The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 24, 1930, Page 4

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¥ fi © © . e THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1980 belly is this elusive, intangible aura of romance which the bright riders of the old days bore with them. Jeb Stuart furnished a masterpiece in the art of living; and, like all works of art, his career can lift the beholder out of himself and persuade him that man has, somewhere within him, a streak of divinity, That is the sort of thing we have lost. And yet—have we really lost it, or has it only changed its guise? Was there not, a few years ago, a slim Viking who soared across @ dark ocean in a silver monoplane, and brought high adventure down from the clouds for us? Perhaps, after all, a mechanical age can evolve its own romance. Let us hope so. We cannot live without it. The Lure of Fighting Brazil is a long way from the United States, and the civil war there is neither very interesting nor under- standable to the average American; but it is interesting to note that hundreds of young men are striving carn- estly to get down there and take a hand in the figiting, even though they have not the remotest notion of what it is all about. Representatives of the Brazilian rebels, who have of- fices in New York, are besieged daily by many of these ardent Americans, hot for war; so are the official rep- resentatives in this country of the Brazilian government. There may not be a hundred people in this country who know just what is going on down there, but there are a great many who would like to be in on whatever it is. All of this, coming little more than a decade after a war that was supposed to have disillusioned the world THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER , (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N, D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann'....ccnennuee President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year Daily by mail per year (i Daily by mail per Chg (in state, outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North D: Weekly by mail in state per year Weekly by mail in state, three years fOr cus. 2.50 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .. savasacrnsccrreee Le eu Weekly by mail in Canada per year .. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation 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 spontaneous origin published herein. All tights of rey leet of all other matter herein are 0 reserv (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) forever about fighting, is somewhat jarring. It em- ‘ormerly G. Logan Payne C Phasizes two facts that will rise to plague pacifists for CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON years to come—the fact that there is an ineradicable yearning for high adventure planted in the breast of mankind, and the fact that mankind persists in believ- ing that high adventure is best gained by getting into @ fight. That, of course, is only another way of saying that men are by nature restless. Safety and security do not begin to look attractive until after one has Icft youth far behind. And it is unfortunate, in a way, that the modern world does not provide very many outlets for restlessness. Most of us, from the cradle onward, are safe and secure whether we like it or not. So, when someone touches off a war in Brazil, there is a grand rush to get in on the ground floor; and a little later, very likely, sundry youthful Americans will fill unmarked graves far down in the southern hemisphere. To be sure, it is youth’s privilege to fling its life away recklessly, for small gain or for no gain at all. Indeed, many a sedate, middle-aged householder would probably change places with these youngsters who ere off for death below the equator. To live intensely for a few months is sometimes worth a premature and unpleasant death, However, recognizing the existence of this spirit is not ~ at all the same thing as admitting that there is nothing that we can do to hold it in check. A revolution in Brazil is something the world can take in its stride, but another world war, on the scale of the last one, is not; and the spirit that is taking Americans to Brazil is the same spirit that would take all nations into another great war, if the circumstances were propitious. This means that the statesmen of Europe and America |, must take care to keep even the danger of war below the horizon. Emotionally, we have learned nothing what- ever by the World war. We shall enter a new one as eagerly as we entered the last one. International crises hereafter must be met ond solved before they come | to @ head. | Political Experts Disagree During