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LOYALTY WEEK ourth Celebration planned and managed by nits COUNCIL? DEFENSE Dakota IC. A. WORTHAM SHOWS DOLLETA adjoining the ON THE STREETS 2 2 Supremely magnificent palaces of amusement, presenting every phase of entertainment that will appeal to the masses. A fairyland of enchantment, a place where the grind of the work day can be forgotten, where a colorful hour of pleasure waits to refreshen the tired human. being. Not an objectionable feature to be encountered. on the show grounds. A carnivalistic revelation. Every: Morn, Noon and Nite This Week’ Go Slumming Through UND een _ CHINATOWN | * Fem f GROUND 4 ba ae Auditorium visit-THROUGH THE TRENCHES a weird and realistic reproduction of scenes “Over There” From tho Prcifie C Coast st MOTHER ALIVE 28 inches high A feature, wit » A. Worthi THE SMALLEST HUMAN forces, Baseball game. THURSDAY.-Our Birthday and, iD Home Guard Day “Morning -+/Patriotic meetings | am and addresses. Every Afternoon Every, Evening including Saturday Nite Official Daily Program C. A. Wortham Shows Open “Mary’s Ankle” at Auditorium Tractor and baby ‘Comeon Over’ Afternoon — Monster ‘patriotic | pageant,-ball game, baby and ba- i by food exhibition, “Pershing’s Red Cross-Elks Dance on Street | Crusaders,” Wortham Shows. ; TUESDAY—Red Cross Day | Address by Gov. Frazier and/| “Pershing’s Lieut. Hill of the Canadian forces, “Peyshing’s Crusaders” at Audi-| Miss Liberty. , torjum, :C;-A! Wortham Shows, Regd:CrosssElks dance on ‘street. WEDNESDAY-—Tractor Day Demonstratiqn of tractors, ba- | by and baby food exhibit, address | by Corp. Smith of Gen. Pershing’ S _“Pershing’s: Crusaders” | and Wortham Shows, Red Cross- | Elks dance on street. Evening— Evening — Wortham Shows, ' Cross-Elks dance, crowning of FRIDAY—Federal Labor’ Reserve Day Tractor exhibit, baby and Baby | food exhibit, address by “Corp. |' Smith, ball ‘game, Crusaders” and Wortham shows, Red Cross-Elks dance on street. SATURDAY—Council of Defense Day | game, Wortham Shows, shing’s Crusaders,” Red roe | Elks dance’on street, Crugaders,” “Re d Oe “Pershing’s demonstration, baby food exhibition, - ball “Per- an angry word. In joy SATURDAY EVENING LETTER By Justice J. E. Robinson sends kind looks and blessings after them, they turn and turn, looking back and bow; And still, as tears obstruct their sight ——) 1 They, lingering took a last adieu. fruitful and multiply and replenish the earth, and subdue it, and have do- minion over the fish of the sea and over the fowls of the air and every- thing that moveth upon the earth. He made the.animal, the vegetable and everything that moveth: on the earth or in the sea to increase and multiply from seed of its own kind. And the Lord planted a garden eastward in Eden and there he put Adam. And in that garden was a tree of life and a tree of knowledge of good and evil, And the Lord said unto Adam, Of every tree in the garden thou mayest freely eat, but of the tree of good and evil thou shalt not eat, for in the day that thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die. But to Mother Eve the serpent said: Ye shalt not surely die, and the Lord doth know that on the day that ye eat of the fruit of the tree of knowledge your eyes shall be open- ed and ye shall be as Gods, knowing good and evil. So Eve ate of the fruit, and when she saw that it was good food and it made one wise, she gave unto Adam and he did eat. And the eyes of them both were opened and they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves aprons. Then in the cool of the day, hearing the Lord walking in the garden, they hid them- selves, and the Lord said: Where art thou, Adam? Then Adam came from | his hiding and confessed that he had eaten of the tree of knowledge and that he was ashamed because he was naked.- Then unto Adam and.his wife did the Lord make coats of skin and clothed them. Then he said to them: Now you are well clothed’ with suits of fur. You are no longer infants. You have a knowledge of good and evil. You were not made to pass your time in sloth and idleness; so get Bismarck, N. D., June 29, 1918. There's a land that is fairer than day And by faith we may see it afar. The Right Rev. Bishop Wehrle of Bismarck, in a recent printed circu- jar, adverts to the old, old story of the fall of Adam and the origin of creation; but as I read the Scriptures and the books of nature, Adam never had a fall; no serpent ever led him into sin or in any way reversed or undid the will and purpose of the Cre- ator. Adam did not leave a curse to his posterity. He did not bring sin, sickness or death into the world. Sickness and death is the lot of allt animal and vegetable life,“ regardless of any sin. All such life has a be- ginning and an end. It was never made to be eternal. At the age of 130 years Adam be- gat a son in his own likeness and call- ed his name Stah and Seth, begat Enos. In the gospel of St. Luke is given the pedigree of Joseph, the hus- band of Mary, Mother of Jesus Christ. The pedigree of Joseph is traced back to Adam with the conclusion that Enos was the son of Seth, who was the son of Adam, who was the son of God., And now as we are all the . lineal descendants of Adam, who was the son of God, it‘must be that we are all the sons or daughters of God. According to Scripture narrative— the traditions as handed down by Adam ‘and his descendants—in the beginning whe the earth was well} - prepared God made man in his own| right out of the garden and replenish image after his own likeness, male|the earth. Make yourselves good and female created He them; and God| homes and build cities. He did not blessed them and said unto them, Be'scold