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The Bismarck Tribune q f09¢ soyns RoRros GEhsoWnA Rte Ap independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bu- Marck, N 1., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs @s second ciass mai! matter. George D. Mann ................President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrie: per year . . Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail. per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota ‘Weekly by mail. in state. pez year . ‘Weekly by mail, in state. three years for . Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, Der YEAr .......esseeee Weekly by mail in Canada. per year ....... Member Aodit Bureao of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published heretn All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) i=] Ts a Foreign Kepresentatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON India’s Disorders Born in Africa English self-sufficiency was the inspiration of the vio- 4 they continue, ever possess the possibility of a flaming revolt in which nationalism, race and religious fanat- icism may unite in irretrievable embarrassment for Great Britain. Ghandi, as he is today in prison, has been 30 years in the making. It is, therefore, no wonder that England has such a big problem on its hands, for in Ghandi has been raised up a relentless fanatic of the type which is wont to run amuck spiritually and politically once they get started in a movement associated with racc, sect or country. The ascetic leader of India’s civil disobedience did not get his nationalistic inspiration in India. It was planted in his soul in South Africa. In June, 1891, Gandhi, hav- ing graduated from the University of London, was ad- mitted to the British bar and quit England for his na- tive land. A Hindu firm then sent him to South Africa to conduct a lawsuit. He found the Indians living in South Africa treated the same as the aboriginal natives, He became interested in their efforts to raise their status and remained in Natal to conduct @ successful campaign against the government's anti-Asiatic laws, sacrificing his large Jegal income. He founded an agricultural colony near Durban in « 1904 based on his idea of renunciation. He abandoned Cy eee ee ee ene ey his legal garb and began wearing only a loin cloth. Henceforth he became in the eyes of his followers Ma- hatma—the great soul. The same processes of agitation were employed by Ghandi in South Africa as now used in India. There were strikes, marches and imprisonment. Eventually Ghandi won better conditions for his followers and de- parted for India in 1914. With nationalistic consciousness aroused through par- ticipation in the World war, Ghandi feund an instrument of agitation ready at hand for taking up what he had left off in South Africa. This was the Nationalist con- Gress, founded by two lberal Englishmen but developed to the point where it split into wings, with the left very much in the same temper as the Sinn Fein in Ireland were before the series of rebellions had brought about the Irish Free State. As Ramsay MacDonald has stated the situation at that time, the demand of the Nationalist congress was “for enfranchisement and for responsibility. It was never anti-British and it has always contented itself with de- manding a measure of self-government under the Brit- ish raj. But it gave birth to a left wing which gradually gained an independent position and drew away from it. The Anglo-Indian administrator lost his opportunity. “The congress which ought to have been accepted by him as a useful critic was regarded by him as an irrec- oncilable enemy. He resented it. He misrepresented it. He handed it over to the mercy of its left wing. The doctrine of a Sinn Fein kind of self-help, the dream of the political boycott, were encouraged by the blunders of the government.” Gandhi came into prominence in India with his first Political coup in persuading the Nationalist congress of Hindus to make common cause with the Moslems in their support of the caliphate movement, and in 1916 he } reflected the Lucknow pact creating an alliance between 1 the Indian Nationalist congress and the Indian Mos- lem league. 1 In 1919, when the home rule envisioned by Lloyd j Unjust laws. George failed to materialize fast enough, Gandhi an- nounced his Satyagraha movement, the principle of which is the asserted right to repudiate and disobey Out of that movement has developed the present reign of disorder boding so ill for Britain, Egypt Cries for Return of Dead : Egypt at last has developed a grievance out of the \ spoliation of its tombs and mausoleums. It wants its dead back. It sees in their removal the source of a curse it feels is on the land, fallen, as it has, from its ancient high estate in civilization and empire. The dead of Egypt possess an archaeological interest that does not pertain to the dead of other lands. The high skill in embalming which Egypt possessed has pre- served its dead better than those of other nations. Then. the tomb embellishment which was the practice of the