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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by tho Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis: marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- &s second class mai) matter. George D. Mann ............President and Publisher viper ea bee Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per ye lly mail, per rear, (in Bismarck) Baily be mail, per year, (in mtate outside Bismarck) ....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail, in state, per year ..... voter in the country has heard the voices of the two leading contenders. This thing became most striking as the campaign came to’ its close. Imagine what such old-time cam- paigners as Bryan would have thought if they could have known that on the night before election each of the two candidates could make a last appeal that would be heard by citizens scattered all the way from Maine to Oregon! The radio, we believe, is a tremendous boon to Amer- ican politics. It should make for more intelligent deci- sions and for more widespread discussion of issues, PROTECTING THE BIRDS Creating refuges or sanctuaries is proving more F Weekly by mail, in si effective than legislating against hunting in the preser- Weekly by vation of wild birds, per year Urbanization of many broad regions is destroying Member Aw lakes, swamps, streams and forests which are breeding Member of The Associated Press places, havens and feeding grounds of wild fowl. The . The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the| sweep of a forest fire, the draining of a lake and con- C use for republication of all news dispatches credited | sequent loss of shelter for game destroy more birds at te tall Grane Se aEnriN oubllshed than the unethical hunter and predatory animals, . ocal news of spontaneou: : Sie a ren G — ferein. All rights of republication of all other mat-| If gaps made in the flocks of game birds every hunt: | ter herein are also reserved. ing season are to be filled up du the breeding sea- Forel R tath son man must see to it that adequate breeding grounds ‘oreign Representatives are preserved or, if destroyed, restored or supplanted CHICAGO PeTROIT| Wherever conditions are adapted to their require-| Te Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg.) ments wild creatures will Destroy their tk refuge and they will 1 it has been re- F recen and give more light on the astounding extent-of the peear lungs? - current traffic problem. an LAN of this, of course, doesn’t mean that we must! During the first nine months of the year, our auto- forme Scrap our navy, disband our army and become out ard | mobiles took 18.200 lives. This is an increase over secre! out pacifists. But it should remind us that big Words) tne figures for 1927; and i be noted that the a Nai and blind flag eavakios eee Eare aeeanig last two months of the year usually show the worst olun effects. We who make the decisions wi safe | records of all. i fae enough. The lads who are now entering high school | What are we going to do about Will we simply f the © may have to pay a steep price, however, if we decide | ignore it and let things slide, as we have been doing? relief, unintelligently. Or will we, at last, wake up and take some drastic : ee For, in our atid tte epee would fight | measures that will end this national disgrace? 4 to the last drop of their blood. ( sana ae AN EDITORIAL IN THE NEWS BY) (Official City, State and County Newspaper) WAR IS YOUTH'S JOB AND OLD AGE'S GLORY “You will fight, you older people,” said the young man, “to the last drop of our blood.” The spirit expressed in that remark runs like a theme through a new play produced in New York-—"The Un- known Warrior,” translated from the French of Paul Raynal. In this play the youth of the world, sent out to die} What the are lovey can do in a sma horribly in muddy battlefields, turns and flings a bitter | tracting birds and small taunt at the older men who made the war inevitable. | Atbor can be accomplished It expresses the cynicism of the soldier who finds how easy it is for those who do not have to do the fighting to be patriotic. Perhaps it isn’t a bad play for us to think about, even though we are enjoying now the piping times of peace. For we shall have, in the coming year or so, a number of decisions to make that may have a pro- found effect on the continuation of that peace. The naval question, complicated by a smoldering ill- fecling and rivalry, will come up again. So will the question of intervention in Latin America. So will va- rious other problems that have to do more or less di- rectly with the question of continued peace. And, in considering them, we might keep in mind that we who decide them will not be the ones who pay the price if we decide badly. It is easy, for instance, to demand that our govern- ment take a “firm stand” whenever trouble arises in