The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 3, 1930, Page 4

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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 83, 1980 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs Weekly by mail. in state. per year ......... Weekly by mail. tn state, three years for ... of North Dako.a, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively enti*led io the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or hot otherwise credited in this newspaper and “Isc the loca! news of spontancous origin pub'ished herein All rights of republication of all other matter hereir are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Crucial Year for United States The new year is a very crucial one for the United States, considered from the international as well as the domestic aspect. The country has never before had so many irons in the fire. At home it is farm relief to be worked out, the tariff to readjust, law enforcement to be put on its feet, waterway plans to be started, rail- road consolidation by regional groups made satisfactory to the companies and the shipping public. Abroad, it is the biggest adventure in peace adjust- ment to be brought to culmination by the president, economic penetration by American industry to break its way against the fears and prejudices of Europe. the mistrust of Latin America to be shaped into such rela- tions as have been brought about between this country and Mexico. That is the purely American side of the situation. But America also has a philanthropic role to play in the adjustment of the relations between the European countries themselves. aid to extend financially, in all probability, to set the reparations system in motion entry into the international court of justice to add an- other perplexity to the accumulating mass of mixed domestic and foreign problems. Europe is far from a calm state of mind. In fact it is in a state of hysteria as the French hesitate to evacuate the Rhineland, as Mussolini stirs up new alarms for the peace of the world by his frenzied spasms of war talk. as Russia parades its world revolution spectres, as the minorities of the Little Entente nations mutter restless- ly for self-determination which would shatter some of the new republics and kingdoms. England has its disturbing industrial problems, its un- certain tenure of the Labor regime, Germany has lost its strong man Stresemann but has withstood the shock of futile attack on the Young plan, and it is possible that in France such a reactionary as Poincare might come back to power to spoil so many of the gains for readjust- ment which Briand has achieved. eee However, as the Old World closed the year, the gains for peace appeared to offset the possibilities of trouble. While final approval of the reparations settlement —saweins%problem for 1930, there is every reason to velieve that the sore point of the pence of Versailles has been healed by economic statesmen. Certainly Franco-German relations have bettered, due to the co- operation of Briand and Stresemann; the complete redemption of the Rhineland becomes probable in the near future. The reich itself has just celebrated ten yars of republicanism in which every assault upon Ger- man democracy has been rebuffed. If the British Labor government has aroused France by London's coolness to the old entente, the atmosphere of Old World politics is distinctly clearer. Indeed, castern Europe presents the principal danger spots. Austria is finding it difficult to maintain po- litical stability, due to the struggle for power between the Socialists and their Fascist opponents. Hungary still has a vacant crown. Jugoslavia has been torn with internal discontent throughout 1929 headed by the ir- reconcilable Croats. Foreign relations prove none too favorable, Three important spots on the map of Europe challenge peace —the Adriatic coast of the Balkans, where Italy is rest- lessly seeking to undermine Jugoslavia; Hungary. find- ing it difficult to get along with Czechoslovakia; and Roumania, bent on having her own way in Transyl- vania, where Hungarian property is at stake, and. similarly, with regard to Bulgaria. eee All these situations concern the United States, for it is so far committed to the permanent pacification of the world that international irritation and friction any- where