The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 28, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUN 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 clas mail matter. George D. Mann .. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ........ Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail per year din state, outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail in state, per year .. Weekly by mail in state, three year Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, DOF YOAT ...ssesecesereseree sees 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 reserved. (Offi City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Funny—To the Rest of Us Some of the things which politicians do—and withal maintain a straight face—are hilariously funny to a great many citizens whose interest in politics is only casual. Every good citizen is interested in his local, state and federal government because it is his business to be 60, bus very few take their politics as a personal matter any more. Less and less each year are men looking to; Political action as a cure for their personal ills. The politician, of course, is never so casual. His posi- tion or his income depends upon his maintaining him- self in power or getting into power. It is a bread and butter game and politicians play it with all the energy which the rest of us show in pushing our own business. The difference is that the politician usually feels forced to cloak the motives which impel him to the things he does. Probably the best burlesque in some time is that now being enacted in Washington where Mr. Robert H. Lucas, executive director of the Republican national com- mittee, finds himself “on the pan” by reason of his op- Position to Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska. Mr. Lucas, it will be remembered, admitted that he tried to bring about the Nebraskan’s defeat in the election last fall. He was very quiet about it but the forces set in action by the energetic Mr. Nye of our own state finally brought Mr. Lucas to light as the dark menace in the G. O. P. woodpile. Mr. Norris and his cohorts are bellowing for the Lucas blood. They want to see the political guillotine operate on Mr. Lucas. They say it is dangerous to the party to have such a traitor in a place of high command. As might be expected, Mr. Lucas has countered with the idea that Mr. Norris and those who think like him should be expelled from the party. Mr. Norris, says Mr. Lucas, doesn’t represent his idea of what a Republican should be. It is all very important because, after all, the dif- ficulty affects the political organization now ruling the land but, at the same time, it is funny. The argument, of course, is to decide whether Mr. Lucas or Senator Norris is a Republican. When Senator Moses referred to the western independ- ent senators as “sons of wild jackasses,” it was merely a forerunner of the situation which now exists. There were signs on the political moon long before that. For in- stance, North Dakotans well remember the time when Mr. Norris and both North Dakota senators were kicked out into the cold by the powers of the Republican party. Later, of course, they were received back with open arms and given preference in the way of committee appoint- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE electrocution, telling him that he was sure to be executed and doing their miserable best to throw him into a paroxysm of terror, The Buckeye state might learn something by coming out here to North Dakota and taking a look at the state training school in Mandan. As such institutions go there are many larger in the land and many with more imposing buildings, but few can point to a more constructive record with regard to improving the physical, mental and moral outlook of the children who are sent there. After all, that is the real object of such institutions. Unless they do that they are drains on the public purse which have failed to justify themselves. The Names of America News that the town of Lineoleumville, on Staten Island, New York, has voted to change its name to something less bizarre leads one to hope that Linoleumville isn’t starting @ movement that will become general. Some of our place names are very odd, and some of them probably bring a blush to the native son’s cheek when he signs a hotel register; but most of them are descriptive, and it would be a mistake to change them. To begin with, there is Main street. For some reason this name evokes great merriment in the metropolitan centers, as if it were intrinsically amusing. If you are really enlightened, you will never mention Main strect without @ sneer .... But after all—what’s wrong with Main street as a name? It is perfectly apt. The street