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4 . The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1929 chief to beat them off, and again there was a shift in the scene of the Mexican stage. War-weary and worn | down, Mexico marked time just long enough finally to’ | allow Alvaro Obregon to emerge as the man of the hour | He had the stuff of Diaz in him, along with a disposition Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- | to help Mexien find itself by milder rule and progressive Marck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarce | ans. @8 second class mail matter. However, came another welter of plots, violent ambi- George D. Mann . ++-President and Publisher sions, instabil'ty and assassination. A new lull. ‘Then AZ a THAT A ZZ Sigerniue WERE. BAH! aw HME w AS much SPORT AS NETTING Heck NoTHIA’ To BRAG ABouT ~~ WHY ~w To BE HONEST WITH WHEW ! w I've EATEN So MUCH WILD Dick I'M AFRAID ILL WAKE UP IN TH’ MORNING | the election of Sunday, disclosing no more hopeful spirit, | WItd WEB Feer You; 1 WAS oFF isd! ety cy caries per year, nena peed Oe ee a eas ee | Ai” LEAVE FoR Work | FoRM |= Ham oni 4 CARLO SOU! =" ti Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) « 7.20 | and turbulence, not pi v jon sooner : : Dally oy mail. per Year, | or later. i FROM “TH” WIDOW NINE aurea Hu-m-H Noy oF A DAY'S PREPARING FOR “ovis | baci and feet will find that att that ara uaeie ot Noth * G00, The situation in Mexieo is hardly assuring in the light SitL!e Come os ~~ A FELLA SHOULD GuWOoRK. You While the, heavy red flaneibls of] is te exerciee vigorously and-tn live Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota REALLY BRING dis- DOWN “THAT MANY WHILE OILING HIS GUN !a— WHY SAY aw WHEN IM GOING RIGHT, I USE AN ICE- COOLED GUN ? |of Sunday's blood-spattered election. As said, if the vic- | - 1.00; tor can get a grip on the presidency such as Diaz hed | + 230) in his day, he may dominate the scene and calm’ the | nso [Country by the continued imposition of force. But in| “| doing so he will have to reckon with many cross cur- | rents, among which it would not be surprising to find Member of The Associated Press j outside influences working through intrigue to unseat | The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitied to the use Dm by fresh turmoil and turbulence. As in the days for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | of Cortez. Mexico still is the stake for which relentless not otherwise credited in this newspaper and “Iso the | conquisiadores strive, but now they are the rival treas- local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All’ ure seexers of finance and big business. Usually can- rights of republication of all other matter hereir are | cidates for the Mexican presidency simply are pawns ea these play off against each other, and it will be inter- | esting to watch and wait to see whether this lawless elec- tion has been otherwise than those in the past. SAKE> DONT BE So MODEST ~TeLL us How You BAGGED SIMPLETONS 9 wTHREE RHINOS ~—~WO BULL ELEPHANTS ~~ AND NA PAIR OF LIONS! Yu FIE ON YOU JAKE personal questions on health and questions on health an diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. Weekly by mail, in state. per year ...... Weekly by mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mail. out: of North Dako.a, per year .. ‘ Member Audit Bureav of Circulation | a | correctly. A daily bath is as valuable in winter as any other time. I have ; had some complaints that daily bath in winter makes the skin of the body | itch all over. Try rubbing down after tl ith with olive oil or cocoa but- and this will be avoided. instructions are not hard to follow and will well repay the effort. Let us join the “No Cold Club” this winter and see how many of us can keep our resolutions, and when the cold blasts of winter months have passed, we can welcome spring with from and the circulation of air. warmly. Sixty-eight Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS lncorporated) j ——— ego Gree Ene CO aN. | Unofficial Foreign Relations | CHICAGO Prensa seacesd 2 | ‘There are many ways of contributing to international | understanding and they all work for the good of Amer- | ica, whether they be applied to allies or to foes in the! ; World war. The important consideration is to be thought- | ful and, above all, to be manly and chivalric. War hatreds do not deserve to be prolonged indefinitely. At | least they should not continue between new