The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 22, 1928, Page 3

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THU RSDAY, NOVEMBEK 22, 1928 DEMOCRATS AT - VIRGINIA FACE POLLS ENIGMA) Republican Majority Causes Possibility of Constable-to- Governor Contest 1929 .ELECTION VIEWED ‘Solid South’ Politicians Don Thinking Caps to Return Section Democratic Se Richmond, Va., Nov. 22. — () — Virginia has emerged froni the gen- eral election of 1928 with a political problem that is an enigma of the first magnitude. Breaking with the “Solid South” for the first time since the days of reconstruction to support Herbert Hoover, the Old Dominion in 1929 faces a state election from constable to governor with remembrance of the 25,000 majority for Hoover still fresh. It is conceivable that every office will be contested. ce The republican party in Virginia, generally a stronger minority than in other southern states, is obviously eager to follow up its success and establish two-party government in the state. The democrats are giving serious consideration to the possibil- ity of a republican government in ‘S Richmond. Predict Democratic Swing Democratic newspapers in_ the state, reviewing the election editor- ially, almost unanimously attribute the republican majority in Virginia to anti-Smith votes and predict that these votes will return to the demo- cratic column. This, however, does not explain fully the election of three Republican congressmen by good ma- jorities, and close contests for two others who were defeated by Demo- erats. One of the Republican .rep- resentatives, Jacob A. Garber, won in Gov. Harry Byrd’s own district while another scored a victory in the tra- ditionally Democratic tidewater sec- tion at Norfolk. The anti-Sn.ith democrats, head- ed by Bishop James Cannon Jr. of the Methodist Episcopal church, South, early in the campaign an- nounced opposition to Gov. Alfred E. Smith but urged support of the dry Democratic nominees. It ap- Pears obvious, however, that many who voted the Republican national “ticket followed through for the other Republican nominees. First, there is the problem of whether these Democrats will return to their party in 1929. In addition there is the problem of whether they may return if they so desire. Situation Demands Action However much the Democratic men and women who supported Hoover consider themselves still Democrats, they are officially Re- publicans. If the theory of the party, braced by law, is upheld in practice every Democrat who voted Republican will be barred from the Democratic pinay “What are the Democrats going is a question being asked les. The Democratic news- contending that the ques- tion demands the best immediate thought of the party leaders. It has been suggested that nominees might be chosen by convention, or if this is not deemed feasible, that there might be something of a gentleman’s agreement not to challenge voters at the polls. The Democratic press is clamoring for action on the part of the leaders in the state govern- ment to work out a solution. State Issue Pushed While the general election was a national issue, some speakers at- tempted to add a state issue to the already overburdened campaign. It was insisted by a number in the lemocratic wing that supported Smith that a vote for Hoover was a repudiation of the state demo- cratic leaders who’ were actively , Supporting the Democratic ticket. Governor Byrd’s “program of prog- ress” embodied in the constitutional changes adopted at a special election last June, was declared to be in- volved. It is obvious that this tesue was somewhat stretched to reach the na- tional campaign, but it appears equally certain that the Democratic leaders have lost some influence. There is # practical certainty that a gubernatorial candidate will ap- Deer Hunter Runs | | Away from Prey | i Moose, Lake, Minn., Nov. 22—(P) Paul Fetters came back from his farm home the last day of the deer season, just past, after an all day Fie 2 in the woods searching vainly for deer. His friends thought it a great joke. “When you walked out a lai buck walked in your back gate,” he was told. Fetters grabbel his gun. ' It was a great joke they said. “A coupla’ fellows came past and shot him.” EAT POTATOES TO GROW THIN oe Spokane, Wash., Nov. 22.—(P)— To stay sylphlike eat spuds! W. P. Romans, manager of the Pacific Northwest Potato Growers association, told the delegation yes- terday that a potato, or rather sev- eral a day would make women grow slender and men grow stronger; likewise would keep the doctors avay. ‘ “The old notion that potatoe: sHould be tabooed by those seeking slenderness hes been dissipated b; scientific aout he sai “Leading food authority has d clared that if the average Americ: would eat four or five times as many pofatoes as he now eats, the result would be a marked increase in phy- sical fitness and freedom from crip- pling illnesses.” The false theory, he said, was causing huge losses to potato grow- ers unable to dispose of surplus crops. FREE LOVE COSTLY Los Angeles, Nov. 22.