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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1930 An independent Newspaper 4 THE STATS OLVES NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) , Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company Bis RN. D, anc entered at the postoffice 4 Bismarck t second class mal) matter. t Subscription Kates Payable in Advance Daily oy mat) per year tio Daily by mai) per year ‘Weekly by mati tn state, three years ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, Der year Weekly by mai) in Canada per Member Audit Bareay of Circulation Member of Ibe Associated Press Ye Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use i vepuntation of al) news credited tc It oF not otherwise credited in thts newspaper and alse the loca) news of spontaneous origin oublishea herein AL rights of republication of all other matter berein are also reserved. (Official City State and County Newspaper) Foreign Kepresentatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (incorporated) ly G Logan Payne Co NEW YORK BOSTON CHICAGO Ice Cream and Opportunity Americans today consume more than 350,000,000 gal- Yons of ice cream a year—approximately $1,400,000,000 ‘worth—probably more than all the other peoples of the world together. Yet ice cream 1s not an American dis- covery, as it is popularly supposed to be. In fact, Ameri- cans were the last of the civilized peoples to know the gustatory appeal of the frozen delicacy. The appetite for iced desserts which resulted in the evolution of ice cream -goes back to at least 1000 B. C., it is found. At that time eastern princes were sending their slaves 9 the mountain peaks to pack and bring down snow, which was buried deep in caves and used to cool wine and other liquid concoctions. Marco Polo is credited with bringing recipes for both milk and water ices to Itely from the Far East, and it is known that Catherine de Medici introduced flavored ices to France, bringing along one of the few chets who knew the secret when she went to Paris to marry the future Henry II in the sixteenth century. Ice cream reached England in Elizabeth's regime, but its making was so expensive that only the wealthiest could afford it. The best evidence of its migration to America is, that it was introduced by British officers: during the Revolution. peub Washington is reported to have served the delicacy at one ares banquets, but there is another claim that Dolly Madison was the first to introduce it in the white house. For many years the process of making ice cream was @ great secret, and chefs who knew how guarded the secret with the utmost care. They withheld the knowl- edge even from their apprentices and placed. fictitious labels on their bottles of ingredients. Tt wasn’t until 1851 that ice cream reached the masses in America. One Jacob Fussell, a milk merchant of Baltimore, finding a surplus of milk on hand, experl- mented with flavoring and freezing several gallons. It sold so quickly that he soon opened factories in New York, Boston, Washington and St. Louis and reaped a fortune. To most of us,ice cream no longer is rated as a luxury out as a delicious and nutritious food dessert. - tally it is a big business—thanks to an ingenious milk dealer who*found more of that fluid on his hands than he could sell in the ordinary way. The same genius which commercialized ice cream in 1851 is a vital force in America today. If it vanishes the commercial and industrial progress of the nation will disappear with it. The Road Is There More improvement than in any recent month is re- flected in the October trade survey of “Credit Monthly,” publication of the National Association of Credit Men. ‘The improvement applies to both sales and collections of ered. Seven cities reported sales brisk, 66 reported them fair and 27 slow. Two cities moved from the “fair” column to “good” during the month, and 12 shifted from the “slow” classification to “fair.” ‘The cities reporting brisk sales were Milwaukee, Wis.; ‘Tampa, Fla.; Austin, Tex.; and Des Moines, Ottumwa, Cedar Rapids and Waterloo, Iowa. Three cities reported collections good, whereas only one tity reported good collections a month ago. These cities were Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Austin, Tex.; and Huntington, while 33 reported them slow. Fifteen cities reported an improvement in collections during the month, moving from the “slow” column to “fair.” No classes have their fingers closer to the public pulse than credit men and salesmen. The former have the job lecting money which