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No era ever -produced a more colorful figure-than the modern air mail pilot. The pony express rider or the Mississippi river pilot of 75 years ago could not com- pare with him, ‘Fhe. Bismarck Tribune m An Independent Newspaper ip THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER hn (Established 1873) Published by tho Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- class mai] matter, +soees+President and Publisher KEEPING THE ROADS OPEN Paved: streets and improved highways have imposed a duty and expense hardly anticipated’ by the early builders. The duty and expense here referred to have as George D. Mann Subscription Rates Payable in Advance 4 to do with the removal of snow, which is an economic S: Deity by carrier, ver yess. i $70 [necessity rather than a convenience and luxury. ~ Baily by mail; per year, It is estimated that 120,000 miles of streets and e: (in state outside Bismarck) ......- highways in the thirty-six states in the so-called snow = Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . belt will be kept open this winter though nature may = ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ..... do her derndest to block them with snow and ice. Weekly by mail, in state, three years for . Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, ‘ POE YORE crccecccccesensceccsscecsecccces Member Audit Bureau of Circulation 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. Millions of dollars are spent annually to keep motor traffic moving twelve months and 365 days of the year. But it is money well spent. It is just as essential to keep'main highways open as to keep the railroads in operation. Over these roads daily pass thousands of motor trucks carrying perishable freight, more thou- sands of automobiles carrying customers to town, rural mail carriers, and school busses. The new activity in keeping highways open is at- tributed to a refusal to allow business to slow down and rural trade to fall off during the winter months. It is estimated that every $100 spent plowing snow off motor highways yields a business return of $1,000. But purely as an economic proposition, it would be poor policy to allow a road which cost millions to build to lie idle and useless for months of the year when the cost of keeping it in continuous use is relatively trifling. corer Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO ETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Peer eRVoeeereriese sree ess “STILL TOO MUCH TO DO” Ezra Meeker, 98-year-old veteran of Oregon's pio- neer days, lay sick, almost at the point of death. His doctors told him that he could hardly expect to recover. | He had lived far beyond the scriptural limitation, and his illness would have been serious even for a man half a century younger. But the old veteran protested. “I’m not ready to die yet,” he said. much to do.” Thus the white-bearded old man, who first traveled to Oregon behind a team of oxen along the route where bleached bones marked every mile of the way, and who lived to go over the same road in an airplane, summed up the whole philosophy of the men who made America. “I’m not ready to die yet—I’ve got too much to do.” Looking back on the country’s past, we too often Editorial Comment ROYALTY AND THE AMERICAN DOLLAR (Minneapolis Tribune) The brilliant wedding which united Miss Estelle Man- ville, American heiress, and Count Folke Bernadotte, nephew of King Gustav V of Sweden, serves as ar excellent illustration of the manner in which royalty is retreating before the irresistible forces of plutocracy. It is not so many years ago that royalty was tightly hedged within its own inviclable sphere, and that mere wealth could hope to make no intrusions within the realm of Europe’s elect. We can all remember when royalty walked only with royalty along the guarded paths, and when the plutocrat was very nearly as much an outsider and onlooker as he would have been without — stoma “I've got too crprererreret ‘ THE KIND WEVE BEEN GIVING HIM -- Now Leys ave nim J roa CMue/e his immense fortune. °. The American dollar, though, seems to have been a | puissant influence in the leveling processes which have taken place within the past two decades. Pre-|@ sumably royalty would have preferred to remain, all things being equal, upon its own select plane of ex- istence. Presumably if it could have enjoyed the ad- vantages of extreme wealth without coming in too close contact with plutocracy, it would have done so. But the attraction of the American dollar has been a potent one. The axiom that nothing succeeds, like success has a peculiar application to America, where every step toward wealth, economic emancipation and industrial efficiency has resulted in very defihite’re- actions on the other side of the Atlantic. Just as mass and machine production in the United States is gradually inspiring an industrial revolution in Europe, so the building up of vast fortunes in this country