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Pe ee TR Bt eyey at ven i sente: sUTeatseee 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- marek as second class mail matter. George D. Mann .........-.-President and Publisher Weekly by mail, in state, per year .....ecree Weekly by mail, in state, three years for .. Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, POE YERT seccsessecseccccrcvsecsccvecves Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Preas 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. 1.50 Foreign Representatives i G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) AL SMITH’S INFLUENCE Alfred E. Smith took about as bad a beating as any major party candidate for the presidency could well take. In all human probability his crushing defeat removes him permanently from further political con- sideration. That being the case, we might as well take the time now to look at two things which this man, overwhelm- Ingly beaten, did for us. First and foremost—he gave us Herbert Hoover for president. That may seem a strong statement. But let your mind roam back to the pre-convention days of last May and June and see if you don’t agree, Herbert Hoover was, by all odds, the strongest man his party could have presented. Indeed, his very strength hampered him in the fight for the nomination. The political big-wigs shuddered at the mere thought of nominating him. They would vastly have preferred to name a complaisant second-rater, To the very last they held out against him, hoping against hope that they could slip over a man who would be more docile in the White House—a man who, in the political phrase, would “play ball,” a man who could be counted on to stay hitched and have no dangerous ideas of his own, But the shadow of Al Smith fell across their path. ‘They knew Smith would be nominated by the Demo- crats; and they knew that no second-rater could hope to beat him. Much as they disliked it, they were forced to name their ablest man. To Al Smith must go the credit for forcing Hoover’s nomination. Nor is that all this defeated candidate did. For years we have been worried about the compar- ative lightness of the vote in presidential elections. This year the vote broke all records. Not in many decades has such a large percentage of the electorate gone to the,polls. And the man responsible, again is —Al Smith. Quite a book could be written on the way in which our defeated candidates have influenced us. William Jennings Bryan was three times defeated for the presidency. But he lived to see most of the pioneer measures he championed become laws. The direct election of senators, direct primaries, prohibition, woman suffrage—Bryan left his stamp on the country even if actual victory never was his. The late Senator La Follette had a similar record. Repeatedly his party rejected him. In his one race for the presidency he ran a hopeless third. Yet many a measure that he was once hooted at for sponsoring is aow accepted as the law of the land. Republican plat- forms recently have contained many planks that were lirst proposed, years ago, by Robert La Follette. The victor is the man of the hour. Herbert Hoover 1s to be our ruler for the next four years. But, in his hour of triumph, we might keep in mind the things we owe to the man we rejected—Al Smith, “Oh, Julius Caesar, thou are mighty yet... .” CULTURE AND PARLOR MAGIC DON’T MIX Otto Kahn, New York banker, tells students at the George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, that all thinking men and women must recognize “the very yreat importance of the use which we make of our ‘eisure hours.” “Ours,” says Mr. Kahn, “is a restless, purposeful, dynamic age. It is ceaselessly exploring, challenging, jliscovering, conquering, developing.” We have more leisure than we once had, and some pf us, at least, have more money with which to make this leisure pleasant. And so, in the last few years, there has come a great public demand for something that we call “culture.” The advertising pages of any magazine bear witness to it. You are implored to subscribe to an organization that will send you, periodically, excellent books; you will be spared even the trouble of picking them out. You are urged to buy publications which will condense for you the great writings of dead sages and poets, so that you can imbibe the best of the world’s literature with- out troubling yourself actually to read very much of It. University extension and “self help” courses are pffered, by which you can chip off your own rough torners, address waiters in French, play the piano without taking lessons and learn the true inwardness of bouillon cups and salad forks. All of this, no, doubt, comes under the general head- {ng of “culture,” and should be more or less included in that “exploring, challenging, discovering” process pf which Mr. Kahn speaks, It’s fine, of course, to see this awakened public