Latin America. Easy to demand it; but what do you suppose are the feelings of the young marines who bleed to death in damp tropical jungles when this “firm stand” goes into effect? It is easy to insist that we defy European powers and build a mighty navy, regard] But suppose that course leads to w what do you think will be the emotions regarding our attitude in the fire-room of a battleship when an exploding shell lets the compressed steam out to scald a hundred sailors to death? There are those who insist we ought to deal bluntly with Mexico, sending an army across the Rio Grande and king the country over and civilizing it.” In Rome s that is an inspiring thought; but will the inspiration seem quite as beautiful to a doughboy who is left on the desert to die of thirst with a bullet in his GRAFT, AND A DUTY EVERY CITIZEN OWES In Los Angeles the district attorney has been in- | dicted by a special grand jury on charges of accepting | money to “case up” on the prosecution of wealthy swindlers. In Cleveland the entire election board has stored. Restore an game will return as if > voice. All know how easily © js and other ¢ supernatural ct wild birds to & food, drink where they are wanted ar where they are unwanted ation of large sanctuaries. ; EXTREMES OF PREJUDICE It is hard to believe th enlightenment racial or re made to hinder any one hon: Yet every now and then new advertisments in which persons Teligious affiliation are emph: apply” for employment by the adve: credit of newspapers gener ments are seldom or never and cruelty of such discrimi: sized. If there “is one right that sho sacred to the individual in this co; to work honorably for a living and a c: T No employer with a civilized notion of life as we are endeavoring to live it in America will hold to any other view. And every one who knows anything of | ey affairs knows that in every ked to print | or that race or sked “not to | It is to the such announce- The unreason | sot be empha- d be forever t is the right busin and girls of all denominations and of every race con- | tributing to our citizenship are accustomed to work side | If we ever permit that custom to be staged, we shall | P* store up endless trouble for the future. AUTOS KIL ‘4 DAILY United States during September because of automobile i accidents, These figures come from the National Safety Council, Sometimes a iittle news d moral better than a whole colu} could do. ii A man was found dead in the sand dunes on the out- 7 ow of editorial comme: i a fay SeRBS igs skirts of Manistee, Mich., the o day. Evidently heen fired for permitting gross vote frauds. In Phila- as bad ad of re tala piped chased “¢!phia a third of the high police officers have been di in the fingers of one hand, was a quart w portat Missed for graft. In Chicago new revelations come nearly empty. The story that told about it conclud 000 wievery day of thuggery and chicanery at last spring's i? ris = % Father May Live, But He’ll Never Look the Same! | LONG HOURS OF PATIENT DIALING ---* STATIC THAN NOISE INA. CHINESE REVOLUTION: \ <i BY) Aces) x ~-AT LAST_HE ACHIEVED IT--- THE Mast COMPLETE, RADIO TN TOWN W--2= aN OT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1928 i eg = PAINSTAKING CARE IN: “CALIBRATING” fe) Washington, er knows how much is S$ organization | elect the candidates in a pres worthy to survive or succeed men and women and boys | C@™paign, but there is reason to sup- | their radio bill would reach $650,000. “,.| Pose that the 1928 bill By RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service W: Nov. 14. iter) No one pent to dential has been {higher than $15,000,000, Difficult as it is to obtain by side in friendly association and in an atmosphere | rate dat wholly free from any taint of intolerance or bigotry. | little qu ccu- is 's cam- ign costs set a record, In the firss pla had a large wad, jusual for them. for expendit old ones. Exactly 74 persons lost their lives every day in the | and ve . the Democrats hich is most un- New requirements e and expansion of the another reason. Lastly which ordinarily elections poured rt. The sum 1 expenditures _ oe further be remembered national committee is only e big collecting unit. There naller ones. Money giv- used by the state and local organizations instead of to the na- mittee is not included in committee budgets. All called volunteer organ- raise and handle their own . In effect, some of them are : holding companies for the hat a great deal of secret con- n and expenditure goes on, and for the most part in i week » Primary antiiong, dhe ee bottle will be sent to the state chem: : states ord the largest f OG. Bel PP a me ROC aPC : ysis. ‘s of population. renee eee ietivan.Hemiocrary, continue to.dem: |" ress. story) we aubmit; seeds ao editarial eritekdo| Hoe ie al te ieee uaed® Takis f} Studek onstrate, day by day, that some kind of drastic medi- noint ity mceal: confine