that gets that name is, usually, a town’s main street. Why not name it that way? Besides, Main street has become distinctive. It 1s typical of this time and place. In its bluntness, its lack of affectation and its commonness, Main street is per- haps our foremost Americanism. It is worth hanging | ‘on to. ‘ 1 Then there are town names. Some of them auto- matically shed light on old, forgotten history. Bad Axe, in Michigan, for instance, is wonderfully expressive. So are Medicine Bow, Wyoming, and Placerville, in Cali- fornia, and Prairie du Chien, in Wisconsin, and Baton Rouge, in Louisiana. There are smaller places, to’, whose names have a refreshing strangeness. Such towns as Horse Thief, Ariz; Black Bass, Ia.; Promptness, Pa.; Breezy Hill, Kan.; Defeated Creek, Ky.; Smoky Ordinary, Va.; Womble, N. C.; Good Water, Ala., and Hahatomka, Mo. —would any sensible man, living in a town with such a name, consent to having it changed to something less outlandish? For all names of this sort really mean something. No self-conscious Chamber of Commerce has tried to pret- tify them or get an urban flavor into their rural con- notation. If you dug back to the beginnings and got a description of each christening, you might have some good stories. That town of Horse Thief, for instance— doesn’t it speak for itself? And wouldn't you like to know how Defeated Creek got its name? The early geographers, in some cases, had a veritable genius for nomenclature. Cape Cod could not have a better name; nor could Old Point Comfort, or the Golden Gate, or the Great Smoky Mountain chain, or the En- chanted Mesa, or the Staked Plains of Texas, or Lake Minnetonka. But those names, musical and romantic in their sound, are beside the point. The important thing is for these lesser places to keep their names. Let Lineoleumville be the last to give up a picturesque title. Editorial Comment Rditorials printed _helow show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- uné’s policies, ‘ Begging the Question (Duluth Herald) While it will be fairer to judge the report of the president's crime commission when it appears and not in advance, still if accepted reports in Washington. are anywhere near correct it is clear that the report will be disappointing, especially to those who had hoped that it might throw light on prohibition and yield some sound practical advice on what to do about it. The latest Washington report, published in The Herald ments, In reality, therefore, the present battle has some historical precedent in our own times. It is amusing to the average citizen because he has Jong known that both Senator Norris and men like Mr. Lucas have been bound together only by the desire to “get somewhere” in politics. Each probably is sincere in his own definition of Republicanism, but the coalition i of the Norrises and the Lucases of the party for many years has been a sham of very thin fabric. To see it exposed and fought over, therefore, amuses the onlooker for he has been aware of the inconsistency of this situa- tion for many years. North Dakota Scores Again ‘Whatever one may say about football as a sport, there ds no denying its value as an advertising medium. North Dakota university's squad of pigskin chasers drew some comment when they went east this fall, made a creditable showing against the West Point cadets ‘and vanquished Duquesne. It must have served to give } the effete east a new conception of the way in which i things have developed here in the northwest. ‘The Pacific coast probably thinks of North Dakota as ® land of perpetual ice, snow and political wrangles. It served as an eye-opener, therefore, for the Nodaks to. capture the scalps of the Los Angeles Firemen in con- vineing fashion Christmas day. Some of the advertising which North Dakota has re- ceived outside its boundaries has been bad but the prej- udice which these misstatements have built up is bound to vanish with the better understanding athletic com- petition brings. The sight of a strong football team, composed of fine, clean young men, is bound to give other sections a new idea of North Dakota. Beating the other fellow in ® clean, fair manner is bound to give him new respect as well as keener understanding. For the sake of the state, therefore, as well as for the fine record which the university team already has made| and | this year, we are glad the Nodaks won. | ; Work vs. Amusement / Beware of both hard work and of too much amuse- / ment is the moral which may be drawn from the warn- ing of a big insurance company’s health department. ‘The death rate from pneumonia, be it known, is in- afe listed as leading causes. At this season of the year, the experts explain, most persons work the hardest and indulge in the widest social activities. Insufficient