The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1917, Page 2

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SS ALSTON GIRS PERN ge : } ,the highway between here and Bar- low, and‘ that he is a man who has been prominert in other I. W. W. dis turbances in this section of the state during the last summer. Police ay- thorities throughout North Dakota have been furnished his description, and jt is believed he will be appre- hended. a ILLINOIS FARMER WELL SATISHED IN NORTH DOTA sae First Crop on ‘Cheap Williams County Land Nets Him $9,000 in Wheat and Flax Ray, N. D. Oct. _5,—Al Robinson WAENGHED FROM HER _emmmwsatres ANDY AS SHE FALLS crop was 2,500 bushels of wheat from! Aberdeen Tot Life-Long Crippled 250 ‘acre: bushels of flax from a je) acres, or the equivalent of $9,009 As Result of ‘Terrible Ac- cident in thege two crops alone, and he has | Aberdeen, $ D4 Oct. 5.—LittleHel- in ‘addition 2 large 2mount of’ live- stock with an giundance of alfalfa | to carry them over the winter. He eit Grover in years old, is happily came here from Waverly, Ill, last playing with her dolls in St. Luke's | [NEWS OF NORTH DAKOTA AND NORTHWEST EE ee e——ee | spring, and he is inclined to regard Williams county lands at $25 to 340 an acre a gold mine as compared with Sucker state soil at $175 to hospital here, in spite of the fact that | she was made a cripple for life when one of her legs was pulled from her body when she was pushed by play- mates from a rapidly moving buggy. Little Helen was riding home from $250. school with some companions in a IDENTIFIED AS I. W. W. pony cart. One of her legs caught, in Ascent, Luck eee Boy the wheel and was, wrenched off. New Rockford, N. D., Oct. 5.—Chiet; ‘ Reynolds believes he’ has identified Fe ee ARO MONT ie amr one of the I. W. W. assailants who beat and robhed Lloyd Kruemple on! {IN BAD WITH ‘THE LAW Mandan, N, D., Oct. 5.Rudolph B. Olson, an Almont farmer, ,pleqded ee guilty when arraigned ‘here, to a charge of stealing wire from the 1./ “| SHOULD WORRY W. Hyde lumber yard at Almont Tast| 'Q)'? May. Mr. Hyde bided his time until + | he'discovered a new wire fence on; ‘the Olson place. Olson could not sat- | isfactorily explain where he had pur- They Peel Off With “Gets-lt.” ' chased the wire, and a.complaint was} Two corns are no worse than one, 7 - made. Following his arrest, he made| a one is nothing at all—when YO" 4 contession, Ten spools of wire had | corn: peel-it- That's (e-! “Gets-It,” the one real corn © loosener, corn-remover. been purloined. reser eet BIG LAND SALE ‘ shrinker, vight-off One ¥ cause ‘yi ‘dibs? ‘EFTel’ ebibes your. corn-paing, fat inti apa you know that that old corn has been % sd. it Kes, nipped in, the inet cutting and dij cor} ‘Charge From Shotzin Stopped by IJ, P. Doyle Gets $25,000 for Sad- ‘has disposed of his three quarter sec- ‘tions near Saddle Butte for $25,000. ' to $50 an acre. | Berg is in the Bismarck hospital as a/ die Butte Holdings Beach, N. 'D.,, Oct. 1. P. Doyle The purchasers are Herman Brown and John Schell, who paid from $45 Loot ene HAS ARM PUNCTURED Christ Berg gf Uaderwocl Underwood, Nz Dy Oct. 5.—Christ result of ‘the: accidental, digcharge of’; a shotgun which he was carrying with him’ on a load of hay. The ‘entire harge landed in the young, man’s arm, sh Finney’s Drug Store. adly niingling, that membef: is° fussing with bandaged, salves or any- thing else entirely unnecessary. -Re- mpemmbér ““Gets-It” i#‘safe. } Yout'‘not have to take off your i a : i shoe or pumps under the table at; Serious Injury in Auto Spill the cafe to ease your squirming boul. pg rE: See that you get “Getslt.”, Don't be. Ray, N..D. Ce fiss Henrietta insulted by imitations. 25c 1s all you Gould is paralyzed from ‘her hips down need pay at dny drug store ‘for! Gets- a5 & result of her ‘car turning: over It,” or it will be. sent direct, by B.' her when she threw the gear into Lawrence & Co., Chicago. Il. reverse instead of low while climbing ‘Sold in Bismarck and recommended 2 steep hill here. It ts feared that as the world’s (best corn memedy by, ave oe has been permanently in- jured. ~ GIRL 18 PARAL Young Woman of Ray “Sustains i | Aberdcnians Will Manage New us Brown Palace at Mobridge Mobridge, S. D., Oct. 5.—The New Brown Palace hotel here, soon to..be completed, will be taken over, it is announced, by A. . Ward, proprietor and manager of the Ward hotel, and J. R. Hubbard, manager of the Sher- man hotel, both. of Aberdeen. SOUTH DAKOTA YOUNG AAN KILLED IN AUTO ON EVE OF WEDDING Creshard Farmer Had Recently Bought Home and Was Soon ta Have Married Aberdeen, S..D., O .