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i i i i 5 A PAGE EIGHT Pt 3 ~ PoRR T 2 Vo DAY 1k VDN SR e VRIS B8 W!DNESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 30, 1922 Smne Look Ever Oflnr The wig is c.lder than éivilization for_th e 5avaj ore one to make him ] peu xg'e £6fmidable on' the field of battlé; Bald-headed men are asked to bear bns ‘in’ mind“When they try to slip somethmg over'‘on their friends. —Tt Can’t Be Done— Hard To. Recognize The murder of one man astounds all England. In America a man must kill at least fifty before he wins much recognition, ; —Then He Is Sure To Win— Hard-Headed A New Jersey man recently fired four bullets into -his -head and he still lives. We imagine that he must have beecn a former basgball player. —TUsed To BoneHeads— Hu To Shv Tlnm An astronomer claims that we havé twin suns shining constantly. Not that it makes: much difference but we suggest that he: will have a hard time making the people of Pit- tsb\lrg believe it. —Aint It A Fact" No Escape One of the Amerlun Legion del-, egates at Virginia last week claimed he had a nightmare during the night and the proprietor of the hotel charged it on his bill—ten dollars for livery. —~—Giddap!— D SHUT: TY BEING SOLD (Continued from Pm 1) all other owners and agents, parties unknnwn, during, all the limes here in mentioned above deseribed, and .that the said John was _conducting and maintaining a’ ting liqaor was kept for sale and comnion!y sold in and about : said premises, and that the said defend- ants, and each of them guilty of maintaining a public nuisance. As conclusions of law, Judge Stan- ton finds that the premises above described together with the person:l property are and each of them is 8 publi¢, nuisance; that . said defend: ants, John Slow, James Butts and Frank Dewey, and each: of them be perpetually 'enjoined and restrained from further condicting said nuis- ance, and that said defendants be perpéetually enjoined and restrained from further condustting, creating or_maintaining anywhere within the state of Mi nuisance within the provisions of Chapter 455 of the Sessmn Laws of Minne- sota for 1919 and acts ameéndatory and supplemental thereto and from in any way aiding’of assisting there |- in; that said defendants be perpetu- ally enjoined from further using or permitting said building or any part thereof on the:ground upon which the same is situated, be used as a pla:e where intoxicating liquor is manufactured, kept for sale, sold or. ordered; that said:muisance be abated and that the personal property lo- cated in said building be forwith re- moved from the building and be sold by the sheriff of Beltrami county as upon execution; and that said -real property and the building thereon situated be closed for a periad. of ofie year from the date of the judgement entered, . unless sooner releaséd according to law; that out of the proceeds derived from the: sdle of personal property the sheriff shall deduct his fees and the expenses of scch sale, and shall pay to the plaintiff ‘the ¢osts and dis- bursements of this ‘action and that any surplus moneys 'from such sale ghll be paid over By the sheriff to county fréisure 'of Bdtflmi county ‘the ‘fame to be icredited to thé " sehool Ynnd of h¥" county. nounntgy;n 10 AWAIT' ,mg; OF GRAND JURY . Oscar B. Thompson was this morn- ing bourd -over to await. the action of the Grand Jury on a_charge of grand_larceny, it being alleged ‘hat he took ten 100-pound sacks of sugar from the F. G. Troppman warehouse on _August 22 fle preliminary hearing was held behre Judge Gibbons’ court and tne défendant was placed under $2,000 tiond 4¥9, his hppearance. County Attorfiey G. ‘M. Torrance appeared io{fixc Troppman in.the case; Bm CLINIC AT SHEVLIN SCHOOL: HOUSE SATURDAY Prdr o |70 DEATH: Brindisi, Which §hould Be Avolded by Light Slesper, Talidy | a Bnby nnd Children’s clinic will} Canton, Ohio, Aug. 80—Three —_ o F (Continned from Pagé 1) | be /held at the Shevlin_ sehool home persons were brutally beaten to e i . Brindis! is:the port on thé east coast | prominent Demacrat, ~ will contest Saturday, September 2 at deéath with an_iron bar here