fresh air is accompanied by insufficient sleep. The system is weakened, so the doctors claim, and the germs which are ever present in the system get in their nasty work. ‘The result is a full-fledged case of pneumonia. _ Pew of us are aware that work and amusement, either “alone or together, could have such dire effects. A Case for Dismissals * It is good to learn that Ohio spared itself the infamy of putting a 14-year-old boy on trial for his life as a r . ‘The young delinquent, who had been driven thing Ohio ought to look into. this creasing and too much play as well as too much work]| jes last night, is to the effect that, in order to accomplish something like a unanimous report, prohibition is to be relegated to a subordinate place and the report devoted largely to a general discussion of the crime situation. When it is so palpable that prohibition is the fertile soil in which most of our organized crime flourishes, to discuss the crime situation while ignoring, for policy’s sake, the condition that causes it louks like a vast waste of breath. Crime is rife, especially in the large cities, because criminals find it absurdly profitable to violate the pro- hibition laws and thus are equipped with the most gigan- tic treasury that criminals ever rioted in. Out of that situation grows the criminal gang, the racketeer, the ae of public officials whose clothing bulges with big To discuss the gang, the racketeer and the corrupter of public officials while virtually ignoring the chief cause of them all would be to make a travesty of the whole proceeding. The only way’ to cure any disease is to find the cause and eradicate it. There is danger that the crime com- mission will ignore that fundamental rule of social Supiattes If it does, its report can have very little value. The Power Fight Begins iy (Washinton Star) ‘The shake-up in the federal power commission's per- sonnel represented in the requested resignations of Wil- Mam V. King, chief accountant; Charles A. Russell, solici- tor, and FP. E. Bonner, executive secretary, should be interpreted as a natural desire on the part of the newly appointed commissioners to start their difficult task with @ clean slate, and the enforced separations from the service of the former employes should be considered without prejudice to themselves or to their records. But because Mr. Russell and Mr. King have won for themselves the reputed title of “enemies of the power trusts,” as against the reputed title of “friend of the ‘power trusts” held by Mr. Bonner, the new commission- ers have exposed themselves to senate wrath and even EN RT LE ET | Ghylin By MARGARET DAVIS Miss Hilda Krause some time in Wilton. Willis Gill and family shopped in Bismarck last Tuesday. Erick Englebretchen’s children are sick with bad colds, Bobby being quite ill at this time. “= Arne Tosseth and two sisters motored to Wilton Thursday after- noon. ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Steve Little and chil- dren motored to Bismarck Monday. School No. 2 held a program Thursday evening. " H. B. Gill was a shopper in Regan Tuesday. Oliver Tosseth will leave for Fargo to visit with his sister, Mrs. Elbert Watkins, during the Wilton high school vacation. A dance was held in the Still hall Thursday night and several of the young people from here attended. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Little's chil- dren will take part in the Christmas program which will be held in Regan Christmas eve. Mrs. L. W. Davis and son, Owen, were Regan shoppers Thursday afternoon. Reuben Krause Eric Englebretchen. § Mrs. Erick Englebretchen’s aunt, Miss Nellie Lundberg, is quite ill at this writing. She is with a sister who is caring for her during her sickness. Staton Davis motored to Wilton Thursday with Arne Tosseth. Mrs. Edna Scott’s school No. 1 closed Friday for a two weeks vaca- tion. Several of the patrons from her school and their children took in the program at No. 2 school Thursday evening. Two of her pupils took part in the program. Those from ,Ghylin who went to Regan to the school Christmas pro- gram were Forest Little, Ida Tos- seth, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Rosendahl and daughters, Mrs. Peterson and son, Mrs. L. W. Davis and children. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mickleson were eunday, guests of Mr. and Mrs, Willis in, Ella Krause is helping Mrs. A. L. Garness of Regan with her house- work as Mrs. Garness is helping in the store during Al. Turtleout’s ab- sence, Arne Tosseth was a caller on L. W. Davis Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs, Eugene Perkins were business callers in Bismarck Satur- is spending is working for day. Miss Marilyn Johnson is on the sick list with a bad cold Ida Tosseth was a shopper in Bis- merck Saturday, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Anderson and daughter spent one day this week with Mrs. Anderson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Keirland. Mrs. Albert Johnson visited school No. 1 Friday afternoon. Walter Schmesky was a Regan shopper Thursday afternoon. School No. 3 had a program Mon- day evening. Miss Vina Oder is the teacher. Saturday afternoon shoppers in Regan were Mr. and Mrs. Louis King and Marie, Mr. and Mrs. Nels Alm and Hollis, Jim Louie, Nels Tosseth, L. W. Davis and family, Mrs. J. Keir- land, Mrs. Iva Keator and daughter and John Drawver, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Anderson, Alfred Anderson and Henry Strom. a | Frances | By MRS. WALTER DIETZMAN Henry Miller took the pupils of Mrs. Moffitt’s school in Frances to Bismarck Monday to see Santa Claus. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Neth also took their two sons to Bismarck the same day. Andrew and Eddy Schauer were callers in Bismarck Monday. John McCormick called on his brother, Charles, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dietzman call- ed on Mrs. Sarah Moffitt at the school house Tuesday evening. John Glum was a caller at the Floyd Owen home Wednesday. Paul Ryberg was a caller at the Henry Miller home Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dietzman went to Bismarck Thursday to do some Christmas shopping. Henry Klean of south of Menoken delivered a load of wood to Adam Schauer Thursday. Paul McCormick and ,Carl Muth were callers at the F. L, Owen home Thursday evening. John Engdaul and Art Fricke were callers at the Dietzman home Wed- nesday noon. Alfred French of Bismarck, who drives an oil truck for the Sinclair Oil Co., was out in this vicinity Wed- bt Walter Dietzman and son, Edwin, were callers at the Owen home Sat- ys % Lawrence Madland was a calter in McKenzie Saturday. Miss Margret Olson, teacher of the West Sibley school, had her Christ- mas program Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Craig and daughter, Josephine, were shoppers in Bismarck Thursday. Quite a few of the young folks from this vicinity attended the dance at Menoken Saturday night. Walter Dietzman and son were callers at the McCormick home Sun- day morning. Mrs. Sarah Moffitt, teacher of the East Frances school, gave a Christ- | 1 mas program and box social Satur- day night, which was quite well at- tended. Floyd Owen was a caller at the Geo. Wachal home Thursday night. Shoppers in Bismarck Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Owen, John Olsen, Bill Neth and Henry and Harold Miller. Arthur Kershaw came home Fri- day to spend his Christmas vacation with his parents. ee Lein By OLGA M. RISE Lewis and Olaf Vick and Joseph Rise called at the Larson and Fields homes Tuesday. Supper guests at the Alfred Arne- son home Sunday evening were M. A. Lien and children, Tilmer, Clara and Hazel, and Nina Waiste. Joseph Rise spent Sunday at the Ole Spilde home. Constance and Valdemar Lein ac- companied by Lewis Vick motored to Driscoll Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barkman and Dotty visited at the John Rise home Sunday evening. Milton Severson, who is attending high school at Windsor, N. Dak., re- turned home Friday to spend his Christmas vacation. Arnold Christianson spent Friday evening and Saturday at the M. A Lien home. e Helmer Arneson helped John Rise repair his truck Saturday. Arnold Christianson and Tilmer Lien visited at the Ole Spilde and ohn Rise homes Saturday evening. There will be a Christmas pro- gram at the church Saturday even- ing, December 27 at 8 o’clock. Art Bjorhus motored to Regan Thursday. Harry Helgeson, who has spent a few days with his brother, Alvin, returned home with him. Ernest Rise is spending his vaca- tion at his parental home. John Rise, Alfred and Seymour Arneson and Harold Christianson hauled hogs to Driscoll Monday. Olaus Helgeson was a caller at the John Rise home Monday. Joseph, Selma and Ernest Rise motored to Wing Tuesday. Olga and Olive, who are employed near there, returned home with them to spend the Christmas vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Barkman and daughter, Dotty, visited at the Al- fred Arneson home Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. motored to Wing Tuesday. Helmer, and Eddie Arneson, Ar- nold Christianson and Marvin Berg, Lewis, Olaf, Vick and Valdemar Lein motored to Driscoll Monday. Jackson county, Ore., collected $39,000 in grazing fees from cattle- men in a year. o— | OUT OUK WAY ‘ By Williams | MY Boy, HERE, Just Quit SCHOOL AAY 1 THOT. MAYBE to threats that their confirmations will be reconsidered. According to the theory behind the attack on the com- missioners, it was a wise step