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PAGE FOUR fHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. , \ . WEDNESDAY, OCTQBER 10, 1928 Hy Hy where quickly and comfortably—needs no more special ; The Bismarck watt ibune physical qualifications than he would need to drive | She Almost Forgot pendent Ne per 2 {. ‘THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER bores ’ Chamberlin, undoubtedly, knows what he is talking t(Eatablished 1878) | about. Aviation is only beginning to unfold its wings. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| Within a few years the aviation industry may well eae [Lg tie eter at eee at Bis | sank with America’s industrial giants. George D. Mann ............President and Publisher ——— Subseription Rates Payable in Ad w an fale PARC al Book. Vriting in the current ue of the Golden Book, Daly py Cae Pe HE sal : Frederick S, Boas, English Shakespearean authority, Daily by mail, per year, declares that if Shakespeare were wriling for the stage (in state outside Bismarck) ....... today he would be up to his ears in suits for violation Dally dy mail, outside of North Dakota . of copyright. Shakespeare borrowed his plots with a free and easy 2 hand. In his day this was considered quite proper; Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, s0 he wrote “As You Like It” from another play written a few years before, turned another rival’s play into per ie lenber Ai “The Winter’s Tale” and lifted half a dozen more from Member of The Associated Press Boceaccio. i} hi — Ber riccuteation of 4a exclusively entitled "erited| Today such a practice would involve him in countless to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and| lawsuits. We can only say, however, that it is ex- also the local news of spontancous rene (elle tremely lucky for the world that there were no copy- Bree All riehts of republication of (i) thay Sith [right laws in Shakespeste's day. The world's 1Ker- - ature would be much poorer if Shakespeare had not Foreign Representatives had rather lax ideas about appropriating another's G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY work, NEW YO eee Fifth Ave. Bg TROIT Fores Bide. Kresge Bldg. TUNNEY AND PUBLICITY ower SCS | Gene Tunney, in Italy, continues his objections to Official City, State and County Newspaper) cameramen. He took one camera away from a photog- ee é rapher, opened it and exposed the film; he threatened DO WE NEED MORONS? to break another camera if its owner did not leave “We are coming to recognize,” remarks Dr. C. E. A. him alone. Winslow, professor in the Yale Medical School, “that | ‘Thig irritation is quite natural and easy to under- the high-grade moron is perhaps a necessary and de-| stand, Tunney is not the first young man to find sirable element in a civilization that involves the per- - zs great fame something of a bore. formance of 86 many routine tasks repulsive to the | ye_ Tunney might bear in mind that the publicity mentally alert.” which he now despises has been the principal cause of | This statement is taken from an article by Dr. Win- his rise to fortune. Whence came the” tremendous slow in the current Golden Book, in which he sets forth | “gates” for his two fights with Dempsey if not from the pleasing proposition that it is a good thing that all | the vast attention the newspapers paid the two par- |, of us are not quite bright. ; ticipants? Tunney would not be the wealthy man of If we were all gifted with alert, capable brains, the leisure he now is if the “pestiferous newspapermen” doctor says, we would not be happy. There are in the | had not camped on his trail a couple of years ago. ‘world many unpleasant jobs to be done; intelligent people do not care to do them; hence, indisputably, it | —_--—ee— a is necessary that we have a host of morons who will Editorial Comment | do the work without getting discontented and dreaming of better things. * A DRAMA ON THE PRAIRIE This is a very fine doctrine if you are sitting some- One Minneapolis Journal) where near the top of the social heap, and if, in addi- One need not go back into the Nineteenth Century, | ————-——-- ivilizati is onl nor seek out the romantic pseudo-history of the movies - tion, you feel that our civilization today needs only a | hot Seok Ob te ettlement and migration. ‘The Indian | WASHINGTON TER, 2 Weekly by mail, in state, per year .. ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for .. ForettT TO REG ae Li PE | Wy little bit of tinkering here and there to be need country and the open prairie are no farther away than perfect. Otherwise, however, it is apt to be rather | twenty-five years, to the people of Ryder, Ward county, depressing. North Dakota. |So swiftly does the drama move, i 7 that Ryder castally points out its municipal airport to For it happens that the world changes. We no longer | jononctrate its progress, and points with pride to its erous campaign contributor back |let out a terrible roar and flung the jreceptable most indiscriminately nt the next 10 minutes trying | Gj.ti rar A ids bring. MeWhorter's most (dors distilled water should be taken. definitely anchored in an exact posi- THE DIET FOR DIABETES MEL- | over a quarter of @ pound of meat LITUS should be used or a: corresponding In curing this disease it is neces-| amount of any of the other proteins. sary that the pi Age eo) Gr ———_—_—— nervous energy, as isease is a sata tic. £ often brought on by nervous strains, Dr. “eke will gladly oe shocks, worry and overwork, Sleep|} Personal qi nd oe aD and periods of rest are essential to a|| 80d ak : te care e. i CUFe’ spite of the seriousness of this|| _ Enclose a stamped addressed disease, under ordinary methods of || envelope for reply. ‘ Depa ti a ond that att is Cha of sw o_o anal easily curable in most cases. 08 | Choice of one or more ve; bie cases that are most serious have décia ie A “ued HOF = destructive areas in the liver, pan- creas or kifney. When diabetes oc-| desserts. 4 curs in young people ‘it is usually! This diet should be taken for at most serious because it is often ac-| least several weeks before any at- companied by dest: processes | tempt is made to use any of the in some of these ort 5 o carbohydrate foods. If sugar dees The proper way to begin treating| not disappear from the urine with diabetes is to use a citrus fruit fast,| this diet, it is sometimes advisable employing either orange or grape-| # take a milk diet for several s, fruit juice, using a glassful every] but this is usually not necessary, two or three hours. Warm enemas | and the diet I have just given will be must be used regularly every morn-| sufficient to adequately, nourish the ing, and a whole body massage! body without the addition of any should be given occasionally. Vigor-| other kind of food. ous skin friction is advisable after a cold shower bath morning and eve-| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ning. i Question: 0. J. writes: “About The citrus fruit fast should be/ ten yea continued until all traces of sugar! my in and since then they give have disappeared from the urine and] way at times and I almost fall. They even a few days longer. In severe mek ‘a gritting sound, and I wonder cases it may be advisable to use| if you could tell me something to shorter periods of fasting at inter-| use as a massage.” vals of one oxy two months. After} Answer: Massage will be of little the fast the diabetic patient may use| use to you in correcting the trouble a well balanced diet, but he should| with your knees. Go to a physical be careful to avoid the use of! culture instructor and have him give starches and sugar for some time to} you some exercisés which — will come. This is a model of the diet| strengthen your leg muscles, Some- after the fast that I usually recom-| times the diathermy electrical treat- mend for my patients: ment will help in the correction of Breakfast: Choice of one kind of| such troubles caused by accidents. protein, such as eggs, nuts or cheese. | The action of the diathermy current Only one egg should be used, or two] is to warm the tissues of the knees ounces of nuts, or two ounces of| including the bones. Metabolism in cheese. Three or four slices of Mel-| these parts is increased and the ef- ba toast, (This is toast dextrinized| fect is far deeper than anything completely through, which changes| which can be obtained by massage. the starch.) A small dish of stewed} Question: O. B. asks: “Will you fruit, such as prunes, figs, raisins,| please tell me in your health column applesauce or baked apples—no| the cause, symptoms and cure of a {fast and lunch at least one quart of] Answer: The kidneys are not He Lunch: Choice of one or more as|tion, but change their position assent to the old Bourbon idea, that all is well if only | shade tree: Consciousness. Since that nearly desired of the following vegetables: | sli tly with, the movements of the the well-born few are happy. During recent years we| Three years of the Twenticth Century had passed : fatal oceasion, every time the gen- Secs Gabe tb laily are. acrtit a ance ae ed have come to see that it is precisely the average man before Ryder was started, on the edge of the Fort tleman rubs the large bump with| syrall beets and tops, summer squash, Pied that the kidneys are always “the man who has to do the unplehsant tasks, “re- | Berthold Indian vation, but the year of its found- BY RODNEY DUTCHER — {Senator McWhorter as he strode|which the evening's festivities jeft | Small beets oe et’ tope, email