inter- ‘est in the arts and what-not. But sometimes we seem to be approaching the whole thing wrong end to. There is abroad in the land a feeling that the man who tastes deeply of culture will automatically rise in the world. If you keep step with the latest books your pay will be increased. If you can read Zola in the orig- inal French you will be made branch manager. If you can discuss painting semi-intelligently you will pres- ently be driving a straight-eight while your less erudite neighbor has to stick to his Model T. This, when you stop to think about it, is utter non- sense. The cultured man is all too often passed, in life’s hectic race, by some uncouth soul who doesn’t know Victor Hugo from Babe Ruth, but who is a whale pf a salesman regardless. Culture (with a capital C) is an excellent thing. The man who has it will inevitably have a better, fuller life than the man who lacks it. But don’t stride forth to mequire it with the idea that it will put more money in account. The rewards of this world are _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE studies of our modes of speech, at Columbia University. Prof. William C. Greet, of Barnard College, who has studied dialect so earnestly that after listening to a stranger talk for 30 seconds he can tell what part of the country he comes from, says that the St. Louis manner of speech appealed to most of the experts as the standard of the country. Just what this means we’re not sure. Possibly it’s something for the St. Louis Chamber of Commerce to consider. ETERNAL VIGILANCE Eternal vigilance, according to the old proverb, is the price of safety. The modern business man has recast that proverb to say that eternal improvement is the price of business and industrial prosperity. Few industries in the country are more settled and established than the great steel industry. Yet W. M. Wood, president of the American Institute of Steel Construction, told that organization, in its recent con- vention at Biloxi, Miss., that it must not be satisfied with its position, but must constantly seek progress and improvement. “The steel industry,” he said, “is looked upon as an essential industpy and as such its leaders have for years felt that no action Sor the development of the industry need be taken; that but little if any effort need be exerted by them for the develogment of the industry, with the exception of that taken along mechanical lines. In the vital problems of sales and distribution and publicity, the industry as a whole has seemed to be where it was a generation ago.” THE VOTE IN NICARAGUA Possibly you didn’t notice it, what with the news of our own election filling the papers; but that much- talked-of Nicaraguan election was finally held, and Moncada, the Liberal candidate, was overwhelmingly elected. If you will let your memory roam back over a little period, you may recall that Moncada was the man whom the revolutionists sought to make president by force of arms. We sent our marines down there, squelched the revolution, saw a number of our young men killed, killed a larger number of Nicaraguans, spent a good deal of money, incurred considerable ill will in various places—and Moncada gets the presidency anyway. Diaz, whose regime was preservel by our intervention, oes out.. Someone doubtless feels very proud of. this bit of statesmanship. But we can’t imagine just who it is. | Editorial Comment | “SIDE-STEPPING AUTOMOBILES” (Christian Science Monitor) The coming of “horizontal elevators” stepping automobiles” was forecast at the recent son business conference, While the latter may not ap- pear to be as paradoxical as the former, both are pro- posed radical departures from the traditional uses of these conveyances. “It is not impossible,” said Roger W. Babson, “that the cars of the future will be de- signed to run sidewise as well as forward and backward. The more intense problem of the future will put a premium upon the ability of a car to maneuver.” Most motorists have had some trying experiences in parking an automobile at the curbstone of a busy business street where constantly passing traffic and limited parking space make the undertaking an ex- tremely difficult one. It is no mean task to slip a vehicle with a ten-foot wheelbase into an eleven-foot rites under ordinary conditions. When accomplished skillfully and expeditiously without disturbing the paint on the fenders of near-by cars it is an attainment that gives the operator much genuine satisfaction. The average driver has, and needs, the assistance of his entire family in the task. While one makes observ- ations as to points of possible contact on the port side, another member may guard the starboard, while the operator himself seeks information from sidewalk ob- servers as to the whereabouts of his craft with rela- tion to conditions abaft. Surely the “side-stepping” automobile of a practical nature has a great welcome awaiting