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& i ORE PROFIT IN | RECROSSING INTO GERMAN TERRITORY : | ————— SED¥e= “5 =F 4. SAYS SOEHREN | | Hettinger Cocnty? Farmer, Proves Value of Diversified | MY 1 i y Farming Al mh Zs —— AS € OS Mott, N, [D.. March 29.— Twelve hundred dollars profit from corn and hogs as compared to two hundred dol- lara profit from wheat, is the result | of last years work oa the John Soeh- ren farm northwest of Mott. M Soehren was the winner of the 192 Hettinger county 40 acre corn club contest and his methods of raising; corn may be of some interest to other Hettinger county corn growers. Mr. Soehren has raised white dent and white flint corn for many years. He makes the practice of selecting the seed in the fal before the frost. | The seed is hung in a corn crib drives! way to dry. Since cold weather in- jures the vitality and germination of | corn his seed corn is kept in a warm dry room upstairs in the house. Mr. S% Healthy Moth: : “i ~ Merry Children Happy Home maintain a happy home the housewife must keep ‘in good health. Herduties are many and various, and it seems as other member of the family depended very much/on her. ere is my hat?” cries the boy. é “What did‘you do with my coat?” asks the daughter. “IT can’t find any handkerchiefs,” yells the husband. Thee housewife is usually the advisor and general manager of the family. : Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetatile Compound neips women to maintain a happy home by keeping them in good health. Bremington. Til.—“‘I have taken six Dp: So! Dakota.—“ I-would have bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Paine and cramps every month Vegetable Compound and it hasdone until Icould hardly stand it and could mea wonderful sight of good. Iwas not do my work at all at that time and never very Strong and female trouble kept me weak so that I had no interest for my housework. I had such a back- ache I could not cook a meal or clean upa room without raging with pain. I would rub my back with alcohol and it would. ease for a few hours, but after Ihad taken three bottles of Vegetable Compound m: es began to gradually leave me. ow I am as strong and id (ee if eve often had to goto bed. I went toa physician, but he did not do me much; good and said I would have to have an operation. I read about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in the newspaper and thought I would give ita trial. Now I feel lots better and don’t have to give up and go to bed, and can do all my work. You-may use these facts asa testimonial, and I will These are the first photographs to be received in this coun- try of the advance of French and British troops across the Rhine, afler the Germans had rejected ‘the allies’ reparations demands. Soehren does not grade his seed corn. but the tips and butts are shelled off. However, a germination test is made; ~~~~~~~~~~~. of every ear from which seed is sown. y | The ground on which last year's; corn was grown was entirely cleared | | of thistles and the thistles burned.’ i It is believed that this work greatly | reduces the possibility of the work which the cut-worms may do. ‘The seed bed was spring plowed! woe six inches deep, and one section of a) ug - harrow following the plow, thereby | Baby Gloria’s Father Losing | conserving all the moisture possible. | Mind in Deathhouse | the ground was harrowed again be-{ { fore planting. Corn planting began, Seer eae on May 11, and wag planted to a depth | By Whit Hadley. 1 of three inches. Forty acres of the) Ossining, N. ¥.. March 29-—Vale,| field was blind plowed, while tne re-} emaciated, half-blind, verging on in-: ae Te eee eoaads ne | sanity 1s James O'Dell, who murdered | corn was well taken care of during | the man who mee wronged his wees the summer as it was cultivated three | He Is in the Sing Sing death house. | times. | The wife, Pearl O'Dell, is in Auburn Mr. Soehren’s corn yielded around| prison, serving a 20-year sentence 30 bushels per acre, and an enormous} for the same crime. Their baby girl, amount of feed was ae from! Gloria, shares the cell of her mother. the 100 acres raised. The feed was, fed as snapped corn. husked corn and| corn fodder. By having this large! amount of corn on hand the story of; the hogs profit needs no comment. j WOULD BE | U. S MARSHAL | Hillsboro, N. D. March 29.—Ole P.