generations. | Atlantic City Veterans of Foreign Wars had opportunity to perform a great service for their country in this re- spect recently. They had on a membership campaign (Official City, State and County Newspaper) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Protruding Ears Question: D. A. 8. asks: “Will you please tell me how to correct pro- truding ears in a %-year-old boy? ‘When he was born his ears lay close to his head, but as a baby he con- stantly rolied his head on his pillow qwhen awake, to which we attribute Hoover Not Upheld in Europe Just as expected, the Hoos sal for freedom Of the seas receives hardly encouragement from Europe. Its humanitarianism is acknowledged, otherwise it is being, not shaped on the anvil of discussion as the president had suggested it might be, but hammered good and hard on the anvil of opposition. gee gs & ery ge ually caused by the child lying on the ears which are pushed forward while sleeping. With children, the condi- tion can be corrected by bandaging using adhesive tape to the ears back, while with adults Plastic surgery may be necessary to the condition. PF. M. writ “The doc- tor here says my mother has spastic and a One country so far has put forth affirmative comment | When the incident arose. Their campaign obtained the | ve |e condition. “His ‘younger ‘trothers and expressed the belief that it would prove an important , US¢ Of @ downtown store window for a display of war unless | and his mother and father do not step toward world peace, but this country being Austria, | Tlics. Among them was a marker that had been re-| resist. (nave this kind of ears.” Which no longer has a seacoast, the approval is academic ™0ved from the grave of a German soldier. gets a| Answer: Projecting ears are us- The commander of the post, Louis Izenski, noticed the marker. It bore the name of Lieut. Franz Xylaende: _ ™ with an inscription stating that this German officer had ly grected the American president's scheme is the fact that it was under Hoover's aegis that the first food trains Deen killed in action on June 11, 1915. Under the inscrip- brought the long awaited relief to central Europe. It is! ee bi mit siaeintatesteton> boii that the dead|® ne ; weay gy chins is a place where Moran and ing s today that the president's plan is z ‘There's not! very funny about Mack would be generals in the army. 1d at 3a. m.! Bee ts uaaested today th eee ee i, It didn't seem quite right to Commander Izenskie that |it, but have you noticed how the | Age [edie endl op tesene street @ natural r of his post-war experiences in Austria, he | But what's a girl to do between then vhere he saw the misery caused by the food blockade— | this marker from the grave of a dead war hero should | stock market seems to get all the Sonator Moses is said to have called soa bedtime? Bemeagiite death.” lie in an American store window when the dead man’s breaks? outs {the radieal brothers sons of JOSKSSEEE.|(Co ae 1999, NEA Bervice, In) When one turns to England, a chorus of polite and’ elatives very likely didn’t even know where their loved} ysn't it remarkable how the coroner Se RO” | ——_—_—__—r i d. i | one was buried. jean discover with such unerring reg:! Engineers have pretty sharp eyes.’ . ‘The chief objection of } g raiih ei a ages itty ae iis aie shipe| 50 he got into touch with the German Red Cross and /ularity that # suicide who shot him-|The other day a West Virginia girl than a mile away. the status of hospital ships would prove too great a started tracing Lieutenant Xylaender’s record. Even-| 7 handicap in enforcing an economic blockade against an ually it was learned that the officer’s family is now liv- nar ‘Aggressor state. This solicitude for the functioning of the | but otherwise negligible. One reason why Austrian public opinion Ras so warm- 7 7 a 1 fick @ self in thé head died of a gunshot |tore a piece from her skirt and flag- | wound? ged a train. | se ® ry oe ® Mothers of New York debutantes |, that is incurable. medicine into her ai won't cure but will : The only thing that I benefit a spastic par- &@ prolonged fast and diet ing in the little German town of Lauban. Izenskie Promptly sent the grave marker to the family, with a let- Lezgue of Nations is even more strongly urged in France | ‘The British view was expressed very explicitly by Pro- fessor Gilbert Murray, who, while admitting the proposal was strongly to the interest of Great Britain, added that | other “important considerations are to be kept in mi First, if