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’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1930 THE BISMARCK TRIBUN An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ol Published by The \Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and we the postoffice at Bismarck ‘secon i er, George 8. ge Lshentle President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance is Daily by carrier per vear, --...--veoversmrsn yeveeereer $120 Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) -.essneene 7.20 Daily by mail per year, {in state, outside Bismarck) .ssssmsensenennen 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota w-wmennneee 6.00 eeveeenseserens 9 1.00 ssseersssorsee 2.50 woo 1.50 waretctassnctacccasisin S00 Weekly by mail in state per year .... Weekly by mail in state, three years Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year sscesneesseverenersanennsensoanccssenene 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 rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserves (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS ' (ae c Former! . Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK _ BOSTON Home to Roost With returns from all parts of the nation indicating @ sweeping victory for the Democrats in state and con- gressional elections Tuesday, political observers and the electorate may well pause to consider the factors which caused this startling reverse from the results of the presidential ballot in 1928. After the high tide comes the ebb and it was only natural that there should be a recession from the enor- mous Hoover plurality which gave the Republicans an almost unwieldy majority in the lower house of con- gress and materially strengthened its position in the senate. But this was no normal ebb in the fortunes of a political party. It was a recession such as the nation has not seen since 1910 when the ills of the Taft administra- tion culminated in Democratic victory in the by-elec- tions following the enactment of the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill. The Smoot-Hawley tariff measure, recently enacted, doubtless played its part in the result of this election. ‘Whether it is good or bad is beside the point. It un- doubtedly gave the anti-Hoover forces a real talking point and they made the most of it. But even a tariff bill could not reasonably be credited with the political turmoil which is evident to anyone viewing the results of this election. We must look elsewhere for the underlying cause of what is acknowl- edged to be a stinging defeat. ‘The obvious cause, of course, is a change in the senti- ment of the people. When we find that cause we have unearthed the reason for the upsurging of the forces of Democracy this year. No political clairvoyance is needed to find that cause in the economic condition which is besieging the coun- try. This, coupled with the Republican propaganda in the 1928 campaign—much too recent to be forgotten so soon—was the primary cause for the worst political back- lesh in a generation. In a manner of speaking, the election Tuesday saw political chickens come home to roost. And it would seem {->t they had rultiplied somewhat while they were awa: Although Mr. Hoover—and it is to his credit—did not so express himself, the Republican effort two years ago was directed toward convincing the people the: only a G. O. P. victory was needed to insure good times end pros- perity for everyone. In effect, Republican leaders as- sured the voters that a ballot for Mr, Hoover was a method of insuring continued prosperity and good times, They were riding the high tide of the Coolidge cra and the manner in which the nation believed them was expressed in the result. To this was added th: Demo- cratic defection over prohibition and other issues and the election was a stampede such as the nation never tefore had witnessed. But the propagandists did their work too well in 1928. ‘They implanted the idea so firmly in the public mind that it was not forgotten soon enough for them to escape the effects in the current campaign. They made some effort to debunk their arguments of two years previous but they dared not go too far for fear they would make themselves ridiculous, The experience of two years had led many voters to believe that they had been duped and this belief was reflected in the way they marked their ballots Tuesday. What this election will mean in the political history of the nation no one can estimate now. Its effect on business, economic, social and political conditions will be watched with interest and everyone will hope, now that the election is over, that the outcome was for the best. One thing the result may confidently be exp>cted to do and that is to make politicians more careful of the ‘sind of bunk they hand the public in the future. ‘The forces which govern the municipality, slate and nation are important, but not as much so as some other factors. In the past politicians have promised every- “ning it was possible for a political party to give and some things which can come only from a much higher power. They ha~- given the impression that ‘he man- r-v of a citizen's ~ ‘ng had evervthing to do with the individual's