in the days of the revolution they decided that one representative should be sent to congress for every 80,000 population. That was before the days of the im- migrant rush. The proportion has been increased ever since then, until now a representative is elected for every 211,877 population, ANOTHER MYTH GONE For years it has been understood that in China doc- tors are paid“for keeping their patients well. The fee continues while health is good. When a man gets sick it is because the doctor haan’t been doing his duty or is incompetent. It was a good story, full of an engaging plausibility. For all occasions it had point and*cogency. The ban- quet toastmaster and orator could always lean heavily upon it, and for pulpit, platform, political rostrum it could be relied upon to meet some need of argument or illustration. From the college president down to the housemaid talking across the back fence, the Chinese doctor story had a lesson so vivid and simple that it carried itself easily and every load of collateral application and ad- monition that any one cared to pile upon it. Taken all in all, it was one of the most useful things Western civ- ilization has ever borrowed from the Orient. And now comes Dr. Reginald M. Atwater, instruc- tor in epidemiology at Harvard, who says the Chinese story is a myth. He has been in China. He has ex- amined the records and consulted the medical code of that nation. And Dr. Atwater says the Chinese people do exactly the way we do here. When they are well they don’t bother about doctors and have the same care- free disregard for the poor medic’s income that we sor- did materialists of the Western world have. But when they get sick they go on the run for the medicine man. As for paying to be kept well, the doctor says he was unable to find a single instance of any such practice, And so it goes with the good old myths, THE NATIONAL DELICACY Last year Americans consumed 335,703,610 gallons of ice cream, which was nearly three gallons for every man, woman and child in the land. In a single year the national consumption of ice cream increased 11,000,000 gallons. Much of the growth and prosperity of the dairy in- dustry during the last few years have been due to the fnereasing popularity of ice cream. Since 1917 con- sumption of ice cream has increased 160 per cent. Ice cream Las been a boon to mankind. It is a whole- 0! dispensable to a man, days. “Dirty” jobs are fewer in proportion to popula- tion than they were 30 years ago. Most city workers can be as neat personally at their daily tasks as when dressed for “society.” Thanks to the general prosper- ity, they have more changes of raiment. They take pride iykeeping their glothing in order, or they find it necessary to do so to retain the respect of others with whom they come in contact. In an earlier period almost everybody wore out their clothes in rough work. Then a “Sunday suit” was in- The same was true of women who engaged mostly in housework and required a change for social occasiéns, for church or the theater. In the home as well as in industry mechanical devices have relieved the workers of much of the clothes-de- stroying or soiling drudgery that formerly was com- mon. Prosperity enables virtually all to have several suits and dresses. Habits of economy constrain them to have their clothing cleaned frequently. Thus Americans have become the best dressed people in the world. GREATER FRUIT SHIPMENT The Bureau of Railway Economics, at Washington, reveals that rail shipments of fresh fruits and vege- tables have practically doubled in the last ten years. The increase is due largely to improvements in methods of transportation of such perishable commodities, This yepresents a real service to the nation as a whole. It has meant that more and more people have been able to enjoy such foods “out of season”; the housewife no longer has to rely on the can-opener be- tween September and July, The inhabitant of the northern part of the country no longer finds his winter diet a vastly different affair from his summer diet. Both his health and his enjoyment of life have been en- hanced. : Editorial Comment | REAL PROHIBITION REFERENDUMS (Minneapolis Journal) Dry candidates, with one exception, ran ahead of the wet candidates in both party primaries in Ohio. A week previously dry candidates, with one exception, ran well ahead of the wet candidates in both party primaries in Missouri. Pretty good evidence that a majority of the voters in Ohio and Missouri favor the retention of prohibition. What becomes, then, of the favorite wet contention that the public, if it had the chance, would hasten to substitute for prohibition some less drastic means of promoting temperance? What becomes of the wet ar- gument that a referendum would disclose an over- whelming sentiment against the Eighteenth Amend- ment and the Volstead Act? What of the pet claim that bone-dry legislation is opposed by all States that have considerable urban populations? For both Ohio and Missouri are States of cities, no matter how much provincial, untraveled New Yorkers may visualize them as backwoods areas dotted areca with trading posts. Back in 1920 Ohio already was more than sixty-three per cent urban, and probably is more than seventy per cent urban today, with as heavy a proportion of city dwellers as Pennsylvania or Connec- ticut, and a heavier proportion than Delaware or Mary- land. And