the pre-election congressional vacations, ‘Wash- ington correspondents are sent on scouting pilgrimages. They feel the political pulse of the nation, as it were, and hoist a moistened finger in the air to determine the drift of the wind. ‘i There has been the usual expenditure of wind in the campaign now drawing to a close, but the apathy of the voters has disturbed the political writers of the na- tional capital. There are many signs in the political heavens, but they are new signs and a Joseph to translate them seems to be lacking among the energetic and ubiquitous gentlemen of the fourth estate. ‘The bread-and-butter argument so effectively used in former campaigns is like so much wasted breath, There is a shortage of bread and butter in many Republican strongholds. Farm relief and the farm board beh no interest—there is a farm relief board but no fai relief. Our old friend high tariff is causing no one to toss his cap in the air, There are no raucous cheers when the Smoot-Hawley schedules are ‘mentioned—if they are mentioned. Most of the schedules are as popular with the people as Schedule K of the Payne- Aldrich bill which buried old “Jim” Tawney of Winona, Minn., and started the debacle of the Taft regime. So it is a new hustings that face the sputtering con- gressmen battling for their seats against one of the most serious economic situations which the nation has faced since the Civil war. The correspondents believe that most anything can happen—some of them are even pre-|. dlicting that the Democrats will control the next house of congress. All seem to agree that the Republican party will suffer heavily in the November election. Speaker Longworth has candidly said that his party without doubt will lose several seats and the staid old Boston Transcript sees blood on the political moon. Political prophecy is more or less futile, but that there ts unrest and uncertainty among the voters is certain. The cloud today in the heavens may be no larger than & man’s hand, but it may expand and bring about a political twister. The chief danger conservative political observers sense is that a material decrease in the Repub- lican house majority may tie the hands of the adminis- tration, Actual loss of control hardly. seems in the cards, but nothing is certain in politics. The imminent danger is that a greater and more agressive Democratic minor- ity may make combinations that will embarass and impede the Hoover program and the policies generally of the Republican regime—if it can be said there is a defined policy. Some say they have serious doubts as to the existence of a strong, compelling policy at the White House. The Republicans have used the full dinner pail argu- Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show thought by other editors, | They out regard to whether they agr The Tribune's policies. the trend of re published with- or disagree with Buy Now (McKenzie County Farmer) An employe in a local store offered the writer an interesting illustration showing the extent to which imagination is responsible for the present business de- Pression. “A man in government service,” he related, “called in our store the other day and proceeded to select a Pao Sanrey But he wanted aa pair oe inexpensive shoes =] ecor was explanation, ‘you know times are hard’, ies as . * ment so long that some of the chickens are coming home the moire iil ees A peg sip teen taal h to roost. As Dwight Morrow well said on the hustings| truth is that he does not feel the pinch of hard times. recently, if a party claims credit for sunshine and the | His salary remains as it was and will buy more today rainfall it must also shoulder the blame for the drought | than it would two years ago. The future of his job is and the depression, It is high time for the Republican | Marured by civil service. Yet, he imagines that it is party to deny infallibility—a most disturbing attribute merchant can cite hundreds of similar incidents, in these piping times of peace. psy dap a bend gore that cag individual whose income as large as it ever was does not announce the neces- Voters ‘are becoming dulled to specious claims for! sity of economy due to present conditions, Multiply this support. The Republican and Democratic parties must| by millions and you have everything necessary for a offer something more stable than has characterized the boston emg ‘That ia one very ee pense why litical speeches of the last decade or more. There is| the price of wi around 55 cents @ bushel at present. Saaagpaala’ a i - ssid One can readily understand the attitude of the man good reason why the voters are apathetic, why many! wo is out of work. He must economize. But what stay at home—they realize that a change in