well-being. ‘The answer to this claim has long been obvious to many persons and this year it was more obvicys than ever before. The manner in which folks marked their ballots demonstrates that. ‘This upset should have a wholesome effect un those who sit in places of political trust and power in the state as well as in the nation, It should serve as a notice to everyone that promise must be matched by performance; that polities is not just a game to be played as the participant wills and without any recognizable rules, but a serious ‘usiness vhich must operate to the people's welfare if it is to be popular. The people of *-> U-**-1 States have tad quite enough persiflage served to them during political cam- paigns. The election Tuesday indicates that they now are demanding performance. The Road to Nowhere The American motorist is beginning to get pretty snooty on the subject of good roads. No longer is he content to take things as he finds them. When he goes driving, he wants to follow only the best highways there are. Bring him to a cross-roads and he will inevitably take the fork that looks the smoothest and the most heavily traveled. No one, of course, likes to be bumped, and sticking to the slickest pavement is ordinarily very sound; but the bumpy, narrow dirt road that wanders off to nowhere will often give the driver a lot more pleasure than the modern highway from which all bumps have been removed. Tt 1s, let us say, Sunday, and church and the Sunday dinner have been duly attended to. Mr. Average Ameri- fan gets out his car, piles himself and his family into it, and sets out to drive. What happens to him? Well, if he sticks to the good roads he is apt to have nice Sunday afternoon in the fall of the yei Hot- dog stands and filling stations make the roadside de-| pressing. If one comes to a lovely bit of scenery one cannot stop, or one will be tooted at by a thousand cars | following after. All in all, it isn’t so hot. i But there is a way out. Let the wandering motorist | deliberately seek out some utterly unpromising and neg- ; lected road, unpaved and untended, that wanders un- | obtrusively off from the main highway and loses itsclf in the farmlands. If he will follow such roads all after- noon, taking the bumps as they come, risking the mud- | holes and the narrow places, he can have motoring at) its best. It is on such roads that one can really savor the coun- tryside, One comes to drowsy farms, with snake-rail { fences whose corners harbor sumach, with weather- | beaten old barns innocent of advertisements, and orchards + whose leaves have turned a delicate soft brown and| whose branches droop low with ripe fruit. In the back- ground there are the hills and plains, swathed in the haze of autumn, mysterious and wistful, as if some pro- | found secret lurked in their empty dales. Now and then! —even close to large cities—the motorist will come to! some tiny cross-roads country town of whose very ¢x-} istence he had been ignorant, a town that looks precisely , as it did 40 years ago, except for the gasoline pump in| front of the general store. | And the best part of it is that the wandering sight- | seer can take his time, If he finds some vista of forest | land, its leaves aflame and its aisles clouded with a blue haze, as if the whole earth were dully smoldering, he can stop and look to his heart's content. He does not have ; to hurry. He does not have to be reminded that many things in this modern world are ugly and nerve-wrack- | ing. He can loaf along and draw peace and contentment into his soul. ‘Try it, sometime. Quit the main roads, hunt out some | untraveled byway that looks ‘as if it led to nowhere, | and follow it. Then you will learn the real joys of| motoring. Women Pilots in War Time? | The news that two women on the Pacific coast have | broken into commercial aviation by establishing uses) to train male pilots calls to mind the prediction recently | made by a magazine writer—that women, in the next | war, will take their places with men as the pilots of | combat planes. | This opens an interesting field for speculation—inter- esting, and somewhat depressing. Offhand, one can; think of no logical argument against it. Women have | demonstrated that they can make excellent pilots. They are surely as fearless as men, if not more so. Why not | let them fight in the air? i Of course, the last vestige of traditional chivalry would | vanish, But modern war, after all, isn’t very chivalrous any more. It would hardly be any less chivalrous to make fighters out of women than it is to drop lombs on | them when they are miles behind the line, as was done | in the last war. * i The Bears and Bulls The present agitation in favor of laws or other regula- | tions which would curb the activities of short-sellers o1 the stock market is probably all to the good, in that it at | least emphasizes the extent to which common, ordinar: | gambling enters into the fluctuations of our security prices; but while we are getting after the bear operator it might be an equally good thing to look into the activ- ities of the bull, as well. Last fall's stock market crash undoubtedly was hurried along by bears. But it will not do to lose sight