has worked to bring about certain revisions of the Euro- pean social codes. Where Mahomet has not been see only the picturesque and colorful parts and forget that the reality was far from romantic to those who took part in it. We read about the long stream of settlers who went westward over the Alleghenies and the Blue Ridge, penetrating the wildernesses in Ohio, Indiana, Kentucky and Tennessee, coming to the Mis: sippi, going beyond it and scattering over the vast plains; and the thing has a great epic quality. We feel that it must have been splendid to be alive in those days, uplifting to take a part in such a great moverr.nt. But in sober fact it probably seemed neither splen- , did nor uplifting to the men and women who were in it. * To them there was only an infinity of hard work. A log cabin in a wilderness clearing may look pretty from a distance, but to live in it is a different matter. The pioneers had a proverb that speaks volumes; repemrarirrtee of Te to pa Saeete dren ———_—_—_______———- BARBS . | Courses in corrective sleep have} ’ President-elect. Hoover once was hostler at a girls’ school. ‘exas. ss their time some way. in Pe Sweet and soothing flavors are [proposed by pharmacists for the|an expression of Christian brother- medicines that used to make chil- | scowl. Pretty ‘soon father hood. ; to the movies. won't be able to threaten William | * with a dose of cod. liver oil. | * * what his first message to Congress will say? ** A ram died the other day after a 10 years’ service leading 7,000,000 been’ préscribed at the University! sheep to the slaughtering pens in Now that the football’ the Chicago Stock Yards. season is over, the students have) are several of that kind left, though, the Stock Exchange. * * * St..Paul recommended kissing as But then St. Paul didn’t go * C. C. Wu is the new minister from |China to the United States, replac- ing Sao-ke Alfred Sze. Just another Wonder } point to be brought up at the head- if he knows about donkeys, too, and line writers’ annual banquet. “the cowards never came, and the weak ones died by * the way.”. Out on the frontier life was reduced to an eternal fight with stubborn nature. There was no time for pleasure, fo time for those excursions in quest of truth and beauty and peace that give life its flavor. From birth to death, they were always busy. We of today reap the benefit. We talk, constantly, about our prosperity, and we are very proud of our t teeming cities, our rich countrysides, our great fac- tories, our miles of paved highways, our airports and our tall buildings. But a remark such as that last protest of Ezra Meeker’s should remind us that all of these things were bought for us, at a high price, ‘ by the pioneers. Those ancestors of ours weren’t par- H ticularly happy; work and danger were their constant companions, Every American ‘city should erect a statue to the readily persuaded to come to the mountain, the moun- tain has in some cases evinced a willingness, if not actually an eagerness, to come to Mahomet. .Where great wealth has not come to European royalty, Euro- pean royalty has in some cases evinced a ‘willingness, if not actually an eagerness, to come to great wealth. Our millions, obdurately plebeian, have been the de- ciding factor in breaking down the prejudices and aver- sions of aristocracy. This should not be taken to mean, of course, that the match under consideration was purely mercenary in motive. Genuine sentiment may have inspired it, and very likely did, but the fact re- mains that‘the Manville millions were scarcely a bar- rier to its consummation, And the fact remains that} royalty has seemed fascinated, over a period of years, not so much by Americans, per se, as by American wealth. When royalty allies itself with the non-pluto- crat, it will be time to deal with the insinuation that the dollar is the dominant factor in unions such as that which took place in Pleasantville, N. Y., on Saturday. . & pioneers. And across the base of such a statue there ———_——_—____- 4 might well be chiseled that chant from the frontier THE CITY LIGHTS om This column last sreek insavertently_slipped ? “yp, 7 1, ” is column last week inadvertently slipped a cog : I'm not ready to die yet—I've got too much to do.”