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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Katablished 181) —_—.- Published by the Bismarck ‘Tribune Company, Bis- | i ' P Marck, NV. and entered a! tie postoffice at Bismarck | aye yairond mergers in the went are more lmm emer Class mail matter President and Publisher | than in the east, said Commissioner Porter in a reecut, | i digo clon. Pee ayolication of tie HN roads for convot!- | Kubscription ‘ayable in Advance dation of the Great Northern, the Northern Pacific and | Dally by carrier, per year ST 2 he iy veh “ould unify inte one em lines | Daily by mail, per year (in Blanae VAveUb De teiel T 4) ipibatiitig: Gan r=* se RGA hb ECITLA eer BT ai. cuisine Bisinoree) 5.00 / —ot) is before the commision, In redrawing of the } Dally by mail, outside of North Dakota 699) merger plan iy % mbsstoner Porter—of which no details _—- “oe toot been ed to get out—it is suspected that the ar th watg, tives yours tor 240 | Burlington has been omitted from the Hill combination, | D Weekly by inuil, outside of North Dakota Whichever ©" the HM corges 1 o!tempted it ts bound | 4 per year 150) 6 arouse wir dous fight—on the part of the Milwau Me 1 Audit Bureau of Chreutation hee to get inelided and on the part of the Hill lines to lated 1 Member of The The Asocisted Proos bs exchnively entitied to the use | for republication of wll news dispatehes credited to it or Po fot otherwin credited in this newapaper and alse the B foeal news of spor published herein Ail Fights of republication of all other matter herety arc flno reserved | Foreign Represcntatives a UMALL, SPENCE ormerly q CMICAGO BOSTON 7 4 (Official, Clty, State and County Newspaper) | ‘a | The Paramount: A City Asset Bismarek has been placed on Mrowdwa Mt it ts Broadway tial he cone be Heamarek hiv E Not hn’ to go there to becom A ostation on the Creat SF White Way of tities theatres! © Pils ts what the remodeling of the old Bilince theater # as by processes of aitiotic magic, into the new Paramount MEANS, Memarek theatergoens, te Hutents ane pur Poses, Herentter will be merged with the vast audiences | FOF the nations netiopolts. They are to be provided with | fhe same show that hold in) (rath th interest of the most elite playgoer. of the county Honvane eul ture, adve: mune, Film technique, coumd: reereation: nd the myriad of productive aecescorios of the modern movie studio wre to dupleate of the world’s prime showway of minicr attract here the super a ae a A new prestige is conferred on Memes Tt become of the state in the with the glamour ef the ‘one of the few ellie Metropolis traneterred to it primney, TH moves wp to New York tn the Bast and to the Northweot respect, TL ds set part by this inotatiation here Highest type ense of (heatrieal own Pwin-etties in tit ote aes of the ver 4 Of up-to-the minate playhouse q ‘Tho Paramonn’ theater becomes a historical step tn the ‘ evolution of the tride, 1 { Iustre hhould ey, TM nats an artiste etic Riven Mismarek cultural polisty and conte $ The Paramount bo hr tisett a ereation of taste. Tt be an influence to develop and mold the mere appre raiument into an esthette sen: d # elation of plays and en ¢ 2 The theater be: {could no more aw theater than it eould schools and churches, UW wa lub luncheons Chat the prime requisite are a tive new wequate hotel wecommiodations and fA good playhouse, "The thought rate commInily asset, aN organiom tn ibs development and | } progiess, and it ty that an in the ehureh, and a medern eity spare pare tts aid at one of the serviee to make a etty paper the theater as a will w city draw people, and the more people that come tow elly, the More Ms business will Cheive and its growth make prog, J roes, People like to po where they ean be entertained. In _ the Paramount the highest Appeal to its continuon at has promived (he city the bi there, outside of a few large eities able time show, have come to be sereen output with talkie features, ‘The etveuit vaudeville and the road show have all but died that Bisnarck will get some of | the fest musical comedies tn filme form, a Th pPropertion as tis playhouses are geod ity new bas a mean: territory, Us w naren { productions of showdom, and to afford the old The mean Well as super Pletures, that ave now the programy of producing movie dom This is & prospect that Bismarek welcomes, I wel- tomes, therefore, the new Paramount for its artistic Interior, for i for tts influence and aid in community development, for the esthetic uplift it implies, It congratulates all who have had a hand th its creation and it naturally indulges the wish that (he venture will meet undeviating Promicc of the greaier art of the sereen