The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 23, 1917, Page 4

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MONDAY, APRIL 23,1917. THE TRIBUNE @atered at the Pestoffion ra ts Becved Case Mattes ISSUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Quily, by mail or carrier, per month ..,..... seve. © 60 Daily, by mail, one year in North Dakota .....6 ssssssoe 4.00 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Memphis, Vicksburg and the opening; of the Mississippi river. | Germany today has not enlisted as| many men in proportion as the south. | |She probably still has over a million! reserves. Her territory is almost un- touched by the invader. She has three allies. | With Austria, her mid-European ter- |ritory is probably the best organized | STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, A. C. Townley, A Socialist REGISTRATION, BLANK do solemnly ewear (or affirm) that my sume and signature as eigaed below be my tree same and cignaterny¥ 1 [Tabloid His tory Lincoln's election in 1860 was the signal for South Carolina’s legisla- |ture to adopt a secession ordinance on Dec. 20, 1860, which was followed in January by Mississippi, Florida, Alabama and Georgia, and later iby of United States| Srbecccccccccccecccccocceccococccccooccococoocooooo$) cut the Memphis-Charleston railway, defeated the Confederates at Shiloh, Tenn. At the close of April Union navy and army forces under Farra- gut and Beauregard captured iNew Or- Jeans. Successive Confederate victories in aoe De a vent 6.00 EI Tg eel a ea Esra geen ed juest by the altesting office Louisiana, Texas, Virginia, Arkansas, one y oe D : s ri i | igned it, it it ET - — and it was signed at my req 7 Jr. ouisiana, F 1" | , a Dally, by mail outside of world and she is rich in coal and) hare not reer tigned it, it & decanse.. es eae alates Pele a ke papa Mee matolGe ga ePennessee: Virginia, over successive Union com- North Dakota, three months. 1.60/!7on. My age ins¥B..yoars and oecepation...-Searcmntt. 4 Rativity ace or Greve) Whar Bor we |” President Buchanan’s vacillation,|mander, brought the southern armies County, North Dakota; (off city oF towa) at Nom, ne in contrast with the vigorous action |across Maryland and into Pennsylva- Daily, by mail in North Dakota three months . « 1.25 Weekly, by mail, per year - 1,60 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation THE STATS OLDEST NEWSPAPER for 24 hours ending at noon, April 23: Temperature at 7:00 a. m. « Temperature at noon Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday . ‘Lowest last night .. Precipitation .... Highest wind veloci For North Dakota: Unsettled weather tonight and Tuesday; prob- ably rain in south portion; rain or snow in north portion; colder Tues- WEATHER REPORT | lieve that their cause is just, although | Forecast. man's fight” was widespread in the Her armies are not outnumbered in a ratio greater than two to one. Her communications re almost Yperfect and she has the inside lines and} “short haul” between all the fighting points. | There is every reason to believe that the vast majority of Germans be- the world has condemned it. The/| world had rendered its verdict against | the confederacy, but its people be-} lieved they were right. ! There may be discontent among the | German poor but for three years be-| fore Appomatox the sentiment that | this is a “rich man's war and a poor confederacy. Probably the wiser Germans know that their fight is hopeless. ‘But that | does not mean that they are ready toj{ Top. testimosy whereof I sign my name two times. day of... none NSE There has been several inquries re- cently as to the politics of A. C. Townley, president pf the North Da- kota Nonpartisan league, and also ap- parent head of the national league, now in process of incubation. To fix Mr. Townle: political sta- tus, The Tribune, through the cour- t of the Minneapolis Journal, pub- lishes a facsimile of his registration blank. Probably thi Mr. Townley's no news to Undoubi- convey ociates. Subscribed and sworn to before me this