The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 19, 1928, Page 4

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: PAGE FOUR ; an ‘The Bismarck ‘Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) i — | Pranz Schub: centennial is be Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, B: marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffic> at Bismarck | , &8 second class mail matter. 1 \ George D. Mann .............. President and see yi = =I Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota ust dds that $7.20 729 + 5.00 school! as 2 d's Weekly by mail, in state, per year Weekly by mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year a ao Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press i The Associated Press is ex ely entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it 5 or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published her All rights of republication of all other matte. are also reserved. mind and per his cious of Foreign Representative: G. LOGAN PAYNE COMP. NEW YORK .... Fifth / ies 2 feriority complex t him to write some DETROIT} }; Kresge Bi all The whol py brain. THE LATE Bismarck audiences were enjoying a film pic week, which brought back to the screen after a lo Bence the very grand old man of the American r world. Before the week was out came word that their + — favorite was no more. Theodore Roberts had died unex- | Pectedly. | ting H Theodore Roberts owed his popularity as a screen fig- ” ‘ure to the fact that he was a real actor of the old school. He worked with s1 and flappers of the film art, but he was not of them. Intellect, elocution and a lon - fod of training on the stage before he came to the m fitted this man to ; the roles in the silent drama in} ©, {which he had achieved a distinction comparable to that | uncer of Joe Jeffe in Rip Van Winkle, Edwin Booth in j ,, + Shakesperean characters or Fred Stone in the drollerics of stage clowning. Roberts was like them because he stood at the top in all he played. Like them he was a | man of unusually substantial character and lovable dis reveals the {that the entire ri smething more enl greatn men of ge and them, w t reason r They prove to us, made him famous on the screen. It was a gesture very | spirits, much like that which gave distinction to the face of the i TAKING GENIUS APART d of the inferior value of his sot nds very ument that defies refutation. nd complexes un Position. | sleep and a forgetting.” Roberts had acting mannerisms that were a trade- | mark. There was his manipulation of a ciger which | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1928 the Viennese musical genius whose celebrated now, was “a self-satisfied, 1 individual, a harmless little schoolmaster, con- ient ethics and of his soul. comes from Dr. Robert Lach, ‘al history at Vienna University. Dr. bert realized his inferiority, and that zation brought him event- moral qualities and understand. Shelley was as cr carried on scandalously wife. Poe was a crabbed drinker. pocket and a footpad. Whitman was loafer. genius often does things which ary man to be set down as a plain bit incomprehensible; so the rest of p trying to dissect the genius’ y, to see if we can find the reason y thinks ho knows all there ts to nd he is not impressed. Schubert. his own deficient ethics and moral 3" his in- ormen‘ed him, and eventually drove passable music. when a modern professor ex- vorld is reduced to a set of crossed There are no mysteries, no Everything is made clear * or something equally glib le of answer- e professor ficient moral ny remains to lous for eternity. That It not only $s of Schubert’s soul; it proclaims capable of rising to such heights, than an accident, something higher look ridic! us are wandering stars. cannot dissect them. sop! We cannot They are our can talk of 1 they are blue in the ally, Wagner's ¥Tristan,” Whit- Schubert's “C Major,” Shelley's " to prove that our birth is, after all, “but a These things were produced,| from a wisdom that is beyond the wisdom of the schools. beyond denial, that we are immortal late “Uncle Joe” Cannon, but where “Uncle Joe” postured his stogie, Roberts manipulated his perfecto like a drum major wielding his staff. Roberts was an example of that old saw that “destiny shapes our ends, rough hew them as we will.” Meant by his parents to be a preacher, he unconsciously laid the | basis of his subsequent great film career in a course in elocution intended to make him a great pulpit speaker. Chance participation in an amateur play at school di- verted the current of his life and he became a barnstorm- ing actor. Then heredity seemed to take a pot shot at the making of the man. He came back to San Francisco, where his father was a man of means in the shipping business and Theodore, at the age of 22, went on a three- year voyage on one of his father's ve: which he