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2>AGE-FOUR - ] The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER 3 (Established 1873) Publighed_by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- rarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- aarck as second class mail matter. IGe ieorge D. Mann -..-President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance daily by carrier, per year ........... + $7.20 daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . wee 1.20 daily by mail, per year, ‘ : (in.state outside Bismarck) 6.00 Tt daily by mail, outside of North Dakota 6.00 . Veekly by mail, in state, per year ++ 1.00 Yeekly by mail, in state, three years for ++ 2.60 Veekly by mail, outside of North Dakot it Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the se for republication of all news dispatches credited ia ° it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and ie 180. the local news of spontaneous origin published < erein. All rights of republication of all other mat- iad herein are also reserved. So-.. Foreign Representatives tw G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. ke ETROIT tre HICAGO ‘ower-Bldg. Kresge Bldg. Mi (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ‘ LINKS IT WITH BISMARCK Mt John Andrews, pioneer Dakota newspaperman who is ow on the editorial staff of the St. Paul Dispatch, laces five additional stories on the Patterson hotel in . recent article in the Twin City paper. He refers to the eight. as twelve stories. Local pride will forgive h Jawn” for his slight oversight, but his article is most nteresting as reflecting enterprise of the western cities © f between 7,500 and 12,000. The visit of President Coolidge to the Black Hills in » 927, started a great trek of tourists to Rapid City, S. ', the gateway city: That movement of sight seekers “aused the erection and completion this summer of the PS lex Johnson hotel, a hostelry of some nine floors shich, looms up like an Eiffel Tower in comparison to Di he stall buildings grouped around it. But to quote buy, and I have no money and no friends. I took the only proper course.” Then, a little bit later, she added: “Virginia won’t be hungry now. She won't have to suffer like I have. She’s happier than I am now.” And now the district attorney is wondering what to do with the woman. One can ima, that the world seemed like a heart- less place to this woman. Poverty, illness and loneli- ness are terrible things to combat. When they afl at- tack together they give the feeling that one is alone against the universe. And yet—how pitiful, how tragic, that the young mother c-uld not have understood the world a little bet- ter! People are not really selfish, or indifferent; they simply do not know. Even though Mrs. Lethermon had not a friend inthe world, an appeal for help would have brought a ready response. Any newspaper would have been glad to present her case. It is safe to say that the people of Michigan would have come to the rescue most promptly. There is in the human heart a vast capacity for sympathy, a vast desire to help the unfortunate. It is too late, now, of course. The little girl is gone, and it is pretty obvious that all the help in the world won't do the mother much good now. About all that can | be done is to treat Mrs, Lethermon as wisely and sym- | pathetically as possible. Perhaps, though, that isn’t quite all. We may live a long way from Dimondale, Mich., but how many other people are therein our own vicinity, suffering just as sharply as Mrs. Lethermon suffered? How many other tragedies are getting ready to break as hers broke? We might look about us a bit, resolved to help wherever wecan. We might keep our hearts sympathetic, so that we can respond readily to any appeal that may be made on us. The world isn’t unkindly. It just doesn’t see things. When ;;ou find a case of human suffering, help it if ycu can. If you can't, tell others so that they may do some- thing. eet eis Hartford Times: In Danbury a man was hit on the head with a box of dynamite and nothing exploded but his vocabulary. | Edito WHY THE GANGSTER WINS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ._ William Hard; Smith by Henry F. Another ‘Milestone! BUTTER IS A WHOLESOME FOOD Cow’s butter contains more of the fat soluble “A” vitamin than any other food in comparison to the amount used. This makes butter a very valuable food for children, and they should be encouraged to use a reasonable amount. Since the earliest primitive time: butter has been the source of one o: man’s best forms of nutrition. The milk of cows, mares, and, in fact, the milk of every domesticated animal has been used, and is still being used in many Hd of the world, but be- cause of economy of. production, cow’s milk is now the vrincipal source of butter fat in practically every civilized country. It is advisable to use a certain amount of hydrocarbons