The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 2, 1928, Page 4

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.PAGE FOUR -The Bismarck Tribune An ladependent Newspaper . THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by ‘he Bismarck Tribuse C mpany, Bis- marck, N. D., and enterea at the ice at Bis- farck as second class mail matter, Ceorge D. Mann ... President an. Publisber | | Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | Daily by carrier, per ysar 20) Daily by mail, per year, ( 20) Daily by mail, per ye (in state outside marck) . Daily by mail, sutside of North Dal 60 60 1.00 2.50 | Weekly by mail, in state, per year Weekly by mail, :.1 state, three y Weekly by mail, outside of North year... Member Aadit Barena of Circalation Member of The Associated ress The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news uispatches 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 ali other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE ta bees ' - NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bulg. . CHICAGO DETPOIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg. (Official City. State and County Newspaper) This Day of Crime | It would be rather easy to get quite pes-| simistic about the condition of the United, States right now, if you tried to. Much of the daily news isn’t at all comfort-/} ing. There is Chicago, where crime seems to be absolutely defiant to society. There are daily murders elsewhere, ranging from holdup shootings to frightful tragedies like the Hick- man affair. There are the slimy details of the; Teapot Dome affair in Washington. There are assorted rascalities and imbecilities of all) varieties. The sum total is, at times, depressing. It would be quite easy to conclude that civilization is going to the bowwows. But, after all, we do pretty well—considering. ‘We mustn’t be impatient; mustn’t expect too) much of ourselves. The ancestors of every one of us a thousand years ago were plunged in barbarism. Europe, in the dark ages, was not an admirable place. Its most civilized centers were crude and un- tamed. Its poorer classes were hardly a step above the level of the brutes. The vast hinter- land regions housed myriads of utter savages. In all the western world, in the year 928 A. D., there was not one man we could call educated, judged by anything like modern standards; there were not more than a handful free from the grip of monstrous superstitions. There was no rule but the rule of might. That was a thousand years ago. An im- partial witness from a more enlightened planet might easily have concluded that all mankind was fast on the road to beasthood. The spirits of those ignorant, selfish an- cestors of ours still live in us. We haven't yet had time to outgrow them. A thousand years is not a long time in the evolution of society. The low peasant of the dark ages is our grand- father, not too many times removed ; he, or the ue blood-thirsty war lord who ruled im. This is not said to excuse the defects of present-day society. It does not make the mis- deeds of our Hickmans, our Falls, our Sinclairs, our Capones, any less heinous. But it does help us to understand how such things can happen. It does help us to keep from giving | way to pessimism when we think of the future. 4 Shocking things can happen in Twentieth Century America. To keep them from over- “whelming you, read a good, detailed history of | Europe covering the period beginning about 800 A.D. It will help you to keep hopeful. Rights of Children The rights of children. How strangely those words would have sounded a century ago. In that day a parent, under the law, had a right to the child and to the services and earnings of the child, but little was said about the rights of the child and less still was said about the enforcing of such rights as might have existed in the written code of the times. One of the most encouraging signs of the i it age is society’s increasing interest in ‘the child, the protections thrown up about the child and the definition of the rights of chil- dren. The change in public attitude toward “ithe child followed the shift from hand manu- facture to machine manufacture. The day is jt when children could be worked from 12 to hours a day under deplorable conditions and at poor wages. Certain rights of the child are today recognized as inalienable. The extra-legal rights are the right to be «well born, the right to a good environment