com- manded. That was a towering experience compared to contact with life at Coney Island which is about as much distinction as some other idols of the screen represent It was a fortuitous piece of fortune for the films that Roberts came back to the stage and then shifted over to the screen. He lived to give those great characterizations to the roles of Svengali in “Trilby,” Simon Legree in “Uncle Tom's Cabin,” Tabywana in “The Squaw Man” and Moses in “The Ten Commandments. When illness removed him from the movie studios for more than a year, it was as though a great light had gone dark. The galaxy of the film firmament had suf- fered the loss of a star. Then, like day succeeding night, he came back and there was expectation that his virile figure would restore lustre to the screen. He had a life contract wih his producers and there were plenty of roles to which he might lend his vibrant Personality. Then the career that was both romance and brilliance was snuffed out and the connoisseurs of the film again feel the re- action of a personal bereavement. ART HERE AT HOME Talk to the average American about art and he dromptly begins looking for a European accent. Speak of beautiful buildings and haunting skylines and he as- sumes that you are talking about some such place as Paris or Munich.” } ‘We are used to ugliness in our cities. To most of us, beauty and utility do not go together; and since utility is our specialty, we think we must get along without much beauty. But some artists know better. Louis Orr, famous American etcher, is issuing a folio of @tchings entitled “Ports of America.” In this collection he presents sketches made at the waterfronts of 13 Amer- fean cities, He has gone to the very fountain heads of utility—the docks and wharves of commerce—and found rare, strange beauty. On the Atlantic and Gulf coasts he has sketched scenes in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Hampton Roads, Savannah and New Orleans. In the Great Lakes fegion he has sketched Chicago, Cleveland, Buffalo and Duluth. On the west coast he has sketched Scattle and Gan Francisco, Now this is surely a representative list of American Cities. One or two of them, perhaps, appeal to most of us as places more romantic and appealing than the aver- * age; but for the most part they are solid, substantial, » utilitarian trade centers. We are proud of them, but we don't, ordinarily, consider them good hunting grounds for artists. But Mr. Orr’s sketches are eye-openers. In each place he has found a scene of impressive beauty. In Chicago, for instance, he gives us a glimpse from the river's edge, with a winding stairway ascending to a bridge and a tow- ering, mist-veiled office building shooting aloft in the | background—so that you wonder why any middle west- erner thinks he must go to Europe to see nobility of building. We need more of this sort of thing. It is as if this artist had said to us: “This America, that you think so commonplace and drab, is really not that at all. It is a land of majestic skylines, mystic structures that were built for trade but Jook like strange temples, jumbled heaps of buildings and iaridges and climbing stairs in which men who have ded- feated themselves to labor have hit upon form, design - beauty. If you had eyes that could see you would never ‘again call it ugly.” ‘often conscious. Striving to make money, we ere hitting tupon # way of life that can eventually give every citizen ig | freedom and leisure for spiritual development; and work- is for strict utility, we are erecting cities of haunting, beauty. now learn that an ovis poli is just a sheep and We naturally supposed it was a fero- ‘We are doing @ good many things of which we are not | | AMUNDSEN’S MEDALS Roald Amundsen’s vast collection of medals has been sold to defray the debts of his estate. He died in debt; and his medals now go to the King Frederick University at Oslo, Norway. It is a rather melancholy thing to think about. Amundsen was one of the giants of his time; yet, when he died, he left nothing tangible to settle his estate except a collection of medals end decorations. However, we need not waste much sympathy. Amund- i ecure enough. Medals, after all, are only t serve to call attention to unusual exploits; |and Amundsen’s record will be remembered long after ér> medals have been entirely forgotten. | thing: Editorial Comment | HOLLYWOOD PAWNSHOPS (New York Times) Hollywood, where fortune smiles or frowns with rapid | changes of mood, would seem to be afi ideal field for a pawnbroker’s business. A slump in salary from $500 a week to nothing at all is exactly the sort of catastrophe to provide clients for pawnshops. Ye. there are only two in the whole town. The articles most frequently pawned are nd cameras. That movie players should t two seems naturai enough to any one who reads the stories of the hectic life in Hollywood. But