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siibabicrenits bids arts cos tee res “<5 ce mk iN he ee he cls hermione! wens aes . ate as economic afflictions on the farmers in inverse ra- | Regent; A. M. Bannon, Mott; A. M. Thompson, Cogswell; Grand Forks; 8. Elenbaum, Scranton. The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER } (Established 1873) | ——— 4 Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | ‘Marck, N. D., and entered at the postoifice at Bismarck | @8 second class mail matter. | George D. Mann .............-++ President and Publisher | | Subscription Rates Payable: in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Dailv tv mail, ver year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail. ver vear. (in state, outside Bismarck) ...... Daily by mail, outside cf North Dakota . ‘Weekly by mail, in state. per year Weekly by mail, in state, three years for .. ‘Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year Member Audit Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or Not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontancous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all othe: matter herein are also reserved. Ey 120 ~ 1.00 i 250 150 | Bureau of C Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) | Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official, City, State and County Newspaper) | Getting Farm Relief Set Up The Farm board now has the final and formal sanc- tion to go al with the experiment of the economic fehabilitation of #zriculture and of the farmer, by co- operative processes of marketing farm product t membership has been confirmed by the United States | aving had it on the senate grill. | ing marketing cooperation, of course. | concerned with the grain of the Northwest and | the cotton of the South and Southwest. Other agri-| cultural and horticultural products have, under private | initiative and with the assistance of financial forces, had the benefit of the cooperative system of markcting and | have heen doing rather well through it and through | standardizing and branding. California citrus fruit, for instance. | Coincident with the ratification of the Hoover nom!- Nees to board membership comes the news of the incor Poration at St. Paul of the Cooperative Farmers North- | west Grain corporation with a capital of $5,000,000, and with Nor.h Dakota cooperative agriculiurists prominent in the proposed management. ‘Thus two steps in the inauguration of the Hoover plan Of leading agriculture into prosperity by the application Of system such as has operated for the welfare of form- erly decrepit or disorganized industries have been taken. ‘The aim of the Farm board ts to induce the organization Gf more of the cooperative organizations such as that in- corporaied at St. Paul, then unite them in a federal or- Banization wiercby the farmers can make themeclves masters of their business, just as the industrial captains | of the country have been able to do by similar devices. Under the farm board plan, these regional coopcra- tives are expected to work out the problem of the sur- Plus crops, suc! as in wheat and cotton, which now oper- tio to the apparent prosperity reflected in bounteous crops. It may be possible to deal with this problem of surplus from both ends, in reducing the volume of the surplus by diverting land to the preduction of deficit | crops, as flax in North Dakota, and in lessening the losses of adverse marketing. The national organization will be required as a means to administer this marketing in smooth cooprration. Onz of the decisive factors in the development and Operation of these cooperatives will be the eredit element, or the financing of tie grower while his products are held back in the proc: of orderly marketing. The govern- ment is involved in the scheme in this respect only, that it will hold at the disposal of the Farm board and co- Operatives a half billion fund for assisting them in this financing of crops. As that proves effective or inef- fective, will the farm board plan rise or fall. So far, since the passage of the law creating the board, the time has been tco short for the new body to get a lever- ge on the farm situation. That is to come now and gradually the moncy advanced by the government is be- ingect tswork on the task. The Gutlook at the present time is that, as far as this year's crops are concerned, the mest that will be ac- complished will be merely to feel out the situation and accept first results as experimental tests for shaping of | future operations. | The Northwest venture is on a scale calculated for vast operation. There are. to be 300,000 shares of stock to carry a voting membership at $20 a share. Anticipa- tion of full cooperation with the federal farm board is shown in a clause in which the dircciors are “expressly authezized to enter into such agreements, stipulations ‘and arrangements