the public owes. The latter the job of inducing the public to incur more tions for the credit men to collect. e fact that people are paying off their debts is one of the brightest indications of an upturn for business in the near future. The bulls and bears may wrangle on Wall Street; the great and near-great of the business world war predict and orate; but the fact remains that Mr. Average Ameri- can is the controlling factor in the business situation. When he gets his mind tuned to the idea that tomor- row is another business day things will go forward The matter-of-fact observations of the credit men indicate that this process rapidly is being completed. we The Revival of the Inn In the old days, when people who had some traveling to do climbed into epormous, slow-moving stage codches and moved along with genteel grandeur, the roadsides Were dotted with inns and taverns, which provided food, shelter and a picturesque and enticing charm. Then the railroads came, people got to their journeys’ end in quicker style, and the inn went the way of all out-moded institutions. -But now it seems to be coming back. ‘Old institutions are seldom restored just as they were, however, and the roadside inn is no exception. It is | returning to us in a form that is ‘convenient and often . very comfortable, but never in the least picturesque. Its _ signboard, instead of being a gaily painted boar’s head [| OF @ swaggering pirate, is a neatly lettered “Tourists’ + Rooms”; and the inn itself is either a private home with ‘one or two rooms set aside for wayfarers, or an in- credibly cheap. dingy and repellent roadhouse plasterea ‘with tin advertisements of chewing gum, cigarets and ‘soft drinks. All of this is rather a disappointment. The develop- Ment of the automobile has put travelers back on the ‘open road once more, in a manner quite as pleasant— i ‘once you get used to it—es the legendary stage coach: f; ‘but the overnight accommodations offered now are F Uterally less attractive than those of a century ago Probably this is chiefly because the automobile is still Buch 8 comparatively new development. Cross-country touring on a really large scale is only a few years old | Right now we ave using such makeshift accommoaa- ‘wholesale and manufacturing firms in the 100 cities cov- fe W. Va. Sixty-four other cities reported collections fair, | tions as could be devised on the spur of the moment. Ten years hence, probably, things will be different. ‘When the change does come, the American motorist will very likely change his habits. Right now he gen- erally tries to get where he is going as quickly as pos- sible, no matter how much time he has at his disposal. He tears along through beautiful country at 50 miles an hour, wearing himself out and tossing lovely landscapes over his shoulder without giving them a glance. Why? Because of some innate restlessness? Possibly; but isn't it more likely that the real reason is the lack of any .20 good inducements for him to moderate his pace? Once fix things so that he will encounter, every dozen miles, a really attractive stopping place, pleasant to look at, restful to enter and equipped with good food and moderate price lists, and the motorist will stop being a speed demon. He will take hir time, see more of the country he traverss, rest his nrves and enjoy him- self much more than he does now. Leisure, in the old sense, will come back. : This may be a long way off, but it is coming. The present period is a time of transition, Spoiling the Scenery The automobile touring season of 1930 is just about over; and if you asked the average tourist for his chief impression. of the scenery along his vacation drive the chances are that he would mention the great na- tional eczema of advertising signs along the highways. Looking back over a summer spent largely on the high- ways, one recalls these signboards in a dizzy, ever- multiplying panorama. They make the approaches to our cities hideous and they mar one’s enjoyment of quiet country roads; they intrude upon pleasant vistas of in- land lakes, they dot the white-fringed seashore and they plant themselves at the feet of lofty, snow-tipped moun- tains; and the long-suffering American continues to en- dure them without a protest. A recen issue of the Roadside Bulletin, a little magazine published by the American Nature association, contains a series of pictures of roadside advertising signs, and the series is enough to make the reader doubt the collec- tive sanity of the American public, With a magnificent continent crisscrossed by excel- lent