The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 30, 1928, Page 4

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cere ua 3% PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune , Ap independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- marek as second class mai] matter. George D. Mann Presi Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Dafly by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail, pet reat, (in Bismarck} Daity by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) .........6 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota .. Weekly by mail, in state, per year ........ Weekly by mail, in state, three years for .. Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, POF YORE vessecscccssescseceses Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Metnber of The Associated Press The Associated Press is excl use for republication of all ne 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 5 DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) WARNING FROM RUSSIA Soviet Russia today seems to be nearer to that long- predicted smashup than at any time since Nicolai Lenin was laid to rest in chilly grandeur in the Kremlin, Every year has brought its scare story from Russia; but this one, which tells of revolting peasants, hostile neighbors and a restless army, seems to be based on fact. Its chief details, for instance, are broadcast by the special correspondent of a New York paper that has always been scrupulously fair to the Soviet regime. The grand communistic experiment is evidently ap- proaching a crisis, Probably “experiment” isn’t quite the word, at that. It’s the word we’ve been using for a decade, and the Russian nation has surely lent itself to a great venture into an untried field; yet, on the whole, what has hap- pened over there has been a great deal more than an experiment. It has been, primas#*, an object lesson; a colossal, smoking warning, trailing across the eastern sky a banner of blood and fire and smoke, by which all the rest of us can profitably be guided. Suppose, for the sake of argument, that the present stories should be correct and that the Soviet state should presently come down with a crash. Suppose that Stalin, as some predict, should seize absolute power and make himself a kind of northern Napoleon, riding the Russian people with a spur as sharp as the czar’s. What then? Would it be in order for us, prosperous, well-fed Americans, to lean back and smile and say that we “knew all along” that this wild communistic struggle could not possibly stand for more than a few years? It would not. All along most of us have missed the point of the Russian revolution. We have deplored its wild excesses, shuddered at its bloodshed, piously shak- en our heads at its cruelties—and have been, all the while, supremely blind to the real meaning of the whole business. The Russian revolution has been a demonstration that ought to last the human race forever, of what repres- sion and autocracy inevitably bring in their train. The rulers of that great country sowed the wind for cen- turies—and as always happens, they finally had to reap the whirlwind. Many innocent people were killed and much money was wasted, but it was inevitable. As Carlyle pointed out, if people are deprived of their rights long enough they will eventually assert their mights—tragically and cruelly. The World War was the fruit of European civilization as it has been developing for a century; and the Russian revolution was Russia’s by-product. We are beginning to realize that to avoid a repetition of the war we must steer a different course than that which was charted up to 1914. We might let the Russian revolution tell us that the race must discard autocracy, repression and Bourbonism if it is to avoid another communistie experi- ment on a grand scale, STYLES IN CURVES 00|them” may be an appropriate setting for a war, but West because the United States has more at stake in Latin-America than in Asia or Europe. The next presi- dent will need all the knowledge of Latin-American affairs he can accumulate, and if he can bring all the American nations into closer understanding and sym- pathy he will have materially lightened his own job. “CANNON ERA” IN ART PASSES In the opinion of the Pennsylvania State Art Com- Imission, which has been endowed with broad powers in the field of amusements and public works, “cannons to the right of them, cannons to the left of them, cannons in front of them and cannons to the rear of in peace the cannon sounds a discordant note in the harmony of public architecture and landscape. The commission, which has supervision over all build- ings, monuments and other structures erected on public ground, has adopted, as a settled policy, a rule that cannons are not to be placed in public places except for temporary display. It fails to sce anything orna- mental or inspirational in munitions of war, finding them, on the contrary, to be symbolical of death and destruction and not even commemorative