The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 24, 1928, Page 4

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Pp PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper beet THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER MRA mee ees EF. MS ES Ee FS ON Ie BS EN R (Established 1873) Fublished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bi arck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bi marck as second ciass mail matter. George D. Mann .......... u Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | 'Pipdaily by carrier, per year ........ .. Daily by mail, per rear, (in Bismarca) ~ Daily by mail, per year, ‘ (in state outside Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota + 6.06 Weekly by mail, in state, per year .... Weekly by mail, in state, three y 0 Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, ‘Ac ed Press ly entitled to the jatches credited otherwise credited in this newspaper, and local news of spontaneous 1 published All rights of republication of other mat- ter herein ure also reserved, Foreign Representatives LOGAN PAYNE Mere ten YORK Fifth Ave. error Kresge Bldg. FE Ey N aoe CHICAGO Tower Bldg. ee EE Se eeeerareeeOley . (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ND UTOPIA ‘ Now that Secretary ioover’s acceptance speech has heen analyzed by the experts and the last drop of po- litical significance extracted therefrom, there remains one section of it that might be quite apart from any political consideration Discussing the rise of America’s industrial prosper- BY ity, Mr. Hoover remarked: “We in America today are nearer to the final tri- Ml umph over poverty than ever before in the history of de any land.” bu = Mr. Hoover is not the first person to say that. We Olt have heard it a good many times before. But we Be don't often appreciate what. it really means. fr Perhaps we can understand hetter what an epochal to thing it is that is happening by reflecting that never before in the world’s history hav any but the wildest. $e Visionaries ever believed that poverty really could be a4 put out of existence. It has always been taken for th granted that there never would be quite food enough, Tt clothing enough, houses enough, happiness enough, to {go around, Even the wisest of men felt that a hard gt Providence had decreed that some men, in all ages, W should be downtrodden and miserable. ae Now and then, of course, a Utopian dreamer arose and announced some new scheme of society in which there should be no poor people. But his scheme always called for a revolution in the conduct of human rela- tions in which society would be overturned. It never looked quite practical. But now look what is happening. It is precisely the most practical, realistic of business and industrial lead- ers who are declaring that it will soon be possible for everyone in the land to have a job that will provide for more than simple subsisten Matter-of-fact, selfish, uninspired and materialistic as the business world may be, it is nevertheless carrying us straight to a realiza- dream of the Utopians. This isn't y that the reign of human brother- hood and eq y is at ha It doesn’t: necessarily mean that the ten Age is about to dawn again. There will be plenty of ngs in the world for our children to right. Yet this modern age is more deserving than we some- hink. It may be very crass and materialist! but it is entirely possible that, by releasing millions of men from the grinding oppression of material cares, it is paving the way for a mental and spiritual awaken- ing such as the world has never seen. to THE TH THAT LAST In the town of Tenayuca, half a dozen miles outside of Mexico City, archaeologists are restoring a great Aztec temple, one of the finest now in existence. Its four walls are panelled with bas-relief serpents chiseled in stone. A great, steep stairway leads up the west side of the tall pyrami the top is an open Space where once the stone altar and sanctuary stood. Much of the structure is missing. For centuries In- dians and white men have carried away stones for building material. The towering mass of earth and rock that remains was not, for a long time, even known to be an artificial affair; people who lived near it sup- + posed it was just a rather symmetrical hill, i It is interesting to ponder on the fate that overtakes ! old buildings. Five centuries ago this building at Tenayuca repre- sented the utmost in theological knowledge and arch- itectural skill that could be found in the new world. It ‘was one of the great achievements of a race; it symbol- ized the highest point reached by the minds of America’s wisest men in their upward gropings for truth and beauty. Undoubtedly, the men who built it and served in its ritual looked on it as permanent. Their nation ruled all of the world they knew about; no vision of the future that they might have had could have foretold the com- plete extinction of their civilization. Yet today their imposing temple, where they groped for an understand- ing of the infinite, is a