roads, and with the entire population on wheels ready to go out and enjoy these roads, we permit com- mercial interests to mar the scenery, desecrate the open country and inflict monotonous ugliness on us from one seacoast to the other. A number of states have tried to remedy matters by law; but the law, in this case, is rather ineffective. You can prohibit the erection of signs on the highway itself, and you can keep them from being placed in the vicinity of railroad grade crossings—but that is about all. You cannot keep a needy farmer from renting a vacant lot to some over-zealous advertiser. You cannot keep a man from smearing an ugly sign across the side of his barn. You gpnnot keep the owner of some dilapidated eyesore of an abandoned grain elvator or run-down factory from Plastering it with screaming posters. Why do we put up with it, anyway? Is there some- thing radically wrong with our aesthetic sense, that we permit these signboards to litter. our -countryside in such. profusion? No country on earth offers its motor: ists such a lovely variety of tours to choose from; and no country permits its tours to be spoiled as we permit the billboard, the hot-dog stand and the filling station to spoil ours. The remedy, of course, lies not in law but in an aroused Public opinion. The problem really could be disposed of quite easily. If Americans generally would vow not to buy of advertisers who deface the landscape with bill- boards, the nuisance would die overnight. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the t ft thought by other editors, fished with: They are published with- gut regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. - Lucky Boys (Duluth Herald) Captain J. Errol Boyd and Lieutenant Harry B, Con- nor, who flew from Newfoundland headed for Engiand, almost made it. Engine trouble forced them down on one of the Scilly islands, three hundred miles short of their goal. Though for that matter nobody would be technical with those who try a feat Mke that, and it is easy to consider the Scilly islands a part of England, And even though they did fall a little short of what they set out to do, in sailing the Columbia over the sea for the second time—Chamberlin and Levine did it in 1927—they performed a gallant feat. And they are mighty lucky lads that the engine trouble did not hap- pen three hundred miles out at sea instead of over a convenient island. That Red Menace (St. Paul Dispatch) Secretary of Interior Wilbur's prophecy of a great struggle between America and Russia was probably not intended to be so alarming as it sounds. It belongs in a different class from much of the Red bait- ing that has gone on in America and other western coun- tries since the Soviet government came to power in Rus- sia 12 years ago. The “Red menace” has provided a convenient bogey for every political jack who has wished to frighten conservatively minded persons out of their better judgment at election time. It is only comparatively recently that America has made its real discovery of the new Russia and the sort of dangers it holds, if any, for the capitalistic system under which the greater part of the world exists. Russia can be @ menace only as the theories under application there now, sh practical operation, reestablish that country as a in world affairs. Such consideration as this undoubtedly is what Secretary of Interior Wilbur has in mind when he says, obviously referring to Rus- sia, that a great struggle must take place between two differing and fundamental philosophies in the world. He means that eapitalistic economics must either displace communism or be displaced by it. The Russian tem is potent only as an example, and what that example is to be is undetermined. As yet, » nothing has been accomplished in Russia to cause any change in the confidence existing in America from the beginning of the experiment that the final ont- come will be to make the capitalistic system of private property stronger and more solid than ever. Russia can- not conquer the world by arms. It cannot demoralize j World economics by speculation or trade conspiracies. Its propaganda and intrigue in foreign countries is the most futile and absurd foreign policy any government ever pursued, for it cannot persevere and has only the effect of preventing’ the return of those normal inter- national relations which alone can provide Russia with the most favorable conditions for its serious domestic experiment. But this theory of an inevitable contest for supremacy between capitalism and communism is itself open to suspicion. Already