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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE 1 An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES] NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- tisabeh, WD. arid catered as the postafticn 14 Bisraarch te second class mai) matter. George D. Mann . President and Publishes Member Audit Burean of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitied to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the toca) news of spontaneous origin published herein. AU righte of republication of all other matter herein are also (Official City State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives KG SMALL, SPENCER & LEVIN (incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORE BOSTON Something to Aim at Convening @ conference on home ownership at Wash- ington Wednesday, President Hoover asserted that “it should be possible for anyone in our country of sound character and industrious habits to provide himself wit adequate housing and preferably to buy his own home. There-is a world of understanding of his fellowmen, their needs and their desires, behind the president's ex- pression of that idea. It gives rise to reminiscences about Hoover, the humanitarian, to whom the world turned under the stress of war. It demonstrates clearly that the president has not lost the common touch. For to most of us there is nothing quite so dear as home. Cynics have been in the habit for a long time now of detracting from the merits and the value of the home. Newspaper columnists have referred to it as a stopping place between automobile trips and, of course, there is always that old saying that “you can go home when there is no place else to go.” Such cynicism may be justified in some cases but for the great mass of American people, both men and wom- en, home still is the finest and best place in the world. ‘Within its four walls are most of the important things of human existence: the wife or husband and the chil- dren. It is a place where one may turn and find peace, comfort and understanding when the rest of the world seems all awry. The benefits of home ownershop have been recounted often endugh. Nobody denies that they are varied ani many and that the man who owns his own home is likely to make for himself a place in the life of the community. There is something about Americans which makes them do better when they have their roots in the soil. The purpose of the Washington conference is to devise such steps as may be taken to promote home building and home ownership. Doubtless the goal which Mr. Hoo- ver has set for it will not be attained, either in the near future or in our generation. If it ever does come we will be living in a better America than we know now. May Be Important The visit to Bismarck today of an airport expert to confer with local committees on matters relating to the city’s preparation for active participation in the aerial development of the northwest may be one of more im- portance than appears on the surface. The development of airmail and passenger services have been rapid and it is only logical to assume that services of this nature soon will be available in this area. ‘When that time comes, Bismarck wants to be in position to take full advantage of the new facilities and to offer substantial inducement, in the way of an adequate air- port, to have this city made a port of call when such lines are organized. The airport committee of the chamber of commerce has been active in this connection and is to be com- mended for its work. The city administration, too, has displayed commendable foresight in arranging for the use of land which will make an ideal airport. The advisability of subsidizing aerial transportation 2.00 Editorial Comment lines may be open to question, but in view of the increas- ing use of the airplane as an instrument of transporta- tion, Bismarck should maintain its reputation for a pro- gressive spirit by keeping step with other forward-!ooking communities. ‘Ways and means of doing that efficiently and without }. too much cost to the city probably will be discussed at the mgeting today and Mr. Mackenzie, an expert from the department of commerce, will doubtless assist in laying the plans for a more extensive development of Bismarck’s invitation to the new argosies of the air. National Radio Week If one needs to be reminded of the speed at which the ‘world is moving national radio week should do it. All of us can remember the disbelief with which we The modern mind moves at a different tempo than that of 30 years ago but many of us heard voices from the ether with the same wonder that we viewed the first automobile. And the end is not yet. Probably 10 years from now we will have to allot another “week” to celebration for the tadio photograph broadcasters. The End of the Depression A definite pickup in American this fall is pre- dicted by Roger Babson, famous satistician, with the re- mark that “the tremendous drop registered by the Bab- son chart since last September must soon strike bottom if it has not already done s0.” Thus Mr. Babson adds his authoritative voice to the sgtowing chorus of optimism. Colonel Leonard P. Ayres 4s another authority who sees in the near future a re-' turn to more normal conditions, and