that threatens to mar the peace program on which it is set is sure to find repercussion in Washintgon | Conditions in Asia even must give the United States pause. There an ominous atmosphere hangs over China and India. The quarrel of Russia and Manchuria over the Chinese Eastern railway has been tefaporarily thrust aside. eee In the realm of politics, America promises to figure jarge in the events of 1930. The Five Power Naval Conference in January is @ crucial aspect oc the world-wide question of disarma- ment. The possibility of the entrance of the United States into the World Court likewise bears decisively up- on the position of America in times of international trouble—pointing to a way to prevent friction between the United Siates and League members. From the economic standpoint, commercial policies give every indication of heightened nationalistic centi- ment. This will continue to manifest itself in higher rrotectve tariffs and possibly more extensive discrimina- tion against forcigners by governments. Thouch politically a “Uniicd Siaies of Europe” may still be distant. there is every reason to believe that the economic cooperation of Old World nations will bocome closer. Toe year 1920, therefore, may well usher in a new eva of empire building in terms of economic combina- tion. To the European trend must be added the move- ment for greater economic unity in the British Empire. | fnd even the prospect of Latin America economic co- “ eperation. Slippery Streets Are Safer ‘The chairman of the executive committee of the Public 1.00 domestic cane product of Louisiana and the beet sugm u| is tied up in the industry. Freeing Philippines to Tax Sugar It looks very much as though the sentimental hold the | country has retained on the Philippines ever since in the settlement of the Spanish-American war by ihc treaty of Paris—which salved Spanish pride by paying $20,000,000 for the islands taken by Dewey, Pershing and Funston—is about to be released for economic rea- sons, The home sugar interests are clamoring for giving the islands their independence and taxing their products) when imported into this country. At present Philippine | sugar, which is produced to the extent of about 600,9(0 | tons annually, comes in duty-free and this has been hampering Cuban importations, which pay duty, and the | of the west. Cuban sugar fields are largely an invesi- ment of American capital. Millions of American moncy That is why the demand for casting off the Philippines has been becoming so in- sistent. The proposal to give the islands is fathered by Senator | King, of Utah. He has a resolution to that effect pend- ing before the senate committee on territories and in- |Sular affairs. Hearings are to be held on the matte this month. As a majority of the committec is said | to favor the resolution it should be possible to get it on the floor of the senate by mid-February. Inde- | pendence was promised the islands at some time wher they were taken over and 30 years have passed in the development of intelligence, industry and political ideas; intended to make that promise possible of keeping some day. Several times the proposal has been rejected. Once— in 1900—it was turned down at the polis by the nation. for it was then fathered by William Jennings Bryan and the people to accept the vagaries of the radical at the time. There was no doubt that ghe islands were not prepared to be self-governing at the time. Then | the senate voted independence in four ycars, ii 1916, but | the house rejected the bill. Now economic factors are bringing the matter of in- dependence to a climax. The King resolution proposes i that the Philippine legislature provide for an election ot | delegates to a constitutional convention to formulate constitution for a republican form of government. ‘When the constitution has been perfected, the president | would proclaim the independence of the islands, ani; within six months the military forces of the country; would be withdrawn. The matter may not be so casy, however, for the con- tention has been raised that congress does not have the} authority to turn the islands adrift. The New York Herald-Tribune says only a constitutional amendment or | & mandate from a constitutional convention could vest | power in congress for such a siep as parting with national | domain. | It is rather curious