with the federal Farm board as may be deemed advisable for obtaining, securing, protecting, safeguarding and insuring the payment of loans made to ‘this corporation by said board.” Incorporators ars Rodger M. Stubbs. S. S. Beach, Oscar A. Olson, Albert Immer, Theodore Frederickson, J. E. Brin, N. F. Leines, and A. F. Nelson. ‘The board of directors includes P. A. Lee of Grand Forks, secretary of the North Dakota Farmers-Grain Dealers association, the State Farmers’ Elevator Co- Operative, and other members of this group. Lee also is ne of the 16 directors tentatively named for the fed- eral Farm board's new $20,000,000 grain corporation. * Under the articles, each state is divided into 10 dis- fricts each represented by a director. There also are three directors at large from each state, making a total of 52. Another director is to be named by the Minnesota of agriculture, N. J. Holmberg. in accord- @nce with the state cooperative marketing act. ‘The list of directors includes, for North Dakota, Tolet ‘Midbo, Hatton; A. Midgarden, Nash; Robert Robertson, Langdon; C. J. Thoreson, York; Charles Bockier, Green; ®. A. Garber, Fortuna; A. L. Huus, Makoti; Math Boyer, @t large—Carter Pendergast, Northwood; P. A. Lee, _ At any rate, by the organigation of the new corpora- tion, the farm relief pian is got under way and the Niet, after all, was the most that could be expected from the tardy enaciment of the farm board law. Riding in Air by Rocket jihe a jit would form a ¢ ‘ground cleared for its functioning next year. Future re- ite ride around to the music and fores of shooting crackers. Ops! and his mate in the inventive adventure, Fri rich Sanders, have perfected a rocket-driven plane fed trom a tan of liquid fuel. The first trial of the ma- chine resulted in some difficulty in starting, but tae third rocket discharge got the plane off. It went hissing into the air, each explosion of a rocket giving it a new impulce unul it had covered a mile and a quarter, when. 3 cracked in making a glide landing uader the intcr- ence of strong rear winds. Far from being dismayed, von Opel and Sanders will Lud another of the 250-pound planes and try again for ainment of practical performances. One plan ihey have in mind ts to shoot the thing across the Eng- lish channel und if that can be—Opel would say “when that is"~accomplished, there are other worlds to con- quer, such as c ug the Atlantic by rocket power, per- hap: the later on, to essay a trip to the moon, the basis of original idea. Ff s the rocket is a perfect emergency brake It also will be valuable for shooting perscns to safety from shipwrecks and burning buildings, he says. So in a more modest role Itke these, the Opel rocket plane may yet take its place in the world as a practical and uceful contrivance. Controlled by redio, he believes, ‘able war weapon. It could, like hell from the 77-mile German gun of the World war y the successive discharge of rocket —he believes, be applied to fighting airpianes or spreading smoke screens. Von Opel even beiieves persons ean be shot around the world in five hours when his device has been brought to) the proper porfection. What next? Making the Airways Safe Airplane accidents will be kept down to an irreducible | minimum when the aeronautics branch of the Depart- ment of Commerce {'~" “es the program it now has un- der w Everything possible is being done to make flying for the public as safe as walkinz. One oj the divisions of this branch inspects civil air- weys and their cquipment and sees that intermediate Another division ts con- | | tinually seekinz development of instruments and other equipment that vculd help increase the factor of safety. Still another secs that the proper information on flying conditions is broadcast at the right time. But the most important division of this branch in the commerce department, from the public viewpoint, is that which examines, rates and licenses flying schools, air- planes, pilots and mechanics, and which investigates ac- ciden‘s, On the intelligence and efficiency of the men in this department, its inspectors and test pilots, depends the safety of flying. Every airplane in «-- in interstate commerce has to be licensed by the Department of Commerce. It must pass rigid government tests. Its manufacturer must submit complete specifications, blueprints and detailed drawings of the plane to be approved by the engineering section. ‘Then the plane is given a test flight. Even the fac- tory is inspected to insure a properly built airplane. A certificate permits the manufacturer to build the partic- ular type of aircraft that has been approved, but every six months the builder has to submit an affidavit telling the number of planes he has built and certifying that all have followed the exact details of the approved speci- fications. dust as strict are the provisions for testing and licens- ing aircraft pilots. Private