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‘ i sf PHE BISMARCK. TRIBUNE Reinet ot estore ee De SE PAINE, B BURNS ‘AND TE eit te Fifth Ave, Bldg. ted‘Preas is exclusively entitled to ; the: tee use ar i all news- credited to it or not o' ieee ie This paver aad: Gis? the Jocal news <r Isights of Publication < special dispatches hareia’ are also‘ Teserved. _ ME ER AUDIT BOREAU OF CIRCULATION “SUBSCRIPTION RATES PALABLE IN MOAN Qnne ig STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) > “ZYXT” An_ English dictionary now being contpletea | was started before the American Civil War. . It’ was sponsoréd by Archbishop Trench in an address before the British -Philological Society. This dictionary, in many volumes, is the: largest ever compiled. Its makers ‘s@irched -all known books printed before 1500. ‘The total: number of books combed for words exceeds 100,000. . Word) specialists who have contributed to the : work, many. of them Americans, number more than 1300. Twenty-one columng, are devoted to the one word “get.” : Well, that ‘seems about. the most important word in the language to many persons! : The last Word i in the dictionary is “zyxt,” which is old Kentish for “thou seest.” Some persons ‘think it most desirable ta have the last word. Let them have this one. . Ne one else would have any nse for it) ; Do you remember when everybody condemned | dandelions as.a pest?” BANK ROBBERS The American Bankers’ Association is alarmed because the banks:in the United States lost. $800,- 000 during the tast six weeks, through burglaries and hold-ups. This is said 'to-be'“by’ far’ the largest sam for} any similar period in the history’ of the A, B. A. ie Yet, haven’t.the Banks gotten off easily? * Almost every: Saturday, payroll tobberies and other thefts, the’country over, must total @ figure that ‘riskes"9900;000" took like a peck of German marks. " Time was, within ‘the’ Giiecrory of ‘manyof an, when. banks. were. considered the special meat 0 ‘burglars. Bank.loot now totals big, but’ portion to other ‘obberies ’ ‘is: relatively’ that it discloses a. changed strategy, @ shifting in the attack ,by underworld crooks on organized wealth. : wh There is a lesson in this for business conceths accustomed to take uncessary chances by lugging | huge’ payrolls through city streets: ' Pay wages and salaries by checks. There i§ another lesson. It’s ‘for crooks,’ ‘both amateur and professional. During the six months in which'257 bank hold-tps and burglaries ‘netted $800,000 plunder,’ 257% ‘arrests were ‘nade, and of this number 122 have _ rhea The’ electric chair, or poverty get every's fin the long run., Allan _ Pinkerton said that a hat centary,2 ago. It holds true today. “Many a farmer thigyear has‘been hit an awful blow by the ‘staff of life, wheat. NAPOLEON_TRAGEDY By Dr. William. E. Barton. i ‘The world has been thinking and talking much of late about Napoleon. ‘The centennary of his death has brought afresh to the minds of men|: ‘the glory and ‘the pathos’ of his ‘career. Uhfor- tunately, we have had recent cause to remember oho, and the events that followed; and ‘we ve some reason to fear that the mistakes of the Congress of Vienna did ‘ not die with that distin- ished body,’ but havé found some’ measure of ‘repetition i ‘in the Conference at’ Versailles. _Napoleof-compels our admiration. Our cén-; demunation of his selfishness and his willingness to deluge the world with blood is'tempered by our} |, Seniline and permissible admiration for his domi- * nant will, which rallied vast hosts of men, willing ; t his word.: e There’ are three kinds of peoplé in this world., - Mostimen say there are two, but there are really three. They are the people who Have-a purpose to do wrong and the people who have a purpose at all: The third is’ the one despicable class, and it is _ Mot’smiall. You can admire ‘a bad man who has a, | okie @ ‘clean plan, and’ who resolutely | sets out to attain his end, far’ more than you can’ strong admire an amiablé ponentity, who: Tas not person: ality ‘enough ¢o think out a plan nor will enough, ‘to carry it out. Napoleon was 2 bad man, and he went the way , of men who carry their. plans to ‘where they be- _ come a menace to the world. There is a mag new: Bidg.| and by this time he'iiust know it, bry patient old Job. haingman’s noose, prison | ee to do right, and ‘the people who “have no , Plirpose| with interest all that is being printed in German about Napoleon. Mr. William Hohensollern, late of Germany, days. _ His tragedy is the tragedy of Napoleon, But think of the ‘heroic reat of Napoleon, and the use of thas | ty will, had ed.toward worthier ends.’ Between him and his it conquest of Italy lie the ‘Alps. ‘Tints 2 RO “There shall be no Alpe!” ficrenty faith that removes mountains, ” f : No doubt; the first ultimate consumer was i : It is easy to "find saople who'll lend you money —if you don’t need it. wet "Speaking. of ‘a “living wage, < at call ‘aaa on what we mean by ‘living. 0 eee heen esis BY + pitting the cool i in Goolidge. Ais wat /There are then’ too: busy’ ae tines to. boast of what they, are going to do. oS And: sometimes when‘ ‘you cast your. ‘ae upon the waters, ‘it’ ‘comes back buttered. Prine ‘Alfonso of. Spain isa how the first/buster bawls him Are the happiest children at. Meridean, ,Wis., bic h a cyclone blew down: the school u pemee? % “Ladies; do ‘you know ‘snyfhing have. a rain right after washing thé windows? to “Heroic deeds are never as good as warranty deeds when it comes to borrowing money on them. "The Girl Next Door says she’s waiting for some genius to invent a lawn swing that will not creak. Sometimes it “requires. 50 cents worth of a clerk’s time to sell a woman 20 cents worth of goods. “Stock Saiteage has ‘ another tio ‘share day.” ” Spring is here ‘and the fish are bitting again. : “The nation is beginning to realize that the} phrase , “‘cloded. shop” may mean one of tyo things. the’ Gin "Next ior says one’of thé’ mist use- Hess things in the orld i ipa park, bench under a b ight qght. 2 ‘chagrin’-that’ his. 6ffice while high sounding in title is as potent in ars as an enipty clam shell. ~ qunsed in the presp of the day. Yi FIGHTING WINDMILLS 1,451; Is it now about time that the thheatara were in- friendly way that their cbnatant and rej tious: propaganda against | Sunday blue laws ing an insufferable bore? ‘We th ‘80. The average’ man is not above enjoyment of ‘good scrap,-but ‘the averagé man’ also” tires quickly of the fellow who is always beating up| an imaginary’ enemy with his thouth. In short, | is no recogni zed campaign in behalf of blue| laws. There is only @ campaign against them, a campaign that one cannot escape in any house of athusement. ind tunblé “comedian sings: ‘about it, the soubrette chikpé' about ‘it, ‘the legitimate actor, if curtain called, snéers ‘about it, Tt stares | dhe ‘in the printed word from programs atid mov- ing picture screen, and one is ig, likely to ‘have to wait for the féatire ‘while the abow' runs off a : |satiriéal film on the subject. A sensitive person no longer dares’ go to'see Hamlet or. Uncle Tom’s ‘Cabin for fear a homily, on:blue laws ‘has been i in- | terpolated. ° . This, constant dinning on a subject: on which the public mind is already. made up is: likely - to react. There are a great many persons who are | willing’ to let" others spend their Sundays as ‘they |please, but who for themselves choose quiet and seclusion. “The Sunday observers who are ‘toler- ‘days than Sunday. ‘There they, cannot escape the implication that a war is on between theaters and ‘churehes ‘and ‘that all church attendants are: big-| | oted and inquisitorial, What wonder if they cease | attending theatres? ‘There ‘are ive ways of. forestalling blue-|~ 2 law’ sentiment without-boring folks ‘to death about iit. Just now the moving gicture houses can get more firmly, into the graces of the public by re- linquishing the ‘Sunday morning film runs. It would be a courtesy to the churches to which theses are entitled.—Portland, Oregonian. lmust be doing some profitable thinking these! it been direct-| There were none for him.” That is the kind of | ‘An ‘Atlanta’ thief tole Calvin's overcoat, thus 3 corapral Wonder te "Gon: ‘White must have discovered much to his)" ¢ i 1 as gos looked’ at adventure: Highness, more advei our | nodding «tl say,“ culty, Bag, “Wi you can | gyllabus:, obtaining 5539, C. prémises, t vided it ty straw in ‘against! having ‘set straw ant’s mot Affirm Christian: being dial sponddat: | T. O. Huso, appella Syllab the estate heen their Magic Green ‘Shoes © that had taken theiy go faith{ully. on all their. “If you please, Tvbutd’ilke tovhelp Queen could answe: / ingnage Charm a j Thy aren a vaslP to trowed th v oaetittully then smiled again [her fal fal ‘servant, as much as ‘to fares. a@ way. “out of our diffi- Tve just-had: S — | SUPREME COURT | AY John Ramedeli, plaintiff-appellant, vs. Harry, F. Warner. ‘Sspondent. ‘ | personal and Os easacration: A verbu: gift is not vajid unless the means the-thing are given, nor, if*it is cap able of delivery, unless there is a> actual or’ symbolical: delivery of the thing -to the done. L, 1913.) 