others are following suit. The whole nation will devoutly hope that these eminent prophets are not mistaken. F depression has not, all in all, been as severe as im our history; but it has been bad enough, and highest price has been the suffering and deprivation by the families of wage-earners who have been get work. Monetary losses suffered by cor- porations are insignificant in comparison. Dangerous, But Picturesque The death 1 prison of Oliver Perry, . One-time train robber, recalls a career that was both vio- Jent and dangerous, but that at least had the merit of Pictureeque. fe H Perry's last exploit took place in 1892, when he boarded the baggage car of a train at Lions, N. ¥., averpowered E BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1930 _ on speed and tried to escape, but the police got another engine, thased him and finally overtook him. Then, taken to court, he was sentenced to prison for “as long as he could see.” This unusual sentence appar- ently stuck in his mind; five years after being imprisoned he tried to pick his eyes out with a needle, hoping there- by to gain freedom. The only result, however, was that he was adjudged insane and put in solitary confinement. Now it’s all over. Perry was never a useful citizen, but he had, at any rate, a picturesque history. A college dean in Illinois suggests that modern high Schools must be offering courses in “neckinology.” He makes the observation after viewing (probably with alarm) the college campus in the early fall and spring. Isn't it just like some professors to assume that men and women have to be taught everything they know? The Cuban Crisis (St. Paul Dispatch) The dynamic political situation in Cuba is causing the administration at Washington much concern. The rela- tions of the United States with the island republic are such that in case a major Cuban revolution should flare up intervention by this country would have to be serious- ly considered under the Platt amendment. Interpretations of the Platt amendment have been varied, but one principle seems to stand out as a result of the last 30 years’ experience, namely, that the United States is “opposed unalterably to any attempt which may be made to replace by violence or revolution the Process of government” in Cuba. There are enough factors of a grave nature in the Cuban situation to warrant an apprehension that Ameri- can intervention might have to be resorted to as in the revolutions of 1906 and 1917. The spirit of revolt is in strong evidence. The economic depression which has contributed materially to revolt in other Latin-Ameri- can countries is considered more serious in Cuba than in Argentina, Peru or Bolivia. This has been ag- gravated by a political impasse. At the election two years ago President Machado succeeded in putting across @ constitutional change which increased his term to six years and at the same time secured his reelection. Since the election two years ago the economic situa- tion has been going from bad to worse. Because Ameri- can business interests are more heavily concentrated in Cuba than in any other Latin-American country, the Present unrest in the island republic is going to be watched with close interest not only by Washington but by the rest of the country as well. Running Afoul the Law (Washington Star) The fact that nearly a fourth of Washington's popula- tion was arrested in the last fiscal year is more signifi- cant in its bearing on a relatively new sociological Phenomenon than as a gommentary on the lawlessness of the residents of the American capital. For the situa- tion revealed anew by police department statistics is not Peculiar to Washington alone. Every American munic- ipality is likewise affected in greater or less degree, de- Pending a good deal upon the zeal and activity of the Police force. Every American municipal council and state legis- in about 15 seconds, and that after} Everywhere I travel I meet with lature, not to mention the congress, has adopted the same he had drifted over the spot where oe in dealing with the inevitable accompaniments |i+ went down for an hour, in hopes of what we are pleased to call progress, and that formula king up survivors, he proceeded | equ: clumsy in handling the sit- is to enact more laws. Every law passed means another pcg é ae eat Hurst, Jaw to be broken. The automobile brought conditions For this action he was severely * * * undreamed of forty years ago, and the laws dealing with | criticised. It was the popular con-| Prohibition has been the greatest regulation of automobile traffic alone cannot be passed fast enough to suit the average official. The radio, brought other conditions and a whole code of radio law is in the making. So it has been with prohibition, seronautics, heating plants, elevators and beauty par- lors. That one-fourth of the population of Washinton last year ran afoul some of the countless laws and regulations that now control the coming and going of every citizen every day is not nearly so amazing as that the remaining three-fourths of the population went scot- free and kept out of trouble. ‘What will come of it in the end nobody knows. Some one may hft upon a new formuls, transisted from or into a new philosophy, that will not depend upon statutory law or regulation to ‘govern the lives