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/ WEATHER FORECASTS cloudy tonight and Tues- Part! Not much change in temp. day. ’ ESTABLISHED 1873 3 PLANES REMAI BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1927 COOLIDOR 1S ||_Mmtermecomes mene REFRESHED BY SUMMER INS.D, Shows No Signs of Fatigue! From 1,900-mile Journey Back to Capital TO HOLD CONFERENCES! _—— { Will Decide on Special Session’ ~~ of Congress and Make | Appointments | Washington, Sept. 12.—4)—Re-' freshed by his three months’ resi-' dence in the Black Hills of South! Dakota, President Coolidge was back at his desk today to taekle an ac- cumulation of important business he had sidetracked pending conferences; here with government and congres-{ sional leaders. Showing no sign of fatigue from the -two days’ railroad journey of, 1,900 miles from South Dakot: which he completed last night, Mr. Coolidge his face well tanned by the summer in the northwest, rose and her daughter return to New York cn the S. S. Ile de France. early prepared for his busy program husband’s recent daredevil solo flight from Paris to Croydon, England, | ditions, for the day. Conferences Planned In a series of conferences arranged for the next few weeks, the president; hopes to reach decision on the fol-! lowing: y of an early special ses-| congress or of a special ses- sion of the senate. Appointment of Ameri-a’s ambas- sador to Mexico and Cub. Selection of a successor to the late Leonard Wood as governor general of the Philippines, id In addition he will start soon on the preparation of his message to congress which involves declarations by him on farm relief and proposed; relief in the Mississippi river flood area, Although livin~ in the heart of the agricultural country this sum- mer, Mr. Coolidge has persistently declined to comment in any way on the controversial farm relief prob- lem. Nor has there been any indi- cation that he had changed his views in the slightest against the vetoed McNary-Haugen bill. Remains Silent It is anticipated that some of the numerous callers who will come to the White House in the near future will be anxious to learn more from “ue president regarding his famous announcement of the summer that he did not choose to run for president in 1928, Despite the inclination of some Republican leaders, including Charles Evans Hughes and Senator Fess of Ohio, that the president will be re- nominated by his party next year, there is no indication that he intends to amplify his announcement. REPUBLICANS SEE NO NEED OF EXTRA SESSION Washington, Sept. 12,—()—Re- tarning to his desk in the White House after his summer vacation in South Dakota, President Coolidge to- day was greeted with the opposition of the Republican leaders of the sen- ate and house to a special session of ‘ress or of the senate alone. »Senator Curtis of Kansas and Rep- resentative Tilson .of Connecticut were among the first on the pr dent’s calling list. Both were emph ic in their declarations that there ity for a special s sion, The leaders conferred separ- /Ately with Mr. Coolidge, who went (Continued on page three.) Weather conditions at North Da- kota points for the 26 hours ending at 7 a. m, t 3 | Temperature at 7 a.m. ... Highest. yesterday Lowest last night Precipitation to 7 a. Highest wind velocity Temps. = 83 y 2958 32 BEE. 3 Ey 5 ae 93 66 .04 Clear 87 51 0 Clear 82 47 .12 Clear 80 49 58 PClidy. 90 52 .02 Clear 80 44 22 Clear 81 43 G3 Clear 92 55 0 Clear 88 61 .05 Clear Jamestown 9 50 01 PCidy. Larimore 91 68 .05 Clear Lisbon 91 56 02 Clear Minot 84 47 0.-Clear Napoleo 90 48 0 Clear Pembina 86 56 .50 Cloudy Williston - 78 60 22 Clear Moorhead, in. 90 64 08 Clear The above record is for the 48 1 t¥ours ending at 7 a. m. today, local ‘time. WEATHER FORECASTS Forecast for Bismarck and vicin- Partly cloudy tonight and Tues- Not much change in ‘tempera- ture. ‘ For North Dakota: tonight and chan; Precipitation reel pie he occurred in Mi laces in the — ae Mrs. Charles A. Levine, wife of the | | | | { { salt | N first transatlantic air Lonel (2 er STATE IN PUT Mysterious Poisoner Strikes Terror Mothers in Kansas City ON CASH BASIS, | SORLIE SAY Governor Points to Accumula- tion of Balances in Various State Funds \ | LEVIES ARE DECREASED State Has Not Had to Borrow Money to Meet Bills Promptly Since 1925 One of the main benefits accruing to the state from a business admin- istration js the accumulation of heavy cash balances in the various state funds, Governor A. G. Sorlie said jtoday’ in commenting on the fiscal », condition .of the state government. During the last three years the jecash balances listed by the state! treasurer on June 30 of each year have gone steadily upward while the levy made for the benefit of the state general fund has steadily de- creased, State Put on Cash Basis In the face of reduced tax levies and general unfavorable crop con- not to mention the deflation greatly pleased her, Mrs. Levine said, although she hoped he woul }in taxable values in the state, his quit the ai ir soon. JUDGE COOLEY DIES TODAY AT. GRAND FORKS Heart Disease Causes Death! of Aged Jurist—District | Judge For 15 Years i Grand Forks, N. D., Sept. 12.