Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1930 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | ESET AE Sthrastc re eileen Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- m , N. D., and entered at the postoffice ~t Bismarck fs second class mail matter. George D. Mann ................President and Publisher | astanmeeldhd le de alice anaes Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year ........ Daily by mail per year, (14 Bismarck) . ‘Daily by mail per year (in state, outside Bismarck) ..... Datly by mail, outside of North Dakota .. f re ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ... 1.00 Weekly by mail, in state, three years fot 2.50 ‘Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakot: per year Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Lee ane ea FL Ue The Associated Press is exclusively entitle e for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also it tocal news of spontaneous origin published herein. Al rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City State and County Newspaper) Foreigu Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS cincornae Ge, Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Facing Forward Much is heard regarding the difficulties which indi- viduals and businesses are encountering during the pres- ent period but it is significant that Bismarck and her people are facing forward with supreme confidence in the ure. eTouirablartetis of this attitude is the decision of busi- nessmen and others interested in the Front avenue pav- ing project to go ahead with that work this year. If weather permits, the thoroughfare, one of the most im- portant and heaviest traveled in the city, will be paved winter comes. ne job is expected to cost between $70,000 and $80,000. It will provide work for many men and will mean @ heavy payroll while the work is in progress. This will be of undoubted benefit to those persons in the city who need jobs and to those business houses with whom the workers will spend the money. At the same time, property along Front avenue will have an improvement which has long been needed and which should add to its value and the efficient operation of the business houses along the thoroughfare. It is worth noting that there has been little talk of hampering a needed improvement because of the scarcity of money. The city’s credit will be used to finance the paving and the cost will be distributed over a long period. The confidence of the Front street property owners is such that a depression in 1930 is no good reason for turn- ing their faces to the wall and waiting for the end of all things. They know that better things are just around the corner and want to be prepared to take advantage of them when the time arrives. ‘Another noteworthy fact in connection with the pro- posed improvement is that it probably will rank as the largest single paving contract to be let in North Dakota this year. No other city has projected a similar im- provement of like size. ‘The attitude toward public improvements manifested here is only another item of proof for what has become an almost self-evident fact. That is the fact that Bis- narck, while fortunate in its location and resources, is ully as fortunate in. the character. of the people who ive here. Citizens make a city and Bismarck citizens wre facing forward. A Cinderella Returns A little more than a year ago the world wondered why one of its favorite Cinderellas had decided to go home from the ball. It was a long, long time until the clock would strike twelve. The crystal slipper fitted perfectly, and all the silken ladies and gay gallants were bowing graciously. But Marion Talley removed the shining gowns, slipped off the beads and bracelets that she had worn at the ball, and put on a sunbonnet. She listened to the last applause from the glittering horseshoe. She received her last red roses. She threw a kiss at the charmed circle. The stage lights winked their golden eyes and went out. The vel- vet curtains rustled together. Marion was tired of glamour, so she was going away. Going out to Kansas to raise wheat and corn. She had sung for a farm and now she was happy. But now Marion is back in New York again for a little. She has returned to make phonograph records. She says that it is hot in Kansas, the corn is only fair... that she won't say that she will never come back to the opera if the urge grows strong enough. After all, it is a far, far cry from fields of sun-baked corn to the fantasy and romance of the opera stage where life dances along to a tragic drama or a laughing fan- tasy and the actress plays on pulsing, blood-red hearts. There is a long road winding from the black and white ladders of song down a country road where farmers pray for rain. Everyone wondered