any war occurs, it will almost certainly be | breach of the League covenant or the Kellogg pact. Con- | sequently, the solution of the supply problem will be difficult, No signatory of the covenant or pact should supply or allow its nationals to supply a criminal _ ernment engaged in war in breach of its treaties.” | In a letter to the Manchester Guardian, Philip Kerr | says President Hoover's address shows the dilemma the | United States, like all other countries, is in since the! ratification of the Kellogg pact. | “If they live up to their pledge,” he adds, “the ques- tion of neutral versus belligerent rights will never arise and armaments are unnecessary save for international | police purpos Yet they clearly are uncertain whether | the paci will observed or not. i} “So the president, while objecting to the use of an| fnternational force for the prevention of war, asks for armaments for national self-defense and asks the exemp- | tion of food ships in time of war, which implies his be- lief that private war is going to continue as before. If) private war is to continue, the food ship proposal will | fail, though it seems of national advantage to Great Britain, for the reason that all efforts to humanize war | by treaty have failed and will continue to fail so long | as nations are fighting for their lives, unless neutrals are willing to go to war to enforce them. | Being able to feed itsclf in war, France, as comment | feflects its opinion, secs in the proposal the political fault that it would paralyze the League of Nations eco- | nomie sanctions, and the practical objection that in| feeding, an outlaw nation which had broken the Kellogg | pact the other countries would be only enabling the nation to defy efforts to punish it. | It is not admitted that a line could be drawn between feeding women and children and feeding an army which | had embarked on aggressicn. In fact, the opinion most generally heard in the French capital is that the Hoover plan would encourage war rather than discourage it, be- | cause prospective aggressors could make their plans inj the assurance that they would be fed regardless of how much they outlawed themselves. As for making wat } humanitarian, the French say out of a wealth of expert- ence that it cannot be done. The Figaro observes that “the speech of the prest- dent ruins the only chance the -League of Nations has | for action against a people guilty of making war.” H Pertinax, in L’Echo de Paris, points out that in the! World war Germany was largely defeated by the block- ade. great encouragement to any nation planning aggression *To have its food supplies guaranteed by the Amori- _ ean fiset would be too easy,” he says. “If President Hoover belicves so much in the efficacy of public opin- fon why does he not abolish all warships?” ‘The Quotidien says war is outlawed and must be fought by all arms, of which the blockade is a valuable one. Na- tions planning war must face famine as well as poison gas, it thinks. The Homme Libre says that in the World war Amer- | fea tried moral suasion on Germany but that it was, ‘much less efficacious than the 2,000,000 soldiers she sent | ‘to the battlefield. E| . . | i The Mexican Welter Again | As far as the actual presidential election in Mcxico| fs concerned. that palpably was a ferce where it was | mot one of the hundreds of tragedies that marked the ‘voting with 19 deaths and 500 wounded. | The administration resulting from it may be a dif- ferent story. It al} depends on the personality of the, | victor and the forces up with him and back of him. BCG ’ Pascug! Ortiz Rubio have in him the elements of a Por- | forio Diaz or an Obregon he will be able to get away ter of explanation. A short time later he got the follow- | ing reply from a German Red Cross official: | ok ! you cannot believe the pictures of America and Ameri- | in | can#*painted in the newspapers. No warlike and greedy | | prefoundly. But once war starts, misunderstanding 1s | talk well on all subjects except those your friends are | & reality the cowboy will ride herd on an electric horse. | President Hoover's plan would be, he thinks, a |" “The entire town of Lauban has become convinced tha: People would be capable of such a touching act, and | needless to say everyone in Lauban has a new and truer | understanding of America.” There's food for a good deal of thought in that little story. First of all, of course, it proves that Commander Izen- skie is a pretty fine type of ex-service man. War