of the heroism and sacrifice of those whose memory they are intended to perpetuate. This ban and the reasons advanced for it are certain to arouse to protest those who mistake militarism for patriotism, but no one will object on aesthetic grounds. Congressmen who obtained for their districts cap- tured or surplus artillery pieces at the close of the World war inflicted an injury, rather than conferred a benefit, upon the communities which received them. Having no other place to put these evidences of service to the constituency, the recipients have propped them up in public parks and squares at the sacrifice of beauty and dignity. PRIVATELY-OWNED PLANES Whenever it is suggested that the use of privately- owned airplanes in this country will presently rival in extent the use of privately-owned autos, the objection is made that the average citizen will never be able to get the use of a landing field. Miss Amelia Earhart, writing in the current issue of Cosmopolitan magazine, makes a suggestion that may provide a good part of the solution. She believes that the aviation country club will do the trick. As more and more people buy planes, she says, exist- ing golf and country clubs will establish small landing fields for their members. In addition, aviation en- thusiasts will get together and establish new clubs, with landing fields, places for storage of planes, and club houses, This sounds quite reasonable. The ordinary citizen can’t hope to keep a plane in his back yard, but if he can join a club that will have plenty of space for such activities he'll be just as well off as if he had his own landing field. CONGRATULATIONS How rapid has been the development of the North- ‘west was mirrored for many thousand readers last Sun- day by a most notable contribution to journalism, the Jubilee Edition of the Minneapolis Journal. For fifty years this most estimable and enterprising newspaper has been carrying a constructive message to the people of the great states that make up the trade territory of the Twin Cities. fiftieth birthday, congratulates the Journal, its owners and staff upon the product of last Sunday. It teems with interesting historical data and by way of contrast depicts most graphically how substantial has been the progress not only of Minneapolis but the several states- neighbors of Minnesota. Editorial Comment | WOTTA LIFE! (Omaha World-Herald) residence within shooting range of a volcano, but a lot of people do. They stake a claim, build.a cabin, put in their crops and go about their daily business, reading the daily or weekly paper, milking the kine, hoeing the spud, harvesting the grape. Every so snorts forth a stream of lava that puts the molten skids under everything and everbody within reach, whose predicament immediately becomes akin to that of an American Democrat in a national election. Then, when the spouting’s over, the survivors go Bismarck’s feminine contingent shows no desire to follow the London trend toward rotundity. One gathers, however, that the appearance of feminine Londoners is decidedly an issue in that city. Plump- ness has there become so general, not to say pro- nounced, that a return to prominence of the “county families” may be suspected. Solid folk, they are, and the backbone of old Eng- Tand’s civilization, and their daughters differ from the lithe city flappers as Yorkshire pudding does from the daintiest French pastry. If they set the tone for the London season, no wonder that the social scene has. lost its flat appearence and is developing perspective. This possibility, however, justifies Bismarck lasses in asking for exact information before they under- take to expand. The county girls of England do not cultivate plumpness, When present, it is inherent and under merely natural control. American girls;| however, exercise a mysterious personal power over their corporeal substance. They have thus far tri- umphed, but no one can tell what will happen if they allow it a measure of freedom. A minor constitutional amendment might be all right, but there is always a chance of ending up with some other system. Whether. Broadway sets the vogue in figures for Miss America is about to be demonstrated. The girl with a tendency toward plumpness and decided curves is supplanting the slender miss in the chorus. Will the girls on the other side of the footlights imitate the new stage beauties? The farmers who have grown poor of purse while dieting femininity has grown lean and willowy send up a prayer. SOUTH AMERICA’S AWAKENING The nations of Central and South America are achieving developments which bring them inercasing recognition in world affairs. Their capacity for self- government is more clearly demonstrated year by year and their constant improvement in domestic and inter- national relationships extends their reputation and in- Muence, while stabilization of their money and banking systems increases their prestige in international com- merce. Only a few years ago the Latin-American republics were considered of no great commercial