AL. =-+ Assessor in and Ld 4 I! addres... Reach. party; that J bave reiided in this state for one year immediately preceding this ole™i0. {Ta Hh ediy he has never concealed the fact from his coworkers that he is a So- cialist. Whether he ever told the North Dakota farmers that he was a pronounced Socialist records do not reveal. Under Norta Dakota laws a man st declare his politics when he is registered by the assessor. The Tribune me prints a re- production of this istration blan so that the farmers may not be mis- lead as to Mr. Townley’s polites. In many quarters it is believed that he is a Republican, Probably Mr. Townley has changed since this declaration was made. nyway if The Tribune is in error its columns are open to Mr. Townley or any league member who desires to enlighten its readers as to the present political status of this gen- tleman, since he entered tae realms| ; of political autocracy. tried. | becility was in his favor. Perhaps his condition of im ‘The others | of southern leaders, allowed govern- ment property in the south, including arsenals and forts, to fall into the hands of the “Confederate States of America,” formed on February 4, at Montgomery, Ala., by representatives of the first seven seceding states. Lincoln in his inaugural declared he had no. intention of interfering with slavery, but that the seceding states must remain in the Union. Fort Sumter, in Charleston harbor, surrendered to the South Carolina state forces, after a long bombard- ment, on March 12, Congress called at first for only 75,000 men, but after the Union de- feat at Bull Run, which imperiled Washington, the number was increas- }ed to 500,000. By the end of 1861 the North had 000 men in arms, the South, 350,- 000. On Jan. 1, 1863, Lincoln freed all slaves. Great peace meetings this year nia, where, on July 1-3, 1863, Gen. (Meade defeated Gen. Lee, rebel com- mander, in the battle of Gettysburg. This was the turning point of the war. A few days after Gettysburg, the Confederates, forced by famine, sur- rendered Vicksburg, Miss. and the Union got control of Mississippi riv- er, Grant’s western victories gave him supreme command of the army. He turned the West over to Sherman, in March 1864, and ‘led the Union armies before Richmond, Va., Con- federate capital. Sherman marched from Atlanta to the sea, starting Nov. 15, 1864, and turning north. Rich- mond was abandoned on April 2, 1865, and on April 9 Lee surrendered his main Confederate army to Grant at Appomattox,. which _ virtually ended the Rebellion. On May 4 the Confed- erate forces in Alabama surrendered, and on May 26 the last confederates gave up in Texas, On April 14,1865, President Lin- coln was shot by the assassin,, Booth. it, accompanied by Sewell and Dow. SS tol tn rts te sj pending it in a tub or datrel of « _ The chances are your irden, t remained idle, day in south and west portions. ; ! ‘Lowest | quit. All the intelligent people of the | were tried and sent to the peniten-| Wi Ah th Edi ‘i caused widespread disaffection with ‘ : ee TemoeraHr|souin knew after Gettyaburg_ that PY, Where ater a rene or oo Fan ith the Editors [ete aera Sa oa ea teen ee uae ‘a’ 36 ia ea aU an wa aased, o ecoming n 5 8, Williston ie ars ts all wae to use +a insane. i against drafting of men for service.|new type Monitor, defeategithe iron- Grand Forks phrase that they themselves employ-; Mr. Roosevelt did not know western | , . i A - By the end of 1863, however, the/clad Confederate Manassas in Hamp- Pierre .... ed, but they set their teeth and went | life then as he does today, for we; OUR EXPENSIVE LEGISLATURE. lic sentiment will permit Minnesota | North. had 975,000 men in the field,/ton Roads. St. Paul he bloody finis! feel] satisfied were such a thing to} (Minneapolis Journal.) to lag behind the other progressive] the South, 470,000. The total number of men engaged Winnipeg | to tne bloody finish, happen now he would give each a _Our twenty-four-miltion dolalr Leg: | States much longer in administrative | after Bull Run, no decisive hattle|was: Union, 2,666,999; Confederate. Helena Germany is not going to surrender. | fey strokes with his pony whip and | ‘slaiure bas closed its books and dis: | resrms. Pann. was fought till April 6 and 7, 1862,|about 500,000, Losses: Union, 359,- Chicago .....