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—]||SFATE'S OLDEST SCHOOL TEACHER KELSCH, HANDTMANN, BRIGL, BLANK, STEVENSON: WIN FIGHT FOR OFFICE; COUNTY FAIR TAX LEVY IS DEFEATED C.F. Kelgeh will fugain’ act state's ‘attorney in Morton county, Henry Handtmann, A. E. F. veteran, will be sheriff and the Mandan} Pioneer will again be the county’s offi | paper. These facts were in-| dicated by the returns from all but] two precincts which gave the victors | for all three offices b majorities. With only Youngtown and Buch missing from the tabulation late ye: afternoon, Kelsch had rause 2,61% Even if Ki were to receive the entire vote of; both precincts he could not be clect- | ed, it is said. The two precincts gave Keisch a majority of 20 in the pri- maries. Henry Handtmann had Oscar Olson 2,474 with the same two! tssing, but Handtmann’s | = too great for Olson to, rome. The former A. FE. F, man increased the lead he had over Olson foliowing the primary from 300 to hbetier than 600. The Mandan Pioneer scored an im- pressive victory over the News, its rival for official paper, having 2,961 to its opponent’s 2,030, with the same two precincts mi The contest official paper hud been marked hy intensive campaigning. Fair Levy Defeated orton county will no ionger have . voters decided when they went to the polls yesterday, for, with 47| precincts in, the vote stood: For af mill le , against 3,254, y of Mandan polled a heavy vote in favor of the levy but the rural districts swamped the measure, it had been placed on the ballot he- enuse the fair was no longer self. supporting and needed aid from the | ind Stevenson during. ept into August { atten School Destroyed By Fire destroyed the; ¢, located south of on the Standing yesterday. ‘The dd was the Mossman of » the school New equipment will he se. ‘he school opened in the | board members Porcupine Roel. reserv: building was cured and near future, school >on 2 | r Personal and fh Social News of i _ Mandan Vicinity — DILGER-BERGER Miss Rose Berger and Simon Dilger, | both of Mandan, were united in mar-| riage at 7 o'clock Wednesday morning in St. Joseph’s Catholic-church, Rev. Pau! Neussendorfer officiated. The | Total tee , _,Raananbndcne rahip Vou John W a majo F returns. ‘The vote was Precinct, Stevenson, O'Neil! dackso Fair Valley 5 De Vaul Fallon Hy uy 4) 42 lash Ft. Ode 5 1 412 at! steve Brigl of majority in the! sioner August with one pre-| The vote by precincts | Nickel “: In the “D” di Huff duplicated _h primary over Comm kel, a lead of 3 inet missing. a8 follows: is Brigh Massingham . 40 Highland Custer Little Heart | Rural . Albrecht 6 a ‘ Sweet Briar |. Dettman . Bindewald Crown Butte Total ..... In District “0” Commis Philip Blank won by a 317 majo The vote by precincts is as follows Blank“ Ramstand | New Salem 288 Youngtown Engelter . Rosebud ... Moltzen 1) ali * 134 9 | 20 a4 ig Caribou... Feland Total WOT Aniee (ene 2971 mous for the number of tongues to/ be heard within its walls, wins most | of the loving cups in athletics and scholarships alike. Its track teams win, its basebalt teams win, its de- baters, orators essayists win and yet it is in that section of the ghetto where tenenents pile one upon the other in dirty ATA And the children who represent it come from every kingdom upon the earth. ing up a notch—the universities | in tho city turn out football wit lteams which prove a match for the he-men of the reat open spaces. Did not New York niversity recently & {vanquish the worthy southerners from Tulanc? Did not a New York girl swim the channel? And another New |! Yorkar, the mother of. two, repeat the deed? And a third New Yorker ome a most valiant struggle? 1 have often thought of these mat- ters as I honeycombed the drub and dirty streets of the East Side. I have noticed the streets and side- + walks, ankle-deep in debris from the pushearts. I have seen youngsters couple was attended by Miss Clara | running in the streets until midnight. Berger and Peter Knoll. They will! Walk through these highways ony continue to make their home in Man-| hot days or cold, or at almost any | day hour of the day or night i you can see the sidewalks lined with baby LIBRARY SALB carriages. | sannual rummage sale ofgthe, Often have I heard mothers gasp, library board will be held | at seeing an East Side baby soundly | d Saturday of this week in! sleeping in its street crib on night be | embly room of the Farmers that snapped with the chill of ap- > State bank. This room, in the base-| proaching winter. { ment of the bank building, is reached | | This is no belt for hot-house plants. ; by a side entranee, Donations are so-; The youngsters who survive have got to be sturdy, They must have! GOES TO SHRIN dosenh Sturm, 12, Sturm of