—Her hus- band not only believed, but practiced “free love” and advised her to do the same, Mrs. Louise Mayer of this city charged before she obtained a di- vorce here recently. Mayer made counter-charges to the effect that his wife nagged, and was in love with another man, but these wer- refuted by cross-examination. pear in 1929 on an “anti short-ballot” platform. The “short ballot” was the name given to three constitutiot al amendments sponsored by Gover- nor Byrd. The amendments were adopted last June by very close mar- gins. . Congressmen Influential Henry W. Anderson, who has ap- peared on the national Republican horizon as a vice-presidential can- didate as well as on the Mexican claims commission and other gov- ernment bodies, is being discussed as a candidate for governor on the Re- publican ticket. Mr. Anderson, a well-known Richmond lawyer, took an active part in turning Virginia into the Republican column. It is being further contended in Virginia that the three Republican congressmen from the old domin- ion will have more influence as mem- bers of the party in control and will be able to do more for Virginia, thereby assuring continued support from home. It is a year until the state elec- tion and four years until another president is chosen, but the Demo- crats have already donned their thinking caps. a eS A AMI ANSE FOTN Business, Quarter of Century Old, Packs. 216,000,000 Cans Per Year Honolulu, Nov. 21.—(®)—Adver- ao is credited with having made the Hawaiian canned pineapple busi- ness the second largest industry in this territory, with a total pack close to 216,000, cans a year. The in- dustry, only a quarter-century old, was the first in America in which competitive producers joined in an associational advertising campai for their commodity, spending nearly 000,000. The first canning of Hawaiian jineapples was done in 1896, but the venture was not a commercial success. In 1900 the Pearl City Fruit rfl @ began to can “pines,” as they are known in the islands, and in 1903 a [Peg ald cannery was started by James Drummond Dole, who came from Maine to grow coffee and remained to make a fortune in pineapples. “Jim” Dole has become the lead- ing figure in tl i company cans a third of the pack. From the start he insisted that tech- nical knowledge his company gained made available to competitors. lore power for the industry,” he always skid. i Thus, when over-production de- veloped for the first time in 1908- 1909, Dole’s competitors responded when he.called them ther. They must get retail dis ition in the big eastern markets, he told them, and advertise Hawaiian canned pine- apple to the women of America. first associational advertising campaign was started. In a few months over-production had become under - production and advertising was dropped. By 1913 marketing conditions again were critical and the advertising campaign Te- newed. Then came the war and in three years pineapple production tose from 750,000 to about 1,500,000 annually. The industry felt the post- war depression, but a national ad- vertising campaign again was start- ed and since has been continuous. The basic idea used since the first advertisments appeared in 1909 has been an attempt to make association of the words “pineapple” and “Ha- jian” as habitu: that between its” and “Panama” and “cigars” and “Havana.” In 1900-1903 consumption of ci ned pineapple in the United St: the only field reached by the ciation’s advertising, was esti at one-forty-fifth of a slice’ per. ak Last year it was more than nine cans per family, enough to line a grocer’s shelf extending half way around the globe. Manchurian Tribe Is Related to Indians Berlin, Nov. (AP)—Walter Stoetzner and Frithjof Melzer, head of a German scientific expedition e: ploring in northern Manchuri ave sent word that they have dis- covered that the Tungus tribes in the region are allied to the North American Indians and do not belong to the yellow races, The expedition has been ina hitherto unexplored region in the bend of the Amur river for more than a year. It has found the land m- : THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE ISLAND PINEAPPLE INDUSTRY GREW UP THROUGH INTENSE ADVERTISING ! is so fertile that it may in time be- come a granary for distant Europe. explorers compiled a gram- mar of hitherto unknown languages. They also made a valuable collection of Rate Shamanist vestiments and other native objects for the Dresden ethnological museum. The Shamans are medicine men or witch doctors of the tribes of the region. GROUP TO PLAN TARIFF ACTION Dr. John Coulter of Agricul- tural College to Serve on Joint Committee Representation at the flax tariff hearing at Washington Dec. 5 will be planned at Fargo Nov. 26 when members of the joint committee serv- ing the state on the flax hearing meet. The joint committee was the re- sult of a conference called by the Greater North Dakota Association for the purpose of atoiding duplica- tion of effort. The committee con- sists of Dr. John L. Coulter, chair- man; P. A. Lee of the North Dakota Farmers Grain Dealers Association; T. A. Durant of the North Dakota Terminal Exchange; W. M. Thatcher of the Farmers Union and James S. Milloy of the Greater North Dakota Association. Economists of the state agricultural college are preparing data to be used by the committee whieh will cocperate with commit- tees from other flax producing states. The committee will also be repre- sented at the hearing on the linseed oil tariff set for Dec. 11. “Securing of a joint committee to serve the state on the flax and lin- seed oil tariff hearings will probably be the forerunner to similar correla- tion of effort on tariff matters in the future,” # statement issued by the Greater North Dakota Associ- | ation declares. The association has Ge reat to other organizations the advisability of having an expert economist as- signed to duty in Washington as ad- | viser to North Dakota’s congres-| sional delegation when the tariff) bill is re-written next year. At its | annual convention last week the! Farmers Union approved this recom- mendation and other organizations represented on the joint committee will be asked for an opinion at the meeting Monday. NOT SO LUCKY | London, Nov. 22.