it. WHY THE SOUTH VOTED (New York Times) The campaign ended with a good deal of unexception- able talk by the Republicans, Mr. Hoover included, about the desirability of there being an end to political sectionalism. With their eyes fixed hopefully on the Southern states, the Republican spokesmen dwelt on/ the advantage of making party lines longitudinal in this country and not having them swung parallel forever with that one known as Mason and Dixon’s. The net of these appeals, it was hoped, was electoral votes from the South for Mr. Hoover, Now that it seems that the South has helped to swell the Republican tide of victory, the change has not come about for the reasons outlined, and all the party orators know it. The breaking away of Southern states from their Democratic moorings will not be, as has been said, the beginning of a new political era in Amer- ica, where there will be two parties of equal regpect- abélity in every State in the Union. Those of the States that formed the Confederacy which voted for Mr. Hoover were won on grounds which will do the country harm, not good. The votes were not given to the Republicans or their candidates. They were votes against Governor Smith. Most of them were cast ay st the Democratic candidate because he is a Cath- olic; the rest were because he is an anti-prohibitionist. As the returns come in, and the Southern returns will come in slowly, it will be seen to what extent the Republicans have profited by the appeals to bigotry and fanaticism in the South. But the extent to which they profit, if any, will retard and not advance the American political structure, because they are nega- ey cast votes, based largely on a harmful super- stition. THE NOVEL FACTORY (New York World) Some time ago John L. Balderston, our London respondent, sent a story about Edgar Wallace, hi pressure manufacturer of mystery fiction for the B ish reading public. It appears from the story that Wallace in his time has written 140 novels, It app A ‘Pied Piper’ ” Who Played Too Well! b. BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Nov, 16.—The pres- ent disablement of the Democratic party may be expected to point more clearly than ever to the pro- gressive group in the Senate as the really active opposition in national polities. Especially it seems bound to single out Senator George W. Nor- ris of Nebraska as the overtowering “leader” of the opposition, even though it may often appear that he has little to lead. Once there was much talk of the effect that the Democrats were dependent on the progressive bloc whenever they sought to block an administration measure. For a while it probably will be more accurate to say that the pro- gressives, who provide so much of the leadership, are dependent for support on Democratic senators, who vote against the Republicans in most cases from mere force of habit. Insofar as Congress is concerned the conservative Republicans are stronger, the conservative Demo- crats have been reduced in number and the progressive bloc, represented in both parties, has held its own, ar that incorrigible insur- 't likely to be punished for his waywardness in campaigning at the end for Smith. There isn’t any particular chance of taking his Ju- ‘iary Committee chairmanship away from him at the forthcoming session because Democrats and progressive Republicans would join to prevent it. In another year, by the time the Seventy-first Congress meets, mem- bers of the Old Guard who would now like the Norris scalp are likely to be a little less enthusiastic about punishing the Nebraskan? They re- member what happened after they punished the insurgents of the 1924 campaign; the Democrats came so close to controlling the Senate after the 1926 election that it was neces- sary to coax the insurgents back into good standing in order to have even a titular party majority in the upper house. The thing might ap- pen over again. also that the sales of his books have reached the grand total of 5,000,000 copies. And it appears that Mr. Bal- derston is amazed that Mr. Wallace is not an Ameri- can, so characteristic of America is this quantity production, and it appears that the Literary Digest must be amazed too, for it gives a whole page to the story and even publishes Mr. Wallace’s picture with it. Tut, tut, Mr. Balderston. Tut, tut, Literary Digest. This may be going some for an Englishman, but for an American it is hardly warming up the motor. As it happens, we have with us, living right here in New oan an American who can beat Mr. Wallace’s record all hollow. His name is Gilbert Patten, and he had written, ‘the last we heard of him, some 200 full-length novels published in paper and some seventy-eight full- length novels published in cloth. The total sales of his works, as nearly as we can figure it out, must be easily in excess of 100,000,000. But when it comes to real speed in writing, Mr. Patten disclaims the cham- pionship, or