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4 7 Ic j _ ig going to emerge from the present ; that is beating upon her just as unspoiled as Lind- PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune An ladependent Newspapes THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) by the Bismarck Tribune C mpasy, Bis- marck, ‘N. D> and eaterea at the postottice at Bis second class mail mai 5 Cones D Mann ...-........-Preaident an¢ Publisher she, like Lindy, will be a mighty good idol for young America to have. AN APPRECIATION The Tribune desires to say a sincere thank you to every one of the 3,063 friends who voted for it for official newspaper of Burleigh county at the primary election last Wednesday. The Tribune led the runner up by a majority of 429. Voters of Burleigh county have demonstrated be- fore their appreciation of the service it is possible for "29|the Tribune to give in publishing the official pro- by mail, in state, per year by mail, :2 state, three years for - Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako a, TL enerrrrrrrrr rrr rr crete errr Member Audit Bureae of Circulation ef The Associated Press The Prony Press is exclusively entitled to the {se for republication of all news ulepatches credited | to ft or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, sad also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of al) other mat- ter herein are also reserved. aS Foreign Representatives 5 AN PAYNE COMPANY wnw TORE 2+ Fifth Ave. ~ CHICAGO Tower Bldg. Kresge Bids. eee (Official City State and County Newspaper) — A BRILLIANT SPEECH Democracy heard another “cross of gold” speech the other day at Houston. It was a brilliant effort by a brilliant man, Claude G. Bowers, editorial writer of the New York World, and author of “Jefferson and | Hamilton” and “The Struggle for Democracy in, America.” Mr. Bowers out-Bryaned Bryan in that distant day of hallowed memory when the peerless and well revered one, who was three times the choice of his ceedings and notices of the county in the most com- plete printing plant and modern printing home in western North Dakota. They have also before evidenced their appreciation of daily and weekly newspaper service, including the full leased wire report of the Associated Press, serving a wide territory while steadily working for the up- building of the city of Bismarck and the development of the resources of its surrounding territory in Bis- marck’s largest manufacturing plant, with a weekly payroll that is an important asset to the city and county. The first consideration in the designation of the official newspaper is service. The Tribune gives it. Editorial Comment ANOTHER SOLDIER TELLS THE TRUTH (St. Paul News) Sometimes the truth has a strange way of coming out. Take the case of Lieut. Col. Thomas J. Dickson, who spoke out while on a visit to Columbus, 0. He re- marked with feeling that much of the history taught in our schools is foolish fiction, 6 He specified as to the history of the World war now being crammed down the young minds. Use of trained dogs to succor wounded soldiers; statements that the German army was delivered to the allies without the firing of a shot; descriptions of the American offensive as consisting of 1,200,000 men fighting in a territory of three by five miles in area and advancing 14 feet every hour for 47 days and party for the presidency, thrilled Democracy with his! nights; all these were cited as examples of present classic “thou shalt nots.” One cannot read Bowers’ speech in keynoting the Houston convention without feeling that his party there nominated the wrong man for president. Every party needs such leadership. read Mr. Bowers’ books without being impressed by| his keen analysis and his evident sincerity. contents of much of the school histories. Col. son called it Dick- | Raga tneeee “Some of t! e things set forth in these books,” he remarked, “are so obviously fabulous that if the pupils had not been taught fables in their history classes One cannot} st their lives, they would not hestitate openly to deride them.” Strong words, these, but truthful. A newspaper His de-| which printed such stuff as fact would soon hear of it, yet histories regard without votion to his country is inspiring. He ranks as among the great American patriots of this day. It would be unkind and perhaps unfair so close to question purv. which youngsters it. Most of this is done in a spirit of vainglorious patriotism. The books are written to magnify every- such a brilliant effort as the Bowers panegyric to at-|thing our nationals have done and minimize every- tempt to judge it by the facts. Anyhow there are | thing the enemy did. And they also glorify war. If many Republicans who deplore many of the facts he they told the truth, they would constitute the great- mentioned, just as there are many