moss-grown ruin, visited only by professors with notebooks, This sort of moralizing is old stuff, perhaps. Yet it is exactly the sort of thing that we, who have such unlimited faith in the things we make with our hands, ought to indulge in a little more. Some day, in all probability, the United States of America will go the way of the empire of Montezuma, and our finest buildings will be rubbish heaps for anti- quarians from—China, shall we say? Wars, revolutions, economic shifts and natural catastrophes will destroy all that we have built; and what will be left? What have we, today, that would be thought worth saving by an alien race of conquerors? Not much, perhaps. Intangible things, at best; a glimpse of beauty, here and there, a vision of sanity amid the chaos of life, a gleam of eternal truth found in the .uzmoil of things—nothing more. Steel and stone rust and crumble. If they are the only materials in which we can build there won't be much left of our handiwork. Until we learn how to produce something besides skyscrapers and automobiles and steel plate, we needn't feel that we're going to bequeath such a &ecat deal to posterity, PROTECTING THE GUILTY A young gangster has been on trial for murder in Kansas City recently. He was a precious specimen of the gangster breed; of the oily, well-dressed, sneering youngsters who make such a jaunty appearance in court. He lawyers, one of them imported from Chicago occasion, and the newspaper accounts of his we been rather revealing. \wyers fought well for him. The prosecutor was able to put two questions to a witness without interrupted by an “I object!” from one of them. each state witness had told his story a merciless examination was begun. He was asked a variety bullied, coerced, sneered at, insulted, in the i aE at i ft yiven a little thought | .-President and Publisher t $7.20 | 2720 oes 5.00] easy way that lawyers have; nothing was left undone that might have confused the witness, or raised an insinuation that he was not testifying from disinter- ested motives. The trial, moreover, was only the first act in the drama. As the defense lawyers’ obje ruled, exceptions were noted, so that the basis for a |lengthy, time-killing series of appeals could be laid. If t —he rejoices, by the way, in the name of t : |free and all of this isn’t at all unusual. It happens every any mau is brought to trial. But it does suggest more this question: How much of the responsibility for the present de- fiance of law by the underworld must be shouldered by the legal profession, whose members are so fond of re- marking that they are “officers of the court?” The criminal trial in this country—provided the de- ant has money—has ceased to be a process for man's guilt or innocence in the quickest way possible, and has become an elaborate sort of game. No one knows this quite so well as the gangster. Does the gunman, even when taken red-handed in the most glar- ing crime, ever give up and prepare for a trip to pri- son? He does not; instead he sends at once for his law- yer, knowing that when society has captured him it has only gone about a third of the way toward putting him where he belongs. Lawyers often urge that the present state of affairs had best be left unchanged because it does Protect the rights of an innocent man; and they repeat the old saying, “it is better for ten guilty men to escape than for one innocent man to suffer.” Y nnocent men, row and then, are convicted any id it is usually the biggest crook who benefits most by the law's protec- tion. time once arning wa The solution must come from members of the bar themselves. They have a rather large responsibility in the matter. Our criminal court procedure is fairly ery- ing for reform. It is up to the lawyer to make a few suggestions. UNEASY “LEXDING CITIZENS” One of the most po methods of evading the Volstead Jaw has been the social club, which makes liquor available to its members. Cleveland had such a club—the Harmonie Club, | with a huge membership ro Federal prohibition agents raided the place the other night, seizing not only a quantity of beer, but the elub’s list of members. Now it is announced that every el one of the members can, and probably will, be prosecuted for violating the Volstead act. i A good many Clevelanders are uneasy. Some of the “leading citizens” were members. Judges, lawyers, city and county officials and other prominent people are said to be involved, Apparently the “social club” isn’t as cafe a way of | getting a drink as the old-fashioned spcakeasy. ANOTHER SUBMARINE SINKS The tragedy that sent the Italian submarine F-14 to} the bottom the other day is instructive for us who had our own submarine catastrophe a few months ago. This accident was very sim to the one that sank the 8-4. The F-14 was just coming to the surface when a speeding destroyer crashed into it.