R PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Ne “ | THE STATE'S OLDEST "NEWSPAPER * (Established 1873) Published tho Bi: ‘k Tribune Co: » Bi N. D? and entered. at the postotfice v4} Bis. class mai) matter. Mann «President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by HT, POF VERT ....... sees enees 87.20 Paty by mail, per rear, (in Bismarts) . i a ty by mail, per yea: iF ‘in state outside Bismarck) ....... 6.00 i" Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . 6.00 é Weekly by mail, in state, per year . eee 1.00 H Weekly by mail, in state, three y: 2F1 rs Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota. i Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat. ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) SEEKERS OF THRILLS It is the most natural thing in the world for youth ‘to go looking for a thrill. It is an excellent impulse, and has done a great deal of good in the world. But, like all good impulses, it gets oddly perverted now and then. Consider these two ways in which American youths have sought a thrill in the past few days. In Oglethorpe University, in Georgia, were two rich men’s sons—George Harsh and Richard Gallogly. They wanted a thrill, so they took to banditry. They carried through a number of holdups, shooting two men to death in the process. Now they are awaiting trial for first degree murder. That's one way of looking for a thrill. Then there was a 19-year-old caddy at the Rye (N. Y.) Country Club, named Clarence Terhune. He also wanted a thrill. So he went to Lakehurst, N. J., hid inside the envelope of the great dirigible Graf Zeppelin, and made the aerial trip to Europe as a stowaway. And that’s another way of looking for a thrill. It’s a queer business. The two university boys are being condemned from one end of the country to the other. The least that their fellow citizens wish for them is a speedy passage to the electric ‘chair. And the young caddy is something of a national hero; we look on him with a sneaking admiration, feel that he displayed daring and. ingenuity, and wish him all kinds of good luck. Yet all of these young men were responding to the game natural impulse—the desire for a thrill. No impulse of that kind is good or bad in itself. The need for a thrill drives some young men into crime; but it has sent many more into positions where they could serve their fellow men. It would be interesting to know just how many of the young men who forced their way through the Argonne forest in 1918 got there, primarily, for that very reason. The desire for a thrill has filled the world’s armies since time imme- morial. In the long run, of course, it is up vo society to fill that need. In it there are enormous potentialities for good and for bad. If we ignore it, as is our custom, q we will see, every so often, an outbreak like this one in Georgia. If we take advantage of it, harness it and put it to work, the world will advance. Nothing gives youth a greater thrill than the call to follow some high ideal. We who have passed our youth are at fault if we cannot raise such an ideal for our young people to follow. The material is there. If it goes to waste the fundamental blame lies, not on the shoulders of the young, but on our own. FOR PRIVATE OWNERSHIP Those good patriots who despair of the ability of the ‘American people to set bounds to corporate greed should cheer up. If voters will attend strictly to their own duty by electing honest men to office, the govern- ment will always be strong enough to control public utility corporations and all other corporations, without. taking over and running their business. Public ownership is advisable in many instances, fut it has not always proved best. Many attempts fat public operation of public utilities have proved costly failures. Theoretically, private ownership Bhould be costliest and least efficient, but in practice government ownership and control often give the people less for more money. Those who advocate public ownership of utilities would not be satisfied with the incorporation of utilities restraint the more violent the eruption. When the ebullition has subsided the rebel meekly roturns to his well-worn groove in the scheme of things to begin all over again accumulating discontent. Put the average man in a school, in @ prison, indeed let him mingl> with his fellowmen on the street, in any still the average citizen not a whit denatured. carries with him wherever he goes a more or less sup- pressed desire to cut locse and raise a little hades. Let the excuse to lift the lid aris», be it absence of the teacher, the voice of a hecklor in a political mecting or the whisperings of a malcontent in prison, it has one and the same effect. Out of such stuff are riots and revolutions made, to say nothing of wars to end wars. NEW BUILDINGS Real estate men show sound judgment in discussing frankly the building situation. It is, of course, not practicable to maintain a supply of housing accommo- dations in precise ratio with demand, as a manufacturer seeks to do in his output of goods, but it is possible to prevent the real estate market from becoming se- riously demoralized by ill-advised construction for which there is no demand. It is a mistake to assume that progress is blocked and that depression is brought about by frank recog- nition of facts, if building is being overdone. When this happens, capital is tied up and goes without return, resulting in a direct loss to the community. Values ere apt to be unsettled, resulting in a temporary gain to tenants and to buyers, but the ultimate effect is to discourage investment until restoration of a normal balance between supply and demand again makes its influence felt, There is no way to stop, if it were desirable to do so, building enterprise that offers bett commodation to home seekers at prices they are able and willing to pay, with the consequent shifting from old to modern dwellings. This process will necessarily continue. At no time can a community afford to have an acute housing shortege, but neither can it afford to have| many buildings unoccupied and producing no revenue for their owners. As near as it is possible to do so, a happy medium should be maintained and can be main- tained if builders will face the facts and guide their operations accordingly. A BROKEN LEG—GOOD LUCK Sometime we never know good luck when we see it. A week or so ago Charles Hitchcock, policeman of the Lake Bluff, Ill, force, broke his leg and had to go to bed. Undoubtedly he bewailed his luck. A few days later Miss Elfrieda Knaak was found, burned almost to the point of death, in the basement of the Lake Bluff police station. She told a confused story of a “psychic love” for Hitchcock, and said she had burned herself to prove her love. Now it is obvious that the bewildered detectives, hearing this, must instantly have thought, “Aha! This story is fi: This guy Hitchcock must have had a hand in things somewhere.” But Hitchcock, for several days, had been flat on his back in bed with a broken leg. By no stretch of the imagination could he be connected with the mysterious burning. That broken leg just naturally saved him from a lot of suspicion ard questioning. He didn’t know how lucky he was when he broke it. | Editorial! Comment , KILLED—UTTERLY (Cleveland Plain Dealer) When Sir Arthur Conan Doyle thought he had! written enough about Sherlock Holmes he killed him by plunging him over an Alpine precipice. But the public complained loudly. So Sir Arthur revived his hero and administered another dose of tale: And For the public demand was solidly then another. backed by pounds, shillings and pence. ¥ Now Sherlock is really and finally dead. He_is killed utterly. Moreover, his occupation is gone. For no less a person than the creator and chronicler of the most famous of all detectives has solemnly de- clared that efficient police forces of the future will have no need whatever of detectives. Neither will there be any place in the scheme of life for the “private investigator.” Instead of detectives and investigators snooping and ferreting about all over seventeen counties an official clairvoyant, comfortably established in a seglnded office, will solv 1 mysteries and indi- cate the hiding places of all criminals. The saving to both public and private purse will be simply enormous. There will be speedy justic, and no miscarriages. And in time almost everyone, realizing the impossibility of escape, will refrain from criminal activity. Perhaps we might be skeptical if anyone but Doyle painted this picture. But we all regard Sir Arthur as @ supreme authority on detectives if not on clairvoy- ants. We must, perforce, listen with respect. Privately, perhaps, we may regret less poignantly the pronounced doom of the detective profession than the final certainty that we shall have no more Sher- lock Holmes stories for our diversion, THE SKY'S THE LIMIT (Elmer Davis in Life) §n their scheme of federal ownership and operation, for the appetite for ownership is insatiable. It is evi- dent that there is nothing to limit the spirit of acqui- Bition, either in individuals or in governments. It is a question whether the government should set fside, in whole or in part, private initiative in the {interest of communism. First intervention, then owner- ship, and then attempts at operation, are the steps foward socialism and communism. The American people come naturally by their aver- Bion for putting the government into business. Their tountry owes its development and prosperity to individ- ual initiative and enterprise fostered by a patronizing government. FOR THE WRONGED HUBBY ‘The world is filled with troubles, and man’s plaints tise to the unheeding skies as the sparks fly upward; _ but the Viennese League for the Rights of Man be- | Sieves that it has put its finger on the sorést spot of + all. It has called an international congress, to meet fn January, at which the wronged husband