to contemplate what is proposed. | There is sordidness in it. No idealism animates the con-| | gressional forces backing the proposal, only tariff ad- justment, and there have been some dirty hands dipped in that muddle of late. All of Cuba is suffering. Sugar growers within the United States, both in the cane and beet divisions, are} up against the same thing. So congress, to relieve the situation, would like to put a duty on Philippine sugar.) To do this, however, it must grant the islands indc-| pendence. The Philippines, accordingly, are nearer independence now that ever before. Before the winter ends it is quite | possible that a bill setting them free will be passed by congress. We haven't the faintest notion—never having been there—whether the Filipinos are ready for self-govern- mnt yet. And it’s very likely that all good Americans ought to rejoice to sec their country at last ready to honor its old pledge. But somehow the thing leaves a bad taste in our mouths. When it was a matter of honor alonc—a simple matter of keeping a promise—this country couldn't see its way clear to do anything about it. | Now it has become a matter of dollars and cents | That hits us where we live. So maybe. now, we'll kee)) | our promise. The whole thing is a rather sharp commentary on | H our national character. i The Submarine’s Usefulness . | | Submarines, evidently, will play a big part in the com- } | ing naval conference at London. England and the Uni- | ted States would abolish them; France and Japan want to keep them. It will take much patient negotiating to reconcile these divergent views. We are inclined to wonder, now and then, if the im- portance of the submarine as a naval weapon is not exaggerated. In the World War Germany's submarines clamped a tight blockage on England; but in the end. England and America found a way to cope with them. The submarine menace steadily diminished from the | summer of 1917 on. | We have a notion that in any future war the submarine | Will be found a less efficient weapon than many people | suppose. Youth ‘Revolts’ Early A scientist at the recent Des Moines convention arose , and solemnly? announced that the “revolt of youth” | usually begins during the high school age. At that} point, he said, a young person begins to be irked by; | authority, and takes up arms against it. This conclusion, he added, was gained as a result of studies made of some thousands of public school and college youngsters. Maybe it’s all very scientific, but we insist that the gentleman doesn’t know what he’s talking about. The revolt of youth begins just as soon as the youth in ques- tion is able to crawl around the floor. If you've ever | tried to get a dish of spinach down a child of thre?! who didn't want to cat it. or tried to induce a toddler | to go up to bed when that toddler had other ideas on! | the subject, you'll know at once what we mean. | Editorial) Comment | The Woman’s Clubs of Main Street | (Duluth Herald) It might pay thosc who snecr at women's clubs. charging that they merely fuss with the externals of culture and do no good in the world, to study the work that some of them are doing in the Main Streets of the nation. For instance, there is the Women’s Club of Center. a little prairie town of three hundred people in the western part of North Dakota. It does a good deed that has a pretty story back of it, and that perpetuates the memory of a girl's self-sacrificing heroism. Years ago Hazel Miner, a young girl. was caught in a blizzard with her younger brother and sister on their way home from school. With sublime unselfishness, sht took off her own cloak and wraps and used them to shelter her little charges against the bitterness of th: ‘blast. Because she cid that, they lived. But becausc she has done it, she cied. She died that they might live. &0 the Women's club of Center created a students’ loan | : lund, named after Hazel Miner, to help ambitious boys to get education than, without help, they or. 4 iG Ze ie i i « Publicspirited club woman, club started a students’ loan to commemorate the memor; club and the community. . of Haztl Miner, and it is thought- I 5 z i i g : u 5 F e to ‘ BARBS All who have been in eny doubt whatsoever about the reality of Santa Claus surely must be convinced—by the bills payable Jan. 1. * * Senator about being disowned by his party at | home. He