* It sank almost at once, in 180 feet of water. There was a disposition in some quarters in the ited States to blame the Navy Department for the S-4 traged.. The Italian incident ought to demonstrate one thing; that submarines are risky affairs, at best, and that there can be tragedies in connection with their use in all navies. The mishaps that come seem to arise from the nature of the submarines and not from of- ficial incompetence or neglect. | Editorial Comment | CRIME BILL i Herald Tribune) Even residents of Chicago and New York, accus- tomed to holdups and gang wars, will b rprised at the report of the Baumes crime commission that the chances of being held up and robbed in Chicago are 100 times greater than in London, and in New York thirty- six times greater, To deal with this situation costs t country about $13,000,000,000 a year, including | sustained in stolen goods, the costs of jails, co ies relating to crime and its pre- vention. The commission's only suggested remedy is more and better pol It advocates the employment of one policeman fi 500 of populrtion and more and better schools ing them. What the commission fails to take into considera- tion is the element of polities in city government. Ev- erybody knows what Bepeanad in Chicago during the ign of terror there, and why. As soon as the public fully awakened to what was going on it registered its wrath in a single election, and crimes of violence im- mediately began to wane. : In New York there was a serious condition gards crime for eight years. Then a single deter Police commissio with no previous experience in crime fighting, drove out the invaders and restored order, Now the criminals have become active again, although there are more policemen on duty than when the force did its most effective work. However numerous may be the criminals in a city, they are vastly outnumbered by honest people and not operate when there is a general and organized ef- fort to get rid of them. | ms were over- tisties—40 per cent of 431 | profits. ‘FRIDAY, AUGUST 24, 1928 | Reckon He’s Gonna Be a Purty Tough Critter to Bust SWIMMIN' HOLE. = 4i ae BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, August 24.—There is one school of political thought which holds that campaign speeches never chenge any votes. Al Smith certain- ly does not belong to that school. Hoover, in his acceptance speech, had no need to go after more than Gool- | idge received in 1924. He need only talk to hold that big Republican ma- jority. But Smith, in accepting the Democratic nomination, has gone af. ter that majority hammer and tongs, with a direct bid for the important 5,000,000 votes which were cast for LaFollette. Two characteristics of Smith him- self stand out all over the speech. Che is his own direct personal ap- peal to the voter and his unusual ca- pacity for frankness—-so yare in poli- licians— that goes with it. There are plenty of perpendicular pronouns. It! is full of solemn compacts between | Smith, personally, and the people. Without. making promises im- pessible of fulfillment, he neverthe- less promises to the limit of his ability. Recognizing the predomi- nant importance of personalities in this campaign, he embarks on a su- preme effort to sell himself to the clectorate. He is proud of his record of achievement as eovernor of New York and defies anyone, by inference, to find flaws therein, “8 Ok The other characteristic is his al- most uncanny ability to avoid pit- falls and at the same time use the words of his enemies to barb and hurl back at them with force. True, Hoover has not been making any breaks such as would enable Smith to convert them into boomerangs. But Hoover cited a flock of statistics designed to prove that Republicanism had brought on unprecedented pros- perity, So Smith, too, found a ile of sta- corpor- ations were actually losing money; one-fourth of one per cent of them were making two-thirds of corporate He grabbed more statistics | to rake “Coolidge economy” fore and aft—-the government was spending more than when Coolidge took of- fice and was extracting more tax) R MES (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette) The only thing missing from the Greck games at Amsterdam this year appears to be Greek names, Im- agine the shades of Heracles, Theseus, Miltiades, ( imachus, Herodotus, Hippias and Themistocles as they scan the news! Marathon winner—Fl Ouafi. High jump—Bob King. Hammer throw—Patrick O'Calligan. Broad jump—Ed Hamm. Hop, step and jump-——Mikio Oda. Decathlon—Paavo Yrjola. 400 meter hurdles—-Lord David Burghley. Shot put—-John Kuck. Pole vault. in Carr. 100 meters for women—Elizabeth Robinson. 