political) about the 85 per cent of the American people who are parties means little in their scheme of things and that! employed in spite of present conditions—is it necessary in the administration of each party there is good mixed| for them to pinch and save and contribute to general with bad. No party, they know, can hasten the millen- | *#gnation? tum or guarantee a full dinner pail. Some trite political ‘arguments have crashed to the ground recently and the If all those who are not affected by the present period of unemployment would forget all about the talk of voters are not taking party labels as seriously as of yore. hard times, the time of a real business revival would not be far in the future. The wise man who has his job, ‘inds the present to be a good time to buy. Prices are as they can go unless we have a general slump old 1913 levels, But the industrial leaders con- that good wages make prosperity, are determined to avert such a business catastrophe. We can all feel sure, therefore, that buying now is not only a way of Feerice eaNuua myer of restoring, business_ to ts Fry The Sense of Glamour ‘When a man starts regretting the passing of the good old days, and begins to remark that nothing is quite as fine nowadays as it used to be, it is a fair sign that he is getting old. Nevertheless, even a young man can spot one or two ways in which the modern world has fallen below the level of the world of his grandfather. Life has grown easier and safer, and in most ways this has been all to the good; but there has departed, some- how, something of that sense of glamour that ured to ‘surround men and make life a richer and brighter affair than it is today. Captain John W. Thomason, Jr., that talented officer of United States marines, recently wrote a bicgraphy of Jeb Stuart that illustrates the matter perfectly. Jeb Stuart was Lec’s chief of cavalry in the Civi! war. He was @ cavalry officer in the days when the cavalry was the cavalry, when a general took his chances along with the buck privates, and war still had an overtone from the age of chivalry; and merely looking at his Portrait, as Captain Thomason gives it, is enough to emphasize the passing of the sense of glamour. Look at the man’s picture—a young man, with a flow- ing tawny beard, dressed in immaculate Confederate gray, wearing always a gay plume in his hat and gold spurs on his great cavalry boots, with a yellow silk sash ebout his waist and a gray cape lined with red silk that fluttered in the breeze when he galloped into action at the head of @ thundering line of yelling horsemen, sabres aloft. He had the dash and fire of one of the children of romance. He wore a red rose in his lapel, sang rollick- ing when he slouched at ease in the saddle, and he died at last on the battlefield, a world-famous gen- eral at the age of 32. Merely reading about the man quickens one's pulse But he would be # lost and archaic misfit today. Gen- erals do not gallop into action in this efficient era, nor do they wear plumed hats and red-lined capes. He was & type brought forth by a different generation. We can- not duplicate him. It is all very well to say that plumes and bright spurs Sre unimportant. It is hard to live by bread alune; and ‘among those things which nourish without filling the i A Costly Error (Jamestown Sun) Some one has made a very costly blunder in the mat- ter Gee caurriad sae maintenance in North Dakota—a blunder the taxpayers of the state hundreds and posably Finley of dollars in actual cash outley in addition to the inestimable loss due to breakage of machines, inconvenience and delay For several months scrapers have been sent up and fom es the state's principal highways scraping the gravel ther side of the road, making ridges varying in height @ few inches to more than a foot. ng many of these roads, notably highway No. 10 between Jamestown Fargo, the grass has grown up through this ridge gravel until the roadway has-been changed from being graded up into a veritable ditch. The rains of the last 10 days, falling onto these Toads, did not drain off but formed pools between the little hills and the automobiles churning through this water have cut the roads until many of them &re all but impassable. Autoists who have driven between Valley City and Fargo during the last, three or four days tell of scores of cars which have abandoned in the ditches and being forced to wait until approaching cars have plowed ‘stretches of mud where it was impossible for one car to pass another. In many of these places are high es of gravel on both sides of the road which have held the water in the roadway. If the gravel had been piled onto the center of the road or had not been placed on the roadway at all, there