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~ FRENCH WILL ‘HANG SLAYER OF A GERMAN, Paris; May 28.—Two Morrish sharp- ™="|THE BIS MARCK TRIBUNE = iarriage. Adelle being under age. | Sear "in hs application, "iver sait_ne PREDICT BELOW was single an ha is is my first ; NORMAL MERCURY ical ; marriage.” : | | As a matter of fact Siver left a Washington, May Weather pre- dictions for the week include: i What is Society Doing? | The social activities of your wife and two children in his New) Brunswick homé when he whisked AND PLAINS, A Traveling alone over mountain and plain roads for 1,400 miles, crossing ND HAVE GOOD TIME roads, the hest roads being found inj North Dak and in southern Idaho. ' across the Great Divide| they cannot get this intimate knowl- edge from books nor schools,’ Complain Bitterly “The twentieth century boy is com- plaining very bitterly of the girls you and I are raising, and. the girls are not to blame as much as we are. ‘ € FORTIETH Y ? —____~__— EAR . BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA, SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1921 - PRICE FIVE CENTS . Se : : ANOTHER CONNECTICUT BRIDE NO. 2 - | 1 NEW CITIZENS ©.2° TTWO POOLING SWIMMING POOL CAMPAIGN Is GERMANS MAKE . { os : : { . ‘ “ oe i | oy GATHERING FORCE NEAR CLOSE; i | | , i | | 100 PER CENT CLUB IS STARTED i | ' V ' | i i ia | “Are you in on the finish?” HUNDRED PERCE | eral oS ee { ‘This was the question asked by the : NT \) BRAD i i | * i ‘i i | Three business nizati | * Exercises Mark Completion of | (Due to Failure of Wheat Grow-! commitice making the drive for the) | in the city have, joined the | /'Two Hundred Million Dollars Of Naturalization Hearing in. | 1 epee inti d 'N | Swimming Pool fund today. | “Hundred Percent club” in the | Fs District C Se oct q sociation, an ew | The question asked of committee] | + Swimming Pool campaign. Bonds Payable Partly in istrict Court ~ | | Company to Consolidate —_| members on tho streets by little boys | Those reporting this morn. | . a i H i : Hl ies | ing that every employe in the || United States — i RSs Py j and girls was—“When will the pool | organization had given somite i x ’ PLEDGE THEIR LOYALTY, ISIGNING UP FA | be ready?” | thing to the Swimming Poo! i | > FARMERS. = the Elks committees were reinforc-| | fund were the Soo line freight ||BONDS ARE ENDORSED ER H ———- ‘ed today by traveling men in for the| | employes, the Lahr Motor Sales Tw F Soldi Are! | | company and the International | eyerecec o © Former ers Are! | Wheat Growers Association Op-| “C¢ke"d: who volunteered their ser-! | Harvester company. Three Big Banks of Ge A i vices in the campaign. The drive] | Are there others? o rmany mong mitted By | i a4 erating on Compulsory ‘ends tonight, if the committees can) | The committee wants to give Guaranteeing Issues Give: Judge Nuessle | Pool Basi cover all their territory. Every per-| | eredit to every organization, and | an | ‘ oo sis | son in the city is to be visited, and! | before the campaign was fin- | For Reparations . y In the presence of an admiring and| | Fa N. D, “M. y 2s i 6 ae parent for the commeter | ished today it was expected that |; sence a Fargo, N. D., May 28.—-Tw pat 5 7 tl ii 4 7 F sympathetic audience on Friday after-| pools or sales ee ee ak on next week. | | Sa ee ee a ents percent i Paris, May 29.—(By the Associated noon in the county court room twenty-| jisencies will be i) Avhile the campaign ends, the com-} | club.” The Tribune will gladly eet =the first real payment oa eight mem took the oath of allegiance! joperation in North Dakota for the| mittee books are not closed. Many|.' publish the names of all organi- | |the German reparations account was to the government of the Unite: inext year at least, according to de-! people who desire to contribute may| | zations which can show hat fynounced from Berlin» yesterday. Sinton rie ee inet ( | velopments of the last week. | horoverlooken otners may seatre: to] | every member of the orgéniza- beg aed acres the form of ane 5 sive, was one i to i avmay| add a bit to their contribution. ey ti i i ion dollars he remembered by all who were pres-| Ls N. K. Wicks, county farmer) may send to the “Swimming Pool | ae conte bute izati | leach, eighty million dollars of whica <i ent ; i ana state org for the Wheat] jund, ‘care First Guaranty