Ohio’s cities are industrial cities, factory cities, with hundreds of thousands of citizens of recent European extraction. Nor can Missouri, with such pop- ulous industrious centers as St. Louis, Kansas City and St. Joseph, be classed as predominantly rural. The wets have been magnifying the American thirst. If a majority of the voters of the Nation were actually against prohibition, then both Ohio and Missouri would be in the wet column. If working folk were really against. prohibition, then both Ohio and Missouri would be in the wet column. If city dwellers were against prohibition, then both Ohio and Missouri would be in the wet column, ‘ The modificationists have long been demanding a ref- erendum on prohibition. They are getting one in the State primaries this year, and the outcome is not to their liking. A TRAFFIC SUGGESTION (Detroit Free Press.) After an extended survey, a St. Louis expert startled New York officials with the declaration that what Fifth avenue, a particularly congested thoroughfare selected for observation, needs is not to be widened, as had been suggested, but to have well defined and carefully ob- served traffic lanes that would keep motorists in line. The equivalent of almost half the roadway, his investi- gations revealed, is taken up by zig-zagging drivers and others trying to get ahead of the column of autos in which they find themselves, If cars were kept in stead- ily moving lines, with inside and outside lanes for vary- ing, speed, the e: ing dite would not only be amply ufficient, but there would be 2 marked speeding up of travel, according to this Midwest observer. ~ The same finding could be applied to almost any other large center of population. Too often congestion is caused not by narrow streets, but by inconsiderate drivers who pick traffic lanes with an eye to their own convenience. Widening thoroughfares gives greater op- portunity to deviate from a straight line and take up unnecessary space. Establishing traffic lanes, and training drivers to keep in them, would be a slow and often tedious proc it is true; but it would be far cheaper, and more satisfactory, in the long run, than the mad rush to widen streets indiscriminately that seems to have laid hold everywhere. THE FROZEN KISS (St. Paul Dispatch.) The Americanization of Europe goes forward. Hav- ing adopted for the year at least the American climate, Europe has become an addict to American ice cream. In Germany the sudden increase in demand of 400 to 500 per cent has almost overwhelmed the manufacturers, who attribute it to the unwonted heat of this summer and their own cleverness in naming ice cream “Cold Kisses.” Everywhere now in Berlin and the larger BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Awakening Giant BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Aug. 20.—Romantic legend hovering over Yellowstone! National Park is recalled by the announcement by the National Park Service of the discovery of a new geyser. The new phenomenon spouted forth with more than a million’ gal- lon flow the ther day, in the Perry Creek district of the park. Its vol- ume is greater than any known since the old Excelsior geyser stopped boiling over in 1888. The discovery recalls the storied names of John Colter, the first white man to visit the territory and Jim Bridger, scout and trapper, whose trading post was far up in the snowy Rockies. see Colter returned to civilization about 1807 with a tale of the nat- ural wonders of the park that peo- ple refused to believe. Forty years later an official exploration party confirmed the story that Colter told. Colter was a member of the Lewis and Clark expedition that blazed a trail across the virgin west. He was a trapper at heart and he had wandered away alone in quest of the beaver’s lodgings. He was captured by Indians near the junction of the Madison and Jeffer- son rivers, but escaped. Jim Bridger confirmed his story about the “big tea kettles” of the region, but Bridger was given to odd stories, too, so he wasn’t believed. ss The whole Yellowstone area once was the sea of tremendous volcanic activity. Far below the earth, traces of this voleanic heat linger and now and then send a hot column of subterranean water spouting high into the air. That is what the new geyser is, “Old Faithful” shoots a column of water 120 to 170 feet into the air every 65 minutes and the display lasts for four minutes. “The Giant,” another of the park’s famous ysers, water 250 feet high and lasts for an hour. cities parlors can be found where cold kisses are dis- pensed and push carts offer the delicacy on every street. In Great Britain the sale of ice cream has leaped enormously although the dish is not a novelty there. Since the advent in 1917 of the Doughboy and the Gob, ice cream has been sold and cautiously dabbled in by Britishers. Even today it is doubtful if either Ger- many or Engl knows ice cream in its full bloom, in the form of sodas and sundaes. ‘The European is just beginning to get acquainted with the delectable dish. It has long known ices, but even these were served only at banquets and on the tables of the aristocracy. Now that. common people are getting a taste of its nobler more nourishing plied iust enough. When there is a soda fountain on every other corner serving the more glorious combina- tion of ice cream, fruit juices and soda the palate of Europe will be tickled as it