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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNF: The Bismarck Tribune |men have been deluded by fakers and charlatans. An | 5% eager desire to see some intangible, deathless spirit | An Independent Newspaper riding (he Gold Parhtints of aii | th kada: 1d THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER WimiWaiichik. "ot oe ee ee But after all, we needn't be so cocky about it. We . Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | ca" deny the supernaturalism of darkened room and marck, N. D. and song at the postoffice at Bis- moving table all we please; but every moment of our 4. aarek as second ciass mail matter. ... | lives we are surrounded by another supernaturalism so 1 George D. Mann ..........--President and Publisher setounding, so complex, so far-reaching, that the stories Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | of the spiritualists pale into insignificance. Daily by carrier, per year seu setae $7.20) Suppose, for instance, that you deny all religion and t-of-fact scientific on E resolv to stick to the most mat 2 Why atite octaids Bismarck) .. 6.09 | formula you can find. What then? Science will tell + Daily dy mail, outside of North Dako 6.00 | you that all lifeless matter, from a steel girder down to % Wait | Sia a dish of custard pudding, is made up—of that myster- ¥ leekly by mail, in state, per year | , % ~ Weekly by mail, in state, three years for - “ory nahin bare meet es * Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, | A lump of clay contains as many mysteries as a star- ~ per year . Meccel ent Les zocesscesete 1.50 lit sky on a Nover The spinning stars of our : Member Audit Boreaa of Circalation | solar system ca ated in the whirling atomic : Wikia G Yee Ausaina Pee nebulae of a piece of coal. A solid steel rail contains ted Press is exclusively entitled to the T8cant spaces as puzall us “coal sack” of : tion of all news dispatches credited the milky way, where no light has glimmered since the : making of the wo 4 What, in the face of this, are you going to do about a ? you ¢ to a matter of fact formula when | . the very the street contain too pro- é Foreicn eae cn Ne found for the wisest man to unravel? if you i NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg tbataeacceneen | + CHICAGO DETROIT asm and disembodied | % Tower Bie Kresge Bide n the end, to a realiza- | ET : (Official City, State and Con Newspaper) compre | r 1a 4 THE QUALITY OF GENIUS hess : 2h Retandhatele ue THE HASSELL-CRAMER VICTORY 4 decause Bert Hassell and Parker Cramer are not j 4 light to Denmarh Greenland, it | bs take to as: Bt 3 4 Re P. — = math a have blazed , OY pad a Sete tebuce ovacgth water jump the other flyers ence gga aan might note that if they had been fc ee Tesponding stage on the “great Re she tron th would have perished. As it was, “| the Eroica ermphony, in ter ba 4 One wonde “Lincoln's envirenment proved so advantageous that he — towened above his fellows like a giant. Did his long years of young manhood on the great Hlinois prairies wold his spirit to the great proportions things Linco Sangamon were not t im a text book of psx cy To be sure, the saying that “we are prodocts of our times” is perfectly tree up to a certain po Twen- tieth century America could no: time, any more thar @uce a Henry Ford. But, after all. like saying that a boy raised in the Sal not be as good a swimmer as a native SPEEDING The horseless age may may be the equipage of the day— tale: The other for speeding in orse the fastest, We wheye Frederick the Grest got made him pause before a row of snarl at h ering “Scoundrels! Wor live foreve We do not know where Danton got the cool poise that made him stand on the platform of the guillotine and remark to the executioner, ~Y; my head to the mob—it will he worth see: , Still mystified “unshaken th when even him. Editorial Comment LUMBER FACTOR IN THE ORIENT | is mot born of terms of environ of plas b pl foam and sand. CHILDREN OF “INFERIORS” Once again a seri rveyor of the social scene h ‘made the discovery le have more ha! {than rich people. ‘ Dr. Henry D. Chapin, writing in the Review of Re- Wiews, points out that “everywhere the poorest and least | efficient have the lange: } k The worthy doctor a that quantity that is desired in the = that “the fecundity of the For a good many years < Deen voiced recurrently. s Jastified. I: seems rather obvious that a child brought up by educated parents who have ample means to give; Bim good med nd a complete The islands possess more than 64,000 s: ercial forests. jals estimate troction operations and as building mater The issuance of more than &,000 lice: dicative es | With parents who are | peth Herever pressed by poverty. jIn our coun! | Yes, it seems obvious, But it doesn't work out that | Victoria way. i Xt certainly is natural and human to wish that all @hikiren might have as many advantages and pleasares @s possible, It makes our hearts ache to think of youne- @ters who have to think about earning their livings he ore they are out of short breeches, Yet the world qmems to be so constituted that a certain amount of ex how * sagedest te . Bardship is necessary for the development of strength. tele ef bai ing is fendalistic. Bein ature is quite <alloused and hard-boiled about it. f Hardiness comes only from combat. | ‘The list ef men who, by force of character and abil- ty, have belped shape the course of history is a long @me; and if you will examine it you will find that most ‘the names are names of men who were born in this “Bamentably fecund “inferior class” that Dr. Chapin 2 gpeaks about. ‘Genius is mot something that can be foressen in ad. _. Fence, and it does not appear where v7 i qe seem cere i A teky barn in a bork-geliey Kischen open WHAT FARE Serene = } (New Orleans Item) The English parliament was called upon recently to ae on fresdom, and fixed i et a little less it is contrary to 7 must per B ly fine, and women st display it horrible crippling bondages or per e On the whole we feel that Peking is very happy in the posmession of Mayor Eo. And very fortumsie im the complete and final obliteratic f Governor Cha. “Teg cabin is quite as apt to have it as a baby born in a! p cemntry. ‘The boy who has to fight for everything S. t man must encesinnelly | sacrifice to the cause of Justice and ‘his mertyndom. Ext im Mr. | pablic conscience bestirred F * ge Hf E : lit hit t ! i f ‘ FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1928 | The Kind of ‘Hurricane’ We Need ‘| the week beginning Su: toast, stewed figs. apple whip. Monday Breakfast—French omelet, genu-/| leaves on each ah tes layer of ine wholewheat bread, stewed prunes. | cucumbers soup, broiled steak, cooked parsnips, | cooked tomatoes, salad of quartered you please give the first aid treat- cucumbers, stewed raisins. ment for acute indigestion?” baked squash, salad of ‘tomato | vomiting is produced stuffed with asparagus tips, baked | drink immediately afterwards more _j apple. hot water to overcome the irritation juice. | Dinner—Baked white fish, cooked | feeding a five months old baby? It is toes and cucumbers, no dessert. { @———_____________+ | IN NEw YORK {_ IN NEW YORK: New York, Sept. 28—The mar- Yiage license bureau in the very im- posing City Hall furnishes upon any morning, bright or stormy, an ex- cellent cross-section of the people attan The Little Church Corner may have the - the marrying justices of the mar- riage license bureau get the busi- BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Nselection of informers by Civil Serv- Prohibition Commissioner Doran is investigating charges of brutality and vandalism allegedly committed by dry agents in collaboration with local cops and the Washington Bar Assoviation has publicly protested “the wholesale shooting, assaulting and manhand- lored persons.” Police Chief Hess gating the shooting men by three policemen and mem- t race charge the force with reckless disregard of their 28—The pres- w enforcement in this 7 wiches. Columikea & Dinner — Roast beef or pork, carefully with an_ electric needle ; cooked string beans, cooked oyster | there is no danger of cancer forming plant, molded vegetable salad (car- | in the same place. I have personally rots, string beans, peas, and celery), never seen a skin cancer which had | baked pears. | formed at the site of a scar caused Here sits, for instance, ‘ordinary waiting room of a pu’ building, a young woman adorned in the fluffy white thingabobs of a img gown. It is a cheap wed- ding gown, but it has the required amount of fluffery, lace and silk. It is the only wedding gown in the couples are in The young man who is to wed the young lady in the wed- ding gown has not had so much