— After hang- ing ail night’ from’ a ‘wrecked dar} which went over an embankment near Cresbard, the lifeless body of Alfred | Poole was discovered at 8 o'clock in the morning by a passing commercial salesmar. Two hours later the body was identified. Poole, aged 21, had} recently purchased a half section of} land cast of Loyalton, and he was soon to have been married. He was well known in Aberdeen, where he attend- ed the normal for two years, waiting tadle at the Commercial club to assist in defraying his expenses. His par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Poole of Cresbard, and a sister, Miss Bertha Poole, student at the normal here, sur- vive. , BOY ARRAIGNED ON CHARGE OF SHOOTING AT HUNTING PARTY No Reason Can.Be Aszigned for Pot Shot Milnor Youth Took at Doctor Forman, N. D., Oct. 5.—Charged by” Dr, 'W. 'W. King ‘of Milnor with hav-| ing taken a pot shot.at himself andj; friends while they were hunting, Her-| ‘bert Warner, aged 16, is under arrest | on a complaint of illegally using fire- arms. Dr. King at Warner's prelimin- ary examination, testified that a rifle) bullet from the defendant's gun whiz- zed within a few inches of the com- plaining witness’ head, and that he turned in time to see Warner dodging | behind a shock of corn on the War- ner farm. ‘Why the shot was fired was not brought out at the hearing. Warner has been bound over. CAR BACK FIRES Tioge, Doctcr’s Arm: Broken in| Three Places by Kick Tioga, N. D., 5.—Dr. RH. Stobie's “right arm‘; was broken in three places when he endeavored to} take the place of his electric starter. ! The machine, unaccustomed: to hand-| crgukingy: ktcked,; throwing; him, high fair'and: rendering: ttim:wucon: intp ‘the! scious: ‘SUCCESSFUL ‘HUNTING Beach Party Gets 300 “Ducks in .., Few.Days’ Shooting _ Beach, N. D. Oct. Hugh ‘Egan of the-Beach: State bank, 'H. S. Strandness, Dr. Payne and Dr. Gingham of Eau Claire, Wis, are -home' from? a few days’ shoot: ing in Sheridan. county, , Mont., with 300 ducka and 60 chickens. Replaces Human 6acrifice. The:menning of the rite! of “breake ing the bottle” at the launching of | ships was originally nothing short of | | sacrifice, ‘Bullding © town or launcli- {ing a ship were solemn matters to ‘ our forefathers, not to be done with- out devoting a life to propitiate the} gods, Our timid civilization no long- er dares to sacrifice ‘a slave or a pris-| oner on-such occasions, aad therefore | we break the bottle, signifying the . CONSTIPATION IS pase Y || A PENALTY OF AGE Travel and'Ship Your || jewing. is sco ementil to. Freight and Express henlth 4m sdrancing ages fee Oa Se LL Mgt Ser 8 4 It makes one feel Northern ‘Pacific ., Railway ‘4 rsiclane ar thetaante who Tickets and Jnformatipn f Ve Us it, is far prefersble. paral Bate, Sombingtion of simple W. A. McDONALD, Agent | brava Bgl ag onk a ‘ Ci " Pepsin. ‘I Bismarck costs tty cents a bettie; . A. M. CLELAND, Gen’! P: AGt. obrained by wring oy ag . M. , Gen’! Passenger Agt. " of hes St. Paul, Minn. See ee Vaskiaeted |S ST. PAUL'S fam- ous and pupular priced hotel|" ” “200 ‘MODERN: ROOMS With Running Water... .$1.00 to $1.50 With Bath,.... eos -$1.5u to $2.50 Renovated, Redecorated, New Fur- nishings. Noderate Priced Cafe. Headquarters for all from Noth Dakota New Cigar Stand. New Grill Room, Convenient, Comfortable, Home Like. 8rd and Jackson Sts. One Block From Union Depot. Look for Large Electric Signs. Walter A. ‘Pocock, Frop. taking of a man’s life. | Instrumente of, Precision.;; Accuracy ‘is one of the most neces- sary qualifications of the present-day business girl—or so it would appear | ‘from the folowing conversation over- * heard the other day inthe park: “So | , Mr. X—— there? and I said, ‘Yes, do , You want to see him? and then what <dear girl, this is not.a telescope; this ‘fan. s | F: cis telephone.’"