—(@)— Judge Charles Malcolm Cooley, 70 Years: old, judge of the first judicial district for the lust 15 years and prominent in legal circles in North Dakota, died at his residence here at 8 o'clock this morning. Heart disease was the immediate cause of death. Although Judge Cooley had been ill; for the last eight months, the end/{ today came unexpectedly. \ Funeral servi will be held at; the Masonic Temple under the aus- ices of the Masonic bodies, of which Saige Cooley was a member, Wed- nd interment will here. as born Dee, 1 | 18, | and at the University of Micbig: graduating from the liberal arts partment of the latter instit 1878, Following his gradu d law with his father and was r in 1880, mer and Lawyer i On account of his health he en- gaged in farming for a short time near Mitchell, 8. D., and was in the abstracting business for a time at Superior, Wis. He then removed to Minneapolis and was for many years connected with the legal department of the American Building and Loan Association of that city. He- also practiced law in Minot, for a short time. ~ eo He came to Grand Forks in Octo- ber, 1900, and engaged in the prac- tice of law with the firm of Bangs, Cooley, and Hamilton, remaining with that firm until 1913 when he was appointed judge of the first judicial district to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Judge C. F. Templeton. He was reelected judge in 1916, 1920 and 1924. Some of the most important work (Continued on page three) The Greatest Plan on Earth greatest plan ever dl! ‘ects your daily life. Your job, your happiness and your country’s prosper- ity depend on it. It is a plan that crystal- lizes all the wisdom of Aristotle, Confucius and the other sages since the begin- ning of time, If two lines were omitted from its text it would not he safe for you to walk upon the streets an hour later. For sheer brilliancy, sim- plicity ‘and permanence it enccmpasses in the sfewest words .the conduct, care and preservation of the richest nation on earth. In_ another column read the first article on the United States Constitution by Harry Atwood. who knows more about the masterpiece in government than any other living man, A.C. Townley Buys Airplane to Use in Oil Promotion Work A. C. Townley, originator of the Nonpartisan League who used an airplane to fly back and forth to meetings in the heyday of his poli- teal career, has bought another air- plane for use in connection with his oil promotion business. The plane, a 90-horsepower Swal- low, was purchased some time ago, according to Frank Irvine, manager | of a local airplane company, and has a maximum speed of 106 miles an! hour. Harry Potter, Bismarck pilot, has been hired by Townley to oper- ate the craft, Irvine said. Townley has been touring the state selling his personal notes as invest- ments to persons who have faith in his prospects of striking oil in com- mercial quantities. He is said to have a number of “crews” traveling in automobiles to aid him in lining up prospects. OUTLOOK FOR BUSINESS IN NORTH DAKOTA GOOD, ROGER BABSON SAYS Statistician Urges Conserva- “Business men’ should plan for substantial improvement in 1928 in administration has seen the state put upon a cash basis, the executive said. In 1923, he said, the cash balance in the general fund on June 30 was $296,224.88. A year later it pvas $127,219.42 and in 1925 it was $586,- 267.70. On June 30, 1926, the balance had jumped to $1,182,185.66 while this year it increased still ‘further to $1,500,198.24, the general fund the governor said the levy of 1923 was designed to raise $2,930,66682; that of 1924 raised $2,821,948.73; in 1925 it was $2,496,647.41 and in 1926 it was §1,- 996,285.10. During the fiscal year ending June 30, 1924, the state was compelled to borrow $530,972 in order to meet its bills promptly and in 1925 it was governor said. Since that time it has been operating on a cash basis, MRS. PHILLIPS TRIES SUICIDE |‘Tiger Woman’ Who Killed Alberta Meadows Cuts Wrists With Razor Blade {| , San Quent Penitentiary, Calif., 1 Sept. 12.