and the right to parental comradeship. ’ Then there is the legal rights to an educa- tion, to play and to be protected from ex- | ‘they exist. Moving Faster a New York newspaper e following item of police new: “A chauffeur employed by William K. Van- F seston mith renting in Se th 8 g in Seven at Forty-first street at 20 miles ‘boy's book written sbout the same time boy hero” his “pow. * Bh w ix over the road at the “terrific speed les an hour.” U. S. merchant marine. tion remained as derelict as shipping board took a definite s tralia, New Zealand, the Philippines, Chin Y Japan—sold to a joint subsidiary of the Matson furnish both express and mail serv- American | to the Tacoma Oriental Steamship compan . Society, through governmental and other ordered ‘agencies, is more and more making up for the| next benefit of the child home deficiencies whete|“Rlementary Treatise on Determinants” (1869) she was first puzzled and then amused. Dodgson had been mathematical lecturer at Christ Church college, Oxford, his alma mater. Even Sotheby’s, we imagine, could not find a bidder for the original autograph manuscript of the “Treatise,” or of “A Syllabus of Plane Algebraical Geometry,” or of “The Formulae of Plane Trigonometry,” which were Dodgson’s pride, The world tolerates mathematicians. It 80 /revels in what stirs its fancy. The “Table of shows 70 or perhaps 90. Transcontinental tourists as they pass from state to state encounter speed limits ranging from “not more than 8 miles an hour” to “not less than 40 miles per hour.” Speed limits are not determined so much by the “speed” of the lawmakers as by the char- acter of the highways, the character of the traffic and the predominating type of motorist in the state or community. What is a safe speed on one highway or for one automobile may be unsafe on another road or for car. Just because country squires and cross-roads constables believe traveling at the rate of 15 miles is reckless driving, and just because the legislatures of some states still establish what appear to be ridiculously low speed limits are not in themselves proofs that those responsible have not advanced beyond the fear stage in automobile history. Boosters Go in for Yells Life will not be more peaceful when a booster for a seashore resort has had his reck- less way with it. He is about to offer a prize for the “best yell or municipal cry to musical accompaniment.” The scream of an outraged vis siders that he has been ov narged at his hotel would be one way of arriving at this curious addition to local customs, but presum- ably in most cases that would be neither loud itor who con |nor long enough to satisfy the author of the idea. But it may be taken as certain that if one watering place disc a satisfactory yell, and it proves—to some people—an attraction, other cities and resorts will not be long in add- ing to the clamor. And then the United States will ring from one end to the other with the Raleigh Roar, the Batimore Bloat, the Seattle Screech, the Hollywood Hoot, the Atlantic City Cry, the Easton Echo, the Miami Moan, the Philadelphia Fury and ma from the Albany Agony down to the Zion Zeal. There are some “boosts” that do not boost. The “community cry” is one of them. It is not unlikely that vacationists seeking peace and quiet will pass by even the winner of the na- tional municipal yell contest and betake them-| selves to the Sahara Silence. The city that doesn’t need wider strects is dead. OE carn ce Editorial Comment | So issslslsnsats tee ciate etaeetecertanancinanas Selling Out (Time) Figures are quoted con and hopes are ad-| vanced pro on the barnacle-hcttomed question | of whether or not the government should stay in the shipping business and continue in that (so far) ineffective way to try to build up the Last week the que: ever, but the U. § parently vexed no one very much. It sold the U. S. entirely out of the shipping business on the Pacific coast. Of the 500 or so transoceanic merchantmen owned in the U. S., three-fifths are owned by the government. But only thirty-nine were on the Pacific coast. These the shipping board sold for $3,743,661 in three groups: 1—The twenty-one ships of the American Australia Orient line, plying between San Francisco and Los Angeles and ports in Au Navigation company and the Hawaiian Steamship company. 2—The eleven ships of the Oregon Oriental line, plying from Portland to China and Japan —sold to a corporation headed by Pres dent K. D. Dawson of the Columbia Pacific Shipping company. 