ought to be able to get a job any place now as a heavyweight i boxer, * That lounging robe the wife gave | you optimistic about that—she'll be able | for BERT FLUG, WHO IS CONVERSATION WITH ROPE ON “TH” BULL ouT OF BOUNDS ! quiet oS NORE 1990 BY NEA SERVIC! TH” BLOCK SIGNAL ON MY OL” PAL, Now ~~ WHEN You PUT Your STEER QUT To GRAZE SOLDIER OF FORTUNE, BEEN ALL OVER TH” WORLD FROM SIAM “6 TJONE’S SUNCTION ! aun He's A CALL YouR SHOT. AN? NAME Your. Pocket? tS) PARLOR BERT, KEEP A SO 'T Won't eer awe BERT'IS A iz if if BI MUG, BUT HELL, (Xe HAS BEEN FROM -HE TAIL-GATE OF A > RURAL MEDICINE SHOW WAGOAS ! ue EGAD~ Your: FRIEND BERT MAY HAVE KNOCKED AROUND “HIS EARTH ae BUT cT'S MEN ~To PASS. WITHOUT] RUBBING ELBOWS! iB tm ae ; OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern] as SAV, LISTEN KID «Tut cive vou ZA WEED tae Nou APPEAR Z to ROOMING HERE A My HAVE THE IDEA“THAT * VIEW OF THIS WORLD G@ ENOUGH FoR Wo RIVALS = * | shouldn't worry Heflin to * too} @ ' for Christmas—don't be find something around the house! you to do. t i: 0TH TP LL HT AAT RAE Hn Ue NL RON PS i i i that shown by the Women’s clubs New England in North Dakota, that em- a sometimes drab old world with a beauty of that links the human with thé divine L i 3 i LUCA increases wh braide, the women mite the Corn ana x NOW Go on W THE sTony CHAPTER XLI MIE creaking of chairs, the gusty sound of sharply in- drawn breaths, awed exclama- ions, marked the entrance of} il Sevier, suspected. slayer of | two women. The handcuffs had been removed. but two huge po- licemen guarded the man who was as yet booked only as a mate: rial witness. He had not yet re- tained a ‘awyer, and as he! slumped wearily into the witness! chair his hunted eyes glared about an audience containing not one friendly face. ieee The hours of grilling—and Dundeé now knew that that was not merely a sensational news: | paper term—had reduced Emil | Sevier, erstwhile violinist for the | Little Queen theater, to @ cower. } ing. quivering wreck. Dundee knew he had neither slept nor eaten since he had been arrested at two o'clock that morning. | Nearly 15 hours of torture! The! young detective felt a sharp! twinge of pity, then, remembering fhe kiss with which Cora Bar- ker's lips had been gagged as,her own braids were drawn tight about her throat. his heart hard- ened and his eyes were as hos- tile as any that gazed upon Emil Sevier. Norma Page covered her lovely, pale little face with her trem-| bling hands and Dundee envied Walter Styles the privilege of slipping a comforting arm about her shoulders. “What is your name?” asked Dr. Price briskly. Zmil Sevier—Emil Sylvester! Sevier.” the prisoner answered | dully, without raising his eyes, i Mrs. Emma Hogarth and Miss Barker?” “L will ask you, Sevier, if it ts! not true that you planned to rob Mrs. Hogarth of the money she lities are unlimited. And, {back upon what Mr. Shearer did with a shoestring, we almost believe , him, setting caught. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) | erushed straw hat in his b “You were acquainted with}. @\cr's automobile. Usually the hens |hi ere in the back seat. see Mr. Schwab says business opportun- looking * * OK ne thing about those long dresses —the ladies now have to button them keep the tails of their gowns from is subject."—Senator Simmons of North Carolina, zeke “We may say we want peace, but what we really want is to be let alone.”—Rev. Jason Noble Pierce of ‘ashington. We ees ze k mAvenging ©.1929 by NEA Service, Inc. “There are some persons, nearly of the female sex, who suffer from a |chronic rush of words to the mouth.” | Quotations | e © “My observation has been that most A hen in Wellington, Kan., went'every. senatcr speaks more briefly for a ride on the bumper of her own- | when he is thoroughly familiar with { —Dean Inge. FISH ODOR and forks, will remove the odor fish. ’s menus suggested for beginning Sunday, January Sunday Breakfast: Waffle, crisp bacon, 4 ioe tak potato, spinach, celery and ripe olives. Dinner: Celery soup, baked chick- en or Belgian hare, string beans, salad of grated raw carrots, pineapple whip. Monday Breakfast: Coddled eggs, re-toast- ed cereal biscuit, stewed prunes. + Lunch: Cooked carrots and peas, shredded lettuce. Dinner: Broiled steak, oyster plant, cooked lettuce, salad of chopped raw cabbage, Jello or Jell-well with