++ Rather she is probably ready tollet them go, We all change with the! face Be Tee cddecoseare—only Bes beneath eet Fiittent pee when Gen. Grant, moving south to|528; Confederate, 95,000. Swift, Current .. 26 fight a new and greater Wilderness | times. | estes sete 5 s y. ‘ i a es i ‘4 | Le . q so. It has done good things and bad | ardice. The shortcomings of tne pres- ORRIS W. ROE aS campaign over the successive lines of | es sees ue Foley. | things; it has left good tiings and| ent law and the results it produces in| physical health and vigor of the na-|for the country’s defense and to in- eteorologist. | trenches back of the Rhine itself. bad things undone. It has appropri-|the triumph of demagoguery and the | tion. sure the perpetuity of the republic, apr eee We are not in for any “ni var" | {ated the people’s money not wisely, | decay of reasonable parties were pri-| (President Howard H. Gross of the|but to discipline our’ undisciplined THEY'LL HAVE TO HURRY. = | : ae Len beat caca | / but too well. It has loafed through|vately admitted by most of the Leg-|Universal “Military Training league] youth, instil into their minds and x nor a banker's war, nor a training | orns ‘ Unless those German autocrats get | oe ee ane! a ne e ; two-thirds of the session and worked fislators, but the demagogues succeed-|put the case tersely and well when| breasts a higher, sense of duty and f very busy, right off, their last des-|C2™p war. Old Glory will wave vic-{ awit des feverishly, and often blunderingly the |ed in frightening enough of them out | testifying recently before the senate| give them physical’ culture to check ‘ perate means, “unrestricted” subma-|toTious in the end but like all vic-| rest of the time, It has suffered from | of meddling with the sacred primary sub-committee on military affairs. We] the growing physical decline of the é i Jin surely fail, Every| ‘rious battle flags, every stitch of Proper Shoes That Fit Feet Are | lack of leadership and lack of party | system to defeat every measure offer- | know, he said, that if the payment of | nation. rine warfare, will surely fail, [very i silk Laay ites coiled vith | the ‘blocai | . responsibility. ed. ‘They were “afraid of the cars.”|taxes were voluntary there would be With ww rests th _ day that passes clinches the impossi-| 5! Ye DE BONER: |W! 8 Oe Preventive The House especially has been the|and preferred to take no chances of|no hope of public revenue, that. if He congress no’ ; rests te OND eH bility of “starving England.” grime, sweat and grease which are} OREESS | victim of its own unwieldy size, and|disaster to their personal fortunes.| jury service were voluntary the sys- tunity and the duty to give the coun- Dider present vate ef interforence| te essence of.that most elemental of| | Corns, result from abuse of thefot the ansiety to make | re-election | Tae Ernest ‘Lundeen joke law, the tem would be a failure. In the early| ‘'Y these incalculable benefits. vith uals tations, England is {all things—WAR. | feet. They are horny layers of s sure. There was a certain cohesion | presidential preference primary, Was | days of the republic a voluntary school = } with her importations, England is un | i caused by combined among the drys served for a}repealea but other reforms were post-!system was tried and it was a fail- Didn't Give Him the Chance. i { doubtedly short of food in considera- eau yt pressure and fric-{time to steady se, but once} poned for another biennium, ure, Schopenhauer, when staying in Ge i ble degree, but her people are not; The old war-cry “KAN! kill” is giv. | Hon: Loose, as iis prohibition amendimeent had pass-| In the matter of appropriations this! Mr. Gross reminded the committee|neva used to go every day to a table fy 4 yet down to hard pan. In 99 days, | IB way to a new one “Grow! grow!” | chats: ite feet pee | cee shi (dite Dees: ed ang parliament- ree SE eee ree tek hate wntle universal uiciog wore dhote at which now and then appeared HOES aowel i . v| ‘ a ary cha onic. a sin s re ie ntry against militar: the greater part of the season's home; And sie Ag asian sea ea just as likely to! ‘The prohibition amendment stands! that of 1915. The war emergency mea-|ism, protect it from foreign aggres: et coriueicrarie eat Once Lady crops will be available, which means ; ™4? " ay Brow 8. cause corns aSjout as the one at achievement of!sure accounts for a million of this.