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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30, 1930 The Bismarck Tribune An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mai] matter. George D. Mann. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......+.+ Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail. per year (in state, outside Bismarck) .. Datly by mail, outside uf North Dakota President and Publisher $7.20 Weekly by mail, in state, per year.... Weekly by mail, in state, three years fo! Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year .. Weekly by mai) in Member Audit Bureau 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 herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS eel eS Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON STi a Se SEY Russia’s Curiosity About U. S. America is the one land and the one subject uppcr- most in the mind of Soviet Russia today. Every com- munist is filled with an insatiable curiosity about how things are done here and particularly about what enter icans think of Russia, And each one is likewise filled with misinformation emanating from government prop- agandists which pictures the United States as a place of despotism and despair. ‘These are the impressions brought back by Adelaide and Helen Hooker, two New York soclety girls whose thrilling wanderings alone through soviet cities and vil- lages are related by the former in Good Housekeeping. “Is it true that in Mr. Ford's factory if a workman Is late he is pushed into his machine so that it will mangle him?” one ardent young revolutionist asked Miss Hooker. Another, a woman, expressed complete faith in the story that American workmen were held as virtual slaves by capitalist masters and not allowed to leave the country. While Miss Hooker lay ill of influenza in a remote village the entire population, she declares, filed in and out of her room just to look at an American and ask her questions. “Espionage is such that nobody trusts anybody else in a Russian crowd and no one Wants an answer held against him but everybody is willing to ask anything,” she says. Nevertheless she found many things to incite her ad- miration. She describes a young communists’ ball which the two sisters attended. Fox-trots are barred and only polkas and semi-folk waltzes danced. “There was no paint and not a sign of liquor,” says her article. “The communists are very abstemious. I thought of the many stories of corruption among chil- dren, sad results of the lax marriage laws, but this looked like as happy and healthy a bunch as you would see in any high school at home. “They wanted to discuss every imaginable question with us and were curious and interested in everything we said about America, Did workers really have auto- mobiles? Why did we hate Russia so? Why would America lend her no moncy to help her workers along?” When Miss Hooker answered “because the soviets spend it for propaganda against our government,” one youth flung back: “We wouldn’t have to if you would get decent government like ours.” But the crowd around them reprimanded him and the leader apologized for his tudeness to the American guest. Serving 84,000,000 Americans . Recent statistics disclose that use of electricity in American homes has increased more than 50 per Cent during the past three years. In 1926 we employed 6,345,000,000 kilowatt-hours of electric power for domestic Purposes; in 1929, this rose to 9,787,000,000. The average consumption of electricity by domestic customers is now about 500 kilowatt-hours a year, as compared with 220 in 1913. And, to complete the imposing statistical array of facts, the electric industry now serves 20,000,000 do- mestic customers, representing a population of approxi- mately 84,000,000, ‘The amazing growth of the industry is attributed to four main causes: The large annual increase in the number of customers; the largely increased use of elec- tric appliances; increased lighting and better illumination in the average home; and, perhaps most important of all, the fact that cost of electricity per kilowatt-hour is now 28 per cent below the 1913 standard, while the general cost of living is 71 per cent above. With the exception of those things that are vital to the maintenance of human life, it would probably be the general consensus of public opinion that electricity is one of the most indispensable commodities. It is di- rectly responsible for our modern‘high standard of work- ing and living conditions. It has, by giving the worker increased production, helped the trend toward higher ‘wages and shorter hours. And it costs the average person less than two cents per day! Laxity or Ignorance Causes Accidents ‘The campaign to reduce automobile accidents, started by President Hoover, and supported by the casualty in- | surance industry and other private and public organiza- tions, can achieve its object only with the aid of two things—public interest and cooperation and moderniza- tion of our traffic laws. 4 So long as the inexperienced or incompetent are al- lowed to drive automobiles, accidents will continue to tise. So long as our traffic regulations are inadequate and unenforced, we will be powerless to cope with the problem. Too many drivers regard traffic laws as some- thing to be evaded. Not enough of them are interested in having their officials change outmoded laws in favor of codes that are adequate to deal with our modern con- gested, high-speed traffic. . In the words of President Hoover, “There has been much effort to better traffic conditions but the accident rate, nevertheless, continues to rise because the increas- ing volume of traffic outruns our efforts.” In the past ten years millions of new cars, capable of great speeds, have appeared on the highways, while our regulatory ma- chinery has remained practically unchanged. If the present trend continues, automobile accidents will soon cost us a billion dollars a year and will take 35,000 or more lives annually. That is a terrible price to Pay for our laxity or ignorance in handling traffic. A united, active public consciousness is necessary to reduce ‘the increasing toll of deaths and injuries. Glenn Curtiss’ Record Aviation has lost one of its most distinguished pioneers in the death of Glenn Curtiss. Curtiss was by no means an old man when he died; . yet his active career had spanned all of aviation’s infancy. He had seen airplanes develop from crude, unsafe exper- bmental machines to the scaring, reliable affairs that carry mail and passengers all over the country toda: atid by his own efforts he aided materially in the amaz- ing development which made aviation's position today possible. The glory of making the first flight, and proving that man could sprout wings, belongs of course to the Wright brothers. But Curtiss was not a great distance behind the famous Dayton bicycle repairmen. His work was of great value. Aviation is distinctly the poorer by his | death. i Roads and Unemployment Towa is showing the nation how to relieve unemploy- ment and, at the same time, benefit the public. The state has accelerated its highway program. Thirty thousand workmen on Iowa roads will earn $18,000,000 this year. And a multitude of cities, towns and rural communities will enjoy the prosperity that always accom- panies intensive road building. At the end of 1920 nine-tenths of its roads were mud. At the end of 1930, eight-tenths of them will be surfaced. The greatest present road need is the construction of practical and comparatively inexpensive secondary, farm- to-market highways that will give agricultural commun- ities all-year contact with their markets. The American Farm Bureau federation has repeatedly pointed out that 50 long as 5,000,000 of the 6,250,000 American farmers are barred from these markets during several months of the year by mud, we will have a farm problem of increasing seriousness. : The modern application of asphalts and road oils to dirt, macadam and gravel surfaces is making possible the building of tens of thousands of miles of low cost, | waterproof surfaced, secondary roads which would have ; been out of the question a decade ago. Only Nine Votes The final vote on the London naval treaty proved that | the opposition to the treaty was not nearly as strong numerically as it was vocally. For a good many days the die-hards had a great deal to say, and to judge from their actions one would have supposed that at least half of the nation's citizens were walking the strects at night in an agony of fear lest our navy be sunk without a trace. But when it came to a showdown, there were just nine op- Position votes. It may be that it is just a little bit harder to get Amer- icans excited about the dangers that lie in cooperating with Europe than it used to be. Six or eight years ago the whole nation was suspicious and jumpy about such things. Now, however, we seem to have grown more sen- sible. It is certain that the antics of the die-hards over the naval treaty did not stir a ripple of excitement in the public mind. An Amazing Fact The first gas stove in the United States was exhibited in 1879. That was 51 years ago—little more than two genera- tions. Yet in that brief half-century gas has become a necessity in millions of modern American homes. The amazing progress, both industrial and domestic, made by the gas industry, is a dramatic page in American history., | Editorial