cream. Tuesday Breakfast: Toasted breakfast food with cream (no sugar), stewed apri- cots. Lunch: Cornmeal muffins, string beans, celery. Dinner: Broiled: mutton chops, baked ground bag? i asparagus salad, pear. Wednesda: iy Breakfast: Poached egg on Melba toast, broiled ham, stewed raisins. Lunch: Raw apples, all desired. with peanut butter (to be eaten bread | and butter fashion). Dr. the week Sth: Dinner: Vegetable soup, roast beef, mashed turnips, stewed toma- toes, salad of celery and raw carrots, small dish of Junket. Thursday Breakfast: Wholewheat muffins, coddled egg, Applesauce. Lunch: ‘Eggplant en casserole, salad of vegetables molded in gelatin, (consisting of celery, cucumber and Parsley), Dinner: Roast pork, oyster, spin- ach, head lettuce, apple whip. Friday Breakfast: French omelet, toasted Triscuit and butter. Lunch: Steamed rice, brussels sprouts, salad of raw cabbage and 1 GO AES eM OF TS OER, a casserole, add a small amoun. of hot water (just enough to allow for baking) and place in a hot oven, tightly covered, until tender. When Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions diet addressed to tim, on health and care of ‘The Tribune. Enclose @ stamped addressed envelope for reply. ready to serve, pour over the egg- plant a generous amount of hot, thick cream, and dot with butter. Chopped parsle,, may be added if de- 8 | QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS { (Milk of Magnesia) | Question: Reader asks: “Would a continued moderate use of milk of nt the magnesia (after meals) augut hardening of the arteries Answer: Hardening of the arter is produced by the deposit of minerals in the arterial walls. The minerals in milk of magnesia can never reach the arterials as these minerals arc inert substances and pass through the alimentary canal without being as- similated. (Teeth Are Loosening) Question: J. writes: “I have a mouthful of seemingly perfect teeth {that are all loose. I can brush them hard three times a day, still they do not bleed or hurt me in any way. Do you know of any way I can tighten them up again?” Answer: Go to a good dentist and get his opinion about your teeth. You are doubtless having some absorption of the alveolar processes which are , the bony structures holding the teeth in place. Proper treatment will somc- sometimes stop such necrosis, or de- generation of bone, but it is best to rely on your dentist's judgment as to whether the condition can be cured, or whether your teeth must be ex- A cut lémon, rubbed over knives; “The over-stimulation of American | celery. children is one of the greatest dan- gers of today.” — Professor Earl Barnes, Dinner: Breakfast: (no sugar Luneh: | ach, lettuce. all} salad of cold diced beets “) + en casserole: rot was reputed to have hidden in her; lowed by a grim-faced. man of) Anyway, last Saturday night, at room?” Sevier, who had too frankly ad- mitted as much to Dundee early that morning, now stirred and straightened in hig chair. “I refuse to answer, on—on the grounds that it—it might tend to jineriminate or degrade me.” be jerked out. “So, Sevier has had time to think, during these 15 hours,” Dundee reflected, “and he ts not the fool I thought bim,” “Give an account of your move- ments on Saturday evening, June 29, from approximately 11 o'clock on,” Dr. Price directed sternly. | eee ALTINGLY, conscious that every word be said woyld wind a- loop of the bangman’s rope about his neck, Sevier told the story which he knew Dundee could prove against bim. he told of going to the Rhodes House grounds, of waiting in the greenhouse until Cora Barker re- turned home, of climbing up the rose trellis to the upstairs porch, of looking into Mrs. Hogarth’s room from her window, of seeing the dead woman in her chair and Cora Barker searching for some- thing at the desk: of scuttling away down the rose trellis, of sprinting down the alley, his But as before, Sevier refused to tell anything else after that mo- ment when Dr, Weeks had seen him. raising his hat to shield bis face from: the glare of the bead- lights of the car which had turned at the entrance to the alley. “Lask you again, Sevier, where vou kept yourself from that night until this morning at two o'clock,” Dr. Price reiterated: sternly. “I refuse to answer,” Sevier re- | | torted wearily, for the third time. And a dozen more questions jelicited not arother