why Marion Talley stepped out of the story-book and closed its silver covers. After the dis- couragement which has been the portion of farmers this year, no one will censure Marion Talley if she decides to go back to the ball, one glass slipper in her pocket, hoping that the music masters still hold its mate against the time when she returns. Passing Up Liberty’s Privilege If it were announced that one-fifth of the people in America were going to have the privilege of choosing our candidates and deciding on all measures at the primaries, “there would be a cry of protest that would echo from Wall street to Hollywood. People would refuse to vote on @ ticket chosen for them by others when the election tolled around in November. They would cry out that a grand old American privilege had been taken away. That they had as much right to vote at the primaries as at the regular election. Oh, yes, we would hear from them in a babel of tongues. But those same people have been sitting by now, per- fectly satisfied to let one-fifth of the nation choose the candidates on which they will vote eventually. They just don’t trouble to help their party make out a good ticket. Yet they think that it should be strong and able to carry when the final election comes around. They complain bitterly if it doesn’t suit them. But they refuse to help in the primaries as evidenced by the vote in those just held. i Human nature is queer. Especially when judged by a political gauge. It is much more important to choose wisely at the primaries and have a worth-while ticket to present in the end than to fight to see which men and issues will predominate when only two are competing. ‘The people in the United States are given the privilege of choosing their own men and measures. They like to think that they have a voice in the government. But they get ‘hoarse or are stricken dumb along about time for the primaries. The primary is the real testing ground. The November tlections are based entirely on this preliminary material. Human nature, as we said before, is strange. That is why it leaves its political interests hanging in the { closet, letting them get a little musty and moth eaten, and then can't understand when someone suggests that only people who appreciate and use their ballots should have them. ‘We seem to demand privileges. But we calmly add that whether we use them or not is our affair. And mean- while one-fifth of the nation decides the fate of the other four-fifths. Ocean-Crossing Dirigibles Did you noticé how much less public interest there was | in the recent transatlantic trip of the British dirigible R-100 than there was in the earlier voyages of Germany's Graf Zeppelin? The heroic adventure of the Britishers was fully equal to that of the Germans, hut the public didn’t acclaim it as such. All this may be lamentable from the standpoint of | British pride, but it is an,encouraging sign to those who view the future of aviation. For it denotes clearly that transatlantic air voyages are becoming quite commonplace, and it heralds the ap- proach of a day when such will no longer be regarded as a rash adventure, but as a definite systematized means of commercial transportation—as much as that of steam- ships that now ply the ocean’s waves. The adventure of today becomes the ordinary, routine duty of tomorrow. “The air pioneers lead the way in the skies, just as Columbus pioneered the way on the oceans. The fact that their daring feats soon sink to the com- monplace is visible proof of the fact that their aims are fast approaching the stage of efficiency. Such are the stepping stones of progress and so they have been since history began. Women’s Rights in the Air We can’t see the point of these Chicago air race offi- cials at all. They have been insisting that women pilots who participate in the women’s cross-country derbies to be held in connection with the event this year, fly only low-powered planes and be accompanied by, expefienced men pilots. Baturally, the women have balked and, several of the nation’s leading feminine fliers, led by Amelia Earhart, say they will refuse to Participate under such restrictions. i‘ It’s an insult to their flying ability, they insist. And we agree. Women can be just as good airplane pilots as men. Experience has proved it. A 17-year-old girl recently set a new endurance record by remaining aloft—alone— Today Anniversary of | for many hours. Another girl, in California, recently set_a new altitude record for light planes by ascending to a height of approximately six miles—and alone, too. A minister's wife in California flew 200 miles an hour. And more recently Laura Ingalls, 25-year-old New York flier, made 714 consecutive “barrel rolls” over a St. Louis field, besting the old record (held by a man, by the way) by 