3—The seven cargo vessels of the American | Oriental Mail line, which famed Robert Dollar has been operating for the U. S. as les: sold All the sales were on a basis of 21% per cent cash down, 22 per cent when the ships are transferred, the balance is seven and one-half years with interest at 414 per cent, with guar- antees by the buyers to operate the ships for at least five years. The Manuscript of “Alice” (Brooklyn Eagle) Lucky will be the collector who gets for the “expected price” of $25,000 at a Sotheby’s sale in London the original autograph copy of “Alice's Adventures in Wonderland”—92 pages with 37 pen-and-ink drawings by the author and a photograph pasted in of the original of Alice, a daughter of Dean Henry George Liddell of the Liddel & Scott Lexicon, familiar to all schoolboys. “Alice” is immortal. i Just as mathematical preeminence doesn’t prevent Eamon de Valera from being a venture- some Irish rebel, and doesn’t prevent Bertrand ploitation. Buesell from being an advanced Socialist, it “Alice” was published in 1865. Queen Vic- toria read it and was highly pleased. She that the author should send her his book. When she received a copy of the Logarithms” may be vital to science, but “The Arabian Nights” need fear no rivalry. of “our Fame tem Dodgson to go further, and twocylindar automobile” until. it "was|e did not free wanes rhe eh a ae aw Glass” and “The Hunting of the Snark” swelled his royalties. But he was busy with books till his death in 1898 and was never untrue to his earlier love. The psychology of the author of “Alice” is almost as interesting as the book itself. Nn as a character has compelled the world’s attention. another'| fective ‘publicity gnd advertising tep which ap-! and Transit company, which will es- ‘COOLIDGE WILL - "BENEFIT STATE | Tourists Attracted to Summer White House Will Ap- preciate North Dakota Fargo, N. D., June 2.—More ef- j will come to the Northwest as a | result of President Coolidge spend-| ing the summer near Superior than | would result in spending a million | dollars on advertising this secti | the Greatey North Dakota Ass | sued today. “The presence of the President’s party in northern Wisconsin will | send thousands of tourists across | North Dakota highways to the Yel- |lowstone and Glacier National | Parks and the Canadian North- | west,” the asscciation declares. “The big endeavor of this association in encguraging motorists to pass | through North Dakota has been to | popularize the northern route to the west. With the President near Su- perior, thousands of tourists from the east and central states will swing up into the Arrowhead coun- |try before going to the parks. | That means that they must cross | North Dakota. Fortunately, North | Dakota’s principal highways east and west are almost compieted so that from the standpoint of good roads this state will make the right kind of an impression on visitors. | ‘The big value of having motor tourists cross® North Dakota is not | in the cash they spend. The big re- |turns are from the favorable ad- vertising. To see North Dakota first hand is to appreciate our pro- | gress and development. These | tourists will have occasion to see | North Dakota and see for them- |s just what is being accom- | by way of development.” | a splendid thing for the en- | tire Northwest section to have | President Coolidge return. Scores of newspaper men will again spend their summer in this section and they will again tell the rest of the | world how this section is progress- ing. If a fund of a million dollars | could be raised to be spent on ad- ising the Northwest, the results ild not be as great as the adver- tising and publicity we will receive by having the summer White House p here for three months.” |Passenger Planes to Operate from Fargo to St. Paul) Minneapolis, Minn., June 1) | | Beginning about June 10, passenger | jairplanes will wing their way be- been set for launching the service, |planes are ready and only final ar- rangements remain to be completed, | according to J. L. Pierce, secretary- treasurer of the Mid-Plane Sales tablish the line. Two cabin monoplanes, each cap- able of carrying four pasengers, will | be used on the route. Each plane | will make a round trip daily, and {the running time is expected to be approximately two and _ one-half j hours. | Mr. Pierce said that establishment of the service would be purely