ourselves to the official bud- ' having cine is needed pretty badly. jget money of the national commit- pe re An isolated case of crookedness in public office is tees, because that's much easier to ¢ same easy to understand. Nothing ever will prevent some “Welone public servant, now and then, from yielding to ment ittemptation. But at present we have no isolated cases. the ma. ‘ i nee ch ik . aun fave have something that looks very much like an epi. proved demic. deen, S Our first impulse, naturally, is to look for new laws. A uWe must provide extra safeguards at the polls, We lished lmmust get a better system of checks and balances that I deen, HWill make it harder for district attorneys and police- The men to graft. We must do this, that and the other A CURE FOR BLACK EYES (New York Times) In the old days of the Bowery, many a barber con- ducted a special black-eye department. Raw beefsteak promptly applied was considered a sure and rapid cure. if instant concealment of the injured eye was desired, a deft barber could be relied upon to paint it back to | respectability. uat t cal al fool- vsti Nowadays eyes are still blacked by the old-fashioned Milwadscrn os our consciences sag se ae a ial meas ae the cure ar a renee has pen Se b: Bisa ized. Black eyes may cured in twenty-four hours panies, Unfortunately, however, reliance on new laws won't | by a new electrical treatment, according to a physician expectedo us a particle of good. We have relied on them al- 8 short together too much in recent years. That is one reason ste tntor the present mess, the uni We get fine uprisings of civic responsibility every manageoften; and when we get them we insist on jamming No through a new law to remedy matters. This done, we operatimettic back and forget the whole matter, confident that the Rieverything will be rosy. erating. But everything isn't. When respectability goes to and JRigieep, rascality gets busy. And one of the best things por rican respectability does is sleep. Minot-P Why can’t we open our eyes and face the truth? Why can’t we recognize the fact that as long as we (Time) | ° wes to bother ourselves with our civic and political At the University of California, Prof. Charles Ber- | 2 ponsibilities we shall have district attorneys indicted, | nard Lipman, plant physiologist, took a chunk of pre- | ‘lection boards fired and police officers dismissed for} Cambrian rock. 1 yep fron, Canada. More Tempererafting? Why can't we understand that our lofty | irs “onsidered it 100,000,000 to 200,000,000 years old. Highest 4 ipman split the chunk and from the fracture disdain to take an ivy energetic interest in govern- eer scraped what he hoped were primevial iegrental affairs provides the best possible breeding | microbes. | Eieeite round for crookendness? bi fastily he planted the scrapings in test tubes with/ WI The hinery of our city, state and national gov- germ culture mediums. He sesled the tubes so that no For ts is all right. We don't need to tinker with who attended the recent convention of the American College of Physical Therapy in Chicago. He is said to have cured a polo player of a broken | nose and two black eyes in forty-eight hours. Straight- ening the nose was simple enough, and as for the dis- | colored eves, the doctor stated that they were cleared up “by the application of a certain current of static | electricity.” je theory is that the electricity drives the discolored blood back into the veins. j In many parts of the country this new cure wil] be | welcomed. As for its popularity in Chicago, that will probably not be great, due to the Chicago preference for sawed-off shotguns rather than fists. THESE MICROBES ARE TOUGH o—_ modern air could affect the scrapings. If he did have 4 pceebrss life in his tubes modern air would spoil cons any more. We have nothing and no one to blame i Poeeaires, Sox, ie uke easy atmosphere is | quit ifferent from that of geological ages ago. FL, gh present peel SE fe gehigginee oftice| fter a time F Prof. Lipman noted a new murkiness in 4 - i. > js sealed Something surely was'growing re- _ tant Porte last a day after be got there, if the honest citizens| in, He waited a while longer. Then he examined the | : growths under the mi 4 A few days ago, elated, he announced that he saw AMPAIGN microbes hitherto unknown to science. They were | shaped like rods and linked in chains. They produced 1928 will go down in| spores, such as many known mircrobes and toadstools made it} and mushrooms develop. bi . Prof. Lipman believes that the ancient germ spores have been sealed up in minute cases. similar to the co- able to speak! coons in which larvae rest. It is well. known that | time. | microbes can live through to li main quiescent for long periods. great heat or cold. and re- | Li rods astounded hi Pine duslist | ¥ stou im. jicated their ples and | Llvman's cots, actoveseg oven bie He duolicated the