—Manchester Guard: | Bye kook London, — American women who have been expatriated through ; their marriage to foreigners have a pa- thetic role, indeed, to play during these days that try the souls of humankind. Expatriatiop, aljvays bitter to the pa- triot, becomes an overwhelming bur: den to the American in these times when. their country, the noblest of them all, {s, about to strike the most tremendous °and :majestic blow ever struck by-a nation at war. Even to be expatriated to.a friendly ally may well prove rankling-to ‘an American who possesses a full measure of patriotic pride, and to be marooned from the civilized world in the ranks of our en- eny is proving as bitter as hemlock to numbers of tyue- Americans at heart. Among these the most poignant suffer- ers are the erstwhile American girls, nov the wives of enemy aliens, who, in thelr distress, have, almost to a wom- an, identified themselves with the Red Cross of _their. husbands’ countries. They feel that, at least in this one re- spect, they may. conscientiously quiet their broken hearts ‘with the thought that they: do a work ‘which the great United States jn its honest myriads of hearts will heartily approve. Among the_more prominent of those who suffer thus appears the former Gladys Vanderbilt, who has been an migel of. merey, In -Austria-Hungary and who now finds herself unwittingly ved againstsher home land and family. 4: 4 ‘Her ‘husband {8;a staff captain with lNeian region where the Russians once hoped to make the critical drive of the war. Her brother, Col. Cornelius Vanderbilt, 1s, now in. the field in the United States, with. the Twenty-second engineers, preparipg.to.seek the Eu- ropean battlefields too, where it Is within the realm of possibility that he will ‘find ‘himself ‘directly and person- ally opposed to the dashing young man who married his sister. So there is a sad young woman over in the far land, laboring for the Red Cross, the wounded and for a cause that is not that-of her family and the friends of sher ‘childhood. Indeed, it ; wis the death, of her own brother, Alfred G.. Vanderbijt,, that had as much, to’do with molding American sentiment ‘against:the Teutonic powers as any one:incident of the war, What- ever may be the fect, ofthe real cause | of: /the underlying. break,’ the public mind holds niost: prominently the sink Ing/of the Lusitaniaias an item of re- Sontment,-and the most prominent ‘vic- tim of'that ocean. ter was her own “brother; sent ‘to a ry grave ‘by*a torpedo that came ‘One brother deid'as.a ndncomibatant vietiny of War, another ‘In’khaki ready’ td fight, a, couple of nephews wearing the uniform of Amerjca and scores of relatives. and -fMends either in the ranks or in thecouncils of the repub- Ne, the position: of this unfortunate young: woman is:indeed one of the most pathetic stories of tuewhole cataclysm that is shaking the world, 5 * While: she is by reason of these ; queer international complications the most! striking “figure in ‘the marital horrors of Cupid, she does not stand alone, ‘A score of titled women, a few hundreds without titles, but still wom- en. With, hearts and. loves, are in the same boat. And the most pitiful phase of the whole situation is that their adopted countrtes do not trust them, in spite of ‘any “snerifice they may make. Studying the récords of ages, one finds that time and again ‘some woman of high place and mind has cast to the wiuds love, personal wishes. and even life ‘itself ‘to serve her own land. There is a higher law that is not defined that ‘says to; every man and every’ wonian that personal tles are sevondary to the grand duty of pa- triotism, and it is this higher law that makes the officlals of'the central mili- tary powers fear and distrust any 1 answered: the phone, and he said, ‘Is | wife whose land is not their own. Bismarck, the Iron Chancellor, put the thought into concrete form when + do. you think he said?. He said, ‘My | he' issued an order that no German diplomat in the service of his'codutry might marry a foreigner. The order | fell. into disregard when the kaiser took the reins completely in his own hands‘ until: shortly before the Euro- Sign Languages. : It fs said that Gen. Hugh 8. Scott ‘Is one of the world’s greatest experts ‘any fighting he has .settted more dis- putes with Indians than any other man in history. Most.of them were set- ¢tled, too, without:a spoken word, just by signs and gestures. General Scott > Speaks practically every North Amer- lean Indian dialect, besides being {familiar with the primitive languages { of other lands, Anether Thing to Remember. Willie and his motier had been vis- {ting their aunt in the country. After returning, his mother was telling one of her friends over the phone how homelike her aunt’s house was. Wil- lie was taking in the conversation and, speaking up, said: “Mamma, don't fore get to tell her how homely auntie was, toc.” HAVE