his big infants or say to them happiness over $00 years and had many sons and daughters. At several times when the*Lord spoke to Adam there were no stenographers, no written language, no spoken lan- guage save a few simple words. Adam was the only reporter and he never learned to read or write. Hence,. the story must be read in the light of reason, science and common sense. God is just and consistent. He- did put to the mouth of Adam good and eating it, or curse.the earth for pro- ducing it. He did not make Adam and Eve to live in a little garden or to pass their time in nakedness or ignorance, sloth and idlenes: He made them*to-do just as they did, and |to partake of the tree of knowledge, to learn to clothe themselves and to cultivate and replenish the earth and to live in comfort and happiness. As Scripture and science teaches us, Adam, our great ancestor, who was the son of God, did not tell or nor is it all told in the Bible, For as the Lord made our sun and the worlds and planets which revolve around it, He made billions of other suns, which are called stars, and the worlds that circle around each star placed on those worlds. great immensity of space he set- the {suns and worlds at proper distances apart and made them subject to the same laws of motion and gravitation. He made them, each and all, in the form of a globe or sphere. To produce the change of seasons He made each world to circle ground | its $un; and to produce morning and! of night and day, He made world to rotate so as to turn con- THE STORE WITH OVER 1,000 GARMENTS | comprehend all there was of creation}! and pride they | of its: sun. get up and go; and as the good Lord: Adam and Eve lived in health and; thes tempting fruit and then curse him for | i and the Adams and Eves whom hej and worlds, but it ts certain that he And in the’ evening, or short alternating periods | inhabited each |and Bye, tinuously a different side to, the light ation, a To prevent any world from falling into, or flying away from its sun, the Lord ordained the great- esi of all laws, which is, that the radius vector of every world must pass over equal aréas in equal times. ‘The radius ‘vector of a world or plan-! et is a line drawn from it to its sun. The nearer a planet gets to its sun, the faster it must .move to counter- balance the force ‘of attraction or gravitation, The same law governs all the worlds and’ planet volve' arouhd the billions tof e stars or suns. The number“thus/far discovered. are only some twenty mil- lions, but ‘they are ‘in a comparative- ly small part of the great immensity of space. And though we see not the worlds that circle other suns, the a aJogies of reason aggure us tha sun was made in .vain and that eac! sun is the center of a solar system of inhabited worlds, To a person looking from a world which circles around the nearest star, our sun ap- | Pears as his star ‘does to us. He cannot see our earth, but how insane it were for him to conclude that hi universe that has inhabited wor! circling around ft. Our sun is more than a million it is smaller thanvan average As the stars do vary { d #6 do the intellectual, scientific and moral , developments of their people. We know not how long the Creator took to make the “heavens and the suns took billions of years, and he work by adapting meats to not by mere flats, sfon to do anything, in haste, or to do anything and of it, He did no repenting or cursing, .He had no iim jitations of time or space, as these are | without beginning dnd without end, On each world, a4 on the earth, man was the last of Creation. Kach | world has Sts own A its animal and veget kingdoms, {ts varying wtories of ( t Hid the onde, -|Tays of the enn /ets more delignttal thar \ distance to any of them is 20) , enormons that \ the jepeed of Vightning a [And hy faith we may see St afar, ‘ 1 He had no oces- { nature and of nature’s laws. While the light of the sun comes to the earth in eight minutes, the rays of the nearest star are abow: four years in coming to the earts. There is a land that is fairer cham It is decked and adorned a3 4 ‘or her husband. Ir Is th plaw Saturn, and it may well be siw real and true heaven of splrits. ae light that we look through « lange | telescope at Saturn, its rings and it | moons. Its distance from tae =m is about ten times that of the sett Its diameter 1s 75,000 sailes. § wea) eight moons and it is awerownded by! enormous, flat and wide fweuinaws | rings, which shade {te centeal and hottest part from the perpendicwlar | The rings are $A") 900 miles above the eanatorial on / central part of Gaturn. Gach a iwelid | and luminous shade above and aroma | the hot zone of or earth would mag | it a Paradise. Certain i te that 6 heaven of a departed spirit mast te | on some planet within the solar ars | OT it minst he in areary, empty | ‘The one or the other is inev- | able. In other eolar systems there) May he other heavens aud other plan Kalan poor departed apirit jong and dreary | Weil might journey Of aevéerai years, We Pray to he saved from anch a dente | ney and from a lodgement In sony | apace. ‘There in a land that te falrer than day, | SHOE FITTERS MAIN STREET nut | 1 would make for a) wong at the} i 4 { Johnson’s Popular Priced Store Visit Our 5 Day Carnival Sale | can replate it. Auditorium ONE Night Only Direet from The Bijou Theatre, New York City MONDAY JULY Ist *CleaL pisppy™ By MAY TULLY PRICES— Curtain, 8:30. 0c “it's worth going miles.to see. ‘Fair and Warmer’.”—New York Globe. $1.00 $1.50—PRICES Tickets on Sale at: Knowles Food wasted is food lost and no (Continued on Page Three) Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. T "THE STORE WITH OVER 1,000 GARMENTS \