of the fact that the crash came because stock prices had gone up out of all proportion to actual values; and for that the bull, and not the bear, was responsible. The opera- tor who seeks to force prices up can be quite as danger- ous to the country’s well-being 2s the operator who tries to force them down® The bear market could never have existed if it had not been preceded by an extended bull market. ‘Trouble is a lot of fun and fun is a lot of trouble, Editorial Comment itorials thought by othe out regard to wh The Tribune's pol eB Ww show the trend of They are published with- her they agree or disagree with 3. Russia in the Wheat Market (Mott Pionecr Press) The theory of the Soviet government of Russia seems to be that if every economic institution in the world can be destroyed, in some mysterious way the “common peo- ple” will be benefited thereby. It is based:on the old Marxian Socialist idea that himan nature is essentially honest, capable and industricus and that, given a chance at his own share of the world’s wealth, every man woud keep his hands off the other fellows share, do his own share of the world’s work, and all would be happy. The theory is as wrong-headed as its author. Every- body who knows anything about human nature knows that is not the way humanity is constituted. Everyoody who knows anything about economics knows that the way to build up prosperity is not to begin by tearing down the foundation of industry and business. But the little Socialist clique which just now dominates the millions of unintelligent Russian peasants—dominates them by force—is trying to tear down the world’s economic foundations in the hope of making everybody who works so dissatisfied that they will all become revolu- tionists and communists. That is clearly the motive behind the Russian govern- ment’s effort to depress the price of wheat in the United States. By “short selling” in the Chicago mar- ket, the secretary of agriculture states, the Soviet govern- ment has “beared” the wheat market to the financial detriment of every wheat grower. But we ‘have no idea that this will accomplish its apparent purpose, that of turning American farmers into Bolshevists. Chain Fright (Killdeer Herald) __A few years ago when the chain stores began spread- ing throughout the country it was the fashion for the small town dealers to just start counting the days when they would be eaten alive with not a ripple left on the surface to show where they had ever been in business. Some states were even silly enough to pass laws to drive ; the chains out of those states. ‘The big scare is over now. In the last few years the country stores have changed their methods, changed their appearance, have copied the cash system of the chains and have arranged thcir interiors for greater display and greater economy. To all this they have added the steady, aggressive advertising methods of the chains whose motto hes been “You heave to tell 'em to sell ‘em,” and altogether have been able, with the co- operation of their wholesale houses to meet chain store prices, any time. The fear of chain store competition has passed and now there are more independently owned country stores than ever, The following article from. the Commercial Bulletin, a. retail merchants trade journal, states the situation in- | terestingiy: A trade publication notes that two communilics in Texas and Alabama are the most recent to form associa- tions to drive chain stores out of their states, The rea- son for the formation of these associations is the sam= as that for all others—fear that the chain stores may drive out the local independent dealers. Intentions may be of the best, but if the people behind these movements investigated before acting they would find that their fears exaggerate the danger. As it is, they yield to something that can only be called chain fright. Compared with the situa’ fifteen years ago, in the grocery trade aione, there are more independent dealers now than then. What is more, the total of thelr busi- ness is about double what it was in the earlier period. There is no solid ground for chain fright. Those who yield to it are helping in the fight of inefficiency against efficioncy of anti-progress against progress. The chain store has made its appeal to the public through serv- ice entirely. Wha: Emerson said about the world mak- ing a path to the home of the man who could make More trouble than fun. Traffic does get heavy, on a he By ORG! SYNOPSIS: Denny Dorn, Greenwich Village artist, is st urd Fi dee ha ie green po EJ : i tive Murphy has_» small Denny’s hand. This will i disappears. The guests are they must stay in the house until the murder has groans and heavy footsteps are anda cellar, but as they start to through the doorway. cellar stairs, They y party. rangely He is found hanging by a enizes coi in decide to investigate. They ean find no one in the 2. upstairs again they see some o: Palmer discovers strange footprints are identical with the footprints Palmer bad found on the seat of a chair in the kitchenette. The ne flash on the volice are no nearer solving the mystery, when Dr. Gray accuses two persons of moving from their seats during those few seconds of darkness