it is hard to understand why one whose business is the Pictures should own a camera for use in leisure hours. Pawnbrokers disagree as to the reason why they are so few in the film center. One of them is certain that there would be ten times as many if licenses were not so hard to get. The other bases his explanation on the psychology of those who are down on their luck. He says that most of them would much rather take their valuables to shops in downtown Los Angeles, where there is less chance of their being observed by more prosperous friends. BALTIC A POWDER MINE (Living Age) The eastern end of the Baltic is apparently replaciag the Balkans as a European trouble breeder. It would not be quite accurate to revise the old joke about the Balkans and declare that “peace is raging on the Baltic,” for the anomalous situation existing on the Polish-Lithuanian frontier is neither peace nor war. It is not peace; for Poland and Lithuania have re- garded themselves, formally at least, as belligerents ever since Gen. Zeligowski’s Polish guerillas seized the dis- rupted city of Vilna eight years ago. Neither is it war; for though the frontier is closed and though Polish and Lithuanian patrols glare balefully at one another across il, there have been no battles and no bloodshed, except ca the wounding of two Polish soldiers in a skirmish in july. But though it is difficult to take seriously a “war” in which nobody fights and almost nobody gets hurt, the Vilna dispute is too grave a matter to be dismissed with 9 smile and a shrug. The perpetual friction between Po- land and Lithuania is having a disturbing effect on Eu- ropean relations generally. On one side of Poland stands Soviet Russia with a large and well organized army. On the other stands Germany, which has, indeed, promised not to try to al- ter its eastern frontier by force, but which has in the past been known to forget treaty obligations. To make matters worse, behind Poland stands her ally, France, always suspicious of the Teutons. It is easy to see what dangerous and far-reaching results might fol- low were either Poland or Lithuania to venture upon open hostilities, COLORED UNDERWEAR FOR MEN (Fred Kelly in the Nation's Business Magazine) A friend of mine operates a small shop dealing in men’s furnishings, and he also has a controlling interest in a shop, immediately adjoining, which specializes in under- wear and other fancy fripperies for women. ‘Recently he made a surprising but priceless discovery. His best method for gaining attention in bargains in the show window of his haberdashery shop is to place alluring ex- hibits of delicate, gayly colored lingerie in the window of the shop next door. Men who would uot bother to pause and examine the showing of excellent values in shirts, stop and feast their eyes on the pretties intended for gals. Once having stopped, they finally move over a baa or two and look over the offerings of masculine goods. Likewise, while we're on this subject, the present sea- son has seen an almost startling increase in sales of un- derwear for men. The reason is that crafty manufac- turers have been putting them out in festive colors. A man may well blush when he looks in the show window of berdashery, and observes what members of this once x are coming to, s tell me in eonfidence that the more racy the » the better such goods sell, And sales are ky no means confined to young collece boys, but include a con- siderable ratio of plain-looking old plugs who might not be expected to take interest in such checrful underwear. Even baby-blue undershirts of near-silk material are rs Uncle Sam’s Ch =~ ° OPER A ot ae TN NEON Christmas.” one more thrill. Peggy Joyce. two novels in him, says a novelist. BARBS ———— 1? Suggestions for late 1928 . slogan: | | eee “KILLER'S MOTHER CALLS: HIM! - i Gabriele d’Annunzio says he wants | Well, there's always o. Every person past 30 has at least ts of people prefer speaking theirs || to writing them, however. eee The wife wants a new hat for “Get Hoover out of the trenches by Christmas, but of course that’s just overhead expense. soe A Russian couple were married and RASCAL,” says a headline in a New! divorced in 40 minutes the other York newspaper. If the young man! day. Great movie talent. keeps on like this he'll need a good | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, spanking. Compare Cocktail Shaking and detailed study learned judges of an international contest have decided | ‘that cocktails mixed by women are! more suave, those made by men are 1912—Woman suffrage lost in Mich- more energetic. Inc. | ristmas Cheér | | | December 19 ,1800—John Jay declined chief jus- ticeship. 1864—President Lincoln called for 300,000 additional volunteers. Paris, Dec. 19—(?