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_THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ind shopping place for nearby farmers and their famili Eventually, as the nation drifted toward > industrialism, ‘factories were established in these little 4° THE ant eorbg me EB centers of population. These industries took what : Establi native labor they found and: acted as a magnet for the F; Published by tho Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-} surplus labor inthe surrounding area. The community , iarek, N..D., and entered at the postoffice at Bit-| prow and new industries and more labor came. marek a8 second class mall matter, and Publisher| Today the process of jndustrial and community de- Geérge D. no detbd dd adda velopment is more complex. ‘Experience has proved See Rates Payable in Advance : that, except in the largest cities, there is such a thing IY CAITier, POE Year .. 20.0006 in the community as a point of saturation. Increasing B ig oer (in Bismarck) the community population is not a simple expedient Yin state outside Bismarck) ........ of inviting new industries to build there. . Factories are Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota built where there is a surplus of labor of a kind re- ired by th ‘ticular industi Steel mill: it 4 % 5 quired by the particular industry. Steel mills are no’ yond the limit of safety before any Weekly y ort B ear a oy yeas established in-a shoe manufacturing town, and vice discomfort may be experienced. f, outside of North D: verza. The industry must go to the labor supply, for Eyestrain and eye fatigue go hand ° the labor surplus in this country is not so large that — in hand. - When your eyes tire easily, industry can place its thumb on it any place. begin to smart, perhaps. slight The ‘Bismarck Tribune it Newspaper Ee EYE EXERCISES Like all other vital organs of the body, the eyes can be taxed far be- Member of The Associated Press The community must build up its labor supply if it : ie eats tS gh cnean The Aszociated Press is exclusively entitled to the| is to develop more industries and if it has a surplus of | . - . Do not wait for the sec- use for republication of all news dispatches credited | labor then the community must extend its industries. “tk ignal but heed the first warn- to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, 894) Community developing is a scientific rather than a hit- z i & member, poor vision is not also the.local news of spontaneous origin published ny prbted ; \ | the’ only cause of eyestrain. If rest herein. All rights of republication of all other mat-| mics process, , : ia all thats requised 40 abaih give ter herein are also reserved. 8 ATi rou perfect eye comfort, your prob- THESE NEED EDUCATION i. 2 crats expect Smith’s’ New England carried away. dina el importance (Editor’s Note: This is the industry; the strength of Senator eee Se =e ee papell dl es EN a eno Hfigtidintt tele hdtatraectt iy jp Seen adie eee eer Republicans are counting on the| sequent inhibition to the stronger sections during the closing days | Cooli meee ciend, William M. small town vote to hold Connecticut, ones. The science of optometry has qut of patience with the existing order. Like Beethoven, | Washington, went to the White House to be Photo- his mind is attuned to communications that the rest | graphed with President Coolidge, Bishop Brewster of us cannot hear. If, in addition to being and idealist | objected. he is a man of force, this bears fruit, and he gives us 4) “We shouldn't take him from important business 4 which voted Republican by 136,000| contributed greatly to man’s eye Fifth. Symphony, cure for some hitherto baffling | to do this,” he said. of the campaign.) | Sionstitl fet od Hignny,| in 1924, ‘The state is regarded as| comfort by perfecting a technique lagde, French lution. That's d it. Bs voters are immigrants: or children! jeaning to Hoover. for building up weak eye muse! “4 phage dat ii bbtererhaditreda i anda ated aL BY RODNEY DUTCHER of immigrants, and some Republican| “ National Committeeman J. Henry| At the present time, splendid equip- Ary idealist is a man sustained and made strong by | we would applaud even louder if somebody should object (NEA Service Writer) factional strife. Rohrback, who opposed Hoover be-| ment is available which enables the a great inspiration. And great inspirations do not, /to the process on the grounds that it would waste the |. Washington, Oct. 26.