or fats each day, both for their nutritive and lubricating qualities. Our best butter at present comes from the large and well organized creameries, since there it can Le sci- entifically prepared so to avoid all possibilities of uncleanlin:.s. By this process, the cream i: arates from the whole milk while it is still sweet by running it through a trifugal separator. It is then pas- teurized and treated by ti.e addition of lactic acid culture before being churned. In this way there is no danger of contamination from ovt- side sources, and it is a well known fact that creamery butter will keep longer without becoming rancid than farm butter. The old fashioned methgd was to allow the milk to stand for two or three days and then churn the cour cream, which formed at the tup of ing placed on the market at the pres- ent time, which are an advantage in families where the income is small and the butter bill is often a consid- erable item. Most of these butter Dr. sige? Mas gladly aalte personal estions on heal and diet, Taddressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. substitutes are made from peanut and cocoanut oil, combined with milk and heavily flavored with salt. They usually contain a smo! amount of benzoate of soda, which is a preserv- ative to keep the milk from sour- ing. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: A. R. asks:, “What causes little red spots, like little sine of blood, to appear under the skin? There are a few on my face and all over my body.” _ Answer: Your blood capillaries are breaking down because they dc not contain enough calcium or other minerai matter. This may be due to your not eating foods containing these minerals, or simply because they ave destroyed after eating by acidosis in your system estes by a diet that is improperly balanced, from the standpoint of physiological chemistry. Question: E. L. writes: “Will you kindly print a diet which should be followed by a person sixty years old, of apoplexic build, who is getting rapidly stout. Weknow that starchy foods are fattening, yet what arti- cles of food are there that will give ohn ‘Andrews: the vessel. Butter made from sweet cream is not popular as a table article in this country as it is in Europe, and while it is relished by many, it is no more desirable from a standpoint of health than properly made creamery butter, to which a small amount of salt is added. Sweet butter, never- a varied diet and keep up one’s strength?” Answer: It would be all right for you to follow the weekly menus which appear in this column each Saturday. The only change you need to make is to substitute some one kind of fruit for the meals which contain starches. If you have high blood pressure, it will slowly reduce Lit ted and by Norman Hapgood and Henry Moskowitz, collaboraung Such biographies are never cold and but the Pringle and re regarded as the most critical among them. Samuel Crowther, in “Herbert Hoover Versus the Presidency,” a alyzes Hoov experience, achi ments and. known opinions (Milwaukee Journal.) : Gangster guns bark again in Chicago—this time kill- ing one of the city’s “best known” citizens, Big Tim Murphy. He may, as the police think, have been en- gaged in some sort of labor “racket,” whi another name for business and jadustrial blackmail. Or it may have been that he was marked because of his earlier record. Anyway, the government of 4,000,000 people didn’t protect him, and his own power*as a leader didn’t There ‘s much speculation of the effect the new hotel will have on the town. Some may recall the effect of the erection of the 12-story hotel in Bis- marek, N. D., on that city. At first it was about that whict the ~@gallon hat had upon President t_ Coolid, . It‘cast a shade. But not for long. Ina and fewlyears the town had grown up to the hotel. Im- agine th: effect of a hotel of the size and style of the Lowry, in St. Paul, set in a town of 7,000. It is bound to cause talk. But it is like the venerable minister in Goldsmith's “Deserted Village,” who “pointed to brighter worlds and led the way.” City, Deadwood and Lead, frontier towns, still color to interest the traveler. Of the s, Rapid City has shown remark- ble progress. It is moving out of the class of typical cow towns” and taking on the air of metropolitanism. cal capital aided by the Northwestern railway of- P cials has given the city a most remarkable hotel to *rve the summer tourist who uses this gateway to the iost interesting Black Hills country. * With the development of highways in Western North akota, and the establishment of the Roosevelt Bad save him. f How can these things go on in Chicago? ‘Some light on the situation was revealed the other day. Judge John P. McGoorty, who presided recently at the trial of a gangster, returned home to find a notice that the in. surance policy on his house had been canceled. He wa: no longer regarded as a good risk in a city where men have