hatreds | are dead, as far as he is concerned; he's ready to do all | he can to restore friendly relations with the one-time enemy. But the real significance of the thing goes deeper than that. It proves, once more, how amazingly easy it is for the barriers of international jealousy and suspicion to be broken down. A little effort will do so much—a little neighborliness will go such a long way! The solution of the age-old problem of war and Peace lies right along the pathway blazed by this New Jersey war veteran. No war could last a week unless the people of the warring nations misunderstood one another inevitable. Governments spend huge sums to make it so. No one bothers to remember that the people he is fighting against are, after all, very much like himself. —_——$__ ay Every young business man passes through a stag? when he dictates long and purposeless letters just to im- press his stenographer. Thirty minutes of study cach day will enable you to! : interested in. i | The advisability of passing @ car at the curve depends on whether the widow will think the loss covered by insurance. It is assumed that when the synthetic cow becomes They are not really “old folks” until the children begin \ to quarrel about whose duty it is to keep them next. Editorial Comment | Power and Light by Corporations The cities of this. dietriot had ir understanding he ci a fair last week of what electric current furnished by a larg: corporation means. ‘the city of Mohall was among the towns that were without light and power for nearly three days, and every businc:s firm sufiered to a certain extent. Those who about employees of the company in respect, but it is about the power company. We have the highest 4 for all of the employees and know that they did all ia their power to avert such @ condition. that is nearly 100 miles away, and ts doing Power station or auxiliary plant at this end to cf its patrons, in case anyching gocs wrong at plant cr on line near the piant. Last week the line » plication of despotic power masquerading in the garbj of democracy as long as the pretence of a republican form Of government is kept up. é ® yeng '©.1929 by NEA a room tac: RHODES wvearding howe to aear KNOWN, nawenmer ant of wenrts THDA PAWN. soe haneemata: sea OVSTY “RANTS, Mee Rendea! worthless bos! Nandce hence of See, Mognrth’s misertinenn, that chet hemad, and we vaam. When the yonur @: vetmrne at 1217, be Ande vee. Hoareth's dear aniacked. and that ah bre heen ehaked ta denth by a binek eoave caver the mond ramen. re re and the taventigntion he. WwW GOOF WITH THE ATORY CHAPTER VI “or couree the first thing you're Interested tn ts how long she's been dead.” Dr. Price. the coroner | sald to tfeutenant Strawn, “I Pretty obvious she was stra | auppore?” and he hent ” Lfeutenant 'd like vou to Dundee. Doctor He's a fnew member of the homicide sq: Joined the force today and came here to board.” “Lucky to have him on the scene of the crime. Mon't suppose you did it, young feller. to make a gond case @n which to win promotion?” the coroner chuczied. Bonule Durice @ushed. “1 feel almost as rteponsible as if { had killed her, Doctor. fact, | came here te I her fcom—just this,” ning. Left her alive and usual at about 10: wi death took place between 1 12:10. Lt eay 12:10 instead of 3: it ts obvious that the murderer ransacked the room after he killed her, and it must have taken him at least 10 minutes to get the piace so completely upset.” “Hmm. You ought to make good detective, my lad,” the doctor remarked. eyes twinkling. He was a lean, oldisb man. about 55 or 6v, with wh.te ba! “Heart trouble, bigh blood pres- Sure, obesity caused by glandular denclency.” he diagnosed aloud. “Now, let's see—" eee NDEB turned bis back while coroner made further ex body. re tor baving et this thing happen to ving hay to be She had been eo testtal of What if she a a “mis Shepherd had ae expressed It? What if she had created enemies by changing ber | rupted, he | MRS. EMMA HOGARTH | ak eR. Inn taent theater: HENRY | inled | “Dundee, | want listen in on the boarders’ stories. | will so often, had aroused the pas sion of greed in ber fellow-boarders by keeping her money in her room? She had committed no crime, she ; had meant to reward kinduess. . | And that thought brought Bon. nie Dundee crashing against a real- ization he bad teen keeping at bay since be bad said so glibly, “Of my own knowledge, death took place between 10:45 and 12:10." The person who would beuetit most by Mrs. Hogarth’s death, provided she had not been robbed. was Nor- ma Paige. And Norma Paige jeall upon Mrs. Hogarth at 10 m! i utes of 11. | Unconsciously, Dundee had veep of the fii rint expert, directed by Lieutenant Strawn. and fear “Well, Strawn, as near as 1 can tell you now, she’s been dead }ap hour. sulted bis ‘3 now 12:59. 