uuccess. Competitive or Co-op Rail Mergers? An agitation in which the Northwest is vitally inter ented, the proposed merger of 160 of the first class ratl- roads of the country into 18 or 2 Ukely to co the activit yumisdion and the inevitable appropriation ef (he subject by congre: The determining principle to be decided on in these Mergers is whether competitive or cooperative considera ‘tlons are to govern in the cc The tnter Commeres commission several F ago had a tentative plan of sonmg groups dvawn up and proceeded to trial-balloon tt out, bul it promptly met willy > counter proposals the mM dt all to pleees, The pla ky for instance, proposed the merger of tre Hil roads «the Northern Pacific, the Great Northern and the Bur- Hngton—-into one group, but this Fi with the approval of the Milwaukee interests, whieh in- P sisted that thelr road should be included in the merger, | The Milwaukee at (he time was in (iancial straits, un- able to moet tts bonded obligations, resuliing in its re- OrRAnizAtiON Tater, while the MN lines were votling in |, Phosperity, The latter (hreo, thesefore, objected to taking J im the Milwaukee, on the ground that ¢ giant nroups ts very © to the surface Chis winter, beth through of the Inferstate Commerce solldations and zoning years reheme did not meet hey would be Seontributing cf their income lo overcome the anemia of » the Milwaukee, Objections of a similar nature and of a competitive peharacter were advanced in other portions of the country | {to others of tho proposed mergers. i The Van Swearingens tried to carry out a merger of —& their own, peouped about (heir Nickel Plate property, the F Bako Bric and Wheeling, the Chesapeake and Ohio, and | the B. and ©, but the Tater tate Commeree commission Pefused to peoait (he pian to eo throug’, under objections adyenesd by stoekholder factions of some of the lines beonccrned. | Bere ty. > proposal for mergers has lain dormant, | | fiend Curing tye tine Commisioner Claude G. Porter has | et WN Ue BESS ae, oy Che basts of 18 to 20 groups. This, Foplan is to be considered by Lhe commerce commission as | MAS ik can di:pase of rov on tis | » One of which is Uhe North Dak ate case, | BF Loree, president of the Delaware and Mudson, Projected a merger proyocal of bis own inte the sit- With likelihood of complicating the entire project, ‘MA, and one of the most ageressive railroad execu- in the country, last year sold the stock owned by p Delaware and Hudson tn Wabash and the Teltigh | x to the Pennsylvania, and found himself with 00 cash in his treasury, ‘Application, just made to the Interstate Com- for authority to merge 15 railroads @ east of Ohio and north of the southern border | is choraved, it will tle together a now ud ayetem along the Atlantic seaboard. mat, the Central of New Jersey, Buffalo, and Western Maryland. The:e | porsibly edge that the world tat ruch a bad place | in system | The Virginian and the Delawa | Western, both sought: by Mz Loree in the new pl: The y Van Swearingens dele in thelr eystem merver fight in the east has Just begun bay i out whole plan of the un by this dendloek other merger of the western Hnes bs Iti, obvious that the membec western group) must depend on the dealin: with the Hil lines. As one of these hy ducluded or left out, so must (he tentative grouping of Lip of the initial step the ofhers be rer veced Th the meantine, coneress has before it several mew tees bearips on the subject, notably one by Genator Fess, {Obie which would five sanction to fir eps and eurtly issues focilitoating a general merger program. Karly to Bed Full of Bunk A rreat deal too much has been tate in praive of the vid “earl: to bed end cerly to rhe storen ‘To be sure, Ie may well lead to health lend to wealth, well, thats something ele agatn. There > kinds of wisdom in this world. One ts the Lind that enables a man te go about hts daily bust And health, may sometine But wisdom are t te heoolne out of trouble, earning a living and finding ways of leying aside a Httle bit of extra money now and then ‘The other kind doesn't bring such definite re- wards It Is the reeener whdom that keeps a man from. geting discouraged and downcast; the soothing knowl- after all, and that mort of tts pitfalls are affairs that men dig for themselves, ‘This the kind of wisdom that leads to contentment and peace. An’ eddly enough, you can often gain it by {laying up tate at nijht “This den’t written in support of night clubs, late parties, aud the like. ‘There ts prectous little wisdom to be found in such activities, If you -re going to get any real good out of keeping late hours, keep them alone; keep alone and get out of ‘The mind works be’ around midnight, ‘To be sure, there Is