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Ca ae 4 wasear jects ee, PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune rests An Independent Newspaper 14 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarek Tribune Company, Bis- marek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- marek as second class mail matter. George D. Mann ............President and Publisher Subscri Rates Payable in Advance Daily by cartier, pee year rad aTsi cabs +$7.20 Daily 2B mail, per rear, (in Bismarck) « 7.20 Daily mail, per year, Tin state ouvsids Bismarck) ........ « 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . « 1.00 o 2.69 1.50 in state, YOar cesses in state, t years for |, outside of North Dakota, ber Audit Bureau of Circulation .. Member of The Associated Press ‘Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republication of all news dispatches credited or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and the local news of spontaneous origin published All rights of republication of all other mat- herein are also reserved. to it Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. tt CHICAGO ETROIT Tower Bidg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Kresge Bldg. ] WHOLESALE THINKING ‘A weather-beaten old house, black as a dusty crow, tattered as a street beggar, and rickety as a rheumatic ‘old woman, holds its own on the busiest road that leads from one of our largest cities. It hasn’t changed a bit in 20 years, A thin, anemic wisp of blue smoke curls from the chimney in the winter. Scarlet flowering quince hushes blaze in its grass-grown yard in spring, and gnarled old apple trees brush their pink petals against the cracked panes, In 20 years I have seen no man, no woman, no child bout the old house. Only the curling smoke that tells of life within. . Years ago I never noticed the old house at all. It ‘was only one of dozens of old farmhouses needing paint that punctuated the green meadows of open country, quiet and peaceful, as though the thunder of the city were not less than three miles away. But the years have passed. The city has oozed out to meet the country. The road, once dusty with its yellow pollen in summer, impassable with its frozen ruts in winter, has become a smooth boulevard, black with the cars that swarm it as flies crust a comb of honey. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE nevertheless, that became a part of the heritage of the race. It’s still a long way from realization. None of us will lose any sleep over the prospective starvation of 100,000,000 Chinese. But the mere fact that the news got into our papers at all is significant. Our futile, uneasy feeling that we ought to do something about it means a good deal. It megns that we are progressing along the road to cur ideal. IT WOULD BE A NOVELTY London too is launching a campaign against the jay- walker, but she is pursuing a method quite different from that commonly resorted to in countries havin; more dictatorial police than the’ proverbially courteous London “bobbies.” Posters and warning signs employed in the London campaign are couched in the words “Please cross here.” The reasons for this designation are several. In the first place, England never succumbed as much as did this country to the arbitrary German system of “Ver- botens.” American laws, ordinances and regulations contain countless prohibitions, so it is natural for such campaigns as those against jay-walking to be waged witht “Don’t” from red signs and redder policemen. In England they order this otherwise. Their in- structions are more in the affirmative and those whose duty it is to enforce those instructions are invariably courteous, to the point that they leave the impression of having conferred a privilege instead of denying a right. Should the London campaign prove more successful than have similar traffic drives in American cities, it ¢an nct be adduced as 2n argument for the adoption here of British methods. Though a nation so accustomed to being “bawled out” by traffic cops and to “Shall- nots” might, because of the novelty of the thing, ob- serve to the very letter a campaign conducted on the affirmative plan of the Londoners. A GOOD INVESTMENT Last year American tourists spent $800,000,000 abroad. This year the total expenditure will appprox- imate $900,000,000. Evidently with the steady ex- Pansion of student and pleasure travel the American people shall soon spend a billion a year outside the borders of their country. Such a sum, which before the war would have seemed staggering, is the fullest proof of a now familiar fact —that the “visible” items of trade, manufactured goods, raw materials, gold and silver, are nowadays only slightly more important then the “invisible” items. The “invisible” items include immigrant remittances to Europe, which exceed $200,000,000 a year. They include charitable remittances, payments for freight in foreign bottoms and, of course, loans, It goes without saying that $900,000,000 spent by The old farmhouses were razed long ago, and in their stead queer things now stand—hot dog stands, an air- port, a wayside skating rink, and row after row of trim little bungalows, When I was a child I looked at the rickety old house American cightseers abroad is invaluable to the nations which must make heavy payments on war debts and on an adverse trade balance. No complaint or protest is heard on this side of the water because Europe is repaying America with Amer- (T WAS SOME BATTLE WHILE IT LASTED! | The War’s Over! Now Let’s Have Peace! By RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Nov. 15.