ex- i perimental and is planned for a 90- {day period. If the trial period re- jsults are favorable, flying will be continued on a permanent basis. The company plans ultimately to ice if the experiment is successful. Regular stops will be made at St. Cloud and Alexandria, for the con- venience of passengers. Airport cilities have been obtained, Pierce id. Duluth, Superior, Grand Forks, Aberdeen and other Northwest cities will be served by passenger planes to and from the Twin Cities Fargo line proves successful, said. Extensions to Winni- peg are also being considered. Surveys are now being made to determine traffic potentialities of |the proposed routes, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNF: 1928 ‘steps on the gas” until the speedometer ation declared in a statement is-/ jtween Fargo and the Twin Cities,| Strigg] to Milton Junction, Wis. th St. Cloud and Alexandria as|Mise*Adeline A’ Neos te Pickers intermediate points. ville, N Esther Maxwell to Although no definite date has . Olson to Lawrence Stallings-Maxwell Ander- son stage play, “what Price Glory? Boyd was the star of “The Volga Boatman,” and Mary Astoy was leading lady for Douglas Fairbanks {in “Don Q,” and for John Barry- more in “Beau Brummel.” Where the war euds, the story of “Two Arabian Knights” begins. In no sense derived from Omar Khay- yam’s tales, the title is explained by the fact that the American buck private and top sergeant are knighted by an Emir in Arabia for no good reason. The private is less concerned with a knighthood than with the Emir’s daughter, Anis Bin | Adham, who is really Mary Astor. The following Will school stu- dents had perfect attendance rec: ords during the last year: First | srade—George D. Bell; third grade; —Bobby Hill, Clarence Putz and Ethel Meader; seventh grade— Leone ‘Arnold, Justine Bahmer, Viola Barth, Claire Brier, Vivian Coghlen, Mary Cowan, Claire de Rochford, Ruth Friess, George Gul- lickson, Luella Harding, August Helfenstein, Jack Humphreys, Lilly Iilehen, Eugene Imus, Marian Isam- inger, ‘Dorothy Kenelly, Paul Mil- hollan, Norman Nelson, Ellsworth Smith, Beatrice Vater and Edris Wilcox; eighth grade — Mildred Britton, Arthur Cram, Robert |Edick, Ralph Goddard, Richard |Hugelman, Erwin Lee, Edna Olm- |stead, Helen Parke, Marian Pillen, Charles Shearn, Ruth Shuren, Al- vin Waddington and Joseph Wright. * Honor roll students at the Will r the closing month of the y re: Seventh A—Peg- .» Sophia Fredrickson, fannaford, Gladys Han- Evelyn , son, Mathew Miller, Marie Nixon, Freda Schlickenmayer, Virginia Smith, Richard Tiedman, Beatrice Vater, Neva Vettel, Wilma Wenzel; seventh B--Mary Bankston, Howard Corwin; nth C—Luella Har- ding; ‘eighth B—Emily Brown, Leona Jordan; eighth A--Joe Byrne, Ernestine Dobler, Robert Hoskins, Willowbelle Matscheck, Nina Mel- ville, Lloyd Murphy, Alpha Nelson, Ione Noggle, Helen’ Parke, Russell Saxvik, Charles Shearn, Dorothy Tiedman, Omer Walla, Joseph Wright. cell Teachers in the Will school, ex- cept those whose homes are in the city, have gone to their homes for the summer with the exception of Miss Eloise McKee, who will attend the summer session of the Univer- sity of Texas at Austin, Texas. Miss Marie Huber, Miss Leila Brown and Miss Gertrude Evarts will remain at their homes here. Miss Esther Teichman has gone to Fargo, Miss Hulda Salem _ to Portage, Wis., } ‘a McGet- tigan to Superior, Miss Jessie J , and Miss Charlotte Sehmi t to Milbank, S. D. Marian Isaminger, student at the Will school during the last year. holds the enviable record of hav- ing never been absent nor tardy during the seven years in which she has attended school. * Lloyd Murphy of the Junér High, with an average for the year was awarded the history iven annually by the local chapter of the Daughters of the Americn Revolution. Robert Hos- kins, with an average of 97.4, was a close second. two boys were guests of honor at a luncheon at the Country club yesterday, given by the D. A. R. chapter, and the medal was presented to Lloyd Morphy, by Mrs. A. M. Christian- son. Mrs, R. D. Hoskins presided at the luncheon. Miss Mabel Olson, instructor in history, and Miss Marie Huber, principal of the, Junior High, were also guests at the luncheon. see . Joseph Wright, Omer Wal Charles Shearn received the highes' averages in eighth grade arithmetic during the last school year at the Will school and thereby won the right to compete in the arithmetic examinations which