of men. But that Utopia is far away. In the meantime a new point of view has developed regarding the incidental and almost necessary violation of law in the complex social order of the day. Our best citizens chuckle with- out shame over having been arrested for some infrac- tion of law—running past a red light or permitting a tail light to burn out. The virtuous housewife and faithful mother zestfully describes the aftermath of a burst of speed down some smooth avenue. The architect of the United States capitol does not conceal his grin when | served with a warrant for violating the smoke regula- tion. Such transgressions have become the rule. The reason the volume of these transgressions leads to great interest and possibly to viewing with alarm is that we still apply the old point of view to violation of law as @ principle and interpret the figures alone without !tak- ing into account the nature and the inevitability of such violations. The time has come when the otherwise up- right citizen pays his fine for law violation in the same spirit with which he writes his income tax check, some- thing that is necessary and unavoidable, if unpleasant. In spite of the hundred thousand odd arrests in the district last year, however, it is encouraging to note the decrease in cases involving felonies. In the fiscal year 1929 there were 4,061 felony cases, In the last fiscal year there were only 4,057. We are better, by four good citi- zens and true, than we used to be! Sullivan Says, ‘Drop Twichell’ (McLean County Independent) For frankness, the grand prize must be awarded to Edward Sullivan, editor and publisher of the Renvilie County Farmer in Mohall. Sullivan, for years, was at the helm of the New Salem Journal. A couple of years | ago, he bought the Farmer, converting that newspaper from a dependable League grgan into an organ that | failed to respond to any key that might be touched— Politically. The New Salem Journal, under Sullivan, sel- dom digressed from its say-nothing policy, so f as) Political principles were concerned, but when it did, it | leaned perceptibly toward the IVA standard. As he did in New Salem, so has Mr, Sullivan done in Mohall. But, ; not being for the Nonpartisan League, he has been against it. Now comes the si declaration by Mr. | Sullivan that the IVA should follow in the footsteps of the League, which dropped A. C. Townley, and drop L. L. Twichell. “The time has come,” says Mr. Sullivan, “when the people do not want him any more.” | What Mr. Sullivan says in his IVA paper should be | echoed by other IVA organs if they had the necessary | courage. Once in a while, an IVA newspaper, the Valley City Times-Record for instance, arises to its feet and says things uncomplimentary to the IVA forces. An in-| stance of this sort came up a short time ago when ap- Pointments by the state game and fish commissioner | were made that did not satisfy Percy Trubshaw, editor of the Times-Record. Percy actually threatened his “gang,” and with"instances like these to use ag a basis of | judgment, there seems to be hope that the fallacies and | inconsistencies of the IVA will finally be’ impressed up- on people. Mr. Sullivan says that the state of North Dakota has| able farmers, and that it is rather hard to believe that the farmer wno has made a success of his business desires | anything but a substantial government. This is quite | an admission from an IVA, for it was the IVA tum tum ! that the farmer should go home and slop his hogs while Twichell and others, who never were nearer to a hog than the consuming side of a pork chop, handled his business for him. This takes us back to the birth of the Nonpartisan League, fathered by well-intentioned and serious minded farmers who were from all sides. Now, with the accomplishments of the Non- partisan League an open book, it seems good to hear a confirmed IVA give the farmers the credit they should have, and it adds to the feeling to know that Twichell's Place in the limelight is questioned by one of his former adherents. Mr. Sullivan says that we should have a political party not too radical in its views. The only progressive party | in this state, the Nonpartisan League, answers this de~ mand, Cleaned of the befouling epithets thrown at it when the party came into existence, and seen in its true light, the Nonpartisan League is satisfying. The farm- ers who supported the party in its early years have been vindicated. Known as the Nonpartisan League, or as the Progressive party, according to recent suggestions, the League can, with an infusion of new blood, be the power in the state of North Dakota. Politics in North Dakota have passed through a cleansing process. Pro- gressives will have little trouble disassociating them- selyes from dictators like the Twichell type. And the She train crew and took command of the engine. He put | time fox disassociation is here, i ¥ Eh CCCCCTHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY,SEPTEMBER 25,199) 00 Fall Guys! - HERES TO YOUR. HEALTH Be Dr ff RANK, mweCOyY ECZEMA CURABLE BY DIETING Eczema is one of the more common skin disorders, and it does not seem to be a respecter of age, for it may occur with babies or at any other age, up to extreme old age. In some people the disease may-last a lifetime because in most cases it does