communism has become a misnomer in application to what exists in Russia. What Russia really has is state capitalism, with government there taking the place occupied in America by private enter- prise. The exaggerated claims being made by and for Russia on basis of the Soviet’s tremendous five-year pro- gram of industrial and agricultural expansion are yet to be proved by the test of actual results. Russia is undergoing change, not only from year tc year but from day to’ day. Where it will finally come to rest no one can say. But there is no warrant at the present time for cancluding that the ultimate economy and culture being developed in Russia will be so incom- patible with that of the western nations that @ great struggle for possession of the world must ‘take place beween them. It is even more likely that the two will be easily able to exist side by side without important conflict. Too much emphasis is placed in these calculations of Russia’s future on the importance of doctrines, systems, forms of government. Those have.their importance, but much more telling for tRe final outcome will be the in- telligence energy and effort of the Russian people in working out their own problems. just as in America the success of this political and economic system has fol- lowed from the fine qualities of mind and characier of Une peeple, who are the real nation. [ Drop by Drop Will Wear Away the Hardest Stone! - | Today Is the Anniversary ot BATTLE OF HASTINGS On Oct. 14, 1066, the conquest of England was auspiciously begun when the Normans, under William, Duke of Normandy, defeated the English, under King Harold, at the Battle of Hastings. Duke William claimed that Harold had agreed to support his claim to the English crown on the death of Edward the Confessor, and, when this ‘was not done, William began prepar- ations to wrest the crown from “Har- old by force. Harold had just conquered his brother and rival, Tostig, at Stam- ford Bridge, and when he heard that the Normans were ravaging the south he immediately hastened in that.di- rection. The Norman army was di- vided into three parts, the center be- ing led by Duke William in person. Shortly after the\battle began the in- v raders fled and the English, falling BEGIN HERE TODAY wines an extra, and is now und Grand United, one of of the Hollywood studi DAN RORIMER, York mewspaper mai te nario writer, is it he for the leading fem! mine part. GARRY SLOAN ts t direct the teat and the wood opportunity. forced to tell him that 7, both get romantic and reeites poetry to CHAPTER XL 667 LIKE that,” said Dan. one,” Maris said. houses stand: duilt upon the sand!” Maris laughed. you took them with aspirin.” “Aspirin doesn’t always work.” her. didn’t expect that.” around her. help it.” Maris was silent. drove her home. protested, “No, Dan.” a serious one. Sunday morning. another, busy, and, working with Garry Sloan ANNE idly ler contract at the largest 01 one. PAUL COLLIER, whe writes a Gaily movie column for a string of shares meway ’a apart ment. He has mer’s ability, had fm New York to Feat itrand & atic. The: Sree Aim to revise it for the ie gives ber she wins the role. Sloan director im Holly- Anne ts elated over her to her, but she is t she te net this, Garry Sloan aome interest in her and begins te ims to NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “And there’s a companion “Bafe upon the solid rock the ugly Come and see my shining palace “I like both of them,” Dan said with a smile. “They're comforting philosophy for the morning after.”* some of them rather loudly—and “I didn’t know “And does philosophy?” Maris turned smiling eyes to him, and Dan smiled into them with his own and then bent his head and kissed She did not try to-avoid it, but she said after a silent moment, “I And Dan tightened his arm “Are you sure?” he asked. “I don’t see how I could They lingered there for some minutes longer, but she presently reminded him of the time and he There he would have kissed her good night but she | So he shook hauds with Ler in- stead, although he did feel that her objection might not have been They parted with the understanding that they would go horseback riding the following Another week passed, and part of | parts opposite Lola. Dan was keeping very Collier had predicted, | wasn’t bad; everybody eaid that be continued to learn things from into a trap, foolishily pursued. The Norman center repulsed the English and easily won the battle. ‘William met little vigorous opposi- tion thereafter in his conquest of England. He was ultimately crowned king of England in Westminster Ab- bey. Possessed of remarkable ability, William ruled strictly, kept excellent order and won success by his own initiative. PEER | Quotations I] eee > “The young man who applies him- self to thinking will, by and by, be amazed to find out how much more there is to think about.”