| when we referred to the city street lights being paid - for by the taxpayers. In a way they are, but by power a: WAR COST GROWS using taxpayers whose liberal use uae ae alee pone eB. In every war somebody has won and everybody has makes the plant self-sustaining. The Valley City ligl ee tops, ard go WHE It be with evéry, war of the future, /Plant 18 owned by the aity, but it has beon 8 roving institution for many years. Superintendent Oscar Bergman is the man who has made it the great success it is today, and we have the lowest light and power rate in the state, the maximum price being eight cents per kwh and from that down to 2c for the heavy users. The city itself puts in $3,500 a year to the upkeep of the plant, but the users of electricity are so liberal that even at the low rate charged the plant makes money enough to give the city its wonderful street lighting free of cost. Ten double streamers and several single ones are now in operation and more will be added next year— and run every night of the year free of cost to the city. The standards of the new white way just completed on the south side are paid for by the residents and the light plant, the plant paying over half and will maintain. the lights free of cost. The streamers in the business section were all colored red, white and blue the past week and gave the city a real holiday appearance... Mr. Bergman states that this year the city street lights used:about three hundred thousand killowat hours and with the new white way and the new streamers con- templated, another hundred thousand kwh will be used in 1929 and give the city a continued reputation as the finest lighted town in the northwest. The operation of the plant has been a success under Mr. Bergman’s.man- agement and the city is indeed fortunate in having such an able man in charge. FASHION NOTES (New York World) There appears in these austere chambers a fair one, and deposes that she is all dressed up, and that she The League of Nations can even show that the winner of a war can be the heaviest loser. A wear bill is not settled with the peace treaty, but is cumulative over indefinite periods. So the league's “committee of action” finds today that the cost of the World war is far greater than the most extravagant guesses in 1918. The figures to date as furnished by league experts place the cost at 37,000,000 human lives and $363,000,- 000,000. On the battlefield the allies lost 5,400,000 men, compared with 3,400,000 for the central powers. Exclusive of these battlefield dead, the number. of deaths added to the normal death rate because of war is placed at 6,015,000, probably greatly underestimated. Counted in to make the full total are 22,850,000 lives that never came into existence because of a lowered birth rate and the lost reproduction due to the more than 9,000,000 killings. These are gruesome statistics. To the total of the war’s toll in human lives must be the millions who died from undernourishment, those who have died since the war or will die from wounds or the effects of gas, and the victims of revolutions brought on by the war. Nor can the war bill be written off until estimates are in for the losses due to the disruption of world commerce, the total of pen- sions that must be paid for more than half a century * to mutilated soldiers and to widows and orphans, and +he tax burdens loaded upon all nations to pay debts and maintenance of increased armaments brought about by war frenzy. PAROLING A CIVIL WAR VETERAN Usually there is a howl when a convicted murderer, serving a life term, is given a pardon. But there won't be anybody to protest the action of the. Indiana State Pardon: Board is canceling the im- prisonment of Henry J. Romine, imprisoned since 1913 for killing two men in an argument. goes from the state prison to the Old Soldiers’ Home, where he will spend the rest of his days as an honored guest. Romine, who is 81 years old, is a Civil War veteran with a distinguished record. We imagine that everybody will agree that it is fitting that the old soldier be allowed to end his days in honor and peace, free from the stigma of a prison uniform. VESRURPETTEMSPRES SNOT TARE OAL OTEE PEE EE PESO CTE ELEY knows she is all dressed up because while she was on| ber nie here at least a dozen taxis pulled up beside | 9 er ani pened their doors. She then goes on to explain | . that this is one way in which a woman. can always tell whether she looks well. If she has the. general appearance of a Cinderella, no taxi driver will sus- pect that she has the price of a ride. But if she looks, as the saying goes, like a million dollars, then all: drivers eye her hopefully, confident that one so pros- perous would never ride by subway. The whole thing sounds very plausible to us, so we Pass it on to any who desire a quick and easy test of their personal Bypesrance. As for men, the test was happily devised long ago and is familiar to al a man is dressed like a worthy candidate on the alist ticket, the traffic cop calls him “Buddy.” But if he is dressed like @ friend of the Hon. Grover A. Whalen, the traffic cop calls him “Chief.” A MARRIAGE SHRINE (Collier's) It is some satisfaction to note in this day of. organized igns and whatnots, that the Little vale, near Nashua, Iowa, has suc- ceeded in clearing a sixty-two-year-old debt, contracted when ox teams hauled to build, largely through marriage fees. i) i The church made comparatively famous in a song, has seen many @ marriage solemnized in front of its hand-hewn altar between the rough walls wherein Congregational pioneers from New England worshiped i They hauled hardwood over sixty miles of | 9° ~ roads to build it but they cannot have dreamed endure ‘as a national monument to mar- which takes the institution a bit too May its stout walls stand to witness many ceremonies down through the years. . —— ‘THE: CATERPILLAR CLUB ail mail pilot, bound east over the Alleghenies Le hension come over her. pelled a degree of her stage fright. 