}—After a long | 1893—Warships sent to Rie de Ja- neiro to warn against inter- ference with American ship- ping. igan by 760 votes, : 1926 By NEA Service THIS HAS HAPPENED rate introduces JERRY RAY to ESTER * CARSTAIRS when he | pilot, it hopes to joney. Jerry loses her Job on count, and Alester helps fn pince in a chorus. Rehenrnaln ra, wat EVELYN STARR ¢ mc im by a midnight chorus party. works hard and ts rewarded a special She bya dance m urges Jerry zo to the next we lenter Innis 1 jut he to ef Jerry begs fore she ot ing Boston by w Aleater anys. “You can fly—with Da: ween they takes the whee! the storm. He 1 F Jerry catch a train o Boston nnd arrive hefore the eve- mance but too lute NOW GO ON WITH THE sTORY CHAPTER XLIIL “Wry” Jerry stammered; “you know . . . Alester’s father + +. it would get him into trou- ble.” Again Mr. Weinertz grunted. “H'm,” he said, “there's something in that. His old man has threat- ened to take his plane away from him {f he has an avoidable acci- dent. I guess you'd call this an avoidable accident—letting his ship go out in a storm.” “But he could fix that,” the press agent declared. “He'd have his ship to show that it hadn’t smashed.” “His father’s friends would see your picture,” Jerry pointed out. “And I don’t think Alester would like you to use his name,” she add- ed, turning back to Mr. Weinertz. He nodded. “I guess we'd better not make the boy sore, Sid,” he said to his publicity man. “But his name will put it across,” the determined Sid pro- tested. i “I think the true story is more thrilling than any you could in- vent,” Evelyn stated, and Jerry threw her a grateful glance. eee (THE press agent sulked. “Why don’t you write it up?” he asked, meaning to be sarcastic. ‘“I'@ Hke to help you if you're “TAA AA AAT TAR The story got into the front pages of the morning newspapers. Jerry devoured it eagerly and knew that Evelyn had been as good as) her word. “I like that Dan Harvey,” Ev- elyn had said to her. Jerry was elated at the clever- hess with which Evelyn had man- aged to see that Dan received his just share of praise in spite of the Press agent's efforts to try to have Jerry played up. Jerry did not know how she had accomplished this . . . she was well aware, howeverg that Evelyn could exert @ rare charm when she wished. ‘The next morning a note was de- livered to her while she was at breakfast. It was from Dan. He'd written it just before leaving for the scene of the enforced landing. He was going to have the plane repaired so he could fly it back to Carmoor. Jerry was hurt at his uncere monious departure. She did not suspect that he had realized he couldn't trust himself to refrain from discussing the subject she had forbidden him to bring up when in her presence. But she soon forgot her pique. There were other things to mon- opolize her attention. It thrilled her to know that she had been the cause for the much desired publicity that the press had skowered upon the company. It thrilled her to know that perhaps a million people had become ac- quainted with her features in the papers this morning. see Wwmt pleased, her more than anything else, however, was Mr. Weinertz’s capitulation. He’ gave her the part he had promised, but not without lecturing her on the advisability of attending re- hearsals with punctuality. “See that it doesn’t happen again,” he said finally. “Once is enough.’ i Jerry thought 80, too, She was not late any more. And she worked so conscientiously and uncomplainingly thaf she complete- ly won Jack Beals’ professional heart, The number went over big be fore a critical Monday night audi. ence, Jerry shared equally the honors with Beals . . . he carried her along and kept her from be coming frightened. Jerry had learned enough of the traditions of the stage to realize what @ magnanimous thing he was doing when. he maneuvered for her to receive an even break in the ap- plause. s By the time the show was ready to open in New York Jerry de talent. Some called it that. Others called it a spark—the thing that fires you to do greater things. Mr. Weinertz, keen showman that he was, shook his head when he thought of her as a potential star, She just didn’t have it, that was all. Bernhardts and Duses and Pavlowas aren't born every minute... eee ERRY never knew that she had been passed upon for such @ role. She was pleased over the hit she had made in Boston and was looking forward with eagerness to the opening night in New York. Dan would be there. He couldn't stay away. lester, too. She knew she did not care much wheth- er he came or not. It was Dan - + . but she would not let herself weigh the matter. The hour arrived when she stood in the wings of Weinerts’s New York theater and stared across the stage at her dancing partner, wait- ing for her cue. But she was strangely depressed. She had stolen out on the stage when the curtain was down and “peepholed” the dience. She failed to find the one she was Jook- ing for, though she saw Alester in ® box with a group of friends. Jerry recognized Betty