YOU] Write stay for garpie bottic and fc infermstit about ‘in sign language, and that without! pean. war, when it’ was revived. Ia the meantime there had crept into the German and Austrian diplomatic socl- ety a number of brillinnt American | women who are now under the ban of ' the old military law and who are alien enemies of their native lad without being trusted friends of the one to | which Cupid led them, | Thus it was Lillian May Langham, beauty of Louisville, Ky., came to be the bride of the late ambassador to | Washington, Speck von Steraburg, and | likewise through the hiatus there came ' to Count Johann Heinrich von Berns- ‘ torff, his successor in this country, Miss Jeanne Luckmeyer, one of the fairest of the daughters of New York. And Miss Constance Hoyt was another ‘of the rich Americans who went to the’ diplomatic court of Germany through her wedding to Baron von Stumm. In many cases American girls with money and without married into the | German army set and into the lead- fag business circles of the country. GOOD PRICE FOR LAND Gounty Homesteader Gzts $25,009 for Quarter | | Ray, N. D, Oct. 5.—One of the highest prices yet received for a Will-| and many ultra-modern improve:c2{s, | qatar WARY AMERIGAN WOMEN ARE THE. 2 ATION ENEMIES 8 HARRGE Among the Most Prominent of These Is Gladys Vanderbilt Who Has |. ‘Been an Angel of Mercy in Austria-Hungary and Who Now Finds Herself Arrayed Against Home- Land and Family. ‘ — Germany, before the war, treated the American. woman who came to her arms with great consideration. ‘The touch of .business did not rankle at) , the imperial court because the kaiser | 4, himself embarked in trade and was as proud of -his pottery as-he was of @ new regiment. 1 But there was a sadly different story to be told in Austria, all of which adds to the predicament of the talented and beautiful women who are now forced lemon skin softener ut fresh lemons into a bottle con- ing three ounces of orchard white. remove such blemishes as sallowness, | Juice of Lemons Creates A Clear, Soft, Rosy Skin Tells women how to make a’ lemon: beauty cream ‘ cheaply for the face, neck, arms and hands Boe gneneenenenanenenenertntet qntntntrtitertrei anne erirtrnarerrtertr enter trentit Gene eGGGrs, ‘At the cost of a small jar of ordin- freckles and tan and is the ideal sl ary ccld cream, one can prepare a full softener and beautifier. quarter pint of the most wonderful and ‘complexion orchard white at any pharmacy or er, by squeezing the juice of toilet counter and two lemons from Care should be taken to strain the and massage it daily into’ the face, juice through ‘a fine cloth so ‘ho lemon neck, arms and hands. ‘pulp, get in, then this lotion will keep should help to-soften, freshen, fresh for months. Every woman knows and } that lemon juice is used to bleach and any skin. ———— kin Just try it! . Get. three ounces of - the grocer and make up a quarter pint . of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion It’ naturally hleach ing out the roses and beauty of It ‘is wonderful to smothen , rough, red hands. ee —- : by love to salute a flag that is arrayed "3 eas against thelr own. Under the rules of the Austrian Bla GAIN IN PROFITS court no, person icould be presented unless ‘eight generations; of nobility could be shown ‘a8 a condition prece-' Uncle Sam's: Reserve: Banks dent. Coming from America, where ees gets 22 titles of nobility are not recdgnized, these women: found. the ‘imperial ‘gate. closed, or half-closed to them, while Show ‘Large Earnings. cess of Income Over Receipts More | Convinced. “| don't know,” muttered Rivers, picking himself up from the pavement and moving on with a.perceptible limp, “whether there is any such thing 2s a bicycle fue or not, but I'am thorough General Dankl fn that: dangerous Ga-! bearings “might slide through the chink, i Notable among them was the Count: ess Sigray, who was Miss Harriet Daly, daughter of the late Marcus Daly. Gerard, wife of the former ambassa- dor of the: United States to Germany. She married Count Anton Sigray, who had held many important posts in the! service ‘of the empire ants whose: po-; sition &t ‘the court was beyoud any possible question. Love and the law, also took her from the land of her} birth and from the.friends and_rela- tives who’ are cheering for Old Glory while she nurses the sick and seelis the wounded under the imperial ban-; ner. She has gfven a private hospital to. the