1926 EA Ser S HAS HAPPENED e mate MYRTLE. She like: DAN HARVE le proposes and ghe e does not bellevd ta hopes to marry ‘for He leaves after trying to ous, Dan tells Jerry she ing him to her feet but to be eare- fal about her reputa' party wi to because she wants ves a wild party Jerry ixnores a ‘stage with the de-: ot a “fat NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY: CHAPTER XXXV “TERRY kept her. eyes off the au- dience as long as she could, but finally succumbed to the tempta- tion to look over the footlights. She was dancing in the first row of girls, near the end. She glanced quickly at the box just a few feet away from her, thinking that Alester might be in it. She did not locate him there. He had said he was’going out front when he left her and Evelyn at the stage door. Jerry felt a little chill of appre- It dis- Had she been too severe—too inde- pendent? producer, a hand on his director's shoulder. Whe that...” “They'll tire.” . “We're going over. a first act gets them like ERRY heard no more. Encore! For the star, of course, but the audience wanted the chorus, too— the little girls in bridesmaids’ cos- tumes. Jerry was one of them. Delicious shivers shook her when she took her first curtain call, She was part of a hit! Part of something the public liked. Back in the dressing room Ev- elyn waited to congratulate her. To them the show was Jerry's. The star was merely an adjunct.. Jerry had made good. Nothing else mat- tered. Tears sneaked down Jerry’s cheeks when Evelyn hugged and ‘kissed her. “Aren't we funny?” she said. “Who saw me?” — “Mr. Hule did,” Evelyn replied. “Oh, darling, you danced divinely.” “Hurry into your change,” the wardrobe mistress called, and Jer- ry turned obediently to her dress- ing table. “Flowers for Miss Ray,” some- one yelled from the door. Jerry started to run toward it, but Evelyn pulled her back. “Let Mrs. Dwight get them,” she said, “you haven't time.” The wardrobe mistress hurried over to the door and soon returned with a long box in her arms. Jerry couldn’t stop to open it. She. had to go scurrying with the other girls back to the stage, climbing the steps from the dress- ing room and threading her way through the piled-up scenery. There was @ generous round of applause when the curtain went up for the second act and then there occurred one of those things that make life in the theater so uncertain, The show died. The promise of the first act was unfulfilled. Re- laxed nerves grew tight again; smiling faces became strained, The audience had not applauded the big scene in the second act. Everyone knew then that the show would be a flop unless new life could be put Blamety blam blam blam! The music was growing faster. Jerry's body began to free itself of taut- ness. She looked. straight out over the footlights and tried to smile, remembering. that Mr. Hule- had told them not to let their faces |! “et.” In the first row a woman lifted her hands to applaud. Jerry caught the flash of jewels on her wrist. The woman's companion was watching Jerry, trying to make her Jook at, him, Jerry skipt her: eyes over his head, seek- ing Alester. . She. found ‘herself thrilling now to the knowledge that her stage fright.had passed, that actually she ‘was before the public and enjoying it. The spell of the theater began. to weave itself about her. The mu- sic crept into her blood, the ap plause showered her with tingling gratification. Curtain! A thunder of applause. ‘Hysterical people congratulating themselves and each other in the relief HH tg Cero we “tant, Nol, IE was the aie it before the curtain was Jow- e Mr. Hule was tearing his hair. Mr. Weinertz, out front with his guests, mouthed an imaginary ci- ger between his lips and groaned wardly, Someone leaned over to him : “Too much cos- tume." Mr. Weinerts nodded. He knew it; he'd told Harsell. his big idea There ; ton. 1778—John Jay elected president of Congress. 1817—Mississippi admitted to the inion. 1862—Congress voted to admit West irginia. 