seldom has and the Ameri- canization of European taste will be at hand. DOLLAR DOWN AND DOLLAR A WEEK (Duluth Herald) Charles G. Younggreen of Milwaukee, president of some and satisfying food. Countless times it has solved the dilemma what to give unexpected guests. It has usurped the pie as the national dessert. But of more importance is the new industry it has created. Billions arb invested and thousands of men and women are em- ployed in this industry. A part of it are the dairy farms which furnish the great quantities of cream and milk required by it each day. Ice cream saved the farmer from bankruptcy when prohibition deprived him of a market for his grain. Just the International Advertising Aepcinisity who honored Duluth by a visit "yesterday, said in his Minneapolis address that there is no danger to the country in well regulated installment buying. ‘ith a little emphasis on the “well regulated,” that is not only true, but more thamthat is true: that more of the nation’s present great prosperity than most peo- ple realize is based on installment buying. Millions of people are getting automobiles, phono- graphs, radios, washing and ironing machines, homes and countless other int in, on the install- ment plan who couldn’t have they had to pay cash. That means, of course, that all these things are being sold in quantities that would not be possible with- out the installment plan. And, equally of course, that in turn means that manufacturers, dealers and their employes are enjoying business and employment that are due wholly to the practice of buying on time pay- ments. Installment buying, in fact, is like water. Water is useful in many ways, but you can get drowned in re Regulati. of the bar- sellers, Buyers. sori lyre loial are cai may ot be able to cousin, ice cream in cone, biick and bulk cannot be sup- | * sends its| wrought It plays at intervals of!cathedralesque six to 14 days. An unpleasant odor of sulphur continually permeates the whole geyser district. The newest geyscr sends its water 120 to 150 feet high and lasts for four hours. at a time, at intervals o! eight hours, ‘ | The mouth of the geyser appears | ito be the crater of a volcano. The |valley is shrouded in mist and jsteam, given off by scores of gey- jsers and hot springs. Some of; these geysers are very tiny, send-| ing little spouts of boiling water three and four feet into the air. | Sometimes, near the big geysers, \hollow roar can be heard, sugges- itive of the great caverns far below ithe earth’s surface where the gey-| sers are born. One of the park’s wonders is the i“Dragon’s Mouth.” This phenome jnon is a hot spring which hurl ‘seething <vater back and forth in a, small basin. The flow never ceases. |Year after year this huge churn has kept up its boiling activity. | The “big paint pots” also attract many tourists to ¥ellowstone. These are like huge cauldrons containing, what appears to be boiling white llead, its surface dotted with bubbles. Steam, forcing its way up| , through mineral substances, causes these wonders. f IN NEW YORK | New York, Aug. 20.—-There’s many an off-key note in the Man- hattan theme. It is, for instance, in the most gauche sector of the Broadway belt | that you come upon a strange sort of shrine to the immortal Stradi- varius, who left his soul in the: ribbed wood of a few hundred fiddles. heraldic design. But on the fourth side is a very competent looking safe. They do not trust the souls of man in the presence of the soul of Stradivarius. So they keep a dozen or so of his master fiddles barricaded behind an almost im- penetrable steel door. It seems they have a value of $35,000 each, or some such sum —- not unamusing when one recalls how little the great Stradivarius cared for the money-value of his kandiwork. He was a man of means. He did not have to create to sell. He could fford to destroy ten fiddles to very one he let leave his hands— nd did! He could spend years to perfect one instrument of master tonality; something which artists hold more precious than gold. oe 8 Just across the street, the chromo of a heavily tressed lady is bathed in a summer rain. Just below, the large painted letters inform you that | taki Mme. Platois is prepared to provide you with a marcel wave or a re- juvenated face. Just across the street, another sign tells you that Dottie Allen will turn you into a chorine in 10 les- sons or reduce your girth in a dozen lancing lessons. The maestro of an range drink stand stops to dust off the ice. ck From the ground floor; just below, come the monotonous repetitions of phonograph records being demon- strated. Down the hall someone is getting a ukulele lesson. And in the strange shrine to a great fiddle maker, a young musician who has made himself an expert on rare vio- lins, rubs a bow tenderly, over the strings of an instrument he hopes some day to be able to poss Meanwhile he holds his job as sa! man, expert and custodian. And, when no one is about, he can take out one of the precious fiddles and practice a bit. © — If you sit about for a time in a severe Gothic chair, a strange as- through, Each will’be carrying’ bes rougl wi ing be- neath his arm, a -fiddle. Stories have gone out of the fabulous value of genuine Stradivari. Anyone who comes upon a battered fiddle in an attic or hidden behind the coal bin the mezzanine floor of the:runs down to find out if a fortune On Wurlitzer building there