when Denny mct his death. & By E. V. Burkholder (Copyright, 1980, by New York Evening GRAPHIC) R. GRAY spoke with an ease that smacked pretty much of smugness. I wondered how he had returned to the * house so soon. He had left me just before I went down’in the cellar and said that he was going out. Not more than fifteen minutes had elapsed since then. It occurred to me that he had made a hurried trip. His words produced no visible ef- fect on Courtney. They did, however, on the rest of us. We were at our nerves’ end and beg brag J would cause us to sit up and take notice. “I don’t think you've made such & worderful Gieoorery said. “I haven't denied that I moved during that minute.” “No, you haven't denied it be- cause no one asked you,” Dr. Gray retcrted. “You know that it wouldn't do you any good now for you to deny it.” “I don’t know that we have to be subjected to a third degree from any one but Len Courtney said, “He's enough—without having to listen to the family doctor.” . Gray smiled at this crack against him. “No, you don’t have to listen to it, Courtney,” he said. “When I came up here you were ali arguing about what had hay guring that minute and 1 told you | Murphy co tell you what two of you had done.” \Brandford straightened up. “Sure, go ahead, Doc,” he said. “ started this. He shouldn’t object to it being finished. No—no—he shouldn't ce “I'm not ol en ,” Courtney re- torted. “But I don’t want to listen to another third degree.” “Since you admit that you moved,” moved,” Courtney plied. “What has that got to do with the murder?” “You knew that Dorn was going t> announce his engagement to Miss Marsh.” Dr. Gray said. “That didn’t hit you very well. You vanted to marry Marsh.” “Of course. 1 did.” Courtney an- said. swered, “And what is more, I am going to marry Miss Marsh.’ Brandford Jaughed in his drunken and humored way. “Yes. you — you'll — marry — her now.” he said. “Yes—you'll marry —her, now. Dorn’s dead—clear cut of the way.” These words produced a noticea- ble effect on all of us. It was not the fact that Brandford said them; it was the mere fact that he had repeated what was on some of our minds. Jane Marsh threw her head back, | [ng “I hardly think my private affairs heed to be aired in this way.” “Don't worry. little one,” Mona . “You'll be lucky if all they tal Brandford Wourhed ratter crudely at this and Jane Marsh bit her lips. “Gee, 1 wish 1 was in my little Mona groaned. 4s one pretty mess for @ chorus girl to get up in. “it's a dev Gf e mee for ail of SY a AT THE MOVIES | AT THE PARAMOUNT For the first time in the history of the talking screen, a concert pian- ist displays his art on the silver sheet. The pianist, in this: instance, has other attributes better known to screen. fans. for he. is: Ernest Tor- dence. Torrence plays the piano in “Call of the Flesh,” Ramon Novarro’s new musical film ‘which opens today at the Paramount theatre. It will be the first time his admirers have heard him at the piano, although in Holly- wood his musical evenings are well known to members of the screen colony. Torrence started his career as a concert pianist having studied music at the Conservatory in Stuttgart, Germany, and at the Royal Academy of Music in London. He won the - gyal Academy gold medal in 1900 for operatic singing and also the Westmoreland Scholarship. In 1901 he went on the stage -in London as an operatic baritone with the Savoy Opera company. Follow- ing this, he spent ten years in musical a better mousetrap than others finds its parallel here. “Sure, you'll marry her now,” he “Denny’s dead—clear out of about tonight is whom | in us,” I said. “Chorus girls are no different from ministers’ daughters around this place,” ish.I was a minister’s daugh- ter tonight,” Mona said. “But what's that got to do with the fact that Courtney moved from his chair. suppose before the night is over they will have us all jumping and running around when those ts, were off.” “Not unless you moved, Miss De- yore,” Dr. Gray said. “It happens that Mr. Courtney moved and left something in his tracks to show ee he moved. The police found | INCRIMINATING EVIDENCE “I know ee found it,” Court- ney sneered. “I had that out with sn't prove an: 4 have time to murder Born.” “I didn’t ou did,” Dr. Gra; replied. “I sitnply said,'Z could tell you who moved. I’m not saying who murdered Dorn.” “Why not let us in on that secret, too?” Courtney laughed coldly. “You seem to know so much.” “You'll likely know that before you leave this house,” Dr. Gray potted ae ed that bea you . The police have a pretty good idea who killed Dorn.” abhi Courtney didn’t make any rep: to this. T looked around the. room. Mavino was still glassy eyed. He was rubbing his hands together and his face was gray and si ct ing. Jane Marsh sat with her lij penny Coe | together. as if si were hol ding herself together with @ supreme effort. Courtney was looking at the floor, * Greta Ellis sat at the piano with- out saying a word. Her eyes weve glued on Dr. Gray. Not a muscle in her face moved. Brandford was f yd ot, a Lg A taking fe and a ie mystery @ per- fect drunken ease. Mona Devore, who alternated be- tween spells of silliness and abject r. was passing out of her recent