1877—In Wyoming women were authorized to vote and hold office. duce the bathing girls here. busy, Hule.” “Wait a minute,” Mr. Weinertz “What are you going to have in place of those girls in exclaimed. the third act?” Mr. Harsell pinched his lower lip “Let's see the caps and aprons on the suits for this act,” he said sardon- icglly, “then we'll have the caps and aprons for the third act. I'm afraid we can’t go any farther thoughtfully. disgust. to Mr. Hule. fish. second act. funny stuff. big. The empty seats that Mr. Wein- ertz had expected to see when the curtain was raised for the last act were not there. He wiped a perspir- ing forehead and went back to his friends. His collier was limp and the long lock of hair he used to cover his baldness hung down the back of bis head. He knew that success hung in the balance. If the audience failed to react favorably to Harsell’s big surprime he didn’t want to read the papers the next morning, the pro- ducer. told himself when he took his seat beside his wife. No show, he added, could live on the skeleton of a former hit, " Fr so ¢ Tse audience had remained— atmosphere. People were waiting to ‘have it over with so they could get to some’ more exciting entertain- ment. No one applauded the first scene of the third act—the host and host- ess of the bride and groom at a fete on a country estate. The two were discussing the program they had prepared for their guests. It prom- ised nothing excit ting. But it proved to be quite differ. was no good. You couldn't whet |} faded appetites by overdressing the girls Just to add a kick_to their scanty appearance in the last act, bea sea and now he knew it was true! this stupid blunder. The culprit was found in an argument with the stage director. “You've got to do something!” the producer cricd frantically. “We're dying!” HISTORY December 10 1672—Monthly postal system began between New York and Bos- “Hell,” Mr. Weinertz exploded in “Let it alone.” He turned “Tell Ted and.Leon- ard to throw in some of their old stuff when they go on,” he snapped. “That dragon fight—sort of bur- lesque their old hit, and if the au- dience doesn’t warm up to your cute little surprise when you spring it in the third, Harsell, you'd bet- ter go stab yourself on a sword- The ocean’s full of ‘em.” ‘The audience remained silent and unmoved untii near the end of the Then Ted Hart and Leonard Glass got them with their It was recognized as| be? a favorite bit of a past season being done over, but the way the boys made fun of themselves went over Fi APPLES—GOOD WINTER FRUIT. Almost a thousand varieties of rapples have been derived from the parent of them all, the crab, or wild apple. Apples may be cultivated in most of the cool temperate zones of the world, and seem to thrive wherever the oak tree grows. In the early New England days this fruit was valued chiefly because of its cider pee) but with our modern methods of refrigeration apples can now be preserved and eaten raw throughout the year. It is estimated that the apple cro) this year in the United States will be 178,000,000 bushels, fully 33 1-3 per cent over the 1927 crop. _ A good ripe apple digests quickly, only-about. ninety. minutes being re- quired, but unless the apple has been masticated thoroughly it has a ten- dency to ferment internally, produc- te . uring the fall and winter months, when apples are so plentiful, it is a good ae tg make an exclusive apple diet for a Tew days, eliminating all other foods, but eating whenever apples are desired. An apple may be taken every two er three hours, or they may be eaten three times daily in place of the regular meals, When two or three apples can be used ata time. An apple may also be eaten each night before retiring if not too cloge to the evening meal. If taken this Way it is a valuable aid to overcoming constipation. Apples contain from 10 per cent to 15 per cent of fruit sugar, a small amount of protein, and are especially rich in potassium sodium, nitrogen and iron salts, which con- tribute to the building of bones and the enrichment of blood. The malic acid of the apple is in a negligible quantity, so apples may be con- sidered in the sub-acid class. Applesauce Applesauce should be prepared without the addition of sugar. It is quite sweet if cooked without water in a thick aluminum pan. The apples should be thinly sliced, and the pan should have a closed fitting lid and be placed over a slow fire. This makes an excellent dessert to be used either with a protein meal or with breakfast. - Baked apples should be likewise cooked in an aluminum pan and no sugar or water added. Applesauce Drink One cup of finely mashed apple- sauce, one pitit of milk, and a level tablespoonful of honey. Shake well ALIA AA: Get |legs had drawn her the abbreviated skirt that theatrical tradition has associated with the French maids of musical comedy since time im- memorial. She carried her tray with poise, but though her nerves were quiet her eyes were not attuned to them. She had not succeeded in locating Alester. The flowers he sent had softened her heart; she wanted to let him know it. Others in the chorus had received flowers, too, and telegrams, but the messages had been received at their hotels, or earlier in the day at the theater. Yet no one had a more gorgeous bouquet than Alester sent to Jerry. The incomparable American Beauty rose; two dozen of them. Alester could well afford them— or two dozen orchids if he wished— + Dut thing EALTH DIET SY Dr.Frank ADVICE: Me. Sa oT ek and serve cold. This may be used as a meal by itself when one doeg not feel especially hungry, Apple and Spinach Soup Use two bunches of spinac! washed and finely