The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 27, 1928, Page 4

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> f The Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspaper 1 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER } (Established 1873) Published by the Bi secceee as second Rew Ds Rates Payable in Advance year. 2° » per 7 ; 1.20 bebind, dodged in and out unexpectedly and made motoring e burden. Now they don’t. The new Fords are faster and more flexible. than the old ones—but somehow the drivers don’t take adavntage of it. They drive more sedately, ismarck Tribune Company, Bis-|somehow, with more restraint and less verve. Marek, N. Dae ond entered st the postakfice St Bis- ‘We wish somebody would explain why this is so. 18 THI8 A PUBLICITY CHASE? The workings of the intellects of police officials and Prosecuting attorneys are, at times, rather funny. ‘The other day a bandit named Paul Jaworski killed a 5.00! policeman in Cleveland. He was caught, and it de- oe 6.00 1.50 exclusively entitled to the f all news dispatches cred! ited in this newspaper, and spontaneous origin lished iblication of all other fo) Tower Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) : INEFFECTUAL LAWS Soon after the Baumes law became effective on July 4, 1926, crime in New York City appeared to be decreas- ing. It was hoped that this statute, automatically gentencing fourth offender to life imprisonment, would afford something like a real solution of the crime problem, Then came doubts, and later disquiet- ing figures showing that crimes of violence are again on the increase. The police commissioner of New York City blames the increase in crime on unemployment. But his report of a 25 per cent increase in crimes of violence this year, as compared with the pre-Baumes law figure, appears to leave the troublesome enigma of crime about where it was two years ago. After enactment of the Baumes Jaw, the entire na- tion watched developments with intense interest. This legislation has been copied by other states and more states are now contemplating similar legislation. The apparent failure of New York's law may put a damper on the movement. The people of New York state had great faith in the Baumes law. And the people of other states watched its workings with equal optimism. Like most legisle- tion designed to accomplish some great reform or work some great social change, it was lamentably disappoint- ing. Some day society will learn Jastingly that mir- acles are never performed by legislators and laws. More and more one becomes convinced that crime is too deep-rooted in our social structure to be wiped out by the gesture of writing new laws and creating more severe penalties. BETTER RADIO ‘The reallocation of radio channels represents months of arduous effort on the part of the Federal Radio Commission and its engineers. The commission has had an exceedingly intricate problem to solve. Al- though the new order does not become effective until November 11, it is generally believed that the changes made will be for the better from the listeners’ view- point. Radio is now a vast industry. Millions of homes are interested in its development and millions of people are concerned with the hourly distribution of news, music and speeches, and the varied programs of entertain- ment and information to which they have become ac- customed in an amazingly brief time. The commission declares it has apportioned the ether channels, divided the broadeasting time and limited the station power so as to beat to serve the public as a whole. It has ordered many changes, silenced some broadcasting stations and curtailed the privileges of others, for only drastic reorganisation could bring order out of the chaos into which broadcasting was rapidly drifting, It would be tee much to expect that the commission ‘thas succeeded in accomplishing all that it hoped to ac- complish, but there is reason to believe that the new regulations will demonstrate their usefulness and the | th changes where practice shows them to be needed. OVERCROWDED COLLEGES In America’s hundreds of universities and colleges now opening another term more young men and women are enrolled than there are college students in all' the rest of the world. A flattering fact. We can say, per- haps, that we have come of age; that we are not merely a shrewd and energetic nation but an intellectual one. cultivation of the mind and soul as it is an expression of America’s extraordinary “drive” and vitality. Hence the constant agitated perplexity over just what a good education is and what good an education is. No one would deny that colleges do serve an Smport- veloped that he had broken jail in Pittsburgh, where he under conviction of murder and awaiting sentence Now the Cleveland officials refuse to surrender him to Pittsburgh. try him here and send him to the electric chair in Ohio,” they