greed have Ane a Hf the hilly sections of the highways, because where there was sufficient incline for the water to drain down into the lower places the roadbed is in very good condition. It is errors of this kind, which it would seem to the mind should have been avoided by any intelligent need , that make it hard to put over any proposition for the raising of more money for highway construction and maintenance. If the people of the state, as a whole, felt that all of the money now being collected was being used efficiently and without unnec- essary and foolish waste, there would be little opposition to a larger e tax or any other legitimate form of taxation forthe purpose of improving the state's high- ways, i SYNOPSIS:—Der Gree: eral of his friends ton Dn, ce Ife Aon gh gen invites sev- ) even more on our nerves than ” Bet ECO. under way, he intimates that ah a sl epee resp te, tell hs walked ao be a ecying to mee RANK, OSE Le “4 he meets keep up the conversation. We even 7 joked a little, hi to ieaaiies ili ula ba as jai — e terrible” t sae jenny eddremed eovalope oust be caclomd rn Bi behind that guests, Before he can tell them. he guests find his body benging by # green By E. V. BURKHOLDER OURTNEY’S voice brought me-to myself with a jerk. » A woman was groaning behind me. There was, the sound of hysterical sobs somewhere in the “My God!” Courtney cried. “He hanged himself!” ———— Es ” 1 said in a _ hanged him- o erhat was his great surprise,” be oh) suggested in a tremulous vetetter shut the door,” Brandford sald. “I'm going to keel over it I have to look at,that much longer.” ' “Yes, we'd uae shut the on tia aera mechanically. | He shut the door and we all walked automatically back to the seats we had used before vhe trag- edy. We were all so stunned that we went back to our seats as if it was just another part of the prue- some tragedy that we had witnessed “~ were actors in. We tooked at each other. Every erson in the room by sober. Greta lis was sobbil bed ad the crite silence of “Yes, you are hha voice. \ “We girls had better get out cf here or we'll faint,” Mona Devore ; whimpered. lock 4) “Can any one get out?” Brand- ford asked: “Is - tine door still } Courtney jumped to his feet, as if the suggestion came as a relief to him, an i ea and I also hastened over Courtney. tes locked” he said. “The key is on Denny,” Brand- ford suggested. | “I’m not getting it,” Courtney re- to 1 “We font need ff ni Ae I said. eat . Yale lock and can ve m the inside by turning | re, 1 “TI su ose we'll have to call the randford suggested. ! “Yes, and none of us should go until the police come,” said Court- rushed to the hall door. | ting room. ‘We are sure of. that.” Courtne said ‘Tn fact, the door’ to the fail ae there. had “YOU ALL STAY HERE” But all Paine reed we knew he was: We 't believe that was locked. No one could have come | locked. whe door was locked?” ‘Yes. Dorn snared Just before f2, ent the kitchen- y. that ette, it opens Me what aid he de etter ve tected | the hall a secret.” “We'dors tow, i le told Loret- ta Whipple to turn a and then, went went into the tte. Greta ‘Hane He never Fi ine. ou though He was | all we open door.” “How long were the lights out?” “Not more than a ute.” the @ Tr called . “ive a good. thing. you di aia” hy?” “Becatise this ts a case for t e eourtney “ale a littl wt “What rou mean it, doc= demanded. <B tor?” I Denny Dorn was hang “T ean that 2 He did not him- She was sit- | Dll event ‘She was pale and her lips trem- bled a Tittle. but the announcement that Dorn aol been brought no cl ney her well had known vba ‘was on her mind that minute, I St ct bt ay not have visible change in emotions, hey oe (ines then en rardly to wal new shocks. That was hi her case. wl when he went in hts out ply cou couldnt he have been iting across who is this wise doctor—the you said was a@ friend of she asked. led b pretty smart man,” I re- since the death of She _was too cool and col “How Whole will be a hell wish I hadn’t been invited to ‘nis a party.” “thats weet’D Dorn Cera his oe are ingen Bois I ne toe about vikeed ‘ae it ‘geil nave ben, ‘im! ge ‘any 01 Dorn, 1 1 looked at the; differe: 0} in noted a they all nad een seated: that closet. I took! jc ethno mae gr tick: id to myself. It sim- been done. cal exai I qooorted: down Sauer or og tn ere there nearly a half an nour waitin to hear the verdict of iw “a were" Greta sat next to were dle about ae hi bag oi sani id me. She paled a fitde'aca | lighted a cigarette. J Marsh looked at me. «te the room. “Just man Dorn?” I didn’t like her, and her actions roiled me. he is?” “He's smart enough to bail this eine up,” Courtney pee of a mess. smart do you she questioned. Marino broke | in, the death party.” I