will be given in June to representatives from all schools in tl 1e, county. ° James W. Foley, North Dakota and ES i At the Movies ‘ ts iit ELTINGE THEATRE When a film star turns Follies dancer for one picture, she trains for the event like a boxer trains for a bout—if she’s wise. Unless she does, there’s an agony of sore muscles to endure while she’s dancing and acting. For a month before Billie Dove began her chorus scenes in “The Heart of a Follies Girl,” her latest picture coming to the Eltinge for Monday and Tuesday, she trained for the part. Already an accomp- lished dancer, her training merely took the form of gradual flexing of muscles to be used, through the fol- lowing exercises: Rope skipping. Backward and Leg flexing on a forward bends, chorus bar. Back and front kicks. Dancing to music. zy She began this exercise program with a half-hour poring and eve- ning. This was increased daily dur- ing the entire month. When the dancing scenes were taken—and they meant eight to ten hours of dancing per day—she suffered no muscular twinge at Larry Kent plays opposite Miss Dove in “The Heart of a Follies Girl,” and Lowell Sherman is the villain of the piece. Mildred Harris, Clarissa Selwynne and fifty beauti- ful and shapely Hollywood chorus CAPITOL THEATRE “Two Arabian William Boyd, Mary Aster and Louis Wolheim in 9 post-war com- Capitol theatre next by Lewis Milestone, from cGibney’s McClure story, the film was produced under supervision of John W. Considine, Jr. Telling the adventures of Private rfield Phelps, and Ser- girls appear in the supporting cast. | $4,800. Knights,” with|department to edy film, will be the feature at the|go the i week. Directed | accept the joet, spoke to the pupils of the unior High Monday, Health Department Will Be Increased An offer of the Rockefeller Foun- dation to pay half the expenses of an epidemiologist and a sanitary engineer who would be added to the state health staff will undoubtedly be accepted at a future meeting of the state health board, Dr. A. A. Whittemore, state ‘health officer, said today. The offer came as the result of LIGNITE MINES HAVE FINE YEAR |Long and Open Season Brings Total Tonnage Much Larger Than Average When North Dakota lignite mines j¢losed down about the first of April they had experienced one of the most successful seasons in the his- jtory of the industry, according to Albert Waddington, state coal mine inspector. Waddington recently returned from an inspection trip to mines at Burlington, Tioga, Ray and Un- derwood. His trip was chiefly te heck on the smaller mines, he said, and make sure recommendations made earlier in the year regarding safety measures had been carried ‘out. “Both shippers and miners re- ported a tonnage much larger than the average year, due to a long and open season,” Waddington said. “At no time during the season were the smaller mines forced to close, due to excessive snow, as is the case in some years.” Although reports from mine op- arators will not be complete for several months, indications are ac- eidents during the last season have been cut down considerably. Wad- dington credited the decrease chief- ly to educational campaigns which have been carried out by the state mine inspector's office and other organizations. The process of making briquettes the Lucky Strike mine in Mercer county gives promise of saving thousands of doilars annually to the coal consumers of the Northwest, Waddington said. The briquetting process has been carried out successfully in several | university experiments, he said, and{ once 60 tons of lignite coal’ was shipped to Germany and briquetted there by their process. “The process which will be tried | in this state is an exact duplicate} of the one used in Germany,” Wad- dington said. “The ligtite is first ground to powder and run through a machine to remove the moisture. The next process removes all the by-products such as tar and oil, and finally the lignite is put through a machine that compresses the fin- ished luct into a uniform bri- uet. ie lignite briquetted in this fashion has proven absolutely clin- kerless and burns practically with- out ashes.” Fourth of July Fund to Be Collected Soon! The committee which has charge of the financing of the Fourth of July celebration planned for Ris- marck will collect money which has been subscribed the latter part of} next week, according to John Hoff-| man, chairman. 