to let Mr. Bonner go, but @ betrayal of the public trust not to retain Mr. Russell Mr. . King. Is this good reasoning? The old power commission won more prominence by the internal strife between the three employes concerned than by any acts of com- mission or omission in connection with regulation of power companies. If Mr. Bonner’s friendliness to the Power trusts was enough to make his continued service’ with the commission inadvisable, the same reasoning ‘could, ‘and obviously has been applied, in considering the inadvisability of continuing the‘services of Mr. Rus- sell and Mr. King, the “enemies” of the power compan- . The commission is a regulatory and quasi-judicial body. It would be reprehensible for it to begin its func- tions with personnel that is biased in either direction. And without attributing to any of the employes con- cerned a bias that prevents honest public service, the new commission is amply justified in wanting to begin its work with expert help of its own choice. As for the practical considerations involved in the at- tack on the new commissioners, the threat to “recon- sider” their nominations is rather absurd. They have been by the senate and have taken their oaths They are removable only on specific grounds proved charges. The time limit of, a number of leg- islative days within which moves to reconsider legisla- tion may be made does not apply, of course, to legisla tion that has been enacted into law by the president’ ,Signature. Nor has it anything to do with appointments, when the appointees have entered office. The selection of subordinate personnel of the power commission is none of the senate’s business anyway Such personnel does not have to be confirmed by the senate. Unless the senate desires to extend its power of ap- proval of presidential appointments to the examination and approval of every minor employe selected for a gov- ernment job, the vociferous critics of the new power commission may as well restrain themselves. Otherwise they will spend their breath in vain. FOR AWHILE. lo lo lo lo o oe SORRY, CANE Bor wou , KNOW THERS ALOT O' MEN You MIGHT HAVE | OFF HERE eHeULOA SOMETHIN'—OH, | AN EVERYWHERE Just ANY THIN" elise. FACT WHY HE ABO. U. 6. PAT. OFF.01820 BY NEA GOOD NIGHT! TH size OF “THAT LooT}! L.Donir Beueve | LONG AGO- HE CAN GET A JOB ANYPLACE RIGHT NOW, YES, BuT THER 4 PROB WAS wor" THEN. HE WASTED TILL WE WAS SURE HE COULONT GET A 508. MOS ARE BRIGHTES THAN, WHEN You AN' = WAS MOONG, MAGGIE / TRWLLAMS cx, me. 1221) BY DR. KK mc 4 My Me co Wag to beallte’ QUESTIONS IN REGARD TO TH © DIET wi 4 caged sorene eons rohit A REPLY © 1926 MeCOY HELIN SERVICE “LOS ANGELES: CAL: DEFECTS CAUSE BACKWARD | some defect of Fortunately, child labor is no long- er popular, although in the not very distant past it was not uncommon for children of six and eight years of age to labor in ill-lighted and badly ventilated factories from ten to twelve hours a day. These long hours resulted in crippled bodies and dwarfed intellects. Even though a great improvement has taken place in most civilized communities, there is much progress that could be made. There are still quite a few states and countries where the fourteen year age limit is not regulated by law, and in others, thful develop its full strength until the age of twenty-five. If during the grow- ing period the muscles are held in a cramped position, or used for eight or ten hours a day, it is found to pro- duce a lopsided condition. Often dis- eases arise in immatured working children which can be directly traced to the occupation. For the body to develop properly it is necessary to have @ great variation of exercise during the day. Even school work, with the child sitting for several hours a day in one position, may re- sult in certain physical handicaps, such as crooked spines or one should- er higher than the other. The chest is often cramped, making the child susceptible to tuberculosis. This tendency must be overcome by defi- nite periods of regular exercise, which fortunately is now compulsory most schools. When for some reason it is necessary that a child work, care and watchfulness should be used to see that the child is not strained, and there should be sufficient change in occupation and recreation to balance the task. Once the body has become deformed, it is practically impossible to overcome the harm done. The bones are not readily changed once they have become set. Parents have @ great responsibility in rearing chil- dren, for~health is the best endow- ment they may give to a child. The aim should be a good mind in a sound rector will be able to tell you just what exercises the child should take. It should not be forgotten also that the diet plays an important part in the bone formation of a child, and you should see to it that your child is properly and adequately nourished. The eyes should also receive atten- tion. There are thousands of chil- dren handicapped by poor eyesight '.