as the price of a blue suit. He wears a | Suit of some brown mixture—and it has been worn before. pooled fortunes went inio that wed- ding dress) At any rate, no bride (who ever trod the aisles of a ca- \thedral flanked by ring bezrers, bridesmaids and=ruch eter got 3 Her mother chirps’ indiscriminate is still investi- f two colored room. 4 p on charges of street clothes. ‘Tt within the last The policemen’s association met the the newspapers } _concerning - general conditions and common practices. One arose to remark that each of the of- fivers present had seen brotal and allied for beatings sdministered > prisoners and had ignored gam- and drunkenness amont. ther policemen. more than 40 liemen have been rkenness on duty | he recent storm of ganized police trial d that amy more on duty will be Cases of superior officers, charged € intoxication of patrol- greater thrill about her, like a nice old Wird. ilusioned and peak, sings in the air. jee | Our Yesterdays In the corner sit an old man and an old woman. They sit band in hand. They do not smile. do they speak. They They sit and look and per- haps they think. And if they think, inking of contrasts in The Un: ment for Burleigh county was named as $17,000. C. W. McGray was drive chairman. romance. Here in life they. come im contact with it again. Probably two lonely souls, a Jonesomely from | § nonk, yearning for companionship and drifting, at last, skull in a lonch room. into a second—perhaps a third— Representative Gibson of Vermont, ; i chairman of a special investigating | sub-committee of the House tee om the District of Columbia, has with the promised an iz And there is the frightened youth frightened maid. They westigation of police /have come alone. Perhaps they have conditions on his return to Wash- eloped. They seem terribly yo: | i elbow together. of 2 great adventure and whistle, as it were, to keep up their courage. | They look abozt to see how the other jfolks are actigg. They find every- s they are searched olce upon entering and leaving ted plaes. He recommended ing teachers:;William Moore, super- 7 4 © istcadents high schécl, Einbeth (0 |Jones, Clara Struble and Gertrude || BARBS ' = |OUR BOARDING HOUSE | | ments | way in { Ht j | if ; t HEALTHeDIET ADVICE 4A Dr Frank Mc < wth Ite Saat My 2 Dr. McCoy's menus syggested for | Spread thin slices of genuine whole- sf nday , Sept. a heat bread with peanut butter. Sunday Place a few crisp spinach or lettuce Breakfast—Poached egg on Melba | . MeCoy will gladly answer | Lunch—Macaroni_ or spaghetti | te am ‘4 bealth i questions on th boiled and buttered, head lettuce. {| and ae addressed to him, the Tribune. Dinner—Roast chicken, cooked as |} care of raj small green peas, salad of | ‘stam addressed Minced avocado on shredded lettsce, Il patties far Pag lengt! sprinkled with minced ripe olives. Dinner —Non-starchy vegetable; QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | Question: Mrs. G. J. asks: “Will Lunch — Baking powder biscuits, string beans, celery. Tuesday Answer: The simplest remedy to Breakfast—Re-toasted breakfast employ when suffering from acute food with cream, pear sauce. } indigestion is to drink three or four Lunch—Combination salad of | glasses of water as hot as can be cooked and raw vegetables, such as | borne. This will assist in carrying beets, carrots, peas, cucumbers, cel- | off the offending food material, and ery. lin some cases .produce vomiting, ere Dinner—Roast pork or mutton,! which brings quick relief. is well to Wednesday cf gastric juice and bile which is Breakfast—Coddled eggs, Melba! generally thrown out in large quan- toast, stewed prunes. | tities during acute indigestion. Lunch—8 ounce glass of orange | Question: Anxious asks: “Will you please tell me what to begin fiftten pounds, twelve ounces, and is livery lively. What would cause a squash, cooked lettuce, sliced toma- | breast fed but seems hungry. Weighs i ursday Breakfast—Baked eggs, small; baby’s feet to perspire and feel | piece of broiled ham, Melba toast. clammy?” Lunch—Baked potato, string | Answer: A five months old baby | beans, celery. should be given only orange juice Dinner—Spinach and celery soup, !and milk, using about four feed- | Salisbury steak with buttered mush- | ings daily of milk, each feeding to be | rooms, salad or raw spinach leaves, preceded by one or two teaspoon- | apricot whip. a |fuls of orange juice. The quantity | Friday _ of milk used at each feeding should '| Breakfast—Wholewheat muffins, | vary between four to six ougces, ac- peanut butter, stewed pears. | cording to the baby’s digestive abil- Lunch—One or two oranges, glass ‘ity. The baby should be kept warm | of sweet milk. and the circulation in the legs not in- Dinner—Broiled_ filet of sole, }terfered with by having the diapers ‘baked egg plant, McCoy salad (to- | or underclothing too tight. | matoes, cucumbers and lettuce), no! Question: A Young Lady asks: dessert. |“Do you think that having such | Saturday poset a as moles removed from Breakfast—Cottage cheese, pine- one’s face paves the way to growths apple (fresh or canned). | of a more serious nature, such as a Lunch—*Cucumber and olive sand- | cancer, ete.?” | Answer: If moles are removed “Cucumber and Olive Sandwiches: | by removing a mole. ome peering at everyone else. Ro-|Mr. Boyd, aids a wounded man who mance, as well as misery, likes com- Staggers in his shack, and after pany. They whisper comments about (nursing him to health, the man re- each other. | pays him by robbing him of his sav- sae ebay ings and winter overcoat. This And so they come and go through | prompts Smith to join the police | the da: tho: of the slums, the palaces and the such rats and drag them to the bar | far-eway plates. of justice. He does this eventually, Drama! Well. we thought so. And/but his path is not strewn with j it's one of the sights of New York— roses. He runs down a band of iif you asked zs. \Tobbers and his warmest friend, ut force so that he might run down GILBERT SWAN. Sergeant Coughlin, played by Tom {Kennedy, having been slam, he @ swears vengeance. | | ELTINGE THEATRE The millions of ee who have Se purchased prints of English hunting TEN YEARS AGO scenes, with the hounds hounding. States war work allot- and the gentlemen all in romantic looking red coats, will get a real thrill out of “The Whip,” which comes to the Eltinge for today and Saturday, featuring Dorothy Mac- J. P. Clinton, local manager of the | $2! a Fa | Stacy-Bismarek company, was trans. X2Ul and with Anna Q. Nilsson, ferred to management of the Butte, ;, Mont., branch. in ihe coat Prince Axel of Denmark, who was {f 2!! Drury Lane melodramas, fea- ‘touring the United States, passed through Ralph Forbes and Lowell Sherman- “The Whip,” one of the greatest tures a fox hunt on the screen, the oe eee like of which hasn't been seen, even Bismarck im his private car. in Merrie England for lo aainany years! The gentlemen are red- three public functions, netting §71 ‘hese , beautiful scenes were ar- for the Red Cross. ranged as near as possible to re- semble the romantic old prints TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO —_ hich have adorned so many walls | sec, {OF years. and then Hunters reported that prairie er st SH |they talk, but when they converse | chickens were starce in this locality.|__“The Whip” offers all the excite. Catumbas, O, Sept. 28—A short they whisper. afraid Lant Eghtning , their own Toines; of their ows “words. | ‘ment for which the old Drury 3 Ba ithrillers were famous, with horse pl Erastus Williams, son of General me | H a Fr da ‘races, auto wrecks, train collisions a swimming pool | They find themselves at the doorway SS soteet Pesta Military |and much conniving and plotting on the part of the villains to drive Bismarck schovls had the follow- -o F : Tell, seventh, 5 i Ni xt a ie | , Nicholas Murray Butler bolted the Pert fourths Miran Bentley: | Republican Party some time ayo, now he has bolted the Demo- Kirkland: Te. Fannie Danning and ‘Ts Probably just to be sure he's | Kate Thomas, mncic supervisor, Miss | © the right side. . A tribe has been discovered in \ | eB New Guinea that lives within the SS pine tA dg W. | crater of a volcano. This will be FB! jennie Griffin ui te . | read with appreciation by apartment. a a FP sae’ cg Sa agen wpred i = ny ee know how mean a jan- T. W. Griffin. Over 60 guests were | ¢ eee | Helen Wills says she tmproved ; shade trimmed | her tennis i White plagh and gold orma-| It doean't. sec tar anne met a however, mt same Do you suppose the two have | nelins ef Bismarck, was secidentally sea three Peed rd been etant- mien univerety pointed @ gen at really hada faling out? im fum. He was recovering. ‘The result of Al Smit i us wat’ dnc mith’s visit in