297 more rolls. j And still they say women flyers have to have male Protection along when they participate in a simple cross- country race! ones emer es That Western Art connoisseur who recently removed the paint from a’ $400 canvas and uncovered an “Old Master” valued at $150,000 had good cause to say, “Things are not half as bad as they're Painted these days. * Editorial Comment navy. ~ CAPTURE OF GUERRIERE On Aug. 19, 1812, perhaps the most important naval battle of the War of 1812 took place when the frigate Con- stitution, commanded by Captain Isaac Hull, captured the British frigate Guerriere off the coast of Nova Scotia. -In less than 30 minutes after the engagement began, the Guerriere struck her colors. She was so badly cut to pieces that Hull could not tow her to port. Instead, he set her on fire and then blew her up. The American ship was undamaged. From that time on the Constitu- Ironsides.” Out of 18 naval engage- ments between single ships during the war the Americans won 15. These series of victories moved Daniel Web- ster to urge Congress to, increase the The success of the Americans on LTT | But There’s No ‘Relief’ for Presidents! | POST THIS, PLEASE! Wow Mt sea was due to the fact they handled their ships and guns far better than @he British did theirs. it is estimated, lost on the average of about five men to one for the { Americans. pa a lei BARBS ° by this time that it is far more Profitable to cultivate one’s voice than a crop of wheat. * x The enemy, o—> Marion Talley must have learned * Judging from bathers we've seen at the beach this summer, what this | country needs most urgently is form) R stanley, live at Manhattan. relief, 4 7 4 2 * * * * Those two Brooklyn men who pro- tion became popularly known as “Old | pose to sail to Europe in a big rubber ball will find that even in their simple way it takes. a roll to get across, * Oe OX Eight Condecticut boys swimming 1 \ Bre eee Te ee eee £2 1ey, Calif, below sea level to the sum- eyebrows and green eyelashes. Some Mit of Mt. Whitney, 14,496 feet high, day they'll be very typical freshmen. * Oe OK When Clarence De Mar, noted long distance runner, missed a train on his way to keep a lecture appointment, he ran more than the distance of a marathon to catch another. A miss is as good as miles to him. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) KANSAS VET KILLED New Rockford, Aug. 19.—Ralph R. Stanley, 33, Manhattan, Kans., world war veteran, died here Sunday short- ly after he had fallen under the wheels of a train he attempted to board. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. No inquest was held. { | A tablet will be placed in Savannah to mark the spot where Georiga’s only colonial newspaper, the Gazette, was published. A trail is planned from Death Val- Who Leads the Chinese Reds? (Washington Star) In the dispatches from China telling of the uprising | of the communists of the south against the Nanking | government evidences appear that point to the mainten- ance of some degree of military order in the movements in Hunan, Kiangsi and eastern Hupeh. The attack upon | Changsha and the looting of that important industrial city, with the large silk mills, was: marked by an ap- Parent purpose to secure funds and to destroy a source of revenue for‘the Nationalists. Since then the com- munist swarms have operated in two such distinct direc- tions that a definite military plan is indicated. The pur- Pose apparently is to cut off Hankow from Nanking, with the neighbor cities to Hanyang and Wuchang—the three are virtually one city, being separated by the Yangtse and the Han—and also to capture Kiukiang, which lies about 120 miles to the southeast, down the Yangtse. These objectives are scemingly part of a general plan to approach and possibly to capture Nanking, the seat of the Nationalist government, which lies a little more than 200 miles down the Yangtse from Kiukiang. In these more or less orderly movements there is a hint at something more than mere Chinese communist direction. In the first place, the red bands that form the body of the fighting forces in the field are all ir- regulars, volunteers, bandits and deserters from the Na- tionalist armies. If left to themselves they would acknowledge no leadership beyond that which provided the “chow” and the ammunition. Such leadership, how- ever, is not lacking. Hints have been given in the dis- patches of the. presence of Borodin, the erstwhile “mili- tary adviser” of the Nationalist government who was | dismissed and all but executed by Chiang Kaishek. . This Russian agent of the Soyiet government at Moscow, in the course of his several months of connection with the Kuomintang government of China, succeeded in estab- lishing a number of communist centers in the southern provinces. These