|sion and make for honorable peace, = | a | its - A ee see 5 i is 7 - . +] “Doctor,” said the host after she that submarines will do little starv- . tight shoes that|the Legislature, and its refusal to] but the chief increase is in the school |it would bring even greater moral and 3 i ing out for several months at least.| What to do with regard to fellows | sicKings , Press and — bind.; complicate the i passing stat-|aid appropriations, waich have come| physical benefits to the individual | 84 left, with a twinkle in his eye, vs - “he ‘who marry in order to avoid the| itockings that ‘crumple and roll into! utory prohibition. or by submitting| to be looked on:as a fine “pork bar-| and, through the individual, to the na-| “Actor, do you know who sat nert The estimate of steel merc aoa eens halle acter it ot | ridges are. #lso to blame at times.{any other constitutional amendment, | rel” for rural districts eager to eS-|tion. to you at the table today? It was Lady \ ship construction this year is 3,000,000 | feet me ee Wa fe tof ate person that wears comfortable | 6ve0 a suffrage sats, ere cape, Jocal taxation! : = ag “It teaches respect for authori- | Byron.” 5 Lens cebletiy= 1a Skeay, Realty cone et rid of them b fo: da afting begi shoes of soft, elastic and wel <On- | fj st Spportunt rt vote on Fen ie meninet the: House's determination to ty Je promotes: physical, and, {ily the deuce did. you. not tell } and the United States. The U. s.|8¢t™ them Before dralting e818. | ed jeather is not likely to be doth- | out sdisturbed by otzer| roll out an overflowing barrel, and seas: and. weifielianes, I are ernoald tavo lite te beer oe ae t aan a ‘ A ——— j = y , z . s sel fire! % - fw ” federal shipping board announces | ee nae ae fered with corn. The toe of the shoe | controversies. suceeded in establishing a precedent ates. higher erent? one T should have Mked to be rude to her.’ 4 4 that, by October, the U.S. will be] © pre's = uzzing about peace. — |should be broad and the shoe should |__ The outstanding failures of the Leg-| that may help succeeding Leislatures| teaches observation and prompt i Site what I feared,” sald the i turning out standardized wooden ships | Will be a ee unless the Allies give the toes free play. The shoc| islature were it Tefusal to Mager take to handle this question in a more) decision. It increases patriotism 0st. — ange. ‘ j j at the rate of 200,000 tons per month, | 24andon their determination to not; need not be ‘squaretoed {any broad legislation of moment look-| equitable and sagacious way. Mean-| and g regard for the rights of { i , Sven: confer tintit’ helt) eueniles: pubs | To: caresa. cornitho. leary: tissues ing to a better and more efficient or-| while we shall have the highest state} others. It breaks down caste, re- Don't Delay Helping Others. ? to add to her present tonnage and| id ielpitanaes lot the ohber skin aNould Be sottanca nization of the State government: | taxes on record. moves misconceptions and makes To do the right thing a little late, ) the 600,000 tons of interned German | "~ i | by ei a = . c nd its unwillingnéss to cure any of| ‘Jt should not be forgotten, how- i ——— | by soaking in hot water for a half; th ‘ hs ean. . for true democracy. It is the very |hag much the same result as if one did shipping. By 1918, there ought to be mies lhour or ce This softens the surfiee {the glaring defects in the primary el-jever. that the Legislature passed) antithesis of militarism. It will | Siena’ a : { so. s is 5 hee sy: i ois the wrong thing. A letter of sympa- over 5,000,000 tons to replace what| Scientist proclaims that the ball of the corn, which can then de sera | tne Taportant measures submitted serene capidertug ite dis. and seaming and virility to the | thy delayed several months, ease the submarines may have destroyed. | !