Bank; Preble ers pee toe i is payable in New*York, sixty million “ =! ? i | Growers’ association, announced that. 7 " a : in xt 1 ne eeeine the iretimany at tm9 site | bis organization will begin Raion MS a nean: phone ane ee ee bands areratinion ahs the * ” _ceremony of accepting favthe cltisens| | sign up farmers on its y| Tribune will accept the money and| of the city under the absolute super-| Reichsbank the Disbontogesellsch and / took place.,. Judge, Nuessle ch ‘il pooling plan. The North Dakota Farm | turn it into the fund vision of the city. ; the Dresdener banks. the ‘atoup with Ceions end etal Bureau Federation announced earlicr| It takes a lot of money to build] The Jamestown college players, who| 20 et CA TMNGTEHGH. betore the fal bie | in the wek @ school in which solici-! the kind of swimming pool that is| 2Ppear at the Auditorium tonight, APPROVE NEUTRAL ZONE. oP tors for the United States Grain Grow-| needed—one that will offer recreation have offered 50 percent of their net| Paris, May 28.—(By the Associated \ shold be* taken that would cancel be ers Inc. would he trained for work in| and sport ever: y 7 | receipts to the fund, and the Elks} Press.)—The allied council iS forever, all allegiance to the land of ind ‘sport to y boy and girl in’, of ambas thelr biftti Sta aaa N ben Nota o {securing North Dalia members. the city, The incidents reported at| hope they will have a large attend-| sadors hag virtually. approved a plan en: countey-at ‘thelr adoption. echoes | | Insistence by the Wheat Growers! the committee meeting at noon today ance. to establish a neutral zone between ty People Ri ption. { ‘upon a compulsory pooling plan as' showed the same tenor of: public ‘At noon today $6,000 had been repart-; German and Polish forces in Upper With all persons in Hr aguubrn opposed to the optional plan of the| thought--that the city needs a swim-| ed for the fund, with many reports not | Silesia. It decided at its' meeting this rising ta ag the. Natio1 al Anthien (Grain Growers inc., made’a merger ming pool and must have it imme-| in. The sommitiee was well, pleased | forenoon, however, to obtain further under” the leadership of Mrs. A. G | of two agencies impossible. | diately, with the campaign and with a good | information desired before taking defi- Jacob the “ ted Bani = The United Grain Growers Inc.| The public spirit. was not confined] closing the pool will go over in fine; nite action, " r jas pson, the “Star Spang! led Banner” | which has its home office in Delaware, | to financial aid. ‘Many persons offer- shape. | The concentration of German troops ook on an added significance in the|- recently applied for permission to do; ed to contribute two days Jabor on| What the lack of a swimming pool | at Brieg, near.the- Silesian frontler, is presence of Mrs: Obert Olson, a read- | business in North Dakota. the swimming pool work. might have cost the community was/ declared in dispatches reaching t! er of beautiful voice and diction, read | ! | Cathe local union of the Carpenters| revealed today when it w learned | foreign office today to be im te : = y FEAG. H a ee | ‘pen! reve yas lear | ce y to continuing. : twoxbrief selections; the first, en- | i MAY OPERATE IN OHIO. H started the ball rolling among organi-| that a boy who went out swimming at! ——$—___—_. titled “America,” and written by a) Columbus, Ohio, May 28.—The Unit-| zations with a contribution of $25, and Yeaton’s dam with a party jumped ! young Jewish rabbi, H. Silver, previ- led States Grain Growers Inc,, nationar, it was expected that practically into deep water and was rescued with | D ous to his own adoption into American | co-operative farmers’ organization.| every fraternal and other organibza-| difficulty. | ' citizenship, was as foilows: si i may do business in Ohio without legal, tion in the city would come forward The next few days offers the best| “ ° “God built a continent of glory and | obection, it was held by Secretary of | with a contribution to the fund. It is} and last chance to everyone in the} filled it with treasures, untold. He State Smith. ¢ emphasized by the committee that it] city to do something for the boys and studied it with sweet, flowing foun-) j a {is a city-wide, public proposition, and! girls, and prevent disappointment, the: faine and traced it with lone, wind. | \LIGHT SNOWS | the pool is to be the absolute property| committee emphasized. 