Sweet Bi necepted at the Shrine for crippled children in Min- | Mertslle and will be taken. there on londiy. The boy is the fourth to be | to the hospital by the Mandan! nd At, | IMEGREE OF HONOR DANCE A latge crowd attended the dance river. Tuesday evening in the Elks | all hy the Degree orf Honor. The conte :t which had been conducted was | won hy Mrs. Robert Ford of Manda FU) AL WEDNESDAY Funeral services for George Paul, who died suddenly Monday, were hel id | Wednesday morning at St. Joseph's | Catholic church, burial taking place in! the Catholic cemetery. GOES TO, BELLINGHAM Kred Scofield left yesterday Bellingham, Washington, where ‘ee | will make ‘his home. Mrs. Scofield | will join him there in the near fu- tory, TO RESIDE IN CALIFORNIA H. J. Tavis and Dawson Stark have left by car for Los Angeles, Califor- nin, Mr. Tavis will join Mrs. Tavis, who is making the trip by train, in| Los Angeles and they will make their home there. ENTERTAINS AT. BRIDGE Miss Pearl Wagner and Miss Hattie Hanson entertained Tuesday evening at the home of the former with three tanles of bi . Honors were won| by Miss Glendora Watkins, LEAVE FOR OREGON ht, K. Keller and W. E. Boyd, pro- ietors of the Lewis see a Rotel ave returned to theii Port- Jand, 0. a after Seaneastinns ee in Mané ] MEETING POS' POSTPONED The Perrine. ag: the. Couer de Lion No. 15, Templar, ane Was pec Held tonight, has been ely Pestoned: $ PARENTS OF SON and Mrs. John Seigle of Price she poronts of a son born yester- undergone 2 period of struggle Lead made them proof against almost. ‘thing. They can fight their way through traffic and blizzards Bikes Also, in these tenement belts, the, social workers have been busy for | years. Clinics have sprung up ii hospitals and settlement houses, They have learned cleanliness and | hygiene. Poverty hax meant going without | fuel in winter and without ice it summe;, They have learned ti atand both the cold und the heat., They have learned to accommodate , themselves to inconveniences and to, close quarters. Take o child from another section | of town and subject it to a few wee of this life and it Sauld he ill) Ey dead. (Copyright, 1926, NEA "RHA" Bervica, Yn.) | REHEARSALS FOR MUSICAL COMEDY START ‘Leave It to ‘Gloria’ Wilt Be: Presented at Auditorium November 17 and, 18 Auditoriums November 17 and 18 der the sponsorship of St. Geotgo" church. promises to be one of th most attractive and pretentious hom’: talent ig acl ti Ss Bismarek ie seen in a long time. Over 100 will apadat tH the dertoveaatee iH to a up the big cast all, the bésy dramatic, musical, and dance * of the city has been enliated, hearsals are being cond the dances being " der the of Misz Edith Arno! io foritierly a ee ture dancer with the b ire lage Follies oad Pe a aoe 4 petal tles, and’ the fi thys far Se, fe ity | a plasty. of nei cay story, aes te a tet and ige vel a and susceas this ‘production THE. BISMARCK TRIBUNE the writer wearing a pair of her hus- band’s trousers beneath her dress to keep from freezing; the advance of ealtare on the frontier. Former Controller of Currency Dead... “Nov, 4.--@)—John | Skelton Williams, former controller of the currency, died today at his \home near Richmond, according to a {special dispatch to ‘the Washington POTS EXPERIENCES IN BOOK FORM 4,-—#)—Homely cidents told in a homely w form the warp and woot wf a new book as just been conipleted here r M ‘almer Wilson, North Dakota's ol school teacher, She has taught three generations of | Dakotans, beginning in territorial in- “but 1 would like to visit an old: fashioned home once more, Father sitting by the table reading. Mother mending the holes in stockings. Brothers and sister# busily employed lin quiet work or helps: cach other in their lessons afte? which ‘sonfe. ‘eume, as chess, dominoes, or authors, | ia played. The} “Then, methinks, | can hear father’ 5 faded | voice saying, ‘Let us have n song.’ iaw when her publishers went One of the girls sits down to the For the second, “Glimpses | organ. Brother gets his violin, an- in the Schoolroom.” | other the guitar and little brother new publisher, | the hones, short beef ribs. her autobiography filled with '“Ahove all the music of these in- ¢ experiences of 50 active years and |steuments 1 can hear my mother’s with the sturdy spirit of th soprano and father’s heavy bass. Aft- who came to North Dakota w er this evening concert the family was a frontier, lived in sod shacks ‘[:neels in prayer and met hardships and — pri Hue nee ‘without complaint. are aioe woman’s story of a wor i id wend n’s, versi Heed | \plonecr di harn was so completely covered with | Pre: they had difficulty in find- é children wading waist-deep through icy water to get to school and a smattering of the three R's Wishek, Nov. Washin . Williams had been ill for two ith nearc disease, having been icken Tuesday. His death oecurred ly today at “Paxton,” his country . which ts three miles from) 4 effort imaginative story, first, ati not News 's Wins For Official Paper; N. D., Nov. 4.