—Maine has eae ery fore the Kansas City convention, ap-| optometrist to direct innervation to ordinarily, come from the outer world. That part of | time of the president, . | 6 electoral votes, New Hampshire 4,} . The Democrats were careful to 4 e Vermont 4, Massachusetts 18, Rhode | nominate a Protestant for governor, eae cl Seer bald reryed vruidehed Thee seme or ml le life that we can see with the naked eye is not always} Surely, the president of United States is too busy to} Island 5 and Connecticut 7. asmuch as Smith and Walsh are| M&chine Petes east ea (om ‘i va ar a 8 pbk t . ioket, trpatchenta cine ad very inspiring; it is worth noting that the “realists”! have to.pose for pictures with every publicity-seeking | Herbert Hoover will carry Maine,| both Catholics. ‘The population of EO ae frestments in: manny. cases. rerebve in the world of fiction—the writers who. boast fondly | man or group of men that visits Washington. New Hampshire and Vermont. But/ the state is more than a third Cath- Thomas J. Spellacy and Augustine| establishing a normal balance be- that they “‘see life just as it is’—are the world’s pro- Alfred E.- Smith is giving him aj olic and the Democrats claim that if inated >) th fi st. pessimists, fight for New England’s re-| they will have this: year the nor- Baa fee tae tos ran ween ote be cae ee ee founde: . ‘ “ js ‘ inst S : McLean thii :,| who are wearing glasses ‘find that But the world within—ah, that is different. Any . Fe aE cre tering £0, beat! mally Republican vote of the Italian, | are ‘ot exactly political buddies but| thelr eyes are more rested after a le world within—ah, ‘J ss lown Hoover's victories in the -| French an ortuguese ‘8, 7 ‘i f treatments. eir e- thing can exist there; anything, that is, that we in- Editorial Comment ‘ ships with heavy city majorities. On| because the religious issue was pro- both are strong admirers of Smith] course of treatm vorki i fici fect be overestimated. dividually ‘are’ capable of conceiving. There we can the eve of Smith’s .personal visit, to} moted against Smith. é pee eee bad or stim: Taehee Get ee ; hit to be: there, lilie Beethoven, STAGE PROFANITY this battleground it appeared that} Forty. Harvard professors, in- >——- | stenographers, and others who use tee the world as it ought to be; there, like Beethoven, 5 atpeeen Weea) : |] the Democratic candidate had’a| cluding Felix Frankfurter and F. | IN NEW YORK __ || their eves at close. work constantly, we can heat harmonies that should exist but do not. Miss P Woog Bee "tk Ato @ ‘menial slight edge in Rhode Island, that | W. Taussig, have declared for Smith. And, if we are strong enough, we can help transform ae ney oot acktens, talked to a iminisi = n are greatly relieved bv these sys- ascociation in New York the other. day about stage’ Hoover ‘had the better chance in} It does not appear that President |@——————-—-—® these visionary sights and sounds into realities, awemeine! 7 Connecticut and that Massachusetts | Coolidge’s influence in his own i That producer now puts on extrava- Preachers are not the only people who 4 New York, Oct. 26.—There are “ i a Never look, to the outside world for strength and | would like an explanation of the blue haze that hangs va Sete Era chy slinéesataalicihi resvanell have any great effect on hundreds in New York who com-| sant productions from time to time. inspiration. -You will not often find them‘there. Look | over the sources of present-day drama. 4 We f prea the first three states mentioned it] Such factors as these, favoring| mercialize their failures. A man who had been wrecked in within yourself, Imagine what things should be if}, It is a high testimonial of the charm of drama’that | jies in New Hampshire. But itis) Smith, must be cited in order tel In most places, particularly small! Wall Street immediately turned his the world were remade—and then go ahead and try to intelligent, refined, decent people continue to patronize | not a bright chance and the Demo:|-sow how he can hope to overturn] towns, a. failure is, something to| loss into gain by writing a book a it and endure some of its revolting accompaniments.