spell of silly remarks into a spell of cecror, carette Whipple wasn’t much in this room killed it is up to seven of you to protect yourselves. I have no sym- murderer. I am Ic Apedaged T know.” “Who was other person that moved?” I asked. There was a moment of silence. You could have heard a pin drop Tcant say that thi can’t say that Is person ved,” Doctor Gray said. F can only say that the person was doing @ great dea) of faking when those its Were out.” couldn’t quite get what ne meant. But it wasn’t tong until be removed all suspense. We all stared at him. waiting for bis next words “This oersor was supposed to 2e with Kitty Gordon and other musical comedy stays. ‘Torrence and Ramon Novarro have e | wi | said, “He didn’t arrange his choad 5G tion ee doing somgthing when the lights were out, he Sent on, “But she ‘We all looked at Greta Ellis. She was the only person who had any- thing to do in that minute when Dorn was killed, She was supposed to_be playing the baga, ‘Wie on exo 80 wards, piano. i ‘. oer. walked over to the piano. “a 's were still sony Sn hin aie ee rece o pad DESIRE AND EXPECTATION she shrank away from him. He paid no atention to her, en Many people try to use the will in ‘Who remembers what piece Miss | 8aining better health, but I can as- Ellis was 61 d to be Pisving sure you that you will have much bet- when | the ts were off?” Dr. ter results if you use the powers of ory, et i was playing, ‘I'll be waiting for you’” I said quickly. I remem- bered the piece, There was certain irony in it for poor Denny. “All right,” Dr. pad replied. “This piano is an elt ic piano. i either play it by roll or by He ome a lever or something and started to play. It was | pl . “Till be waiting for you.” He shut off the plano and looked at us. We stared at Greta, who sat terror stricken at the far end of the piano bench. “That was the roll on the piano.” Dr. Gray said. “It had been played about one minute before it had been shut off. In other Ellis started that lights went off. What she was do- ing while the plano was playing. 1 don’t knog.” We all say something, but she didn’t. She got up slowly and walked out of the room. waited for Greta to Dr. Gray left a few minutes later, saying that he was going down to see He! Carpenter. We know what to do and it was several moments before any one spoke. Even Brandford, drunk as he was, remained silent. But finally he got up and shrugged his shoulders. an, Well—well——”_ he stammered. ‘Now—that we—know the two pco- ple—who moved, let's fifp a coin to—to—see which one—is guilty— and the rest—of us can go home.” “Shut your mouth,” Courtni snapped at him. “This is a hell @ time to joke.” “Maybe for you, but—not—for me.” Brandford laughed. “Sit down, George.” Loretta Whipple said. “Try to act sensible.” “What was Greta doing when the piano was playing?” Mona Devore whimpered. “She couldn't have killed Denny and hung him up.” “No one could do it in the time the lights were out.” I said. “But—but—some one did.” Mona hined. “You're right about that. Mona,” Loretta Whipple said. “I wish I had_nevér known Denny Dorn.” “Don't blame Denny for aie mur- ey of “But he arranged some party,” Loretta said. “Yes, some party,’ Mona chimed in. Jane Marsh said nothing. She hadn't said ten words during the whole procedure. She sat near Courtney, who patted her hand from time to time. We all looked at Courtney with suspicion in our eyes. ey saw this and remained silent. I was thinking about the little piece of linen—the clue that had been stolen off the table. I tried to recall everything that had hap- pened during those few seconds when we were all gathered around Jane Marsh and Greta. I couldn't dismiss the fact from my mind that Greta had suddenly gotten up from her seat and walked past that ta- ble. She had started the whole rumpus that gave some person & chance to steal that clue. But she had been in the midst of the argu- ment and had had no chance to Ret to the table to steal the piece of linen. { FATAL MOMENTS! What had Greta done in those fatal seconds of darkness? She had was a good pianist. She was the last person ir the world to resort to a player piano for music. She had not denied the fact that she didn’t play the piano. The unfin- ished roll of the piece she was play- ing was there. ‘The information about Courtney moving caused me to direct my sus- picions toward him. I didn’t like him and I was ready to believe that he would do anything to gain his end. The discovery that Jane Marsh was ¢1 to Denny was sur- prising. It was so surprising that 1 wasn’t ready to accept it until 1 had more proof. I knew Dorn. He was not the marrying kind. WHO IS GUILTY? 