ever) | to two millions years old. | i It trace. | Editorial! Comment ie they run pretty too early to learn the respec- ncial apportionments of the committees for 1928, but well along the lines portantly, certain power- | regarded as common knowl- | Democrats had more to spend than at any other time since 1892 up to 1928. Everyone seems to agree that a large part of the campaign money, if not the greater part, is always wasted. Business men have esti- mated the “waste” at from 25 to 50 Per cent. of previous expenditures by what- | @- ——_—2 | IN NEW YORK | ever party had money to spend and iI the only important change is in the sy amount spent for radio. a | The Democrats told this writer|, New York, Nov. 14—The cus- ;tomary superstition connected with the numeral 13 does not attach to box 13 in the Metropolitan’s famous “diamond horseshoe.” In stead of being viewed with su- Perstitious eyes, this location is in | The frequency of Governor Smith's | great demand. Not so long ago national hookup speeches made radio |George Henry Warren, who occu- an expensive item for the Democrats. | pied the safety of No. 14, leaped at Twenty such speeches at.a radio cost | the opportunity of getting the “jinx” of from $7,000 to $10,000 apiece ; number when an opportunity afford- | Meant an outlay somewh2re between jed. I am told that a score of emi- $140,000 and $200,000. And the; nent folk have made bids for it. governor was only one of the speak- peters ers. Radio stations charge for time | from $30 to $600 an hour, dependent | figures who made the “diamond on their power, prestige and cli-| horseshoe” the social institution entele. The $600 price is set by |that it is. Its fame rose in the dear WE jold nineties, when the society folk in National }came to the opera in their carriages | The Republicans owned up to $350,- |C00. The Democrats say the Repub- |lican bill must have been far above | $350,000, ee Death has removed most of the 4, the Repub’ Committee spent just over $3,000,000 | and when the “400” was the “400” ¢ and reported some of its principal; and not the 4000. Stanford White, expenditures as follows: who was slain by Harry Thaw, was Publicity Bureau $741,278, grants | one of the original group, occupying to state committees $686,300, general ' box No. 9, which became the E. H. administration $410,000, Speakers’ | Harriman property. Henry C. Frick Bureau etry ies aay ae pancreas ae the nlaeaees: The Committee 170,000, natorial | Gary estate took over his box. Committee $87,000, Labor Bureau While Percy Rockefeller’s name $101,188, Colored Bureau $89,111, | is to be found on the lists, neither Women’s Bureau $64,796 Washing- (John D. nor his son have shown any ton peaciiase re sa id For-) particular alee in joining the eign Language Bureau $34,000. operatic semi-circle. Ordinary Speakers’ Bureau ex-| There is a grand old tradition sur- penses have been reduced by thej rounding No. 1 which, although its radio. On the other hand, both |location is not so central, boasts a parties made strenuous aulee ar ertciar rating peat magia the women's vote, the colored vote,|on the original list. ie lets the foreign extraction vote and the/have handed at sown and call Pos- farmer vote. sess it. e stors, lorgans, ee | Whitneys, Vanderbilts and Wetmores The most important wad is always | are among those who have kept the sent into the precincts just before | Met box in the family. election day. Political students say | comer is Kahn, who took over that the party with an adequate | Warren’s box when he moved to No. supply of money to handle the pre- | 13. net wares almost invariably wins | eee * Pe an 4 if the other party is poor. In the language of the Metropoli- Figures have been cited to show tan, these are “parterre’ boxholders. that, with one exception, the big- | Part of the arrangement is that the gest campaign fund has always won | holder must also be an owner of the presidency. The exception was | stock in the opera. in 1916. In that year the Repub- | seduce licans spent considerably more! There is a secondary “box” section The newest | OUR BOARDING HOUSE * MEAT FoR DINNER TomoRRowW NIGHT MI | i HOOPLE !-~ YouR HUBBY WENT oO A HUASTiA: ae i™ DoT ORDER ANY STRIP, AN MIGHT BRING { Home A BRACE OF 1\ BAR OQWLS,—oOR A COUPLE OF WEATHERVANE ne ROOSTERS /. money than the Democrats, but the | which has attracted little attention, By A ern] £4 ID PLAN SAFE Tomorrow NIGHT i doucH, AW Ge. 74 wee dase: Sena - FD As OPTION ot A OF HAM, ws case | Krauts —~Le 6 We DoESMT RELIED a Him _ i We, AND BRousHT TRousers !. Home Ah aay LOAD OF MARSH CAT-TAILS “fo PuT IN “THE PARLOR CORNER !