| crats will be surprised if they win normally large Republican majori-| weep about, to bring a sense of|on inside Wall Street methods. Its shape the reality to fit. It is nonsense to talk of the realism of the stage. Why | the state of Senator George Moses.| vcs. ‘ihe sepublicans reply that| shame and to cause a hanging of the appeal was so general, and it w: lem is-comparatively easy. Butvif Foreign Representatives Twenty-one American cities have in operation ‘one ms 1 ¥ the annoyance continues after ample G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY or more, schools in whitch ‘crippled children are edu- : 4 Ld Hacer shad ena is time NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bigg TROIT cated in’ conjunction with nécessary correctional, med- - \ 4 Within «-s comparatively cobent: dle Gee. Kreage Bldg.| ical and surgical treatment. Remarkable results are t i IM v time, science has opened new ways being obtained by these institutions: ; j ot of tani ca of Ril Pregl ed (Official City, State and County Newspaper) The crippled child is a social ‘problem. Generally! - ~~ Hf | . 45 inuseenion a fet aye/ hace he or she is unable to keep up with normal classmate : P \ - muscles, Formerly only two courses SEEING WHAT SHOULD BE and formerly was permitted’ to drop ‘ut of sctiool to | f W 4 Z v lable; one to put on glasses | to di Ludwig von Beethoven, greatest of composers, would | go through life handicapped physically and mentally. ‘ p Z Sep angen ae ell Edd not have been a great composer if he had not suffered | Education is more valuable to the physically deformed i y ¢ ‘ould soon disappear. In a case of from deafness. So says a French student in a recent | or crippled than-to the physically normal. See 5 Z | purely muscular weakness due to communication to the Paris Academy of Scichtists. Smaller communities eapnot finance. special schools | , ; y /E b, overworked ere both the above Beethoven, according to the Frenchman's theory, was | and hospitals for the instruction’ and treatment of 4 5 Z g Srnec is carers Cae ia able to put together great harmonies because he could | thesé¢ children, but there must be a way for. every ¥ z . ent lines. . Suppose you have: a not héar the noises of the outer world. The Mi eae no barat Lebabaty in population ae fae oe arm, whey aoe first je heard were sounds within his own brain; from | financia’ means, give them an education least. Z ? *; ee got the materials to make music that the world |. Evety physically defective child society makes inde- ¢ ; f soda ae ies aca tuaeeanabulteiies will-always remember. pendent ‘through schooling or correctional treatment : ) trouble. After this, proper exer- Beethoven ‘could not hear the music that really] is a good investment. Were that child to continue : cises will develop the arm muscles existed; he could only hear the music that ought to | through'life a public-charge,.the cost to society would . > y* E so Halts ee the edited will exist. That -is the way it is with most of the men | be fer in excess of the other cost. a dartone ai comer aetna: your we honor highly. They devote themselves to what} Citizens. and civic organizations are concerned and arm or leg muscles. Each ‘ought to be rather than what is. should help make it possible to give these unfortsnate | <£$—-£__—________—— sed of bundles of fibers, stimu- To be sure, they are usually called ‘“impractical| children the attention they so sorely need. elle perainaincn Hae Ein lated hed (Mules oe lak idealists” by their contemporaries. But that does not \ : ue ae oO P pat sstienon ‘The Mirchi tae ae matter. Since thexdays of the Pharaohs, the world POSING WITH THE PRESIDENT French vote probably will decide the | the main benefits derived from hav- has followed meekly at the leading strings of the im-| The Rt. Rev. C. B. Brewster, Episcopal bishop of Con- fight between Smith and Hore ing muscle treatments is increasing it stops spinning. ,_ | Picture is a waste of valuable time. \ > about 35,000. Meanwhile, Demo-|toxic materials are more readily What is an idealist, anyway? He is a man who is| When the Episcopal House of Bishops, meeting in P e Yqu will be a visionary idealist, to be sure. But it| should people pay money to hear language they would many wets -will vote for Hoover,| head. True, Manhattan its quota| successful that he began to cai is the visionary idealists to whom the world owes every- | Tesent.as grossly insulting if uttered in their presence |. Massachusetts .,i8 , one . of. those| that the’G..O. P. is experienced -in| of men who end their lives after al on advice to “suckers: thing it prizes. 