say. What, in the name of wisdom, is the sense of that? ted |1¢ they want Jaworski electrocuted, Pennsylvania stands ready and willing to do it. He won't even have to be tried. Sending him back would surely be the logical thing to do, It would save Cleveland the expense of a Protracted trial and prevent the newspaper glorification of another “bandit king.” It looks as if some of these Cleveland officials must be trying to grab some publicity. On no other theory can their stand be explained. THE WORLD SERIES The fourth day of October will be the beginni end for the 1928 season of the great American sport of baseball. On that day will open the World Series for a year that for sustained interest has had few equals. Baseball, a real sport, has enjoyed a sporty season. So close have the pennant races been in both major leagues, Commissioner Landis found it expedient to fix, for the opening of the World Series, a date later than usual. Things in the realm of baseball have been hap- pening so fast, everything and everybody have been up in the air, Nothing so hurts the king of American sports as one- sided competition. Public interest wanes and gate re- ceipts slump when one club early in the season leaves all other flag contenders hopelessly behind. A “little world series” now and then during the season keeps the fans on their toes and the stands full. Apparently, it takes more than just a ball game to attract many fans to the grounds, Terespective of how the league campaigns turn out, two wall-matched nines will face each other in October for the series of four or more tilts which will decide the world’s baseball championship for 1928. Baseball- dom is agog! BYGONES ‘The business man or manufacturer whose hopes for the future are wrapped up in an expected return to pre-war normalcy is out ona limb. For pre-war normalcy never will return. That’s history. We atill hear suggestions and hopes of reverting to old-time methods and ‘the pre-war business basis, but, according to Dr. Julius Klein, of the United States De- partment of Commerce, “such a retrogression would be about as simple as an attempt to return to the middle ages—and about as profitable.” There isn’t a great deal of room in business these days for Aunt Sarah, who inherited a shoe factory and insisted that the factory go on making high-laced shoes Secause Uncle Ezra sold ‘em in the "70s. Ameri- can business never was more dynamic and volatile than it is today, with a constantly changing front in prac- tically all lines. i Since 1921, Mr. Klein points out, American business has left as monuments of its progress a long succession of junk-heaps of discarded processes, antiquated ideas revered and once profitable practices. The new business man must be eager to take ad- vantage of the slightest changes in trend. It is no day for secrecy, Backward glimpses should not be longing and desirous of what is behind, but intelligently in- quisitive of facts. ARCTIC MAY BE OPEN SOON ¢ ur Stefansgon in the American Magazine) Sir aes has removed the last obstacle to and hunting. the only obstacle to arctic exploration now has proven the practicability of the air- hen he overcame fear, he virtually opened tropic in the adrift man tropics, but 3 EEfiy lf i & 3 i is ry Py ing is the youngster who doésn’t show up ahead of time on his first day on his first job. Adam probably did it row i cae Fists ee there too enriy the Hest day bp 5 earl ta ost so ir the real si : yo ‘or Jol will come some months hence, If John, working for the man whom the gossips see as his prospective father-in-law, comes urrying in some morning next Soring to punch the ‘sn ordinary bursan, the same as the rent of us. Bot same as the rest of us. it John Coolidge, by next spring, has developed a lar habit of his job ten minutes yon pig Coolidge will be recognized as a genuine super-| (ann SKYSCRAPER The skyscraper has distinctive of siders the the arctic regions to travel, unlimited te THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. —_. BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) When a man gets to be vice presi dent he has earned it. The vice pret Washington—For a few blissful idency is the softest job in Congres days the good people of Washington, who are forever at the mercy -of crusading congressmen, went hap- ily about in the belief that they d been definitely relieved of four of the most ambitious reformers in Congress. Final returns from Georgia, how- ever, showed that Congressman Wil- liam C. ‘ord of Douglas had narrowly nosed through in the rimaries, after appearing to have n beaten. Lankford is theauthor of the Blue Sunday bill which would close up everything in the District of Columbia except the chimneys and which causes an annual row at committee hearings. Nevertheless, it is certain tl Congressman T. Webber Wilson 01 Mississippi and former Congress- man Wilbur D. Upshaw of Georgia will not be among