—Herbert Hoover is now being com#tlled to listen to the assurances of apparent- ly innumerable persons and organ- izations that he owes his election to ‘with scorn and derision. I wept for the folks who|ican dollars. The hundreds of thousands of persons |them. Fortunately, he is not com- lived there. I thought what shame it would be to live in such a ruin. The antique craze had not yet been born. People did not talk of “the early American,” the “charm of the old,” the “beauty of tradition,” and “the pure lines of the colonial.” But today the rickety, shambling, knock-kneed, spav- ined old house is almost priceless, and glows like a jewel among the “modern,” electrified, “convenienced” bungalows, Realtor after realtor has attempted to buy it, and failed. It is not an “antique” to those unseen people who live within, It is home—just their house, stark and drear and grim in winter, and hardly less stark and grim and drear when mantled in the apple blos- soms of the spring. People have gone mad over “the old”—unreasoningly mad—mad without analysis and discrimination, It has grown bewildering. Children who were ashamed of their old-fashioned homes of the long ago, who hung their heads in shame because of coal-oil lamps, organs in the parlor, and no bathrooms, while some of their Schoolmates boasted of gas jets and pianos and white- washed iron bathtubs, now scour the country for the very things they despised, The old coal oil lamps and melodeons and antima- fassars and enlarged ancestral portraits and hooked rugs and maple drop leaf tables and spool beds are almost priceless, Some of these things have beauty. Some have no more than the old house, spavined and rickety and knock-kneed like a winded nag. True there are beautiful old houses, built with artist- ry and sturdiness, built with solid beam and infinite care. Such homes are worth the fortune the unseen owners of the ugly house ask. There are, too, beautiful new homes, worth much more than the sneer which anything “new and modern” these days brings from the high-brows, And by the same token there are ugly old houses and ugly new houses. Less wholesale thinking is what we as a nation need. (Less adoption of the same groove of opinion by everyone, THE 100,000,000 FACING STARVATION IN CHINA China is a long way from the United States. There- fore, the news that 100,000,000 people are facing pos- sible starvation in four provinces of central and south- ern China doesn’t affect us as it ought. Not all of these people will die, of course. But enough to populate three or four cities the size of Chicago will, When famine descends on the overpop- ulated Chinese interior there ensues a period of appall- fng misery, in which those who are neither lucky nor strong go under. But China, after all, is a long way off. Its people ‘re not like our people. Their skins and features are different. It is hard to make their sufferings seem teal. In addition, we share Cain’s doubt that we really fre our brothers’ keepers. However, this one thing is worth noting. In the year 1928, when we read of such a thing as this Chinese fam- ine, we at least have a slight pricking of the conscience, We feel vaguely that we ought to do something about it; and if somebody starts to collect a relief fund, a good many of us probably will subscribe to it. And that slight, casual measure of sympathy is of vast portance, ig Wer the ability to sympathize with someone you have mever :een before is relatively a new thing in the world. The race has not always had it. It is only a few cen- the people could go unmoved even by a town ten miles away. “Every man for oldest slogan on earth; it is only re- have begun to rise above it. » & change is in progress. Many years “brotherhood” first. It could not be sweating legions and But it was 9 word It persisted; and, in few men began to give heed word had a sheen and to it. Slowly it ; ideal; an ideal the imen from the United States spending hundreds of millions in foreign travel feel they are getting their money’s worth. No investment in merchandise could be worth as much as that in pleasure and broadened outlook which the tourists pay for, and which permanently af- fects American life for the better. RUBBER—A LESSON IN MONOPOLY Attempts at monopoly often defeat their own ends. Several years ago England, through the famous