Democrats who de- plore certain facts about Demoeratic administrations of bygone days. Nevertheless, it would not be necessary to go into the grave to prove, in the light of Mr. Bowers’ classic pronouncement, that no party is free from the grafter, the exploiter or other of the more reprehensible types. There have been barnacles upon the ship of state ever since George Washington's time. Probably there always will be. The Tribune would not detract from the glory that | ; rightfully belongs to Bowers for one of the aR | speeches ever delivered upon any political occasion, great because of a strong, true note of patriotic ee cerity. Every party needs such men as Claude G. Bowers. America needs them. They rouse the soul of the peo- ple. They have the gift of tongues. They inspire. 3 But the facts—they seem to show, as the record is written, that at Houston the voice of this splendid man was merely raised in an Augean stable he did not sense. Such efforts are never lost. Such old-fashioned, heart-to-heart, straight-from-the-shoulder talk harks back to an era of American politics when we had torchlight parades and well-defined partisan issues, as in the McKinley campaign. Mr. Bowers and others of this kind, though lesser lights, who have not the gift of eloquence that is his, in whatever party they are found do their country great service. What a pity there are not more of them. A VAGUE FARM DECLARATION The Democratic platform adopted at Houston qual- fies up to predictions made in advance in its farm equality features. It is a clever bit of campaign liter- ature more positive in pointing out Republican mis- takes on the farm policy than in proposing construc- tive remedies for the inequalities of agriculture. It promises credit by loans to cooperatives, crea- tion of a federal farm board to assist in marketing farm products and then launches into a fulsome panegyric of self praise. It calls its policy new and recites at length what Democracy has done for other ere party qualifies about as did the quack doctor who assures his sorely stricken patient that he has cured worse cases than he presents and then proceeds to get the money. The Democrats tell the farmer they have done con- siderable things for finance through the federal reserve and hold forth vague promises while inter- ested in his vote. “In this section of the northwest the Democratic promise upon the farm problem is too vague to be impressive. ‘There ts a promise in the platform, too, of an honest effort at enforcement of the eighteenth amendment. This is brief and, of course, is subject to certain definite limitations as to elaborations, not the least of which is the wet views of the’ party choice for the =... there is a bandwagon our Democratic friends get on for a ride. Wherever there is a Re- publican mistake they gesture frantically. Constructively they endorse deep waterways from the Atlantic to the Great Lakes, recognize the unem- ployment situation, declare for the eliminaton of est possible argument against war and for peace. PROHIBITION AND THE PARTIES (Duluth Herald) The platform-makers of the great parties lose more sleep over the difficult question what to say about prohibition than they do over any other subject, farm Telief by no means excepted. That isn’t surprising, since there is no issue be- tween the parties about prohibition, and small chance of making an issue between them when both are afraid to do it. The dividing line on this as on some other issues is not m the parties but across them. It is, of course, impossible to assay the strength of the two sides in the two parties, but possibly the Republicans are sixty per cent dry and forty per cent wet, and the — are sixty per cent wet and forty per cent dry. On the whole probably the Republicans are more homogeneous on this issue than the Democrats. They are divided, of course, but they are divided in about the same way everywhere. The Democrats, though, are divided sectionally. The city Democrats average about as wet as people gt to be. But the Southern Democrats—and the mocratic party is chiefly made up of Southerners and city folk—on the other hand are about as dry as People get to be. With a wet candidate and a pervading dryness in the very hotbed of Democracy, the South, Democratic latform-makers h&ve a more anxious job than the iblican resolutioners. In both parties the artisans who shape the platforms would be made very happy if there were some way to lay this issue on the shelf along with free silver. It will not be so disposed of for quite some time. THE PASSING OF TIM MURPHY (Chicago Tribune) Tim Murphy, the most picturesque of the rack- eteers, has n killed by gunmen, as was to be ex- pected. burghers will be inclined to rejoice, as they have before when gangsters have been killed off, saying that each one gone is one less to prey upon the