centers have now sprouted their bale- ful crop of radicals, who have taken the field. Borodin was driven out of China—or at least out of the range of {the Nationalist government—some time ago. His wife was under arrest in Peking for a while and barely es- caped execution as a spy. That Borodin has returned to the field of his former activities and is now acting not merely as military adviser, but as-virtual commander, | of the communist forces is suspected. It is not an un- likely hypothesis. Moscow would be greatly pleased | to aid in the overthrow of the Nationalist government of China by communists. ' ‘ It is the possibility that is said to concern the north- ern coalition of insurgents against the Nanking govern- ment, even while it is in the thick of -its fight to win | Shantung from the Nationalists. For if the Moscow- inspired--if not actually Moscow-led—communists suc- ceed in overthrowing Nationalist authority in the south they are quite likely to continue their campaign north- ward, in which case Yen Hsi-shan, Feng Yu-hsiang and Wang Ching-wei, the northern triumvirate now engaged in organizing a new government at Peking, would have another war on their hands. The Education of Earl Carroll (Minneapolis Tribune) A New York grand jury has declined to indict Earl Carroll’on the charges of presenting an obscene theat- rical production. Mr. Carroll, who spent some time in a federal penitentiary for a perjury that grew oyt of his “bathtub” party, hes been much in the theatrical news since his arrest following his production of “Vanities.” ‘Whether or not “Vanities” is an obscene theatrical production must be a matter of opinion, there being no recognized standards of modesty or obscenity. If we judge the Carroll production by the standards that pre- vailed when “the Black Crook” shocked the republic to its moral foundations, and when women were arrested fér wearing divided bicycle skirts, “Vanities” is certainly an immoral play. s Moralities change with the/passing years in spite of all that can be done by those who fill the role of moral authorities, One generation wrings its hands in despair and views the future of the succeeding generation with genuine horror. Whatever “Vanities” may be today, it was certainly immoral some years back. Even Carroll himself could not deny this. Once upon a time no longer ago than 1920 Mr. Carroll inserted an advertisement in the New York Times as follows+_ “I believe there are still some good, clean, sweet, whole- ‘are not so calloused that they cannot appreciate an evening's entertainment that doesn’t have a Georgette the center of the stage.” | Alas, vanished is the georgette nightie. Ten years after, it is as much out of place on the Carroll s! a coon skin coat or a bathing skirt. seminude woman. Her place is t never does anything by halves clean, sweet, wholesome home-loving people in the world {but “Lysistrata” is » Greek classic and much must be: a by her sister who | conceded to classicism ber Times chance 2nd Earl Carrell manages to keep a step ahead of the times. some home-loving peopte left in the world, whose hearts | 3 nightie, a folding bed, or a seminude woman occupying | § Gone, too, is.the) 3 “here are still good.) g REGIN HERE TODAY Y model, SUDITH GRANT, ALAN ‘STE CHUMMY MORLEY, friend. Chameay bi brenks her engagement’ but Ju- dith refuses {o marry Steyne, telling — him belongs Chummy. After some mi Chummy and Steyne resum: engagemen i tack Judith v “for thelr marriage. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIX TEYNE and Clarissa Morley had fixed a day in September for their wedding. .Chummy hardly knew how it had come about. They seemed to have drifted together again, Alan took up painting ofce more, and often came to her for hints and encouragement. The month of August was won- derful. They seemed to be alone in New York. -Even the inveterate habitues of the Cafe Ture had gone on a holiday. Judy was still in Scandinavia. Dumont had been to Toulouse, to visit some of his French relatives. He had come back bronzed by the sun and full of energy; but they saw little of him because he was in the frenzy 6f creation, working like a madman on a great symbolic canvas which he called “Life's Chop House.” Chummy and Alan had their meals together, as of yore, In the evenings they drove up*the river in Alan's two seater. Sometimes they toot: a day off and drove to Some quiet little place by the sea. One moonlight night—a night of enchantment—Alan asked Clarissa whether she would not change her mind and marry him, after all. So on those moonlit sands she opened her soul to him, and they went back to town betrothed anew. {t was after midnight when they reached New York. She ran up her stairs, locked her door, and threw herself on her knees beside the bed. eee THEN