1 Bismarck citizens subscribed cer- tain amounts earlier in the year, and it is the business of the com- mittee to collect this fund. Express Company Is Liable for Damages Express companies which con- tract to collect money when they deliver goods are liable for dam- ages if they deliver the goods with- out getting the money, the supreme court has held in the case of H. C. Blaisdell vs. the American Express company, appealed by the defend- ant from the Ward county district court. Blaisdell was given a judgment by the lower court because the ex- press company failed to obtain the money for ac. o. d. package. An offer by the express company to from lignite whieh is being tried at}tone of their bodies. jby the height and age alone. MORE DANGER IN NOT RE- DUCING Many women are frightened against reducing by statements of bel Mares authorities that dieting to take off weight is weakening, and brings on serious consequences, like tuberculosis, My private opinion is that many of these “experts” have never dieted a patient. I have observed and conducted thousands of cases of reducing and I do not know of any fat woman wh6é has Seen injured by limiting the amount of food below that which she was accustomed to eating. The only possible danger that I know of would be for her to reduce too much beiow normal on a diet that is deficient in alkaline-forming elements of vitamins. It is possible that if she reduced on white bread and sugar exclusively that her sys- tem would become very toxic. This resh fruits or non-starchy vege- tables are predominant in the anti- fat menu. I believe that protein | should also be added when the weight is about its normal. Starches, sugars and fats may be entirely dis- pensed with for all fat people. It is advisable that patients who! ercise to maintain muscular Long daily walks are of undoubted value, espe- cially because they cause the body to absorb a larger supply of oxygen to assist in consuming any clog- ging waste matter in the muscles and tissues, I receive many inquiries about the use of certain glandular extracts for reducing, but I have never found them either advisable or necessary. Possibly much of the talk about the dangers of reducing has originated in those cases where too much of these secretions were employed. It is a well known fact that aft- er 30 a person has a much better chance of long life if he is thin. There is not much satisfaction in eating heartily just to fill an over- sized casket! Contrary to the prevailing idea! of many people, fat has no con-/| nection with health. The proper weight for the best mental and! physical vigor is often far below the patient’s ideal, and it can only be determined by careful observ- ance, considering the temperament, muscles and bony framework. One cannot determine the correct weight the The best rapid method of reduc- ing is to employ the citrus fruit fast, using only these fruits or their juices and water, In this manner! the weight will reduce from one- half to two pounds daily, with a marked improvement in all pltysical | and mental functions. This increase of energy is due to SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1928 [and green vegetables. | ganger is entirely avoided if the | reduce should receive sufficient ex- | gout? |since prohibition that caus jbe almost entirely removed.” freeing the body of any burden of encumbrances. Ordinary occupa- tions may be followed throughout the fast. This is not impossible, and I have known of a number of cooks 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. and chefs who reduced while in continual contact with food. It was necessary for them to refrain from even tasting food during the re- ducing period. The diet following the fa: shou!d be carefully selected to pro- vide the groper amount of protein One can live on this diet indefinitely. The carbohydrates and fats should only be introduced‘ gradually after the patient has completely overcome the tendency to obesity. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: F. M. asks: “How is it so many of my friends have I thought it was caused by drinking alcoholic beverages, but should Answer: Gout is a form of rheumatism and is caused by the rheumatic toxemia which comes from over-eating, over-drinking, and usir ; wrong kinds of food and im- proper combinations. Question: Mary H. writes: “I read in your column that milk should not, be used with sandwiches. When should milk be used?” . Answer: Never use milk with sandwiches. Milk should be taken by itself or combined with one kind of fruit, or with the non-starchy vegetables. Question: Mrs. N. G. H. writes: “Do you know where I can get the new dress material which permits the ultra-violet rays of the sun to penetrate to the skin?” Answer: You probably refer to the material called celanese, a cellu- lose acetate product which some manufacturers have been eyperi- menting with. So far as I know, none of this material has been put on the market. Question: Mother asks: “Do you think it harmful to children to use scooters? I have heard that they caused one leg to be shorter than the other.” Answer: If a child can be made to change from one foot to the other while running a scooter, it should be very beneficial exercise, but one- sided exercise for children encour- ages a faulty position of the pelvis, and spinal curvature. serve the city as a municipal air- port will start early next week, ac- cording to announcement. An op- tion was secured from the W. G. Smith estate yesterday. The mu- nicipal airport will be located’ one! mile northwest of the city. | { i return the package, made at a later date, was not sufficient to relieve it of liability, the court held. 23 Carleton College Students Suspended Northfield, Minn., June 2—(AP) —Twenty-three students of Carle- ten college, including twelve girls, were suspended today after an in- tended beyond the hours co-eds are permitted to be out at night. Those suspended will not be eligible to resume classes until the fall term. Italian Flyers Break Air Endurance Mark Rome, June 2.—7)—The Italian aviators Major Ferrarin and Cap- tain Del Prete, landed at 3:52 tl afternoon at Montecello field, hi ing broken the world’s record for a duration flight. They were in the air for 58 hours and 37 minutes. Flying the S-64, the aviators took off at 5:15 a. m. Thursday last from efforts Whittemore made during the last year to have the men added to his staff. In_taking Whittemore’s request, the International Health division of ree pro} wi follow: 1. Bonation of 000 toward pag of apldarhicl ist sod Gack ravel expenses of epidemiologis and contingencies. unhee’ this bud- get it would be necessary for the state health department to acquire a sanitary engineer. 2. Donation of $1,800 for salary and travel of sanit engineer which would total $3,600. 3. Donation of $2,400 toward saierin of clerk and Saldamioloriss and fraveling expenses, totaling As it would be impossible at the present time for the state health get @ sanitary en- ineer from its own funds, the Realth department will have to fore- first but it to and thi Under this budget the total of $8,400 for Magazine | the sanit Ineer and epidemiol- d under oxi wil be ant between the state department and the founda- TORNADO WRECKS TRAIN made | —E. T. Meredith, local publisher and the Montecello experimental field, confining their flight to a circuit of about 74 kilometers, MEREDITH SERIOUSLY ILL Des Moines, Iowa, June 2.—(AP) vestigation into a party that ex-|. My darling child: What an extremist you are, my dear. And how wise you are one minute, and how foolish the next! Where did you get the idea that I advised you to do what you did? And couldn’t you be romantic with- out calling in the scene shifters and the stage hands, and creating the at- mosphere of a society drama? You see, my dear, romance to you is really externals—it’s apple blos- soms, and shaded lights, and trap- pings—not something that is in you, and that you must naturally radiate. That is why you can see no ro- mance in Alan—just because it is not trimmed up in tinsel. You fail to see anything romantic in a man loving you and expegssing his love in practical tributes4such as a love- ly home, quite unlimited charge ac- counts, pretty dresses, and more lib- erty than any girl as attractive as you should have. If you ever had worked, you would know that all work does not end by 5 o'clock, even if that hap- Bens to be the end of the 8-hour ye As nearly as I can figure it out, you immediately suspected that Alan was giving his work as an ex- cuse for being with his stenograph- secretary of agriculture in Presi- dent Wilson’s cabinet, is tritically ill at his home here, his personal pivaleisn announced today. Mr. leredith, it is understood, is suf- fering from high blood pressure. BAKER APPOINTED TO HAGUE Washington, June 2.