importance, they spend in twelve months more than a bil- in the United States and two billion more Asia. Today the world is in keen com- petition for the business of Central and South America. possible to right back, rebuild their homes, replant their crops and look again to the future—just as the Democrats do. Those Sicilian folks, God love ‘em, must have the mak- ings of good Democrats in them at all. You can beat them up and kick them down and rough-house them too terribly for words, but you can’t entirely lick them. Yet—and_yet—maybe they would fail as Democrats, aftcr all, We don’t know just how bad Mount Etna is, but it will have to travel some to beat the eruption that belches forth its demoralizing flow from the rocky corsts of Maine to the sun-kissed slopes of the Pacific every fourth year in the good old U. S. A. A SCHOOLBOY TRAGEDY . (Duluth Herald) A serious crime was committed in Gackle, a little North Dakota town, about two weeks ago, Because of circumstances that he did not seem able or willing to explain, a seventeen-year-old schoolboy was suspected. He protested he was not guilty but was placed under HISTORY November 30 1699—William American province. 1776—Washington occupied Tren- ton, N. J. 1782—Adams, Franklin, Jay and Laurens signed preliminary peace treaty with Great Bri- tain. 1835—Birthday of Samuel Lang- horne Clemens (Mark Twain). We still say sunrise even, though we know it stands still. ea esas \* PEOPLE'S FORUM |. pa ae ae ey Charbonneau, N. D. Editor, The Tribune: It has often been said that the more wealth a man acquires the more | $6,000,000,000 per year. he wants. Penn reached his} with a nation. richest people in the world. Perhaps it is the same And We are by far the) perhaps that is the reason that we cast such an overwhelming vote for a dry president. Since prohibition, we have made our greatest gains in wealth. The per capita savings in savings: banks and other time de- posits, for the eight years before the war, averaged less than $90 per capita. Since the, war the average is $185, and still is mounting, 1927 showing $225 as the average for mA Nee ER | News Note: ‘Hoover Enjoys Deep Sea Fishing on Latin Tour!’ \ ; every man, woman and child. The amount of building and loan invest- j ments, while much smaller in total, shows a like trend. Professor Irving Fisher, the noted Yale economist, estimates that pro- | hibition saves the nation at least | While no ;one can comprehend those figures, every person with two eyes and a memory capable of spanning a dozen years knows that social, economic and moral conditions have improved beyond the measure of the dollar. R. M. CALDERWOOD, Tree frogs sometimes borrow the insect-catching leaves of a southern species of pitcher plant and use them to catch insects for their own purpose. + The Bismarck Tribune, which also has passed its|& We can’t understand why anybody would take up|# often the old volcano rears up, takes a deep breath and| 1926 By NEA Service | ‘THIS HAS HAPPENED Fate introduces JERRY RAY to ALESTER CARSTAIRS when he crashes his airplane into the camp in sharing with her roommate MYRTLE. She likes his pilot, DAN HARVEY, but Alester is atruck with her beauty and shows her attention, irom the atore—int: it back next day. er with bein; to help her pen lester takes her. iaehay He proposes ahe he does not believe in 1 love to marry but going money. He leaves after trying to warn her, Alester takes Jerry for a drive and goes to the denerted, comp whi where he makes adv: al = Ff to take her ‘contrite when ashe says she lost her job on his account, promises to help get her wy rus, day they interview the Producer wi wisely in her on the stage. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVIL helping put surveillance and the police continued their investiga- tion. Before their work was completed the boy had disappeared. Then it was discovered that he was entirely innocent. Efforts to find the youth, however, were unsuccess- ful, and the radio was resorted to in the hope of in- forming him that he was no longer under suspicion. But nothing was heard of him until last Sunday when his body was found by a hunting party in a pasture near his father’s home. A revolver, lying near-by, revealed the pitiful story. What a tragedy! An excited community, some locse and irresponsible talk, and a half-grown boy is driven by shame or fear to kill himself. Circumstantial evi- dence has a legitimate place in law, of course, but what a cruel fate it sometimes means to its victims, especially when it is used in the villainous court of gossip, where the defendant has no chance to defend himself. ’ PROTECTING RECORDS OF “ANCESTORS” (New York es) Aithough the craze for family trees with roots in the soil of the Garden of Eden has been outstripped by other fads in this country, there are still enough “antiquarians,” not to mention their clients, to view with mixed emotions the attempt in England to make arish registers and records more difficult of access. hey have long been the favorite resort