1 ing streams. He carpeted it with soft. ~nnnnr. H rolling prairies and columned it with ARE REPORTED | thundering mountains. He planted ii! | ! TWO KILLED IN | with deep shadowed forests and fille: | OVER MONTANA| FALLING BUCKET | aa eet d unt th 1 i Nek M 28.—Light | Tolle, Reese ay aay: Gi “Then He called unto a thousand i a cg F elena, Mon a | Adell ed Shubel lee . P | " 4 May I Q . neoples and spumimaned the (ven | Bond dele ee i lho may ned So Tee rena hatte i. pews snow are re ried at widely sep. | IN MINE SHAFT, Make Failure in Life— among them; they came from the ends % i ae a * : ; -arate place: Montana, the fall lis. Mich H of the earth, each bringing a gift and) etre te F oat xian | helng heaviest. In the mountains, 2 ra als) Kalle, Mich ae ain | Fathers Accused x ‘ a hope. The glow of adventure was) ‘PROGR AM FOR é | Snow was falling at Yellowstone and another seriousl; ‘injured | ——. in their eyes and in their hearts che! } today; following a rain there last | when a! cable drawin Py bucket | ‘Chicago, May 28.—While speaking glory of hope. | q CUSTER B ATTLE night, according to. the: weather | < used In bringing fron 4a from the | 2 an audience of 300 prominent. busi- eee Pet megiogs al B MEMORI AL GIVEN! wae Ee vreclpiatlon’ wit a : Monmeea beta’ malse here aug | day, Mrs, ‘Helen B. Pacis idenier hearts and the prayers of souls, out CHURCH: Is 1 temperature of FY} deren, but no | Reports of Weather Bureau eas throwing the ach to ener ! and) peychologist, created a decided a ; { aor y Is sf * esl 5 4 Pm | Sens RY hopes at he eal rasa ang in ne Parcteatert kerk fer te |, .Many-persons' in western North Da- te Wiilewee’ or tea eee |, Show ‘Rainfall Heaviest in tom of the shaft, A fourth man | causes. for girls eciig See ate Be pe et a fee ant putenee! : “testa are’ expected tosgo to Hardin,| that have heen wide-spread. over Bismarck Area In the bucket was uninjured. j Bhatically stated that, if parents, and sublime and called it America,” | H T Montana, on June 25, 26 und 27, wher| the state. : H cc pel ie PAE Ts * | especially fathers, would teach their Following this beautifwi ‘ apprecia- ‘ there is held a three. i, round-up and eet he | el ASK CITIZENS a cuentas from the moment they be- {ote icommemoration of the forty-fifth an- { G 5 «gin going out with young men, always SE eee eeeeat rc Tyler, io Ged aes i nive of the Custer battle, hela {WIRE LINES ARE INTACT : ‘to pay their own way, wherever they Judge Christianson Spéaks. | Charged With’ Embezzling Lib- der the auspices of the Custer Bat-| i Aue: | go, very few girls would go wrong. Calling upon the candidates from s % tle Anniversa! ciation, : F | A heavy wind and rainstorm in Bis- T OPEN H M | ‘i That Good Night Kiss 4 t the various. countries, beginning with | erty Bonds After Fight The program, which has been pubs marck late yesterday afternoon was b ‘Girls do not want to do wrong thee trom: Russia each croup’ réleed | With Waitre lished, states that the Custer battl followed by another heavy rain and | things but many of them begin what thevright-hand and the oath of alleg- | ith Waitress will be refought hetween soldiers. and thunderstorm in the early hours of . j often results in an unfortunate ‘cli- ie reo the United States of Ameriea dl “indlang on the battle ground. An In- i j the morning: i Miler this souk night ereecUMAE TITG 7 dian parade, with Indians in full war ., The rainfall was again heaviest ia ; kiss them good-nigh! .” said Mrs, Paul- was administered by the county clerk, By R. Whitney Saint and regalia, will be held in the Utes Reported on Warparth Fol-' jy, pismarck area, according to re- ;sen. “They do it because they feel ras a chrisfianson Speaks. | New York, May 28.——Connecticut’s xfternoon, followed hy riding contests lowing Shooting | ports received by the United States {that they owe something for the Irimedintely following the aecho: “non-bigamous bigamy” industry con- and unveiling of the Custer monument Weather Bureau from 21 stations in Odd Fellows Lodge Expects it parents, boys pee spent on teal: et 3 is li e city park of Hardin at 6 P.M. ae the state. Rain fell in the foll 5 ere to teach their daugh- x tg ance of the candidates America was; tinues to flourish! im the city park of Hardin at 6 P.M) gap Lake City, May 28—Fear of an! amounts: Bismarck, io: Devile Lake | Hundreds to be Here for | ters to pay their own way, the girls sung by the audience and the new, Are you tired of your wife? | uprising of Ute Indians following the 14, Langdon, .07; Fessenden, 26: Grand Meeti ; Would not feel that they must give citizens, and if any within sound of Are you tired of your husband}, | death of an Indian in a battle with! Napoleon. 