not scription. It seems that the small blisters formed di this disease are caused by toxic impurities from a disordered. blood stream being thrown out by the skin. This is the reason why any treatment which only treats the outside is not usually successful in cleaning up the condition. bison @ quick and permanent cure when the blood stream is cleaned of toxic substances and the eczema does not recur as long as the patient con- tinues to follow good habits of eating and living. In an attack of eczema, which is also called ‘tetter,” “weeping eczema” and “salt rheum,” the skin first be- comes red and swollen, with itching, burning, local heat, then small blis- ters form which enlarge and break, }and a clear sticky fluid oozes out {which stiffens clothing. This is the fluid which gives’ the disease the name of weeping eczema. As the eczema seems to dry up in one place, it will form yellow crusts or flakes, THE 8-51 TRAGEDY On Sept. 25, 1925, the worst sub- marine disaster in the history of the Block Island, off the Rhode Island| of coast, after it had collided with the passenger marine’s crew perished; three were rescued, The accident occurred at about 10:30 at night. Captain Diehl of the City of Rome said that the 8-51 sank BEGIN HERE TODAY DAN RORIMER, a scenario writer im Hollywood, ts in love with ANNE WINTER, who, be- stuning a5 an extra, has pro- Sressed rapidly and has been of- fered a contract by Grand United, one of the largest of the studios. Anne lives with two extra girls, MONA MORRISON and EVA HAR- LEY. Eva at times is very bit- She works only rarely, and preferably until daylight. suffocation. * * * economic and moral benefit that the that bother her. “Johnson is used to dealing with hard-boiled eggs. Look him in the eye and tell him ‘ixmay, big boy, ix-nay!’” It was something of an ordeal for her: Anne was afraid that Mr. Johnson might get out of patience with her, think her an ungrateful upstart, calculating and mercenary. But he heard her calmly. Behind his vast desk, a faint smile playing on his lips, he looked like a man who could play a very good game of poker. He had one question: “Is that your father’s advice, Miss Winter?” Cool, casual, one hand resting on the desk before him, its polished nails making little clicks on the hard wood surface. Anne colored. “No, Mr. John- son. He left the decision entirely to me.” A eee LITTLE nod from Mr. Johnson. “Very good judgment—on the part of your father.” He paused. "| Then: “Perhaps you'd better think it over.” “But I have thought it over. Please don’t think me ungrateful, but it’s hardly as much as I made on the stage.” “But you didn’t have a three- year contract on the stage.” ~ “There's a nice telephone bill,” she sald a little ruefully when she “hung up. “Promise, Dan, that you'll, not forget to tell me how much it is—or T'll call up the telephone company and write a check here and now.” “I promise,” said Rorimer. “Well, what's the veydict?” “Just what I thought it would be.” Anne Winter laughed. .“Fa- ther said to do what I thought best. Father always says that in the long run. He was awfully proud, though, and so was mother. They'll ‘probably call up the newspapers right away and tell them all about it” * “Did he offer any legal advice?” Johnny Riddle asked. He chuck- led. “He was in @ tough spot, I'd aay, trying to be legal and fatherly at the same time—and by long dis- tance in the bargain.” “No., He told me if I needed a lawyer to get one out here end he'd pay for it.” Riddle said, “You might send him @ bill for my services, I'm pretty reasonable, Anne.” “How about me?” sald Collier. Anne laughed. “I wish,” she said, “that I had more nerve. I'm going to have cold chills running up and down my spine tomorrow when I tell Mr. Johnson that I've decided: the contract isn't satistac- tory.” | But Dan sald she shouldn't let “I should feel better if the con- tract were for one year.” : Mr. Johnson's eyebrows rose ever 80 slightly. “I really mean it,” Anne sald, and he considered this gravely and then got up. He said, with his faint smile: “It looks as though we can't come to an agreement, I'm sorry.” “I am very sorry,” Anne said, and he bowed her out. ‘When she had gone, Mr. Johnson called in his secretary, told her to see if Garry Sloan could have lunch with him. Dan Rorimer, when she told him what had happened, said, “Don't worry. He knows now that you're smart.” And Johnny Riddle, whom Dan informed, nodded sagely. “They'll think a lot more of her now. A little independence doesn’t hurt.” And he predicted that Grand United would make her an- other offer. “Maybe not right away, but they'll come around. She'd be crazy to tie herself up for that kind of money.” Two days later Anne again en- countered Garry Sloan on the set, but this time the director did not stop to talk. Remarking his quiz- zical smile, she was hotly embar- rassed. Sloan had done her a great favor and she bad repaid him with what appearéd to be ingratitude. Anne would have liked to explain ‘to him that it was not, but he was mot alone. She could not even thank him. “I thought of the saying about the serpent’s tooth,” she told Dan, but Rorimer scoffed. “Why should it make any differ- ence to Sloan? I hope you won't lose sny sleep over it. Besides—” wood by NEA SERVICE /zc3_ 7 have’ stood by for a longer period,! nation could have had to run parallel with its tremendous post-war busi- Although rescue ships were rushed|ness and numerical expansion—Sen- to the scene of the tragedy, efforts|ator Morris Sheppard. to raise the sunken submarine failed day after day, until the hope of bringing any of the imprisoned men|The bill was drawn by and came to the surface alive had been aban-|from the Department of Justice.