had il about that. a named it right,” Courtney of us to have} HEALTH DAILY MENUS Sunday Breakfast: French omelet, waffle, applesauce. Cream of tomato soup, Lunch: eggplant, celery and ripe sugar). Glass of buttermilk, with 10 or 12 dates. - Dinner: Vegetable soup, roast beef, string beans, stewed tomatoes, salad of chopped raw cabbage and celery, Jello or Jell-well with cream. Tuesday Breakfast: Coddled eggs, Melba toast, pear sauce. Lunch: Steamed rice, cooked beet tops, head lettuce with olive oil. Dinner: Broiled lamb chops, spin- ach, buttered beets, salad of vege- tables molded in gelatin (green peas, string beans and celery), no degsert. ‘Wednesday Breakfast: Oatmeal with butter or cream, no sugar, stewed raisins. Lunch: Glass of grapejuice. Dinner: Roast pork, cooked okra, baked eggplant, McCoy salad, baked apple. ‘ ursday Breakfast: Baked eggs, Melba toast, stewed SF Celery soup, cucumber and olive sandwiches, Dinner: Veal chops, cooked squash, string ebans, salad of chopped cab- bage, ice cream. Friday Breakfast: Poached egg on toasted Shredded’ Wheat Biscuit, stewed figs. with butter, and keep very hot until ready to serve. If tare is taken in cutting the squash in uniform size, 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. the squash may be piled on shells in individual portions. The squash baked in the shell has a very delicious flavor. yh QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ~ Dry Hands Question: Miss ~. asks: “Will you please tell me what causes my hands | to be exceedingly dry—so dry they often wrinkle in the palms? This is mostly at night. Also, I have a crav- ing for fresh fruit and cool tart drinks—anything cold and juicy. I have been this way for several years.” Answer: Satisfy your craving for fresh fruit by eating nothing else for a few days. This treatment will help to correct the dryness of your skin. For temporary relief, rub cocoa-butter on the skin. Use a small amount over the entire body each night before you retire. Poppy Seed Oil Question: L. K. asks: “Is there an oil from poppy seed that may be used as a salad oil, and is it a good food?” Answer: Poppy seed oil is popular in parts of Europe as a table oil. It is of a pale yellow color, practically odorless, and has a very pleasing fla- vor. The inferior grades are used in soap making and like products. As far as its food value is concerned, it has no special merit. Gaining Weight Question: M.D. J. writes: “Ihave Lunch: Raw apples or oranges, as many as desired. been drinking milk to gain weight, a pint for breakfast, a pint at 10 o'clock, ney “What do you mean by that state. : “Why call the police?” Marino| ment?" Co heel ae Dinner: Broiled filet of sole, cauli- | at 3 o'clock, and before retiring. Have 1o’s reference to the invita- 4 * called “gut from hig seat on ‘the| atter the first effect of br. Grey's| tion brought back co my mind tne | flower, asparagus, salad of sllced|/ been drinking it this way for two) doctor. We don’t want the a assertion had worn off. net thought about when it tomatoes (no dressing) ng dessert. months but do not seem to gain in on this.” “Just what I said.” Dr. Gray re-! came to m8 ent. Saturday much. Do I drink enough, and at We havent any cholee,” Court le Denny Dorn did not Thang | “Funny that he sent out those in- Cottage cheese, pine- | the right hours?” Wi answered. th us IS 8 suicide. ‘was put was d age vitations,” I said. “They were Answer: If you take Sica mk ? fe can’t move the body and no one poms printed, : fou will on! Gar tea Cea gd So Ba “That “What invitations?” Brandford Lunch: *Hubbard squash, salad of | along with other foods you wit only examiner sees, the body. You girls utterl: possible,” T said. TEvery asked. “I never got one.” lettuce and cucumbers, bring eee brace uj ‘one of ph oS m teo far away| «Neither did 1,” ‘1 Dinner: Vegetable soup, Salisbury | this over-feeding. If you want to try ave to call the police.” | from re in| quick ed oarmey sald — | steak, steamed carrots, okra, salad of to gain weight through taking the we'll I sale ei il call a doctor also. No- body should leave this room.” T called police headquarters and = Fy called Dr. Stuart pong He lived across the street irom Dorn I also phoned my paper to Pyou ive it the news and told the'ec editor renal cover the case. Ellis had recovered fi spell byt the time I had | he recast joning. a acne us ct rtney had aden it but none of'us watked out ta the T knew something like this was the kit to that brief ‘time t the Pope “It couldn't lig! aE at, help that.” Dr. Gi = | 2 torted e tee) ‘Dorn’ was va here when that rope was put around quickly. phone and invited me to this party.” “He called me on the We didn’t get a chance to anything more about the invitations, the | A man entered the room. I knew 1t was Detective surn hy. He was a — aes wi scar on face. reputation as a de- fective was well known. his neck. I can’t tell you now how] “ was mi id, I only know that y he was vaead when that rope was buf, around his neck.” “If he was, some one entered the kitchenette through the window or some secret. door,” Courtney said. looks Denny Heit eames Tu ey to ask you to His words caused us to look at each other, pre eee ae all our eyes. “I'm trying to tell you the person who martezed ere was in the room just before the lights went out,” going to happen.” Greta said. “Den- ay woe pes »been acting strangely tor Dr.