of American ancestor-seekers, who have drawn from them material which has delighted many a family. LESTER'S first doubt of the success of his plan to put Jer- ry under obligation to him grew into a disquieting conviction dur- ing. the three weeks she was re- hearsing. His own fear of having put her farther beyond his reach inspired the feeling that h® had made & mistake. And as his con- quest of her seemed to be reaching the status of a dream he became more enamored of her than ever. The lightness in which he had held her in his mind vanished— she became even more desirable, really important: person in his life, But marriage! He had always taken it for grant- ed that Mrs. Alester Carstairs would be a girl from his own set, a emart, finishing school product, one who could do his social shin- ing for him while he followed other pursuits more pleasurable to him. From the nature of the proposed measure it would seem that some of the hunters have been so anxious about the quarry that they have ignored the rules of the game. There are instances of records altered. They have even been abstracted bodily for the delecta- tion (and expense) of the American family-tree climber. The worthy persons, including many amateur genealo- gists, who have in good faith and with a full sense of the proprieties delved into musty records, of course, feel a little resentful that they should by im- plication be included among the suspect. They have perhaps all the more on their side wae soon of ose, whe old gd ond be on old’ records would: of manufacturi: desi their bus: equally toves out a Jerry—bdeantiful, alluring Jerry she would be utterly lost among his crowd. He thought of her at the country club; thought of her old-fashioned ideas about conduct; wondered what would happen if pee beau in his cups tried to kiss er, A girl as attractive as Jerry couldn't hope to escape the atten- tions of-men who had been en- man she married to protect Think of a girl like that to stand on equal en who sought trouble as a who knew how, when and where No, he didn’t want to marry Jerry—it would be a nuisance, see (ERRY was vaguely aware of a change in his attitude toward her. A subtle sense of his perplex- ity, @ feeling that he toyed with a fascinating but objectionable idea, invaded her mind and left her with mixed emotions. She was amused at his conceit and assurance, and chagrined because they were jus- tified. But she didn’t want to think; her. work in the chorus was tiring her body so that her mental facul- ties could not be goaded to sharp perceptions and clean-cut conclu- sions. Thus it was not consciously that she drew Alester nearer and nearer to what he thought of as a “nice mess.” She did not guess that it was her determination to make good that was firing his im- agination, causing the change she felt in him. She had no idea that Alester saw her as a romantic figure on the road to success, that he was think- ing less and less of the obligation she owed him, more and more of {winning her at any cost. But though she did not know that he was watving her gratitude, she did not bother about express- ing any. She felt that they were even—that he had helped her in order to make amends for his un- warranted conduct at the share, She worked like a slave to merit | g, the chance he'd given her, to make good his boast that Mr. Weinertz would thank him for bringing her to the office. To Jerry, that was sufficient pay for Alester's kind- ness. She did not work in vain, The day before they were to entrain for Atlantic City Mr. Hule admitted to Mr. Weinertz that Miss Ray had the stuff. The producer grunted in reply, satisfied. He'd been paying Jerry a salary. with money supplied by Alester. a|This he hadn’t told Mr. Hule, who knew, however, that the girl was being paid. Mr. Weinertz was just. a little afraid of his stage director's sarcastic comments upon such sit- uations. If Jerry had fallen down it would have made him look ridic- ulous, because the other girls weren't receiving any money. He had tried once to tell Hule that it was @ good policy for him to treat his friends right. “It the theater can’t get along without atronage it can go to hell as far ‘as I’m concerned,” Hule had re- trying terms with wom- thrill, plied. “Well, don’t work the little girl too hard,” Mr. Weinertz suggested when they finished discussing. the details of getting the show to the Jersey resort. e He did not explain that Alester had complained to him that Jerry was too tired to go out at night. Alester had, in fact, requested that, Jerry be excused from a rehearsal, but right there the producer put his-foot down, He wouldn't inter- fere with Mr. Hule, eee sul s° Jerry had found that thé but- terfly side of the theater did not exist for her, or for any of the girls who took their work serious- ly. One of the greatest surprises she had met with backstage was the presence of such girls as Evelyn Starr and Margaret Spear, for in- stance. The latter, a tall, honey- haired girl, was starting her ca- Teer at the bottom in