Austrian ‘forces, and, with New; York enterprise, has seen to it that the government ‘also had a first-class X-ray outfit for the treatment of the anything .witp the required armorial, © Her sister is, Mrs. James W./ 30, 1917, were $4,141,528, . compared | Than Three Times That for’Cor- responding Period in 1916. Total earnings of the federal reserve banks for the six months ending June ; with $1,824,436 for the corresponding | period in 1916, while total current ex- | penses for the same period: were $1,-) 878.883, compared with $1,019,926 in 1916, Uncle-Sam reports. Current ex- penses for ‘the ‘period under. review are made up of $990,830 expenses of | operation proper; $821,844, the cost of | federal ‘reserve notes and bank notes, expenses incident to the issue, ex: bank premises, furniture, and equip: ment. , The excess of earnings over expen- ses, or net earnings, were 2,762,645, or more than threefold the net earn- including ‘espressage, insurance, andj © change, and redemption of iotes and ; * ‘1 $66,209 of - depreciation ‘charges’ on wounded, Sngs for the corresponding period in Making up more of the notable list, 1916, Calculated on an average paid- of marooned Americans there is the jn capital of $56,331,000, these net beautiful Mabel Wright, now the! earrings constitute 9.8 per cent, as Countess Zichy. She was one of the ggainst 29 per cent reported for the most striking beauties of this country .gyst six months of the immediately and her face brought her fortune’ preceding year. where many rich women of less charm; ~ ji the banks show annual rates of failed. net earnings in excess of6 per cent; A. famous Italian sculptor ‘used: her} four banks—among them New York— ‘as the model for a magnificent figure having earned 10 per cent or over and of an-angel, and it is said ‘that the! five other banks betiveen’9 and. 10iper Austrian -emperor ‘himself bought the cent, While finanejal. results. of op- work of:art. : ‘| eration from the very beginning were ‘And ‘among the women who must’ more favorable than for 1916, net,earn- think of the Stars and Stripes a8 they | ings show the largest increase for May ard their noblé surroundings 12° and particularly June, chiefly because Nora Iselin, now ,the Countess Colle. of the'large enll by members upon tlie redo-Mansfield, She is the daughtcy” eredit resourées of the reserve’ banks} of C. Oliver- Iselin, once one of the in: connection with the, Liberty loan. best-known millionaires in. this coun./As mntter of fact, the ratio of cur- try, His patronage of yaehting,.and other. sports made him famous. Her husband has held the’ secretarial post at the Rome embassy, one’ of ‘the places that an ‘Austrian nobleman coy- ots most of all. . ‘From one of the oldest Virginia fam- flies there comes Miss Agnes Carroll,’ who married Count Anton Heussen- siamm, The daughter of the late John, A. Stewart, Gladys Virginia Stewart, is the wife of Count Julius Apponyi, who is captain of hussars in the Aus- trian army. There is the case. Dan Cupid, the traitor, has been convicted of betray- ing American girls to the enemy. He ought to be shot at sunrise. . SHE FORGETS ONE. HUSBAND. California Woman Married So Often That Memory of One of Them Had Faded. : San Francisco.—Having sailed a stormy matrimonial sea over a period apparently was unable to keep close track of alt her ports of call. In a} board here, when she'sought compensa- who had béen: asphyxiated ‘by gas while working in Los Angeles. Mrs. Bundshu mentioned her marriage in 1868 to Frank Morrell, who, she said, That journey, which es- tablished the-nonexistence of Crocker Land, ‘which took 70 days to make in hardships which all Arctic explorers must expect and the dangers they must face, could have been made in a modern airplane in summer time between breakfast and dinner. That sounds extravagant, but it’s true.” | jams couaty quarter of land was $9,000 | paid by Arthur Sundquist for the Her- | | bert Contzen farm, northeast of Ray. | | Mr. Contzen filed on this quarter in farm, with a splendid grove of trees cent of total operating expense, as of many years, Mrs, Bilen J. Buadshu | hearing before the state accident, banks’ clearing departments. ‘The for- tion from her fifth “and latest imate, | the dead of the polar winter, with the | | 1905 and he has made from it a model 4 ‘rent expenses to earnings, which. dur, ing the first four months of, the pres; ent year werks out at 86.3 per cent, de- |: clined to 802 per cent in May and‘2055 | percent in: June, This. ratio! for the:| first six months of 1917 equals 33.3 per cent, compared’ with '55.9 per cent for tlie first’ six months in 1916, aMeS Of the total expenses of operition for the six-months period, 28.2 per cent ; went as compensation to bank officers and 24.1 per cent as salaries to the Clerical staff of the banks, these per- centages showing but slight changes since 1916. Amounts collected from the barks for the support of the fed- | eral reserve board, totaled $111,395, as | aguinst $109,973 in 1916, constituting ‘11.2 per cent of the total operating ex- penses of: the banks, as against 13 per cent in 1916, Rent constituted 8.1 per against 9.3 per cent tlie year before, other specified expense items of im- portance, in the order of volume, being printing and stationery, postage, and directors’ fees, Current: expenses, shown are exclu- sive of expenses incurred by.the banks in:the flotation of the Liberty loan, and ofi disbursements on account of the mer are reimbursable by the govern- ly convinced of the existence of the phenomenon known as the banana skin.” —_———_——- Lucid Explanation. Theodore had learned from his plays mates that the Murphy family had ten ehildren, each: being two s an the one before, “You know the 3 y got ten shilren, rs older than each other; they go by ages.” : ae ST Business Proposition. ‘Jad cume in the grocery store The was removing the withered s and told the bey they cost ten whereupon. he’ remarked, “Can't e off a few leaves and make it for a five-cent head of lettuce. clerk ve Happy ts Lover of Booke. Without the love of books the rieh+ est man is poor; but endowed with this treastre of treasures the poorest man is rich, He has wealth which no power can diminish, riches which are always increasing. Hy Why Not Find Out? Evety time a young man sees a pret- ty girl purse her lips he wonders it there is anything in the purse for him. , —Boston, ‘Transcript, ; Pract , If, Well, Located. .. 4 An advertisement is.like.an electric:: fan;:just keep it going and:people are sure to get’ wind of it—Boston Tram’ acre: ee ett ote ile “Chimp Clark _ looks wellin The Legislator one of the new fall GORDON HATS Sce your hatter for your Gordon. ment, and the latter are covered large- ly by special service charges. tabbbieiienbiebiaiehbibbibs t faded away 18 months later. H Increase Shown " Foreign 3 | In a previous hearing she ‘had failed gy Trade of the Philippines a to enumerate this marriage, When | ¥} aE $=) this was brought to her attention, she %, Foreign trade of the Philip- x 5 sald: pines during the fiscal year of z “It has been so many years ago:that |% 1°17, advices to the bureau of & I had entipely forgotten it. I suppose insular affairs of the war depart- ¥ he is dead, I never heard-from him.” ment state, totaled $122,700,000, z ‘ ag increase of approximately # 16,000,000 Z Aeros for Arctic Travel. : year, Sear meee a Freepert, Me—“I have made the < Imports increased about a last sledge and dog expedition to the | # $6,000,000, totnling $51,983,277. ¥ far North. In the future I see the air-.|% Uxports, totaling $71,715,375, 4 plane carrying men to the undiscov- were $10,000,000 higher than the ¥ ered regions of the North.” Donald B. ry year before. Fifty-three per % MacMillan, Arctic explorer and*qcien- M4 cent of imports came from the % tist, made this assertion In an inter- |¥ United States, and 60 per cent * view, Continuing, he seid: “The day of is of exports were sent to this a dogs and sledges is over. The airplane |¥ country, as compared with 47 4 5 will, in the future, carry men to the | per cent in 1916. zi5 vast still areas which no man has | ¥ 53 i éver seen. Redetete ed Medeor tetrad bw ade | LATE MODEL | + Dodge Bros. Touring Car. Standard eouipment. perfect me- chanical condition; used ‘short time as demonstrator .. $775.00 { } °Uge Batel af Fertect Service” “3a the Beart of thr Vong” Persenal Management of Hagy C. Metr Clark and Medison Streets Chicage : | rates fo pas Bevery Room with @ Bath exo Soo ; Terrace Garden 3 Chicago's Wondcr Restaurant “But Terrace Garden Is more than a restaurant. It isa pik larless ampitheatre, with ter- Tace uponterrace—allin cres- Misseuri Valley Motor Co. '§ th at Main St. Telephone 234 cent form, leading up from the ice rink and the stage Where Food, Service and Entertainment cte Supreme

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