— ‘doned. When the submarine was fi-! senator Wesley L. Jones, “author” of nally raised it was found that the/the five-and-ten liquor law. crew had drowned and had not died * * * ‘The idea did not originate with me. ** * “The greatest, busiest business ex- ecutive in the world is the wife of the steamer, City of Rome. " 5 = | American working man.”—Secretary A ie ib-| | Quotations ies Davis, ————_—_—______—_~ Good taste is better than bad taste, ‘but bad taste is better than no taste.| than to science.”—-Miguel de Una- —Arnold Bennett. * * * “Philosophy lies closer to poetry muno, xk * “No woman is truly beautiful when ‘tremendous dissatisfaction with mar-|she is half-starved or angular or riage, and every country seems| pony.’—Florenz Ziegfeld. * * * “Women have been brought up as }@ parasitic race, and you don’t get fine thoughts from a parasitic race.” —Cicely Hamilton. . “Besides what?” Dan grinned. “Oh, I guess his hide’s plenty thick.” Which was not exactly what he had started to say. He thought, feeling again that strange antagonism toward the man he had never met: “Who cares what Sloan thinks, anyhow?” Dan was going to San Francisco for a vacation. “An enforded one,” he explained to her with a careless laugh. “I think perhaps it’s the beginning of the end.” Anne was deeply concerned. “Why, what do you mean?” And he told her that several in his de- partment had been given two- week layoffs. “It’s no longer a secret that Con- tinental is selling out. I mean it's offeial now. And some big bugs from Lawson Brothers have been parading around and sitting in at mysterious conferences, and pro- duction is at a standstill.” eee HE drew a deep breath. “Believe me, it will be a relief to. get away from that mad house.for two weeks. The morale of the place is simply shot—more guys moping around and whispering, and wor- rying about their jobs! I'll be sat- isfied if I never see it again.” “But why do you say it’s the be- ginning of the end? Do you mean that you think they are going to let you go?” “Sure. Adamson thinks I'm a bolshevik, anyway.” “Perhaps Adamson will be let out himself,” she hazarded, but Dan said he was beginning to think that was unlikely. “He's a smooth article, and he can talk plenty fast. And if he stays I hope I do go.” Care perched lightly on Rort- mer’s shoulders, Anne thought, let- ting her eyes rest on him; and she gave silent consideration to the Problems he might be compelled to face should his surmise concern: his status at Continental prove correct, They were having Sunday sup- Der at the Brown Derby, the place, she now remembered with a faint reminiscent smile, where she and Dan Rorimer had eaten their first meal together. Then, as now, he had been dissatisfied with things at Continental Pictures, Anne re- called, and she watched him gravely while he ordered for them. ‘The waiter gone, Rorimer turned to speak to her, encountered her intent gaze, stopped. “Why the brown study?” he de- manded, “Oh, I was just thinking.” “About “Yes, e admitted. “That's a break! ‘I hope it was nice.” “I was thinking that, for a young man about to lose a very important Position, you certainly were the embodiment of indifference.” Dan laughed. He said he was very disappointed. “You see, I was hoping it was something else you were thinking about.” “What, tor instance?” “Oh, I don't know; but it would Sor iS ERNEST LYNN while breaking out on the nearby skin. Eczema may vary greatly in its characteristics, sometimes scaling or not, showing pus or not. In some cases.the skin is thickened and in | Some not. Eczema of/the skin somewhat re- sembles a catarrhal inflammation of the mucus membranes of the body. Where the blood is in such a toxic condition, eczema may follow friction or rubbing on the surface of the body, such as from woolen under- wear, but the breaking out often re- sults from no apparent skin irritation. There are some trade eczemas, such as affect chocolate dippers, painters, dyers, etc., but I am sure that the original toxic causes must first exist. Eczema is not contagious. It is not restricted to any age. . ‘The crust which appears on in- fants’ scalps is a mild form of this .