¢ ‘Gray arrived at the house five minutes jater. 1 met him at the door downstairs and tried to explain oft ;hurriedly wha. nag ‘hay ed. = gape say Cie He rushed ‘the stairs 1 followed. Stuart Gray was still in his 30s, ‘The medical profession to him was ;merely something to (active mind. He was independently jfich, having inherited a great hee or Pe age from his father, whonad Tich man of the old Brey Ward before the Village had taken lace. ee him fairly well. He was a brilliant man. He had interested {himself in the study'ot crimi jana had written a book on the ‘of psychology in relation to crime. He was a little abrupt and im- pulsive in speech and actions. I al- ways sensed that there some- thing cold fae merciless about the man: yet I knew that nearly all of his practice of mecinine was Sic] the poorer waa joouidn’t bay a doctor and rer coul rata, eae Pee & man except fof When he et tered the jo he walked alrectiy to the kitchenette. We all watched him in a kind of a stupor. Our brains had pa net Te. ceived the full blow of had happened. I seemed that ey were living in a dream and that in @ minute or two we would awaken. He was in the kitchenette only @ few minutes. When he came out, he took @ cigarette out of a silver case. back of bis when Dorn entered that ilichenette?” be asked in a dry voice. “Just those vou see here.” I said. He lit his cigarette and looked around the room, “That's interest- ing.” he said “You are "eure that "a one slse was tn the enam? oo _________ ___—. | AT THE MOVIES 2 CAPITOL THEATRE Five nationally known players vie for comedy honors in Radio Pic- tures’ “Leathernecking,”- which will open at the Capitol theatre Monday. They are Eddie Foy Jr., Benny Ru- bin, Ned Sparks, Ken Murray and Louise Fazenda, Foy and Murray are clever vaude- ville ahd musical comedy stars; the latter was on the Orpheum circuit eight years, the other just stepped out of a Fred Stone show, “Ripples.” Benny Rubin, remembered for his soldier part in “Marianne” and other n interest. mis | Sixt | pictures, brings a comedy flair to “No one in seas room could have poaidiy gone to a kitchénette, ered him ae got back to a eat ae Sing Sine: toward the north end the It was a five feet to the places seated. A Mt big bluse ee killed “But none of us killed him.” Mona Devore walled: Bale didn’t kill him.” sneered. Ths is a Gy4 daylight.” crisp raw spinach leaves, cup custard. ‘Hubbard Squash: Cut @ squash in quarters and remoye seeds. Bake in @ moderately hot oven until tender. Scrape from the rinds into a sauce- pan, add a large lump of butter and two tablespoonfuls of cream. Mash until all the lumps are gone, then beat until light. with « silver fork. Put into a deep vegetable dish, dot is the real thing, the train, in true European fashion, starts off without them. Stranded, Skeets and Clara make inquiriés about a hotel and are directed to the mayor who, innocent- ly enough, marries them. Skeets and jara, even sign the marriage certifi- cates’ believing @ it to be 8 aes reg- Forbes), a famous composer who, tir- ing of an over fond public, had ex- changed identities with Skeets. “Her Wedding Night” comes to the Paramount Theatfe on Monday for a two day run, and will also be the feature attraction at the mid-night show at the Paramount tonight. Today Is the | ‘Anniversary of S$ O GERMANTOWN On Oct, 24, 1683, a party of Ger- mans, the first German settlers in the United States, laid out German- | ° ‘|town, a suburb of Philadelphia, Pa. milk diet, it is necessary to give up all other foods. Then take a glass of milk every half hour during the day, which will give you about six quarts daily. If you can drink this much you are bound to gain weight, but it might not be good weight, and may leave you after you have stopped tak- ing the milk as fast as you put it on during the milk diet. revival are at work.”—Francis H. Sis- son, New York bank executive. t * * OK “The fur-bearing animals are * dis- appearing with alarming rapidity as @ result of trapping for the fur trade.” — David Quinn, secretary of the emergency* conservation commit- tee. * oe * “In the great intangibles of human emotion, respect is inseparable from good will.”