—Otto Kahn, xe * “Certainly no sane person believes that for many years we can unravel the 18th amendment.”—Senator Rob- ert La Follette. * * * “It was said 2,000 years ago that ‘He that striveth for the mastery is temperate in all things,’ which is as basic a rule of conduct today as it was then. How sadly we of today have fallen away from this percept of right living."—Dr. William Gerry Morgan. * * * “Each year 25 per cent of the fresh- |man class at Harvard enjoy the first year to such an extent that they re- peat it."—A. Lawrence Lowell. * * * “I had 140 men under me and I was sure of the honesty of only half a dozen."—Colonel Ira L. Reeves, for- mer prohibition administrator in New Jersey, quoted in The Golden Book. zee 8 “Marriage is all right if it is the thing one wants, but I don’t want it.”—Elsie Janis. It was not so many years ago since it was believed that to overcome an enemy it was only necessary to fash- | melt it slowly before. the fire, when jhe, too, would waste away with ill- ness. ion a wax doll resembling him and| ji the old English word “wrickken,” meaning to twist, because this dis- ease twists the bones of the growing child out of shape. The legs become curved, the head too large, the’ chest is narrowed, and the bones do not harden properly. Rickets is marked by the malnutri- tion of the whole body as well as deformity of the bone, and a pot the very young, who, are shut away from the sunlight and who are fed food deficient 10 vitamin A. More babies develop it during winter than in summer. There may be a soreness of the entire body, with a loose skin, weak muscles and an enlarged liver. A child suffering from this disorder Starchy foods are not needed but raw milk with the cream alternating with periods of raw egg yolk mixed with orange juice is very good, also about @ level tablespoon fA the juice of laily. Short frequent sunbaths are the hest way to keep your baby from de- veloping this trouble. Sailors on long voyages, prospectors in the far north, and armies on the march may suffer from scurvy, a dis- ease in which there may be great weakness. The gums become spongy and soften, and the teeth fall out. ‘While this disease has been known from the earlest times, a knowledge of the cure of it is fairly recent. The use of plenty of foods containing vi- tamin C is the most efficient remedy and preventive. This often found. in babies. A form of infantile scurvy may be found in infants who are taking con- densed or malted milk, or boiled milk without the addition of other sub- stances containing vitamin C. ‘This disease causes severe pains in the baby’s limbs which appear sem!- paralyzed, the child does not wish to be touched or moved. It is @ good plan to change the diet to raw certifie with alternating feedings of » lime or tomato juice e. Such disorders will never develcp when the proper diet is used ‘and it is the doctor's duty to see that the But there were times that he found it difficult to keep from be coming a little irritable in the face lof some of the director’s demands. |A feeling somewhat akin to humil- ity saved him from it—a recogni- tion of the other’s superior knowl- edge and of his unquestioned au- thority. He often sat in the projec- tion room and watched the famous director, and no one viewed the rushes with as jealous or critical jan eye as Sloan, as the result of which he was ruthless in ordering retakes. And frequently these necessitated a change here and there in an actor's lines—a word or two to catch a laugh, or the building up of a situation that seemed to him not quite satisfac- tory. eo ee UT Rorimer gave him his best, and he managed to be cheerful about it. When she was not in front of the camera herself, Anne Winter often lingered on the stage to watch the others, and she sometimes sat be- side Dan Rorimer and talked with hearsed a scene. She ate lunch with him frequently, too, although usually there were others with them. Anne seemed especially anx- fous to be friendly to him. Once as they sat together \watch- thing here that the director did not altogether appreve. And he wondered what it might be. His first thought was that the sound of their voices might have marked then that others about them were talking and laughing— he concluded that he was quick to imagine