Comment | A Smoking Queen (Time) | Britons had a prime news tidbit to stir with their! tea last week. Queen Mary smokes cigarettes! | London‘s News-Chronicle found it out. What brand she | Prefers the News-Chronicle could not say, but smoke she | does; one cigarette after lunch, one cigarette after tea, no move. Averages (Washington Star) Averages are funny things. Here comes the National Confectioners’ association with statistics to show that the average American spends two cents a day for candy. ae buys twelve pounds a year he is average,” it is Said. ‘The above mentioned average person, if he likes candy, spends considerably more than two cents a day on it, and eats far more than a dozen pounds a year. The man| who does not care for sweets will buy none at all. So the “average,” although interesting, means nothing at all. Perhaps the best thing such figures do is to per- mit those with curious minds to make comparisons. It is always intriguing to be told that the number of doughnuts eaten in the United States every year, if: piled on top of each other, would reach to the moon and back five times. One is reasonably sure that this spectacular piling feat. would be impossible, from every standpoint, but it pleases | wie! imagination to picture that multiple pile of dough- nuts. Thus the American reader is deluged, year after year, with highly fanciful comparisons, spiced with great dis- tances and impossible stunts. No one is harmed, and perhaps the art of statistics is helped. \ A Wife Confesses (Cleveland Plain Dealer) A young British novelist, Sylvia Thompson, admits that marriage has “tamed” her. Formerly, she explains, | she was unconventional, impulsive, extravagant, self-as- | sertive, and self-sufficient. She has become, through | marriage, more submissive, more conventional and j{ steadier. The change, she adds, was not sudden; nor’) was it difficult. Women, in her opinion, are instinctively | adaptable to the demands of love, home making and child raising. 1 If the host of young wives whose natures are adaptable | and whose husbands are intellectually and emotionally compatiblecould put their wedded experience into words | they might express themselves much as*the British | writer does. They would agree without resentment that marriage has changed them, and that the change has been for the better. | Other young mothers, either less fortunate in their | choice of husband or less adaptable by nature, resent! bitterly the very changes for whieh Miss Thompson ais | grateful to matrimony. They never quite accept the; “setting” process. They find housework drudgery, and the child raising nerve-racking. Husbands, they discover, grow monotonous. | One doubts whether the British writer would accora these women much sympathy. The wife's lot, she would contend, is to adapt herself amiably to the situation | that confronts her, to cease pining for vanished free- dom, and to accept with resignation, if not with pleas- | ure, the changes that are inevitably incumbent upon the marriage relation. Turkey Proceeds Against American Movies r (Christian Century) A reader sends us a translation of a notice appearing in a Turkish newspaper, Milliyet (the Republic), of Stam- boul. In this notice the government authorizes an- nouncement that “the National Association for the Protection of Children is preparing two laws to submit to the grand assembly this year: (1) No child below the age of 18 shall be allowed to buy liquor or cigarettes; (2) No child below the age of 15 shall be allowed to at- tend cinemas.” Laws thus introduced under government auspices are assured of enactment. In another part of the same paper it is made clear that the proposed regu- lations against the attendance of children at the movies are a result of the government's determination to protect young Turks against what it considers the demoralizing effects of American-made films The situation is worth Pondering. A nation that has been popularly identified with anything byt a puritanical code of manners—how- ever unjust that nation may have been—taking steps to guard its children against the moral ravages of the mov- ing pictures exported from the missionary-sending nation of America! The “infidel” aroused to protect his chil- dren's morals against the product of the “Christian”! The demand voiced by Dr. Eastman in his articles on “The Menace of the Movies,” for some sort of state department review and control of these celluloid “Am- bassadors of TH Will.” receives new support frem this impending action of the Turkish government. HERET TO YOU HEALTH By Dr FRANIC, NECOY AUTHOR OF “THE FAST Way TO HEALTHY questions regarding Health and Dist will be answered. elf eddrewed envelope