today. It was the annual dinner of a cer- 2 | of Italy where one gets.a steamer for .t with Whipple for the senatorial the afternoon. The clinic i Police found the mutilgted bodies of tain soclety at a New York Dotel. The s H Greece, . Turkey, Egypt, Indis, the | nomination. {possible through: the sale of Red|Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burns and Mrs. dipers_laughed at the storfes of the TUIIKEYS LAY THREE LITTERS |plack sea and_ Adriatte ports. It Is | Formér Governor Samuel' W. Mc- "Cross - Christmas__seals. Parents are|Frank Nola at the Burn’s home. ltm\dlnnar speaker. They were good the nolsiest in the worid, accord- | Call, who it was feared for some urged to take advantage of this free | Frank Armstrong,’ who accompa- m brought smiles | Pouits Hatched Later Than. June Do fng to Kenneth L. Roberts in the Sat- | time might. enter the senatorial race | examination and advice. A state doc- | nied Mrs. Nola to the Burn’s home i the. h. Not Develop. for Thanksgiving urday Eveniog Post. Theré are only. fas an independent Republican, fail- |tor and nurse will be in charge. . |at-an early hour today, was also the Markets. two decent hotels in the yll«. and fed to file nomination papers. victim of the fiendish attack. His American ‘Traveler Awards Ralm- te Aeurdln’ to Thie a!ory. a lyndlau Is Always on Hand to Gath- or Them In. Iooking young man. His tortolse-shell S both. of -them front on_the big st The fight betweer: Governor. Chan- A7 AT ORT B injuries are of a serious nature, but glasses Dearly touched the paper as he CGPrepared by the the LA Bates Department | dock which forms the foreground and ning H. Cox, who seeks re-nomina- mo"c flm ON m ;:;’uucmnu say heswill liv Police scribbled . furiously, - While the other| jmating turkey hens be- the front yard for all Brindisl’s a tion and Attorney General J. Weshni and sheriff deputies instituted a reporters leaned hack and Iaughed the uns"t“: l“ w;" ¥, nesting plices and ties. Allen takes second place in the in- NEw mmm JoBs search for Frank Nola, 25, husband 45 Every cluun".t Brindist ‘seems { m. terest of the voters. Allen is cam- of one of the murdered women. ¥MWWN'°"’"-— ;| usually comimeiice laying ‘1n" from -a The last story was spun ouf ot geéa gréal’ 'ee‘k""o 10 da ttor The frst mating, | 00 @ d0g and all the doga come paigning on his acyi cjpyementy eip md, N, H, Aug: 30 (United, . Jength, and when ‘the end cdme ‘the [\, o' niing s giticient to tertllize att (1072 G front Ak pidaien patiing conpt offioale £ hirlwind campaigns are the | STEELE COUNTY FAIR OPENS speaker _bowgd :n nt down umld the eggs. of oufi litter, but the hens and bark_hoarsely at one another. The With the exceptxgg 14 ,the W‘ ardoriof the.day in New Hampshire FO AY PROGRAM TODAY ‘Toud ‘_VP"""- ordinarily mate three or four times be- water front fs lined with salocns and. | for secretary of stal be g5 the: primary elections: of Septem- é %li news?’ one of the report fore beginning tolay. AIl'tarkey hens, each saloon supports an orchestra Republican and Democranc £ gtes;q -ber 5th, draw pear. Many candidates tonna, @um BO-—A military e 0 not begin laying at the whl:g plays the sourest music ever ;for cvery office on the. ball are .ut for thé various state offices SFE fo: I staged by Co. F. and " . That's and in a flock of about ¥5 From \ .untl . two. land a furious campaign' is being|headquarters company, 136 Infantry D“Cd ‘Just_the jokes. di Y 1 it may be six weeks or more from the Toon €6 sal Sawit ¢ from waged.. and a free! radio school and radio- business.. I'm a joke syndicate, you time the first hen begins to lay untik [ 31000 0 saloon, bawling at one an- .| . Among the candidates for the|phone service are among the features see. I pass along all the good stories | ., ‘Jog” peging, Pullets usually com- other. . At two; o'clock :a- couple of ¥ Democratic - Gubernatorial nomina- | of thy ) e Steg] county fair which opens I hear, and that speaker certalnly told | \yence Jaying a little earlier than SEIZURH P‘LAN LOSES tion are John C, Hutchins of Strat-{here coqay} i some corkers.’ yearlings or older hens, say poultry |29 E:ypt. letting off & few blasts | ford and Albert W. Noone of Pet-| The fair will last fpm- days. Ef- from their whistles that almost jiggle ‘erboro, who were primary rivals for|forts have -been made to bring a “How do you do it?” the reporter g asked. the windows out of the hotels. Di- (Contmned from Page 1) the, same.otfice. toveral yaaRl: ag0 o e bilog, = an exhxbltmn drill. “Easy. 1 see a notice of a dinner réctly atterwdrd a mob of laborers | timent in the house taday by offer-‘gpc apror winning by a few votes in the newspapers. I find out who the | | iather and scream frantically at one | ing. an amendment to the Winslow ;1.4 ho defeated in. the elections. speakers are to be. If there is a'good | | another for an hour. At five o'clock | fuel distribution bill empowering the n 3o Freq H. Brown of Somerworth story teller among them I attend the | ¥ & Jaunch comes and gets.them and PI’ESIde_nt to ,ta!(e over the railroads a former Dartmouth athlete, is also 3 dioner. I know pretty nearly every | | | takes them, still screaiding and wav- and mines. This may be ruled out a_candidate for the Democratic nom- WRlTlNG SHO\TER I.ETTERS good story teller in town, from Job ing. their -hands, to their work down'|of order. . b Hedges to Patrick Francis Murpby. 2 e tire. river, Democrats in general oppose Seiz” | Arthur G. Whittemore of Dover| Washington, August 30, (Umted Once in a while & new one comes , s ; Then comés the milk dealer—a boy |ure. Among those. who favor . the .14 Wincor H: Goodnow of Keene |Press) _Ameflmm, are writing short- along. I spot him scon_enough. about. fifteen yéars old—with g flock | ‘“watchful waiting”. policy are Sen-|sook the Republican nomination for |ér letters, . In_a form letter I explain_to my. . of elxht goats.. The boy drags a tin ators Lenroot, Curtis, - LaFollette, | covernor, This, statement was confirmed to- 1] that I have access to the best \ 1 | pail at the end of a string, so that it.| Underwood and Rawson, A great deal of mterest has been |day by comparative figures made of Jokes in captivity. -Sooner H g Ny clatters interestipgly over. the stone | ... - - aroused by the eleventh hour candi- | the post office department upon the ery good joke passes Broadway and : pavement. The . goats have ehurch | u I o TV TR |dacies of former Governor Robert|weight of sthe average lctter that Forty-second street and gets into the bells attached to, their necks and their P. Bass of Peterboro and former |goes thrnugh the mail. hotel belt. That means that it gets fu- | { - hoofs on the stones sound like & troop O D! MINEDE | Congressman Raymond D., Stevens| Back in 1907, on the average that to.the. tolls ot m A O of cavalry horses. climbing the back: of Landaff, for. séats in the state [there were:40 pieces of first class can't escape i. 1 e stalrs of an apartment house.. The house of representativest - Bass, a|mail to every pound.’ ination. atténd five ! el Bronze Turkey Hen. boy drags his tin pan up and down (By United Press) progressive - Republican was one of | Now the same data shows that N in my form- letter I ‘advise s 25, A o .. | the. water front, followed closely by b ‘At the Argonaut ‘Gold ~Mines, | the:seven: governors who signed :the there are 45 pieces of first class prospéctive clients that I can furnish f sp in .the Unjtea. States De- | his troop of goats, until Some one [Jackson, California . (By = Robert eqnested Theo- | mail to every pound. This means that a weekly-or monthly joke service. To | pa ot Axrlmlm 5 leans out of & window and howls deafen- | Donald) -August 30—Picking . crews gelt’ the weight of the average letter is an inveterate diser-out in a gmall city | _The average number of eggs in the | ingly for milk, . Then the boy.shrieks ffought feverishly to dig out 43" en- lential : k less, and th efore shorter. 3y, service is & boon. . He ean't repeat | arst litter is about 18, .although. in | an acknowledgment ; of the order, | tomber comrades who are fered to o ‘ l the same jokes all the tiie and my | individual hens it may vary from 12 | squats down beside a goat and milks | have already perished cut,off by fire service enables him to refresh his sup- | to 30.' Hens that do not have to be set | her into his-battered pail 3 at the Argonaut gold mine. b ! é{ and achieve fame as & <Story | can be brokén up on becoming broody | -After the milk boy has passed on, | Early tomorrow it is estimated teller."