—The train he had boarded was taking him far past his station, and *fearing that he would lose his job if her were not on time, William Woodcraft, 36, jumped from a train going 60 miles an hour and was killed. At the in- quest his landlady said Woodcraft believed he had a charmed life. Dr. Geo. F. McErlain Osteopathic Physician Electrotherapy Sol ay Chronic Diseases a Specialty Hoskins-Meyer Bldg. Phone 240 Will Rogers Barred from Exclusive Club San Francisco, Nov. 22—()—The | Examiner today said that the name of Will Rogers, actor and humorist, had been withdrawn by his sponsor from nomination as an associate member of the exclusive Bohemian | club of San Francisco. The newspaper reported that among the reasons for the with- drawal was an accusation that while Rogers was a “distinguished guest” When your Children Cry for It Baby has little upsets at times. All your care cannot prevent them. But you can be prepared. Then you can do what any experienced nurse would do—what most physicians would tell you to do—give a few drops of: plain Castoria. No sooner done than Baby is soothed; relief is just a matter of moments. Yet you have eased your child without use of a single doubtful drug; Castoria is vegetable. So it’s safe to use as often as an infant has any little pain you cannot pat away. And it’s al- ways ready for the crucler pangs of colic, or constipation, or diarrhea; effective, too, for older children. Twenty-five million bottles bought last year.—Adv. LACAAL CASTORIA were WANTED Opportunity for three or four salesmen to connect up with automobile concern selling light six Chevrolet. Earnings above the aver- age. Selling experience not necessary. Write No. 30 care of Tribune for in- terview. Our Guarantee The New ZENITH BALLOON TIRE is unconditionally guaranteed to give you AT LEAST 16,000 miles of satisfactory service. 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The purchaser of a ZENITH TIRE is absolutely assured that he is going to get more tire satisfaction per dollar than he ever thought pos- sible—if the tire he receives doesn’t give it to him it will be promptly Price of the club at its annual high jinks last August he “stole the show” by occupying the limelight for an hour and a half instead of keeping to the five minutes allotted him. It was said that numerous other celebrities were crowded off the schedule. The article further de- clare that Rogers aroused the feel- ing of the members when he re- ferred to the high jinks in a news- paper article as a form of week-end \givertisement for tired business men | jfrom which it took them about two/B weeks to recover. The humorist’s sponsor was not named. EATING THE “PROFITS” A young wife, two pennies’ short in paying a bill, called to the cook: “Maggie, have you a couple of coppers downstairs?” “Yes, ma’am,” replied Maggie; DON’T BE SICK! The inalienable birth. right of nature is health. That same health comes from within your own body, not from -without. Perhaps you have been ailing for a long tim and have tried this and that with little or no re- sults. Stop that uncer. tainty and find the exact cause of your trouble be- fore you waste more time and money. Your Body at One Time Did Function Normally and If Given the Chance Health can only come through all the tissues, cells, and organs of your body, the cause of all diseases. When the products of fermentation and acid poisons are absorbed from the stomach and intestines and bass into the blood stream they poison the entire system. Here Is Your Chance to Get Well ‘linic of Dr. T. M. MacLachlan who will make a of your blood and urine and determine the exact amount of acid in your system. dangerous nor disagreeable method Lachlan does not send his patients to the hospital—he cures them. He does not believe in operating—he cures without surgery. The results obtained by Dr, MacLachlan’s Modern System of Natural ir roots and bark and Alkaline Blood Treatment are simply marvelous. HE HAS CURED HUNDREDS—HE CAN CURE YOU. Clinic Rooms 6-8, Lucas Block, Bismarck, No. Dak. eal Comfort ‘Even In The Coldest Weather by visiting the careful examina’ Healing by herbs, “AG The Windsor Equals $180 Furnaces For low price and low fuel consumption Unbiased tests by expert Heating Engineers prove our fur- naces capable of longer service under severe and constant firing and by far Windsor is supreme. Driginntor of Alkali ment and Mucoun! Blood Treat Diet System Will Do So Again the circulation of pure blood in Impure blood ‘is He uses no X-ray nor other of examination. Dr. Mac- Caer or THEATRE Tonight - Thursday VIOLA DANA THAT CERTAIN THING” with RALPH GRAVES Burr McIntosh Carl Gerard Aggie Herring Syd Crossley You'll like it—You'll rave over it—You'll find your- self chuckling for days af- ter you have seen this clev- er comedy of the ups and downs of city life in the search for that certain something which everybody wants. Comedy and Fox News Friday and Saturday KEN MAYNARD (The “Ace” of Action) “CODE OF THE heats all rooms comfortably with one fire What does if matter if chilling winds, snow and rain rage outside? Your home can be warm as toast more economical than other nationally advertised furnaces in the same class. This Means You Save ‘ $50 to $75 $ CASH PRICE 1] 00 22-inch Firepot Save on First Cost Save on Fuel Consumed It is easy to figure the time and labor which a Windsor Furnace will save you. It ordinarily requires attention only twice daily. 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