—President Hoover. ee * “One of the most interesting prob- lems that science has yet to solve is concerned with the nature of vita- mins.”—Dr. E. V. McCollum, nutrition authority of Johns Hopkins Univer- sity. * * * “I am too long, I know I am too long.”—King Christian of Denmark,’ who is six feet five inches tall. New England May Get Natural Gas Pipeline New England, N. D., Oct. 24—New England, Regent and Mott may have natural gas next year, according to James Trimble, Bismarck. A branch pipeline may be extended 29 miles south from Dickinson to New England and then on to towns along blic|*he branch line of the Milwaukee, which has its terminus here, the manager of the Bismarck office inti- mated. H. M. Frederick, distribution engi- neer for the company, will come here this week, Mr, Trimble said, to make Mu get in that is when the medical ex- 4 seconds. It was comple out “j @ fuel survey and lay out the dis: of the question, unless some. Stuer | Mmner, he eget ae x tribution system. The figures of the pad n used to get to the all same = guage was printed. sae will peice as & basis for pl for construction another year, De, Gray Slso glanced at the dis-.| angrily. ot if oy eu mare Germantown is chiefly noted 10 uy. ‘Trimble averred. : Hie shrugged fils shoulders. | GOz,DOED. HOW 10 ae co ea reagnt there If it appears there is a sufficient “There are no secret doors to that Eero te amount of business here the ‘con- kitchenette,” he said. “I tested the. looked. at him with nar- struction of the line is a possibility . mm Mine window is locked from es, “That, my friend,” he next year, Mr. Trimble says. He Courtney walked back to a chair salg curly, “is fst what Tim quoted the fact that money is cheap and sat down. Marino tried Ep Fis Oth. Cethen, RAVOt gael, tenye at the present time and called atten- Say Ceemamecimene yy] Qe asa opts (Seal, Aen Sethe ce setae anaes ina” face “haggard and . terror ht out nothing new. ial in the business of building pipelines. at the “Leathernecking.” Ned Sparks, now under contract to Radio pictures, and Louise Fazenda are cast in the best-roles of their careers. Opposite the comedians are Dunne, star of Ziegfeld’s are, teens Lilyan ‘Tashman, the best-dressed woman in films; Rita La Roy, Radio’s baby vamp, Baron von Brincken, Carl Gerrard and others. “Leathernecking,” adapted from the musical stage play, “Present Arms” was directed by Eddie Cline who re- ceived his comedy training from Mack Sennett. PARAMOUNT THEATRE Skeets Gallagher and Charlie Rug: gles, two of Paramount's most al ; comedians, are prominently cast in [”_— BARBS ——_—— OO Now that Lindy has purchased a farm in New Jersey does he expect to fly from chore to chore? ses 6 As between the girls and the humor in current comedies, we'd say a miss ‘was as good as a smile. : ek * Edna Wallace Hopper, though 65, lis to tour the vaudeville circuits in sald Hing Alfonso of Spain recently, “I like to drive my ine Sweeeewse reso” Thee a foreign correspondents meant, per- haps, when they referred to the rumblings of a Spanish revolution. * * * at @ recent convention Druggists the new Clara Bow picture, “Her|favoreti excluding bathing suits and Wedding, Night,” an Avery Hopwood auto tires from their sales lines. ‘What with profitable sandwich and Angry Fathi of yourself? ‘You've es learning for three years and you can only count What will you do in life Small Son: Be a referee at boxing matches.—Tit-Bits. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ‘w “ farce comedy of unusual and aivert- ing entertaining qualities. Also fea- rene tured in what undoubtedly 1s the best Clara Bow vehicles since the advent tho puyed eppeia Ruth Chalten | ——Quotations [Quotations —_} who ed opposite Rut this wife in feat life) in *A Lady of Quotations Scandal," and Rosita Moreno, the charming heroine of “The Santa Fe ro oe oe Anapechion Sosy 3 Dare Trail.” made I didnt see one single drunken The trouble begins on a train in the|man.” — Prohibition Administrator south of France. Skeets sees Clara,|Amos W. Woodcock. likes her and makes one grand play ‘ xe & for her. At one of the train stops,} “The plain truth is that the world Skeets and Clara got off the train|is passing through a perfectly natural book trade, maybe they regard other Commodities as drags on tne market. (Copyright, 1930,.NEA Service, Inc.) and while they are trying to convince|and normal reaction. Slowly but} Moths don't always live in luxury, oe natives that their French accent ly the forces that will bring about] but they hare expensive tastes. ‘ ' ‘ 4 ‘ \ \ ry 5)

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