dwellers along the Nile, especially in the case of histori- cal personages, lends interest to the defunct laid away in them. There is historical and ethnographic data abeut the resting places of the mummies of the land of the pharaohs. Science is eager to possess itself of specimens of the dead as exhibits of the ancient culture and civili- zation as far back as the time of Moses and even farther back. That is why Egyptian tombs have been plundered and Pillaged by the modern peoples. What would European nations say if the tombs of Charlemagne, of the Popes, of English kings, of Spanish conquistadors had been sim- Marly stripped? What a tremendous wave of indigna- tion, for instance, would sweep through the religious world if the bones of the Christian saints and martyrs in the catacombs of Rome and elsewhere were removed and placed on public exhibition in museums. The first outward expression of this new sentiment in Egypt manifested itself while public pressure insisted that Tutankhamen’s mummy must not be removed from its magnificent royal chamber of death in the tomb in the Valley of the Kings, near Luxor. The second manifestation was the refusal of King * Fuad and the Egyptian government of the $10,000,000 of- m fered by John D. Rockefeller for a new museum and in- turstitute of Egyptology in Cairo, under conditions which {0tmeant international control of the museum and arch- gelogical excavations in Egypt. ‘There was some criticism to the effect that Egyp! has “thrown away” $10,000,000. Others felt that King Fuad and the Egyptian government displayed a highly com- mendable wisdom in encouraging the new spirit in Egypt, and in placing national ideals above material con- siderations. In ine with this, Queen Nefertiti, who reigned 4500 | . pri * Jent riots and civil disobedience in India. which, while | {not only for its inherent interest but because it puts THE BI SMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 14, 1930 years ago, is the first subject of earnest negotiations be- | tween Egypt and a foreign government. The Egyptian | foreign minister, Dr. Hafiz Afifi, recently went to Ber- lin to begin negotiations for the return of the head of this queen, considered to be the most beautiful piece of ancient Egyptian sculpture in existence. The head was excavated by a German archacologist some years ago. Muscums invariably are reluctant to give up treasures. Still, it is announced that Germany will lead the way in extending the unprecedented courtesy, and will return the head of Queen Nefertiti. Only when the royal and priestly dead, now publicly exhibited as mummies abroad, are brought back to their native land will Egypt see freedom and happier days, | the Egyptians feel. ' Carping Criticism—Knocking | We all are natural-born knockers of one kind or an- | other, The tendency is the offensive expression of @ faculty for desiring to better conditions or of ideals which go higher than the goals attained. Knocking is impetu- ous expression of dissatisfaction, that is it is the un- dignified form of criticism and desire combincd. It has, therefore, been well termed in the slang sense. In a more } refined terminology it is classed as carping criticism, one of the most potent producers of weariness of the soul that 15 iriaginable. In this era of big things this sort of criticism has be- come more or less the echo of great achievements, seek- ing to belittle vision and genius and success. During the last few years Americans have been doing material things on a bigger scale, probably, than ever | before in all history. The engineer, the builder, the or- ganizer have reached heights never gained before. Hand-in-hand with this, however, has come the rise of a determined spirit of criticism. Never before have we had so many writers of reputation busily engaged in maintaining that these material accomplishments of ours are things of no account whatever. A word—“Babbitt’—has been invented. It is applied freely to any and ali business men—to all men, in fact, except those who think that making marks on paper 1s the chief end of man and the noblest exercise of the human spirit. Now all of this, we submit, is a funny sort of develop- ment. In an era that is, pre-eminently, an era in which things are being done, we are indulging in an orgy of talking that goes beyond anything in our national ex- perience. We are glorifying the writer—the talker, in other words, the man who says much and does little. ‘To be sure, every nation needs self-criticism. But haven't we a bit of an over-supply? Is all of this ink- slinging really necessary? Visit, some day, a really large-scale construction job in some American city. The experience is worth while, you in closer touch with the American spirit than a whole five-foot shelf of books. Below you is an excavation big enough to hide the pyramids of Egypt_gouged out, casually enough, in a month's time. Above rises an enormous mass of masonry and steel, more stupendous than any of the breath-tak- ing works of proud old Rome, flung skyward by a mir- aculous combination of human skill and mechanical in- genuity. Thousands