even the logical contendership. The cham- pion speed writer of the country, he believes, was the late Prentiss Ingraham. Col. Ingraham on one occa- sion found himself in Washington on a pleasure trip. Advised by telegram that there had been some mis- underst jing about a novel and that such an opus was desperately needed by his publishers at once, he sat down and by the next night had a 33,000-word story in the mails. Beside this the feat of Mr. Wal- lace, who once turned out a novel between a Thursday and a Monday, pales into insignificance. But, you say, you have never heard of Gilbert Pat- ten. "ah, but you have. The name that he wrote under was Burt L. Standish, And the character that he wrote short, for a large part of his career at least, was Frank Merriwell. As for Col. Ingraham, he was that stanch friend of your youth, the official chronicler of the life, the times the deeds of that sterlin; patriot, William F. Cody, better known as Buffalo Bill. Come on, England. ow us something else. Louisville Times: Next to the waffle iron, the thing that has probably the greatest turnover in this world is the luncheon check. Adrian Telegram: Isn't it odd how many friends the Aarmer is able to pick up every four years ?, AASHINGTON 4. \. LETTE 3 OUR BOARDING HOUSE ~EGAD LAD, “1 Notice AT-THE FooTBALL GAMES THAT THE VOGUE -THis WINTER WoULD BE Fur COATS ! we HMM TLL BE WW STEP WITH THE STYLE 2“Tlis SEASOA f< I'VE HAD THIS CoAT PACKED AWAY The question of whether any- ¢ thing should be done about Norris and Blaine of Wisconsin, who also supported Smith, will be up to Presi- dent Hoover, . * According to some of those who know Norris best, developments of the recent campaign have made it reasonably certain that he will run for re-election in 1930. A herd of wild horses had to be], corralled to get Norris to run again in 1924 and it is understood that) he has figured this term as his last. But his declaration for Smith was followed by the Anti-Saloon League's threat to drive him out of politics in Nebraska, despite his dry record. His friends now say that Norris never ran from a fight in his, life and that, on the contrary, Norris al- ways runs toward fights as fast as/ he knows how; they assert confident- ly that the progressive leader will re-enter the fray again in 1930 to determine whether he or the Anti- Saloon League rates highest with) the voters of his state. It may be recalled, however, that Norfls has expressed the idea that he would like to be governor of Ne braska in order to carry out ideas of what a modern, progressive | state government should be. Thus there is some possibility that the old warrior may decide to challenge the| league in a fight for the governor-| ship. oe Once more come deep mutterings and weighty head-wagging over the} possibility of a realignment of par- ties; the creation of a new liberai or progressive party which will su- persede the Democratic party as a opposition to conservative Republi- canism. Such a lineup is bound to come eventually, but there is not a chance in the world of it within the nex@ four years. Any attempt to make the Democratic party a straight-out progressive party, en- gineered from within or without,| is doomed insofar as concerns the near future. The election of 1932 may find a wet ticket in the field, depending on what happens in the meantime. : But the prohibition question, with its : THREE YEARS ZI § THREE SHoTs ing tendency to divide par- ties, will have to be solved and bur- ied before the political division can be clearly made between conserva- tive and liberal factions split by so- cial and economic principles, Perera | INNEW YORK | New York, Nov. 16.—Brief flashes of those incredible extravagances indulged in by a few of the moneyed New Yorkers frequently are re- vealed to the eyes of the bewildered man on the str t. To me these breath-taking peeps at extreme profligacy always seem unreal. There is, for instance, in a current issue of The New Yorker an ad- vertisement of a string of pearls, priced at $685,000. To be sure, the jeweler comments that this neck- lace is the cli in the many achievements of the firm. It ought to be. And my own purse might al- low, at that price, a microscopic fragment of a single pearl. oe And in Town and Country I have discovered an ad of the Cunard Line, the quoting of which will not dis-| please my friend Mons. McIntyre of that concern. “Grouse by airplane from the! Yorkshi ++. To catch the| hee ie it. To feed the un-| tired American tourist, an airplane! lies to meet the boat and drops a few brace of grouse aboard. What a world! On the other hand, small town scenes are not as uncommon in Man- hattan as one might think. It's all very well to draw funny pictures of Farmer Brown trying to get his cows off a motor-infested road. Yet, within a single day, I watched a street car pull a horse team out of a rut on West 34th street and beheld a few thousand people watching a wagon being dragged from the mud at 42nd and Broadway. To be sure, these are not every- day events. It is not every day in a week that you'll find mud at 42nd and Broadway, for instance. It just happened that the street had been under repair and left a miniature quagmire where concrete pavements had once been. ‘28 And now the old Broadway the- ater gives up the: ghost to make way for a $10,000,000 steel giant. « By Ahern ~~ SURE ,~I REMEMBER “THAT MoTH RANCH, Nou WoRE [T AGo ¢ ~~ -THATS -TH’ CoAT You SAID You) Took SPECIAL AP AIM AT-TH’ BEAR, So “THAT TH’, COULD BE USED 7 FoR BUTTOA- HOLES / = a“ BUT Look AT TH’ MaoTHs © POPPING ouT OF (T!