| unknown to parents and even to the a School merely are suffering from the eyes oe re 4 are beginning to real iow im- ore Jt the teettr are to the health. Dr. McCoy will gladi, personal questions on di ly answer health and let addressed to him, care of envelope for reply. ny children are unable to proper iy digest food because of bad teeth. — Others are poisoned by abscessed / teeth, and may be nervous because of the teeth growing in improperly. Every child should be taken to the ¢ dentist once or twice a year for an examination of the teeth. Defects in children should be cor- rected as soon as they are noticed, and any neglect to do this may irre- trievably injure the child's health and chances for future happiness. Nc parent would do this intentionally, but unfortunately the best intentions in the world are valueless if vigilance is not constantly exercised. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Torticollis Question: B. D. writes: “I would appreciate any suggestions or diet or treatment in a case of chronic tor- , ticollis of long standing.” Answer: The treatment I have found most satisfactory for this con- dition is the use of a short orange juice fast at intervals of about a - month apart. Hot applications to the neck, or treatments with the deep therapy lamp or diathermy are also in helpful. Osteopathic or chiropractic treatments along with the fasting and dieting regimen will also tend to has- ten a cure. Buttermilk Question: A. G. asks: “Would buttermilk be good in the case of in- flammation of the gall bladder?” Answer: An exclusive diet of but-+ termilk is sometimes effective in gall bladder disorders. About three quarts @ day should be taken. ‘ The Cardoon ‘Question: Mrs. B. asks: “What kind of a vegetable is a cardoon? Are there any special methods of growing or preparing it?” Answer: The cardoon is a plant Closely related to the French arti- choke, and is considered by many authorities to be the same plant slightly changed through the process of selection and cultivation. The Plant is first blanched either in the field or under glass-covered pots. The midrib of the leaf is the part used. ‘They may be cooked and served like any ordinary vegetable or used in salads. It has an agreeable flavor of its own. The most valuable of these plants are those with the thick- est midribs, 4 Prunes Question: Mrs. H. D. asks: prunes contain acid?” Answer: Dried prunes do contain & small amount of acid, but not as much as the fresh prune plum. “Do _Today Is the ‘Anniversary of ———S KEPLER’S BIRTH On Dec. 27, 1571, Johann Kepler, one of the world’s greatest astrono- mers, was born at Wurttemberg, Ger- many. As a child he was sickly, but ex- ceedingly precocious. At the age of 17 he received his bachelor’s degree from the Univesrity of Tubingen. he knew little of the subject, Kepler was unwillingly made to ac- read Pg class in astronomy at Graz Forced into this branch of learn- ing, he made the best of it. He be- ‘came imperial mathematical and astrologer and made the acquaintance of such scientists as Galileo and Alfred Arneson} Brahe. Kepler's chief title to fame is his biesagins Mscggy Poriagg tan na ol gy eh In 1629 he called the attention of astronomers to the approaching - sits of Mercury and Venus. That of , which occurred on Nov. 7, 1631, was the first transit of a planet across the sun ever observed. Kepler did pioneer work on several important scientific subjects. Quotations if from without, and a little more atten< tion to the within.— Former Ambas- sador Alanson B, Houghton. * * ® It is good for religion that there should be some atheists, whether it is good for the atheists or not.—Archz bishop of York. * * * If we want material results we must fulfill material conditions. — Rev,' Harry Emerson Fordick, Rien re BARBS i —_——_—_—_—_ Merchandise is being sold on the installment plan in Germany. Every purchase there, of course, is a “mark” down. * * * . Though Flo Piegfeld. has warned his chorus girls not to over-indulge in sports, they can be depended upon to exercise their rights’ : **s *& Then there’s the boy who thougist his mother was to try her hand at arithmetic when she told him he wag driving her to distraction. * * * Professional basketball is passing in western cities. Doubtless because of insufficient net returns. * * * A Tennessee man says he hasn't fe 16 years. He must be dream: ee x “There's no rest for the wicked,” a4 those cricket fellows in England might say. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Ingd GOLD IN TURKEY

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