Stev- enson act, limited the amount of rubber her growers could produce, and thereby kept the price at a high level, taking many billions of dollars from American consumers. It was fine while it-lasted. But the high prices it caused stimulated Dutch rubber growers to expand their acreage, and also drove a number of Americans into the business of acquiring their own plantations. As a result, the Stevenson act has been abandoned. The monopoly has been broken to pieces—broken large- ly because of an unwise attempt to keep prices above their natural economic level. The modern world being what it is, that is apt to be the fate of most monopolistic attempts. There is a world of comfort for the consumer in that thought, | Editorial Comment | FIVE MILES HIGH (Time) % shit alate thousand feet above Dayton, Ohio, Capt. A. W. Stevens and Lieut. J. H. Doolittle were taking photographs. they were flying toward the city at a rate of a mile a@ minute, they were in reality being carried away by a head wind of 115 miles an hour. Soon the ther- mometer registered 57 deg. below zero and instruments ceased to work at all. Finally the oxygen line to Capt. Stevens’ breathing cap froze and his head nodded for- ward. When Lieut. Doolittle struck him a stinging blow in the face he recovered just long enough to see his assailant fall forward exhausted by the exertion this effort had cost him at such an altitude. Out of control, the plane dived thousands of feet in the oxygen laden air below, where both made a timely recovery, landed the plane, delivered the photographs. STUDYING NATURE'S WAYS (Philadelphia Public-Ledger) _ z The forest service has begun an experiment which will please conservationists and which constitutes a novel form of scientific research. It has set aside some 4,000 acres in the Coronado National forest in Arizona to study the relationships between living things in their natural environment. No logging or grazing will be permitted in this preserve. No attempt will be made to increase the productivity of the forest or to combat the plant or insect pests that check the growth of trees. In a word, nature will be permitted to carry on her work as in the days before man, in his zeal for expanding civilization, began to stimulate or alter natural func- tions. As trees decay and die special attention will be paid to the manner in which nature disposes of or util- izes “waste.” Out of this experiment foresters wonder whether they will discover means of working with na- ture rather than against her, to learn lessons which science may find especially helpful in conserving natural resources in the future. TEAM PLAYERS _ (Des Moines Tribune-Capital) Princeton university will give a cup to the best inter- ferer on its football team this fall. An interferer, it may be explained for those who do not read the sports s—if there are any such readers in these days—is player who leads the way and clears the path of opponents in order that the man carrying the ball may make his gain. 2 The interferer subordinates his personality for the benefit of the team. He is the victim of it much raised “spirit of team ” He is little noticed, but is most important. Few playesa carrying a ball can poten nln tackler. The interferer has to knock the down if the carrier is to reach the goal. Football has evolved into a blocking and interfering game. Perhaps it was always this, but the open e pe a ium upon good blocking, Many teams have kfield players who never carry the |. These are ee men who are primarily eligible for the Princeton ps it ought to be lained that Princeton uni- versity not only has = il team, but professors, classes, and di hed teachers and students. It grants other prizes than athletic ones. South Bend Tribune: Cam; munition for those who contend fit to govern When their instruments indicated that | 1, pelled to believe any of this guff; presumably he realizes that no one is in a position to step out and say, “I did it!” : If Hoover’s margin had been small that wouldn’t be true. Then nearly everyone would have been able to show, with considerable plausibility, that if their group had been working against him he doubtless would have been trimmed. In 1916 the Demo- cratic bosses of various states were able to boast that if it hadn’t been for their work Wilson would have lost to Hughes. If Hoover had won by a similar vote, the claimants would have in- cluded not only many politicians but also the organized drys, organized bigots, big business and federations of churches. As it is, Hoover can prove that he could have done very well with- out any single one of these vote- swaying groups or even without a combination of them. “+ % Now that the votes are all counted, it is possible to apply to many states the same reasoning which would be applicable had the vote been very close. It is more than reasonable to suggest, for instance, that if Smith had not been a Catholic, Hoover would not have broken into the here- tofore solid south, And that