05; in 24 hours ending at 7 rand Lodge Meeting | their perfectly Beautiful selves to is anther Beard and Wee Ht area Why bother with divorce? h peace officers today was contained if} o'clock this morning. Between 7 es lence man who pays them attention. oa deeper respect and greater; | a message received by U. S. Marshai: a. M. and 9 A. M. tod: ne-fifth of a tide ‘i | Girls everywhere, when urged to keep pride for America than ever before la F you a ae oe meruples es Nebecker from George Adams, forme? | inch of rain fell, making the otal enero lp ‘the Odd. Fellows ‘take themselves pure and sweet, say.;.in there was something left out of Lg eee spar ube Alen to Connecticug with END OF CROSS member of the Uteh legislature, from rainfall in the city about three-quar | care of hundreds of delegates and{ Perfect innocenco—'well, what can we make-up. ee ual tha ‘girl or man of your heart, tell a/ San Juan. ‘| ters of an inch. visitors expected to attend the con-; $0 for the boys ior all’ the money: they, Judge Nuessle, in highly compli: lie or two, and get married quietly. The message read: | Although there was heavy wind and} vention here next Tuesday, Wednes.| Pend on us, and the boys say to our mentary terms, introduced the speak-; They won't prosecute you, or “One Indian was killed when Coun-' sharp lightning the wind did not ap-| day and Thursday. | untrained sirls,—‘what do you sup. er of the day, Justice cof the Supreme | jounle you, or bother you, unless you! ty Attorney Kelter and Sheriff Hyde | proach cyclonic intensity, according to! As an example of the large attend.; Pose we are spending all this money Court A. M.7 Untistianson. Judge} remain there over-night. If you do| 4 attempted to arrest Utes for stealing reports received by the' Western Union| ance expected it was said that a citi! ae you for anyway?’ Since the girl Christianson, while a learned furis' tat, you're a bigamist; it you don't, pa ae ay cattle. Sheriff called for help. Posse; and North Dakota Telephone company.| zen of Oakes, N. D., had reserved | mas entered, ‘Aig. puslness world, there and a keen student of history, was first! yoy are not. : ; / H | leaving from Monticello and Blanding.: aj] lines were working. The tele-| rooms for 42 people; that Belfield he no reset ie we should not, tain, of all on tie nesta) ani adopted That's the technicality in Connect Eddie Rickenbacher Expected} Wires out betwen Bluff and Blanding.”! phone company had heard from Het-| Would send 25 delegates and that let- high ope and college” it wil make ~ 0 ‘citizen, and as such, was able im: icut jurisprudence that has_ blazed chi Fy , Se ee tinger, Dickinson, Mott and Garrison, | tes asking for reservations of 25 to " press the incoming class of citizens! the way for half a dozen men of more! in Washington Early in AVIATOR LANDS where rain fell last night, but there| 40 people are not uncommon. tainty seer ‘eit a a cman ee er” with the dignity and importance of or jess prominence, including a New| Afternoon was no damage done to telephone| _ An office will be opened in the old! Ye Povo Fathers colnet ph epg in Gelihy | Jersey jurist and a New. Vari brok- | IN LAKE; SAVED Mees. Theres wan a sharp burst of Foon ee: Bits Putney Mrs. Paulsen accused the fathers of thier, to take unto themselves second Siege eae —— lightning in the local office last even-| ° 7 25 young girls of bein, y they were pledging allegiance in com-j wives without divorcing” their first| Dayton, Ohio, May 28.— Minneapolis, May 28.—Homer Coll, | ing. roomer for the convention are asked fee ene nels ae aia engin parigom with that of inheriting that | wives, lenbacher, Columbus aviator, on ) veteran Canadian war pilot, escaped} Bismarck rainfall, according to the to call L, ‘H. angley’s office during: she stated that fathers have a more privilege. . In language both simple Siver’s Case | cross-country flight from the Pacific| from death today when a commercial | weather bureau, is far ahead of last office hours. At the registration room! important home f ry duty in this day thaa ind learly. convincing, Judge Chris-| The latest is Shubel K. Siver, coast to Washington landed at ‘Mc-| Plane he was piloting plunged into/ year. The rainfall last year in April there will be a rest room for visitors.