|trouble. Many young children suffer from this trouble, but it must come from wrong feeding, as these cases are quickly cured by putting the child on the right diet. In case of infants, the milk formula must be corrected; be wonderful to get a pleasant sur- prise. Now, when I think about you—and I’m doing that practically “—I always think how wonder- ful you are, and how beautiful, and—” “I hope you have a good time in San Francisco, Dan. Have you ever been there before?” Her eyes danced with little Mghts of mis- chief. eee ~ «6Y7OU_ see?” Dan complained. “Every time I start making love to you, you let me down with & great big thump. . . . No, I've never béen there, but I know a couple of boys on the News.” And he demanded to know why she al- ways steered him off of the subject whenever he got serious. “Were you serious, Dan? I'm sorry. I thought you were just fooling again.” “You always think I’m fooling,” Dan grumbled. “Some of these days you're going to be sorry for trifling with my affections the way you do. I’m going to make you pay and pay and pay.” “Horrors!” Anne shuddered. “You'll see,” he threatened dark- ly. And he was suddenly serious once more; he reached across the table, let his hand linger on hers for @ moment or two; and Anne saw in his @yes that which caused her to drop her own. I'm always happy when we're together.” “So am I, Dan.” “Honest?” His eyes sought hers eagerly; he leaned closer. “Of course, silly! Why shouldn’t I be?” Rorimer smiled and sighed. “Oh, I don’t know. Only, I sort of hoped there might be some special reason why you should be.” ~ “But there are reasons,” Anne insisted. “For one thing, you can be very nice, if you only knew it, Dan Rorimer.” She paused. “And you think of such nice places to go, and things to do. And you've been very kind to me. Now, does that satisfy you?” But Dan stubbornly shook his head. “T'll tell you my. reason, Anne, Would you like to hear it?” But Anne found laughing, ban- tering ways of evading him that were just as effective as a definite- ly spoken refusal. And though he met her'smile with one of his own, he was heavy-hearted, realizing that beneath her lightness and her Jocularity there was a serious and determined unwillingness. Anne’s method of refusing to hear him, he reasoned, was her. way of letting him know that she did not want to hurt him, and that she wanted their relationship to stand as it was, on the same easy, comradely basis. Anne, he knew, preferred it that way, and the thought held no solace for him. (To Be Continued) ‘AS queclioss eoperding Heath and Diot PAST WHY TO MEALTI 0 be covered! ‘Sean ably slower, but depends upon the correct diet treatment. Even in case of the trade eczemas where there is ‘an outside irritation of the skin, the main object is to cleanse the blood stream of toxins induced by wrong feeding. The best way to cleanse the blood which I gave in my recent cleansing diet course. The fast should be con- tinued until the skin shows indica- tions of clearing. It may then be followed by a diet of cooked and raw non-starchy vegetables and some pro- tefh, but no sugar should be used at this time, neither should starches, such as potatoes, porridge, bread, etc. Sunbaths may be especially recom- mended, also local treatments of the affected part with the actinic light. one eaae AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. M. B. writes: “I have suffered with nerves through worry, and it has left me with insom- nia. This has lasted nearly a year.” Answer: One of the best ways to cure insomnia is to take plenty of physical exercises and also take long walks each day between the hours of three and five in the afternoon. Start walking one mile daily, and Gradually increase the distance until you walk four or five miles. Your muscles will temporarily be relaxed after this walk and you will be able to sleep without any difficulty. How- ever, you should also avoid any food which produces an excessive amount of stomach or intestinal gas, as this gas pressure will often distress you enough to keep you from sleeping. Cheese Question: Mrs. W. B. asks: “With what other foods may cheese be com- bined, and what particular kind of cheese do you think best, if any?” Answer: The best way to use cheese is to make it the “meat” part of a,meal, serving with it plenty of green vegetables, both in the cooked and raw form. It combines well, as @ lunch, with any of the raw acid fruits, particularly pineapple. No starches should be included with these combinations. Fresh cottage cheese is the most wholesome, Yellow Eyeballs Question: B. 8. asks: “Will you Please tell m@-how to rid my eyeballs of @ yellow color? Have tried a fruit fast for three days and felt very bil- jous and depressed. I am bothered also with a gaseous stomach, and am very much underweight.” Answer: A three-day fast ig just enough to stir you up and make you feel more bilious and depressed. Keep up @ fruit fast for at least 10 days if you want to get rid of the jaundice which is causing your eyeballs to be- come yellow. The tendency to a gas- eous stomach will disappear after such a fast if you will afterwards use the proper foods in correct combi- nation, —————————_—_—__— | BARBS { >—_—_—_—_—_—__________6 Success slogan in India: If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. ** * The first of the month in Chicago is the time when many gangsters pay their bulls. * *k * There tallest skyscraper, don’t you ery; you'll be second largest bye and bye. * ek x James W. Gerard, who made a list of 64 rulers of America, can’t be ac- cused of evading work. He might have made a list for Italy, you know. zi * * * There is no feeling of satisfaction |Scription blank of the magazine which had just polesied @ manuscript. * * If Sir Thomas Lipton looked a bit land they usually dress to kilt. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) * Mighty Golf Swing | | Kills Player’s Wife i Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 25.—(?)— ‘The irl without a date is usually of Se) retiring nature. -