atom of in-} formation from Emil Sevier. Finally Dr, Price asked: “Just what was your relationship witb the dead woman, Cora Barker?” “I refuse to answer,” Sevier re- plied sullenly. “Is it not true that you were once engaged to be married, that you made love to her fre- quently?” “I refuse to answer.” “Is it mot true that you were so incensed against Cora Barker for having tnformed the police of your previous plans to rob Mrs. Hogarth that you came back here. at the risk of arrest, to kill her?” “No, L tell you! No! I never saw Cora Barker last night, 1 never spoke to her or touched her, and you and your damned third-degree cops can—" “Order, order, please!” Dr. Price rapped sharply on the table with his gavel. “What is the mat- ter there, officer?” Re ee ee? UNDER turned and saw young girl struggling with the niformed policeman who guard- ed the entrance to the room. “A lady—says she’s got some- thing to tell,” the officer panted. | {Then bring her forward,” Dr. Price commanded sternly. Io the deep bush, a girl, fol-; ‘middle age, ran down the aisle be- tween the two sections of seats, {She was very young, and her pretty face was swollen and | blotched from crying. Before she ;feached the coroner's table, Emil | Sevier halt rose in his seat, cried jout something tuarticuiate, then {sank back, turning his head jsharply away and shielding tt with his crooked elbow. “That {s all for the moment, | Sevicr.” Dr. Price snapped. “Take jhim away, officers—" “Please let him stay. I want jhim to kuow—to hear—” the girl panted, her hands stretched toward the corone: “Who are you. young lady?” Dr. Price asked aly. The middle-aged man stepped forw before the girl could ai swer. “This is my deughter, M Againe@iyra Cannon. I am George H. Cannon of Mereyville—" “Please fet me talk fir: the girl appealed to the “Father is so angry with me for coming here; be didn't want me mixed up in it—" “Just a minute, Miss Cannon. +... Officers, guard your prisoner. ;He may remain bere until 1 fu- struct you to remove him... . Now, Miss Canson—" | A minute or two later, the girl. duly sworn id, was pouring out i her story in a flood of words and tears, only occasionally inter- rupted by a question from Dr. Price: “I first met Emil—Mr. Sevier —last winter when I was study- ing music In Hamilton. I thought be was a wonderful violinist. 1 met bim at my teacher's studio, where he sometimes took a les- son. He used to come to see me at my boarding place, and we'd (practice together for hours. We —we got engaged to each | other—" “When?” “In April—April 12, it was. I jremember so well—" and the jsirl’s voice broke down com- pletely for a bing fiercely at her on; “I told Daddy the very nest Sunday, when I went home for the week-end, and he woulda't let mé come back. The next Fri- day Emil came out to see me— Friday was bis day ol the theater, and and Da quar- reled terribly, Daddy made me promise 1 wouldn't see Emil again, but—but we wrote to each other, J sent his letters to the theater and Emi} sent his letters to me to a girl friend of mine. We were planning all the time to get married and go far a! But Emil didn't have any mone; nelther did 1, except my ance from Daddy. And—aad | never dreamed Emil would plan such an awful way to it as that—that woman éays he did.” eee UNDEB flinched at the way @ «designated poor dead i Co: You didn’t know anything of his plans then?” Dr. Price inter- rupted. ff course not! He told me he was going to come into some money when his father's éstate ; Was settled, but I ka: now. about half-past 12 or a quarter to one, the phone rang and It was Emil, calling me from Hamilton. It was lucky I answered the phone and that Daddy dida’t wake up. I—my mother is dead, and there’s nobody but Daddy and me and the cook. Emil said be was in trouble, but that be badn’t done anything wrong. He asked me to drive to Greenpoint and wait for him there a piece down the road from the station. He said .e would drop off the train there when it slowed up. It doesn’t stop at Greenpoint, you know, but it slows up to go through the village. So 1 did, and nobody saw me, and Emil told me just exactly what the trouble “a . “Kindly tell the jury what Mr. Sevier told you that night,” Dr. Price directed. Rapidly th ri told the same story tnat Sevier had repeated so many times to the police and, that afternoon, to the coroner's