community. That is the short view. The man who killed O’Ba: ion was tougher and more resourceful than O’Banion; the man who killed Hymie Weiss, was tougher than his victi and the man who killed than Murphy. As one gai off he is succeeded by another who is less restrained by the standards of civilized society. The progression is from fists to bombs, to pistols, or to machine guns. This progress in lence has been accompanied, as might be expected, by expansion in the field of activity of the gangsters. There was a time when they con- fined their murdering and extortion to their own un- derworld. They preyed upon bootleg saloons, gam- bling houses, and houses of prostitution. They still do, but they have reached out, in the machine gun era, to levy as well upon legitimate business. The racketeers already have their hands on small mer- chants all over the city and they are seeking new and richer fields, to conquer every day. It was only a few weeks ago that one of the largest factors in the cleaning and dyeing trade took Scarface Al Capone into partnership to preserve his business from ruin. Society will conquer the thugs or the thugs will conquer society with their regime of terror. The ituation cannot be neglected in the belief that it will ight itself with time. Time s not making the gang- sters less ruthless and grasping but more ruthless and more grasping. THE STEAMBOAT WHISTLE (St. Paul Dispatch) For a few moments the staccato clatter of the streets recedes into the background while a new sound fills the air. The city seems to halt in its hurry and to come to attention, listenng to the prolonged and dominant note. When the pore filing sound ceases and the noise of traffic becémes audible again somebody says, “Steamboat whistle.” “lame duck” congress and go far into other platitudin- ous fields, eae beautiful ideals which will not Come to a partisan issue in this generation. It’s an old-time Democratic platform. AMELIA TAKES THE TEST It is becoming evident that Miss Amelia Eathart glare of publicity bergh did. In some ways there is no greater test of one’s char- [terrae May, 1938, and the Jui ROAD SSE ‘Burleigh County. | minute. The barge towboat in, Chances are that the steamboat whistle awakens many. memories among those who are reached by its Ply mer lively highw: atop a bi the river and the boats which made it a in the past. From the shade of a tree ing a view far up and down the stream, the boats could be seen pushing rafts of logs south-| ward, ‘and going with passengers and freight. Many small boys of yesterday, watching the meander- courses along the winding channel of the: stream, took their first lessons about the velocity of sound while contemplating the time elapsing between ‘the first upward burst of steam from the distant whistle and the arrival of note at the expectant ea: The steamboat whistle bursts now upon a noisy and forgetful world like a commanding voice from a dim, romantic past. So it is. But there is also in its signal a note of revived vitality and oy cA oe salt ri passengers ushing , 18 gone. new river traffic, with tows of great barges loaded with immense cargoes of bulk freight, is dawning. jionally the steamboat whistle, voice and also of the future, again is heard. 4th an@ 11th days| More than 467,000 tons of water passes over Niagara Falls every of the past ah bg ogy a2 loaner Never leave spoon in a sauce- jan if you wish its contents to boil quickly SATURDAY, JUNE 30, 1928 The Good Old-fashioned Remedy Dearest Marye: NEWS (TEM: vou to return. Won’t you consider it? Then we'll get straight on everything. All my love, MOM. NEXT: Marye is going to fight it out. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ———— | IN NEW YORK | eo New York, June 30.—Those fast- action, business-like pay stations in the Manhattan hotels have played havoc with the once romantic life Sometimes I feel you are just a child, and I wish you would grow up Other times you are much too old, and I wish you were not maturing mentally so quickly. Naturally, when you married, I expected that you would, as we used to say, “settle.” I supposed you would delight in housekeeping and that Alan would be the big consider- ation in your life, and that you would have children and delight to fuss over them, and that you would be protected and ckerished the rest of your life. As I look back, that was my ideal for myself, and I carried it over for you. How did I know that you would resent protection, that you would hate housekeeping, that you do not want children, and that you feel that a job of some sort is the only sal- vation to protect you from bore- dom? If you were to go into business with your friend Jane, you would expect, I am sure, to work hard and to build up something solid. You wouldn’t be satisfied just to Play around with it. And tha would mean much of your tim your thought and your