a way of saying it with “pineapples.” His record as a public servant, a man who especially needed pro- tection and who doubly had a right to receive it because he was working to make Chicago safe for insurance comipanies and others—all,this‘counted for nothing. That type of moral cowardice reveals a good deal of what is wrong with Chicago. When the community is threatened, “get out from under” yourself and let the other fellow look out for himself. But for citizens, as citizens to stand on the firing line and present a united front seems to be an impossibility. The gangster wins because he can pick them off one at a time, knowing that the other 3,999,999 will get out of the line of fire and scurry away. The same kind of thing doesn't happen where, at the first attack, the full force of the community-is brought BY -RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Aug. 3.—Every pres: idential year brings forth a number of books dealing with political phases and personages. The current political season offers an unusually worthy crop of reading matter for the campaign months. No one has yet written a compt hensive history of American The essentials are crammed into Dr. Edward Stanwood’s “History of the Presidency,” the standard work on nominations and elections up to 1916, While Stanwood's book is a gold mine of information and a book of immense value to students and other writers, some larger work yet to come will include volumes of addi: tional detail. For the present,.‘the full, vivid, colorful story of our poli: makes. them. fit. imi late nat proble paganda, but well done. Here in Washin; Boeckel of Editorial ports has published pamohlets under the el Democrats, a party 60 or 70 years older than the G. 0. P., is told in fewer words. That fact will appeal to many ers. And when Kent and Myers get into the clinches—as in their pro and con arguments over the Hayes-Tilden scandal and the Wilson administration- e journal- ist appears to have it over the pro- fessor. ir, ough ef becomes a pal hous J loes, not: tempt to “the ais. uf she Grant and other administratior Kent’s best chapters cover the Wi son period and the last eight years. “Presidential Years, 1789-1860,” by Meade Minnegerode, is also teresting reading. There were those who shouted publicly that Washing: ton and Hamilton were crooks and that:Lincoln was a vile:dis, they all have their innings National Elections, Tami a National. Politics, and R writers. f s to prove that Hoovei a national necessity. les title of Pre dential Politics, 1928. The subject are such as The Woman's Vote jen Patronage I: fl er Business Conditions in Pre: idential Years and the Prohibition issues. The series has proved valuable to editorial and other peel IN NEW YORK | 1 | theless, has a rendv sale since it is used, especially in the larger cities, to re-construct cream and milk for restaurants and ice cream factor- Used in this manner, it is just wholesome as the fresh cream, and has the advantage of being kept for a long time without spoiling. ‘The best butter contains only about 11 per cent moisture, and will keep for a long time without spoil- ing. When much milk is present the butter tends to spoil. The rancidity is caused by the formation of butyric acid. By washing id butter in fresh milk, some of this butyric acid is absorbed, after which the milk ey be washed out with fresh wa- rr. Many families use oleomargarine. There are some wholesome butter substitutes called nut margarines be- the mone; under this non-starchy diet. You will see that there are plenty of foods other than starches which you can’ use and which will “keep up your strength” and, at the same time, not be fattening. Question: F.G. writes: “I have severe attacks of heartburn after meals. I would like to know what ae this and how to get rid of it. Answer: Heartburn simply means over-acidity of the gastric juice, and is caused by bad combinations of foods, wrong kinds of foods, condi- ments, too much liquid at meals, etc. A teaspoonful of baking soda taken just after the meal will relieve the eartburn, but a real cure can only be obtained through removing whatever jcause is ~~-~4ucing the trouble. ° ; end Minne: t is split. A new “victim” is secured and the plot goes steadily | on. The point, of course, is that event- . ually the public pays for it. For the insurance losses thus sustained are written against the operating charges, met by the public in the payment of rates. In a city the size of New York, it is not difficult to stage such a “racket” on a large scale since a large number of bona fide accidents are constantly occur- ring. ‘ands National Park, there should be a connecting link etween that section and the Black Hills. Taking the ute from Bismarck via Linton and Hull, it is an easy ay’s drive to Pierre, §. D., and then a four hour drive > Rapid City. With the exception of thirty miles from he North Dakota line to the gravel