even if Smith had been a dry Catholic, the south would have remained unani- mously Democratic. It is also safe to say that if Smith had been neither wet nor Catholic he wouldn’t have carried Massachusetts or Rhode island. Of course the trouble with most of the really big states was that they had too blamed many Republicans— New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, California, Iowa and so on, In such states as those, which always swing elections, it is impos- sible to say that the religious issue played any decisive part. In these decisive states, where the x LADEN wit GAME THs ROARING FIRE IN issue was in any way close—as in New York—the best suggestion that can be made is that Hoover knew where lay his strength when he ad- mitted before election that he was depending on the eae of the women. But the Democrats probably will continue to find too many Repub- licans in most of them until masses of people over wide areas have some- thing to be really sore about. For the first time in several decades, a majority has voted to extend a per- iod of conservative Republican ad- ministration beyond eight years. The cry of Prosperity may be the bunk in a political campaign, but it would appear that the installment houses will have to take back quite a few automobiles and radio sets before most of the voters will believe it. 2 At the moment it looks as if only a panic or some pretty awful breaks on Hoover’s part could keep him from running his four years at the White House into eight. —$— | BARBS | o When bolometric magnitudes are used throughout, instead of visual or photographic magnitudes, the in- trinsic luminosities are probably not inferior to those of the ordinary Cepheids, according to a bulletin from Harvard Observatory. We don’t know just what he means, but think it’s the reason the Solid South went back on the Democrats. A blindfolded man drove his auto- mobile from New York to Boston. The newsy part of the whole story, though, was the fact that his wie was with him. i The earth is between 13 billions and 18 billions years old. And nota new song yet. Biot s Science now gives man an age her down hard once in a chair.” May- be he thought she was trying to be speaker of the house. s+ # The girl named Mary Smith who went to Hollywood and became Marye Smythe has found her match. In New York ‘here is a boxing pro- moter named Mique Malloy. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ° SEE eran ee | IN NEW YORK nor immortals.” largest cake. one, or-other, statistical records. x % gone in the morning. future challenger. click; the reporters are potently by. * itests is greater, ot of steadv entertainment. expectation of 71 years. That’s no street. e * HAIL fe MioHtY HUNTER RETWRAS, HEAVILY FowL oF THE WooDS AND OFIELD 4S ~~ EMPTY “THE BAG oF PHEASANT, GROUSE, PARTRIDGE AND QUAIL {~~ TLL START A HEARTH witH GOLD A_New York woman got a divorce in Reno because her husband “sat | OUR BOARDING HOUSE AND 3 FORTUNATE “TRI “THE CHICKEN - HAW Me wrth AH LAD«T HAVE HAD A Most we WHILE “TRAILING A DEER “THRU HE ForeST,,T WAS CALLED BY A FARMER lo SHooT A HIS BARAVARD /~ THis rity. Bniaica Gathering a few notes on such over, a period of a few matters ; By Ahern WELL, TH’ BIGGEST CHESTNUT 1S OUTSIDE oH’ BAG! = a WE COUNTED ON You AT LEAST COMING Home wth A CAST-IRON & LAWN RABBIT f- Pl) K Ww GENEROUS BAG OF CHESTNUTS $2 oes SERS Ebene aS e a New York, Nov. 15.— Manhattan provides an endless parade of “mi- They’re those people whose names one cannot remember, yet who, in 1898 won the world’s pie eating con- test; or the dance marathon of 1928; or the loud-speaking contest of 1864; or the fellow who baked the world’s These are the boys and girls who once brought about a-percentage of the arguments that went on around the old stove in the country stores and who, for all I know, may be the basis of discussion around the drug store counters at this moment. Some- you will recall, was always ready to “bet a quarter” that so-and- so did such-and-such on some-date- ‘Whereupon there was a hasty searching of the World Alma- nac and other volumes given over to Yet some- where, somehow their achievement is recorded and rises to haunt some During those moments when the achievement is at hand, the movie cameras grind and the still cameras out en masse and the committees sit im- The competitive spirit in such con- course, in the smaller communities than in Man- hattan, though the number of con- tests in New York if placed end to end would provide those Roman hol- iday seekers with a hundred years At the county fairs, unless times have changed, the pie eaters still go to it tooth and jowl; the hog call- ers send their shrieks out upon the reason why you shouldn’t look at the] still air and the gent who grew the traffic lights before crossing the} largest pumpkin is a minor celeb- METHODS OF COOKING Frying is the’ most unsuitable method of cooking, since it causes the food to be much more difficult to digest. Butter, contrary