things. Those who worked with Sloan were at high tension; it was easy for them to be “jumpy.” But later an unwelcome recollec- tion came to mind—the bit of gos- sip he had overheard at the tea with Maris Farrell, linking Sloan’s name with Anne’s. And still later he recalled a story Paul Collier had told him; and once recalled, it was hard to put from him. Collier had told him a story about Sloan and a certain star whose name and his had been cou- pled @ great deal in the days be- fore he had made Slyvia Patterson famous. And it concerned @ young actor from New York, a handsome youth with no stage or screen ex-| perience whatever, who had been “discovered” by someone from Hollywood who was struck with bis facial beauty, “It was just one of those things,” Collier related. “They gave him @ Screen test—this was before the days of sound—and then they shipped him out to Hollywood and gave him one of those great lover And young /Roelif made a go of it too; he) count that he felt any concern; he owed nothing to Sloan’s good will, he figured, and he felt there was little that a man’s whim could do to him to cause him to lose any sleep. Anne, though, was different. |@bout you, Anne. I'm sorry about Anne Winter might some day be a Yur headache. Maybe a little ride, star if the fates were kind enough, |@2d dinner, will chase it away.” and no one could do more for her power, what Anne might think of it. hunched forward disturbed the man, but he re-|very good. He was boastful, swag- “And Sloan cast bim in another Picture with her; and then one thousand dollars a week at the lieve he’s worked in a picture.” oe ON seriously, nevertheless, there might be wis- Winter and a great deal to himself. But it was not on bis own ac- than Garry Sloan. his He watched Sloan now as he about them. Dan smiled. Moore was good— gering and tough. Michael was back from the war, unreformed, con- scienceless and scheming as ever; for him and afraid of him, and sat back in bis chair. He he talked in a low voice, and Dan door he ran into Phillips, bound ask a question. “Sloan shooting tonight?” scene tomorrow.” its original version. When Michael was called upon to sob and shed tears over the loss of her sweet- heart. |the kid was bound for a big suc: |Cess. ‘to turn it om, Anne—ell the way.” NNE had agreed with him that night Garry saw him making love|one that way, but she was a little to Lola—and everything was offjafraid of it. She told Mona: “I'll right away. Roelif was making a|never please him—ne Sloan was discussing it with her time,.and since then I don’t be-/now, explaining just what he pectel her to do. had changed his mind about keep NB didn’t take stories like this|ing her late and having her go Dan thought; |through it. “You know dom in being careful not to give the |you can save man cause for offense, especially |Can't we hat during production of a picture that linstead? We can go to some nice might mean everything to Anne |co9) place and talk things over.” And Anne nodded. That would ‘be much better, she said. “I'm glad you’re not going to make me work this evening. I've a headache; I’m jafraid I'd be terrible.” Sloan laughed. “I’m not worried He let her go then and turned He wondered then if the director |@walting his direction, and Anne really had become “interested” in|Moved off toward her dressing him in a low voice as Sloan re-|anne Winter, as gossip had hinted. |700m. Rorimer, sitting off to one And he wondered, with a touch of |#de, saw her coming toward him, jealousy and resentment of Sloan's |#2@ he smiled and asked how she ae “Ready to knock ‘em “T tel,” Anne replied, “as if I'm in his chair,|waiting for the executioner to ing the taking of “stills,” Dan saw |trowningly intent on Anne and|come and take me away. Do you Garry Sloan look thelr way and|Lester Moore in a scene, The two|know how that feels?” frown and turn away, and Rorimep |were sitting at a restaurant table sensed that there might be some-|and Moore, as Michael, the dapper. |there, but I've got an imagination. handsome gangster, was brazenly Rehearsing tonight?’ holding her hand, contemptuously| «yo, unmindful of the other diners |tomary Dan nodded. “I've never been I want for my last meal.” laughed. “That's kind, isn’t it?” “Very,” jwaved to him and went her way. Sloan was ready by the time she and his “girl” was a little fearful|had removed her makeup and nee ee ae She found The scene ended. Sloan nodded |"!