must be enclosed. ‘on one side of paper only. Letters must not exceed 180 words, Address Dr. Frank McCoy, care of this paper. i? HEALTHFUL COOKING—Continued | steaming may assume an entirely dif- Broiling, grilling and roasting are|ferent flavor and appearance with I am sure that there much alike, and consist in cooking|each method. food by direct radiation in an uncon- fined atmosphere so that the steam 4s allowed to escape. Broiling and grilling are used for the small cuts of meat, and roasting for the large joints. These three processes aim at Quickly coagulating the surface of the meat so that the interior juices are locked in, and those which do escape are used to baste the meat to prevent drying. Because of the high temper- ature on the surface of the meat, a Particularly tasty substance is pro- duced which gives the delightful flavor. Salisbury steak when broiled has a peculiarly fine flavor. Overbroiling the meat should be avoided, or it will taste scorched, but if it is properly basted this can be avoided. Grilling * . When grilling, the cuts are c quickly and it is necessary to use more tender and expensive meats. Fish, small steaks, chops and bacon may be done in this way. The food is put under the hot flame or over the hot coals and seared on both sides. It is frequently turned to in- eeeekd cine anaes: Harthle wig? I getting rheumatism? Are there any while a steak takes no more than ten|SPecial foods I could eat to prevent to fifteen minutes, This process of it? My mother is troubled with the broiling or grilling is used for meat |S8me thing, and says it is heredi- which is cut flat and not too thick. | *#'Y- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer J Dersonal questions on health an¢ diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. need be no monotony in preparing wholesome foods if a little thought is given to their preparation. Cooks may be among the greatest helpers of mankind if they really learn the dietetic principles as well as the science and arts of cookery. I am Pleased to know that cooks are taking more of an interest in the dietetic principles, and the time may yet come when cooks will serve properly pre- pared foods in wholesome combina- tions so that the average person may not need to worry so much about foods and their proper selection. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Enlarged Joints Question: Mrs, E. K. G. writes: “The joints of my fingers are becoin- ing enlarged and ache at times. Am YY Ss Today Isthe ~ | | Anniversary of HENRY FORD'S BIRTH On July 30, 1863, Henry Ford, Amer- ican manufacturer, was born at Greenfield, Mich., the son of a farmer. He began early to develop an in- terest in mechanics but when he fin- ished his education at the district schools his father put him to work on the farm. After three years of this Henry went to Detroit to work for $2.50 @ week in a machine shop. Con- stantly working with engines, Ford later was made an engineer and ma- chinist with the Detroit Edison com- pany. After hours he worked on the building of a gasoline motor car. When it was developed he left the electric company and went into busi- ness for himself. In 1903 he organized and became president of the Ford Motor company, which has become the largest auto- mobile manufacturing establishment in the world, and the third largest in- dustry in the United States. In 1926 the company had assets of about $1,000,000,000 and had in its employ | some 200,000 people directly and an equal number indirectly. Ford was a pronounced pacifist be- fore the war and sought by a peace mission to bring the warring nations into conference. Cor.vinced his er- rand was hopeless, Lowever, he re- turned home. —_——_—__—___——-¢+ \ BARBS \ ———————_»_—_6 We don’t know what the little Lind- bergh baby’s diet is but we are hoping it isn’t sandwiches. eee Did it ever occur to you that the Spirit of "76 and the spirits of 1930 are very different? eee Chicago is building its first all- metal apartment building. Bring on your machine guns! ss 8 Maybe the anfi-noise crusade in New York would be aided considerably + dentally Ie: D who lost her memory STEYNE, fee! honor bonad to ask marry him. Judith goes Teacher CUARVENIUS to dancing, and accepts the offer of rich BRUCE GIDEON to star her inn musical show, Steyne’s warnings. Chummy e fal m reecgnize Steyne came back to her, her, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXII UDY and Clara Jenks came out of Guarvenius’ house together. It was a very hot afternoon. Summer had suddenly descended on the land. The asphalt streets were soft, the reek of gas smoke was nau- seous, and every city sound was in- tensificd a hundredfold; and yet it was only the