energy would have to go into this new enterprise. I fail utterly to see why a business is so much more important than a home—o= why you could not put the same interest into your home that you are willing to give to business. As for your latest acquaintance, which you say starts on a highly scientific and commendable basis, I take my old-fashioned stand—you are a foolish girl to play witht Tire as_you do. I wish you would come home for a visit. Iwould like to get you back to a less hectic, more ‘wholesome type of life, and see if you could not get a saner perspective, Your old room has been freshly painted and papered, anc I have a lovely new rug for it. All your old furniture is there, besides a new netrating blast—memories of lazy sum- of steamers, carrying hase of So oc- chest of drawers, and it all urges of the telephone girl A few years back, scores of love tales could be written about the switchboard operators in the larger hostelries. Dozens of them landed wealthy husbands and, to all intents and purposes, lived happily ever after. The plots of these stories varied little. A visitor in New York, tired of making the rounds—or, perhaps, a bit sentimental or homesi would find himself leaning against the counter, behind which perched the pretty phone girl. He would speak of being lonesome and she would seem both sympathetic and jocular. His humor would rise; soon they would fall into banter; she would arrive the next day to find a bouquet of roses on her desk; there would be lunches and theatre and dances and, finally, romance. , Or there would be a type of small town man to whom the big city phone girl would suggest glamour fascinated by her glib tongue; her dy assurance in all situations; | er suggestion of independence and capacity to look out for herself, her wisecracks and her “city vate As ja matter of fact, those girls were “smart,” and generally quite attrac- tive. eee But times have changed. Today there is a matter-of-fact up of phone booths; there is a little stock- ade in which sit many operators with receivers strapped to their heads; there is a iting list of half a dozen people; individuals rush in and out; calls are dispatched with lightning speed—there is little of the old romance. Also, the house phones are now eraaet. on pabile, etende, while.s matter-of-{ cler! ives you sired inforrhation concerning a room number. I do not recall hearing of a hotel phone girl romance in more than a “WuperT WORK NAMED CHAIRMAN OF REPUBLICAN: NATL. COMMITTEE!" and worldly wisdom. He would be|? year. And there used to be at least one a month; or something like that. eee When a Broadway show becomes pular, the agencies and specu- lators buy up most of the theatre— as everyone know., or should know. The seats, as every purchaser has long since learned, are then sold at considerably more than the adver- tised prices All of which is by way of intro- duction to a little yarn that is mak- ing the rounds. Recently Edna Ferber, the writer, was reported quite ill. Miss Ferber, by the way, wrote “Show Boat,” one of the sea- son’s biggest successes. Someone inquired the nature of her illness. “Oh, she went to the theatre one night and found out that the two orchestra seats had been sold at box-office prices. The blow felled her,” commented a wag. “pe WHEN IS SURGERY ADVISA- BLE? I receive hundreds of letters every week from people who tell me they are afraid of surgical operations; they may hav. been told that an operation was absolutely necessary to save their lives, While there are few surgeons who are in the business of selling opera- tions where there is the least ex- cuse, I am sure that the majority of doctors do not recommend an operation unless they conscientious- ly Believe i’ is necessary or advis- able, but I am sorry that more of the latter type are not acquainted with the wonderful effects of the fasting cure. I know from practical experience that many of the dis- eases that ar@ considered only cur- able by operation can be remedied and often entirely eradicated by the proper use of dietetic measures, since this method goes down into SES SS Seeee ees HEALTH<DIET ADVICE oH McCoy. seeeseze ! 