will at last get his due. The purpose of this congress will be “to initiate a A good many newspaper readers must have lately rubbed their eyes, and their glasses, and then looked back a second time to make sure that this was really a report of a meeting of the American Bankers’ asso- ciation, and not of some convention of the enemics of society. For through many’ of the speeches in this late assembly at Philadelphia ran a warning that per- haps the Golden Age of easy pickings is drawing to anend. “Three years ago,” said Leonard Ayres, “the American people were speculating in Florida real estate and finally that bubble burst. Then they speculated in urban real estate, but city real estate prices are rapidly coming down. Now they have turned to the stock market, and stocks are selling on expectation rather than on realization.” 3 Did that disturb the public that has been running up the prices in the stock market? Not in the least; the market went on rising. The Federal Reserve board has tried to hold the gamblers down, but with no suc- cess; if the bankers think of reducing speculators’ loans, their depositors, the great corporations in which the business judgment of America is embodied, take over the work and lend the money that boosts prices Maher and higher. it looks as if there were several billion dollars of sucker money in this country that are bound to be lost somewhere; now that the bottom has dzopped out of Florida the money is getting ready to be lost in Wall Street. But violent Socaetion of prices on Wall Street is not very good for American business. It movement all over the world for combating the tyranny created by civilization by and in favor of women.” Thed be stirring words, in truth. Nothing that we can imagine would be more diverting and instructing as a spectacle than the assembling together, in one mighty hall, of all the world’s wronged husbands. The hen-pecked, the nagged, the brow-beaten, the put-upon +annot you see them, a new light upon their tired revolt? It would be 2 sight for gods and men. : EMOTION After all, there is nothing particularly astonishing sbout such emotional outbursts as prison riots, de- study of human beings and human behavior will reveal an excess of excuse to find to suppression monotony of environment just faces, as they lift their eyes to attest their common N political rallies and mobs. Only a little] to might be cheaner in the long run if we encouraged the development of roulette. PIONEERING IN THE AIR (Spokane Spokesman-Review) Lieut. N. B. Mamer’s successful nonstop flight from Spokane to St. Paul, with a passenger, is another re- minder that history repeats itself with variations. Mr. Mamer and his passenger flew as a pioneer demonstration of the feasibility and superiority of the lorthern route for air mail and passenger service. Seventy-five years ago Washington's first governor, Issac I. Stevens, led a military expedition from St. Paul to Puget sound to demonstrate the feasibility and, as Governor Stevens was convinced, the superiority of the Northern route for a transcontinental railroad. The first transcontinental railroad, however, went the Central route, as the first transcontinental air line has gone to the Central route. The continental railroad in the Northwest was not com- mass-gathering, in a political campaign, and he is! He ASHINGTON LETTER, i —— BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, Nov. 12.—In polities | too, it is sometimes hard to deter- mine where pathos leaves off and) ward, comedy begins. Partly, of course baht because what is gay, high comedy| There’s rare humor in the story for sorne of the boys and girls is| of how the G. O. P. roped and tied often stark, dank tragedy for the; Senator George Norris. As a Re- rest, +| publican leader explained to your While the antics of Dr. Hubert) correspondent early in October: “We Work carly convinced some of us| got George tied so he can't move that the prize for the funniest cos-| hand or foot. We nominated his tume must go to the Hoover or-| campaign manager and close lifelong ganization, it has to be admitted] friend for attorney general Ni that Jake Raskob and his boys fin-| braska and now’ he just can’t c ally made the decision a hard one] out against Hoover. Haw-hav-haw for the judges. The crowd in the| The boss Republicans, for all General Moto:3 building may not) their sad experiences with him, have secn enything very funny/ simply didn’t know George. As sovuj chayt it. b + is thinking of the} as he had finished his campaign for finance question, other progressive senators, Republi- 40 tac 41... ,.acee, when some of; can and Democratic, George came the Fat Boys, led by Uncle Jake| smack out for Smith. Standpat Re- and Pierre du Pont, leaped into the| publicans can’t understand it yet. Smith camp it was taken for grant- ae ed that the party, for the first time since the good old Protozoic Age,| would have some money for operat- and then Mrs, Charles Dana Gibson to