800 meters for women—Lina Radke. High jump for women—Ethel Catherwood. Verily that lad who set out on the jump from Mar- athon to break the news to Athens of the defeat of the Persians wrought better than he knew. In his way he started a League of Nations that equals the organiza- tion of Geneva when it comes > introducing a variety of names. NORTH DAKOTA IS DRY (Lincoln Journal) The wets claim a moral victory in North Dakota be- cause the vote on the referendum to repeal the state prohibition statute was «lose, but they fail to take into account several factors that influenced the vote. in the firsi place the question had to put their mark in the “yes” column if they fa- vored abolition of the prohibition clause und in the “ni column if they wished to retain it. As a result large numbers of voters were confused. In the gubernatorial race. Charles Streich, the wet candidate drew 4,141 votes, while the two drys in the race, George F. Shafer and T. H. Thoresen polled 89,618 and 80,194 respectively. North Dakota, dry since its formation in 1839, will re- main dry. Florence, Ala., Herald: Somehow we being a little more tolerant toward ths it can’t help mpaign liars of our own party, Fort Wayne News-Sentinel: Why doesn’t Mr, Black- » the missing oil witness, show up? Doesn't he int te ha acauittad ? » KNEE $e -TH’ WAY YoU FRAMED SASON, VACATION WiTd A RicH BANKER WASHINGTON LETTER, | OUR BOARDING HOUSE MASoR » THERES No ‘DOUBT BUT WHAT You | SPENT-TH' FIRST FIFTEEN NEARS OF YOUR LIFE, ON A VENTRILOQUISTS GIVE US -THAT HIGH PRESSURE GAS, ABOUT How You SPENT Your money from the people as well. Having hurled statistics he began| to fling quotations, using the post- master general to show inefficiency and waste, the army’s chief of staff to demonstrate bad usage given our soldiers, the most recent party his torian to indicate the evils of the Re- publican tariff, Elihu Root and Coolidge himself to assail the sLepu. lican teriff and a Republican pro- hibition administrator to indicate the corruption of prohibition entorce-; ment. eee Then back to statistics to show what the farmer had suffered in re- nt years. Not very many statis- ics—just enough to tell his story and not bore anyone. And always talking right down to the voters as individuals in the home. He pictured himself, in his stand on the prohibition laws,as the champion of a great moral cause and appealed directly to anxious fathers and mothers who dreaded the dangers of | ® bootlegging to their boys and girls. He met Hoover's challenge to any- one who would nullify the Constitu- tion and simultaneously promised the wets his own services toward immed- iate relief and po:nted out to the drys that it was, after all, for the people and their representatives and not for Al Smith to decide finally what was to be done about prohi- bition. Briefly, hisprogram is: Immediate revision of the Volstead Act to per- mit beerand wine of alcoholic content uptothe point where it is proved act- ually intoxicating, as a relief from present conditions. Then a constitu- tional amendment which would allow dry states to be dry with constitu- tional enforcement aid from the fed- eral government and wet states to introduce the Canadian provincial plan permitting rigid state control and state sale of alcoholic bever- ages. By solemnly swearing to up- hold the Constitution, declaring em- hatically against the saloon and asing his position on the traditional Democratic principle of state's rights, Smith gave the widest pos- sible latitude to the drys inside his own party gnd out who might be per- by. I LIKED DASON'S DESCRIPTION OF —TH’ OF A NEEDLE on PIPE, HE CAN “to LIMIT OF IMAGINATIONS £ », Ga ithe progressiv after an attack. portunities. will continue to defend. begun his great attack. , Wins who, in the opinion of the vot- ters, has the best case. °——- —_________4 | IN NEW YORK | —— New York, Aug. 24.—By the time the elevated trains have swung into the dark, cheerless stretch Morris street, the brokers, stenog- raphers, file clerks, and other pawns Street have buried their noses in the stock reports of the af- ternoon papers. Hurrying home. with eyes keyed to figures which tell the story of mil- lions that passed back and forth dur- ing the day, they have little time to reflect upon a district which is far better acquainted with pennies than with dollars, Like seattered scenes from a torn moving picture film, the second and third stories of Morris street flash of Wall suaded to vote for him. see He used another brand of skill in dealing with farm relief. j to have no panacea that will cure the | farmers overnizht. But he promises | definitely to engage the best phys ‘cians the country can call them in for immediate consulta- tion. Smith’s bold introduction of the | power issue into the campaign was the most unexpected part of his jSpeech. He has raised it to a plane almost alongside that occupied by prohibition and farm relief. Totting himself briefly to all progressives land liberals at the outset, he wound |up with’ a terrific | ‘power trust,” the biggest bogey of s. He is for govern- ment or state ewnership and contro? of great water power sites, owned by_the people, and that’s that! But Smith's promises in every in- | stance were brought to the front only The note of attack ran all through and he missed no op- Hoover defended and He claims ““aduce and fusillade at the Smith has The man labeled There is no coordination to the EXCUSE » youngsters, VACATION GUEST OF A BANKER 2 UM-M-- NATURALLY, YoU ARE DEALOUS! Go INTO A HEAD-SpIN] <AS FOR DASON, He ane: ned A Good “TIMI You WiLL _ bay HAPPY HABIT oF OVER-EMPHASIS f= scenes, But, in the brief panorama, there is