pilots and student pilots are prohibited by law from transporting passengers. A limited commercial pilot may carry passengers, but only within a radius of 10 miles of his home field. With such strict licensing provisions, the aeronautics wanch of the Department of Commerce assures the pub- lic of having only the most experienced and highly trained mon transport it through the air. Flying schools, too, are inspected, Neensed and regu- | lated to make certain that future pilots are adequately trained before taking to the air. The basis for its licensing activities is the department's , close inspection and rivid examination of airplanes and j pilots. This is done by a large corps of trained inspec- tors, all of whom are picked from the best of the nation’s flyers. These inspectors are traveling from airport to airport, from factory to factory, examining pilots and mechanics, rating flying schools, testing new planes and reporting any violations of air traffic rules and reguia- tions in their district:. | Editorial Comment Over-Fifty Men Best (The Churchman) ‘With commendable common sense, Mr. Henry Ford re- bukes those who would retire from business at 50 as depriving trade and industry of its best brains. It is to be inferred from this that he would equally opposc like reason. Late life means ripened knowledge and ex- | perience in an age where the half ripened are too often | preferred to the intelligent. largely on the ground of | superior speed. We doubt if there was ever a time when the young were 80 poorly instructed in either trade or learning as at present. This would apply also to many young men who have supplanted their elders in positions of responsibility. Indeed, we not long since asked an perienced banker what he thought was the chief men- e to the future of America, to be told in prompt reply: “The small caliber of the men who are being put into large positions.” He was not farm from wrong. Mr. Ford notes that most men who give way to such succes- sors find themselves lost without occupation and die off prematurely. We take it that the most successful in- dustrialist the world has ever known proposes from this life with his Clemenceau Missed Calling (Omahs World-Herald) etd i é A record of 75 seconds aloft against the 12 he Wright brothers in their first plane Might pes led = fifa cali landing fields, beacon lights and radio apparatus are of | @ | the best and in working order. o * A college lad lost his pants, but won a flag rush. The thing is to win nothing, but lose your shirt. Cleveland motorist fined for going through a safety zonc. safety in them for motorists. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY. OCTOBER 1 1929 A 0oB 2 ~~ GREAT An EGAD ~ You DON'T MEAN -O 4 TELL ME “THAT You ARE OUT oF SOMETHING MUST BE Done IMMEDIATELY FOR You, DAKE ~YcuR UNEMPLOYMENT WILL EMBARRASS ME GREATLY! ~~ HM-M--- T WILL USE EVERY EFFORT 70 GET You A POSITION BEFORE MARTHA STARTS “0 HAGGLE “THE BOTH oF US! CAESAR, SHouUL OH, 1 SEE! ~~ You Dor WANT ME “To “iP YouR THRONE AS “TH” OFFICIAL LOAFER OF “TA” HOOPLE FAMILY! ~~ IM A GUEST HERE AT PRESENT ~So WHY DONT Yau Go AN” KNocK OFF A JOB FOR \'SELF 2 ~~ BEING “TH” HOST, You SACRIFICE FoR YouR Pore to get to Lunaland. He is so sure thai tals is the | coming form of serial navigation that h> predicts | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern: eve-y man may in a few yeats own his own air Ford and | ZZ, D MAKE SOME BARBS |}s0 ° Mrs. John Coolidge says hcr aim is | tions to live on That's every wife's aim, but a lot of |—about all w them are poor shots. ** her husband's income. | WI 50! customary thi x * * There's no to ** & @| five days and five hours. He's the game. cause he found his w Playing first fiddle. * * The latest in hair rt of fellow to date up with, girls. eee Applicants for civil service posi-} in Massachusetts are asked, hat is a peanut?” Let's see now] ‘e know is that it has to do with a bascball mething see Chicago violinist got a diverce be- ie had had He's used to ree other husbands. * is a bob Does that mean match your nose. | 2 pala James McFadden. of Cleveland, is @ pompadour for a pug? x ok OR Professor of New York State Col- the dropping of the middle-aged from employment for | § out to break the sitting up record. Plans to perch on a sign board for | lege of Agriculiure says making pets TET THIS HAS HAPPENED ELEN PAGE feels 7 hopeless; fm love with her guardian, LEON- ARD BRENT. with dying beggar, CHARLES IL K. CUNN Brent takes her to Canainzham and offers preefe which « “p for the tnjustice done her mother, Cunningham showers the | Girl with affection and gifts. Among Helen's new friends are EVA ENNIS and her broti ERT, whe as the heiress. He ine becomes jealous of Nob {8 te secure the girl for eelf quickly. Hearing the doctor eay that a oudden sheck would Kill the off | man, Breet gets the servants out — of the way and rushes tute the sick