| over before in their lives. tianson made'an excellent address. |treasurer of the First Reformed (ook field, Dayton, at 10:10 o’clock| Crystal Lake, pinning him beneath it, amounted to .45 of an inch; this year The local lodge has issued a state-) «phe woman'of yesterday. was pro- "At the close of the exercises, the Church of New Brunswick, N. J., WhO; from Chicago. He planned to change] by releasing his belt Coll was able to, in April, 2.47. Last year in May it| Ment to be shown soleentee Pointing tected by her father, then married audience were permitted to welcom? disappeared May 4. plapes and leave for Washington. swim clear of the plane and escape./ was 1.27; this year, 2:16. The gen on she: a SO Dad Fellows i ‘or! and then protected by her husband or, > in person each new citizen. Investigation disclosed that he had " qickenbacher left McCook field at| The plane hit the surface of the lake |eral average, however, is just about FETA ihe Odd Fellows jome:| in case she did not marry, her broth- ‘At the hour of four o'clock, when! eloped with Adelle Gourin, a young) 11-97 A. M,, flying alone. He plan-| with such force that it turned over. | normal. ere will be the ellows grand. org protected her,” Mrs. Paulsen said. the exercises were to take place, the'French waitress of Perth Amboy. A! neq to stop in Colimbus on the Way le —____ lodge Grau moperr er a prererl “The girl of today goes into a differ- business places of the city ran up the| warrant issued after Siver's diseP-! ig Washington which he expects to PROTECT WOODS, Soret. or uniformed organization of| ©" cavironment ‘and! surroundings: colors a8 a mark. of respect for the | pearance charged he had stolen $5200 reach hetween 2:30 and 3 P. M. His i 9 Odd F ‘4 Fathers know the conditions that event. worth of Liberty bonds belonging to! , BT AIAe oa . \ APPEAL ISSUED ellows, | surround the girls in the store, the Those Admitted - the church | flying time between Chicago and Day-) | : | Office and the factory. They oe The following were admitted to citi-- Six days later news came from} ton was 2-hours, 10 minutes. | Washington, May 28.—-To thousands CONGRESS IN | the dangers of the automobiles as the rt zenship: Henry Otto Kunkel, Ger-| Greenwich, Conn., that Siver and Miss LEAVES CHICAGO, of outdoor ‘Americans who will begin mothers do not. It is not a square man; Cornelius Johnson, British; Jo-|Gourin’ had been married by Justice) Chicago, May 28.—Capt. Eddie Rick-| ‘today there first three-day holiday 3-DAY VACATION: deal to the girls for the fathers not sef Paul Bartsch, Austrian; Chistian:of the Peace Albert S. Mead, the day enhacher left the air mail field here at! thes Ai j | to teach them to know life so well Gessele, Russian; FrankWalbert, Aus- following their departure from New! ¢-35 central time bound for Daytor, the American Forestry association is- | that they can be sweet and pure and trian; Daniel Hein, Russian; (Nels | Brunswick. | oitot He wasn ee oinae ieane sued an appeal “to guard against] Washington, May 28.—Congress was still earn their own way, One often Alm, Swedish; James Galloiray Lang-| Obtains License ! alta Ghaavte Pa ieee Diloted | starting fires in the woods of the| not in session today, both house and| hears men criticising the way girls muir, British; Alam Klein, Russian;| Siver had gone to Greenwich on 1, Tieut Woodridge, an army flyer. H untried leave the woods | senate having adjourned until Tues-| act and dress in the busines world. Fred Wilhelm, Russian; Joseph ‘De April 29 and made application for 4 4% Hayton, according to a message | |2 y! day because of Memorial day. | It would be well for some to ask them Rosa,” Italian; Emil. Bobb, Russian; |license, under the five-day law. On occived early today Rickenbacher | | . | this pertinent question—‘Are your Joseph (Eckert, Russian; Bernhard May 5, he appeared with Miss Gourin) 1 1. loaned a plane by Col. Bane,| GIRLS TRAVEL 1 400 MILES ALONE | daughters going to dress and act any (Continued on Page Seven) jand, handed