1 upon the street or in the lobby of a hotel? states which Smith is almost com-/ holding the foreign vote in line and| heavy: Wall Street defeat. But al A Broadway playwright, failing ” 4 Undoubtedly license in speech was resorted to orig- pelled to win if he is to be elected.| that the women and the churches singular number trade upon failure|to attract crowds to his theater, : inally ‘in the strenuous search for play material to | It is much easier to imagine Hoover| can be depended upon to get out an|as.a means of returning to suc-| appeared in the bright lights belt BANKS AND PROGRESS create 2 thrill. Once-upon a time an explosive “Damn!” | winning” without it, although his| enormous vote against Smith. cess. wearing a sandwich sign to attract To-people unacquainted with the inside workings of aoed ie sngeter Aan But 28 repaition Jone: te anahagere | Baye done plenty of ah We ad Me maesmiteal we bright pentioman dertares ike wep oae . ‘ an Fy js | effect. sorts 0: levices were reso. 0 to ge! e | worrying ere, ” 9 sic cons ions In ie island | a. business class on failure. 9 efeat champions open classes barking it anes ie nes bank, ati fe eel 18! kick. The innocent young ingenue was made to slip] . The’Republicans count on’ the vil-| and Connecticut are not dissimilar) as the market is full of “success”| in boxing, tennis rs mie concerned, stands still. Change within the structure, out an awkward cuss word, Finally the kindly matron | lages and small towns to vote more) from those in Massachusetts. Over lecturers, this man gives advice on Jack Dempsey, and a score of of course, can take place but gradually, and for this] and the white-haired grandmother were ‘drafted into | heavily than ever for their candi-|a third: of. Connecticut's lation | how to keep from failing and uses] others, have cashed in, despite de- reason it seems to many that the bank of today is| the damning squad. No resources are left untried now| date, spurred by the issues of is Catholic and- nearly half of Rhode | his own life as a “horrible example.” feat, by going on’the stage or into Pretty much the same in its essential characteristics | t© work the trick.: Everybody on the stage at times is| ligion and prohibition. . The impossi-| Iglend’s. The tariff 1s an important | He does very well » too. the movies. Any number of teach- pa ae ba ; ogee ‘ making the fishwife vocabulary seem ifnocent prattle| bility of determining the strength | issue in these states as well as in veiled .__|ers of professions, from journalism . methods as the bank with which the Sreat-grand- | in some of the so-called modewn drama, ofthe wet vote and the dry vote and| Massachusetts. a A few years agoa proninant to law, are men who didn’t do par fathges of this soa gleny a pueeet: ae American | Miss Wood told the preachers “the tendency to over counting in the effect of religion is . Broadway. producer foun himself| ticularly well in those professions. bank, however, could not have stood stil |, Its import-]| emphasize by the use of shock epithets is a sign of | the principal reason why politica! ‘sa Il puztled about M: fh. 8 pot, aneamiae Meunier eae | Tab of tbe ‘most successful I know ‘in th onomic schet f the nation has forced | poverty in expression.” . She is right. And the use of | “~nerts are all puztled about Massa- 1 is, not unfamiliar to producers. He} would have difficulty getting a job. ce eeow with ea sei oe such talk in plays isa cheap and ‘offensive sign of | chusetts. ey A F gt was without money. He bought up} Failure, then, can-be ‘an excelient i ‘ jl Nhe poverty of expression on the part of those who. write| <n pay-State’in- 1924. gave Cool- if large advertising space in the news-| lesson, an incident or a turn of There are evidences that American banking is ap- and produce Plays that, ought to meet the disapproval) idge a majority of 280,000 over the papers and borrowed money. He] Fate's wheel—it is, in no sense, in- Proaching. an era of great improvement. Constructive | of the public lepended upon to buy theater tickets. combined Davis and La