2. Where W., the, owner of certain Is as much: df the'straw as he-waats pro- 7 within. ac specified time; does not ‘remove. any pal -of the straw or in, ay: manner take possessio:: théreof or’exercise any dominion over it, title‘ doesnot vest render W:‘Iabie for the valuetof th M: Clark, ‘ot Kenmate, for re- From Divide County. N wards, holds the legal tit! general relief, where it ap! ez Shipeau Or. ues AND CROCKE. " ADVENTURES OF THe ewING : By Olive hoe tase : ‘“|attempt.to defeat the interests of tha) W "| Divide; county, K..E..Leighton,, J... Re- * i d 2” cried the twi “And may we go?” cri io twins down atl in one breath. “Y-yes,” nodded’ the Fairy Queens “You may. . But the trouble is, Sprin- kle-Blow isn’t popular. Nobody in Meadow:Grové Land likes him, or in ar *, said, Nancy’ timidl: a or " Land-of-Dear-Knows-Where.”: “But,” sald Nancy in’ puzzled voice, “how san_they tell whether they like him or not whef he lives on a star?” “Why, you see, dear,” explained the Fairy Queen, . Sprinkle-Blow has to spend ever 80 much of his time on we should ‘love ‘o. ‘go on natures and’ may we keep our Shoes? smiled, ante weather folks want. But there's no pleasing them. Everybody wants: dif. ferent weather at°the same time. Es: pecially jn the spring when outdoor: matters more than indoors.” “Oh, we'd love to help him!” cried the * Magical Mushroom, @ fine way at that.” , children there is a way Ip. tf you. Feally wish to: ‘telegram from Sprin-. who lives e twins: May we go at once?” prise.) had conveded'™& quarter section’ 0 equal’ valiie 6 the mother of tht wards who, in ‘turn, had exéchted' # mortgage upon. the ‘land ‘so conveyed to her representing the value of th’ estate of the wards in the quartet sec- le Co ity. defendant-re- 1. A gift Ig’ transfer’of perty made < voluntarily possession—and control { Ha sold; that, owing to disqualifica- || appointed, who initiated: proceedings gage and accumulated interest as rep- | provements thereon equal or excee:l- min ae Che the circumstances disclosed, eauley Helter-Skelter Land, or in that other, HIGH SCHOOL SCHOOL BOY the earth finding out just what kind-of; (Copyright 1921 by Newspaper Raters ‘with the 82nd Fie! * giauguese-agwernv A Fine Watch For His ‘or Her Graduation Present. . Nothing will do more to’ awaken: ‘pride to quicken ambition, to help an forming, habits of spaneuaallty ge essential to success watch. It’s a gift that will last a life- ‘time: and bring pleasant recollec-. orcad of the giver many times every: lay. Our new line of watches suitable for Gifts for the graduate are new creations something entirely dif-, ferent, yet no more expensive than. the ordinary kind and their time keeping qualities make them * ideal gift. (3 The’ Boy. or Girl graduate will | place ‘a double value onan article received in a Knowles Box ci ing. the prestige of. the q jewelry store. F. A. KNOWLES Jeweler and Op tician ‘Established 1907. - sapped his. vitality so that complica- tions set in, and the boy was given his’ honorable lecharge and permit- ted to come hom Sterling f stot ‘Mis’ exporfencé has. been worth ito him an@:he knows: that he can’ také ‘up “his ow 10bf are again with @, Srmer: grip, for, his ‘ite tie triplintoretvange. Bet.” il Bost of friends: in. Bismatck hope for his complete recovery during the summer under the care of his breve war moth- er, whose spirit never © wavered through the darkest hours of watching and working for her Sup boys over- seas. ‘ea . t PORTS CORNER 1 POETS’ CORNER. | ah tion ofthe guardian making the sale, a second guardian; the plaintiff,’ was in probate court to legalize the. first le but refused to receive the mort- resenting the estate of the wards; that the mother re-married and she, her husband and children moved on land so deeded to her and put im- ing in value the original value of the || land, and that the mother and her}/g————___ Present hueband maintained thereon a home.for the wards; it is held: TRIBUTE TO ALBERT GRASS. -(1) ‘The evidence does not show any, ane scion of a chieftain’s line, We greet yoy once ‘again. jose you not though sacrificed bik Burope’s war-ploughed plain. Through every Nne of Freedom’s gong We catch that undertone 1 Which thrills through every hero's requires that the value! of the estate.of the minors in theunimprov-| ed Quarter section sold,,plus the ac-, interest, be ‘paid over to. the deeds, uardian in cash and that the ‘And tells you are not: gone. « : A thes bei-quieted in accordance | |..