Justice Mead an affidavit auathe sali, ae,he'toox.off, he expect: | , | differently when they go to work for \signed by a Mrs. Katherine Gourin, | edt tavbe in Washington by 2 o'clock. | H ; some one? Then answer that ques- which gave consent to her daughter's eidd sedis 3 IN MOTOR CAR ACROSS MOUNTAINS | tion by saying,—If they do, it is go- 9 ing to be because you teach them, shooters, .members of the French 7 A ‘ wee! j i p ™ il yard with Miss Gourin. Upper M ippi and Lower Mis- ey : | + Rhineland forces have been convicted | northward : 4 ner friends naturally interest the Great Divide just after the road! On the trail 7" But the lie he told in’ Connecticut} souri Vall Temperature helow: | see : A The boys say,—‘There by the Frencft.war council of murder-| 4" considered perjury, because. eertaal’ pe fighal toe howeras | every woman. What Mrs. || was passable for the first time thia| only several Yellowstcne park motor! home.’ They say that A agereained ‘i Smith is doing or what she | season, hitting a stretch of road that| busses had crossed ahead of the girls | home of the girl, knock at the door, The big cars cut the road up badly.} she comes to thi he » re comes e. doo! and made travel difficult. With one) eyen asking him ere ae dere other car the girls found travel diffi; where can we go tonight? cult, At one point they were pulled! “She has to go to a movie, a thea- ing a German engineér at Hoechist, : aa fi ‘ is _| again, the. couple hurried right out bees? Franklort, ss See ae ais of Connecticut and upon their arriv- patel Lone tas eonantttea while al in New Brunswick Siver published the men were under the influence ot | the mene ‘required 12 hours to travel 28 miles ‘are among the experiences of Miss | Florence Keniston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Geo, N. Keniston, and Miss TIULD DLT ! is planning to do are told in WEATHER REPORT | on Tateresting way in our so- | ciety columns, hours ending at} You'll enjoy the news, for For twenty-four i Bonds Missing : t liquor. One of the mem was condemn-| Gpyrch. and police authorities in-| noon, May this paper makes a specialty || Mabel Olson, of Ada, Minn., who ar-| two and a half.miles by a team. ; ter, have a box of candy and some- ed death, while the other was Sen-| vestigated the disappearance of the | Temperate of society events, Every- {| rived in Bismarck last night. People they met on the road were| thing to eat aftes it dufaitiordr:: Tho d | The girls, who taugnt school at Jer-| very fine, the girls said ,and showed) young men say their perfectly goo tenced to life imprisonment at ‘*hard) labor. LEAVES STATE POSITION. | William McClure, superintendent of | the state school for deaf at Devils; Lake, has resigned. The resignation! is effective July 1. Mr. McClure will) take the position of head of the deat school in Missouri. Only two men, it was shown, had access to the churcli safety deposit vault. One was Siver, On May 10 Professor Joseph Striker of Middlesex county obtained @ war- rant of arrest for Siver, charging him with embezzlement. The Burns Detective Agency was immediately hired to find Siver and the police of (Continued on Page Seven) $5200 bonds. thing that is interesting is to be ‘found here. Bismarck Tribune Phone 32 —— ed Highest Precipitation ... Highest wind velocity . Fore For North Dakota: Mostly cloudy) and unsettled tonight and Sunday; slightly cooler in the east portion to-| i aigat ome, Idaho, made the trip.in a Ford |coupe. They are enthusiastic over the journey and declare they are willing |to start out again, | Jerome, where the girls started from. is in the southern part of Idaho, | They traveled almost the entire length therh every courtesy, except just they were approaching the | river from Mandan last night, when four men crowded them out of their | places rudely. The girls e just two weeks in) making the trip. They traveled actu-| ally ten days and stopped on the road} poe Idaho, before turning into Montana. They encountered good roads and bad tour days. wage is practically gone by the time the evening is over. Do you know that the worth while Young men, those who are trying to establish themselves, are doing? They are jist not going with the girls, they say they cannot afford it, and socially we are all losing out, as well as morally from the standpoint of home ideal: Y