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. SS these particuls: cases to give them the most modern method of treat- ment. Many kinds of tumors may be dis- solved and eliminated through fast- ing and physioti.erapy treatments, but it sometimes seems the best policy to remove at least the larger growths and then train the patient to live so. that no more need grow. Even when an operation is neces- cary, it is well for the patient t. re- member that the cause of disease cannot be removed by the knife, and if the operaticn seems necessary to the very tissues of the system, and removes the cause of the disease in a manner which no knife can do. There is no doubt that a great advancement ‘as been made in the science of - irgery within the past twenty-five years. The surgeon of today is a highly skilled technician who has spent years of study in a classroom, with some actual exper- ience while assisting as an interne in the operating room. The surgeon cannot be considered competent un- til he has spent at least five or six years after his school work in as- sisting some experienced surgeon, whose methods he can learn by watching hundreds of different kinds of operations. This wonderful training, in spite of its good points, has one handicap, in that it may produce a surgeon who can only see disease from a surgical standpoint, and consequently a skilled surgeon is often .e:sided in his opinion as to whether or not an operation is necessary Anyone who contemplates a major operation should first have the opin- ions of several physicians of differ- ent schools before deciding if an operation is deemed necessary, then the services of the best available surgeo: should be secured. In my own practice I have seen many cases of gallstones dissolved by the methods which I tell of in these columns, but in some cases where the gall bladder is complete- ly filled with stones, the gall blad- Kidney stones may often be dis- solved throsgh the fasting and diet treatment but again in some cases the stones are too large, and only surgical interference will save the patient’s life. Ulcers of the stomach or small in- Jimmy Walker has written the first musical “piece” since those days when he was whanging out “Will You Love Me in December as You Do in May?” He consented, as a good Democrat, when properly per- suaded by Elizabeth Marbury, an- other good Democrat. Cynical Mai hattanites view it ac something-o: other that the mayor left for Hous- ton convention just about the time his new song was to be given for the first time in Miss Marbury’s productions. Whereas Miss Mar- bury was already in Houston. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) testines may almost always be cured by a well regulated diet treatment, ~ut in some c-ses of penetrating ul- cers and excessive scar tissues a sur- Gical oper:’'c is advisable. A surgeon should always be called in case of a serious accident, since tthe average practitioner may not have hac enough experience with der should *: removed. j remove the c-fects of wrong living, the patient must afterwards be all the more careful to live so as not to Produce a recurrence of the trouble, or even some other disease which should prov? to be more serious. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: H. S. asks: “Will you please tell me what this means: “Suppurating azea over left acrom- ion, slight lymphangitis, extending to axilla.” ,. Answer: This simply means some inflammation of a part of the left shoulder with enlargement of the lymphatic glands under the arms. The pus condition may be due to an injury, tuberculosis, or arthritis, Lo- cal treatment may be necessary, but dieting will prove effective in bring- ing about a cure by changing the quality of blood stream so 4s to help in controlling the inflammatory pro- cess which ‘s going on. Question: Student asks: “Will you please tel! me the name of the substance in plants which makes them green?” Answer: You are thinking of chlorophyl, the natural pigment in plants and vegetables which im- parts the green color to a greater or lesser degree, depending upon con- tact with sunshine. For instance, celery and asparagus are bleached by having the light shut away dur- ing their growth. Question: Mrs. H. W. J. writes: “I suffer from shortness of breath and have for ten years. Our family doc- tor says it is caused from nervous indigestion. Have taken loads of medicine but still suffer. It causes me to yawn and gives me a tired, weak feeling. Have pains around my heart and «as on my stomach.” Answer: Get rid of the gas pres- sure by living on the proper diet and then take diaphragmatic breathing exercises, Any physical culture in- structor will be able to show you these exercises. o. I will be glad to send you some articles I have writ- ten on this subject, if you will send a large, stamped, self-addressed en- velope. Don’t tell us that even the reporters are getting Sikh over the whole thing! ees A Chicago woman fired at her husband, missed and decided to give him another chance. He ought to take it—just look what Charlie Pad- PAP RQ 4 |dock did in his comeback the other Bing: George has just made twelve new Knights of the Bath. Great ‘ritain must be Primping vp. Low necks for men are recom- mended in new low style notes. Low necks with browns to, match? An Illinois man has sued for divorce, charging his wife put carpet tacks and needles into his food. Maybe she was merely trying to patch up their differences. An Towa high school boy, sen- tenced as a bandit to twenty-five years, wept Our young men cer- tainly are becoming soft. Mumtaz _ Be; a glans to take the Maharajah of I lore away from his American spouse, Mumtaz told Sikh reporters. dancing girl, a a el Meu a a | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | WELL DASON, IVE DONE ALL T COULD 7 FORTHE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION, So You CAN START PACKING MY THINGS, ~ “WE LEAVE FoR HOME “TOMORROW HULABALOo PUT ON IT Come HomMe,~YAS, RECEPTION, COMMITTEE OF WELCOME AT THe DEPOT, ww BANDS, ~ PARADE, “E1C, THEY WELL ,~<BUT-1o MEN LIKE LINDBERGH, NIGHT /-— I AM NOT ANNOUNCING ‘MY ARRIVAL “THIS TIME » w-.