1 Yet all this did give certain color to a motive for the murder. The cold and beautiful face of Jane Marsh bothered me. There wes something about her that was strange and mysterious, No one seemed to know a great deal about her, . Before that night of terror was over we were to learn much about her. and what we did learn ex- ” Dr. Gray went on,|™m might have done. - What is this new horror which is xe to occur _in this house of mysterious death? Read the next installment of this ripping serial + tomorrow’: naver screen drama which comes to the Capital Theatre tomorrow. One would never suspect by looking at the desire and expectancy. You will find that in every case where health or some other valuable prize is to be won that these are much more power- ful agents than will power in bringing about the object you are trying to accomplish. Jesus, one of the master healers, expressed the value of expectancy when He said, “Thy faith hath made thee whole.” He meant that the pa- tient was healed because he expected to be. The same thought is brought out by Sir William Osler when he said that it is necessary to arouse “the feeling of buoyant expectancy which is the real curative agent.” Expectancy, when applied to health, means that you expect to get well. When applied to digestion it means that you expect your meals to agree with you. Many people get into the habit of expecting gas and digestive troubles after meals, This habit is so strong that they actually look for such disorders to show themselves, and you will find that if you look for gas and a burning sensation in your stomach you will probably be able to find them. Expectancy works both ways. Train yourself to expect health. Desire is another powerful force which you may use to help yourself to more abundant health. Without de- sire, no one would ever win anything. Think how much easier it is to do something which you greatly desire to do than something which you need to use your will for. If you will watch your own actions you will see that every one of them springs from some desire. If you greatly desire to be well, it will become much easier for you to do the things which build health. All of the great deeds of his- tory have been accomplished because someone was consumed with an over- powering desire. Great fortunes are made because men desire to escape poverty or want to give luxury to someone they love. ‘You must desire health with all your mind and body. Dwell on this desire. Think how splendid it is to have a strong, well body. Think of the pleasant things which you could do with more vitality. You could en- joy an inspiring hike into the moun- tains. You could swim across the pool with swift, strong strokes. With more endurance you could win more suc- cess. If you had a little more energy you could go after many of the things you want for yourself or your loved ones. Health is a splendid thing to desire in itself and with it you may win many of the things in life which are desirable on their own account. Ima- gine yourself as being well. Get a good mental picture of just how you are going to look when you have per- well - furnished, modern office main- tained by Charlie Hart—the leading character—that the man is anything but a prosperous real estate dealer. Velvet curtains, the solid mahogany desk —the well filled bookcases and efficient looking files—all suggest business integrity. Today Is the 1 i Anniversary of | GUY FAWKES DAY On Nov. 5, 1605, the attempt of Guy blow up the king, his ministers and the members of both the houses of Parliament, failed. This conspiracy, known as the “gunpowder plot,” was discovered when barrels of powder nad already been placed in the build- ing prepared for ignition. Parliament set aside Nov. 5 as a day of thanksgiving, known as Guy celebrated in parts of England to the present day. The celebrations are often marked by the public burning of effigies representing Fawkes. Fawkes was merely the tool of a band of men who, disappointed and angered by the persecution of Cath- olics by King James I, sought to over- throw the government and establish one of their own. The real originator of the plot was Robert Catesby. “Fawkes was tried, tortured and publicly executed in 1606. Nearly all of his fellow conspirators were killed on being arrested, or hanged. [Bares | The actress who asked $10,000 dam- ages for a broken nose probabiy felt she was entitled to the sum. by hook or crook. eee Before he became a football coach Knute Rockne says he was a mail sorter. And there's many a scrub hoping he'll come across with a letter when the season is over. xe ® There is a vague suspicion the architects are strongly backing the move for windowless buildings. It will mean fewer drafts you know.. zee “Things have come to a terrible ' HEREZ.TO JOUR HEALTH By, Br FRAME (Na qoutione vogetiag Weak end Dit wil be acaven tide of paper enly, Letters enat act exceed | Address Ds, Feash McCay, eave of Wis pepee. Fawkes, an English conspirator, to) , Fawkes Day, which continues to be); MSCOY CeALTH FAST WH TO ‘ta eddremed envelope aust be exctcnd.| fect health; see those rosy cheeks, see your eyes flashing with life and 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. vigor, see your body rightly formed and expressing health and beauty. ‘When advertisers want you to de- sire something, they give you a glow- ing colored picture of it. Do the same with your health picture. Get that snapshot fixed in your mind of the way you are going to look when you are gloriously, supremely well. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Symptoms of Heart Derangement Question: E. D. asks: “Could you tell me a remedy for my fingers? They get extremely cold, then they start swelling first in the joints and then work up to the fingertips. The soreness starts by small lumps form- ing under the skin, then becoming real red. By touching anything cold my fingers get blue and numb. Would like to find a cure, as I have to work for a living.” ‘Answer: Probably you are having some kind of functional heart trouble. Your physician should be able to tell you whether my guess is correct. Send large self-addressed stamped envelope for special articles on heart derangement and poor circulation. Health Not Measured on Scales Question: J. B. writes: “I am 51 years old, doing light inside work. Have been twenty pounds under- weight for the past thirty years, but never sick—always on the job and full of pep. I eat two meals a day. Do you think I should eat more to try to gain weight?” ‘Answer: Feeling as good as you do, I think it would be folly for you to do anything to try to gain weight. Your chances for reaching three score and ten are much better if your weight is kept slightly under that figure which is usually given in weight tables. If you will plan your meals so as to get all of the different food elements your body requires, you need never be afraid of eating too little. The danger is always in eating too much. Bheumatism and Neuritis Question: Mrs. R. K. asks: “Wil! you please explain the difference be- tween rheumatism and neuritis?” Answer: I consider the cause to be practically the same in rheumatism as in neuritis. With rheumatism, the toxemia locates in the muscles or joints, while in neuritis it gathers around the nerve trunks. The treat- ment in both these troubles consists in eliminating the toxemia responsi- ble. tional ruthlessness of mankind.”—H. G. Wells. * * “It is not sufficient to produce the best goods in the world: we must also have the best methods of selling them.”—The Lord Mayor of London. ses “TI think it is the duty to society to try to help the oppressed.”—Senora Portes Gil of Mexico. ————_— \ KFYR t ° o ‘THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6 550 Kilocyclen—345.1 Meters 5—Farm reporter in Washingtou 30<-Special bulletins: U. S. depart: ment of agricultur —Meditation period. ‘00—Shoppers’ guide program. 9:00—Sunshine hour, 10:00—Opening grain markets; weath er report. 10:10—Aunt Sammy. Arlington time signals. 00—Grain markets. 05—Organ program: Clara Morris. 12:00—Grain markets; Bismarck Tri} une news and weather; lunch- PM. 0. eon program, \—Music. jusical matinee melodies. 1:45—Grain markets: high, low, and close; Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. |, 2:00—Siesta hour: magazine. usic. tocks and bonds. ismarek Tribune sports items, ‘Bismarck ‘Tribune news, Good News radio Newscasting. 00—Studio program. WILL RECEIVE BIDS Minot, N. D., Nov. 5.—(#)—Bids for construction of a new mailing vesti- bule and extension of the driveway at the Minot postoffice, involving sev- eral thousand dollars, are to be open- ed here November 20. Proposals looking toward linking the North and Black seas by a canal will be considered at a conference of cen- tral European countries. Rescue operations are under way ir 19 states to salvage the fish supply hit by the drought. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: pass,” bemoaned the end as he | staff of assistants. So carefully is the always been close friends, having been drawn together by their com- mon love of music. Torrence recently set to music a collection of Spanish poems for Novarro’s tenor voice which will be featured in one of the latter's musicals at his Teatro Intime. CAPITOL THEATRE ‘The chief concern of the man who pursues the lawless trade of boot- legging is to camouflage his calling. With this end in view he frequently pretends to be engaged in some per- fectly respective business. To make the deception more convincing, some even go so far as to maintain impres- sive offices and employ an efficient true nature of the bootlegger’s busi- ness concealed, that frequently his own secretary does not know that the letters she is writing are not what they seem, but are in code. Their Tricks Revealed An interesting insight into the methods employed by these up-to- date lawbreakers is revealed in “The | the knife, comedy in the United States, playing Squealer,” Columbia's all - talking j ESS 7 RE ES | Stickler Solution ~ The above diagram shows ‘how the baker's pretzel can be cut Into ten pieces, with one straight cut of bungled the mney Sree quarterback. * * A sure way to be left in the cold, says Margin Max, is to take @ hot tip on the Daae * * An English nobleman has entered the ‘ring. After another title, no doubt. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) Quotations “The home and the child should be on a parity of dignity with agricul- ture, commerce and national de- fense.” — Representative Ruth Bryan Owen. who proposes introduction of g bill to create a Department of Home and Child in the president’s cabinet. ** * “The man capable of growing rich in @ year should be hanged 12 months before hand. arenes Mussolini. s “Marriage laws and divorces. even| Some people think they can push more than economic and belligerent | themselves forward by patting them- patriotism, remind me of the irra-| selves on the back, Ff eo Y ti pn. ih ee ae ene = Se —w w~y