Mortimer among them. Alester seemed to be in a very good mood. He had just been backstage to wish Jerry a “tremendous success.” He meant it. He had been devoted to her since his return from the cruise in his father’s yacht. She could not help but feel that he cared more for her than ever. Alester knew it, too. “Maybe I'm a fool,” he had said to him- self, “but I think I’m going to mar- ty her.” After the opening night in New York he was sure’of it. During @n entr’acte when he and Betty were left alone in his. box he asked her what she thought about it. “I think it's top stuff,” she said with wholehearted directness. “You like her, don’t you?” Ales- wanted to know. “Indeed I do,” Betty declared sincerely. see ‘THAT night Alester proposed to Jerry. It was at a party that Mr. Weinertz gave in his rooftop apartment. He had personally in- vited Jerry. There were two orchestras, one at either end of ® spacious ball- room. You could dance without stopping if you liked, and Jerry was urged to do just that. Alester had brought his crowd along— two girls and a young man that Jerry had met at The Kraal. danced with the young man some friends of Mr. Weinerts cause it was her nature to be oblig- served all the plaudits that came her way. Her stage presence was that of a seasoned performer. She had perfect poise and a person: ality that immediately won over her audience. She danced with an almost perfect rhythm, and she was one of the most beautiful ‘girls on the stage. Yet in spite of all these accom: really willing.” Evelyn answered, unruffled. plishments and charms Jerry Ray lacked something. Perhaps it was ing. But when Alester led her out on the terrace to a corner with a comfortable seat she glad to have the opportunity THE HUMAN VOICE No musical instrument has ever been devised that has the power of delicate adjustment of which the hu- man ‘vocal apparatus is capable. The human mechanism can be trained to imitate almost any sound found in nature. The average human voice ves, Kut it to be sounds higher and lower than the human ear can hear. being lower, cover the tenor; women’s voices, being soprano. By careful train- human voice can tones of music. between a man’s voice and a woman's voice depends largely upon the size of the larynx, as the Adam’s ap- ple, which is much larger and more noticeable in man. Until puberty a boy’s voice is very similar to a wom- an’s in pitch. During puberty male’s larynx becomes enlarged quick- ly and @ broken or cracked voice is frequently found at this time because he has not yet attained the delicate muscular smear bir soe for ae changed pe of vocal apparatus. Although most of the sound is made by the vibration of the cords, all of the respiratory apparatus is used for forming and modulating the voice. The sound generated by the vibrating vocal cords is modulated by the size of the larynx and the shape of the throat, mouth, and nasal pas- sage. It may be impeded or directed by the tongue, teeth or soft palate. the lungs and diaphragm. them to vibrate. Tonight Jerry let him, because she was despondent, Dan had re- mained away from the opening night—a night that was an event to her. He hadn’t heard the au- dience applaud her. He didn’t care whether she went over or not. “Jerry .. ." Alester was siip- ping a ring over her fingers. Jerry looked down and saw that it was hea emerald she had given back to im. “Let's go in and tell them we're engaged,” Alester was saying. Jerry was eure, afterward, that ‘she must have looked a bit foolish when she turned her eyes to his face, It was such a commonplace Proposal. Not even the star- sprinkled sky over their heads seemed to lend enchantment to the scene; not even the magic city that lay at their feet . . . not even the Blue Danube, the strains of which were floating out into the thin air. Alester leaned down swiftly and kissed her. “Lovely,” he said un- der his breath; “lovely girl of mine.” Jerry half put up her hands to press him away from her. Then they dropped. The blankness was leaving her now. Her head was filling with curiously comic thoughts. i It was funny, really . . . she had prayed and planned and worked to catch her millionaire » » and now, now when she had him she wanted to laugh in his face . . . to laugh at her own self, too, and tell him how preposterous, how utterly unthinkable it was. eee SHE sighed, and dropped against him, dragging the radiant plumage of her spirit to the ground. If it had been true—it there were such moments as the poets sang of—such love as they described—it would have been sweet to know it, Jerry thought wistfully. “Shall we tell them?” Alester urged, drawing back to look at her. “Oh, no,” Jerry cried, “not yet.” “But you're not going to refuse me, are you?” he asked. Jerry fancied that between the lines he had meant: “But you're not going ' to turn down a million dollars, are you?” Why didn’t she say yes