room sheating wildly that Helen bas been killed. Hie pine Works and whee the attendant re- turns, Cunningham is dead. Then Brent appears as friend and for- mer guardian of Helen and takes | charge of arrangements. | Breat had amused himecit by making love to Eva and mow he trles to break of the affair with- cut making Helen suspicions. MeanwAlle, Beb fe too proud to speak ble leve watit a chance | meeting breake hie reserve and they Leth acknowledge their love, Dut Helen tells bie it is hopeless, | as she Is promised to amether, NOW GO ON WITH THE stony CHAPTER XXVIII can't break my engagement,” Helen said stiffly. “I can only | ask to be released.” Bob drew back from her, white | to the lips. Hep attitude was incom- Prehensible to him except from one angle—she did not truly love him. Argument, his naturally logical brain told him, would be useless. What could it mean to a girl who either was not very deeply in love or who was caught up in fallacies, to be told that only a fool would keep to a mere engagement when disaster threatened the outcome? Bob wondered that Helen could think of it. Wondered that she could not sce, as he did, the course she was taking was sordid rather than idealistic. nnocent ©1929 BY NEA SERVICE INC. A chance meeting | jby the thought that she would go of some animals is a mistake, and He's right. You just can't believe what some adds, “No buil is safe.” People say. (Copyri FORTY YEARS AGO J. O. Smith, Hatton. a member of | the state senatorial body, has arrived in Bismarck. Judge and Mrs. Barthdlomew have arrived from La Moure for a several weeks’ stay in Bismarck, could not argue, could not plead} his own case further. What appeared to be uncertainty on her part drove him to cruelty. jHe would not recognize quixotism | decided hat it would be better for as her prompter, he was too modern for that, and he knew nothing of had no tolerance for her. 1 “Then,” he said quietly, coldly,} “you're a bit of a rotter.” All that he knew of needless, even criminal, self-sacrifice; all that he knew of lives wasted for false precepts of honor; all that jhe realized of right and wrong was | 204 went so far as to mention hav- ; behind his words. What scemed her | ing witnessed Mr. Ennis’ hasty de- stupidity, that denied her brain, her apparent lack of courage to| change her course when, to anyone | but a fool, the danger signals all! were set agaiust it—these too had | helped to call forth his scathing} remark eee i HE 224 thought of her as brave and fearless—never a juggier | with the tender passion. Love, he | had believed, would come to her as true and untrampled as it had come to him. How it could involve two men at the same time was an im- Denetrable mystery to him. For Bob had never known puppy Jove, Helen’s passing from love of love to love itself v-as beyond his understanding. ¢ His youthful hardness, steeled through with a loveless match, was & phase of masculinity that Helen had never encountered before, Brent had been cruel on occasion, true, Lut his was the suave cruelty of @ hidden menace—the sheathed claw, that cut lghtly on the sur face but bit deep into the heart. Mr. and Mrs. N. F. Boucher and eee came in from Washburn ee stopped in Bismarck yesterday locked she hesitated to demand ad- mittance. The sounds gradually grew fainter and finally the housekeeper Helen if she left her alone. The next morning the girl was| {her sense of obligation. To him she | Pale and worn, with shadowed eyes | jas unsure of her heart, and he|!® which there was an unhealed wound, Mrs. Wethering was very gentle and remained with Helen while she oreakfasted, or rather while she went through the motions of par- taking of her fruit and coffee. She hoped Helen would confide in her parture the night before. Still Helen said nothing, but there was om her face a set, cold expression that warned Mrs. Weth- ering that the incident, whatever it was, had a serious aspect. eee Mr. WETHERING sighed over “her inability to administer comfort and suggested that Helen ought to get out into the open. “You haven't driven your car very much lately,” she said. “Why don't you, let me fix you a picnic lunch and you can telephone for someone to go for a long drive with you? The weather Is lovely.” ight, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | Aut! *RICH GIRI- “I'm going to New York,” Helen answered quietly, Mrs. Wethering was greatly dis- turbed but she did not dare offer any opposition. There was about Helen an air of determination that plainly indicated she was set upon @ course from which she could not be swerved “Are you taking an early traint” Mrs, Wethering asked, hoping the girl did not intend to drive her car to the elty. She was much relieved when Helen told her she was going on & morning train. In Helen’s mind, too, was fear of driving her car. She knew that she was likely to become forgetful of The frankness of Bob's genera- tion was