-~~You FoR SOME “TIME fe GENUINE SIBERIAN BEAR “HAT I SHoT MYSELF, WHEN You |( HEATER UP, ON A WONT HAVE -fo HANG “THAT “IT CAN FLY METHODS OF COOKING : (Concluded Fish can be prepared by the same processes which I have de- scribed in preparing meat. The salt should not be added until after the cooking has been complete. As a rule, fish can be cooked in less time than meat. Fried ‘ish is the hardest to digest; fish cooked in the skin is most easily digested. Steaming is one of the most val- uable methods of cooking that can be employed in cooking vegetables, for it maintains their full flavor. Vegetables vith large amounts of cellulose and starch are more di- gestible after seing cooked. This is particularly true of roots and tu-; bers. As a general rule, all vegetables that are boiled or stewed should be cooked rapidly with very little water. Any juices which are left around the vegetables after cooking has been completed should be either boiled into the vegetables or used as the basis of some soups and not thrown away, because these juices contain| valuable mineral elements which have been absorbed from the vege- tables, Most housewives are familiar with the fact that spinach and similar greens can be cooked in any ordi- nary covered pot without the addi- tion of water, Sut many do not know} that all foods except grains may be cooked without water over a slow fire in a pot with a-closely fitting lid. The heavy aluminum cooking vessels are the most satisfactory for this purpose, because they distrib: ute the heat evenly, and tend to pre- vent scorching. This method cooks foods at a comparatively low tem- perature and preserves all of the flavor and juices as well as the vita- mins and mineral elements which would be partly destroyed by pro- longed intensive heat. The bottom of these aluminum cooking vessels may be as much as one fourt: of an inch thick, and in this way convey the heat more evenly than when thin-bottomed vessels are used. The dishes of the highly paid chefs imported from France and Italy, where cooking has been recog- | nized as more than an art for cen- turies, although appetizing, cannot be considered scentifically "correct, | either as to the mode of prepara- tion or the combination of food in- gredients. French chefs usually cook their meats much longer than American and English cooks. In this way they are enabled to alter the original taste of the meat, or to almost an- nihilate it so that it may become a vehicle for artificial flavorings. The French chef gives a daintiness and{ variety to his dishes which would be trimmings of meat for meat stoclj admirable if dietetically correct, using th, throws away nothing, Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, uddressed to hip, care of the Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. and like a skilled artisan, hegcat produce intricate results with 81 means. Cooks can be among the greatest helpers of mankind, if they will real. ly learn dietetic princ’ples as well as the science and art of cookery. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Temperature at Night Question: Mrs. J. H. writes “Kindly tell me the cause of a boy seven years old ane tempera: ture every nigit? le is undere weight and of a very nervous tem- perament.” Answer: You should have yout boy examined by a competent diag. nostician. He may be sufferit from tuberculosis in some part of the body, or from pyelitis or sqme other disease where there is a de. generation of tissues going Starch in Melba Toast Question: M. H. writes. “I have heard that you claim that Melba toast contains no starch—that toast. ing white bread removes the starch.” Answer: My claim was that starch becomes dextrinized by the heat so that it is not as liable to cause fermentation in the intestines, Reducing Medicines Question: M. M. asks: “Will you, if possible, tell me what you think of this new } ‘oduct called ————that has recently been put on the market? Do you consider it harmless and does it really reduce? Don’t you think it a good deaf to lose four pounds in a few minutes 2, I do not understand its action.” Answer: I never recommend reme edies for reducing. It is only neces- sary for you to diet and exercise properly and you can surely bring your weight to the