sleepiness to contend with, at first; but after a Hittle while this dvops away, somehow, and one ts able to think more clearly, to understand more easily, to find tearons for hope where none was visible before, ‘Then, (one picks his nights right, there is the moon- | Melt Moonlight, Iate at night, when all of the day's notses have gone away to bed, ts queer stuff, Nothing looks as it doe. by daylight. Familiar houses are made to look like enchanted cottages, An ordinary row of trees looks mys- terious and exciting. ‘The commone:t of streets, lying deserted in this strange whiteness, becomes enticing and ; picturesque with a haunting sort of beauty, Now all of this ts only another way of saying that things look prettter by moonlight than they do by sun- litht. Everybody, very likely, knows that, But why do we take it for granted that it is the moonlight that is {nlse? Maybe we're mistaken, Maybe the unattractive colors that the familiar secne wears by daylight are simply dis- niulses, pul there to deesive us, Maybe it is the sunlight and not the moonlight (hat puts a wrong aspect on things. Does this sound: reasonable? the moonlight floods your back yard, {t does. ‘Then it seems quite Ikely that the enchantment of moonlight fs renuine, Then it ts easy to believe that we have mis- judged our world, and that it ts infinitely more beautiful, more mysterious and more enjoyable than we generally suspect Maybe this notion is all a mistake, But It's a good no- ion to entertain, just the same, And you'll never get it if you don’t stay up late at night once in a while, The Knees of the Male The arbiters of men’s fashions seem to have devised a number of radical innovations for the male's garb next summer, It is written, we hear, that a new kind of pants is to make its appearance; a gaudy, sybaritic affair, somewhat like a pair of basketball trunks, cut off six inches above the knee, which will leave a lengthy bit of leg exposed to the fresh air, the inclement August rains and the curious public gaze. ‘This, (hey say, will be much cooler and more comfort- able than the present trousers, Very likely that ts true. Yet we shudder et the idea, somehow. For, if the horrid truth must be told. the ave: knee ts not pretty, 1 ts usual sute, and altogether unprepos: ing. Much as we like frankness and comfort, we {eel that most men should, out of kindness to the great American public, keep the knees concealed, re male knobby, somewhat hir- Aviation has played havoe with the language. Planes land in the water where there is no land in sight and Zeppelins hop off without any hop at all.—Louisville | Courier-Journal, As a man doesn’t think so isn't he. | | Editorial Comment | Remember the Solids! «Omaha World-Herald) Little did we dream when we wrote our latest (No. 132. 678-A) editorial on food and what to do with it that Not more than a few weeks were to pass until we should be forced to write No, 152,678-B on the same subject. But here is a fellow from Chicago who went wtth a party «hey called themeelves a cult) to Colorado in search of health and happin And how were they going to search tor them? Why, by starving themse! ! Yep, the whole tdea was to cut out the eats. This particular culter went a step too far, i seems, and starved himself todeatiy, Died Wednesday. We wa JS dead and nobody seems to want pari We cant always figure out why they don’t, but that ts another editorial. However, when we read how this fel- low coliberately denicd his innands their daily stipend of Viewnals for thirty-one days we find it difficult to extend to him a tair modicum of sympathy. Food, friends, solid food, is to eat. You can't drink solid toods and you can’t wear ihem. They've got to be eaten—-masticated, swallowed, digested, To refuse to treat food in the way it is supposed to be treated not only is an insult to the food but the height of gastronomical nonsen.e, Why can't people see it? They will go to most any lengths in che matter of hquids. They will drin! stuff that neither God nor man intended ever to be diunk, but they will turn up their noses at solids that were moant for cating and eating cnly. Look at our women. Look at them! Nine out of every ten are dictiny oprnly, braseniy, defiantly, and the tenth is doing it on the sly. Let us have more solids and fewer liquids in this country. After ali—leavine health and ularly to die. the Rutland, now controtied hy the | DAMP iness and heccs sence cut of it—the American peo- | we Meg d ad ged to ‘aiickuuee country as they beotiesgers. Reach ter a weenie unstead of a smort! * the Baltimore and Ohio railroad also wants in its , Lackavanna and the | ¢ After midnight, when t to feel sorry for the poor chap. After ail, he | Notices NO