« METHODS OF COOKING MEAT The varieties of cookery include boiling, roasting, broiling, braising, steaming, baking, stewing and fry- ing. When preparing meat by boiling, it is advisable that the water never be allowed to reman boiling. The temperature should be just suffi- cient to change the coloring matter of the blood, soften the fibre, and dissolve the connective _ tissues, which can be accomplished by wa- ter far below the boiling point. Keeping meat in water. that is act- ually boiling over-coagulates the proteins, dissolves the mineral mat- ter, and lowers the food value of the meat. This is true of any protein, and can easily be demonstrated with the hardboiled egg, which is much harder to digest taan one which is cooked below the boiling point. In the former, the albumen is tough and indigestible, and in the latter form, which has been given the term “coddled,” the white is soft and creamy and even more easily digest- ed than when raw. The effect of over-boiling meat is not as apparent as in the case of the egg, but the regults are the same. In boiling meat it is advisable to first coagulate the exterior by plunging tne meat into rapidly bou- ing and unsalted water for about five minutes. This encloses the meat in a waterproof case of coag- ulated albumen and prevents the es- cape of the meat juices from the in- terior of the cut. The fire should then be turned down so that a tem- is maintained for about twenty min- utes for each pound of meat. If this is performed carefully, the meat will be tender and easily di- gested, whereas, if the boiling point is too long continued, the meat will be tough and stringy. This is the most frequent error made in boil- be) meat by incompeient cooks. it must be remembered that once the boiling point has been reached the temperature of the water can- not be increased, however hot the fire, unless the water is under con- siderable steam pressure; and it must be remembered that the tem- object, such as a large piece of me: or a large potato, will not be as great as the surrounding water. Once water has reached the boiling point, it is possible to turn down the fire and in this way save much fuel. If instead of desiring the value of the meat to remain in the cut itself and one desires these to penetrate into the water to form a meat broth, it is advisable not to permit the wa- ter to boil in the beginning, but to remain at a temperature of about 160 degrees Fahr., not quite hot enough for the water to coagulate the albumen. In this manner the water will be rich in the nutritive qualities of the meat. By boiling meat for several hours, the coagulated albumen becomes dissolved into gelatin, after which it can become the medium for a number of flavors of herbs and vegetables, Salt should not be added to the water of boiling fish or meat as it EALTH“DIET ADVICE SNe dan Mey ool. perature of about 180 degrees Fahr. | perature in the interior of any solid! will render the albumen hard. After the cooking has been compleied «°. salt may be added to suit the taste Stewing meat differs from boil. ing in that it permits the juices to pass into the water, and since the Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, uddressyd to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. juices are eaten with the meat, none of the nutrition is lost. The best temperature for stewing meat ranges from 140 degrees to 170 de- grees Fahr. The secret of success jis to avoid too high temperature. It \is best to allow the pan to simmer only instead of boil. Very little wa- |ter should be used in stewing, and | the saucepan should be closely cov- ered. (Continued in my next article.) | QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Tattoo Marks Question: G. A. asks: “Can you | advise me if there is anything that | will remove tattoo marks from the skin? There are just two small letters.” Answer: Tattoo marks can be re- ¢ | moved by a beauty specialist or by | the tattoo artist, himself, but there |is usually a small amount of scar- lying left. | Bread and Anemia Question: Ella B. writes: “I am very anemic and somewhat over- weight and have an exceptionally good appetite which is almost im- possible to satisfy. If I miss a meal I become faint and dizzy. I am sure that my system requires white bread. Do you think that under the circumstances white bread is injur- ious? I have tried different kinds of coarse breads and muffins, but nothing seems to take its place.” Answer: If you are anemic and overweight you should avoid all bread until your weight and blood count have reached normal. The best | means of improving these conditions is to use an orange juice fast for a ; time. If you will send me your name jand address on a large stamped en- velope I will be glad to send you in- structions. Acid Stomach Question: Mrs. A. W. M. asks: “What is the cause of an acid stom- ach and how can a person tell when they have an acid stomach? What are some foods that a person should eat for this condicion?” Answer: I believe that the aver- age person who is not well suffers from overacidity of the stomach. The cure lies in follownig correcc food combinations, cutting down on the amount of food eaten, and