roads in South , ‘akota near Mound City, the going by automobile is asy. But the natural route into this section of the state H. hould be to the west of Bismarck. This city can eas- y be the gateway for many eastern tourists bound for he Bad Lands, Black Hills and Yellowstone park. The itizens of the Capital City and enterprising communi- ies to the west should bring pressure to bear toward he early development of highways which would make asy access to the Bad Lands and the Black Hills along ighway No. 10 which connects with the now unde- elopgd Highway No. 85-leading into the heart of the lack Hills. To the east is Highway No. 83 leading P sward Pierre via Linton and Hull, which should also e developed, giving Bismarck the choice of two excel- ent routes into that section and tying this city up with valuable trade area. New York, Aug. 3.—In the land of ill wind that r getting money ig to work for it. Everything from worthless Texas oil stock to gold bricks has been tried with varying degrees of success at one time or another. Race track badger games, marked lice and bootleg flim- flammeries have come to light from But just now it is the “fake acci- dent” racket that claims serious: tention. I am told that something southern Democrats will _enjoy| like $3,500,000 were collected in this “Tammany Hall,” by M. R. Werner.| past year for accidents that never Pro-Smith Democrats will not. The: Rapperad. y will have to console themselves with thought that Werner brought his history only to. the death tics ean only be had by reading numerable histories, biographies 4 reminiscences, along with files of newspapers and periodicals. to bear. Seldom it is even attempted. For the gang- ster knows that where the community is against him he has ro show. EE SENd iil AT At the Movies ELTINGE THEATRE Ramon Novarro, popular young screen favorite, is featured at the Eltingé for today and Saturday in “Across to Singapore.” Novarro plays a young sailor, one of three seagoing brothers, who, in an amazing tangle of love and ad- venture, figures in desperate runs across the Pacific, mutiny and other graphic details incidental to a charming love story. A notable cast supports the star, Joan Crawford, heroine of “West Point,” “Spring Fever” and “Twelve Miles Out,” is the heroine of the new sea drama. Ernest Torrence, Edward Connelly, Frank Currier, James Ma- son, Dan Wolheim, Duke Martin, Anna May Wong and others of note are in the cast, Much of the picture was taken aboard the famous old clipper “Nar- wahl,” which sailed for several weeks on a Pacific cruise, during which the sea action, including a terrific storm, a mutiny and an at- . tans by SHA £ i : rates was med. ‘he Singapore scenes are elaborate, including a fa- mous resort of sailors in the “melt- ing pot of the Orient,” in which penctically every nationality on the lace of the earth is seen. fe Tee Movsid yan wes the love ot t, 1 {wo rs for the same girl, a1 (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, I a rivalry that precipitates: a tremen- ° ——+ |dous climax. It was adapted from a | BARBS | {sea romance by Ben Ames Williams, ee famous novelist and Saturday Eve- Culture is sadly on the wane in ning Post author. America, according to a French AT THE CAPITOL critic. Maybe he had in mind the|, The prize won by Bell was a long- fact that a prize fight doesn’t seem | term contract with Fox F: to draw quite $1,000,000 any more. | carries with it an agreement to star * the young screen find in a series of General Nobile was hissed in Nor- western pictures. That remi that iu named Columbus was hooted \Action is the keynote, as may be jud, from the fact that Bell al- in one of those towns over eee is deep in producti 7 West Romance,’ his firs ¢ i Sometimes a man takes a girl in his arms to find that he has her on his hands. narrative, — whiel | inating’ quotations from itempor- aries. It doesn’t give an ‘mpat:ial The best accounts of the earliest | picture, but is in tune with the icot days of our political parties to ap-| Oclastic days when we no longer pear in recent years are “Jefferson | lieve that our earlier presice and Hamilton” and “Party Battles | were guided by divine hand. Minr of the Jackson Period,” written by| gerode does especially well in Claude Bowers, the Democratic key-| Sections covering the Clay-Adnins noter at Houston. For the best at-j election scandal of 1824, the Singing tempt to-connect the evolution and| Whigs:of/2860, the first dark horse: fortunes of our political parties with | —Polk—and the. Democratic the ph; 1, economic and cultural | of 1860. ion, your corre- | ‘The Rise of! American ilization,” by Dr.) Charles A. Beard. | Outstanding among political his-! tories poblias din the last year are! The Republican Party,” by Prof.