§ We one ay and was suggested aera to.the level of the surround: | py the interim Efficienty Commission, | abilities, it did as well perhaps as Eatery pond oe fae country and ar- | very tittle to the recipient. An offer 1f we remember rightly, the German] to the first Hidren’ “by | cocoate raver cutee Gorn Wi ety ra | Made up largely of its own leaders,| could be expected, We see what universal training has|0f helpfulness coming when ‘your tocrats figured that England would| Thus do these science sharps rub our! a corn with a rusty ra-| were in one way or another rejected. Hi zie) i 5 friend has struggled thi autocrats figured that England woul pat aa |nor. The corn-is likely to become) The public domain’ bill, admittedly, Congress Has ‘Great Opportunity. done for democracies like France and ee ee rough: the worst A ‘be brought to her knees by the de-j * OMS, j tee d. Use an instrument care: | was crudely drawn, Its makers had Spokesman-Review. Selene Wen ee by semoe, of Re areeaiace Se ery cutie ry q my piuetion # haha fonnage monty: 0 al eee ee af the corn is anfaie labored under the handicap of the Au-| Congress has the opportunity and Tee lack of nt ana. ta Me curnerae sine fa pe a rie sea et Hy ‘ fot only is that rate not being main- ————f) | et should be treated with /ditor's constitutional Guties as Land} the high privilege of rendering the) - ‘ . ¥ plece of helprul- t tained ut the time is close at hand| | READERS’ COLUMN =| |# cold water application for a few | Commissioner. greatest service to America and the |t@fd¥ adoption of it. Unless we close} ness as completely as if 1t had been ; when even stich destruction cannot | Q-—————————_—0 hours before removal of the corn. But no serious effort was made to| American people that has been given| OU" 0% senlnat the evidence ‘before | postponed for years. Learn to do the 1 Q L Mae ote : ALL CHANGE WITH Times, | his will relieve pain and congestion. | correct the defects, nor did the Legis-| by any congress since the civil war. of ei wile Gaited, sc wee need | right thing at the right time. - ; ave oN, impor ay effect upon t | it rman er ater top or the corn pas been|jature submit an amendment to the| If it will enact a universal training|° it !n the United States. Not alone war. is, without saying much! Medora, N. D., April 21, 1917. | 8¢t! away the part show be! Constitution that would have made|law that will have the approval of about Uncle Sam's ability to feed| Editor of Tribune: painted with a saturated solution of! possible a real public domain meas-| the general staff, of such generals as ®ngland in open, armed ietianceof Some changes have taken place in| myi@wile acid in collodion. This is|ure. Instead. tae bill became at the| Goethals and Wood and such public subiarines u Medora thie spring. Willlani | fain aed base of post com salve, ‘ The! last a bone of political contention and| men as Senator Chamberlain, Sena- if {3 ‘a 3 s iglih | acid softens ani lestroys the horny | personal contention, and so was beat-| tor Brady, Representative Kahn and | has given up the lease of the Rough | tissue. < : |en. The other efficiency bills were} Theodore Roosevelt, it will give the ie A 4 The pen, the plow and maybe the| Riders hotel, and moved to Sentinel | After the acid has been applied the| done to death in squabbles between} nation a new baptism of patriotism, bd ’ { Di qi carpenter's hammer are mightier than Butte, where he has purchased a pool corm should: be covered with narrow | the two Houses. inspire renewed reverence for democ- f all. strips of adhesive plaster. Shields of| Thus the work ef four years has|racy and free government, break i i i ilizati the sword, Er