of tons of steel and stone are in place, each piece cut to shape and marked for its own peculiar spot before ever it left the factory or quarry. ‘The sheer immensity of the job is overpowering, breath- taking. Here you have action—things done that will help to shape the conditions of life for millions of men and women yet unborn. It is all the work of Babbitts—men who read very little and write not at all. And it hap- | pens that it is precisely this sort of work by which the | present age will be remembered. Of course, it is easy enough for the critic to maintain that it is all futile. But it is hard to give the knocker | a very high rating when you stand in front of the doer’s finished product. Editorial Comment | Spare the Evergreens | (Beach Advance) The Dickinson Yard and Garden club, which did 50) much last summer to add to the beauty of the homes and | public places of that city, is wor’.-ng in good shape this year, backed up by most of the citizens, all of whom seem to take great pride in the appearance of their city. In addition to home work, the Yard and Garden club has issued an appeal to surrounding counties in which exist sections of the Bad Lands, to take steps to stop the sons who have no regard for private property rights. / The ravishing from thé hillsides of these beautiful trees is being done on a wholesale scale by parties making | ® business of selling the trees to others, often as nurscry The club asks county commissioners to pass resolutions condemning this practice and state's attorneys to pros- | ecute the parties guilty of it, but, while in hearty sym- pathy with the idea, we see no way in which resoluting by the commissioners would do more than call at- : tention to the evils of the practice, nor is it apparent just how the state's attorney can very well prosecutc without complaint by the property owner. At any rate the wholesale removal of these handsome trees without a | permit from the owner should be stopped in some | manner. Amenities in the U. S. Senate | (Chicago Tribune) The United States senate has been known as the best | club in the world. That was its distinction after it had! begun to doubt that it was the most dignified delibera- | tive body. Even the newer renown is fading out and | nowadays the Conscript Fathers can feel that they are | just as much protected by the amenities of life as Moran | gangsters would be in cutting into Capone territory. i They enjoyed raiding letter files to discover what they , could turn up of a confidential nature embarrassing to | witness stand victims confronted with their pilfered per- ; sonal belongings, but it is something of a different color | when their own desks are ransacked by unknown hands. ; Disconcerting lists of names must be suppressed to keep | the statesmen themselves from pain. Two senators have | lunch together and at the next sitting of the chamber! one turns the other up as having intimated he could get | § fecexal Job if he voted to confirm a nomination to. office. ' The Conscript Fathers have become stool pigeons by | choice, moralists who find that to be truly good they | must abrogate the normal decencies of life. Presently when one senator sees another he will climb a tree and yell for help. A Census Smirk at Peace (St. Paul Dispatch) When the census took away from Hopewell, Virginia, its brief distinction of being the country's fastest grow- ing town, and gave it to Culver City, California, Uncle Sam was spared an embarrassing situation. Hopewell got its start by manufacturing munitions, and in this day | when America professes peace, it was hardly a proper example to be setting before ambitious communities who would seek to emulate the fastest growing town. It is well that Culver City, which had an increase of over @ thousand per cent, should take the distinction from Hopewell, which grew over 700 per cent within a decade, Hopewell offered a census smirk at America's profes- sions of peaceful intentions. It was not a representative champion in the great American population contest. How can Uncle Sam's municipal nephews feed their am- | bitions on a diet of war materials? That would hardly be in accord with the spirit of the disarmament confer- ! ence which, like the census, was an outstanding event of | the year 1930. 4 The census should be revealing a country that is bus- | ily beating swords into plowshares. Instead, it displays an array of rural towns which have :uffered a dwindling ; population because they placed their reliance on the plowshare. It also came very near to giving the cham- | pioasip for growth to a town that has been beating out | swords. whole denuding of the Bad Lands of evergreens by per- | @ | Can He Doa ‘William Tell’? sist | Position specially created for him. He | a Today Is the {| was given a stipend to enable him to Anniversary of | devote his time oxclusively to re- EINSTEIN'S BIRTH On May 14, 1879, Albert Einstein, German-Swiss physicist, famed for his theory cf relativity, was born of Jewish parents at Ulm, Wurttemberg. In 1894, when his parents migrated to Italy, Albert went to school in Switzerland, where