™ outelée, os Thee, you sre be Pasi bis called Anne over to him and she |eyes showing approval of her dress, sat beside him and listened while |“How’s the headache?” “Better. I think the thought of got up and strolled outside. At the |the reprieve cured it.” “I do have my humane moments. for one of the other stages./where shall we eat? Feel hungry Phillips stopped for @ moment to /yet7” <Not very.” ‘Well, we'll Dan shook his head. “Not unless | won't work up an appetite’ ie he changes his mind: Anne Winter |nelped her into his ear, climbed in said he wanted to rehearse her &|beside her and told her to rest. little bit, though. She’s got a tough| Anne was tired, and to lie back with the wind fanning her cheeks Dan wandered back to the set.|was restful. He took her, after a ‘The thing that Anne was to do on|long drive, to a quiet little inn, the morrow was something that the|where their waiter bowed deeply manuscript had not called for injand called him by name. Throughout the dinner he chatted was shot, Rorimer had represented jagreeably about things that Anne the grief of Jenny, bis “girl.” as|was interested In. But afterward, dry-eyed and stunned and inarticu-|while he Nngered over bis coffee late. Sloan had changed that. Itjand cigar, he became silent and was not emotional enough to suit |thoughtful. him, As it was now written, Anne|was wondering about you, Anne.” “You were?” He nodded slowly and knocked the ash from his cigar. “We want to create more pity for {wondering if you've ever been in her,” Sloan had said. “I want you |love. * the scene would be a “bigger” ” And he said he what I want, Anne it all for tomorrow. dinner somewhere attention to the scene that was T've been given the cus privilege of selecting what She Dan said, and Anne HERE TO. YOUR HEA ANIC (aoe NNO baby is properly fed so that these dis- eases do not recur. ‘ Deficiency Diseases continued in tomorrow's article. terribly. I use a greni cream, but I kuow it inward trouble. When it hurts and burns after. I know ot me what to do.” Answer: Use plenty of olive oil increase the using. A temporary treatment which will help is to rub the entire body each day with cocoa-butter, using only a small amount, but rubbiig it well into the pores. Stale Bread ‘Question: A. M. asks: “Is stai> bread more easily digested than fresh? I. so, why?” Answer: The reason stale bread is digested more readily than fresh is because it requires thorough ‘nasti- cation and insalivation due to its dryness. There is no less starch in stale bread, however, and if one is attempting to avoid too much starchy food it is best to toast the bread+ completely through in order to dex- Question: R.C. writes: “I have a blind boil that has bothered me for about four months and will not heal. Have consulted physicians, but with ‘Would be greatly obliged for your advice, as I am be- ginning to be much worried.” Answer: Your blood is no doubt in @ very toxic cond::‘on or the boil would inave healed before this time. your diet and keep your in- testines free from accumulated pol- sons, and I am sure you will find that this blind boil will soon heal naturally without any local treat- ment. \ BARBS : AER rice a One of the saddest things a dry country like ours has to bring itself to is to mention each year “the first A college president declares that American colleges are turning out morons wholesale. That is, illiterate- ly speaking. * * * The English writer who wrote after @ visit to this country that American ently lived on a diet of hash. ** ® A new cook book suggests that pie: be baked hereafter without an un- dercrust. But how will our pastry- pitching movie comedians manage it? *** * Italy, we learn with surprise, has highways on which it is no violation to speed 90 miles an hour. And the office wit advances the explanation that in that country Mussolini wants traffic to go the Fascist way. ‘Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) WheatBetterThanCorn For Shoats, Tests Show Lexington, Ky., Oct. 14.—(7)— Wheat is superior to corn as feed for young hogs, tests at the University of Kentucky show. One hundred -pound shoats were fed a slop made of 14 parts ground wheat, soaked 24 hours, eee part tankage, and gained 1.78 pound: nf Prof. E. 8. Good, husbandry de- conducted the .experi- pointed out, produced also did undigested be added, wheat is fed ground Horse Bites Cap Off Automobile Radiator London, Oct. 14.—The horse has had revenge the automobile which fas taken his place in the world of He said presently, “I “I was (To Be Continued) others you have helped, sd please tell ‘ cooking was full of surprises, appar- . qj is i ae Fi ( . J & | ’ 4 4 Fa J } { : ¢ a | j ‘ 1 « f ) 1 * 1 : 4 t § i t E 4 ‘ * ’ | | f ( \y