—( Clara Phillips, “the tiger woman,” under sentence of 10 years to life for slaying Alberta Mea- | dows at Los Angeles in 1922, hus threatened another attempt at sui- cide because “life can be 50 years or an hou: Everything that might be used as i a weapon has been taken from Mrs. | Phillips and she will be Kept under guard, Warden James Holohan said today, after revealing how she trie: 2 end her life the night of Septem- er 1. Werden Holohan said that Mrs. Phillips’ sobs attracted a matron who found the prisoner had siashed her left wrist with a safety razor blade used in embroidery work. She had wrapped the wrist with a towel and sweater to avoid detection: “They gave me a life sentence for what I did down south,” Mrs. Phil- ip is reported as saying. “Well, life can be 50 years or an hour. I make it as close to un hour as possi morose and recently quarreled with friends. HILL DENIES HE KILLED MOTHER Alleged Matricide Questioned ny the following regions: North Da- tism in Farming and In- Nise Bkets: Nebraska,| py - ge 0 vestments During Next| Montana, Washington, Ore ae ae Meet, Texas, California, North Carolina, tains He Is Innocent Year—Larger Crop Values Boath Caroline, Georgia, Alabama|’. . an oma, ae Will Bring Increased Buy- ing Power in Northwest » Wellesley Hills, Mass., Sept. 12. —The ee outlook for busi- ness in North Dakota is good, Roger Babson states in a report t released from the statistician’a, eadquarters. He strongly urges conservatism, both in farming and investments, during next year. western farmers, “The failure. situation in North’ Dakota looks much better at the moment. I doubt if any: banking| measures will entirely stabilize the level of commodity prices. “I see no reason why there! again his denial of al! know! should be any a lable wage in- Should-Get Out of Debt “We are in a period when wise manufacturers, Ottawa. Illinois. Sept. 12.—(2)i—- ill stood in the gloom shad- o basement. of the Hill home- stead early today, lodked into the allow grave where the body of Hts mother’ had: been found, and ted ; Harry Hi wed how she met her death. ~ For an hour he questioned in the dim lighted cellar by officers who have driven him 300 miles over- land in an automobi‘e from La Crosse, Wis., first to Ottawa and then, with ove ep pause, to Streat- conc! mm the| merchants and investors will get, ,, ols, teenie ot tha tanienee factors now, |out of debt and store up their re-| “whet harened. there, wher ques- the report states, in part: “The;sources. If th men will tions were asked, what rs were volume of business t is good, | this, norma! conditions could con-| made, officers would not zay. It was but competition is so severe .and|tinue and such tment as is Sigel la ne Hd ar Albee ice ade Coed petits si pda Aegina Nd out a murder that were brought against “Apparently 8 definite turn) al downward in volumé of new build- is » The ‘cent west and northwest are expected z irger “The total value of crops this buying pow- ted in nae more half of the agricultural states, nibdee ors i tral | is dangerous inflation; there is. excess of pramuinetaring “| which is the cause of severe competition. excess of copper, ‘ sis-|fall should be larger than » year rubber and. other’ raw which is upsetti kets in the west,” harm, ‘There is an excess of gold which the basic cause of present sale le al lumber, oil, coal, west nay aoe ‘ b ath AS an} brought hock apacity, bie ie the county jajh him shortly after his mother's body was found, buried under bricks in the | with Mar floor, we Atter the queninnl Be. Hill, was 0 Ottawa and locked ORGANIZE GUN CLUI Beulah.—Citizens of Heu! who have organized a gun club held their |S, J als first match_recently at the Roland . Reinhold Sandau and Joe nions won the ‘high scores in the poorest | Kansas City, Sept. 12-—(NEA)-—A | Mothers jer children to eat it. Comparing this with the levy for! compelled to borrow. $240,276, the! ble. I'll try it again. Its no-use try- ing to live in prison. J wish I had made a good job of it.” The warden said she had been ae ELCs eres Ta NIN TRANS President Has Many Problems to __fo Hearts of Somecne Seems io Be Trying | to Put Into Execution a Wholesale Poisoning; Scheme—Children Become Very Sick After Eating | Candy — Pears Also Poi- soned mysterious po