Follette berated the methods in vogue for! dicative of an individual's end. Per- banking movements now under way throughout the raising money for theater produc-| haps 80 per cent of Broadway's fic ph belly yote. Since that time conditions af- t Agr ‘ a Tcessish in shales aitanger barks: vanre cltiient DR. COULTER ON OUR FARMING FUTURE fecting a presidential election have| seems to be that the price too} tions. He told of his failure due to| theater folk fail at. some ti : : : ; i i il i changed, so that no majority of any-| high. exorbitant rates of interest and! other, dropping fortunes in a-single banks, banks offering a.wider service, better under- 1. ‘There ‘may Pitan etees ioe in North} Where near such proportions is in The Democrats have nominated! pressure from business sources. He Sretatlon ‘But they’re back for nr se of bankdiig Buttyin and out of the cage, closer kota .of the type that was La common a few| Sight this year. Among the fac-|a-candidate of French descent for] appealed to the public to invest in| more. . i ‘Ago; i i tors encouraging Democrats are the| governor and the Republicans an-| a future production. : eee for the banking neteice cay Se ce ‘state's Seicint tee a oy intra uk continued depression’ in the- textile | other to oppose Senator Peter Gerry.| ‘And out of failure came success, Arthtir Hopkins is a classic ex- more’ systematic. 2 . Dr. Coulter, aside from ‘watching with satisfaction) Or, ample. Perhaps the finest. prodycer’ in N . t ae | a 7 . licking in the interest o: : ! Sei By Ahern ey of, seasons ago his “jazz- ae er opera,” “Deep .River,”’ “dropped oo = pometeing like - $150,000.in an al- Z st ~Go RIGHT AHEAD @ | fees Feom for the woh of the gone } iti uppeey tl : et the swing of North Dakota from one-cropping with if, are nett Me me. » i ‘ ing, has been: int or that refuses to adjust itself to changed conditions not i He finds that population has P 4 only- throttles its own development but that of the| been growing much faster than’ farm production, and ici that the great army of consumers in the cities has been A af, i a teén expanding. : ISTEAERS LEPT ME, BEFORE I CAME JEACoN, ~~ I KIA Some Broadwagites went so ‘far as __ PFosperous and industrious community. : " ele uci eae ae Dr. i miter agricul: Ut b ee ee ae Panes A” EAT. AA? LIS’EN /. té say that = “flop” would fin. i i “To -THE CLIMAX OF MY S) f ish him. ; {The fact that the United States and its: thousands of | tural production is being adjusted to the requirements He i tt So-HAT wJVE BEEN FOLLERN, But he was. back last with + citi¢s.and towns have prospered and made progress is|0f the home consuming markets; in other words, the You. ALoNE SHALL EAI 2 a id GHT ‘ALONG FROM “Paris Bound” and “Bui best proof that. its banks have not. stood still. To problem is in the way. of Being solved bya I WILL HAVE “THE CONSOLATION oF. Nut Ri both, of which were fortune makers. ages Process of elimination of surpluses. . We. about. i + His ARK ih tea Torta aes smpall extent, isthe development of the country trace- | th, ber of dai ¢ 7 MY Wel HAVE No AHS AA ai , able-to the functions ably assumed by peep obi ofl ee bates ceetree cr Salty come shaatcattle and eves KNOWING “THAT MY RDS Not we had: ion th Toa hard raps, bet it himself of the Meee atee TE-oE & SEND, AES) mS pe BEEN WASTED ! et AHEM awe AS I UP “101d” DECORA audiences in the fest of the country é Sethe Mah. kesp, ep, with sptogtess,: and oes ° the about 6 per cen) Taken a ayn SAID BEFoRE, T REF ER BACK= fo Hat OF IMDAPEADEAICE £ eg Bere fae Bey F ns i i E . es < 8 whose - reputations - had once {ALE ORT mcuane|Faettages tare ve | “A PARAGRAPH GF HE CONSE TTON we tein | Setar et Sunt { Sir ‘William Joynbon-Hicks, British home secretary,| Dr. Coulter makes th i PU: So BEGAD.