| William Starr Myers of Princeton! and “The Democratic Party,’ by | Frank R. Kent, political editor of | the Baltimore Sun. One suspects that they are proving the most pop- ular of the 1928 political books. Each THE DEFLATION OF PUGILISM (Minneapolis Journal.) Is pugilism in process of deflation? Perhaps. Tex Rickard and his associates lost sinporiane money on the Tunney-Heeney spectacle in New York the other night. The intake was one or two hundred thousand dollars less than the outgo, largely because those who usually buy the cheaper seats refused to pay five dollars each for a field-glass view of the proceedings, The chief sufferers this time are Mr. Rickard and his stockholders. But ultimately the chief sufferers will be young Mr. Tunney and whoever has the temerity to enter the ring against him in the next championship fracas.’ For the shrinkage in gate receipts will inevit- ably be reflected by the shrinkage in guaranties of- fered the perforthers. All of which may seem calamitous to fighters, man- agers and promotets. But the public will lose no sleep over it. As long as pacnle were willing—yes, and eager —to go in such numbers and to pay such prices as made possible gate receipts of two million dollars for a single championship contest, it was fair that the fighters themselves should get a good share of the loot. But somehow the payment of hundreds of thousands of dollars to a super-athlete for a single evening's work has seemed an offense ist good taste. And the lure of easy money at the rainbow’s end has taken into pugilism, where they never achieved more than fourth- rate distinetion and never made more than bare liv- ings, a great many youths who might have become useful citizens in other fields. Instead of hurting the boxing game, the slump in gate receipts and the slump in betting that marked the Tunney-Heeney encounter may actually help that sport —considered as a sport and not as a big business. SPECIAL TRAINING FOR RURAL TEACHERS (Grand Forks Herald.) In an address given before the convention of county superintendents at Devils Lake President C. E. Allen of the State Teachers’ College at Valley City, urges special training for teachers in one-room schools, This is one phase of normal school work which has not been sufficiently emphasized in the past but which receiving more attention. ing a teacher to teach in one department does in such person to teach in a school where there are eight grades. The one-roo! sing and it may be best that it is passing long as we have it we should have a teacher presiding over it especially trained for the job. Tf there is any position in the school-teaching profes- sion requiring versatility it is that of the teacher in the one-room school. Recitation periods are often necessar- ily as brief as ten minutes each and every subject from 7 3] singing to civics must be taught. The pup’ ge in age from six to eighteen and discipline is no small task in itself. ° Teachers’ colleges in recent years have given more attention to training teachers for this very important work and greater emphasis is being placed on it each year. This. is evidence of the foresight of our normal school heads and faculty members and is in line with the noble attempt to give the rural pupil as near to an even break with his city cousin as possible. FIGHTING RAILROADS WITH TRUCKS (St. Paul Daily News.) Having failed in all its appeals to move the interstate epirit eee At Reuben’s, which is the “drop-in” place for most of the theater and Broadway colony, there is a list of something like hundred = sand- wiches, each named after a so-called ” There are sandwiches named for comedians and sandwiches named for critics i All good Republi:sns and 4 oe To play this involved game re- of} quires almost as many factors as to Charles F. Murphy tn 1924 and that| put over a big bootleg dei the book costs fi dollars, which| First you must have a “victim” of restricts its s “Tammany Hall”|the accident; then you need a taxi represents a vast amount fo research | driver, ora casual motorist, shyster and documentation. It doesn’t leave | lawyers, accident insurance adjus u , q a much of Governor Smith's argument| ers, witnesses and so forth. The is written from an obvious, th ugh | that Tam: y must be good because| “victim” takes out a fat insurance not offensive, partisan nt. | it’s so old; it amounts to a ruthless policy. The various figures then Neither is a whitewash, except in/ historical indictment. It is so merci-|go into a “huddle” and arrange the spots. Both are easy and interest-|less, in fact, that Werner has been| details of the accident. To make the ing reading and ought to appeal to! charged with more or less Purpose-| deal completely successful an adjust- the voter who wants to know more|ly writing a Repuilican caropelan er must be in on the conspirac: of the background of his Party, and| document and with piling on Tam-| The “victim” gets hit. Avatar the other party. many not only its own innumerable| lawyer is consulted. The driver ad- The Myers book is the more schol-| sins but