to popular notions, is a most unsuitable medium for frying, because it becomes separ- ated at extremely low temperature. Olive oil, cottonseed oil, and corn oil are preferable. The fat should be hot enough to immediately co- agulate the outer portion of the food immersed so that the fat does not penetrate into the food. Frying in shallow pans is not as satisfactory as frying in deep pans, because when the pans are not deep enough, the foods and fats are scorched and mixed in indigestible conglomer- ations. < Baking is a process of cooking food in the dry heat of an oven. Great temperatures are in this way possible, but the interior of. moist foods will scarcely ever reach the boiling point. Baked foods are drier than boiled foods, and some dextri- nization takes place in the exterior parts of all baked starchy foods. Baking is a wholesome method of preparing any food, even those which you might not ordinarily think of as being baked, such as carrots, beets, cauliflower, string beans, peaches and celery. The larger and more solid foods may simply be placed in the oven with a pan underneath to catch the drippings, but the small leaf vegetables should be placed in a baking pan with a cover on to main- tain their moisture. Many differ- ent vegetables may be combined in this manner. Roasting, broiling and grilling are Practically the same processes and consist in cooking food by direct ra- diation in an unconfined atmosphere. Roasting is the term used for a large joint. Broiling and grilling are terms applied to comparatively small pieces of meat. These three Processes aim at quickly coagulat- ing the surface of the meat so that the most of the juices are retained, and those which escape form the meat gravy used for basting or pouring over the roast to prevent drying, and to more uniformly dis- tribute the heat. Because of’ the high temperature on the surface of the meat, a peculiar tasty substance is produced which gives the delight- fal flavor to the roast meat. Over- roasted meat gives a disagrecable flavor because of scorching. Braising is a process of cooking resembling both boiling and baking. ‘The meat is first browned by scar- ing, similar to that of broiling, after which it is covered with a close fit- ting lid to produce a moist steam. Braising is an economical and tasty method of cooking meat since all of the food value is retained by the covered process and the flavor is enhanced by the grilling. . This proc- weeks, young man in Minnesota was able to stow away 65 cups of coffee at a sit- ting, and live through it; that a famous “human fly” was able to perch on a flagpole for something like eight hours; that a patriotic gentleman in New Bedford, Mass., Such heroes, of course, are made " ; of overnight’ ingredients. Their ae! “The eeeia ne ae fame flashes for a few hours and is|!,- more than 17 days without stop- ping, which must place him in the unique position of an American who actually knows the words of the na- tional anthem. Some 45 hotcakes went into the gullet of a future dys- peptic. A couple of young men stayed under water in a Chicago tank until the nolice interfered, and thus spared the undertaker a job. Any number of flyers have stayed in mid-air until records were achieved or the law of gravity in- terfered to cause tragedy. Dance marathon records are as fragile as potato chips. A gent in upper New York thumped the piano keys for 52 hours and was not shot by his neigh- bors. A.couple of stilt walkers walked from Boston to Providence without getting down. q But why go on? They all live to tell the tale and re-tell it. Just what good it will do them I don’t pretend to know. They’re all at lib- erty insofar as I know, and no keep- ers from the “bug house” have, to my knowledge, come to get them. assume that, behind such per- formances, lies some deep psycho- logical motivation, and I’m not up to the latest wrinkles, in psychology. The last contests I remember hear- ing about in New York included a snare drum competition, a marathon golf solo of some 250 holes per day, a prize for the best name selected for a chorine lately arrived from Norway, a croquet tournament, “down the island,” and a theater at- tendance record. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) TEN YEARS AGO The Bismarck Elks lodge held Memorial services at the hall for the 16 arted members of the lodge. Rev. Buzzelle, rector of St. George's Episco| nl church, delivered ress, the or Ft and Paligs Price rene bin spending a few days in the Twin Cit ies with friends, . The junice class of St. Alexius theatre party at the Orpheum, with refreshments later at Hoff- man’s Chocolate shop. Miss M. An- derson was ge of the junior class, and. Miss L, Ankerman, presi- dent of the seniors. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Thistlethwaite were visiting in Baldwin as guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. Butterfield. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO M. M. Cook Twin Cities where he bought a line of pianos for his new store, Fred Peterson resigned his posi- tion as postoffice clerk to. go to Des lowa, to enter school. -E. E. Gifford, 71, pioneer resident of Bismarck, died at a local hospital following a several weeks’ illness of Pneumonia, Mr, Gifford was ¢ Ihave discovered that al hospital entertained the seniors at|this a THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1928 HEALTH “DIET ADVICE Jy 70 HEALTH CDSE AL ess is of particular value in cooking tcugh meat. The fireless cooker offers another fine method of cooking food because it maintains a temperature below the Dr. McCoy will gladly answer, personal questions on health. and Cee addressed to him, "Dncloel a stamped addressed envelope for reply. toughest old rooster dropped into boiling water for about five minutes to oo en. boiling point. The the surface proteins, and dropped into a fireless cooker and allowed to stand overnight will be found to have a delicious flavor and the meat will be as tender as the tenderest of broilers, falling apart at the touch of a fork. (Continued in my next article.) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Exercise for Heart Leakage Question; Mrs. S. V.-asks: “If one has slight leakage of heart and murmur would it be too much to go upstairs about nine times a day, and the same number of times com® ing down, allowing about twelve or thirteen steps to a climb?” Answer: One with heart leakage should take a reasonable amount of exercise. Walking upstairs and downstairs is good exercise, provid- ing you walk slowly. Take regular steps and this acts as a systematic exercise, but do not let anything hurry you. Buttermilk Question: J. L.asks: “Is butter- milk a good food to use in stomach ailments?” Answer: Buttermilk, while a wholesome food, is seldom of benefit in stomach ailments. I sometimes prescribe an exclusive sweet milk diet in cases of stomach ulcers. Dry Dark Skin Question: Mrs. S. B. K. writes: “My skin has taken on a dark cok; and I am troubled with a dryness alll over my body. I feel like I need oil to come through my pores to soften myself. Cream put on from the out- side does no good. Even my is drying out. It feels rough stiff.” Answer: You doubtless have some glandular derangement—possibly of the adrenal glands. If you are us- ing a reasonable amount of butter and cream, you cannot look for any help through adding more oily foods to your diet. The fasting treat- ment often helps the adrenal glands in recovering their ability to secrete normally. Try a fruit fast for a few days and repeat this fast occa- sionally if you seem to be getting any results. Send a large, self-ad- dressed stamped envelope for my article called “How to Fast and Diet for Health.” ployed as watchman of the Northern Pacific bridge over the Missouri river, , Captain Cushing of Company A was making arrangements for a dance which the company would give New Year's eve. FORTY YEARS AGO Legislators were sending in orders for rooms for the winter’s session. Grocers were promised good busi- ness for the next season, The Jamestown Alert suggested that the name of North Dakota be changed to Lincoln. The following from Bismarck af tended the constitutional convention in Jamestown: Ex-Governor Pierce, M. H. @Wewel, Gerald Pierce, J. F. Wallace, T, K. Long, John A. Re: Col. Wm. Thompson, Capt. I. n Baker, E. H. Wilson, F, V. Barnes and Joseph Hare. f AT THE MOVIES | _—— AT THE CAPITOL Lois Moran, playing the role of Joan Robinson in “Love Hungry,” a Fox Films production directed by Victor Heerman, will open a one-day run at the Capitol theatre tonight. In this modern comedy-drama Miss Moran is said to achieve somo of the finest effects of her career. This production, eapecially prepared for her by Victor Heerman and Randall H. Faye, brings her be- fore her audiences as a comedienne of the highest excellence. Lawrence Gray, who worked op- posite par fad a Mr, Heer- man’s first Fox production, “Ladies Must Dress,” does some of the most convincing work of his careey as Tom Harvey in “Love Hungry.” The supporting cast is evenly balancede It includes Edythe Chapman, James vel John Patrick, and Marjorie es ELTINGE THEATRE Jack Holt, one of the screen’s most popular players, returns to the Eltinge after a long absence. He is ie Water Hole,” to be shown on Friday and Saturday, “The Water Hole” is not just a Western picture but combines a Phisticated story with the thrills of action West. The two-gun. villain is lack- ing, but the excitement the same, Jack Holt has the featured villainless picture and Carroll is his leading re Boles takes the part: ordinary picture, would be that of the heavy. Instcad of cleeh-et young dellew ¢ -cul or girl whom Holt admires. nr om ywever, pert A < lany scenes in the picture beautiful technicolor a cellent display to the backgrounds and = elers they leave Great Britain, been 80 successful that an aisline to en will be maintained during the winter months, , a € ,