the members of the Seventy-first Congress. Wilson, a handsome, pleasant young man, is the author of a bill providing a fed- eral magazine censorship board with fearful penalties and drastic restric- tion le ran for the Democratic senatorial nomination against Sen- ator Stephens this year and was licked. Upshaw is the famous dry crusader, who was re; led by both wets and drys e outstanding fanatic of the prohibition cause un- til the voters unseated him two years a He went back after his old job this year and was again defeated in the primaries. Congressman Tom Blanton, de- feated previously in the Texas sen- atorial race, is @ crusading re- former in Washington's local af- fairs. He is a supporter of Lank- ford’s bill, but has generally con- fined himself to raising rumpuses in connection with the district govern- ment and its. Rolice. i. One hears many strange things over the radio these nights. For in- stance, there is Congressman Purnell of Attica, Ind., who says: “Herbert Hoover knows more about more things than any other Well, how about Gene Tunney? living man.” \ T INDORSED THE CHECK OVER “To* Yous $e PLAGUED IF TLL ‘THINK OF ANYMORE IAVEATIONS, ‘fo BE. WHEEDLED ouT oF MY MoNEY“THIS.- WAY f ~~ \ we MIND. Now, You HAVE A “THOUSAND DOLLARS, AND I HAE “THE SAME, wee AND “THE AGREEMENT (Ss “THAT: use there are no constituencies or constant fears about re-election to | worry a fellow and there are always eal d of senators: who can sub in the chair to preside over the Senate. The job is unquestionably an honor and there’s always a chance that pomettiing will happen to the presi- lent. Both Charlie Curtis and Joe Rob- inson were tickled silly. to get their nominations. Curtis has been grin- ning his pleasure ever since because he thinks he is.as good as elected. But how those boys do have t work! . One finds that: the Curtis speaking program gives him 13 speeches in 13 states in 13 days. Rob- ii has been. plugging away with The parties always’ make their second-place candidates work like that, giving the two leaders plenty of yest between speeches. se- sold himself tothe roernt| while plugging for McKinley in 1900, Senator Wheeler of Montana, La Follette’s running mate in 1924, had to ue great burden alone when La Follette’s health broke down. The vice presidential candidate's hope of reward is a four-year-old reat in the Senate, but he needs it. “Nine-tenths of the nosticators make predictions in ac- cordance with their own’ wishes,” remarks ex-Senator Bob Owens of klahoma, the distinguished bolter. “The ‘part of it is that they’re all si ce es : The Democrats finally got wise to the fact that there were two or three hundred ¢ | Srapes, oranges, Democratic headquarters which now issues publicity material simultan- eously with the New York ” offices and furnishes propaganda for south- ern weeklies and dailies. The result is that Smith is getting a better publicity break over the country, though Hoover is much more closely identified with Washington in the popular mind because he has made the capital his headquarters. SEE Ope 2 | IN NEW YORK | Dennen nn aeenhh Se anaaee SY New York, Sept. 27.—The East Side, as well as Broadway, bursts into a sudden’ shower of amusement activity.’ Its lights—particularly the lights of Second avenue—seek to aay as brightly those of the “main stem.” Its theatres im- pressively open their doors, and its cafes grow gay with crowds and! be music. It is at Rosh Hashana, most im- rtant of the Jewish holidays, that nd avenue sends up its curtains, Here, in the heart of what-once was called “the ghetto,” million-dollar | ¢ ae rise to-the ara ae site| and the .comedy. Here is theatre aa Sth “slummtérs ‘trom up-town” just began to discover last season, Here ‘are favorites “with 9 Yollowing such: as:no Broadway star can.claim. - Here, season after seas son, Mojly Pichon reigns - queen, my darling of the East Side,” they call her. Mary. Pickford was never. PREVENTING CHRONIC TU- BERCULOSIS suave aatiatactory far preventing th ost sat lor preventing the development ‘of tuberculosis differ som it from the ‘regular treat- i employed in many institu- ions. Since the tubercular and the near- tubercular usually digestive Systane, Ene, Acc di- gest large quantities wy foods, and for this reason I do not employ the stuffing treatment, nor w - vocate a complete period of iv- ity, since oe ioe end eid is necessary ‘about a of toxins of this disease irom the ee eend ee ee aa frequent resting peri and avoi becoming overly tired. He should retire early and sleep as long as possible, T usually begin treatment of these patients by Leh ddig ) them to take a short fast, using the following acid ‘fruits: apples, apricots, che: rries, tomatoes and watermelons, using only-one kind of these fruits on any one day, but de- sired. n- tinued for at least a week, and in some cases-as long as ten days to two weeks, The A poh! should use a warm