unknown to her. Sie did not finch before the blow. Perhaps she was too shocked to show by so much as a flicker of her eyelids that it had struck her with terrific force. /Without another word Bob turned and strode out of the room. Mrs. Wethering, uneasily waiting in the library, saw bim fing him- A moment of anger flared up in his heart azainst her—the resent- ment of clean youth for evil com- promise. It wiped from his mind the question he wanted to ask her. ‘The name of the man she was going to marry, “. « « « « golmg to marry,” The words echoed in Bob's mind self out of the house, leaving the front door open behind him, as though he were pursued by a demon, She hurried to the kitchen but Helen had fied, up the rear stairs to | older her room. Mra. Wetherlng gathered up the as # reatence to Iifelong unhappt-| things that vere to have gone into ness, No man would let her go.|the preparation of their midnight Rot! A decent man. . . . . but | supper and put them away. Later not while he thought she might |she went to Helen's door and Its- love him. maze of doubt and fear. But tened, She thought she detected Bob felt himself slipping into »| the cound of muffled sobs but when danger on the road and she did not want to risk injury to another per- son, Mrs. Wethering found an excuse to go to her room with her when Helen went up to get her bat and wrap. “There's just @ little tang in the air; won't you wear @ fur? the housekeeper urged. Helen accepted a silver fox and |: threw it carelessly about her shoul- ders. It made her costume perfect and Mrs, Wethering wondered if she had selected the black and white tweed ensemble, with its smart black and silk blouse, with any particular care. i “What could be the object of her visit to the city? It worried the 0 woman almost to the point of causing her to attempt to break down Helen's reserve. But that reserve had acted as a shield upon many occasions and it remained effective now. Ielen was permitted to leave without reveal- Ing her destination, On the train she consulted a card to make certain that she had the correct address. Two or three he/she tried the door and found {t| times she said it over to memorize HEAL HD whts Ie There are six hundred and eighty- two little braces distributed over the bedy. These are called muscles, and are composed of the most remarkable, | active substance in the world which is known by the name of muscle fibre. Some of these muscles are more im- portant than others to bodily health. Practically all of the vital organs composed of muscular tissue. Next in importance to the muscles of these organs are the muscles of the spine and the muscles of the abdo- men. If everyone wouid keep these spinal muscles strong, there would be little need for the osteopath or chiropractor. Spinal troubles and pinched nerves in this section come mostly because the spinal muscles are too weak and the vertebrae are | not held in their normal positions. Since man has learned to walk up- right his chest has caved in more and more and his abdomen has pro- |truded in exact ratio. The narrow, muscular waist of primitive man has changed to the saggy, protruding ab- domen cf modern man. The abdom- |inal organs have prolapsed to the | very basin of the pelvis, and almost all of these organs now lie well be- |Jow the navel when at least half of ; them should be above this point. | Whether or not man descended rom & monkey, the grammar grade joolboy who’ studies philosophy sily understand that if men did at the present time walk on all fours there would be ample room for all of the abdominal organs to hang in comfortable position without inter- fering one with the other. If we in- sist on walking on two feet, we should at least learn how to develop our abdominal muscles so as to hold the stomach and intestines in a bet- | ter position so that they can do their ; Work more efficiently. Sluggish bowel elimination is per- haps the greatest common cause of are day and will visit here for a few days before going to their new home at Dickinson. Mrs, Asa Fisher entertained yes- | terday, the affair being in the nature {of a farewell party, as she expects jto leave soon for an extended stay ; With her daughter, Mrs. R. W. | Wheelock of Mitchell. | ‘TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO HOR OF POOR GIRL”, the street and number, then put it away. The name that was en- sraved upon it was a silent re- proach, How often had she fancied {t as her own! Mrs, Leonard Brent, And now—now she dared not think beyond the hour that was to come —when she would/ beg to be re leased from her mad_ promise. Surely, surely he would not hold her to it! * But the voice of fear deep tn her heart answered that he would. She realized that, aside from the keep- ing of Mis promise to her father, Leonard Brent had nothing out- standingly creditable to his ac count. On the contrary there were many things against