he ultimately be- came a naturalized citizen. He early displayed a genius for mathematics and, after graduating from the Uni- versity of Zurich, became professor of theoretical physics there. By 1913 his work had attracted such attention that he was called to Berlin to fill the post of director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Physical Institute, a Search. In 1923, two years after he received the Nobel prize, he accepted the chair of physics at the University of Leiden. The work by which he is best | known, the theory of relativity, is re- | Sarded as the most important contri- bution to physics since the discoveries of Isaac Newton. He also devised a satisfactory explanation of the phe- nomenon known as the Brownian movement in liquids. ————_—___—____-+ | Quotations | ey “Genius depends more on a partic- ular balance in the working of the various parts of the brain than in | mere mass of all its parts.”—Sir Ar- thur Keith. ee * “The Anti-Saloon League never contributed onecent to my campaign.” —Former Representative Andrew J. | Volstead. ee & “The dance orchestra will never be |replaced by any form of mechanical |music.”—Rudy Vallee, orchestra lead- er and crooner. se * | “The right use of leisure time is the key to happiness.”—Mrs. Mary Sher- jman, President of the Federation of ‘Women’s Clubs. * Oe O* “I know of nothing which gives a jman a greater feeling of well being than when he has touched a fellow for a tener and got away with it.”— Edgar Wallace. i Husbandg . ©11930 4Y'NEA SERVICE INC.. BEGIN HERE TODAY NATALIE CONVERSE tries to Ho other GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VII LAN had a faint bope that Natalie would apologize for her behavior. He wanted her to come to him and tell him she was sorry, ask him to forgive her. Only a thorough clearing away of the misunderstanding would put their marriage back on a normal basis. . He decided he'd have to give her the chance to apologize. That's why he was going home, He knew it wasn’t because he wanted a hot bath. Only he isn't going to humble himself any more. He'd done that enough—begging her to tell him what he'd done, give him @ chance to. explain. No, he'd had enough of that. It was up to Natalie now. He opened his front door in quite the same manner as usual. He'd let her know that he wasn’t too angry to be approached. Natalie heard him, and her heart pounded furiously. The fear that he might not come home at all had haunted her every minute since she'd walked out of his office in a manner for which she now burned with shame. But she did not go to him, or call out a word of greeting. Aside from her regret for having made a fool of herself in bis secretary's pres- ence, she was unchanged in her temper. This was something he could not explain as he had so many other affairs, she assured herself, as she Picture, seated before-the sea salt- brightened fire, with a pile of silken Dillows at her back. Alan should have melted as-soon as he saw her, but he didn’t. His face wore an inscrutable ex- pression. Natalie told herself he wanted to know how much she'd found out before committing bim- self to any line of defense. Well, he should know! There ‘Was no reason why she should fence. Alan, unknowingly, delayed her attack. “What's the matter: isn’t there anything for a cocktail in the house?” he asked, glancing at the empty stand by the davenport. “I don’t know,” Natalie answered tartly. “I'll go and see,” Alan said pleas- antly. He was determined she should not stir his temper, thinking to show her that the way was open sat before her beautifully appointed dressing table, and stuck golden pins into her pale hair. What satisfaction it had given her once, the moonlight quality of and her orchid-fine skin. How little it seemed to mean now. eee y= she was glad she was beautl- ful. It somehow gave her moral support when she went down ahead of Alan and waited in the softly lighted living room for him to finish dressing. She did not know that the power of beauty 1s too often ruthlessly misused—that eventually it makes its owner suffer by causing her to overestimate the endurance of its effect. She knew she made s charming for a better understanding between them. When he returned, Natalie re- fused the glass he offered her. He took his in silenc “Oh, let’s have dinner,” Natalie exclaimed suddenly. She led the way to their charm- ing dining room, and Alan's heart sank, It was plain that whatever had caused the trouble that after- noon would have to be threshed out in battle. ij Instantly, his own intentions changed. He was weary of trying to handle the situation diplomati- cally. Why couldn't he be allowed to eat his dinner in a pleasant atmosphere? Already he could feel bimself succumbing to nervous tn- Hunter | DUTH DEWEY GROVES 4 ENCLOSE STAMPED ADDRESSED ENVELOPE FOR REPLY. @©886 NE.COY HEALTM SERCE £03 ANOELES- CAL. STICK TO YOUR DIET Few people have the will power to adhere to a regular diet. There are so many temptations on every hand that one requires a good deal of un- common sense to stick to the courage of one’s convictions. Restaurants are full of