| Gaustad, who left Hillsboro for the Klondike, in the gold craze of 1898, visited here a few days ago, while en-; route to Washington, D. C., where he| will place his candidacy for United) States marshal of the Fourth district | of Alaska before President Harding. He is said to carry strong recom- mendations from ‘leading Republicans | of Alaska, besides many from the states. Le9n 88 ooneonee renee ELLION IN STOMACH ““Pape's Diapepsin’’ at once f REB 10-880 eee ends Indigestion and | Sour, Acid Stomach me od Lumps of undigested food cause pain. volt; if sick» gassy and upset, and what you just ate has fermented and turned sour; head dizzy and aches; belch gases and acids and eructate undigested foods—just take a tablet or two of Pape’s Diapepsin to help neutralize acidity and in five minutes | you wonder what became of the pain, i acidity, indigestion and distress. If your stomach doesn’t take care | of your liberal limit without rebel- | lion; it your food is a damage instead of a help, remember the quickést, surest, most harmless stomach ant- | acid is Pape’s Diapepsin, which costs So Mttle at drug tores. Destroyer One of natures most des- tructive elements, wind, has swept the country again and again. Behind it lies a trail of death, destruction and heavy financial loss, You can’t fight this fly- ing destroyer but you can ‘buy insurance that will les- ‘take a life. jnor for,a stay f. sentence. | {I believe, though, that I was put If your stomach is in a re-| Beet | Wind Storm—The };" ‘Ten thousand persons have petition- ed Governor Miller to commute Mrs. O'Dell’s sentence for the sake of her innocent child. O'Dell is to die in the electric chair Mon@ty, April 25 unless Governor Miller stays the execution or O'Dell is officially pronounced insane and transferred to Dannemora State Hos- pital. : The writer has just come from i second interview with O'Dell. He was faint feverish, clinging heavily to the steel bars. His Attitude, “Life and death belong to the cre- ative power of the universe,” he said, | “no man can give it; no man has a right to take it. Yet/I have helped 1 have not asked for mercy. I have not asked the gover- into this world to champion defensc-| less women from brute men. And that is what I did in the case of my wife, who was outraged and threat- ened and besmirched. “I hayen’t eaten for three days now,” ‘he continued. haven't slept jfor 60 hours. ~1-cannct eat and 1 cannot sleep because the pictures of my baby rises before me. Can’t you see her standing over there in that dark corner?” O'Dell was hysterical, almost fren- | zied. + “She is looking at me and she is saying: ‘Daddy, it is awfully dark land cold here. I want to grow up like other children, daddy. Can't mother and I go home, now? Don't | you hear her asking me that, mister?” Kneip’s Crime. “Jim,” I said, “tell me the truth— did you mean to kill that man Kneip?” “No,” he replied slowly, “I did not. I want to tell you about that. “Kneip attacked my wife when she was 14. He was 10 years older. Wo were in love and saving money for a home. So she told me. Then she told a relative who had a lawyer write to Kneip, threatening to prosecute him if he ever spoke to my wife again. We were ashamed to tell anyone else. “But Kneip kept on writing and stopping my wife on the strets. “Then we were married) Kneip left us alone for a long time; then he began to stop Pearl on the streets again. And so I planned to beat him Pp. “He didn't know me‘and I went to | the factory and told him I was an | officer of the law and to come with ;me. He came and I hand-cuffed him and took him to my father and moth- er and Pearl made a charge against him. I told him-I was going to take j him to jail and we started away in ; my car, Pear] was with us. | Insults Girl + | “On the way he called her a name land I stopped the car and tog him I was going to lick him. “We went into the woods and fought and he licked me. breaking my glasses and half blinding me. When he @id that Pearl came to help me. aS sen your losses appreciably. You have seen countless reports of the losses of oth- ers. Protect yourself. Here is the right place. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck, N. D. ; “Pape’s Cold Compound” \ Breaks any Cold in Few Hours | Instant relief! Don't stay stuffed- ‘up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A | dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken (every two hours until three doses are ‘taken usually breaks up any cold. | The very first dose opens up. clog- jged nostrils and the air passages of the head; stops nose *running; re lieves the headache, dullness, fever- ishness. “Pape’s Cold Compound” acts quick, sure, and costs only a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assist- | ance. tastes nice. contains no quinine —Insist upon Pape’s. The photo above shows the offic Dusseldorf. Below, British “Non-coms” at Dusseldorf receiving in- structions from a British Officer. \SHANLEY FIGHTS We were both crazy, and then he was killed.” | “To kill this man’ as I must do on| April 25, will be the hardest task of my life,” said Warden Lawes. “As atrocious as the crime was, this man is a gentle man. If the governor knew the facts about him and, his wife he would commute both sen+ tences.” y “Warden,” said O'Dell, “I don't want to live. I am tired out. 1 can't restore Kneip's life. But I want Pearl and the baby to go free soon.” “Have you heard, from her?” I asked, “Yes,” he said, “she’ writes me twice every) day, bnd I write her three times a day.” “That ig true,” remarked Warden Lawes. “His notes, however,” whis- pered the warden, “show that he is on the threshold of insanity. Jt is all worry for her, for Gloria, for their future.” TO HOLD SALE APRIL 7, 1921 Williston, N. D., March 29.—April 7. has been set as the date for the annual spring. livestock sale. to be held in this city. This sale will in- clude any purebred registered live- stock of any breed. FIND LIQUOR ’ IN BASEMENT ‘Devils Lake, N. D., March 29.—Pat | Creely, farmer, was, arrested. by coun- ty authorities, after they had found 24 cases of whisky hidden ina secret cellar of his farm house. Officers believe the whisky was left at his house by whisky runners, evidence in- dicating that two whisky runners, re* cently, arrested, had stopped: there. WILL HAVE... BOY’S CAMP Williston, N. D., aMrch 29.—Dates for the annual county farm boys’ encampment have been’ set. as. June 7, 8, 9 and 10. Every boy in the county is wel- comed from the age of 14 to 20. The public schools announce that: no ob- jection will be raised it fathers of the boys attend the camp. ; REVIVES OLD STYLES Paris, ‘March 29.—One French style shop announces on the 1850. period of costume—in the modest decolletage reaching almost to the throatline, aud extending straight across and expos- ing a bit of the shoulders, Other characteristics of this silhouette are.a very tight basque bodie, with full skirt exaggerated in both width and length. The skirt extends to a little above the ankle. ¢ WHY BIKE IS POPULAR Birmingham, Ala., March 29.—There has been much talk recently of the re- vived popularity of the bicycle. Jack, Horton, prohibition officer, has -arrest- ed two persons in two weeks for tran3- porting liquor on bji¢ycles. “If they haven't autos, they use bikes,” says Horton. CELLAR SAFE UNSAFE Huntington, W. Va., March 29.— ‘Bootleg evidence isn’t kept in the courthouse basement vault any more It wasn’t kept there before, for that matter. The evidence was booze when locked up but 100-proof Ohio River water when produced in court. Hamtramack, Mich., March 29.— Picture of C, . Haas, candidate for re-election as village president, thrown on movie sereen. Charles Zack hiss-' ed. Arrested as disorderly. Faced C. J!Haas in flesh justice of peace al- ial entry of French soldiers into FOR PLACE ON healthy as an’ thanks to Lyd J. Bloomington, Ill. MILL.CITY TEAM Tom Shanley, remembered’ as one of the stars of the Bismarck baseball club of four years ago; is making a -hard fight for a regular place on the Minneapolis» American Association baseball club, Shanley, now is being; played. at second. in exhibition games. | Another ployer fighting for the team) is Armstrong) who is placed at third) Bergheimer, regular shortstop or sec-| nd baseman;:has keen oyt ef the game | with injuries, and; it looks like a fight) between Shanley pand;Armstrong to/ hold a permanent berth);when Berg-, heimer recovers. i BURKE BRINGS _ LIBEL SUIT) Chicago, March: 29.—Damages of! $500,000 were sought in a libel. suit! begun today in cireuit covrt-by John! Burke, formerly treasurer of the Unit- ed States and at one. time governor! of North Dakota, and Louis M. Kar- dos against R. H. McMaster, a local broker. ney for Burke said, had reopened his offices: and is trying to regain the; business given Burke and Kardos and} had called their concern “a bucket shop.” AVERAGE FOR. HOGS IS HIGH Amidon N. D., March’ 29.