beginning of spring. Clara Jenks was there because Guarvenius had been kind enough, through Judy, to make her free to use his big rooms for practice. Her part in the theater duologue re- quired some acrobatic and gym- nastic dancing, and she had evolved some screamingly funny steps. She was almost a transformed . being, these days. Prosperity spoils small-natured folk, but it makes bis-natured ones bigger still. Clara was blossoming. Her blunt face, humorous eyes, and mouse-brown hair would never be beautiful, but she was not nearly so plain as she had been a few weeks ago. As they turned into one of the busy streets, the traffic held up a large limousine in which sat a man and a woman, The man was hand- some, well past his youth, with lines in his bronzed face that told of hard living. He had a grizzled mustache and dark hair. He was leaning toward the woman, gazing at her with absorbed interest, talk- ing animatedly, obviously finding in her the one thing that mattered to him in life. His companion was quite young. She had yellow-brown hair that grew round her pale face in rather fantastic curls’ Her eyes were vivid turquoise blue: Judy’s chief impression of her was that she was bored, and that she looked cool on this sultry day, swathed in trans- Parent black, with a large lace hat, and that she wore a long string of Pearls of fabulous size, “That's Gertie Clarendon, that was,” said Clara excitedly. “Do you remember her at the Victorian? She was only in the chorus.” “Poof! How cool she looked!" sighed Judy, “Yes, I remember her. name.” é “She is Mrs. Clara went on, band with her.” “He looks swell.” Everglade now,” “That's her hus- “Sure! Don't you remember the dress, and that she would probably | wedding? They eaid he divorced his first wite to marry her,” \NCING CORAL, STANTON ond HEATY LOSKEN’ ‘\played for her, was to play to the “Lord! He must have been crasy! And she only a chorus girl!” eee 6OVES, @ girl like you and me— no better,” said Clara stoutly. “Not an ounce of cleverness in her. I mean, you and I could both give her fits. And there she is, sailing about in a car as big as a bus and wearing pearls as big as marbles!” “He must have been crazy,” re- peated Judy absently. “He was—dead crazy. You s that’s the way with girls whi they’re clever, Judy.” “But you said clever.” “Not clever at her job, I meant; but clever as the devil when it came to hooking old Everglade, you bet! She wasn’t the kind of girl a chap like that marries!” “But he did marry her!” Judy sald with a sudden snap, like a fist biting. “Oh, yes, he married her_all right.” “Why, theng” “You ‘goose! ‘Because he was mad about her and couldn't get her any other way.” “Oh!” said Judy. It was a whispered exclamation, just a soft expelling of her breath. Thoughts were taking shape in her mind. Fury and hatred and re- venge. had been seething there for days, but never any coherent plan. There was none now—only the pic- ture of that cool, white-faced, blue- eyed, yellow-haired girl in the big car, and the handsome man hang- ing over her, his eyes alight, his pleasure lrers; his will and his life just a couple of toys in her hand. That was an idea! Everglade had been mad about Gertie Clarendon, and he had to marry her. Perhaps in the beginning he had thought that she was “not the sort of girl ‘one could marry.” Perhaps she had been! to him only a “little Judy Grant”; but Gertie Clarendon had been clever. Judy laughed as if something had amused her, Before she reached home Judy bought an evening paper. Ono of the first things she saw was this announcement: Jasmin sings and Goseteivitsch plays at Mr. Bruce Gideon’s big party on Park Avenue tonight, Judy read the half column de voted to Gideon’s entertainment very carefully, There was a de- scription of the salon, which she learned for the first time was the most beautiful room in New York, and of the music room, where she had danced to Guarvenius. And Gregor Gossteivitsch, who had she wasn’t guests, and Carlo Jasmin, the great- est livigg tenor, was.to sing, and the flowers were to cost so many hundreds, and the supper was to be jServed at separat¢ tables in the pic- ture gallery on the floor above. She read that Madame de Toros, Mr. Gideon's sister, was acting if the writing of novels on typewriters in apartment houses were forbidden. S28 Autumn is the time of year when father finally finds time to get that hole in the screen door fixed. . s* & Space has no limits they say, but did you ever see a woman trying to park 8 car in a six-foot opening? (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) | Quotations | “Let's play Indian.”—Michael, de- Posed boy king of Rumania. sae “Responsibility for Chicago can be traced to illicit liquor traffic.”