city unseen hidden fashi at large in ner, who roams th nd strikes in uncann: nat little children, ansas City. are having gift candy { before they allow closely analyzed Refreshments at parties are i many cases confined to articles th: are not unwrapped from the they are made up at the confee ere until they are ready to ser Even fruit from trees growing in ek Yards is looked upon with sus- | picion. Seek All of this ‘azed Woman 3 because someone—a | woman, it is believed, mentally un- balanced by some strange hatred of children—has been going about the icity trying to put into execution a wholesale poisoning sche Eleven persons, most of them chil dren, thus far have been made ill b: ‘the poisons. Either because the poi- won doses were too small or because none of the victims ate enough to meet with serious effects, there have been no deaths. But fear grips the city. || Most of the poisoning cases have been confined to the exclusive resi- dential) district in the vicinity of 39th street and Agnes avenue. But moth- ers all over the city are taking pre- , cautions, Find Candy in Yard ! The mysterious trouble started at j the home of Mr. and Mrs, Fred Rahner, where the four children found a nicely packed box of candy lying in the yard. They ate purt of it, and shortly afterward became’ seriously ill, A physician was called and saved their lives; then Mrs. Rahner had police ‘analyze the candy. In it were found poisoned grains of wheat, such as drug stores sell for the eradication of rats, few days later Miss Catherine ils gave n party to the girls of her Sunday school class. During the party a messenger boy delivered a box of candy. Miss Dills, supposing that one of her guests had had the candy delivered, served it. Five girls ate of it and became very si Efforts to find who sent the have failed. A little later Jackie Co: k, aged §, found a package of candy lying in his little wagon in the front yard. He ate it and became sick. Pears Were Poisoned Then Mrs. R. P. Noel picked up 1Some pears which had fallen to the ground from a pear tree in her back yard. Shortly after eating them she fell ill and had to call a doctor.' Examination proved that the pears had been poisoned. How it was done, | and why, no one knows. Z ., Ruth Tulper, aged 6, escaped sim- ilar trouble only because her mother thad warned not to eat any candy. The little girl found a box of choeo- lates in the yard of the Tulper home and took it to her mother. The mother had it analyzed and found that it had been poisoned. |, In addition, some. woman—police believe the same one who has been distributing poisoned — candy — has been trying to cause trouble in other ways, ' Wives have been receiving anony- mous telephone calls telling them that their husbands were out with ‘blond stenographers. There was dis- (cord in a number of homes—until andy | Near-Victims o Here are seme of the actor: THE BISMARCK TRIBUI Settle in Near Future f the Poisoner s City’s mysterious poisoning drama. At the left is little Jackie Comstock, who was poisoned by can- dy he found in his wagon; above, at the right at whose party ‘n box of poisoned and below is Mrs. R. P. Noel, who wi pwn bi SCHLEE AND BROCK FIRMLY EXPECT ___ TOFLY ACROSS PRISON INMAT TAKES OWN LIFE | Ben Miller of McKenzie Coun- ty, Serving 10-Year Term, Hangs Himself Death by his own nand today end- ed 10-year prison term for Ben; Miller of McKenzie county, an inmate | of the state penitentiary His body was found at 10 this morning in the off ters within the prison walls. : been working as a janitor gnd had votuined a tew stranas of twine from | the prison twine plant. These hej} twisted together to use in hanging himself in, the bathroom of the offi- one day a woman received such a call while er husband was at home with er, The polige got a number of calls from some woman, who would not give her name, telling them that stills {were being operated’ in the basements of certain residences. Each time the ; Teport proved false—but a great deal {of inconvenience was caused. Police Are Puzzled Thus far the police have been able to make no arrest. Residents of the neighborhood where most of the poisonings have occurred have demanded the arrest of a certain woman living on one of their streets—a woman who seems to {be possessed by an intense dislike of children, and who drives the young- sters away whenever they wander on to her lawn, But to date the police have nothing {to connect this woman with the poi- | sonings, And. meanwhile—the terror of the mysterious poisoner remains, | ‘Discover Grave of Former Mott Youth, | Lost in. World War -Mott, N. D., it. 12.