PRESCRIPTIONS FitLED WITHOUT Doctor's ordER/ US SMAI \ TARIFF SESSION O dergredu mecting. He benan by man who defin remains beliir | gotten ail you have elaborated thus on left behind don't new-f What prompted the question was the sight of an athletic type of wearing ® new high-waisted, long- | Separating the I . trying to get out of a | Uness and getting all involved in} and chaotic fact her new hemline. heart of 3 Some good longshoresman English | unfamilia that escaped her ro s {the er time indicated she herself wi thinking together pleased with the manag ed general: ment, But give her time. Do you remem- creating power ten 4 nd of hi ations. tion as something adopted the very short | from college, in the how lez consctous they we and how they tried to cover their |sum total of eve knees when they down? Then, | experience as we eventually, women ‘Kot all about it A boy could go to and wore them with the casualness | and be completely that they required. Fashion has a way feminine” “be ilored” or be something else, quite as unconcerned- ly as if styles were something that and went like seasons instead of mandates that required a psychological adjustment, If feminine styles really are to be dollars and ¢ successful-—and certainly they ai -! However, it doe ing to be if the designers have -'\ the mental equip thing to say about it — women will) opher than of an have to be more feminine in their | wa They are going to be obliged | > to cultivate grace, and they may even | | have to revert again to manners, in| jorder to create the needed illusions. | You can't strut and stride in a fro that was cut for gliding and groom-) America what it is ing, unless you want to look like a) blame it all on Brot cature, * * There is always a great deal of talk- ing about a change in s ‘comes, but when it actually arri comes with a bang. A month ago, in| the teeth, New York, people were talking long skirts—and wearing short ones. To- | N the shops have taken, tt their hems and pushed up their entered an institut exper Incider ing of the aneial lof Princeton University, summed jthe ideals of modern education v A hunting par of the grylloblatta, |OUR BOARDING HOUSE N tt fa NAX VEEK AY BE GAT MARRIED AN’ \F AUTO BE GOOD, AY BUY IT -1a Go i ‘ es at their quoting the Oxford aed education as “A mind, a tempered and skilled Instrument of realizir insurmountable, a dis of sophistries cf We are so apt to think of educa- | ber how self-conscious women scemed | than created, something thet you get | books, or from trav hing you feel and ' cording to Dr. Hibben, or he cowd be of saying “be | an educated man without ever having xecording to his own reaction to the nces that come to him, r how much it is worth in BARBS A man we know gets up and writes 2s when he can't sleep. Insom- |belts, That’ means the style 4s! k * | launched! | ee % ver: ABOUT EDUCATION nia must be an awful thing. Dr. John Grier Hibben, president * y has gone in search RY AY BAN “TOL” You HAVE AUTO EY oR SALE AN” AY Come SeE Now, THEN. LET'S EXAMINE YOUR) INCOME JAX REPORTS! first. chapel | about the only thing not included in the tariff list. en @ at | Jonah was a good man, they say, have for- but he set a bad example for stow- and then | aways. what should be , (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ° processes 'Y of ideas emplation and power to make obstacles that rning faculty iT (By Alice Judson Peale) Sooner or later every child must go to the dentist. In this generation of hodonture there are thousands of | children going weekly to the dentist's office, the mere sight of which still A so many of us an anticipatory chill, The children of today are not near- ly so fearful of the deniist as we were, Partly it is because he has be- come so skilled that the pain he in- flicts is seidom very hard to bear. partly it is because children are in- troduced to the dentist's office under Pleasant circumstances. They are not first taken to him when a toothache has given them a wretched night, and when some cruel Fak ea AMINE: see must be oui “i ei nee | ‘The wise parent today does not wa: value of such aN until her child has a toothache before she takes him to the dentist. Instead ¢ takes him with her one day when she herself has an appointment. If she is a good patient she allows him to be present while she is in the chair. She lets the dentist make friends witn him. Then she asks him to climb up into the chair while the den- @| tit merely examines his teeth and perhaps gives them a splendid clean- ing. Most children enjoy having the dentist clean their teeth and the ex- perience leaves them with a pleasant ‘feeling toward dentists and all their loose and unground- acquired, rather labor: el, inst ory out of ul of the rh. ollege four years uneducated, ace ion of learning— ionaire, today. hibition? * But why | A Boston merchant bit a hold-up | works. ‘le before it} man who tried to rab his store. The This preliminary visit is especially it | storekeeper, it seems, was armed to) worthwhile if your child is timid and ek O* inclined to nervous fear. The ordeal of going to the dentist may thus be robbed of much of its unnecessary nervous tension. The child as he starts out for the dentist's office is ad not then already tense with the fear of being hurt—a state of mind in it- self exhausting and bound to make more trying such pain as sometimes * may be in store for him. s Will improve a the kind of glass- an insect that| The first sandwich is said to have aptly in his address to the 2000 un-/ lives at the foot of glaciers, That's | been made in the seventeenth century, By Ahern AW ~MY SON «I must Be SN TRUTHFUL WITH You /. AHEM~ BS ~I WOULDNT WANT “fo SEE YoU EMBARK ON “THE SEA oF, MATRIMONY IAL A DERELICT! ~~ You AND “HE BRIDE WOULD) DUST BE “TOURING From ONE REPAIR SHOP To ANOTHER AND FINALLY HAVE “1 BE “TOWED INTO A DIVORCE court!’ ~~ No SoA, WoULDNT SELL You THe CAR! ~~ i wa “fo SEE Nou STA j MARRIED LIFE oN “HE f RIGHT Foot ~~ BUT J Not 1) SEARCH OF A Mecdanic / 1 HH a surenoy we Gala ONCLOSE STANPEO } FOOD COMBINATIONS * In yesterday's article I gave you ® llist of foods in their different classi- fications. Today's article will be con- | cerned entirely with how these foods | may be properly combined. Protein Combinations When a protein food is used it ts best to observe one of these rules: Use one protein by itself. Use one protein with either cooked noa-starchy vegetables or with an un- cooked one, or with a selection from both the cooked and uncooked vege- tables. Use the above combination with the addition of one kind of stewed fruit. No highly starchy food should be used in combination with any of the proteins. An exception can be made with those of good digestions if they wish to use a small amount of real wholewheat bread or wholewheat crackers, No more than one protein should be used at any one meal. A small amount of milk may be used with such proteins as eggs, pro- viding the milk and eggs are cooked together, which seems to blend their proteins in a digestible form. Starch Combinations Make a meal entirely of one kind of starchy food. Combine one starchy food with one or more cooked and raw non-starchy vegetabies. Do not use either acid or stewed ake with any kind of highly starchy food. Do not use protein foods at the same meal with the starehy food. For example, do not use meat and rice to- gether, and do not use two kinds of starchy foods at the same meal. For example, do not use spaghetti and bread at the same meal. Non-Starchy Combinations Cooked or uncooked non-starchy vegetables may be used with any single article of food. There is no food material with which non-starchy vegetables do not mix. For example, they may be used with either proteins, starches, stewed fruits, acid fruits or fats and oil: Fats and Oils Combination: Any of the vegetable or animal oil may be used with any of the other classified foods, providing such foods are not cooked in the fats or oils. Acid Fruit Combinations Any one acid fruit may be used in combination with any one protein, with any of the non-starchy vege- tables, or with protein and non- starchy vegetable combinations. Acid fruit should not be used at a meal containing starchy foods. Stewed Fruit Combination Any one kind of stewed fruit may be used with one protein or in com- A Ae Oe On Oct. 2, 1780, John Andre, an English soldier in the American Rev- olution, was hanged as a spy. During the negotiations between Sir Henry Clinton and General Ar- nold in 1780, fox the betrayal into the (hands of the British of West Point, Andre acted as the confidential agent of General Clinton. To perfect plans for the plot, Andre, under the assumed name of John Anderson, met Arnold in secret and made the necessary arrangements. During their interview aboard the British sloop-of-war Vulture, the ves- sel was forced down the Hudson river by American gunfire and Andre, armed with a pass from Arnold and disguised as a civilian, started on horseback for New York, carrying concealed in his boots several incrim- inating papers in Arnold’s handwrit- ing. Near Tarrytown, almost within sight of the British lines, he was cap- tured by three Americans who found the documents and. refusing all bribes, handed their prisoner over to their superior officer. A military court convicted Andre as a spy and he was hanged at Tap- pan, N. Y., Oct. 2. f Our Yesterdays ] —_ FORTY YEARS AGO Mrs. John Davidson left last eve- ning for Moorhead, where she will vis- it her daughter Margaret. On her re- turn she will stop at Jamestown for a visit with another daughter, Miss Hattie. Captain D. W. Maratta returned from Dickinson last night and con- tinued his journey to Fargo. WW. M. Tuhoy has returned from Minneapolis ra visit with friends there, mene Tne, Repu blican state ticket was cart ‘an overwhelming at the election yesterday, Preston to returns received today by the Trib- une. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Three Dickinson men were killed. and *three others seriously injured when a stock train crashed into the rear end of a train ahead-at the gies water tank early this mort ing. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Lenhart returned last night from a honeymoon in the east, and have gone to their new home at Washburn, Mrs. Frenk Briggs who has spent the summer at Howard Lake, Minn., hfs been visiting old time friends in Mandan and Bismarek this week. W. H. Webb., Jr., returned Satur- pedo airs Laer tor SS nights Temp! conclave in Ban Francisco, to Denver, the St. Louis exposition, Chicago, and Minneapolis. TEN YEARS AGO Cc P, rancher, is shipping a so! 20 carloads of Herefords Chicago markets, Federal aid projects whic the national, Tate and unk ber ernments, which are collaborating in train of ly to the ane! eek shts The Sast bay. to Saale Burnatad, Logan county | use iees bination with a protein and non- starchy vegetable. Stewed frult may be used with any of the non-starchy vegetables. A small amount of any 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. = one stewed fruit may be used at a meal containing real wholewheat bread. Tomorrow's article will explain about proportions and quantities of the foods discussed in the last two articles, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pinguecula and Pterygium Question: G. H. asks: “Is there any cure for pinguecula or Ptery- gium?” Answer: The diseases you have |named mean formations on the cornea | of the eye which are due to irritation from some cause such as outside in- fection through dust or bacteria, or from an over-acid secretion of the eye lubricants. This trouble can be checked and even cured by proper dieting and the use of a simple eye wash applied several times daily. ‘oast Question: H. V.N. writes: “You say when making Melba toast to use white bread and cut all the crust away. Why not use wholewheat and leave the crust on the slices?” Answer: I suggest cutting away the crust as it has already been “toasted” in the original baking of side of the slice is sufficiently dex- trinized. The average wholewheat bread which is made partly of white flour may be used in making Melba toast, but the real wholewheat bread, if toasted through, develops a bitter taste because of the burning of the protein and bran elements. Whole- wheat bread only partially toasted makes an excellent food if there is no reason why you should not use the starch which it contains. ritis Question: G. H. asks: “What is arthritis—what are its causes? Ev- eryone seems to have a different defi- nition for it.” Answer: Arthritis simply means rheumatism in the joints. Acute in- flammatory rheumatism is sometimes found in the muscles but most rheu- matism, including arthritis, comes from a deposit of rheumatic toxins in the joints. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) their construction,, $609,543, have been awarded this year by the state high- way commission. Former Congressman Thomas Mar- shall, Oakes, visited in Bismarck yes- terday en route to the Pacific coast. John Satterlund, Washburn, old time political leader, has entered a local hospital to receive treatment for his eyes, “Crime is the nation’s biggest busi- ness."—Richard E. Enright, former Police commissioner of New York City. (North American Review.) ses & “The feminine art of living charm- ingly is certainly more important than any job under heaven.”—La Mar Warrick. (Plain Talk.) sek “Among the forces which have steadily undermined the vitality of the women’s clubs are bridge, ath- letics, the radio, politics, and the “In this year of grace 1929, tne scenic beauties of the United States resemble Venus with the rash."—Will 2 * may well ask herself it Benito Mussolini is the man ti2 United States needs to enforce its Prohibition law. “In the past five years,” says the Premier, “I have closed 27,000 saloons. Give me time Mussolini's attitude is that too much land is de- voted to vineyards and not enough to Every year mataria-bearing mo- squitoes are responsible for the deaths of between two and thrce million Even the most expensive sable i) 2 foxy looking coat, . the loaf, and will burn before the in- ©