—Colo- nel Robert I. Randolph, of the Chi- cago crime beh Acihc committee, * * “To see those rows and rows of crosses would be the greatest appeal to all young mothers for world peace.” —Mrs. Charlotte Butler, Gold Star mother returning from France. a by CHELSEA Judy's thoughts went back to the girl in the car. She would probably be there—Gertie Clarendon. At any rate, she could be there; but little Judy . Grant couldn’t—oh, dear, no! eee Que aia not know a single person in_Gideon’s real world—only the two or three uninteresting men who had been to lunch with them, and who obviously belonged to his busi- ness life. For the first time she learned from the paper that he was interested in Transatlantic Oil, from which he derived part of his enormous fortune. She really knew very little about the man. She had not seen Gideon since the day when she had overheard the two men talking in Storna- way’s studio. All the rest of tne day she brooded. Frequently there rose be- fore her mental vision the pale, curl-framed face of Gertie Claren- don, a chorus girl, no better than het ‘hat night Judy was at the Lemon Grove, and her kindness lifted poor Dumont into the seventh heaven. ~ Two afternoons later she went to Stornaway’s. She was in radiant spirits, She had had a wonderful lesson that morning. Guarvenius had actually praised her and called her “my bird” in Polish about a dozen times. He had also said that she would be ready in less than a year, He wanted her to go to Paris, and told her that she was not to like a daughter to him, and would he not be repaid a thousandfold when she took the world by storm? Judy really began to think that she must be going to be a great dancer. Somehow ghe did not mind what she took from Guarventus. ‘He was making plans, he told her, for her to live with a relative of /his in Paris, a Polish lady married to a Frenchman. They would look after her. He wasn’t going to have Judy running about the Quartier Latin as she did about Greenwich Village. She might get into mis- chief and spoil all his beautiful plans. Stornaway welcomed her eagerly. “I've been wondering what had be- come of you,” he told her. “I stupidly tore up your letter and forgot your address.” “Fact is, I've been awfully busy,” said Judy. “I didn’t think you were so very keen on the sittings, Mr. Stornaway; but I ought to have let you know when the week was all be very glad to have you said in his urbane way, which always suggested that he lived in a world with which there was Do fault to find. ‘ “I haven't dared to touch that | sketch of you. We must get to work?” She laughed. “Oh, but that is not work, Mr. hostess; that she was famous for her elegance and perfect taste in iwear ‘pearls. the magnificent Albenza Stornaway! You said you were jonly doing it for a joke.” “I didn’t say ‘for a joke,’ \Juds. I said ‘for my pleasure,’ ” » corrected, emiling. UDI worry about expenses. Was she not ! Answer: You are developing a form Steaming of rheumatism known either as arthritis or arthritis deformans. In my opinion the cause is due Primarily to the absorption of Poisons from the colon. See that your bowels are kept open with two or three bowel movements a day, even if you must take laxatives or enemas. There is no special food which causes rheumatism, but the cause is only from bad mixtures of food and a sluggish colon. Gaining Weight Question: E. J. writes: “I would like to know the easiest way to gain weight.” Answer: Steaming is one of the most valua- jable methods of cooking that may be used for vegetables, for it retains their full flavor. The use of the heavy aluminum cooking vessels for this Purpose is very satisfactory, as they distribute the heat evenly over the interior to prevent scorching. There are also regular steamers which may be used to prepare vegetables. This method preserves all of the flavors and juices as well as the mineral ele- ments which may be de- stroyed by prolonged intensive heat. Fireless cooking is a very fine meth- od of preparing food which is not used as extensively as it might be. It is a process of very slow cooking at a moderate temperature and can be used for either meats or vegetables. Often very tough meat or chicken can be made very tender if it spends six or eight hours in the fireless cooker. Cooks can avoid monotony in the preparation of their foods if they will learn to use these different methods. ‘The same foods when prepared by boiling, stewing, baking, frying or And she smiled back, having heard from his own lips that he was doing it for Bruce Gideon. ere “pur I do want you for some more serious work,” he went on. “I’ve got to paint that Princess Elizabeth in again. I’m not satis- fied with