- AHEM ~ “THERE 'S ALWAYS SUCH A BIG CIVICe A Wi MY HONOR WHEN Course Yo' KNows BES” MISTAH MADOR ~~ Bn BUT MAN, How AH’D LAK -fo BE “TAKIN" Bow W A BIG P'RADE ! ~~ UM~MUH fe wTROMBONES PUMPIN’ out HiGH-StTEeP Music, axe POLICE ESCORT ALONG SIDE Yo’ CAR, ~~ BUT Not IN WIF Yo" f— —~ MAN, DAT IS A chfropodist says that if we don’t walk more we'll begin to re- semble ostriches. It does seem as if we had been riding quite a bit, some of us. rae Big Bill Thompson says that if Swanson beats Crowe for state’s at- torney’s job, he (Big Bill) will quit. re Hooray for Swanson! se 8 Judging from the scope of the D. A. R. blacklist, it would have been much easier for them to draw up a list of speakers they would listen to. eee _A Chicago husband sought a divorce from his wife becayse she smoked a cigar. Oh, well, girls, a husband is a husband, but a good cigar is a smoke. . Maybe Rickard will have to boost the prices a little on this Tunney- Heeney fight. Otherwise the cus- tomers never will think it’s worth going to see. soe * Almost time for the hog-calling contest—or, is it husband-calling? We always get them mixed up. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) is date in MAAMERICAN HISTORY June 30 1692—Massachusetts general court condemned four women to death as witches. 1859—Blondin crossed Niagara Falls on a tight-rope. 1863—Maryland put under martial law. 1863—Confederate dollar worth eight cents. ™ 1891—Weather Bureau transferred from War to Agrigultural De- partment. 1905—John D. Rockefeller gave $10,000,000 to aid small col- leges. Se ee | Incorporations y] ee Incorporations: Hardon Grain Co., Dover $25,000; I. R. Stout, Bordulac; William Handon, Sykeston, and George Adjets, John Noulen and Isak Olson, all of Carrington. First Natio:.al Corporation, real estate, Langdon; $60,000; . Fletcher, D. C. McDonald, . E. Groom, AA H. Bain, W: W ‘McQueen . and J. J. A. Boyd, all of Langdon; W. A. McIntyre, Grand Forks. Valley Investment, Inc., Fargo; $25,000; B. R. Pfusch, L. S. Ward and Earl D. Pegg, Valley City; B. P Schmallen, an¢d U. D. Weddell, irgZo. Midway City Wholesalers, New Rockford: $25.000; A. F. Schwartz, { Dr. McCoy Suggests | Menus For a Week | | @—____________i« Dr. McCoy’s menus suggested for the week beginning Sunday, July 1. Sunday Breakfast—One coddled egg, 3 or 4 pieces of Melba toast, 5 stewed prunes. Lunch—Boiled potatoes with chopped parsley, string beans, Avocado salad. Dinner — Roast chicken, Melba toast dressing, cooked carrots and fresh green peas, head lettuce, ice cream, made with figs (See recipe June 16th) oe | } Monday Breakfast — Cantaloupe as de- sired. Lunch—French artichoke, cooked greens, sliced cucumbers. Dinner—Boiled fresh beef tongue, cooked spinach and parsley, molded vegetable salad (peas, cucumbers, pematoee), baked apple (no sugar or cream). Tuesday Breakfast—French omelet, made of the whites of two eggs, and two ounces of milk, served on Melba toast, stewed raisins. Lunch—Apples or fresh berries as desired. Dinner—Baked sea bass, cooked celery, string beans, sliced tomatoes on lettuce, plain Jello or Jell-well (no cream). 4 ! ‘ednesday Breakfast — Wholewheat muffins, pepant butisr, Senet Ee. anch—One pin’ termi or 12 dates.” wi Dinner — Roast mutton, cooked mashed turnips, asparagus, salad of grated raw beets, pineapple whip. . Thursday Breakfast—Coddled eggs, toasted Triscuit, stewed apricots. Lunch—Sweet corn, cooked aspar- gus, raw carrots. Dinner — Broiled steak, mush- rooms en casserole, cooked greens, conned raw cabbage and celery, Breakiast Baked stuffed reakiast — Bal apple, with milk or cream, pre Lunch—Baked egg plant, spinach, lettuce. Dinner—Broiled white fis! mer squash, salad of watercress, it cream). ih, sum- tomatoes and Sa Breakfast — wheat muffins, Lunch—Abcut a pound of fresh lass etables, eaten as celerv, *Select small tender fod yy em, cut into small into a baking dish. (ecg Mad a cupful of finely cut string or celery, pour over all a little wa- r, and caver with two or thicknesses of lettuce leaves. LY ‘ saecorntely hot ig until Bes. L, are tender, season a little salt and butter as Sadie Schwartz and F. P. Mattson, all of New Rockford. Ayuthia—has Jéungle for four Th ient of acti! ar centuries, & { { ‘ t x t ‘ iY a 4 »