those of its enemies in New| mits his blame. Witnesses are ready ly, representing much more re- 3 to testify. The conapiring: adjuster ch and presenting ; 1 ign biographies! finds the claim to be well substan- teresting detail. Kent’ have appeared as usual. Hoover has|tiated and advises a certain settl but informative. His hi been written up by Will Irwin and| ment. The settlement is made and ind sand. wiches named for managers and for stars of the drama and the musical ows. The other night I overheard two wags in the process of placing an order. One read over the long list of the theatrical names and then beckoned tl iter. “Is tl Il you’ve got to eat here?” queried the wag. it, sir, there are dozens of se- GO EASY ON SLOGANS due respect to Senator George H. Moses, the cholar of the United States senate, the slogan he has ® coined for the campaign, “Hoover or Havoc,” may be B ibuged. Someone has said that in America when a few b rather together, they seldom adjourn without the elec- don of officers, the adoption of by-laws and several snappy slogans. Senator Moses belongs to the old school of politicia: " gho:think that a slogan is as essential to a campaign 8 wine used to be at most weddings. * “Hoover or Havoc!” Will it replace that of “Keep- ng Cool with Coolidge?” The Democrats have not coined theirs. Probably one will be released soon from the,General Motors build- ar! lunny, I don’t hit hat. hate iy ion't see anything GILBERT SWAN. | OUR BOARDING HOUSE g DAT FisH Looks Ver’ MUCH LAK -TH’ FisH WHUT A MANO TRIED To SELL ME HERE "Bow ATWENNY MINUTES AGO, MISTAH * MASOR!~ DES’ ZACTIN LAK'M fs, +A BIG YELLER SPECKLED FISH! we DT DIDNT HAVE No MONEY, BUT I Got ovT MY DICK To. INTERES’ HIM IN A [X GAME OB: SUNGLE POLO Fo’ “TH” FisH,~ But HE MWJOULDAYT. PLAN !:. | WHAT EGAD,—Do You INFER “THAT -I PURCHASE: THIS FISH 2 ~~ WHY CONFOLIND (1 SASON, I Sust ‘. BOUGHT~-.DRAT tT, SEE !- Nou. HAVE ME ALL RILED INDIGNATION, ~< CAUGHT THis: FisH fw HARR-R-UMF~ GETTHE PAN J] READY, AND DONE ares <) fg., | Bnt then Senator Moses is quoted in the New York Times as saying that the voters will forget soon the ins and the platforms and focus their entire at- F ei upon the abilities of the candidates and nothing in other words, he would not have the voters take che platforms or the slogans too seriously nor get too | worried ove- whether it is going to be “Hoover or Tavac.” the other hand, Congressman C. A. Christopher- on @f South Dakota dropped in to see Dr. Work tl:e y day and he minimizes the issue of farm relief cr ‘arm equality or even revision of the tariff in the in- erest of agriculture. The South Dakotan said the | armers in the Corn Belt were “feeling good.” fle de- and says further that most of them will vote the blican ticket. His other “hunch” is that the farmers of the great Sultural areas may have their quarrels with the blican party, but that the belief is deeply rooted Meltminctag all b iminating all biographical facts other than that he is a mighty fine physics] specimen, 6 feet in height, weighing 185 pounds, athletic, hand- some, and with a million-dollar per- sonality, it needs to be written that Rex Bell won out because he is the most typical westerner who entered the contest. Local audience . . Hi ee ar 8 will have 7" op. f seeing him when Wild Wine hath He will make seven ee COOLIDGE OUT AFTER BASS, says a prepares. headline. We ike chasing some of those singers ourselves. When the politicians take up farm relief, some measures ought to be adopted in hekalf of the young men who have to rise at 4 . to feed with the m. the ducks after being out chickens until . nh Capito! the: tr scree at theat day and Saturday.” see Ae | Re} A New England cooking e: shat solution of their problems can best be left to the | commerce commission, the Minnesota railroad and ware- penines the swordfish Pe belioas is for 3 bu PR | Par@ of protection. Pergo Watertown Tate tcheme bp nitiatieg toate cane failed with delight by vetecan swore mitt furalek bonds 4 . | Fargo-Wa wn rate scheme by ini truck com- tI veteran - ko Lj, Ppitical history seems to add weight to the deduc- | OFC) with the railroads, * 78. | Slag bide for santtor work: pepe & of Congressman Christopherson, To this end licenses have been issued for five new (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | 14,, 1928. : a truck companies operating in central Minnesota. ——______- or rg Board has a right to reject any ¢ effect, according to the commissiof, will be considerable 2 # ‘BEATEN BY LONELINESS F7. Mes. Adeline Lethermon lives in Dimondale, Mich. She Fis 23 years old, crippled and poverty-stricken, deserted ler husband. She has a four-year-old daughter, Vir- + You’ ‘me, your but look tired. Young Man?” Yes, madam, I'm savings to shippers in the Twin Cities. It will be interesting to watch the outcome of this ef- fort of a state to overcome what it MRS. PAUL HOLMES, * President. 1:24-81 =