chill the radio audiences with frantic appeals for help to meet the deficit. This may have had no bad effect, but it certainly was awk- Pitiful or humorous, as .you will, was the sad plight in which Senator George “Hot Stuff” Moses found ing expenses. Chairman Jake/ himself in the closing days. Caught! beamingly admitted as much, pub-| red-handed and nailed to the mast by licly, evidence that he had circulated anti- pleted | Catholic propaganda against Smith The inevitable happened. The} with all the enthusiasm of a couple} long-starved boys out in the states began to make prodigious demands; in some instances they talked so fast and persuasively that large wads, were shipped into the most rock-! ribbed Republican states, file of of Grand Titans, George first stuck} out his tongue and then squirmed. His specialty is short and snappy comebacks and the first one was: “Who is this John J, Raskob that’s tampering with my mail?” Then someone frantically remind- Ne-|| Meanwhile the rank and Democracy was so convinced that) du Pont, Raskob, Bill Kenney and a few more were eager to pay all the bills that it went out and spent! ed him that in his haste to retort snappily he had appeared to ad- mit that it was his mail, after all, and the next Moses statement, neith- its contribution money for gewgaws | er short nor snappy, required half and gumdrops. Not quite too late,| a column to explain that George Colonel Lehman rushed to the mi-| ‘Hot Stuff” was a little hazy about crophone to explain that this wes all) it. a mistake; the party needed dona- Rishi, tions as never before. And for the| Whether to laugh or cry at the next week money began to come in.| position of Senator Borah was an- Then Chairman Jake announced.) other question. No one ever had his again publicly, that the response had| own words flung back into his throat been very generous—and the money] quite as effectively as Borah, who stopped. The result was that im-| agreed that this was a rrovwsiaat mediately before Smith’s grand| nation and ridiculed Raskob’s Eur- finale speeches, at_ Brooklyn and| opean ancestry, when it was revealed Madison Square Garden, it was|that he had once charged Hoover necessary first for Treasurer Gerald | with malfeasance in office and such MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1928 ‘ The People Have Spoken—and How “perverted views of decency” that he mustn’t be trusted with money. And Cautious Cal Coolidge! For weeks the question was seriously discussed here whether Cal was for Hoover or Smith. The Hoover boys had him pegged for three political speeches, which he never made. ‘inally, after he had refused to pose shaking hands with Hoover for news photographers just before Hoover. went west, Cal couldn’t read a news- Paper without encountering some discussion of his attitude. So the silent man in the White House broke into words and sent Hoover a telegram! Fortunately, perhaps, neither the Republican or Democratic party is out to prove which is the funnier. The clowns of both parties are primarily concerned with winning elections, ——— 9 f IN NEw YORK ( New York, Nov.” 12.—Hoboken, which can be reached from Manhat- tan by dropping five cents in the slot and subwaying under the river to “Jersey,” must be dropped from the list of towns which have become butts for vaudeville jokes. Hoboken is real, Hoboken is ear- nest! Hoboken has been adopted by the literati. No less a figure in the world of letters than Christopher Morley has christened Hoboken “the last seaport of Bohemia in America.” To which have been added a long list of rec- ommendations from the who’s who, the what’s what, and the why’s why. Even the latest of the little theatre movements has sprouted in Hoboken. ,. The Bohemia that once centered in Greenwich Village is dead—long live Hoboken! Whether or not it will be the Greenwich Village of tomorrow cannot at the moment be predicted, but it is going to have its chance. eee To take up some of the major fac- tors that have caused Hoboken to become “the last seaport of Bohemia in America,” there is, for instance, beer! That might be sufficient unto itself. But it also has beer and steak resorts, candles on tables, “quaint” places, seidels, schooners and “short ones,” * The beer in Hoboken happens to be good beer. In fact, New Jersey has about the best beer to be ob- tained in America. It is possible to swing out of a subway at Jersey OUR BOARDING HOUSE NoTHING SURPRISES ME IN THIS MUSEUM ! ~~ ANYTHING CAN HAPPEAL, EVEN To “TURNING on “TH” SHowER-BATH AN’ GETTING 'DoUSED wirTH by FRENCH DRIP COFFEE !: J ~< BUT-THIS IS A CASE ‘IN PERSON ! ORDER OF we WHAT'RE Yo GILDED BooZokS, GONNA DO,~ACTION }\, WHO OFFICIATES ' b OFF ORIEATAL THIS NIGHT AT ni pleted till 1888, Now the Pacific Northwest has more transcoi railroads than th combined. Dayton News: After winning a beauty contest, a cease ai is going into Pobece SM 80 everybody can mm: Wh remember back You eld rm on the radio and get-qausic instead ental Central