chopped, fo Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, sddressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. apples peeled and sliced, three cups of water. Boil these ingredients in a covered pan for about twenty minutes. When cooked add threo lumps of butter and serve. This recipe may be used with a meat meal, but should not be used with starches, Beets and Apples Select two bunches of very small beets. Peel them and cut into slices, Clean the tops, chop, and add to the beets. Boil for about twenty-five minutes, then add four apples peeled and sliced and boil for five minutes longer. Add four level tablespoons« ful of butter and serve. t QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Facial Paralysis Question: Mrs. O. J. writest “The left side of my face seems to be partially paralyzed. I can move the muscles of the eye, cheek and lips with great difficulty. Can I do anything for this condition?” Answer: You can surely be cured under the right treatment with a diet and physiotherapy, but there are So many factors to be considered in each individual case that space does not permit me to fully answer your question in this column. Ulcers in Mouth _, Question: Reader asks: “Why is it that I get ulcers in my mouth after eating citrus fruit such as oranges, lemons, ete? I am in pers fect health, bowel movement. twicd sometimes three times a day.” Answer: The mouth ulcers come from over-acidity of the stomach which is temporarily made worse by the use of acid fruit. Paradoxical as it may seem, the best cure fory this tendency to a sore mouth is to take a us fruit fast for a week or two, ing exclusively on oranges or grapefruit with plenty of water and no other fruit. This fast actual- ly cuts down the stomach acidity after a few days and the cure is Permanent if no bad food combina- tions are used from that time on, as inharmonious mixture of food is apparently the one important cause of over-acidity of the gastric juice. Rickets Question: K. G. asks: “What is the cause of rickets in children? Could syphilis or any other diseasq in the parents be the cause?” Answer: Rickets is caused by a lack of proper alkalinity in the blood, and can be cured by the use of green vegetables, wholewheat and milk, The disease you mention can be a contributing cause to the produc- tion of systematic acidosis. oe t Our Yesterdays FORTY YEARS AGO Allen M. Easterly, special land agent, has returned to Bismarck after a short business trip east, M. H. Angenvine, trader at th Standing Rock Indian agency, is ih the city on business. _ John A..Rea, register at the Land Office, has.gone to Canton, S, Dy for a visit with relatives. J. S. Hillyer has returned from a Jerry knew, but she appreciated his wanting to. make her proud that someone had considered her little stage debut worthy of being remem- bered. Her eyes searched the audience at every chance. Where could he The show was nearing the final curtain. Jerry had a minute off stage to fly down to the dressing- room. Yes, there was word for he! a telegram, Mrs. Dwight told her, but she could not give it to her until after the show. “Why?” Jerry pleaded. i “It’s against the rules in Mr. Weinertz's productions.” “But the show's almost over!” “Then you can wait,” Mrs, Dwight said firmly. “I never break the rule, Miss.” eee IRRY rushed back to the wings. “Hurry,” Evelyn cried, as she saw Jerry come running up the stairs, “What in the world did you _ do that for?” she whispered a sec- ond later as they danced out to join the company in ensemble for the closing song. “Mrs, Dwight has a telegram for me and-she wouldn’t let me have it,” Jerry whispered back. “Of course not,” Evelyn replied under her breath. “It’s a precaution against bad news upsetting a per- former during the show.” ‘The last of her words were lost in the wild applause that broke out and swept up over the footlights— applause that came like a reprievo to threatened toilers. > “Bad news!” Jerry hadn't thought of that, And why, she ‘The elation of the people about her, the last and greatest burst of sound’ from the orchestra, the laughing, clapping audience sud- denly meant nothing to her. She danced on, mechanically, un~ she found herself in the wings. it she could not yet get away— was calling the com- §EE Duluth on a business trip. E. White. City, here. is in its new location. cool mornings. kota Power Co. trip east. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO James L. Young, who has been stationed at Fort Lincoln for several years, has been transferred to the engineers division at New Orleans. Contractor Rhud has gone to Mr, and Mrs. J. W. Flemming have gone to Winchester, Ind., for a vigit Miss Kittie Galloway and Everett Green were married by Rev. Charles TEN: YEARS AGO Senator F, E. Ployhar of Valley president of the Bismarck Gas company, is rpending a few days ~The Roy P, Logan grocery store celebrating its first anniversary Dr. Piatt Dunn and J: - Cormick of Shields are “Sion ‘ '| Bismarck this week. Get a Radiantfire for these Montana-Da- ais leaks cut when