is a room patterned in Gothic dignity. Well) has suddenly tumbled out of the skies into his lap. They come and Sad veueratn ioe et cover two walls. windo ws bear a neat | OUR BOARDING HOUSE B a A HoteL CHECK OUT, A TELL US ALL ABout TH" MASOR'S VACATION DASON ! ev WE READ AN (TEM IN-TH’ Society | COLUMAS THAT “TH MASOR AND HiS VALET WeRE SoDOURNING FoR “TEs DAYS IN A FASHIONABLE COUNTY DAIL, FoR USING FIRE ESCAPE“TO Ato NE Pur The | Rithen ea the day. To them a ivarius is merely something that will bring tens of thousands, iS SES’ POLITics “TALK Hurt His CAMPAIGN %” FALL! <TH’ MAJoR AN’ Me, WAS UP “To ABIG ‘F BANKERS SUMMER LODGE | DELIVERN, ON A PRIVATE LAKE Fo’ Bur His VACATION $< MAN, IF YoU WAS DERE,~ MUTHIN’ BUT CLASS fu IMAGINE IcB CUBES BEIN’ MADE OUT OF IMPORTED LILAC INSTEAD oF ATER bs (a Fe ty, " ma As MY R MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1928 gress is uphill and unpaved. It is much easier for us to strolt along the well trodden trails of the past than to forge our hee the unknown. ‘e always try to avoid- new problems of thinking. Every new thing has been condemned in its day and generation by those who did not wish to make the effort to under- stand its meaning. When railroads were first intro- duced, many objected because they said that human beings would be killed if they traveled over twenty miles an hour. Today we have aero- Penad vil? at almost two hun- red miles per hour. When automo- biles were first introduced, the pessi- mists cried, “Alas, the farmers will be ruined, for there will no longer be_a demand for horses.” , Fifty years , because it was so difficult to obtain a bath in the city, many lazy authorities claimed it was unhealthful—that one would catch a cold through too much bathing. The daily bath is now recognized as one of our best health habits. When the first cold storage meat was shipped from Brazil to France seventy-five years ago, the French would not let it land, claiming that the meat would be dangerous to health. It was finally landed in England, and no doubt this very broadminded attitude of the English has contributed much to the emin- ence of their nation. It is well known that-the English are extremely fond of their roast beef. The arguments that you hear to- day against meat eating are rem- nants of the s:.ne reasoning used at that time—that flesh would spoil soon after it was killed, and become poisonous if kept too long. Those who have dared to investigate have found that properly killed meat is actually more wholescme after be- ing refrigerated for several months. lany people still believe that acids and milk make a bad combina- tion. I recently read an article by one health expert who said he had bib pet there was nothing to good or ad combinations because he had found that patients could eat fruit and drink milk at the same time without any bad consequences. He did not know it, but he was simply stating a discovery made by prac- tical dietitians many years ago that milk combined perfectly with acids, bes more easily digested in this combination than if used alone. He apparently did not know that if bread were added to this otherwise good mixture, excessive fermentation is set up, often producing very ser- ious consequences. Even today many physicians teach that athletes die young because of ‘ing too much-violent exercise.. The truth is that their deaths are not caused by continuing to exercise taking too much violent exercise. or by exercising too violently after they had been overeating. Some doctors are still advising weak patients to stay in bed and eat plenty of rich, nourishing food, The advanced idea is to encourage the weak pateet to exercise to gain strength and, at the same time, to select food of a better quality, and reduce the quantity. Only a short time ago it was cape cared very dangerous to breathe night air. Now we know that this is the aibeeet air, and every one is advised to sleep out of doors, win- ter and summer. There is a ecience of life for you to study just as surely as there are rules of chemistry or mathematics, and food science cannot be learned by intuition or insptration. There is no magic with which you can change the rules of chemistry that govern your body. Foods are good for you or they are not good for you, and ‘food combines harmoniously or it does not. All of these facts you can learn by study and experimenta- tion, and your experiences with pain rhould be lessons to assist you i understanding the problems of life. THE CAUSE OF ASTHMA ot erent asthmatic patient unde: that when he first contracts this dis- ease he is afraid of dying, and after -he has had many attacks he is act- ually afraid of not dying. This is because he is literally gasping for breath, and is suffering as much for want of oxygen as a fish would be out of water. These patients suffer from an in- ability to draw enough air into the tinge They'can usually exhale air gle to draw in enough air to supply he ‘blood with its indispensable plished by com roby | of the dia) the flat muscle hae the lungs m, ye is] large, Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and pe addressed to him, care o! Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. tony the diephrage upward ion, the diaphragm presses upw: forcing the air out of the lungs, while during inhalation, the dia- phragm lowers, and in this way draws air into the lungs. If an excess amount of stomech and intestinal gas presses upward against the he eat ed it is often impossible for the diaphragm to de- scend low enough to draw in the needed air. The heart is often af- fected by this pressure, and thir form of asthma is then called “Car- diac Asthma” because the lungs and the heart action are both affected. Bronchial asthma is another con- dition often present, in which there is a large quantity of mucus which fills up the air passages, and inter- feres with the free circulation of air through the lungs. This excessive mucus is produced from the patient using too much sugar and _ starch, and too many of the fats, which load the blood with catarrhal material, This is thrown out through the deli- cate membranes of the lungs. , The excessive stomach and intes- tinal gas is produced by using too many of the starch and sugar foods, or from using foods in bad combina- tion with each other. Foods which are gas-forming in themselves, such as onions, garlic, cabbage, Brussels sprouts, turnips, etc., will also create this excessive gas, and these foods must be entirely eliminated by one who has a tendency toward asthma, Drugs are entirely useless in the cure of this trouble. Of course, it is possible to struggle along for years using adrenalin or smoking powders which contain opium, but this cannot bring about a cure, and I find that patients who have taken these treatments are always in oe ele than a who have © not, al eir cases are always mor difficult to cure. i s Considering that asthma is a symptom and not a disease, it is of course very foolish to continue to treat such symptoms with remedies without at least attempting to re- move the probable cause. As I have explained, there are only three ites causes of true asthma or bronchial asthma. These are excessive gas pressure inst the diaphragm, lack of mobility to the diaphragm, and excessive forma- tions of mucus in the bronchial tubes. The cure then must come from removing these causes, and fully one hundred per cent of ail cases can be cured through properly regulated diet and exercises, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. H. J. writes: “When I am walking my hands swell up so much that they pain me terribly, especially when I touch them. At times only one hand will - swell and the other will be perfectly all right.” Swelling of the hands ? Answer: is quite common when walking rapid- ly to any great distance. The swing- ing of the arms forces the blood into the hands, but should not cause any discomfort unless you are suffering from rheumatism. Sometimes an im- pingement of the nerves which issue from the spine and go to the arms vall bethe controlling factor in caus- ing one hand to swell and not the other; an osteopath or chiropractor could tell you if this cause exists. Question: Mrs. H. K. L. writes: “My husband has to take his lunch which now contains wholewheat bread, cheese, ham, salmon, also a, couple of ket oad you please give me some fillings for sandwicl also a dessert?” i Answer: The wholewheat bread sandwiches can be made of cheese or any one kind of meat, or filled with... anut butter, avocado, or t pli lettuce and butter. A andeh ot raisins or dried figs makes a gine dessert for a noon lunch. Question: J. T. asks: “What can be done for a six-year-old boy who is constantly making faces? The doctor calls it some form of nervous- ness. Have had his tonsils removed, but certainly cannot see any im- provement, and his face is lly growing out of shape. Would be test cause of glad of any help.” Answer: The such nervousness is from irritations of the gastro-intestinal tract, Irri- tating food mixtures have an effect Upon Producing irritation all over the body. I have never seen a case of these troubles with children that could not be quickly cured by Putting them on a well balanced; non-irritate ay ing diet. I will be glad to send an article outlining the pro; ies for children if you will send mea » Belf-addressed, stamped en- velope. comfort. Not one in a thou- has a fiddle that is even of an expert’s attention. and then someone actually has t proves ‘to be an an- never a Strad. There ld, something like 400 Ex wi are, fe generally ry ig, know Drege ay wait for the owners to é E g zt they hope that the heirs will selb| . A strange scene to find in the of 42nd street within epsric- ene amp ot the pariah GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA -ervice, Ine.) er ee Eien case . At the Movies | —_—__—___—_—— | AT THE CAPITOL i most of the laughs in “Chicken a la King,” Fox Films feature of laughs and thrfils coming to the Capitol theatre for today, Monday, and Tues- fourteen blonde beauties, led by vivacious Nancy Carroll and stage life, which are a part of the story of this pie Sythe es nee, ba are inals and desi for by the studio modiste. The handsome chap_who the baton in the orchestra none other than Cush nationally known orchestra leader,’ who is vacationing in Hollywood, engagement with Will- iam Wrigley at Catalina Island. ls Str ELTINGE THEATRE o John Gilbert has given the scroer swashbuckling heroes like “Bar- Big Parad am in “Twelve Miles Out.” Now this same John Gilbert in a man the public doesn't well, but who knows the t inty little Frances Lee, trip the chiektn ir , » trip cing on alteedy and is of unstretchable Pisce {installs not only no bane, but a very real .

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