normal. The principle of all reducing remedies is wrong. Stop the cause—0O MUCH FOOD AND _INSUFFI- CIENT EXERCISE—and you have the only sensible cure for obesity. Chest Measurement Question: M. L. H. asks: “What is the chest measurement for a per son twenty-one years old, five feet eight inches tall?” Answer: Your chest measure: ment would depend upon your typt of build, and would vary all the way from thirty-six to forty-two inches, (Copyright, 1828, by the Bell Syd- dicate, Inc.) Last of the old pioneers of the| Broadway drama, the Broadway that | wrote many a page of stage \ tory. Forty years is a long time in the Times Square belt. Forty year: o they were saving that any theater located so far up town as 41st street | could not survive. Forty years ago| it seemed that only the hardiest theatergoers would venture so far! from home. Today 41st is fast be-| ing jeft behind as the bright light zone moves rapidly to Columbus Circle and beyond. It was, the old-timers tell me, on the night of March 3, 1888, that the curtain went up on the old Broad- way, with Fanny Davenport play- ing in Sardou’s “Tosca.” Sardou was the highbrow of the moment, yet the crowd couldn’t be pulled up town. In a sort of desperation the back- ers called upon Lillian Russell, mightiest drawing card of her day. But the box office didn’t cash in the pay checks, - The “wise boys” sat back and laughed. “The very idea of having a play- house way up n the tules”... just 40 years ago. ng There was one ace card left. Ed- win Booth—if he could only be in- duced to bring his “Hamlet” so far away from nowhere. Booth, it would seem, turned the tide. Then came a landslide of mighty names—Modjes- ka, William Crane, Wilton Lackaye, Rose Coghlan, and many another. The laugh died on the “wise guys’” lips. In a few years they were trail- ing toward the present Times Square. ... And Times Square be- came the center of the national play- world. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) |.. BARBS Presdent-elect Hoover, in his -will tour of Latin-American gountelan, will bere Teer peavens anyway. He e rip aboard the U. S. Superdreadnaught Maryland. Man; —Dby tl on. * married men are outspoken ‘ir wives. ee Brosdcasting would be improved if cer songsters we know of could be given the air. cee Bill Tilden is forbidden to play amateur tennis in :.!l countries ex- cept Abyssinia and Russia. Those two forward-looking countries paca got any lawn tennis associa- ns. es 2 & Now that the election has settled the prohibition question, what is the going to do about alcoholic oe 8 . in’ flood Selick. “Thats alors Phat it costs to elect a resident, bu (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) It may be well to hold a post- motem on whatever fowls are found dead at this to vides and ‘material in abundance, HISTORY NOVEMBER 16 1776—British captured Fort Was! ington on the Hudson a took 2000 prisoners. 1864—Sherman’s army started on if march from Atlanta to tl sea. 1907—Oklahoma admitted to the Union. \ Our Yesterdays TEN YEARS Aco & Miss Cora Farley, visiting nurse of the North Dakota Anti-Tubercu- losis association, was calling on homes and schools. She was SBis- marck’s first visiting nurse. Paul Jewell, son of Mrs. Marshall H. Jewell of Bismarck, was confined to a hospital in France, having been wounded for the second time since serving in the fighting areas. H. G, Markley, chaplain for the Second North Dakota regiment, spoke in Bismarck, saying of the ‘anks, “There isn’t a cleaner set of boys in God’s world.” Mrs, A. Van Horn and daughter Adele left for Galveston, Texg to spend the winter. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO The following guests attended 4 party given for little Ethel Rupert on the occasion of her fifth birthday anniversary: Helen Bronson, Irma Rye, Marian Newton, Geraldine Pen- warden, Dorothy Moorhouse, Dor- othy Treacy, Zaida Hutchinson, Ethel McKenzie, Anna and Julia Baker, Lavina Register, Elizabeth Reming. ton, Odessa Williams, Mary Kuntz, Irma Logan, Clara Cochrane, Loia Barnes, Harriet Falconer, Hortense Moore, and Vera Beardsley. ¢ Cattain Ba Aunaueed that he would open a billia lor it of the new Baker store rooms, sii A transfer was made of the ade tership of the United States land office from A. C, McGillivray to M, H. Jewell, 5 FORTE. YRARS AGO epair work was the road between and ‘Tort Lincoln, Mrs, M. H. Jewell and Mrs. R. B, Woods ret from Indianap. olis, where they had spent several months, A meeting in the interest statehood for Dakota at the Atheneum. me ie L. M. Georgin of Binghamton, N Y., was in Bismarck visiting Regis ter of Deeds Richards, ee Cheese may be made at time of the year, and on farms where there is a surplus of milk certain seasons cheese-making fers tan 1 exceptionally B ohiiye gar) means of conserving, for milk which otherwise ta, oe wasted. The farm home afford to use more cheese, It muscle body of ‘4 pe Re eS i ee as