ear-| lower down than is considered nor- pulsive to the mentally alert”—that is difootiant: 218 ing eee ae es ty we of the Ryder News, and now (NEA Service Writer) \down the aisle to the rostrum. Thejhim he is inspired to write out alrots and parsnips, lettuce, okra,| mal, There are seldom any definite spaper comes out with an edition he is not happy, then the world needs remaking. of thirty-two pages, to Pereira tee Hane seb i es if thi _| of town and paper, and to tell the id very capably Dia oy See cen ss wiles oan ayer about this dranya of settlement that so captures the im- age man is cnly du tent with! agination. his lot. But the world did not spin into form out of From a hitehrack_ € glowing stardust merely in order that we should raise ales a eet a port i desde Sis peed ili nN ‘i .< | four-page paper to a well-illustrated 32- ‘Dosi- a Ae Fe ee rhe te aes ee tion of Spratly effort! shee is drama e a ue mnditawary amuse! eer pee eone romance to please anyone with a spirit a-tune to the in povérty and not caring to rise, was not designed by Ik heaven for that lot. To be sure, from certain viewpoints a population of Boomnboom McWhorter, whose prin-| £6 brought capliflowers. ponent. q al woe in life for rete bet e Fe a ns iheieees io saa as as been the grave question whether erhaps the most painful feature his meat and potatoes would come|of the campaign for McWhorter, | IN NEW YORK out even, is now beset by trials and; however, has been the fact that he) @: tribulations calculated to make most|has been unable to attack his op- of his private speeches unfit for |ponent’s record. The man who as-! publication. 'pires to his seat in the Senate hap-| The senator’s campaign i pce Bens ae Ha) ee state or election is not going so well. ‘he {urer, who took that important jo! election fe icwhoue: iz Namself no|when Senator McWhorter left it to| Se completely ss any—st_ least longer certain of victory was dem-|go to Washington. Of course, Mc- westegl nelle a postoffice to a hustling town gone by the boards, it seems to enough to organize for better pay or shorter wor ing | 5, 75,000, ei |McWhorter hasn't. Thus the sen- heard, the other day, of a collect hours. A political boss would be highly pleased with} the northern end of Alberta, known as the Peace River i reine haatd managers, Ct sepiateds Phas iy a 2 Ll ee paabpresh A | di - a P age eat. hastened to cover up his gesture valuable time heading off volunteers an electorate that could not see through his output of |d . has hacveered ll sap of itt a vered {of defeat by asserting Sat the dene Mib. Want 10, aah shies; rival’ oni bunk. All of the forces of reaction would exult in such ient research of the int_ pathologists discovered % 4 tet A ° : a variety of wheat called ‘Garnet, ripening from six to ator hadn’t seen his opponent’s barrassing questions, which is a sad a situation. ir li F H 14 |¢laim or he would have raised him! position for any candidate. twelve days earlier than other strains. Since 19 4 a 4 But the democracy of which we have dreamed would | Garnet wheat has been tested and improved at Can- 5,000 or 10,000. H But even in spite of such handi- Peace Ri i hat pa f Sas- ati committee, 0 _ We need more education, and not less; broader ho- Be eae eet seal ce Al Peet hat part Chisigic|heard of Senator MeWhorter’s|““Promises. Not Bunk!” — might rizons, not narrower; higher aspirations, not lower.) |. known as a Garnet wheat country. It has brought in troubles they advised him that if:have carried him through had it! We are not yet ready to preach a gospel of content-|a great crop. ‘The use of the new variety is spreading |he would avoid all national issues|not been for the tragic occurrence’ New England states. ment to the unfortunate. If the time ever comes when |all Vos T'SEEN Neat known as Rew rd, is being tried |@bout the presidential candidates, | the senator undertook to speak over ron is “a necessary and desirable element” in Another new wheat, known as Reward, the moron is e y and ‘out by Canadian farmers under super the grain even though the soil was fertile. Today saves old coins or stamps. He eral hundred which he hopes so! ture, which has been scouted fern Northwest to escape the stem rust that usually Of course, the McWhorter misfor-| introduced to the microphone with’ tainer. When one considers the sharpness of the American of Mussolini and the meeting would senator for a few minutes. But Pslatge note to Britain, it is rather remarkable that the British have been concluded without tht MeWhorter knows his hardware and diring room : Speen agai) press should generally rally round the American stand. )aid of the entire local police force, suddenly he picked up the micro-|the other day. them simply haven't an idea of what's going to happen. | ‘The: reason, however, is no far to seek. Neither the It was McWhorter’s campaign phone. His worst fears were real- + ee The other day two New York papers printed an-| British press nor the British public has been sympa- |managers who suggested in ad- alytical stories of the effects of Governor Smtith’s first; thetic towards the. British government’s attempt to | vance of a great mass- meeting a | western tour. One paper, The World, Democratic, |foymal, vague, or crystal-clear, witn Fzance, To be|graceful tribute if everybody should jcuspidor. all of which were being filled | announced that Republican headquarters were shivering | gure, the Anglo-French bargain, namely that France |bring a flower or two to cast at | Thereupon Senator McWhorter] spite the fact that this process with fear, that they already conceded Smith Wiscon-| was to be supparted in its small submarine contention gin, North Dakota arid South Dakota, and that they by Britain and Britain in her small cruiser contention a by France, did not exactly represent an Anglo-French feared more states would follow. The other, The] aliignee, But.the British press, the British public, and © Herald-Tribune, Republican, asserted that the campaign | the American state department cll scented an alliance tour had been a flop, and that Republican leaders were |in the making. All felt that the agreement would be now i i if ing followed by another agreement, and then another, and in ae paint RU SaET ® eonatS pian then still another, until eventually Britain and France would be tied together in an old-fashioned thorough-| _ @ THERE WILL BE JY You aval What is a barriers voter to ude in such a eaee eoing a lance. sada son FELLAS NAMED HooVER AA" 0 CAMPAIGN f= “0 SNEAK UP ; “ ” i ‘ x ees : id Anne meyer ire ans et |, eh wom on eh gas; | Zs wlo Wve “ke aN’ [pM RECORD. (© | SOME, Niet ggness, it will continue to be, down to the end of the cae vee ae cae vi at ae? sneritanle POLITICAL PLAY AWAY FROM. Al — ee AN PULL -THosE campaign. even—a close Anglo-American co-operation. The most r) You, WHILE You WERE BUSY AND T [4 APRIL CIRCUS enlightened body of opinion in Britain is against any STACKIA' "NICKELS fw WHAT FULFILLED EVERY POSTERS OFF sad plight also. After reading a number of prognos- tications, one is forced to the conclusion that most of ‘RAIN COMPETITION resumption of these continental alliances which were ’ Bg ee car to tame the | geen to, Om fomminion af RHA, walla Be ABOUT NOUR CAMPAIGN, J» PRAMSE So | “tH” WIndows a at is e ey -| country’s finest “crack” trains, he probably will name Kigio-French naval egreements in no uncertain tones, ‘FOR RE-ELECTION AS NE “TRUST uct AN’ -TH “the Broadway Limited and the Twentieth Century and|recsived so comparatively friendly a reception in the DISTice oF TH’ PEACE 2 = THE INTELLIGENT HALL HAS ‘Tet it go at that. Few paatornece realize that the really | Peet Bees British government is backward-looking aca I CAME PAST Your, VoTERS or “This ACCUMULATED: ‘Juxurious, speedy trains are found, not in the east, but | rather than forward-loo'ing. It clings to historic and A oFFice “TODAY, AN" COMMUNITY , “To SO MANY ‘on the lines west of Chicago. traditional policies, and betrays little understanding \ Pos peigel td , NOTICED “TH” DooRWAY =| RE-SPAT ME IN J UNREAD NEWS- HAD EIGHT GENERATIONS } “HE HONORABLE / PAPERS, You lag age Naber gh eigen AG I eee yas Seriya OF SPIDER-WEBS SPUN cain t. ie, So | Caner WALK BAS hig Re °8 | in a deadlock. And its attemnt to slip over a deal with Moines, Sioux City and Omaha, as “the finest train in| France intended to pat the United States at a disad- WitHosT SNoul- SHOES ! ‘the world.” Whether the train actually rates that| vantage in the matter of cruisers was not only stupid : we don’t know, never having ridden on it; but the nae shertalGh but calculated to endanger Anglo- western lines have many others to compete with it. Porrimnn: FE SUONE: ; 2 + ‘There is, for instance, the Oriental Limited of the To those Americans anxious to see Anglo: araticen © Great Northern, There is thé Olympian of the Mil- ‘ ' waukee; the Overland Limited, of the Union Pacific; Pg Neagle $ it Santa F Hope at toe Senay Enc ee government es long as the British aré not being misled. , Ne OO Pacific; the Panama Limited of the Illinois] Muncie Star: Henry Ford. who is getting together . All of these are magnificent trains, Let phauhaey Satta aH a his muse rn to out ae addit rug stores of other cays were like, might ine! a thon: ot pein car couple of drugs in the list of exhibits. Indienapolis Star: ‘Commander Byrd has ordered a shalf ton of Hoosier novcorn for his trip to the South Pole. which surely will help to while away the antarctic evening. « Stout Fells Argus-Leader: Coolidge’s visit may en- lighten sore perzohs who believe that the Minnesota agents who have all but denuded the living rooms of Connecticut and the! baid for on’ the “dollar down and Washington, Oct. 10—Senator J./!de® proved quite popular; quite nlf for Senator McWhorter’s op-| chayotes, oyster plant (salsify),| symptoms except those which go mallow, kale, zucchini, parsley, en-| with the general prolapsus. The dive, avocado, (alligator pear), or} backache and bearing-dowa feelings ripe olives. These may be used both| associated with prolapsus are seldom | cooked and raw. In the afternoon at} caused by the floating kidneys alonc, least one quart of distilled water] but come from the general weakners should be again used. of abdominal and back muscles New York, Oct. 10.—Of all the ar-| Dinner: Choice of one of the fol-} which allow the prolapsus to exist. ticles of grandma’s era that have] lowing proteins: Beef, mutton, tur-| The only cure is in raising these me! key, rabbit, chicken, fish (except) organs through strengthening the that the napkin ring has disappeared | saimon), cottage or cream cheese,| abdominal and back muscles by tak- in| gelatin, frog’s legs or turtle. Not! ing suitable setting-up exercises. is i iali Not even the petticoat is quite £0 | said by the bootleggers to be all but|sends with hirts i nt morons would be an advantage. A big industrialist) Twenty-fiv Sago it was e onstrated the other day when,!Whorter knows a great deal about] 7. § y, Be with your shirts is excellent would delight in having a breed of workers who were | would never grow in the northern. reaches of Alberta Gctatiy aniet Tony er nel the treas-)"*Napkin rings, if you please, have impossible. |. , toe into windows that rattle at j ji v ho fifty-fif ara 000, i ie just smart enough to operate machines but not smart |And Saskatchowan. North of the filty fifth parallel of |scnator himself only claimed it by|Whorter. He has the books and joined the ranks of antiques. I) Just how $50 and $60 clerks and sos tor | salesmen manage to pay the $90| Commander Byrd passed through who has begun to save them as one | rentals they are charged has always |Chicago on his way to join the An- is’ been a mystery to me. Yet scores|tarctic expedition. Probably just reported to have a collection of sev-| of poorly paid white-collar men live |getting ready to go through any- me! in apartments that cost from $90/| thing. day will be very valuable. Antique|to $125 a month. They sport canes eae | shops, I am told, now sell this grand| on ‘Sunday and seem well supplied old standby of the country table} with dinner clothes. as they sell early American furni- California grape growers have in- creased production 200 per cent b I am told that most of them are|since prohibition went into effect. Y} generally “in hock.” Their radios, | People certainly are eating a lot of phonographs, autos and clothes are | jelly these days. r . Bean aaa wad. Aree sottine at Eloomiebure tiie umer miGht whet! Nid Cee inaniea tt ac inadelndio& cet rtrd ite teen at cane Ee a are presumed to be more persons|cane sufferers all the contraband 5 being trifd |iie could have anyone he wanted tc the radio for the first time in the| lower Fifth avenue, which exude dealing in credit in New York than |liquor seized in Florida. People in our national life, America is done for. ; F ig ainenit i ition |Z° on a stumping tour with him,’ campaign. jl ip any place in the world. Granting |some other parts of the count , government. It is also early ripening and in addition |& ping im, ‘campaign [Shard to believe that the occupants y 1 t untry are government. tt iS tosistant qualities; ‘The advantage |Senator McWhorter agreed and| The senator, who had composed | sit down to their table without first the see okithe- popularity fhe tat | wandering) how you (ko) about baring, BAD GUESSES BY EXPERTS of the carly ripening grain is not confined to the colder |Wrote back suggesting Clara Bow, & special new speech which he|‘aying grace” and then taking a| smaller towns, r a windstorm. ‘ Sports writers are, notoriously, prone to err when regions of Canada. It might well be used in the Amer. |but had no reply. jhadn’t used for several years, was| napkin out of its venerable con- + (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) The business of putting on “the they try to pick the winner of an important prize fight. | p tacks the wheat in the last few weeks before harvest. tunes aren't all his fault. Some-|a few well chosen words and pro-|- “Saying grace,” by the way, is dos ae carried to a ridiculous! ¢_. « The number of bad guesses centering about the first | American farmers adopted Marquis wheat from Canada |one should have told him when he ceeded to speak. Very shortly | another custom almost out of vogue} . #8 fe} Yi Dempsey-Tunney fight is still fresh in the public| They might find benefit in experimenting with Carnet addressed an audience of Italian-isome unconventional persons in the|in the big city. I was told that) Actors, particularly those wh ur esterdays or Reward to get a crop before the rust destroys it. |Americans two weeks ago that theirear of the hall began to yell] several waiters and a few hundred | come under i he aay vohae 10 | memory. Ae bulk of. them were anti-Fascists.i“Louder!” The senator raised his| cinc:s ell but, toppled over when| are the worst offend gt allen TEN YEAR But it might be pointed out that political experts, A SURPRISING BUT HAPPY REACTION Then McWhorter wouldn't have! voice into a roar and went oi. bs ‘aon te eaoats from the| Gop” is eon a ee the G He Ss AGO as far as the present campaign is concerned, are in a (Minneapolis Tribune) launched into such fulsome praise} The yells continued, puzzling the south bowed their heads and whis-| ether their fault. is not alto-| | Governor Lynn J. Frazier named gethef their fault. They feel they |November 2 as Fire Prevention day cr thanks in the| have to put on a front whether or |for the state. Fifth avenue hotel! not their board bills are paid and whether or not their stomachs are; Sgt. Tom Rogers of Garrison, full ized on close inspection, for the . a »|empty. In the offices of the agen- blood Mandan Indian, descendant of microphone turned yet ie hei at are md me a appedtertle peti “ we they become verbal plutocrats,!tribesmen who housed Lewis and Pert tears, ‘tiliance, loose or tight, formal or in- |few deys later that it would be ais known in the underworld as a/ sands of nonrefillable liquor. bottles, jut once out onthe street they go|Clark on their expedition through to the automats for a dime’s worth |this part of the count ned ar of coffee and potatoes. Frequently |from service in Rene i ea in- they have to borrow the dime. But|structor for select service men at their shoes are shined, even when|Camp Lewis, Wash. ie, heeles are et run over and the 8 —_—_— ; soles well scoffed, i jismarck pled; 000 for re- Their gaiety -of spirit often ill jlief of starving Wiec ie road on becomes their stage of economics} other European countries. and mind. They are ready to wise- crack with the next one and blow] Indians at Fort Berthold sub- dream bubbles all over Broadway. |scribed $14,400 worth, of Liberty Their last comment, however, is|bonds in the Fourth Liberty Loan likely to be cagey: “Say, you couldn’t| drive, according to Karl Klein, let me have a dollar until I get that !chairman for McLean county. contract with Belasco, could you?” GILBERT SWAN. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO peered. sake Sey Frank Andrews of Minneapolis °F | was killed at Napoleon when he was | BARBS. | |twn over by a loaded lumber wagon. —<—<— + « ne Bismarck high school basketbell Cows were fed seaweed.on an Illi- |team defeated at Jamestown 22 nois farm on the theory that the|to 6 om the Jamestown floor. milk they’d give would cure goiter. 4jWhy not give them an aspirin tab-/ Al Small, one-eyed trackla; on let every day? So no one who|the Linton extension, got'a pi of drinks milk ever would be bothered |steel in his good eye, threa with headaches ... The trouble is|the loss of sight. " that it isn’t the people who drink escapee! milk who get headaches... The FORTY YEARS ‘AGO experiment might be carried fur-|,, Postal Clerk, Shipley purchased ther. A man might buy a cow these {the M. T. O'Connor. fruit and con- days; mix up a few political fectionery store on Main street, speeches with the animal’s hay, aes take a drink of milk and go to bed Busty rehy gap tne peecie yas sgusted, saving time and the ex-|V!5!ting friends ismarc! wing pense of a radio. . . Sufferers with [completed thresh t int 5 ing her wheat omnia might find relief by buy- | Which 18 bushels of No. 1 ing a cow and feeding it on grand |bard to the acre. opera selections... If this ex- barge riment is a success, however, the|, John C. Pollack of near Bismarck tleggers all, will go into’ the bile oat gy Sed ie od ee isiness, the bovines corn miadh and sell mila $12 the quart, |caFried no : : + ibosten ‘baked beans. originated a: Russian monastery a centu1 , aoe € pene the Pili landed, i- de te ¥ : a Nati - | taurant Khsoctat rig We srish ie y RICAN association would set its historians 7 tous af the sags margd an airtel | eggs served as strict! . October fresh nowadays, Soa : . 1780—Connecticut tiered its west- A doctor says that if we eliminate |1862—Lee oak. sonata! flane Wiets of the artes intentors tod Alt |308h Teresi ities aeciaes wen! « coverers. Onc of these probably i is ~ into the man who original: ind — fog ake inal He foun oar je California adopted woman Pa