—New York Times. and made to lay a second or & third | the cab drivers begin to gather, howl | the picks of the rescuers will break —— rs litter. . The number of eggs laid in the | Ing at one another and cracking theft | through the final wall between the Fine Steamship Launched. second litter averages about 12, and in | whips vociteroasly. Then.the steamer | mine and the Kennedy mine adjacent | §. The Californian, the t twin- | the third gbout 10, although there is | from Trieste comes.churning in, blow- fand the victims dead or alive will | f. Dramatlc Art séréw motorship buflt mc nqnlp- considerable variation in the egg pro- | Ing off steam and letting -off whistles; [ be reached. ped exclullvely tn the Ui duction af different hens. and with that, Brindisi really begins | = Seven hundred fect of rock and S%-93 110% 06, Bowih was recently launched at Cheam sog. turkey hens u:\;{ Bé fiade to to wake up for the day. < carth. separated the workers from the Large Faculty of Artllt Teachers Pg., and it will be followed at an ur or five litters; this-§# not g entombed miners yesterday. Early ? usually advissble, as poults hatched “Solvea “Sarvant” Problem. today, working in relays, they had 3 3 (‘:":B:::,E‘ B:;:f;"::fi;?f c.':fl 1 n June do not haye a chance The servant problem is still difficult; | cut away 400 feet of tunnell through pacngogue' ' fof ftie Thanksgiving and | but a Willesden engineer 18 makiig an | which the 43 men can bé brought. e Stephens, alstinguished Planist Qoristmas mhm and are mot suf- | effort to solve it He Is reported to | Fifty feet of solid granite must be o S tastramete—An subjects dre, 46T ft. over-all length, 69 ft.-8-in. mature by the following spring | have Jnvented & mechapleal maid-of- | plasted at the last minute. Red Cross! |- | b [ Con e rtitcates and Diplomas } beam, with g.draft of 28 ft. at & dead- | 1o be used asfreeders, A hen that be- all-work, which, dt-is. claimed, will be | Workers already - have completed | 3 Dormitory Accommodations Charles M. Holt welght tonnage of 11,000. The powet | ging laying in{the middle of Mareh will | &ble to perfors jail the.ordinary du-| preparations to receive the chtlms.[ William H. Penties Largest Recital Hall in Northwest i dsts of two six-cylin usually. finish’ laying her first litter ties of the -up-to-date. “domestic.” | The fire continuéd to rage prac-! Direétor of Music Fall Term on-; Sept. 4th Orstary-Drasiatic ngiue «arly in April, her second litter about | AmODg tlie accomplishments of this | yically unakated today, VeleoThess?, FAIRIOR. Fres : i the third week in May, depending up- mechanical servant-are said to be the on '-ht nimber of eggs she Iays and following: It can wash, dry and pol- the promptmess with which she s | ish household crockery and glass; peel capacity 15 1,400 tons, with-a reserve | proken up on becoming broody. g:tltoespo\;fl:hxeen: aflce hretad lng umn7mm|wux|nom had -2 R 35 con ; sl ver; scour pots am éruising range of 25,000 miles.—Popu- "nu“” t:::a;mo‘um t:;;tcmg pans; separatejmlk; - churn. butter; lar Mechanies Magazine. thels first litter often begin- laying | DSA% Water;, make. lce creami; - chop (A agaln i the fall, but poults hatched fruit and- vegetables; seed raisins; mix ? dough; vacuum.iclean floors; walls and at that time are of Httle value except Sardinla, one of the lsland posses-| f,: broflérs, as they require too ‘mich ceilivgs; clean and.polish boots and slons m‘y'fl “:. (:‘v: .mndl.; ‘care.. and attention .to carry. them shoes.