a monotony of squalor. oe To Morris street a fire escape is a combination of front-yard, back- yard. playground, veranda, nursery, cradle, laundry and, in the evening, salon. Upon the tiny rectangles of iron slate are parked babies, laundry, and, in the evening, tired heads of the house. at a garden are here and there re- A few potted plants rcach Pathetic efforts By Ahern | 34 YOUR DAILY WEIGHT The State Sealer of Weights and Measures in California has just given out some figures which should be in- | teresting to my readers who are try- | ing to figure how to keep better fig- ures. He finds that the people of California are so interested in watch- ing their weight that they actually spend on an average of a dollar a year apiece on weighing themselves on the penny scales. This average doubtless holds good all over North America, and if this is so, we are spending over $130,000,000 every year just to watch our weights go up ordown. Doubtless at least as many people are also weighing themselves on the free machines found in drug- stores, and on grocery store scales. These weighing machine statistics indicate very clearly how much the average person is interested in| health, and shows the general belief | that a normal weight and good health are synonymous. While health cannot be accurately measured | on the scales, our interest in watch- ing our weights is nevertheless of some value. The thin man is often underweight because of weak digestive power or because his energy is wasted through mental overwork, or because of} worry or some of the other destruc- tive and enervating emotions. These causes must be recognized, and stuff- ing with food usually does not help, but often makes a thin man thinner and is liable to bring on a series ot | 1 disorders which may be difficult to cure. The use of codliver oil, or large quantities of milk, cream, fats, | starches and sugars will seldom pro- | duce any permanent effects in the: gaining of healthy weight. H The thin man who is underweight because of glandular derangements, enervation, or insufficient digestive power, should be warned that over- feeding may only make him worse in every way. The problem of “girth” | control is much easier and is almost ntirely a question of diet and exer- Although the fat man may jhave an abnormal tendency to avoir- dupois because of improper function- jing of his glandular system, his re- duction of weight can be accom- plished through vigorousexercise and the selection of the right kinds of food, and the use of these foods in whatever limited quantities are nec- eed to accomplish the desired re- j sult. The thin man must be just as care- ful to use the right foods and should usually eat three meals a day, with good combinations of the right food. jHe should also regulate his exer- cises and learn emotional control. The fat man should not use over toward the sun that swings over but a few hours a day. The passing of the elevated trains takes on the im- portance of a stimulating event. The elevated, which shuts out the d light and emits an eternal clatte provides a peep at a gay and com- le world. At night the bright fort lights from the window give a sort ef pyrotechnic display as the trains rush past. Voices can be heard in animated conversation; laughter pen- etrates the racket. The crowd is go- ing up town to Broadway and the theater. _And, as the Inte shadows fall, the night-perpled spires of the Wall Street sky-touchers rise as contra: ful symbols. For Morris street lies in the very lap of luxury, yet lives , in damp squalor. Long after the last tenement dweller has abandoned the fire es- cape, the day’s wash flutters on the line as if to call attention to the con-! tract in wealth, and Poverty. | I've oftenwondered about the wash | lines of New York. Nothing is more| typ‘cal of the metropolis than the endless rows of laundry that decor- ate the light wells, the fire escapes and the roof tops. But, as I recall, the original pur- pose of washing clothes was to make them clean. What, with the dust And dirt of the streets swirling about; what with the elevated tracks stirring up a constant dirt cloud, 1! have wondered what the linens look | like when they are taken from the line. Without having experimented, it has seemed to me a most futile! Process to go en washing day after! day only to hang the garments out! ais) they cannot avoid being re- soiled, Saratoga, N. Y., I am told, gets one of the heaviest hotel plays of any city and slaps on healthy rates —yet, at the end of the season, is the victim of more hotel beats than any similar community, The “walk-outs,” I am told, come HEALTA« DIET ADVICE ‘Dr Frank ste he Saat bay: - 3 two meals a day, and should exer. ce in the gymnasium at least three . McCoy will gladly answer Dr. y ee ‘cat 1 questions on Ith End diet, “wddressed to him, care of Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. or four ae a week besides taking long walks. “it rai rules od followed, the hand of the weig! machine may then ine increased Ith each day, as it registers more for the