—U)—With cts of Ward county's 80 ed, election returns show the has polled 3,586 the Northwest d_ observations mall part of the story Hy a new, agd a wom- the two ane each fect tall; the story of eacher who preceded her a boasted that he had administered “liclings” in one day; the tale of discomfiture at the hands of husky pupils and his subsequent dis le recital of how hy appealing to their chivalrous instincts; a hundred other occurrences in which she pliy. éd a leading part; everyday ‘dramas of the hair and the sehoolroom. }@ Years Old wit roe is 7 years old ady to hegin her Sitst teach ! precincis will not re- this afternoon due to nundabout mail service. Election of, he News is declared certain. } Mrs. vis I vere this fall but her hushand became i! und she was forced to ret: The hook offers pertinent criticisms of moderm modes of living and social conditions; modern methods of teach- ing and other changes which 50 years ave wrought. Not all. of the changes have been for the better, Mrs, Wilson avers. She mentions “slangy teache: pupils; autos filled with you pene dackine about the anaeinendd at all hours of the night; sleep teachers coming to school after danc- ‘ing: all night; parents addicted to and to playing pool; the pass- ing of family evening prayers and lack of unity because of a diversity of” interest: But half a centuryshas not less ened her faith in children, “The children “of today ate certainly no worse than those whom [ met when 1 first, began to teach,” she says. “In- | deed it is surprising how finc many of them are in view of the training- or lack of training —that they re at hom Pour hot milk over it LINIMENT IN AMERICA Aches and Pains OFFS LINIMENT Fry HOFF'S Goo FOR A REAL GOOD GOOPRICH-GAMBLE CO., sT. LARGEST SELLING WHITE What Ai believes, return gard for the family as a unit better home life, ily prayers, gay parties where parents are the chap- rons, simple ggmes, simple hearts, and the elimi of the “jazz mad, speed mad spirit,” which she fears is indicative of 2 tendency toward de- cadence. “Call me old fashioned if you will,” jshe declares in the final chapter, Mrs, Wilson 6 a highe D.C. PR. C.: Doctor of Chiropractic. EXAMINATION FREE. Fitinge Bldg. Phone 174 PAUL, U.S. A. r claps the Faber cenbless ts pecented aka aepeat eggiciees eae “ee. ren pital Chevrolet Company’ “ACHEVROLET A DAW - ss Borvice That Satisfies. gs Coach So, Badan 4735 Min Fn terms, Ask about our 67% Purchase Certificate Plas Ss . 90 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1926 Rumania and a tour of Seattle wala mayors, Governor Hartley and nee i canceled today by Mayor Bertha K.| paper publishers, was to meet her « | Landes, when advices were received | the st*tton. that Her Majesty wo rriveat1:15| Bvery tfall for 25, years Jim Bark. this afternoon, six hours later n, retired ‘tattlenian, has searched for ‘scheduled. The committee which was |the “Lost Dutchman” gold mine in Seattle, Wash., Nov. 4.—()—Offi- to recpive Queen Marie, composed of |the vicinity of Four Peaks in the reception of Queen Marie af| 40 Waehington ana Hricisn Columbia | Superstition Mountains of Arixoni. Se ‘Mayor of Seattle Cancels Reception For Rumanian Queen: ee! the Mest Powerful Métion Pleturé: Classic “MARTIN LUTHER, HIS LIFE AND TIME” ‘ ‘Dramatie! Gripping! Fascinating! at the : BISMARCK AUDFFORIUM Saturday, November 6th, beginning at 7:30 P. M. Two showings. Admission— Adults 50c, Children 25c. “Music by Miss Ruth Rowle and Adolph Engelhardt. _ ANNOUNCING THE OPENING ‘of'a new: POPULAR PRICED SHOE STORE Saturday, Novetiber 6th at 418 Broadway It will be the aim of this shoe store to serve and scive well the people of Bismarck and vicinity who desire to pay these prices $3.95 $4.95 $5.95 For Men’s and Women’s Children’s in Proportion Ladies’ Silk Hosiery, 95c \ All styles—all leathers—all sizes—large volume—low overhead—will make above prices possible—and give you dependable footwear. > All Sales.Are Cash—No Exceptions my In alee to enable us to give the Fis slide service in the way of composition, early proof, and getting our pa- per to press earlier, we urge ow! advertisers to have their copy in our office before 6 o’clock P.’M. the day be- fore publication. : No Ads Accepted | . After 10 A.M No display: advertisements will be: accepted: after 10. A. M,, on the day of publication: All advertisements after that’ hour. will be held over for the following. day. A Tribune Representative Will Call _ Tribune Adv Dept: Fgh si