tasty dishes; stores show & display of highly colored and deli- ciously tasting foods which in many cases are quite injurious to health. A business man will realize that to be successful he must adhere strictly to certain business principles, but this same business man who would not change his system because of a pass- ing whim may sit down to a friend's table and forget all his dietetic rules and eat foods which he knows to be harmful to him. Even a chemist who understands the rules of food chem- istry may need only a little urging by some friend to put into his stom- ach an inharmonious conglomeration of soup, meat, bread, pie and coffee, though he knows it is a bad mixture from a chemical standpoint. Some people seem to think that as long as they eat foods which are pre- seribed for them in a diet that they can eat anything else as well. Only a short time ago I placed a woman on an orange juice fast, telling her to take a glassful of orange juice every two hours. The next day she came | back with the query of whether she should take her meals between the orange juice feeding or at the same | time, and she seemed surprised when | I explained that no other food should be taken while on the fast. | If you are following any kind of | diet, I would advise you to stick to it absolutely so that you will then | have a chance to see whether or not jit is beneficial for you. If you eat leandy between your meals, or use | coffee or sugar when you are not | Supposed to, you have only yourself |to blame if the results are not as lyou desire. If you are forbidden | bread and pastries for some reason, j avoid them if you have any confi- | dence in your doctor. It is not just | to him or to yourself to take his advice, do what you please, and blame him for the consequences. ‘Those who are trying to live on diets such as I recommend in this column need not have difficulty in selecting a meal of good combinations either at their friends’ houses or at restaurants. Usually there is a large variety of foods from which you may choose—three or four good articles Natalie drew in her breath sharp ly, as be spread out his hands tn a gesture of futility. “You do not understand me,” ehe cried furiously. “I know that there’s something more between you than a business relationship. What is it? Why don't you tell me?” The storm of her accusation was breaking over a sob in her throat. “You're forgetting Jack Lamont,” he sald. & Natalie's answering laugh cracked ae |bysterically. “Oh, am I?” she Sq |esnmeered. “And what are you do ing? Do you think that he would want a married man mized up with his widow?” Alan's fist crashed down upon the table. “Natalie! Stop it! You know that Bernadine is nothing to me...” Natalie was on her feet, “How about the boy?” she shot at him. “Bobby?” Alan was taken off his guard. “I suppose he is nothing to you?” Natalie mocked. “Your youngest client, perhaps?” eee Aan completely lost bis temper, “You bet he {s something to me,” he declared warmly: “my favorite child.” He saw Natalie's face go as white | a chalk. It brought a laugh from him. “Not what you're thinking,” he |assured her stingingly. “Bobby's | Mame is Lamont. And & reg- aS Natalie told herself that he wanted to know how much she'd found out before committing himself to any. line of defense. digestion, a complaint that was growing steadily more acute with him. eee ATALIE toyed with the canape before her. He swallowed his in two bites, Then his rebellion burst forth in a flood. “Well, let’s have it,” he sald chal- lengingly, leaning back in his chair and nervously wiping his lips. Natalie smiled a wintry, accusing smile. “Must we?" she retorted, shrugging distastefully. Alan grimaced back at her. “You know we must,” he sald. “You wouldn’t miss it for the world.” Natalie’s eyes widened, then nar- rowed in reaction to her quick anger. “I’m not asking you to ex- plain,” she said hotly. “No?” Alan laughed. “But you will give me a chance to, won't you?” He was sarcastic and Natalie knew it, but the flame within her had burned out the pride that might have kept her silent She could not resist her desire to know why he bought toys for Bernadine Lamont’s child. “What am I accused of this time?” Alan went on, reading her thoughts aright. Natalie stared back at him, tense and bitter. “To save time,” she sald, with a sarcasm to match his own, “I'll tell you. Why are you interested in Bernadine Lamont?” Alan’s expression grew blank. He sensed an unspoken charge beneath her words, something he could not cope with. ular kid. I wish I had a doz erg en like Natalie gasped and started to speak, but Alan shut her off. “I'm tired of your everlasting suspicions,” he stormed, and flung his napkin to the table. Natalie made no protest, as ne strode from the room in the high tide of his anger. It flashed over her that she had learned nothing of value to her. And their quarrel was going to end as usual—with Alan going off somewhere alone, But there was one satisfaction that be longed to this occasion. He could ” Bot go to Bernadine Lamont. Not unless he went to Atlantic City. ... Natalie caught her breath