opposition to the wishes of her uncle, a fa mous composer. She was too ab- sorbed with her family and ac- quaintances to have time for friendships in the chorus, even when she found a kindred spirit like Evelyn, It would not have been so easy to deceive Jerry in regard to the salary paid her had she not lim- ited her intimacy to Evelyn. ¢ The other girls would have told her about the two weeks guaran- teed pay had she been on chatty terms with them, no doubt, but to Jerry the stage was only a job. It was a better job than the one she'd had at Fane's, but she hadn’t given up her early ambition. a A chorus girl, she told herself, couldn’t have the home and lux- uries she had planned for her mother. That is, she couldn't un- less . . . she thought of some of the girls who came to rehearsal all but dead on their feet, with hollow eyes and diamond bracelets. They probably wouldn't be with the show’ when {it opened in New York, she heard it said. Mr. Hule would get rid of them soon. “Why. did he engage them?” she ed: Evelyn, ‘Well, you know dear,” Evelyn said, “to use a homely simile, there are usually some bad eggs in the basket. And they can dance, those girls; they help to train the show until the strain of working and Playing too hard gets to be too much for them.” “But it's not fair to use them to teach the others and then not give them a chance to open,” Jerry proclaimed warmly. Evelyn smiled at her. “Mr. Hule gives them their chance,” sho said. “They try to hang on long enough to appear a few times in New York, and some of them do, He won't fire them before that time unless he has to, ‘but their chief aim is only to have some Connection with the stage, no matter how brief it may be. It is their trade mark. Then the re serve corps is tapped.” “I can’t imagine anyone leading such a life,” cerry remarked. eee never told me, Jerry, what your ob- jective is, And I have an idea it enough to make one believe that might ‘be it.” Jerry ‘was disturbed. “Why do you think it isn’t?” she ris remembering Myrtle’s crit- elem, “To be frank,” Evelyn replied, “you don’t ingem to have the theater in: your blood.” Jerry saw a way to change ber 2nd: sired. gus, stuffed celery. toast dressing, McCoy salad, ice cream, Monday Shredded Wheat Biscuit, stewed raisins. Lunch—Lettuce soup, baked pars- nips, raw celery. Dinner — Salisbury steak, small green peas (canned), cooked celery, salad of shredded lettuce, pear sauce, Tuesday Breakfast — Wholewheat muffins with peanut butter, stewed prunes. Lunch — Combination salad of cooked and raw vegetables, (celery, tomatoes and string beans), glass of milk. Dinner — Roast mutton, grated turnips and carrots baked, salad of raw spinach leaves, Jello or Jell-well with cream. Wednesday Breakfast—French omelet, waffle, stewed prunes. Lunch—Potato on the half shell, celery, ripe olives. Dinner — Broiled rabbit, baked eggplant, spinach—tomato—aspara- gus salad, prune whip. Thursday Breakfast — Baked stuffed apple, Melba toast. buttered Lunch — Cooked okra, beets, lettuce. Dinner—Broiled steak with mush- rooms, string beans, molded vege- table salad (celery, cucumber, peas), apple whip. Friday Breakfast—Cottage cheese, sliced pineapple. Lunch — Cornbread, spinach, cel- ery. Dinner — Baked sea bass, cooked oyster plant, stewed tomatoes, (canned), salad of cold cooked as- paragus, no dessert. Saturday Breakfast — Coddled eggs, re- toasted Shredded Wheat Biscuit, dish of berries (canned). Lunch — 8-ounce glass of grape- juice. Dinner—Roast pork, cooked tur- nips and tops, combination salad of Lunch — Baked eggplant, aspara- Dinner — Roast veal with Melba Breakfast—Coddled eggs, toasted Evelyn’s question, but the latter read an answer in the introduction of Alester’s name into the conver- sation. She called herself stupid for not having realized before that Jerry’s ambition was to marry. “But I had no idea she cared for him that way,” she thought, “and Jerry's such a real person. I don’t believe she would marry for money.” Aloud she reminded Jerry that she had promised to come up to her apartment on their last night before leaving for Atlantic City. “You've told Mr. Carstairs I want him, too, haven't you?” she asked. “Yes,” Jerry said, “but I can’t let you know if he’s coming. It depends upon some plans of his mother’s.” “Is there anyone else who could come with you if he can’t?” Evelyn ced, “No...” Jerry paused. There ‘was someone she would like very much to ask if Alester failed her, There was Dan. She hadn’t seen him since that\Sunday night when Alester had taken her back to the place where they had first met. ° . (THERE was still time to send & note to Carmoor. She was a fool to think of it, she told herself, but it was nearly three weeks and she'd not heard a word from him. She’d got so she scanned the newspapers for news of accidents to airplanes, Alester never men- tioned Dan. For all she knew, he might have gone away. ‘When this thought came to Jer- ry she realized that hard-work and exeltement had made it easier to keep him out of her mind. She