—An aver-/ age of $85 per héad’ at the sale of| John Mehrer’s Duroc-Jersey sale near | this city was made. Eighteen gilts | were offered, only two selling for less | man $60 and six for more than $100; each. 4 | i t TOBACCO “No-To-Bac” has helped thousands to break the costly, nerveshattering tobacco habit. Whenever you have) a longing for a cigarette, cigar, pipe,| or ‘for a chew, just jPlace a harmless No-To-Bac tablet in your mouth in-| stead, to help relieve that: awful de- sire. Shortly the habit: may be com-! ptetely broken, and you are better off! mentally, physically, finafcially. It’s! So easy, so simple. Get a box. of No-| To-Bac and. if it_doesn’t release you! trom all craving ‘for tobacco in any, form, your druggist will refand your: money without question... © | »: Battery so. Paid $10 fine. i McMaster, Phillip B. Davis, attor=| { SHEAR OF f BATTERIES Built by the World’s Largest Electri¢ Service & Tire Co. : 215 Main Street woman and I give my answer with pleasure all letters I re- iia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound for my health.”— Mrs. A. courrsy, 610 W. Walnut St., rs. South Dakota. Thousands of women owe their health to Lydia E. Pinkhams ceive, and you may be sure I will praise your wonderful medicine.”— irs. ARTHUR J. KaDE, Box 71, Dante, egetable Compoun LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS, FARGO PLANS: . SALARIED BALL CLUB THIS YEAR Fargo, Mar: 29.—Baseball fans of Fargo will be treated to a brand of ball which Awill rivat with that-of the Northern League ball club which was supported by Fargo-Moorhead three years ago, if plans of the local post fof the American Legion now nearing completion, are:fully carried out. A rennin ; FREEZONE Corns Lift Off with Fingers Faerun Drop a little “Freezone” on an ach- ing corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. It-doesn’t hurt a bit. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the cal- luses, without a particle of pain, Bungalows Bungalows Am’ offering severa] right down: to date bungalows. one of six rooms and bath, garage-in basement. This one: is brand new. These bungalows will be sold on reasonable terms. ° Don’t delay if you want to buy a home. ‘J, H. HOLIHAN 1st Door East of Post Office Phone 745 Factory : high class organization of salaried players is the plan of the Legion and games will be’ played in Fargo throughout the baseball season. Per- mission has already been secured ‘to lay out a diamond at the fair grounds and work of erecting grandstand and bleachers will be started within aI short time. wemtoa = JOSEPH BRESLOW, Druszist WILL HOLD CONVENTION ~ Van Hook, March °9—The Young Peoples convention of the Harvey cir- cuit of the, Lutheran church will be held at Parshall April 1 to 3. FARMERS TRAPPERS ATTENTION DON’T SELL HIDES AND FURS ON THE PREVAILING MARKET Use them to.a good advantage instead of sacrificing them at the present low prices. Let us tan them into fur sets, robes, coats or leather. Send for free price list and tags. If‘*you prefer selling, we al- ways pay the highest market price. THE BISMARCK HIDE & FUR CO. BISMARCK, N. 0, worked out. \ purposes: Taxes on House ... Vacation Trip Christmas Present . Annual Overhauling of (If you have one) . .If this:is your total . deposit each month in our a similar deposit each month will work. of life. EO A Little Talk on Banking _ One of the cleverest and most careful businessmen of Bismarck, you would all agree in this if we should give you his name, told us recently of a plan which he had | He said, “You know that sometimes a fellow will find himself short of ready cash when insurance prem- iums come due or the taxes must be paid. Let me tell you what I did early last year. I estimated the total of the taxes, life and fire insurance and, certain other fixed charges for 1920 and then deposited in your savings de- partment one-twelfth of that total amount. Each month I made similar deposit and as a result had on hand during the year and at the close a sum sufficient to meet without any strain on other resources all expenditures for the purpose for which the fund was started.” We think that his idea is a good one. _ To illustrate: suppose for 1921 you are likely to re- quire or would wish to provide funds for the following fe. .. Life and Fire Insurance Birthday Present for Wife where it will draw interest compounded quarterly. Make It can \be varied, reduced or enlarged, to meet the requirements. of everyone, merchant, professional man, teacher, clerk, mechanic, men and women in every walk Try it for 1921 and thereafter. First National Bank Bismarck, North Dakota ETT Automobile saving department $66.66 and see how easily the plan