and wit- ness the stupid surprise replace his complacency? ‘i But that would be madness, This moment was the turning point in her life. Before her lay @ prom- ised land of milk and honey. sbe turned her face away there would be nottring but a desert. She wouldn’t ever again be so nearly in love with anyone as she was with Dan Harvey, she told herself. Only a man with Alester'’s ‘wealth could lead her into the land: of honey. What did it matter, without love, whether it were he or soméone else, so long as it cotld never be Dan? But the desert—the desert of poverty where love might have for her—looked very, very even | enchanting to Jerry as she turned to give her answer to the man jp-| Who held open the doors of wealth her. ° ” (ae Be Continued} . the scale, include the con- | 8rea' The volume of air below the vocal hand algae At aged it forced with varying degrees of pres- sure against the vocal cords, causing The vibratory por- tions of the cords may be shortened or lengthéned. The edges may be sharp- ened or blunted, The angle at which they come together may be increased or decreased. ‘The loudness of the voice depends upon the relation of the energy of cecilia Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. eed ‘tion the force of resist- nk the be ergo the rapidity of the vibration of the vocal cords. The ter the tension of the vocal cords the higher the pitch. The quality or timbre of the voice depends princi- pally upon the thickness of the cords and upon the overtones produced by the size of the larynx and shape and ..| direction of the air passage. With a little care anyone can learn to control and direct his speech sc that it will be more pleasing to oth- ers. A compelling voice has been the secret of many a man’s success. (My next article will be on defec- tions of the voice, and vocal gymnas- tics.) (Copyright, 1928, by the Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Chloroform More Dangerous to Breathe Question: T. L. writes: “I was re- cently operated on and have not been a| Well since. Could it be possible that I have swallowed some of the chloro- form given me as an anesthetic? Would that be poisonous?” Answer: Although extremely pois- nous in vapor form, comparatively large quantities of chloroform can be taken into the stomach without pro- ducing death. The smallest dose which has proved iatal to an adult is fifteen grams, but with a child an ‘amount as small as three and a half grams has resulted in death. The symptoms are burning sensation, fol- lowed by numbness, sometimes tem- porary excitability and delirium fol- lowed by narcosis, pale face, livid lips, convulsions followed by bloody stools, general pain and sensations of anx- iety. People poisoned by chloroform internally sometimes live for several days before death occurs. Ear Discharge Question: H. W. asks: “When a child of two years I fell out of my high chair. I injured my ear and it started discharging. At intervals I have consulted doctors, and they do not help—just tell me it will eventu- ally stop. I am now forty-three, and this ear has been running all those years. Do you think it will ever stop, or is there anything I can do except just to keep it clean? I hear faintly with this ear.” Answer: As you have probably dis- covered, a chrenic discharge does not heal readily because a running sore becomes practically an eliminative or- gan for toxins from the body. It is usually necessary to undergo a pro- longed eliminative diet to cure your system of the accumulated toxins be- fore the discharge will stop. Mean- while, all you can do is to keep the running sore clean while you follow the fasting and dieting instructions which I have sent you by mail. (Copyright, 1928, By The Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) Our Yesterdays | FORTY YEARS AGO Z. B. Lesh and Ed Shubert of Sterling were here on business, Mr. and Mrs. J .C. Campbell have returned to their home in Bismarck after spending several months on their farm on the South Heart river. Rev. and Mrs. George Klein have gone to Grand Forks to attend the North Dakota Baptist convention. Rev. John Richards of Holyoke, Colo., has arrived for a visit with his TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO J. G, Taylor and W. F. Cochrane have formed a partnership and will transact real estate business. Captain and Mrs. W. G. entertained friends at a euchre party. Governor Frank White has re- euped from ‘his hunting tip with.» TEN YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. Price Owens have re- turned from a trip to the Twin Cities, A Josephine Fillebeck and John Mc- Kenna of this city. Miss Adele Kaufman is visiting in Detroit, Mich, with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Albertson, former Bismarck residents. Fig agen ee fan of Can- nonball, »é we TD + a ee eee Ree” eee

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