and Southern regions have, City, for. instance, and after run. By Ahern ALL You NEED ~To Dols TH’ LopGE IS $lo. AND A FEEBLE - MIND! APPLICANTS MUST SPEND A WEEK ANN WW ca oh HD ULCERS AND ABSCESSES Ulcers and abscesses are practic- ally always caused by a break or slight injury to the skin or mucous membranes of the body, which allows the entrance of various bacteria or toxic substances. Croton oil, am- monia, and turpentine, when injected under the skin, may also produce abscesses. The mere presence of micro-or- ganisms is not alone enough to cause pus formation. In fact, streptococci and bacilli coli, which are often ‘found in ulcers, are frequently ob- served in many healthy tissues. The virulence of the bacteria depends largely upon the condition of the in- dividual. Those who are in bad health, with diabetes, febrile dis- eases, or Bright’s disease, are es-| pecially susceptible. | Skin cracks from frostbite, sun- | burn and scratches are frequently | the site for abscess formations. Foreign bodies, such as splinters, needles and buttets do not usually cause abscesses unless they intro- duce pus-forming bacteria, or are moved and in this way cause an in- ternal irritation, or unless they man- | ufacture toxic substances through! some chemical action with the flesh. They may remain buried in the tis- sues for years without producing | suppuration (the formation of pus). Although abscesses usually form where there has been a break in the skin, they may also form in the mu- cous membranes of the throat, stom- ach, intestines and urinary passgges, or the bacteria may work their way through the sweat and oil glands of | the skin, when the body’s resistance is low, or when it is chronically over- stuffed with carbohydrates and fats. ._ The best method of cultivating an immunity from ulcers and abscesses is to cultivate good health by fresh air, exercises and wholesome food. Once bacteria have gained entry in a rundown individual, they multiply, divide, and form various toxins and Poisonous substances, which irritate and even cause destruction of the surrounding tissue.- The body counteracts this by producing a dila- tation of all the capillaries in the immediate neighborhood, causing a local congestion which forces the white corpuscles and blood fluid ge the capillaries into the neighborhood of the invasion. The exact effect of the white cor- uscles on the bacteria is unknown, ut it is supposed that they wage a kind of war, with heavy casualties on both sides. The white corpuscles then undergo a fatty degeneration and die. This forms the white part of pus. Meanwhile the area about this field of combat is cut off by a plugging of the blood and lymphatic capillaries so that the tissues of the scessed area die and are either sted by the white corpuscles or slough off. | Whenever there is an abscess, we have the typical indications of in- flammation, such as redness, sore- ness, swelling and head. In deep ning up the steps to come out al-| most directly into the ' swinging doors of a resort where beer selis at 15 cents per mug—and at a bar that would be a saloon if there were any saloons. But since there are not, it’s merely a bar. Along the waterfront there are hundreds of these bars that would be saloons if there were saloons, And thausands of New Yorkers make pilgrimages to Jersey to quaff beer which is not etherized. she Hoboken is another such place. And so a great horde of artists, playwrights and Bohemians in gen- eral have adopted it as “their last seaport.” There, one is informed, two kegs of beer are tossed in with a perform- ance at a little theatre. There, at this very\moment, Christopher Mor- ley is producing a new play, in pref- erence to putting it on Broadway. There, at this moment, Cleon Throck- morton, which is not the name of a stage villain, but of a fine scene artist, produces @nd hopes to pro- duce the sort of thing that made the Provincetown theatre famous. The eyes of many a former gar- ret dweller of the Village is turned in that direction now that Hoboken has been officially discovered. There goes the limousine and taxi trade, trying to keep up with the latest vogue. . If I smile to myself, it is because we who are not quite so “who” have been spending our nickels for many a year,.going about the steak usu beer resorts of a Sajarday, evening. But if, in the course of the next Hao you learn that Hoboken has come the bright and shining Bo- hemia; the gay habitat of artists and such—don’t be surprised. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ——— eee | BARBS | ———— Indignation iss the noble emotion that seizes a housewife when she discovers the laundress has stolen some of her best hotel towels. A Pennsylvania seer predicts a mild winter, judging by the condi- | \, tion of the weeds. We differ— it’s going to be a terrible winter judging y some'of the: weeds we've smelled lately. ce Among the many ways in which ® man can make his pile, don’t over- look the junkyard, In Chicago coritinuation schools courses in the use of rouge and teahertp Have been started. “Maybe that rule shuld be changed to read- in’, ritin’ and rougin’. . . . A man in England complained be- cauge his wife @ custard pie; ti him. What did he want—pump- in? see Lindbergh bagged an antelope from an airplane the other day down oa baron rt What's ‘ some kind of publicity stunt? (Copyright, 1988, NEA Service, Inc.) ig eae 52 THE BALL AND. CHAIN Doctor: You're suffering from a chronie cemplgint. Patient? 1 know it; but please low- er your voice. She’s in the next .— Answers, ; Treat HEALTH“ DIET ADVICE Vie Sa Mayo Bol Luar res | that— | ti abscesses there may be severe fever and even delirium. Internal ab- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer ‘personal questions on health and diet, uddresssd to him, care A the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. scesses can usually be determined by an examination of the blood. In treating abscesses, the physi- cian should place the patient on a diet of fruit or non-starchy vege- tables if the ulcer is external, or milk if in the stomach or intestines. Whenever possible an ulcer should be drained to permit the escape of jus. Hot poultices assist in bring- ing an abscess to a head so that the pus can break out or the abscess be punctured. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: L, B. writes: “I am working in a large office and forced to sit where electric fans are con- stantly blowing on me. I have had many colds and think that the fans have something to do with it. What do you think about it?” Answer: In the best ventilating system nowadays the fans are placed in the walls of the building, and fan outward so that the foul air is sucked from the room and borne out into the open air. This makes less draft and is much more effective. Ventilation by fans blow- ing into the room is very expensive and unsatisfactory. Undoubtedly the strong currents of air blowing upon the heads and necks of work- ers make them more subject to colds and earaches and consequently give them more sick days. To avoid colds eat less, exercise more, and in your own case try to sit where the fans do not blow upon you. Use of Butter, Salt and Salad z Dressing Question: Mrs. E. R. writes: “I am on your diet for constipation and would like to know whether butter should be used on Melba toast, and whether butter and salt are correct for the vegetables. If salad dress- ing used on the salads, what ee nswer: It is all right to use butter on Melba toast, also on vege- tables, and it is all right to use salt on the vegetables if they have not been cooked properly. With proper cooking, very little salt is needed. T have a special article on salad dressings, which I will be glad to send if you will enclose a large, self- addressed stamped envelope with your request. Worry Question: Mrs. L. K. asks: “How oan you bah ett inswer: By getting rid of an: bodily toxins which may be irritat ing the nervous system, and then by studying mental science in order to learn how to better adjust your men- tal processes. HISTORY November 12 1770—Birthday of Joseph Hopkin- Hee of “Hail! Colum- ia!” 1850—Patent on first sewing ma- chine to sew curving seams issued to Allen B. Wilson. 1884—Boundary between U. S. and Mexico settled by conference in Washington, [ Our Yesterdays if TEN YEARS AGO : ‘Governor Lynn J. Frazier and Mayor A. W. Lucas proclaimed a hol- day in celebration of the signing of the Armistice. Mr. and Mrs. L. K. Naughton of Bismarck announced the birth of a son at the Bismarck hospital on the morning of Armistice Day. A mass meeting was called for Sunday, November 13, at the city auditorium to celebrate the victory of the allies. Governor Frazier, H. P. Goddard, B. C. Marks, C. W. Mc- Gray, G. F. Dullam, George N. Ken- iston and A. W. Lucas were sched- uled to speak. Mrs. Lilla G. English, nationally famous hygiene lecturer, spoke at Bismarck high school. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown enter- tained at their home on the occasion of their 20th wedding anniversary, They were presented with a set of Haviland china by fellow workers of Mr. Brown at the state capitol, ’ W. 8. Casselman of Bismaick, rep- resentative of the W. H. Bell coffee company, was confined to a hospital in Brainerd, Minn., with a sprained nee, natin Save of amet ‘was ap- regist of the land office here. see FORTY YEARS AGO y The continued nice weather Prompted Bismarck baseball fans to Promote a game with Jamestown to settle the question of superiority. The Soo railroad was planning é3 put a réed through from Bism Boston in 1889." s were offari saaae Het and backs reasonablo state capitol for the nena a -|of legislature, Eleven arrests were made at Mi- Hd for illegal voting during the elec- eee aici ae SHE TRUTH r Nature id in winter, “When the gale Pas the north is a hummer. ‘i sy This illustrious dame” Red-Hot Mamria in mer!—Judge, Sum- } f , { j { riv day Al for wit Est ‘Elg t R