her. I’m booked-to de liver that canvas in August.” They got to work at once—Judy in all the panoply of Tudor royalty. She always felt more uncomfortable in the heavy skirts, the sweeping sleeves, and the close red wig. When the sitting was over, Stornaway offered her fea; but she refused it and bade him goodby. “1 say, Miss Judy!” He detained her with a light and kindly touch on her shoulder. “Don’t think me meddlesome, but I’ve been rather worried about you. I know about your dancing and all the hard work it means, and model work can’t pay you anything to speak of. Aren't you rather overdoing it? I should hate to think of your being over- worked, when a little help—” She knew he was not speaking for himself, as it were. Some infallible instinct told her that. She threw back her head and laughed at him, with mischief in her pansy eyes. °Mr. Stornaway, you pay me about three times as much as any- body else,” she said; “and your work is much easier. I’m much obliged to you, but I don’t want any help.” The artist's eyes rested for a mo- ;ment on her shabby clothes. “Have you seen Gideon lately?” he asked irrelevantly. “No—not for several days. Were you at that grand party of hiy?” “Yes,” Stornaway replied. “It Gaining weight is not an you to discover the functional cause of your thinness. One thing certain, you cannot gain weight and be healthy by using any stuffing process. You must first of all get well, and your weight will then gradually come to the normal. Pyorrhea Question: A. J. asks: “What causes Pyorrhea, and what is the cure?” Answer: Pyorrhea is caused by an infection of the gums which have been irritated from hyperacidity of ‘|the stomach. In addition to following @ correct fasting and dieting regime (nstructions for which I will send you upon receipt of a self-adcressed stamped envelope) you should brush your teeth night and morning with lemon juice diluted with water, rins- ing your mouth afterward with water in which a small amount of bicar- bonate of soda has been dissolved. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) KFYR THURSDAY, JULY 31 31,580 Kiloeyeles—45.1 Meters /:00—Dawn reveille. club , co 7 AIA oP jgnal. 0—Farm reporter in Washington 5—Meditation period. 8:00—Shoppers guide program. 9:00—Opening grain markets. Sunshine hour, 10:00—Weather report; grain markets. 10:10—Aunt Sammy. :57—Arlington time signals. H ti 5—Organ program: Clara Morris. 2:00—Bismarck Tribune news and P.M. weather; luncheon program. 12:25—Voice of the Wheat Pool. 1:16—Grain markets: high, low and close. 1:18—Farm notes, 1:45—Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. 2:00—Musical matinee. :30—Siesta hour: Good News radio mi nal, scores, —Newscasting. 0—Studio program. ADVISES POOR GIRLS TO SHUN GOTHAM New York.—No matter how bright the baubles of Broadway gleam, stay away from New York unless you are sure of making $25 a week, is the ad- vice of Mrs. Angelika Frink, chairman of the Room Registries Section of the New York Welfare Council, to girls. Mrs. Frink has found that it takes the better part of $24 for a girl to live in New York, allowing her very little for pleasure. Her table setting down \|the expenditures of the average girl easy matter. It is first necessary for . includes: Rent, $8 a week; food $10.50 ‘@ week; clothing, $3.85 2 week, and ¢arfare, phone and postage, $1.25 2 week. The whole totals up to $23.60, allowing only $1.40 for recreation and incidentals. was a great show. Would you like to have been there?” “Rather, not! she, snapped. “What would I be doing there?” “Gideon thinks a lot of you, Miss Judy.” “Does he? I've got to learn why. He's been very decent to me about the dancing. “He believes in you. A man like that can be a very good friend.” “No doubt, Mr. Stornaway. I'm very grateful to Mr. Gideon for what he has done.”, She was not giving herself away. She was quite convinced that the artist was pumping her, trying to get at her real thoughts about the rich man. No doubt Gideon had told him to do so. Mr. Punch ‘wanted to know whether she was piqued or alarmed by his sudden neglect. Well, he was not going to know. Her nebulous plan was re- vealing itself as a definite game. Stornaway made an appointment for the following afternoon. She felt sure that Gideon had put him up to it, and she was pretty certain that the millionaire would turn up himself. She was right. He strolled in, as it by chance, toward the end of the sitting. Stornaway stopped paint- ing at once, and Judy, released by a nod from her stiff pose, yawned and stretched her slender arms high above her head. (To Be Continzed) FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: } O wea Some folks recreation with rest. y, 3 4 . 1 yee ri