—Lost in action” on Fignder® “Ficid tod' bik grave discovered after nine years of eee the record of former Mott boy. alae 8, Johnson. it . 8. Johnson, who lives near Moss, received word from the gov- ernment recently that the remains of his son, Waldron 8, Johnson of Com- pany C, 16th infantry, had been dis- cove in a grave together with sev- te e same ‘regiment of the Uni States army seeaged in the late war Johnson was s Mott lad. Montana to reside on} a homestead when he was called to join the colors, He was lost in ac- thon on July 18th, 1918. | His grave marker and location in France is aa follows; Name, Waldron johnson. ik, 0 isation, Company ‘C, Toth. Jutentes, Cometery, Oise; Aisne American. Lo- -et-Nestles Aiane, France, Grave No. 4, Row 1, Block D: cers’ quarters,. Miller, who was 44 years old and single, was sentenced to a 10-year term in March, 1925, for assault with firearms with intent to. kill. | Pi tfficials aaid they have no! idea why Miller wished to take hie! own life. They are attempting to get im tench with hie relatives in .nuc- Kenzie county before deciding what wy UU Whee tat MODY, i 8 Miss Catherine Dills, candy was mysteriousty.delivered, as poisoned by pears from a tree in ack yard. THE PACIFIC OCEAN /Round-the-world Flyers Re-, fuse to Abandon Plans De-| spite Fact That Projected Hop From Japan to Mid- way Island Is Regarded as ‘Suicidal’ Omura, Japan, Sept. 12.—(AP) —Edw: Schlee and W Ss. B 5 the-world monoplane Pride of Detroit, told the Associated Press here today that they firmly ex- pected to fly from Japan to Mid- way islands, then to Honolulu and on to San Francisco, svon. The announcement that Brock and Schlee contemplate ahead with their round-t flight by crossing the Pacific ac: cording to their original schedule would mean they intend to ignore the rising opposition to overseas flights and to tackle an under- taking which has been branded as “suicidal,” Earlier advices’from Omura in- dicated that they were somewhat downhearted over the prospects. In addition to the official and ‘ial disapproval of further flights across great hod- Jantinued on page three) GOVERNMENT, LITTLE KNOWN BY PEOPLE pala 1 Notwithstanding Tremendous’ Increase in Population and! Territory Since Completion of Document on Sept. 17, 1787, It Is as Fit For Its! Tasks Today as It Was) Then . | (Editor’s Note: Willian Glad- stone, the famous British states- man, called the Constitution of the United States “the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man.” Yet today few Boonie really know what that stitution contains. This i the first of a series of 12 infor mative articles by Harry Atwood, _ president of the Constitution An- niversary Association. They are written with a view to helping ‘dn the observance of Constitu- tion Week, Sept. 11 to 18.) BY HARRY ATWOOD President, Constitution Anniversary Association September 17, 1927, will mark the 140th anniversary of the completion and signing of our Constitution. It is now the oldest written Con- sueaciog. § til functioning in the world, not withstanding the tre- mendous increase in population and territory and the epochal changes which our country has undergone— including the shock of the Civil War —this hi8toric document, marvelous in its brevity and simplicity, lives on as fit for its tasks today as when it was signed at Philadelphia in 1787. In his great “farewell address,” delivered on September 17, 1796, the ninth anniversary of the signing of the Constitution, Washington ex- pressed the hope “That the Constitution may be sacredly maintained—-that the hap- piness of the people of these states may be made complete by so careful a preservation, and so prudent a use of this blessing, as will acquire to them the glory of recommending it to the applause, the affection and adoption of every nation.” Washington's Faith Washington believed so thorough- ly in the endurance and usefulness of the Constitution that he expressed the hope that other nations would adopt it as their form of govern- ment. In 1887, after a hundred years of testing, William Gladstone, who served fifty-five years in the public life of Great Britain, said: “It is the most wonderful work ever struck off at a given time by the brain and purpose of man.” Our Constitution tion upon which this republic rests and is quite generally considered the (Continued on page three) PRICE FIVE CENTS OCEAN VENTURE | 2 WOMEN AND MAN CONTINUE THEIR PLANS j Four Other Projected Flights i Across Atlantic Have Been Withdrawn OLD GLORY STILL LOST | Steamer Kyle, Chartered by New York Newspaper, Is Hunting Plane New York, Sept. 12.