T. 12 Johnson, the owner, has leather, wool or felt should then bel come to naught, and the next Legis-| down growing class distinctions, dis- Pointers Given on Spading and Fertilization moved in from his farm and will man- Maced over the plaster to preventilature will have to start all over] cipline the rising generation in mor-| 6 seeeeroooooroor wren roo wooecewecsococooccrcnscosoocose4s ‘DON'T BE FOOLED. age the hotel. undue pressure. again—for it is unthinkable that pub-] als and mentality and build up the aor : 4 congressmen and probably|_,2 4 Watson has sold his livery | ! P ee Ny A Lalbiebpai : needs lime to ‘sweeten ‘it ‘and thus | : eenen ably | stable to S. M. Lebo, and his residence | : fe soil in the average backyard | make the plant food in the soil avail- E of American ‘citizens are de-|to William Rozel, and with his fam-| “ ’ ” is not _only lacking in plant food but | able. luding themselves with the idea that|ily has moved to New Salem, his old | YOu NEVER MISS THE WATER ALL THE WELL RUNS DRY has been packed until it is hard and} | Five bushels of lime will be all that | Germany is about “all in,” and that home. | unyielding. To make the soil suitable|the “sourest” of gardens—50x100 feet A ‘all’ the’ f@htins America will have to Earl Fimple has purchased the Hes: | - Stes : mene : for een produce requires careful!—needs. You can tell if your soil is Pe on 1 ied b: ser, eighty acres south of town, and | p a a entlon aig: ; sour by purchasing a nickel’s worth do will be carried on in bank parlors! jt js reported, will sink an artesion er shading’ deeply, being of blue litmus paper and experiment where huge batches of bonds will be} well ang start a strawberry farm. | y careful to push the spade down as | in several parts of the garden. Take sold. Fred Childs, formerly of Under-} far as Wha the: upper three | some moist soil and cover a piece of What basis is there for this talk of| YOO". but who was deputy sheriff hea es: 8 pet Pee le fine pane the paper. If it retains its blue hue ee collapse? here for two years, last past, has tak- Heegtene he Pnncta edacant ihe so is sweet; If it turns red get q s * en a homestead near Malta, (Montana. | & some lime. ‘ q Germany is feeling the pinch of|and will move his family there. Jubige: should. be! Broken up the Drainage of the land is import. > . hunger and will continue to draw her] Earl Harmon tas purchased the} peat aA ae Rp the siny ant. It should have sufficient fall 4 Delt until the next harvest. Germany | Phillips rooming house and will take| Siala oad rl ae r cel rh ves: the to drain off surplus water during ““ a! if ctisthatiiie fiauctal dificult possession shortly. Paced a be lets cannot a rain and yet not so steep that Is also having financial culties. The Tribune gives an account of; ote ree jemse! yee rough lumps. the soil be washed away. But the idea that hunger and bank-|“Terry’s Thiet” which brings things | i relia or rae le one is the] The surface should be nearly level ruptey mean the end of war is based|to mind of 31 years ago this month. | Ss x os tea pet It pi ishes both 80 the water will not stand in hollows. on nothing except hope and the desire| Mt. Roosevelt wrote an account of | a Lt oF an eked 6 manure is} Where the natural slope of the land this for the Century Magazine, where est when well rotted, and is. better! does not provide sufficient drainaj f © to shirk. itean be found on page oD May Aan when mixed with straw than with|ditches may be dug or a tile pati i The plight of Germany today is no-|ber 1888. I think this is the story sawdust. .. The straw will rot quicker | put in. . fF thing to compare with the condition| Which Mr. Roosevelt once told the} unddeeround tp obtain quick action) In my garden there was a low spot i of the southern confederacy in July,| Titer, “that it was written to be| aan ae ncever of well rotted in which the water would accumulate : 1863, The confederacy put up its most |"°" | iein'withinde.dnad takes |e hee ne Gtuwa out the plants cf : . y put up In April, 1886, three men named Fin ter can, ir T hadn't dug a deep hole right in : § terrific fight after that date, and for peso, Peqenbach and Burnstad were 7M you neve or oan get wood | the middle of it and filled it to within 18 months, after all hope of victory cating aroua the saloons of Medo- i ice ered vou ran rh ore Paha the surface with big clink- q " : 2 v0, Si inde J ers, bricks, etc. which vides al 4 was gone, held its enemies at bay.