— (AP) — President Coolidge has appointed Newton D. Baker, of Cleveland, sec- retary of war in the Wilson cabinet, as the fourth United States mem- ber of the permanent court of arbit- ration at the Hague. JURY FINDS WOMAN GUILTY Minneapolis, June 2.—/)—Idalles Englund was today found guilty by a jury in district court here of a charge of first degree manslaughter rowing out of the death of a North Dakota woman folowing an alleged criminal operation. SI will be sentenced next week. MASON JOINS FRAZIER Nelson A. Mason, private secre- tary ‘to Senator Frazier, joins the er. I'm ashamed of you. Certainly, you have nothing to prove it, or had nothing, when you wrote to me. You just planned a certain eve- ning—probably because of the novel- ty of it—and when it did not work out as you wanted it to, you let it defeat the object. That is most illogical and unreasonable. And cereale Alan had = reason for being angis at you. wasn’t exactly the sort home- coming a man who had been work- ing all day and all evening would relish. I think you owed h: 1 an ex- planation. And certainly, I think you were much to blame in having Norman at your home, at that ‘ with no one else around. Yes, I’m old-fashioned, Marye. I think the whole affair would have been quite laughable, if it had not beep for your remark, “We haven’t spoken since.” I felt badly over that. _To this sort of armed neutrality, { much prefer a good, all- around fight, where each of you come out straight from the should- er and thrash out your differences. My advice, my dear child, is to tell your husband exact what hap- cant Peter McGaftney, followi St. Albans, Vt., June 2,?)—One| senator at Spiritwood Lake tomor-|pened—and just how Norman hap- their escay 5 ioe a poeta man was killed and ten were in-|row to remain with him during the to be there. apol Arabia, 0 Arabian Knights,”| jured, pape Serloualy, when a Can-|campaign. Mr. arrived injor be humble; just be sensible, thumbs its nose at the serious spec- | adian lc passenger train was | Bi from Meshing: (Dont dramatize the situation. I be- tacle of war. Its sereen play was| struck by = tornado today between|ton. He will fill some speaking en-! lieve you could forget your bitter- written by James T. ‘ODonohue, Stanb: and Bester, Get 20] gagements while in the state. ness in good y laugh. Try it. scenarist of the film, “What Price| miles north of here. ee ‘our devoted, Glory?” and Wallace Smith. senor, sonebee, were Psyc PORES TO RAVE AUTOR MOM. the original "Captain Fiage® of the| sien amen ine **" lon the 160-ncres of land which is to| NEXT: Mom's plea works. { Dr. McCoy Suggests | | Menus For a Week | —_—_—_— Dr. Me Goy’s menus suggested for the week beginning Sunday, June 3 Sunday Breakfast—Eggs poached in milk served on Melba toast, stewed figs Lunch—Boiled new potatoes, with parsley, asparagus, salad of head lettuce. Dinner—Baked chicken, Shredded Wheat dressing, buttered beets, j Spinach, salad of raw celery, pine- apple sponge. Monday Breakfast—Crisp waffle, with a jlittle maple syrup, one coddled egg, applesauce. Lunch—Pint of buttermilk, 10 or 12 dates. - Dinner—*Minced chicken in toma- to jelly (Chicken left over from Sun- day), cooked cargots and fresh peas, cooked greens, cup custard. Tuesday Breakfast—Wholewheat _ muffins with peanut butter, stewed prunes. Lunch—Stewed tomatoes (left over from last night), baked ese plant, salad of raw spinach, Dinner—Vegetable soup, roast beef, string beans, mashed turnips, salad of grated raw carrots on let. tuce, peach whip. Breakfe mc h f lef fast—Frei toast, stewed raising, pale Mate Ly as desired, Dinner—Brolled Sat, of sole, green peas, Mc 8a (tomatoes, cucumbers, and ietesce, rng Breakfast—Berries. (een) and drained of all sugary j cream. All desired, > Juice) with Lunch—Baked or boiled socks lettuce, Sian olines, polates inner—Roas| tutto bal table salad (peas, boiled beets celery), ice cream. Breaktast—Baren’ ed ‘Shredded Wheat “Blecults tena, Lanch—Raw apples as desired with handful pee aaa Dinner—Baked sea cooked ) Balad of fed as} Jello, no cream. string beans, raw eee ip better: Dinner—Roast pork, cooked spin- shredded raw cee ‘and pars! apricot whip. in “Minced Drain, but do not of fro toes. Pour into a heat to almost until throughly dissolved, Now, mix in one chicken, one-third cupful cho) celery, parsley olives. Pour into wet place in the refrigerator until meal- time. Serve unmolded on a This wgery is ‘or four persons, forms the pro- tein part Cpr a+: ee Pe Pe eee en a pee er oe. ek ee

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