~ PLEASE SIR,~<No 1 THEM: TMS SINCE | | THe venture was highly a atly remarked ithat the beet means of, stcuring | shift of a , is not all CRUNCHING AND CRACKING I Wiz A KID/. -Of ail the players - in or out of fork peace is “the cordial interlocking of ‘conimercial | c¢oun 7 econopa on” the’ farms PS) OF PEANUT SHELLS ‘ Broadway, the only one I know who ' feed ndestal eps tea hie ae ne ae “|S” VERN &. be ers * ‘ Wher’ ot tre now doin} Ta in Lt 4 ‘ ‘ue Henn aee Lone At tt | emer we aes fay By DISCONCERTING! this intrusion into. Britain's industrial: realm | {2tm™4i of the other hand the fatmets do. more with| | | ¢ THEN % “Mke a welesse ie Bra less human Tabor. because of improved farm mechan- : y But the’ factory employs 2,000 British workmen, |’ has never tasted of failure is Ina Cle She is known as the “suc- .” This .is largely due to ais polage ener the: ancestor et manu: fodgment on pablc taste ar. Her judgment blic taste is said to pe 0 s : fice ‘of excellent. roles, But she'd ‘Bir William meant by a “cordial inter- b I : ; ; GILBERT SWAN, reial relations.” The closer. the ti than those: that f prevai ip oe ] : A (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) tematic exercises which give them greater flexibility of the eye muscles and therefore greater ease when ae Re using their eye: This type of muscle training is also employed in all Cs s of strabismus or crosseyes, asul Feet that will be discussed later. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Encephalitis Question: Mother writes: “My son is thirty-seven years old and has been sick for four months. His leg is getting numb‘and he is unable to walk. ‘e have had three nerve doctors examine him, and they all claim he is suffering from encepal- itis. Kindly tell me what is best 10. Answer: You probably misspelled the name of your son's disorder, meaning “encephalitis” which is a disorder caused by inflammation of the brain. This can affect any part of the body according to the section of the brain irritated. I am sure your son would improve through a fruit fast and would also get along better afterwards on a carefully plesped diet, but if would be unwise ‘or me to attempt to give you any specific advice about his case through this column, as his trouble is too serious and requires the care of a competent physician who can watch his case carefully. ‘ Liver Question: Mrs. J. S. writes: “My husband has brown patches on his chest on the right side. Some tell me he has a lazy liver. Has he liver trouble? Some days he is terribly yellow.” Answer: A skin that inter. mittently yellow is an indication of some liver derangement. The brown spots on his chest, although not definitely diagnostic of. liver dis- orders, nevertheless are sldom found with those in good health, and it seems that those having these spots are always toxic and consequently have what. livers. Fi Question: Mrs. R. writes: “When I become nervous, excited, or in & warm room my face always turns red. Is this due to high blood pres- qed What can I do to overcome Answer: The symptoms you de- scribe may be due to high blood Pressure but I should not guess at this for you can find out very quickly by going to your physician and having a blood pressure test made. If you find you have high blood pressure, I will be glad to'send you a special treatise on thi ject, telling you how to bring your blood pressure to normal. . Company’s Pink Poles!” .". .-Or, if might be, “Peaceful Poles for Party Lines.” ... However, what'll the phone companies do with the orange poles on St. Patrick’s Day? ... Somebody ought to propose camou- flaged poles for Chicago citizens to hide behind when the artillery starts pouring over a barrage. . . In Hollywood the av could be dolled up in a little and negli- gee to indicate they have “It” Some of our former government officis ren’t taking any interest in this year. ‘They took. the cash and are letting the interest go. Voltaire was the only genius who made a fortune out of his work, says 8 contemporary. But, how about Babe Ruth? ee He. pecianibiay bal ies hig gues sved a Proper time, would preven: hurricahes. That ought to give lots of jobs to the unemployed house- ‘wives. eee Cheer up, the election will soon be over and the papers will be print- ing news again. ig (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) . TEN YEARS AGO Plans were being made to organ- ize a community chorus under the direction of Miss Bergliot Caspery f ig Bismerck Conservatory of usie. Ensign and Mrs. J. C.. Bell. of Seattle, Wash., arrived here to take command of the Bismarck Salvation Mrs. Charles E. McCormick, pio- neer resident of Bismarck, died at her.home here. For many years, Mrs. MeCormick conducted a toom- ing house in Bismarck. j H.C. Bradley, e Mian ee On Hewat ie tor Mguete ot Miseabel wane ay Mrs, 'R. D, Hoskins received rather wait off-stage than fail on fats r ax ard