came the last days of Au- gust, and a great black cloud suddenly descended and enveloped all the little band. Chummy and Steyne were in the Cafe Ture one night. Michael Stone and Tony Leigh were also there, having returned from their holi- Bastien came in, white and ght. “Have you heard?” “Have you heard?” He was so “wildly agitated. that his words tumbled over one an- other, he cried. CING CORALIE STANTON COPYRIGHT 1950 “No! What? Is it bad came from the others. “Judy!” The one word came from Bas- tien’s lips like a wail. Chummy’s eyes sought Steyne’s face insfinctively. She saw it set and hard, like a mask. He clenched his hands, “Judy!" A great cry went up from every corner of the cafe. “Has !something happened to Judy?” “Haven't you heard?” Dumont went on. “It's in the papers, The theater where she was dancing was burned to the ground. There was @ panic—” Chummy could not take ber eyes from Alan's face. He was not look- ing at her. He was not looking at anybody, or at anything. To her he seemed like a dead man. “Was—Judy—hurt?” asked Mich- ael Stone rather hoarsely. “She was frightfully burned,’ Dumont went on. He talked me- chanically now, like a man in a trance. “They don’t think she'll dfe. She could have saved herself |casily enough, as the fireproof cur- tain was lowered to shut off the stage, but she saw an old man and jumped down from the stage to help him. She was caught in the crowd—" “Don't, Bastien, don't!” said {Tony Leigh in a voice that posi- jtively ached. “Judy—Judy caught in a panicky crowd—tiny little \Judy!” Then everybody began to talk at |onee. Emotion loosened all their tongues but Alan's. Alan continued to sit there, looking like a man who has ceased to live, Chummy was very quiet. All her faculties were taken up in school- ing herself so that Alan should not know. She had seen that,he still loved Judy, and he must not know it. It. began to be intolerable to Chummy that Steyne should just sit there, saying nothing. She touched his shoulder. “Alan, it’s very hot in here. This news has upset us all so much. Shall we go outside?” He looked at her quietly. It was as if his mind returned from an immensely long journey. There was no awkwardness, no hesitation, in his voice, . “It was just like Judy, wasn't it,” he said, “to try to save the old man?” His voice sounded almost indiffer- ent. His friends looked at him askance; but Chummy knew that he was not indifferent. He was sim- ply not there among them in the Cafe Ture. His real self was miles away, with Judy on her; bed of pain, news?” HE little crowd thought and talked of nothing else but Judy during the next three weeks. It |was mid-September, but there was no talk of marriage between ;Chummy and Steyne; and the jothers found this quite natural— \especially Dumont. How could any- {body think of getting married ‘Se by CHELSEA HOUSE. while Judy was lying {ll in a for- eign country? ‘They were all waiting in a state of suspended animation until Judy came back. She came in the fourth week of September, and it was Bruce Gid- eon’s yacht that brought her. All her artist 4riends, with their vivid imaginations, were glad, for once, that she had a rich man to help her. She was brought back to New York to a nursing home, and for a few days nobody could see her. It was reported that she had been very well cared for after the fire, having made a host of friends, and being nursed devotedly in the house of the foremost citizen of the town, Chummy was the first to see her. Judy asked for Chummy, and went on asking for her until the doctor gave way. : Chummy made her way through a roomful of flowers. She still had that curious sense of not being able to feel anything. Judy was not in bed. She was in a big chair, heaped with pillows. “Chummy! Darling, darling Chummy!” said the hoarse voice. “Judy! Little, little Judy!” “You can’t touch me!” laughed Judy hysterically. “If you want to | kiss me, you must just peck at my check. It seems I’th made of sugar, ‘and I can’t be put out in the sun or left out in the rain. J’d melt, or break, or something!” 7 eee CHuny pressed her lips to the bandaged hand that lay on the satin quilt over Judy’s knees. “Judy! Wonderful little Judy!" she breathed, ‘ “NOt wonderful at all, Chummy darling,” said the gay, hoarse voice. “I was in a blue funk, I can tell “But you risked your life to save an old man!” “Chummy, he was such an aw- fully ‘old man—a little old man, all bent and quite helpless. I think they had trodden on him. He had such blue eyes, and he looked so muddled, ag if he didn’t know where he was. Oh, he was ever so old!” And Judy sighed, because the little old man.had. since died. She asked after everybody, and after Alan, too, in the most natural way, She was so glad that Chummy and Alan were going to be mar- ried. It was