felt better about it. “I knew it was a false alarm,” she said to her- self, thinking of the thrill she ex- Derienced when Dan kissed her. “You don’t fall in love when you've something else to think about.” But she'd like him to know that she was on the stage, that sho wasn’t @ shop girl any longer. She had continued to smart over i EE EE if fl be [eater £ BES | iE i Dr. McCoy’s menus suggested for|celery, cucumber, tomatoes and leh the week beginning Sunday, Decem-|tuce, Jello or Jeli-well, Lettuce soup: Shred two medi. Sunda: Breakfast — Grapefruit, all de-/um size heads of lettuce and put in. to a large kettle over a low fire with care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. three or four cups of water. Let simmer for an hour and strain off the liquid, mashing as much as de. sired of the cooked lettuce through the colander. If liquid does not equal three cupfuls, add hot water. Next, add a tablespoonful of chopped parsley and three cups of whole milk. Return to the stove and heat to almost boiling point, season. ing with a little salt. When ready to serve add a generous sprin- kling of chopped parsley and a tea. spoonful of whipped cream to each plate. Thin strips of Melba toast may be used if desired. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Osteomyelitis Question: Miss A. C. writes: “I have had trouble with an abscess on my hip for four years. Have tried everything, nothing helped. Lately Thad an operation. A piece of bone was taken out of my right sacroiliac joint which was examined showing that it could very well represent resi- dues of chronic non-specific osteo- myelitis, Would you advise a fruit fast?” Answer: The fruit fast would bring about marked improvement in the condition of your blood and might prevent further trouble in your hip. Your surgeon may be forced to remove more pieces of bone but you can help yourself a great deal by occasional fasts and living on a good bone-building diet at other times, Large Nose U Question: L. N. writes: “I am 14 years old and have rather a large nose. It is 2 inches long and a little over 2 1-2 inches wide. Do you think it safe for me to try a nose, adjuster? I€ so what kind woul you advise of those advertised in the magazines? Answer: Unless you are an actor it would be foolish for you to try to change the shape of your nose. If there is anything in physiognomy a large nose indicates strong mental powers. It has been pointed out that the largest majority of our great men and women have n well blessed with generous sized noses. Vitamin B Question: M. H. J. asks: “Which foods contains most of the Vitamin nearly all fresh foods, Tomatoes and spinach are rich in this vitamin, | Potatoes, turnius and lettuce are also good sources. It is not found in | sugars, fats, oils and highly milled | Starchy products, as white flour, | white rice and cornstarch, \ Our Yesterdays | FORTY YEARS AGO Charles Blunt, accountant for the : Power line, has left for his home in ; St. Louis for the holidays. John Satterlund of Washburn, dis- trict attorney of McLean county, stopped here on his way to Fargo. George Henderson of Minneapolis was here on business. or _ Warden Williams of the peniten- tiary recently left'a curious and of- ficial document at the Tril of. fice. The paper was the first com- mission of the register of deeds for North Dakota, issued upon the or- ganization of Todd county, the name given to all the country from here to the Montana line. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Officers of the first teachers’ as- sociation of Burleigh county, re- cently organized, are: President, Claude Reed; vice president, Ase Nellie Falconer; and secretary and treasurer, Miss Ruth Hood. Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Edick have gone to New York state, where they will visit at Mr. Edick’s old home, Erastus Williams Jr. has returned from Shattuck military academy, Faribault, Minn., for. the holidays, F. .B. Fisk, photo at Standing Rock, Eas peered a unique calendar with a pi of the Sioux chief, Rain-in-the-Face, with Longfellow’s poem of the sama name beneath it, TEN YEARS AGO Former Governor L, B, Hama, Fargo, was the principal ‘speake! at the annual of the Bise marck Commercial club, held at thq Grand Pacific: hotel. A number of social affairs are bee ing held in honor of the young women of the statehouse who are leaving Bismarck after the first of the year.. Mrs, V. J. LaRose enter- tained a group at a theatre party, Tecently. A report of the motor vehi registration department shows during’the past year 71,690 licenses ithe orient ce iles, Total recei lor were $472,799.27, State. headauarters, for the pendent Voters association ned .in. too! the Lucas with ‘Thomas G. Ne Me * t Ei * While KR ingret cascara and co value in-the treatment of America, so far no value in the ereatment of disens¢ have been contributed by the natives of Africa, A beam of Ii agp space at a speed of 1965000 Answer: Vitamin B. is present in‘* ‘ va

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