| 4 e latter two, simple minded. provides an * ‘There is no reason to believe that the and euieeh race 4 on aes will ir tie Soehasbied. at bigest at abed ht i ver 50 years of} : vhat we} pat ae gin to le Germans have any less grit or determ-| would call an tiibochie: ands w Bat wer better to get your fertilizer (if you! frost is out of the oround, an } ination. One Sunday evening when walking | can’ & a ane manure) rere tho ground well dried. At the time the south, with only|Rear the Cow Boy print shop we saw| SE ged have ey, Doan amt | neon, 4 tolls, especially, should = 5,900,000 white ulation, had en-|i@tigan, who was under the influ-| of eps ibe haves clay, loam, sandy, | never he spaded while wet, 000, popt , M-lence of “red eye” with a rifle, in| and ask his advice regarding fertiliz-} To determine when heavy clay soil , listed 600,000 men, nearly one out of|hand, shooting into the print shop. vise bably th is ready for the spade, a handful of every eight. At the front she was| William Coleman, the father-in-law of| asealal” Pe tae isd ie com-jearth should be collected from the outnumbered three or four to one. She| Johnny Goodhall, who liver near by.| if broadcast and to rake ‘cin tighely, ae seaieis fingers tightly closed Fu 1S was enmeshed in a blockade com- einen: na atid 7 ate and calcd ei NOT EXOUGH reserving a little to use in the hills | is dry aaah tr aiipateee en pared to which the present blockade] sited: Dp g. Finnigan re-| WATER THERE and rows as you sow or transplant. fall apart: when the: eshte wees ~ of Germany is a sieve. “If you dare to come near, I will To Put OUT 4 eae rie, itd pants will have| ‘Don't burn or throw away any of y She had scarcely any industrial or-| shoot you,” but Coleman did not stop. CIGARET ! ese aive tHE! u ai sane at Meh tho woods, leaves, straw, grass upon ~ ganization—hardly any iron and no|@nd as Finnigan was very drunk we| roots will find Sete Spenser tor the plot. Spade it under, thus sup- ; ? really expected that he might take a/ : 5 jem) plying the soll with humus, is : 1H road: fi nd they. b i . Sod eee ietsrat is were few and) shot at Coleman. But the latter went | : throu h th ates Bre cree te ane Cae. MH ‘wore out rapidly with no facilities for|up to Finnigan and forcibly took the Nitsa te SF San fertill Remember that if you use commer- repair or replacement. There was alrifie—and: gave several kicks under a Ta Sumbiaitie ve noe vane clal fertilizer alone you must add slave population of 3,000,000 to be| Finnigan's coat tail. hiefly for foliage. plant, 8 used} humus, leaves, grass, sod, etc. to ‘After this th a chiefly for lage plants and whore} supply the hi Food rit 1 is the sheriff appeared, ar- umus, which is already kept quiet. lots appeared early | ested Finnigan, and there being no Siimuteate for] ruubucb, ‘eetaragae | resent In. stable: manure fm 1863. Food was scarce and poor. | jail, locked him in a freight car.| stimulant ri thubarb, asparagus, - é “Admittedly Ddankrupt, her paper ee the night Finnigan removed 7 Linata wears (water in which sta eae toon + money was worthless and supplies | an ent vee and left town in com- ble manure hasbeen soaked) may iho These artic rare ‘ pany with the two men mentioned. “thi icles are valuable ‘Were taken for the army without pre-| Going down the river until they came used in much the same fashion as for use in the’ future if you e of payment in any kind of cur-jto the Roosevelt ranch, they took the pirate oe a, wen tate 8 garden new a ) a of ‘Doat for a trip farther down. Roose- cloth bag with fresh manure and sus- ter \ i"

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