splendid, and they must really hurry up and waste no time. “You know, Chummy, they say I may never be able to dance again; but then, or the other hand, I may. So it’s a toss up, you see!” “Oh, Judy, Judy, that would be awful!” The nurse came in with some nourishment, and very kindly but firmly decreed that Miss Morley must go. She went out of the room while the friends said goodb; HERES TO YOU W. s In our present stage of evolution it is necessary for us to spend about a third of our time in sleep. Sleep seems to be a state of self-hypnosis, during which time the body is able to rest and the nerve cells. to store up strength, very much as the radio bat- tery is recharged during the night when it is not being used. ‘The inability to sleep is often purely mental, I have heard many patients say that ‘they are sleepy until-they go to bed, after which they are wide awake. If a person believes that he can fall asleep as soon as his head rests upon the pillow, he usually will, but there are many physical causes as well as mental which keep people from sleeping, or from getting rest even if they do sleep. Most of these can be traced to some type of toxin or stimulant which comes from the di- gestive tract. One of the most frequently used stimulants which prevent sleep is cof- fee when taken late at night. Wrong combinations of food, leading to in- testinal gas, is another type of irri-| will tation that prevents sleep. The next time that you suffer from insomnia which you know is due to worry or mental causes, just tap your abdomen and see if it is not ballooned out with gas. This type of sleeplessness can almost always be overcome by the use of a warm drink followed by a fairly warm enema. Once the intestinal tract has been cleared out, and much of the gas ex- pelled, a person will be very apt to fall into a refreshing sleep. The finest prescription for sleepless- ness that a doctor can give is to rec- ommend eating correct combinations of food and the use of hard physical exercise, One who is tired from mus- cular labor has no problem of wake- fulness. Sleep is absolutely essential to pre- serve out vitality. It gives strength to the kidneys and other organs; it keeps the blood pure and the brain clear. A person who does not have sleep enough is likely to retain the systemic poisons in his body, and almost in- variably we will find such a person is constipated or suffers from colds, ca- tarrh, or nervousness. A’ congestion of blood in the head will prevent sleep, and in order to avoid this, one should take a few min- utes of exercise before retiring. If the feet are cold, place a hot water bottle in the foot of the bed. Eight hours of sleep seem to be re- quired by the average adult. Children require more sleep than that. It is im- portant that children form the habit EALEH Dr FRANK, NECOY OR OF “THE AST Way TO HEALTH done, it is much ith the light of day artificial light, be- Dr. McCoy will gladly answet personal questions on health and diet addrcead to him, care of The Tribune Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. cause the night is the natural time for sleep. I have never known of a case of in- somnia that could not be easily cured by using a combination of treatments for removing internal irritation, in- creasing the physical exercise, and the use of the proper mental suggestions. ‘When next you are bothered with insomnia, try to concentrate your mind on your hands and feet, relaxing all of your muscles as if you intend to fall apart. If you can successfully imagine that your arms and legs are dead weights, and that sleep is gradu- ally approaching your extremities, you find that you will fall asleep within a very short time. These meth- ods are much more satisfactory and Permanently wholesame than to de- pend upon sleeping powders, which are brain and nerve sedatives, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sunbathing JUD TL and HEATH HOSKEN of retiring early. soon?” “Yes, Judy, quite soon.” eae i ae days later, Steyne came to see Judy. She had asked for him to come, too. She was as gay as could be, and there was a tinge of color in her checks. She told him her bad news first. “They think I may never dance again. There are some little bones in one foot that have got all mixed up together. Isn’t that funny? They X-rayed me this morning; but they aren't quite sure, you know. There’s still a chance. I don't think I care much,” she added. “I'd almost as soon be @ model again.” Steyne, ike Chummy, was at- fected with dumbness at first. He looked at her and looked at her. “What are you thinking about?” she asked him once, when the silence grew too long. “You,” he answered. She flushed, but looked at him with her straight, clear gaze. “You are going to marry Chummy, aren’t you?” she asked. “Yes,” he