in dis- may, and flew to the door. She saw Alan leaving, his coat under his arm, and his bat in bis hand. She wanted to call out to him, but the conflict of her much bruised pride and her natural in- clinations choked her utterance. And in the kitchen the cook and the waitress talked and “guessed it wouldn't be long now.” Alan caught a train to New Yerk, and went directly to his office. He had forgotten about dinner—about everything but the rotten mess it got a man into to have a jealous wife, Forgot that he'd told Phillipa he would return to the office. He entered the imposing office building with lagging steps, He was surprised to see a light in the office when he opened the door, He thought the cleaning people were through by this hour. Then he noticed that the Nght wasn’t in the outer room, but was coming through the open door of his private office. He hastened bis steps, a vague doubt in his mind of all being right. (To Be Continued) i \ |preparations” a year. from the way they get along with |women it seems some make-up is which are necessary to your diet. The average table contains as many as 10 to 15 unnecessary dishes prepared Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to tim, cars of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope fer reply. apparently with the sole object in view of tempting the appetite of the diner to overeat. You will find that your friends are usually considerate enough to be willing to serve the foods that your diet list calls for. Diet is no longer considered a fad except by old-fashioned people, and you need not feel ashamed of saying that you desire wholesome foods. Any child can understand that the body i: made out of what we eat and drink. It is folly for one to look outside of oneself to find the cause of disease. One is not sick because he does not read a certain book, or because he doesn’t take pills, or have an oper- ation, but he is sick because he has lived in a certain QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Shyness Question: Y. V. T. writes: “I am @ young man 24 years of age, have a good education and enjoy good health. I find it hare to mix with people. Many people think I am ‘stuck up’ because of my actions but it is really my shyness that causes this. Have tried many times to overcome this, but to no avail. I wish that you would discuss the subject in your column because it would be beneficial tc Sometime ago I printeo an article calle “That Inferiority Complex.” I have since received many requests for this article and 1 still have a nu iber on hand. It is usually possible to overcome this shy- ness by cultivating an aggressive mental attitude, taking responsibil- ities and initiative. It is well to study dancing and join a debating society and to indulge in activities through which you will be forced to meet people. Milk or Cream Question: Mrs. C. writes: “I would like to know if a patient taking your diet could drink milk, or is it all right to use milk on the corn-meal mush you recommend in your menus?” Answer: It depends on which of my diets the patient is following. Sometimes I prescribe an almost ex- clusive milk diet, and in other diets I do not advise milk, In the average diet, milk may be used in the same manner in which you use any other form of protein. It is best not to use it with cornmeal or other cereals un- less they are first dextrinized. Cream contains very little protein and should be used in place of milk on cereals. Knees Crossed Question: I. J. H. asks: “Is it harmful to sit with the knees crossed?” Answer: It is not harmful to sit with the knees crossed. However, it is better not to sit too often in this position with the same leg crossed over, or most of your weight will be carried on one side of the pelvis and this may result in some slight mis- placement of the lumbar vertebrae or sacrum. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) {BARBS | e Pink and blue shoes for men are to be the style this summer. Men who wear them will have to watch their step. see It is estimated 50,000,000 powder puffs were sold in the United States last year. Now watch cigaret manu- facturers try and compute puffs of their product. *e & Men in the United States are saio to use $1,000,000 worth of “beauty And judging essential, se 8 If it is true that the gulf stream is moving north, there is some compen- sation in the fact the golf stream is moving south. * eK A Frenchman has invented a car |that will jump into the air and travel considerable distance. With roads as they are, such an invention seems unnecessary. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) | BOSTON DOCTOR AT MOBRIDGE | Mobridge, 8. D., May 14.—Dr. M. G. Miller, Boston, now is associated with Dr. C. E. Lowe, of the Lowe hospital. Dr. Miller comes here from Boston, where he has been engaged in hospi- tal work for the past two years. He tS ‘a graduate of the University of Wisconsin medical school. His fam- ily is expected to join him here later. FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: The modern when she turns girl is well turned cut in. “ w w vim v ’ Norse i) d