thin man and less for the fat one. , QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: G. L. writes: “Will you please prescribe a remedy for my mother’s feet? The soles are cov- lered with solid callouses, and her feet never perspire. They ache and so that sleep is almost Even the weight of her ‘m.”” Answer: Your mother can remove these callouses by treating her feet through oy | them in hot Epsom salts water. The treatment should continue for about thirty minutes. keeping the water reasonably warm all this time. A handful of the salts to the ordinary basin of water is suf- ficient. This soaking will soften the callouses, and when the skin all over the feet becomes normal in texture it is then advisable to vary the treat- ment by putting the feet alternately in hot and cold water, finishing with cold water to induce a good circula- tion and st then the muscles of the feet and also the muscles which control the pores of the skin. Her feet will then Bb des Normally. Question: T. C. asks: “In fol- lowing your menus, when should one and two-year-olds have their milk?” Answer: In my opinion, children who are under three years of age should not be using much of any- thing else except milk. Certainly nc solid food should be used until at least two years of age, and then only the non-starchy cooked vege- tables. If you will give your child plenty of orange juice or other fruits with the milk he will be well nour. ished and require no other food unti! he is about three years old. Question: Mrs. C. G. asks: “Does low blood pressure in adults ever prove serious?” Answer: Low blood pressure mean: weakness, and although many ple live many years before a serious disease develops, it is nevertheless true that any general weakness which produces low blood pressure is a forerunner of very serious dis- orders. in gary, adapted from Lajos Biro’t play. CAPITOL THEATRE Monte Blue has the type of role in which he has won his greatest success. He is ably sup by Edna Murphy, Rol ber and asa flight “Across the Atlantic” is the Warner Bros.’ production in which Monte Blue is scarring at the Capitol Theatre today, Friday ond Saturday. Monte appears in “Across the Atlantic” as the younger son of a tich manufacturer who runs off to wi d loses his nemory when his ing plane is shot down. _ this identity is restured in an_ exciting episode which 1s climaxed by a lone ftizht across the oceaa to France ir a stolen . ‘the story is by Joa Renser.e tnd was adapted by Marvey Gates. It was written expressiy with the view of satisfying the present con- suming interest in flying. Besides timeliness it has clso action, strong drama and an effective love story. As crammed with exciting drama Howard Bretheztn's directing is ‘8u] =—_—— ee l BARBS | — Tigers in India killed more than 1009 people last year. But the blind ones in this country killed even mcre than that. — Paes Ludwig, in his inerastions of America, views success, money, 2s the ideal. The professor must have missed seeing some of cur better class cigaret ads. China launches a new warship, and calls it “Peace.” That’s almost as food a joke as Seeretary Kellogg con ell, eee A stalk of corn from which 10 ears speoniae was exhibited in a Philadelphia grocery the other day. impossible. - body hurte | chiefly from New York. Since, in it racing town, th in the night,” rive with snaopy looking suit cases and gold watch fobs. A few ses.ions with hard luck, and they find them- selves with little more than the other half of a round-trip ticket. Where- fore, they kiss their suit cases good- by and are seen no more. . GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ( At the Movies ELTINGE THEATRE Billie Dove's new Pitas “The Yellow Lily,” at the Eltinge today and Saturday has in its large sb porting cast the most notable gath- ering of playc 3 that ever appea:ed with the famous beauty. Clive Brook, prime favorite among leading and featured men, pla; 8 Op- posite the star in a powerful ‘role, that of a Hungarian Archduke. An- other role almost as significant, that of the archduke’s agent and atter ant, is portrayed by Gustav von Sey- ffertitz. Other characters of “The Yellow Too late, mention speech. Papers A New Yor': lady who unched her husband in the eye probably was only exercising her matrimonial right. eee Dr. Williem Bowie of the U. 8. Coast and Geodetic Survey says the earth is cooling off one degree Centi- grade every 16,000,000 years. Thus, the earth will be two degrees Fahren- however, in for honoral Hoover's acceptance heit cooler in the 16,001,928 A. © D. Gcsh we havi ces an (Copyright, 1928 NEA Service, Inc.) Lily” that have ‘outstanding import- ance in the plot eS SE OF Winton, Nic Svussanin, MacDermott, jodil += Rosing and Charles Puffy. A host of parts of less prominence, but not less im- portance are played by artists of equal abilit Among might be mc itioned Paul Vincenti, Lucian Prival, Yola cay John Westwood and Hedda lonper. The picture is an exotic and col- orful modern court romance of Hun-

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