~ : \ with the conveyances,made. High spirit of the Chiet-to-be Appeal from, .the district court ‘of| Lived regnant in your breast. pone erences btenched: not: inthe versed “and remanded, peinton ¢ of the ¢ourt by Birdzell, J. eo: P, Homnes, Crosby, attarney for defendants.and appellants. Jqhn FE, Greene, Minot, and Off ‘Breatelieu,, Crosby, “attorneys f01 plaintiff and respondent, And 4 was their-bequest That you no craven fear should know; Though’ round you raged the: hell Of bloody’ hate insatiate, . : ‘A conqueror you fell: i 7 Your line hag perished? "Tis not so. You. have ‘but gained your own, The seeds into the furrow cast ‘Are for.the future stvown. ‘Ah, scion of a cbiettata's lint, We greet. you, ance again, ‘We lose you not though sacrificed On Europe’s wwar-ploused plain. HOME. FROM ARMY Sterling Ried, yc youngest son ‘of ‘ur. and Mrs. Peter Ried of Bismarck, re- turned home a Tew days ago, having ben: giveh honorable dischaige from By FANNIE B: BY WILIAAMS.. the regular army because of physical aay. Seine, hos Met / HILDRETH WONT school career grew stale and tiresome comparison with the overseas war experiences of his two older brothers, Aust and Niel, decided before the|’ end of first Seméster this) year: that he fhust enter the army. At last, the very reluctant consent of bis parents having ben secutgd, the lec yeni teg ‘artillery, Battery ‘at Fort Bliss; \Texas, “But a sof- dier’s life is ‘not’all “bliss.”* An accl- ent befell the boy early in‘his train- ing a8 a soldier, causing gerious in- jury to one jaw, with the result that six weke were spent in hospital. “This QyIT, HE SAYS Fargo, May 26.—' Uned ‘States’ Dis- trict Attorney M.A. Hildreth, who, ‘according -to a news dispatch from’ Washington last, week, has been asked to resign, said to a press -representa- tive today that-he had, hot been asked fo resign and ‘that he would’ not ‘re- sign. “T¥e got’ more friends. in’ Wash- ington than ithe rest of them put together,” said Mr. Hildreth, “I haven’t resigned and'I’m not going to resign, because I haven't been asked to. I'll be in the United States district attorney's office until the ex- Diration of my term.” Mr. Hildreth has about two. years left to serve be- ‘fore his term .expires. ‘Mr,, Hildreth declared thaf,he is now in the midst of a vast amodut of important © litigation in which th: “(Sections 5638 ituated: on ‘his: owr that R. may have government is involved .and that he will have several cases of a most sen- |sational nature on the calendar, for trial at dhe fall term of federal court here. Questioned regarding a conference pyesterday, between F. L. Watkins, the prevfises removed f: ind where R state _law enforcement officer, and himself relative to the shipment’ of (whiskey, from. the United States to ‘Canada, the district. attorney, declared, that. decisions made at tlie meeting were of a secret nature and could not to R., sovas t ‘an ‘action brought by R , charging the latter with fire to and destroyed the ‘Ap! ees th district court 9} peal: from the y Rehville county, Burr, J. Plaintff ap- peals from an,order gtanting defend for a new trial, ‘Opinion court by n, J... Mr. Justice Grace lifled, did not participate J. EY Bryans, ot Monell for. appel- ant of others’ rights go.to the theaters on other ai , 88 guardian of Knut Knut- son, plaintiff and respondent, vs. Re gina Jasper, et al., defendants and In an action prodene by a ‘guardian, of ;certain misiors for the | purpose of securing a conv ‘an intérest in lands to whi the defendants, the mother: of the atice of and for| - rs that e wards, consisting of @ two-thirds intérest in an unimprov- éd.quarter section of land, “had been sold in probate court;: thet in lien of the cash Lae ‘the purchaser .be aired before the public. ~ Mr. ‘Watkins is understood¢ to have told the ‘district ateorney that “many carloads of whiskey shipped with government permit from American -distilleries do | not reach’ their destination in, Canada. but are dropped off'conveniently near the border line and the whiskey hauled back across the'state by rum runners.” Make it a point to meet your (riends at the New t the New Garrick. INGROWN NAIL Toughen Skin and Toe Nail Turns Out Itself {A few drops of “Outgro” ‘upon the | skin surrounding the ingrowing nail ;teduces inflammation and pain and {so toughens the tender, senstive skin underneath the toe nail, that it can | not. penetrate the flesh, and the nat turns naturally outward almost over | night. fal “Outgro” is a harmless, antiseptic ; Manufactured for chiropodists. How- j ever, anyone can buy from the drug |Sous, a tiny bottle containing ditee= ‘tions, 2 eerie a