—London Mail. Inkes ng. among -the. largest hrough the whater. Fall-hatched pal; Woild, Thess akes are being con- yin hatched. pul Galvanizing: ftructed. for- frfigation and hydroelec- it ; < gt Copper and brass may be coated “with ""-"W'" purposes.. At the. present | tie 1 poults hatched from thelr [metallfc £ic dg the Thlowing : ma the Sminipg ihfustry -of. this-is- | eggs do not develop into farge, strong :er nlce ety 1ind forms more than & quarter.of the | pirds as do poults from msture stock. onmetailic vessel, entire, Halan output, Zinc. alone is [rodn«d in the amount of 200,000 ‘'l monllt Thig 18 fons yeatly, ut bas.to be transport- | BEST FLOORS IN HEN HOUSE | point. and tne ed to other countries for manufactwre. | . & . ——— i are introduced.. ‘A With the, hydrolectric power.800n t | Disagreeable Condition. for Fowls Ig | DOIIDS: batlr wilk. suflice: to_prodyce 4 be available; it:is expected -that, in- Caused by Moisture Coming firm ;. gnd ;brillient. ¢ over the stead of the szinc. being exported and . to Surface. surfacé of the WOrk. - 3 then -imported .in the finished state, Ry reduced. fo the Fequisife fifteneds by this and various other. minmg products | The floor in any poultry house of- | POUNnNg the melted métal foto an iron can be manufactured m | fers many problems. A largé percent- mortar and. poanding i¢. with an fron lar Mechanlcs Magazin age of the molsture in a poultry house | Pestle until the solid-mass has been . comes about through the floor. The. granulated.- fov the . désired fineness.—~ molsture rises to the surface of the | Fopular Mechanics Magazine. ground and evaporates, in many in- stances causing a disagreeable con:- A{'“'n‘u"" gge. <t 7S W dition for the birds. The best floor | “f cannot” replfed ad to Old the paternl, and, mal in a poultry house is boilt with first a | Mr. Washington, “tell & 1e. I felled ¢ ents, who happen to live on opposite | 1ayer of gravel or ‘cinders, in fact any.| with my Httle hatehet: But,” he added, sides of the same open material that Bas large air [ with a_thriffiness: that helped make One day they “¢ame over from | spaces, then a Iayér of hollow block | him Virglnia’s richest men, “inasmuch Grandma_Blake's, . wi tile, next a very thin layer of cement. | as I did fell it, I should ltke to sell wera staying, unaccompanted. Ceclly. | A good practicll floor can be con- | the motion plcture rights to the fell- stil) somewhat strange to_Mer sur-{gtructed as follows: Six to eight | ing fucident, He titte roundings, résisted all efforts to se- | inches crushed rock, thien a layer of f Feller Needs & Friend”"—Life. move her yraps or to be. amused in tar paper and follow that with about gmently that | three inches of cement. EVERY motorist keiows that 51495 s lifle .« mg‘“by fof a Chandler. ' N % 3 Rl v - N Evén a brief comparison Oroves the do ¥ “I have, never séen a, CIDEKD tnm) Pow', quirements; nul\m%x #0 large ds - fid fl l es "_IOB is that was eqdaf to te’s re- to excite suspicion.” - Thousands of ren . ln ris, Lille, Cambtiy, | - Dous and ?Sifién’&“fixv;f’me& Ditaterans art cheaper oan e [ S0 XBLEB OF DECRAZED . The éitiart echusweness of its body ey i Sghe e oo, | . fivals the custoni-built product. Its , = Ch The Bai % ";;;e:;-'l.‘t.:m’:;t the miore. mportant | mxt::{n?m' iRl relceeflpzf o}f’n]nw:‘ .o mmgmze“ mfg_o: ry advantage fi‘f P durablhty, econdmy and ties .of: France. N s . Warren, Minn., asking-him to ment of child welfare was covered by [ Never feed your towls m na!n the relatives of William - Comm’. teefidance At the - who passed #way. A 7 on w::n:d fic:rm mm thorhing. Relatives -are: urged communicate: with Chief Bailey so ren: /. may The: ‘| believed that the fl!cemd my have had rélatives Berf ' ear]y hatched pullet is m! one shq;,bez{p to lay early’in the fall, gineers. when eggs are hlgh in’ prlce. i, “No, 'sir,” ehnrge of thé job. 0 about half way down fludh gq':- quired, we sfruck ofl.”—American glon Weekly. With proper care nnd e’ i ‘plenty of eggs. Remember that. ln,y B e 1 s ol 3 HARSON A. NORTHROP CO afw S v strial commigsio i H. A. Noflthrop’ Pres. 1t cats or rats bothered you last | With the Farm B year, plan. to outwit them this season. hel]p f?ml’ M“t‘lnw,Au f)fl!;:?ml;:mflfly : Rxe ple:w“ v!r“ l:ch-mulnltre nettm; 2:‘,":" cien bY ) MOTOR COMP o G “What makes you. think your boy Josh will be a good jazs performer?® “Because,” answered Farmer Corn- tossel, “he can stand most any KInd g e tin, émployed to help pay for quite a piece of netting. Sorkers: of & nolse without getting nervous,”