--()—Notwith- standing failure of search for the j monoplane Old Glory, and the with- {drawal of four other projected { flights, three plunes today remained | in the transatlantic air adventure. {. Miss Frances W. Grayson, Long {Island student aviatrix, said she in- {tended to fly to Europe with a pilot jand a navigator in a Sikorsky amphib- {ian plane, while Miss Ruth Elder jat Tampa and Captain Robert Mac- {Intosh at Dublin reiterated their de- jtermination not to be dissuaded | from attempting their overseas hops, Co-Pilot: Withdraws | Captain Anthony Wreford withdrew jus co-pilot for MacIntosh, and from ‘is came word of the cancellation y Lieutenant Paul Tarascon of his {planned flight to America. To these |were udded definite withdrawals of {Charles A, Levine and Captain Frank T. Courtney from the transatlantic lists. The Westminster Gazette, backer of Courtney's flight, announced abandonment of the project until next year after notifying the airmen at Corunna that he was released from any obligation to carry on. At Lon- don, Levine withdrew from the adven- ture, and made plans for a round-the- | world flight in 1928, Levine Going Eastward Captain Hinchcliffe, Levine's pilot, said he had decided to start east ward on an endurance flight Wed- nesday or Thursoay with Karachi, India, as his probable destination. The monoplane Royal Windsor, in which Phil Wood and A. C. “Duke” Schiller had planned a transatlantic flight, is at Harbor Grace, Newfound- land, a ing favorable weather for 4 return flight to Old Orchard Beach, Maine. ‘They have decided not to fly the Atlantic, - Captain Kene Fonck, French ace, whose transatlantic plans received a severe setback when the navy depart- ment canceled leaves of ubsence to two of his crew, Lieutenwnt Lawrence Curtin and Ensign Stephen Edwards, from New York cabled the French Ygovernment in order to learn its at- titude on his flight before announc- ing definite abandonment ofvhis ex- pedition, Ship Hunts for Plane While the projected flights were {being abandoned the seurch for the Old Glory’ was carried on in tne north Atlantic by the steamer Kyle, chartered by New York Mirror, of which Phil Payne, passenger on the plane, was managing editor. | Through high-running seas, the Kyle ploughed toward the point 600 miles off Newfoundland where the Old Glory was believed to have gone down after sending SOS calls early last Wednesday morning. No trace of the plane was found. |The futile search of the liners Transylvania, Carmania and Lapland was described by masters of these vessels when they reached New York. The captains said the airplane could not have kept afloat more than half Jan hour. ‘CORN PRICES TAKE BIG DROP Wave of Selling Orders Causes Prices to Go Down Six Cents a Bushel Chicago, Sept. 12.—(#)—Waves of selling orders overwhelmed the corn market today, und smashed prices down in some cases nearly six cents a bushel. Reports of decided im- provement of the corn crop outluok of late brought about general un- loading on the part of traders who have been counting on chances of crop failure. Typical corn growth weather today, sultry enough for July, was accom- panied by advices that lar wide- ; Spread conditions of late had led to much more cheerful prospects for fields that appeared almost hopeless a month ago. Reports from some districts indicated that owing to hot forcing temperatures and ample moisture corn has made fully three weeks progress in the last fortnight. | Furthermore, liberal country offer ings of corn to arrive here empha: sized much enlarged receipts in Chi- |eago today, which approached an ag- :gregate of nearly 500 cars, Under jsuch circumstances, the price of ac- tive speculative ‘deliveries dropped to almost 10 cents a bushel under last ;week’s top figures, wit ber |touching as low as 95 3-4 cents a bushel today compared with 1.01 1-4 to 1.01 1-! "s finish. (Mercury readings at 7 o. m.) Bismarck—Clear, 51; roads good. St. Cloud—Clear, 71; roads good. Minot—C) 3 roads good. in 61; roads good. Winona--Cloudy, 70, roads good. | Hibbing—Partly cloudy, 62; roads \ Fargo—Clear, 66; roads good. Crookston—Clear, 68; roads good. Mankato—Partly cloudy, 78; roads is the founda- | good. ood, Grand Forks — Clear, 66; roads good. {> Duluth—Clear, 65; roads good,