avoid- ing an excess amount of sugar and starches. The most reliable test is made with a test meal, after which a stomach pump is used and the con- tents of the stomach emptied. The physician making this test can then determine whether or not there is an excess of acidity. largely because the same sentiment is not attached to the ownership. These change hands frequently and scores of the newer rich appear from season to season. Here, for j instance, one may find J. J. Raskob, who tossed over his mighty business affairs to take on the management of Al Smith. . ** Having mentioned superstitions in an carlier paragraph, I am minded of a tale that reached my ears to the effect that Earl Carroll has refused (Copyright, 1928, by the Bell Syn- ~ dicate, Inc.) |e || Our Yesterdays TEN YEARS AGO Chris Martineson, chief of police. returned from Minneapolis where he | visited Oscar Martinson, recently | elected sheriff of Hennepin county. | Mr. Martinson was chief of police in | Minneapolis prior to his election. ° | J. E, Kaulfuss of the state high- to move into his old office since re-| W4Y commission was appointed by turning from his bathtub term in| Governor Frazier to represent North Atlanta prison. This office, scene | Dakota at the meeting of the Amer- of his earlier activities, has not so; ican Association of Highway Offi- much as been entered by the pro- ducer since he came back to New | York, I am told. He ordered a jsmaller office built back stage, and when anyone comes to his general office to see him they are sent back eee One of the most prevalent super- stitions of most actors is that they should never turn down a beggar who approaches them. A large per- centage of the Broadway panhandle parade is supported by actors. There are at present, I am told, some 40 beggars whose beat is West 45th street, a site which this season is particularly alive with theaters. Most of the beggars haunt the stage doors in those early hours when the actors are arriving. During the in- termissions they “work” the lobbies, The reason for this particular charity on the part of performers is simple. They have seen so many slide from stardom into poverty and anonimity that they wonder if to- morrow any one of them might not be in the same fix. And they like to them out if-and when that day comes. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) o—_——_—____________, | BARBS ' —_—_—— A 200-inch telescope is to be built on Mt, Wilson. Maybe they are try- ing to help Tex Rickard to find a new champion who will draw a mil- lion-dollar gate. . ee Chicago is planning a subway. Business men have grown tired of wearing steel helmets riding the, street cars to and from work. Zaro Agha, 155-year-old Turk, is ¢ an American wife. Who said age dims, the fighting spirit? Mayors of Bournemouth and Christchurch, land, _ recently argued over the question of whether or not it was cruel to cut flowers, Maybe some o ee days they'll Give us some light on ti: value of Painting thelily. = . Mt. Etna has been erupting. Prob. ably the shock caused by part of the solid south voting Republican, “If actors must think about what they are going to say, they can’t give full attention to their perform- ance,” says Clara Bow. hanks, Clara, that confirms our suspicions, think that other actors would help | cials at Chicago. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs |R, W. Patten at their home on ; Washington avenue, | Students of Bismarck high school | subscribed $312 to the United War | Work campaign, H eee | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ; Bismarck and the west Missouri j country was called the “banana belt” | of the Northern Pacific line. Other parts of the country were being visited by snow storms. Master Walter E. Carey of Meno- ken, 12 years of age, shot his first deer with a large shotgun belonging to his father. The lad wa; hunting ; alone near Apple Creek. Mrs. W. A. Faleoner went to F go to inspect the Relief C: of that no . is FORTY YEARS AGO The Chicago Journal published a story stating that all indications | Proved that Dakota would get into | the union ahead of Canada. Mr. and Mrs, J. G. Sanders of Bis- marck announced the birth of a son. Bismarck business men reported that conditions here were far Detter | than they had experienced at the | same season in 1887. is date in. AMERICAN HIST ORY November 14 1753—Washington started on trip to | the Ohio river, | 1787—Last session of the Continent- al Con, oat gress opened in New 1832—Charles Carroll of Carrollton. .), last survit signer of the Declaration of Inde- | vendence, died, | 1856—James Buchanan elected presi- | dent, f ‘EW CLAga TRAN i NEW CLASS LEADER Stillwater, Okla, Nov. 14—Harry | Miller, sophomore at Oklahoma A. ; and M. College, leads his class in | mileage. Each day he drives 54 miles from Norfolk to school and back again. To get to his classes [on time he must ‘ise at 5:90 a.m,