jury. ‘He said be was terribly sorry he’d ever planned to get money in that awful way.” the girl sobbed, “but | ki he was tell iug the truth when he said be didn’t kill the poor old lady, or rob her either. So J said I'd take him home with me and hide him in the rooms over the garage, be- cause the cook lives in the house since—since my mother died and Daddy is away from home so much, ‘Daddy was nearly crazy when he read the papers and saw that Emil was wanted by the police, but it wasn’t till last night that he caught me taking food to the garage for Emil. He was so mad 1 thought b kill “Emil, pretty soon he got out the car and made Emil get into it and said he was going to take him to Hamilton to the police station. } made vim let me go, too, and of course with me along, Daddy coulda’t drive right up to the sta- tion with Emil, because he didn’t want my name mixed up in Emil's trial. Emil promised bim he'd cut his tongue out before he'd tell where been hiding, and ‘“e wouldn't have teld! 1 know he wouldn't!” In the deep silence from the audience the sobs of thé girl were cut across by two groans, one from the girl's father, the oth: from the map still loved believed in—in spite of thing. . The coroner cleared his throat, fery- put Sevier out of the car?" “It was about a quarter to one,” the girl answ: corner ‘of First and Chestnut, but he dido’t kill Cora Barker! That's why I came here today. 1 told Daddy ('d kill myself if he wouldn’t come with me to help me prove Emil didn’t kill her, Daddy would like to see Emil hanged, he’s so mad at him, but ell have to tell the truth! Because he knows as welt as | do that Emil didn't kiN Cora Barker!” (To Be Continned) Broiled halibut, aspara- gus, bolled beets, sliced tomatoes, no dessert. Saturday Grapefruit, all desired) Answer: . Buttered macaroni, spin- tracted. (Phosphauria) Question: F. H. asks: “Will you please advise me what to take when there are phosphates in the urine?” The important thing to do is to stop the mental overwork or any other nervous strain which is the cause of the excess of phosphates in Dinner: Vegetable soup, Salisbury | the blood or urine. You can provablv | steak, cooked celery, baked parsnips,| get rid of the excess by drinking and carrots | large quantities of water between Jello or Jell-well with whipped cream. | meals, but the cause is a waste of “Eggplant Peel and | nervous energy, and this cause must slice the desired amount of eggplant | be considered in a real cure. (Copyright 1930, The Bell Syn- dicate, Inc.) oO | Our Yesterdays | VERE pciabeenciainencd es FORTY YEARS AGO ‘Tom Fortune, who recently return- ed from a western trip, is making ar- rangements to locate in the northern part of the state. ©. H, Holt, popular insurance man has returned from Chicago, where he visited during the Christmas festivi- ties, William Watkins has completed his inspection of the local postoffice, and left last night for the east. E. Van Houten is making plans to move to the new state of Washington and enter business. TWENTY- FIVE YEARS AGO Miss Belle Ward has arrived from ;Fort Yates, and will spend several days here with relatives. Mrs. T. Burgum and son are here from Arthur, N. D., to visit relatives for a week. Dr. and Mrs. J, A. Dillon, Wash- burn, came down today to visit friends over the week-end. Mrs, G. A. Rawlings and Mrs. E. J. Taylor have returned from a short trip east. RUST STAINS Sour milk will remove rust stains from white fabrics. Soak in the milk, then rinse in clear water before using | soap. iia FISH PANCAKE pancakes, with a filling of creamed fish, make an unusual tuneh- eon or supper dish. Served with strained spinach, new peas or small diced carrots or beets, it is most at- tractive and appetizing. CAKE CUTTERS Variety in foods is so easily ob- jtained with a little ingenuity on |; mother’s part. New cookie cutters, for instance, cre on the market in modern and alluring shaves. They are well worth the trifle they cost. PAINTED POTS Your flowers pots can themselves be as gay as posies if you paint them. Ferns in a gaudy orange and black Pot, some ivy in a beige. green and pesece mes one, pat bit of exalis a or chartreuse are colorful. alae FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: Quite often the loud ki of the spseker is * ts dey “ ® x | ee, ! +

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