said, “if you stil) want me to.” ‘ant you to? Of course you must! I heard it was all fixed.” “So it is. While you were away, I thought I could.” “You could?” Her voice was full of fear. “I still can, Judy, now I have seen you,” he said gravely. “I can't quite explain, but it’s like this— you've taught me. You could risk your life for an old man you'd never seen before. You never thought of yourself.” She laughed. She could not help herself. The strain was becoming too much, “I didn't think about anything at all, silly!” she cried. “You don’t —in a place like that!” Steyne knew he must go. Judy’ eyes were fever bright, and her face was scarlet—just as red as when her cheeks had been painted. Paint was not encouraged, probably not #llowed, in the nursing home. He stood looking down at her. In his blue eyes was the unspeakable, the eternal farewell. She looked up, smiling. She was like some little ghost of a girl. “Goodby, Alan!” she said. “I'm Just a wee bit tired.’ Both her hands were bandaged and lay outside the quilt; but he did not touch them. He fell on his knees, and for a moment he laid his head in her lap, She bent over it, and her tears fell on his brown hair. He got up again, and she smiled lke an Apjil day. “Don’t mind me,” she sald gayly, “I'm a silly woman. I’m go glad that Chummy is going to be happy! And so will you, Bless you forever and ever—both of' you!” Steyne went out of the room as the nurse came in. Seeing him jyoung and good to look at, and having fallen in love with her pa- “Chummy,” Judy whispered, “you won't wait any longer, will iyou, pet? You'll be married quite tient, she smiled in kindly sym- [eee (To Be Continued) Question—H. L. F. asks: “How much and when should one take a sunbath? How long should one re- main in the sun at the very begin- ning, and should any clothing be worn?” . Answer.—A sunbath should be taken entirely nude and the body exposed to the direct rays of the sunlight. At this time of the year it is a good plan to start taking ten minutes while lying on the back and also while lying face downward: If the sunbaths are taken » increase one minute's exposure on each side daily. Salmon Question.—Mrs. C. N. S. writes: “I notice you exclude salmon from your list of good proteins. Please advise me why, and in what way, it is unlike other fish. I am a diabetic and am very fond of salmon, both fresh and canned, and I know that most diabetic authorities bar it as you do, and I would like to know why and in what way it differs from hundreds of other fish. How about tuna?” Answer.—Both salmon and tuna contain large quantities of fat and therefore are a little more difficult to digest than most other fish or lean meats. For this reason I leave them out of the diets I recommend for sick People. Hernia Question.—Mrs. M. T. writes: “My 2-months-old baby has a lump the size of g large marble on the lower part of her abdomen. At times it al- most disappears and then comes back again. Will you tell me what this is, the cause and treatment?” Answer.—I would advise you to have your baby examined, as I could not determine what the lump ds without first seeing the child. If the lump ap- Pears and disappears, it may be a hernia, and should be attended to. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ——______» | Quotations | SSS Late sera Oma § “Our life is full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.— Will Durant, author. * eK “Authors, it seems to me, have much in comomn with the siege-gun- ners.... Their literary missiles may start a revolution or a conflagration in the most unlikely places.”—Hen- drik Willem Van Loon, * oe * “Marriages differ as much as fingerprints. There are no two alike.” —G. B. Stern. * * * “Women have no right to filch a Post from @ man as a relief from boredom.”—Lady rat Irene Curzon. * * “It is the rack of clouds that makes the sunset lovely.”—Christopher Mor- ley. ** * “It is not the crook in modern busi- ness that we fear, but the honest man who doesn’t know what he is doing.”—Owen D, Young. DRIVER BOUND OVER Rolla, N. D. Aug. 19.—Irving Lynch, driver of a car which collided with another here Sunday, causing the death of Emil Wilke, 20, of Rolla, was bound over to the district court on @ charge of driving while intoxicated. The whale is not a fish. It is a mammal which Jives on the surface of the water, thes air directly through nostrils, and gives birth to living young which are suckled at the breast of the mother. [White horses are black when colts, the dark coat changing to a dapple, and finally to white as they reach maturity. FLAPPER, FANNY; SAYS: | f | | Vacation days mean just one bazg- time after another. ’ rs d a 8 Vv » } C c t § c nh 0 a D t > y Ul ! c D 8 a 0 0 y v t a s a a E : J I ¢ g i y I t t 8 ‘ 1 eat { ‘ 1 f I » i] | | | ) ‘ ve r y; . ‘ 4