him. His past; so many women; his strange, undeniably selfish desire to shape @ young life—her Iife—to please himself, eee HELEN could sce now that her school friend, Shallimar, had been right in much she had said about Leonard. “I should always have been my- self," Helen mourned. “Then this could not have happened. Leno wouldn't have cared for me if I had been more independent.” She was wrong, of course, for youth will frequently have its hour of aberration in regard to love— when it turns to worship of an un- natural object. But Helen felt that she was the only foolish girl in the world—the only one who had been fascinated by an older man, and she was drinking deep of regret. ; ‘The distance to New-York from Yonkers secmed interminable—and yet she arrived there too soon, for the interview ahead of her prom: ised to be psig painful. She had not to say feeling cer tain to find Brent in. The thought of talking with him by wire had been impossible. She wanted to see hed Row, tell him, and have an end “Thank you,” Helen replied and walked rapidly down the hail, face hung about her was a ard that she might have carried; and that the bullding attaches read {it to mean trouble, Particu- larly as they knew that @ visitor had arrived ahead of her; a tall, slim, elegant visitor in fashionable attire and the unmistakable atmos- phere of being at home in ber sur- Helen f expec elen hurried on, tiny find only Brent. 7s (To Be Continued) TH“DIET ADVICE r Frank Mc " “Saat My. to Fall OF ITCHY ND OM BE AODRESOED CARE OF TS PAPER J. T. McCulloch, Washburn attor- BMVELOPE FOR REPLY | disease. There is no cause of con- stipation greater than that from pro- lapsed and ‘kinked intestines. Those who have tried to cure constipation Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. with careful dieting should remem- ber that constipation is just:as often caused by a faulty position of the intestines. If this is the cause of constipation, there is no cure except through training the abdominal muscles, raising the organs to their normal positions, and thus ironing out the kinks which have existed. In many cases adhesions have formed around these kinked intes- tines, and exercises alone will not be sufficient to correct the trouble. In that case, deep manipulations are re- quired. This is a form of bloodless surgery, and is often indispensable in the permanent cure of faulty bowel elimination. The exercises for strengthening the abdominal muscles should be mostly taken while lying on the back. 1 have a special chart of these exer- cises which I have prepared for you with illustrations showing the exer- cises. I will be glad to send this to you if you will simply send me a large self-addressed envelope. Articles on similar subjects which IT have prepared for free distribution. Please send 2 cent stamp for each ar- ticle you desire. This is to partially pay for postage and preparation. Prolapsus or Sagging of Organs —} Adhesions —; Backache : Keeping the Abdominel Muscies De- veloped ——; How Spinal Weakness Affects Your Health ——; Auto- Spinal Treatment SS dia a ea Our Yesterdays | 2 on his way to Minneapolis where he will spend a few days on business. Senator P. J. McCumber arrived today and will speak at the political rally at the Athenum tonight. E. C. Fozarty, Sterling. several days in Bis! ness, is spending en busi- Judge P. J. Lycns of S: ing friends in Bism: TEN YEARS AGO Rev. Henry Langum, brother of G. M. Langum of the Bismarck Busi- Lutheran church at Driscoll Sunday. Miss Florence Gannon, teacher at Underwood, spent the week-end in Bismarck with friends, Mrs. Emily Clayton, Fargo, secre- tary for the Consursers’ United Stores company, is a visitor in the city. Krist Kjelstrup, Underwood banker. with his family visited friends in the city over Sunday, if AT THE MOVIES | ° THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE “The Argyle Case,” one of the most absorbing detective plays in the his- tory of the American stage, having reached the screen as Warner Broth- ers latest all-talking vitaphone pro- duction, comes to the Paramount Theater for Monday and Tuesday, deg Thomas Meighan in the star role. The story of this unusual talking picture, hinges on the mystery sur- rounding the killing of John | Argyle, and Meighan is scen as the {master -detective who finally suc- ceeds in locating the slayer. Sus- Picion is directed toward many char- acters during the exciting course of the story, in turn, and the denoue- ment furnishes a big surprise. | “The Argyle Case,” Meighan’s first vitaphone production, on account of his masterful performance has estab- lished him as great a favorite in the talkies as he is in the silent screen. His voice has unusual resonance and lit is perfectly recorded, augmenting [the forcefulness of his ingratiating it i i Z i : i § sive eg i : H : 3 of stomach .» Hall tell you about them . A . 916 fi wr t arenes Stinger. tic” Mi