or sponge every fr ing, and & warm enema every évening before ate g After the period of fasting the breakfast should — of one or pared in any manner except’ frying; Melba toast or toasted Shredded ‘t Biscuit, and @ choice'of ar~ one of the following fruits, stewed without sugar: prunes, pears, fi pricots, raisins, apples using only the pure or ripe fi sundried, unsulphured fruits, except | and in case of the apple, which may be baked, or the figs which: may be eaten raw if desired. the forencon a short walk should » the distance of Micra should be increased day by 'y~ enough to cause exhaustion, and the patient should rest immediately af- Tr. * For lunch the patient may use one or more of the cooked non-starchy vegetables, such as celery, spinach, small string beans, asparagus, sum- mer squash, zucchini, egg plant, cu- cumbers, beet tops, small carfots, small parsnips, lettuce, okra, chay- ote, kale, oyster plant, and a choice of one or more of the raw salad vegetabl also avocado or ripe olives if desired. No salt or dress- ing except a little olive oi] should During the afternoon take another short walk and another rest, The vests. .. . Wonder who buys ‘em? Hope Hampton in towh from Phiiadelphia where she'll go in grand 1® a:e:2, Did you know that she first can re as a prize beauty contest-winner from Houston? ... Mike Barody has a whole trunk-load of. decorations. and medals earned dearer.to her particular audiences, | NOW She has. but to hangout her sign and the crowds will flock in. Her hus- band,: Jacob Kalich, bears the ‘title of “the East Side Ziegfeld.” Se Hitical prog- | i i drama’s noblest di Z And there is Lud wandered long: enough to do “Potash and Perlmutter” on the “big street.” The Yiddish theaters in Manhattan boast 1600 artists. The East Side “Broadway” sreryens « worth buzzing for a little | teenth mocratic dope, were all in New York, and nearly alf the writers were in Wash’ T CAS SPEAD MINE AS I SEE. wT? tt VERY, WELL f.: politi- | and lat NY FIRST I'M Golo To PUT e : MY FINGER IM A FLOOR-PLUG “h SEE IF I'M AWAKE fs aun THEN IM GOING DOWN TOWN ALL-THE DEPART- MEAT STORES FoR THE | (BIG “THRILL OF RIDING UP f INTHE ELEVATORS;~< iL, INSTEAD OF ~To “THE Light tensing exercises and breathing exercises should be used every hour of the day except during the time when much fever is present, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mother writes: “I have a child two years old who eats clay or other dirt at et | oppor- tunity. What makes a child do this, and may I stop him?” Answer: This rd Prac- tice is probably only a habit which the child gets into use he is not rt sufficiently interested in health- ful playing. me claim that it is because the child craves certain fete ea, ee aa? enoug! se ves. fim "the instinctive desire to eat dirt. My observation is that this is not trye, but’ that the dirt-eating habit or the habit of putting objects into the mouth is ae a bad habit of a poorly trained cl fd. Question: An Interested Reader asks: “Do you recommend the dry- ready-to-eat foods now on es such as corn-flakes, ete?” Answer: When these breakfast foods are re-toasted they form an ex- cellent dextrinized article of food may be used freely with milk or cream except by those who have a tendency to catarrh, in which case it would be to use only a small amount of butter. Milk and cream are to be avoided by catarrh suffer- ers on account of their mucus-form- ti H. asks: “Will you lease tell me the cause of my hands shivering” for about four years to date? My age is twenty-five, and I get, my over. Some time ago I had half around my body, a girdle of hives— “Herpes the doctor said it was. Is'there a cure?” Answer: You are doubtless nerv- ous, but that is due to some cause which can only be found through a careful analysis of your case. The common name for Herpes Zoster is “Shingles” and this is due to cer- tain nerve trunks being irritated by toxemia, The walk should not be long | i with a German band to play for the bidders, Wheat was selling for $1.13‘in Aberdeen, Dakota territory. Bismarck school teachers visited the Mandan mounds in search of evidences of early civilization in the Dakotas. They made the trip in a four-horse Sey | BARBS | a An | A victim of amnesia in New York "| City suddenly recovered her facul- ties and remembered her name was Gheranghelli. She must have been ed|® sick person, indeed, to forget a on the old Bow-\| director. name like that. see 4 Percy Williams, yo Canadian who won both sprints in Olympic mes, will attend the University, of Columbia, announcing he Headlines we are aa never see: PO! REE RACKETEE! TWELVE, aie A grand opportunity to get fnto the news awalts some low who can smoke two brands of cigarettes while he’s blindfolded and can’t tell ’em apart, car Now that Hi is out of a job, low eames Seo deb. to fear ICE SHOOT RS; ARREST

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