1 figure that death took place be tween 11:45 and 12. Of course, it might have been a bit earlier—say j41:30—but 1 think not, judging from the—" i Dundee spun on his heel and clapped bis bands to bis ears. He was still too new at this sort of thing to endure a recital of the pathological findings of the cheer fully interested doctor. “All tight, Price.” said Strawn, “and thank you. You cao take her a: a By the way, was ber death a quick one, orvis re any possibility that she lived awhile, seeing her murderer” at work robbing her?” 'm fairly sure she died almost intly.” Dr. Price answered. “If not, badly mista i find she bad fatty degeneration of the heart" “She told us so,” Strawn Soter- you to, hide yourself behind that screen and watching the swift, efficient work.| ‘ow Dr. | des! ‘g0, | Price’s voice cut into bis thoughis ed, bending over the Parrot “As hot today as my future home will be; that is, if t go where some lof my good friends expect me to,” Mrs. Hogarth bad written, with grim humor. “The moths and light {midges area nuisance. If that use jless Dusty doesn't put my screen ‘19 Monday, I'm going to shake bis jteeth Cown bis throat. Something very strange about bis putting off that job, lazy as be is. 1 more than half believe & 8. or C. 8. bas bribed him to teave my window uo- ; Screened. It’s been tive years since \t've bad such @ etrong present! i of disaster an I've had today. Wrote the police commissioner to send @ plainclothes detective, 1 ‘suppose be will laugh at me and let me die likes —" The bart on the day's entry ended here, and undoubtedly had been written befure the visit of Norma Paige aud Bousie Dundes. But it was the second page, marked “Later,” which bad made Dundee'’s beart lunge sickeningly. “More trouble!” Airs. Hogarth bad written, waveringly, as if ber band bad been trembling with rage \or weariness, “Norma has defied me and got herself engaged to that fortune-bunter, Walter Styles, Told people's lives, i've got lot of fun and excitement out of it. but aow J wish'! bad never started the whole foolish business. The police aren't Such fools as 1 thought them. They using the orange juice for days, followed by a milk several months. However, I to treatments are usually helpful. Dermoid Cyst Question: Mrs. R. asks: “What ts @ dermoid F 4 Answer: A dermoid cyst is a con- genital cyst containing bone, hair. teeth, etc. They do not often increase in size. It is usually best to have Temoved. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ESE aay ST A | Our Yesterdays | OO FORTY YEARS AGO H. F. Wogan of Wogansport, came down from the north yesterday and is a candidate for an. office during the legislative session. Captain William Gleason, old time Bismarcker, came in from Jamestown Miss Eva D. Campbell of Emmons “I thought so. In that case, the fright alone was almost enough to Gnish bh 9 It was while the body was being removed by the white-clad ambu- lance attendants that Dundee, his horrible event that was taking place, discovered the dead woman's keys, He caught a glimmer of re Gected light beside the scattered Bapers near the desk, stooped and arose with a broken silver chain, to which were fastened by means 1d | of @ little ring, three keys of vary. shapes. ing sizes and . 66) ee 'T touch them till they can be finger-printed,” | ippose; the fat one for the | trunk, and this little gold one for what?" “The diary, 1 imagine, it has a bout | lock clasp on it.” Dundes answered. “Well, if she kept ft locked. it fen’t locked now,” Strawn dis- Prag Ufting the top cover of e The fingerprint expert came to ward them. “That? Oa, it's use bothering with it! That leather woulin't give us a nlzable wit OF course the it H al Eke : il EI i i ret i; formed the last para: day's entry. “Let me sce!” Stawn com! i i é i eyes desperately roving to avoid the boo! Fr “Strawn “eon, inned. “But what I’m interes having 8 chet with Mr. oa nd with Mr. r e F ail ctl § § g i police 8 bia trail by this tle’, sow, Dundes, > want zou to f f i ites tits z E "SEE Fi 5 3 F 78 their drifted apart, both 5 recently met after of their mates and the romance ‘| Was renewed. Blake has five grand- children and Mrs. Blake cight. FLAPPER, FA! NY SAYS: