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PAGE FOUR ‘THE BISMARCK 'TRIBUNE An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) 2 Published by tho Bismarck ‘Tribune Company, Bis ++ marck, N. D., and entered at the pustoffice at Bis marck as second class mai) matter * George D. Mann ....... President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per y * YY +8720 Daily by mail. per ~ eee Coal « Daily by mail. per ye (in state outside Bismarck) .. * Daily Sy mail, outside of North D: $ : Weekly by mail, in state. per year ........006+ 1.00 = Weekly by mail, in state. three years for ...... 2.F) s |. outside of North Dakota. ie : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation 2 Member of The Associated Uress The Assuciated Press 1s exc se for republication of all news dispatches credited it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and the local news of spontaneous origin published in. All rights of republication of all other mat herein are also reserved Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg i CHICAGO DETROVi Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg (Official City, State and County Newspaper) COOLIDGE’S FINAL MESSAGE President Coolidge’s final message to congress is concerned chiefly with foreign affairs and international relations, among which nothing takes precedence in his mind over Pan-American relations. While his message tion with the progress made in bring- { ing the American republics into a closer sympathy and { understanding, it makes clear his position that the * United States need play no major role in European affairs but must continue in its position of leadership in the Western Hemisphere. The paragraphs on Nica- ragua, Mexico, foreign relations, Tacna-Arica, Cuban { parcel post, the “Maine” battleship memorial, inter- { American highway, air mail service and Porto Ric * which incidentally take up fully half of the message, lend new light on the importance of President-elect + Hoover's tour of friendship. * On the question of agriculture the president sticks { to his guns. He is one not convinced by the Hoover- + Smith campaign utterances on farm relief. His mes- sage is emphatic and unequivocal on this theme, espe- cially when he says, “The government should assume no i responsibility in norma] times for crop surplus clearly | due to overextended acreage,” and “temporary expe- dients, though sometimes capable of appeasing the demands of the moment, cannot permanently solve the surplus problem and might seriously aggravate it; hence putting the government directly into business, subsidies and price fixing, and the alluring prom of Political action as a substitute for private initiative should be avoided.” There is a note of warning for and confidence in Mr. Hoover in the conclusion, which like the introduc- tion, déals with national prosperity, The president may rest assured that his successor will heed well these words: f “The country is in the midst of an cra of prosperity more extensive and of peace more permanent than it has ever before experienced. But, having reached this position, we sheuld not fail to comprehend that it can casily be lost. It needs more effort for its support than the less exalted places of the world. Peace and prosperity are not finalities; they are only n ~thods.” More than any of his preceding official messages and ic utterances, this charge to congress shows the esident a confirmed convert to states’ rights and states’ duties. He calls upon the state legislatures, rather than upon congress, to enforce prohibition, to relieve agriculture, to develop the power and irrigation resources of the Colorado river and to meet the needs of education, It is not a large program the chief executive has mapped out for the seventieth congress in its second and final session. He has succeeded in reducing all the great national issues to simple problems more ad- ministrative than legislative. His message leaves the non-politically minded with a feeling that that which congress will fail to dispose of after weeks of oratory and debate the president could dispatch with a stroke of the pen. snes cnceeeeeeeeeneteneseneree = 5 8 IT WOULD BE TOO TERRIBLE Another football season has passed on to wherever it is that sports seasons go when they have run their allotted course. In many respects it was a highly successful season. The crowds and gate receipts were larger than ever, and that means the latter were fab- ulous. It produced no “Red” Granges but added several noteworthy names to the Who's Who of the gridiron. And it had its full quota of upsets, which, after all, are what give the game its eternal and irresistible ap- Peal. It is not enough in these days of detailed analysis to say that this or that team simply played beyond itself. One thinks rather of the doctrine to which William James was firmly committed—namely, that in each man are capacities far greater than he realizes ) or generally uses. In an emergency he may perform tremendous physical feats, think with amazing celerity and shrewdness or endure privations incredible in ordinary life. Thus need for an addition to the football coaching Better football will come when the psychological departments of the several colleges show the teams how to get completely into the game with minds utterly alert, muscles ready with tripled strength staff is obvious. and determin: ion hardened into heroic passion. But would this envisioned super-football be better It might be more like a battle beween im- morta? heroes in Scandinavian mythology. And the only reason those fellows were not all killed in the first Even from the remote rim of the stadium the warriors in moleskin,| We had been regarded as having accomplished noth- without drawing upon that potential strength of which football? charge wes that they were immortal. dames wrote, seem to be fighting fiercely enough. BANKER TO THE WORLD it is r 30,000,0) Of, those of land ‘bya despite the growth of the I: e of leadership in this cor, bos yo the world’s investment fiel of neing and wise of London in +The Bismarck T ribune + 5.00] sively entitled to the} Thére afpzars to be ample evidence in contemporary statistics that England is recovering a measurable part of her pre-war importance as an international lender cf eapital. Since stabilization of the pound sterling benkers have been lending abrcad at the rate reximately $600,000,000 annually and British f 'y estimated, are once at whieh ‘thay stood i our, {on been a new |°29 | United States is doing the bulk of Europe’s| country that they should renew diplomatic relations and has expanded its activities at the ex- | ¢x¢! Latin America and Canada. Britain, ‘ee the other hand, continues in the ascendancy in the ‘and has added substantially in recent years | ican statesmanship. ; of the United States in Aus- repo ‘Malay States, Ceylon and India, | credit to and Africa is a realm unpenetrated by American cap- | italists. * | The conclusion to which these comparisons would | seem to point is that the greatest factor by far in re- ducing England to second position as the world’s lender of capital has not been so much the conquests of Amer- | ican bankers in capital markets abroad as the ability | of America to furnish its own capital needs at a time | when they surpassed those of any country in history. | SAVING THE FISH ! With the depletion, or almost depletion, of the | streams and lakes, production methods of fish culture have not bee. developed to compare with the progress | made alorg sane and conservative lines in poultry and | stock breeding. It seems that the public has been impressed that the resources of the water, if not inexhaustible, could be taken care of by the federal government and the states, and that the planting of millions of small fish would compensate for any number of large ones taken by anglers and even by seiners and giggers. The pub- lic has depended on incubator fish until there are no fish worth while in many American waters. The angler has gone the limit by catching the fish that laid the golden egg; so hatcheries all over the country are‘now vainly searching for brood fish, especially brood bass. So great are the demands for fish for stocking pur- poses that it is doubtful whether they will ever be fully met. Government hatcheries, which once filled orders of four or five cans, are now asked to furnish stocking fish in carload and trainload quantities, But for the work of the gcvernment hatcheries some jof the most valuable species of fish would now be ex- tinct in the United States. They have not only been saved from extinction but have been propagated in | sufficient numbers to provide fairly ‘gocd fishing in many sections. THE WELL-TO-DO WAITRESS A writer in the current Golden Book announces that waitresses in New York restaurants are far more pros- perous, as a class, than their sisters in the more “gen- teel” professions of stenography, accountancy and the | like. Tips bring the lowly waitress up into the prosperous class. In some restaurants, it is stated, girls even pay for jobs, so lucrative are the collections of dimes and quarters from grateful customers, The waitress may be only a menial while she’s on the job, but when her work is finished she’s right well to do. Waitresses who make $40 or $50 a weck are not un- common, says the magazine writer. The average stenographer, on the other hand, takes in between $20 and $30. We're not sure just what the moral of this is; per- haps, considering conditions of work and social stand- ing, the two jobs average about even. CHAIN STORES TO GROW A tremendous increase in the size and scope of the chain store is predicted for the immediate future by Prof. James L. Palmer, of the University of Chicago's School of Commerce and Adminstration. It will not be long, according to Prof. Palmer, before there are many chain store aggregations doing an annual business of more than a billion dollars apiece. The independent retail store, however, will not dis- appear, he says, although it will change its business methods radically. “Fighting fire with fire is the only way in which independents can compete successfully,” he says. “Chain store competition can only be met by matching chain store efficiency, or by organization to secure the ad- vantages of mass merchandising.” 1 Editorial Comment | A MINERAL POLICY (Nation’s Business Magazine) The feasibility of formulating a national policy look- ing to the maintenance and most effective use of the store of minerals with which nature has endowed the United States is one of the questions upon which the | natural resources department of the Chamber of Com- merce of the United States will focus attention during the coming year. | The war department has listed a number of ‘“stra- j tegic minerals”—such as manganese, nickel, mercury— | necessary from the viewpoint of national defense. Many others are equally necessary from the view- point of national economic development. What can be done to assure an adequate supply of minerals upon which industry depends, what measures can be taken to conserve tie vanishing mineral re- sources which cannot be replaced, what methods can be devised for the more economical use of those of which the amount is limited and what steps may be taken to determine the availability of existing deposits are some of the questions to be weighed in the formula- tions of a national mineral policy. COLOR LINE IN FOODS (Newark Star-Eagle) Food, as well as clothing, house paint and room dec- jorations, has its fashions and fads. In this metropoli- tan district many housewives will buy none but white shelled eggs. In and around Boston, brown eggs com- mand fancy prices. Consumers there have an idea they are richer in content. A New York cooking institute has been applying a blindfold test to mushrooms. There are white,-cream and brown varieties of this popular edible fungus. Most housewives have been insisting upon the white kind, and as a consequence it has brought a much higher price than the cream or brown mushroom. The insti- tute’s report is that there is not a bit of difference in flavor or food value. Salmon comes in two colors, red and pale pink. The former has been in higher favor with buyers. Salmon packers for several years have bzen carrying on an ad- vertising campaign with the aim of breaking down this preference, the main reason being that the run of pink salmon is much larger. Laboratory tests have shown there is no difference in quality or nutritive value, but thousands of dollars have to be spent in educating householders to believe this fact. The hardest thing in the world to get rid of is a tra- ditional prejudice. It appears that in food, as in other respects, the color line is unjustly drawn. ~ HARMONY IN SOUTH AMERICA (American Review of Reviews) ing but the intensifying of ill will between Chile and Peru as a result of President Coolidge’s efforts in the arbitration of the Tacna-Arica dispute. But such con- clusions have now to be abandoned as premature, Nothing else in South America was so encouraging as the recent resumption of diplomatic relations be- tween Chile and Peru after a rupture that had lasted seventeen years. On October 3 Emiliano Figueroa pre- sented his credentials at Lima, Peru, as Chile’s’ am- bassador. At the same time Cesar Elguera arrived at Santiago, Chile, where as Peruvian ambassador, amidst applause and enthusiasm, he was welcomed by the en- tire population, g President Coolidge had tried to carry out the orig- ‘nal agreement that had called for a plebiscite or pop- ular vote in the provinces of Tacna-Arica; but this proj- sap'y had to be abandoned because of actual condi- ns under which practice could not be made to sup- 'y. A better plan was to persuade Chile and u_to set the world an example of mutual sour eey ond to try in their own way to settle their long-stand- ing dispute. The proposal was made by Secretary Kell to each hange ambassadors. Mr. Kellogg is still working as friend of both governments to help bring about by set- tlement that may be hailed as evidence of the new spirit that prevails so strikingly in the circles of Latin Amer- Thus Costa Rica and Panamh are making progress in téting a boundary dispute; and ment Has bee teported -bettest’ Coboeiale abd” T that’ does both republics. ese | 1799—Georgia adopted the 1876—Brooklyn theater, New York," 1892—Resolution presented in Con-} Tne Camei at the Needie’s Eye! AMERICAN HISTORY December 5 ° | jof state Cl motto: “Wisdom, Justice, | th Moderation.” burned with a loss of 295, lives. gress to keep the World’s Fair at Chicago open Sun- oo Een erERereerenesenenne BARBS | ee electoral vote so well now are taking lover the task of picking President Hoover's cabinet. | days. Johnny comes 1918—First awards of Congressional sc! Medals of Honor made to American soldiers, Gold has been discovered in one} the greens of the Sierra Country ub at Grass Valley, Calif. Aha!} e duffer’s hand again! + 8 the The experts who predicted Ilas anybody noticed how little right home from hool these evenings and asks if there isn’t something he can do to a} help mother . Channing Pollock, playwright, says theater audiences these days “check their brains with their hats.” And, of course, Mr. Pollock, some just check their hats. Several rolling pin throwing con- tests have been staged this fall. How do they manage to get all the hus- bands to pose? < An Iowa man found strawberries on his vines the other day and them in a blizzard. This Republican prosperity? . jicked WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 65, 1928 DEVELOPING THE FACIAL CONTOURS The fleshy parts underlying the skin are composed principally of muscles and by exercising the muscles of the face and neck prop- erly the circulation of the skin can be restored to a large extent. There is nothing which will im- prove the circulation of the blood to the face and head as thoroughly as. exercising the muscles of the neck. A good method is to place a pillow against the wall, stand back about three feet and rest your weight on your forehead-while press- ing it againt the pillow. Partly support your weight with your hands, but gradually ed Lad as much weight with your neck muscles as possible. Roll your forehead back and forth in the pillow so as to strain the neck muscles to the ut- most. You can also apply your head sidewise to the pillow which will develop the muscles at the side of the neck and take out the hollows around the collar bone. Next, turn fet back to the wall and raise and lower your weight, supporting your body entirely by your head and feet. The appearance of the neck may also be improved by exercising of the platysma myiodes—a flat muscle attached to the jaw at one end and to the muscles of the chest at the other. If this muscle is exercised vigorously, the throat will soon as- sume a normal shape. , A good exercise is to stick the jaw out and tense the muscles in front of the throat, contracting and relaxing this muscle alternately, as you make the chin protrude and recede. Do this a few times, and then try tensing the muscles and throwing the head quickly backward so as to put a sudden strain on the front of the throat. Practice this exercise in front of a mirror. Hold your hand on your throat while doing the exercise so you can feel the muscles when they become tense. This exercise should be taken cau- tiously at first or the muscles will become very sore and you will think you are having an attack of tonsilitis. Another method of promoting the circulation to the skin is to use hot applications morning and evening, followed immediately by an ice rub or laving with very cold water. After the cold treatment, use the facial exercises. After the exercises a good plan is to rub the wrinkles lengthwise with a clean toothbrush, plane the camp she in shar ing with her room MYR- TLE. She liges his AN RVEY, but Aleste: by her beauty and shows her at- tention. Unable to buy a gown fo: party ke han invited her to, ry ylelds to the temptation to one from the store for the ning. being “dry” nt the party, drinks too much. A rowdy d: ing partner throws her into r, jo help her, but Alester takes her home. She in dincharged from the store when ahe confessen nbout the dress. Jerry seeks another job, and is surprised one evening when Dan He propones nnd she tells believe in love, ry for money. i o the @exerted camp, where he makes advances, which she repulses. Dan hnppenn by Jerry makes Al- e her ‘When he that she has ‘lost her job account he uses his influ- ence to get her a place in a Evelyn xives a when Alester snyn he Jerry invites Jael takes exception to her mee oS home and a a She refuses and he leaves rage. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XX&AI AN knew Alester Carstairs well. He knew that he held fast to his purpose until it was achieved. And there was no mis- taking, a second time, his interest in Jerry. Alester had fallen hard, Well, Jerry could be relied upon, be trusted, to take care of herself, Dan acknowledged as the cab turned into her street. It looked at last as if she had a good chance to marry her million. When they stopped before her door Jerry opened her eyes and sat up straight. She put out a hand in the semi-darkness of the car and found one of Dan's. “I'm sorry I got you into trouble,” she said softly. The driver reached around from his seat and opened the door. But his fares made no effort to move. “Jerry,” Dan said suddenly, “this may be the last time I'll see you. You know I love you,” he added quickly, briskly. Jerry withdrew her hand from is. “No,” he said, “I'm not going to I know when - I've lost,” he added, holding his “At times I've thought I'd rather take you up and crash with you than have Alester win you,” he went on hurriedly, “but my mind was black with des- pair in those moments, Jerry. £ was afraid that you. . . well, I know. better now, ‘ But don’t be a fool, don’t let people talk about you. That might be the one thing that would stand in the way of make love to you. tense voice low. your ambition.” Jerry’s voice camé in 80 steady, when she answered. “You're talking in riddles,” she tones pitched as low as his own, but not UTH DEWEY GROVESS) “Oh, yes you will,” Dan assured her. “You're near your goal,” he dded with a false laugh, “but watch your step. Alester’s family won’t accept a tarnished reputa- tion.” “Well...” “You know what I mean,” Dan interrupted. “It isn’t what you do, Jerry. It’s how it looks to the world. Be careful where you're seen and what you do. That ring on your finger—it’s Alester’s, isn’t it? Give it back to him and let him keep it until he puts it on to confirm your engagement.” se 8 HE stopped abruptly and for a few seconds a weighty silence hung between them. It was Jerry’s |voice—a queer sound, half laugh, halt sob—that broke it. “Why are you so sure that he will want to marry me,” she said, “and that 1 will want to marry him?” “Because that is what you both want. Alester may not have known it as soon as you did,” he added, “but when a man rushes all the way in from Long Island to a Hun- dred and Fourth Street just be cause he suspects that his girl is out with another man it proves that he is jealous. And when Alester is Jealous ke is jealous of something he wants for himself. That’s why I'm warning you not to make it too hard for him when he goes to the mat with his family. You see, Jerry, I know it will come to that, At first I @idn’t think so, but I didn’t know then how much a man could love you.” “Alester doesn't,” Jerry said. “Don't misjudge him,” Dan re- torted shortly. “Maybe no other girl could stir any real feeling in him, but no man could help lov- ing you, Jerry... . “But what if—if I don’t want him to love me?” Jerry asked, moved by a reckless impulse that was urging her to delay their part- ing—to hold Dan, to forget Alester and all her well-laid plans. Dan drew in his breath sharply. “You want to marry him, don’t you?” he asked gratingly, “I don't know,” Jerry’ cried. “I don’t know what I want. I'm afraid + » + it would be terrible to be un- happy all my life!” “But pleasant,” Dan volunteered bitterly, “in marble halls.” “Don’t be so cruel,” Jerry sobbed. Dan seized her by the shoulders, emotional weakness now she was |i sure to regret it when Alester ap- peared. Moreover, he reminded himself, she never had said, or|l even hinted, that she loved him. His wish had been father to that thought. Just because she lay passive in his arms was no assurance that (| she’d willingly yield to his kisses. She was simply unstrung, and ready to weep on anyone's shoul- der. This thought aroused Dan to action. He lifted Jerry away from him and she fell back against the leather upholstery with a sudden- ness that surprised her. Don stepped out of the cab and turned to assist her. Jerry looked at him with startled eyes. His face, now made plainly visible by the street lamp, was grim and set. A wave of mortification swept over Jerry as she made her way out of the cab. It was with shame that she thought of her yearning to have him kiss her. Why, he des- pised her! 2 They walked up the steps to the stoop of the old brownstone house in silence, Jerry quietly fished for her key and inserted it in the lock herself. She pushed the door open and with the silence stiil unbroken ran blindly up the stairs to her room, - Tan stood in the deserted hall un- til he heard a door slam. Then he went hurriedly out to the waiting cab and drove off. Upstairs Jerry was hating her- self for her lapse from self-con- trol, What could Dan think of her—except that she was cheap? Openly out to marry one certain man and then doing her best to make another kiss her! It would look that way to Dan. How could he know that if he'd kissed her in the cab she'd have been just like any other girl who had found her lover? He wouldn't even believe what she had sald about Alester, she thought with bit- ter self-contempt. Dan was ure about her there . » » well, she couldn’t blame him for that. She had done her best to convince him that all she wanted was a rich marriage. He was wrong about her, though, for just that little moment in the cab—that little moment when she hadn’t wanted to marry Alester. He was wrong about Alester, too, told herself. He wouldn't cot k. eee none too gently. Her gasping cry reached the ears of the driver who glanced over his shoulder. Then he stuck his hand in his coat pocket and pulled out a pack of cigarets. The scene he had just glimpsed would not be brief, he reasoned. smoke, one her, would kiss her. ‘Dan fought off a corres would not trust it. eald. “I'll never see Alester again.” Y put her tearstairied face against Dan's while he held |early,” she remarked % She wished blindly thet he| = raider ponding desire. He was slightly bewlidered | fell asleep. Myrtle woke her at sev- by Jerry’s change of heart, and he en. He told himself that she did not believe that Alester would return to her, If he took advantage.of her |she became conscious of the change HE head ached as she thought of herself as & pendulum swing- ing between these two men and not knowing where to stop. But that was over now, She would go to Atlantic City on the train with the ‘There would be time for a leisurely | ‘Troupe. ‘When Myrtle came in she found Jerry with & towel wet with witch hazel laid across her eyes. “Well, your blowout a break up “I got a headache,” Jerry repli and let it go at that. It was almost dawn before she | “Aren’t you leaving early with Alester?” she asked. Jerry sat up with a start before the door wider to take the the landlady snapped: ter get some clothes on; would ever catch me in a night- gown like that.” ‘ 57 “ONE. FOR TWO in her plans. ! “No, I’m going on the train,” she said,.and dropped back on her pil- low. But at eighty-thirty, while she still lay in bed, she heard the door- bell ring in the unmistakable fash- ion of messenger boys or special de- livery postmen. She wondered with small interest if it could be for her. Not likely, she thought. In a few minutes the landlady came trudging up the stairs and knocked at her door. open it a crack without stopping to put on a kimono. narrow opening she saw She went to Through the the landlady’s arms, As she opened package “You'd bet- nobody Jerry ignored her remark. She was interested only in the box and its contents. Orchids, of course. Well, if she got razzed for having to “train it” down to Atlantic City at least she could flash $50 worth of flowers to make up for what sho had lost. eee ‘O one could have sent them but Alester. She felt in the folds of the green paper for a card. There wasn't any. He hadn’t meant them as a peace offering, Jerry conclud- ed. They must have been ordered before their quarrel of last night. Jerry took her time about dress- ing and packing. The train left in the early part of the afternoon. At 12:30 she was putting the last of her things into a black fibre dress- ing case she had purchased at a sale, At 12:35, as she put on her hat to go out to lunch, the door- bell rang again with that same “I bring news” assurance, This time Jerry was more concerned. It could be word . . . from Dan! When the door opened she was eagerly peeping over the banister. Then she drew back quickly as the man who stood outside glanced to- ward the stairs. It was Alester, and Jerry caught, a glimpse of the black and yellow roadster at the curb before she ducked out of sight. “Ask if Miss Ray is ready to heard saying. “Well, if she isn’t I guess it won't take her long to get ready,” the landlady retorted. “The way girls dress nowadays... .” Jerry grinned, though she was annoyed, Think of one of Alester's servants greeting a caller like that! Bhe crept back into her room and stairs and stopped-to call out the message in a loud voice. Jerry threw open the door. “Yes, what is it?” she seid in a high, gay voice. “Oh, Mr. Car- stairs?” She catiie to the top of the stairs, “Why, hello Alester,” she said to him, “Nice of you to come for me, but I can’t leave right now. engagement to lunch at the which has been dipped in swee. almond oil. These combined treat. ment will stimulate the circulation in the wrinkled area and the skin 5 will gladly answer , Dr. McCoy gladly health al estions on 0 “*Racloee, ‘@ stamped addressed envelope for reply. ——_—$—$—$—$_—$ will soon assume a healthful glowing appearance. Other exercises may be indulged in. A good plan is to look at your- self in the mirror and try to dis- cover various muscles of your face. Avoid undue stretching of the facial muscles. It is more important to gently alternately tense and relax them. Rolling the eyes to first one direction and then the other is also helpful. 4 ‘ou might imagine yourself acting in the movies and that the director is telling you to assume the different emotional attitudes of the face. For instance, first look surprised, then angry; laugh, look sad, jealous, joy- ous, and so on. It is best to employ these exercises in privacy, otherwise our friends will be wondering what tae happened to you. After you have continued these exercises for a time your friends will probably be inquiring the name of the surgeon who did you face lift- ing, because it is possible to erase fifteen or twenty years from the ap- pearance of the face by using these daily exercises, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Drinking Water in Kidney Trouble Question: E. H. writes: “I am suffering from tuberculosis and had my right kidney removed. I drink rom six to eight glasses of water daily. Do you think that amount of water will tax my kidney, or is the water any help to my cure?” Answer: You should drink as much water as is necessary to keep the urine a light straw color. Non-Starchy Vegetables Question: Mrs. Q. asks: “How | should the non-starchy vegetables be combined with other foods?” Answer: One or more of the non- starchy vegetables, either raw or cooked, may be used with either one starch or one protein, or with any other article of food, such as milk, toast) or -fruit. I will be glad to send you a free article on Food Combination. Send large self-ad- dressed, stamped envelope with your request, Pain in Side of Head Question: M. M. J. writes: “For 2 couple of months I have had a pain sometimes sharp and sometimes dull in one side of my head, reaching from the shoulder and upper arm ;to the right side of the head, back of the ear. It seems more acute in ; the morning, but is ever-present and not particularly pleasant. Is it jnerves? I am an unmarried woman 58 years old, with generally excellent health.” Answer: Your pain may be caused from a misalignment of one or more of the cervical vertebra. Change to. another size pillow and if this treat- ment to the neck (while you are hav- ing the pain) would doubtless re- lieve, and if not, the cause may then be found to be either rheumatism or some reflex from lower down on the spine. Our Yesterdays FORTY YEARS AGO John Conway, formerly of Bis- marck, but now employed at Devils Lake, is visiting in the city, Col. C. B, Little has returned from a trip to the east. He visited Bos- ton, New York, Washington and Chi- cago, and was accompanied home by his sister, Miss Nettie Little, of New { pare, who will spend the winter ere, | Dr. John Harcourt, Major Corwin | of the Steele Ozone, W. F. Cochrane, | county attorney, and J. A. Foye, jcounty treasurer, all of Steele were visitors in -Bismarck, TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO J. G. Quinlevan has returned from 1a serena weeks trip to the Pacific : coast, Mr. and Mrs. Wylie have gone to Neche for a short visit, fake Benton and Frayne Baker will en- | ter Smith’s Academy, St. Louis, after | the first of the year, to begin prep- arations for college. — ‘ John Rueter of Turtle Lake is 'spending a few days in Bismarck, ir, Rueter will be employed at the First National Bank at Washburn after the first of the year. TEN YEARS AGO Miss Charlofte Mattson is visiting friends and relatives in Minneapolis. —— N Dean E. J. Babcock of the School of Mines at the state university is arranging a display of pottery, made from North Dakota clay, at the capitol, es BLAME THE PAPERS New York—William Oast has the newspapers to blame for a charge of bigamy. | against hi: 5 notice of his marriage 1 Resign Storer found its way into a §; a Gindys May Bebereans whe ssid ne. ys juperean, wi lice that Oast married her in Spring: field in 1924, Queen Mary now wears a skirt much orien ever she has worn Previously and Pe soclety is waiting to see if she will make’a vogue among the select. a re at ‘ ‘ley, Sout! In the more distant island: \> der the French administration “a Tahiti, natives still res) the au- thority of their kin, ‘and chiefs, ede