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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i SATURDAY, JUNE oe 1922 THE BISMARCK T summoned to dii RIBUN Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN” - - a Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO. ‘ «Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH «NEW YORK - a Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second toria. S Editor) Curs to you that DETROIT | i x r # Kresge Bldg.) Bossie is one Fifth Ave. Bldg.! that we take for MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS and analyze. ; The Associated Press is exclusively ei or republication of: all news dispatches not otherwise credited in. this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special are also reserved. - e ‘ ntitled to the use| , credited to it or} sion about the dispatches herein the. same word, MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU, OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANC Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) “Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Daily by mail; outside of North’ Dakota. 19} $7.20 7.20, Bismarck). . 5:09 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1878) FOR A CLEAN JUDICL One of the most refreshing decisions of many politicians in North Dakota in this primary was to keep the judiciary out of politics.. Most of the candidates have faithfully made dignified appeals to voters. One of them has not, ought to remember it. We have seen the name of W. H. Stutsman mysteriously appear ina political s where he is not widely known. the I..\V. A. organ editorially boost his candidacy in an appeal to political prejudice o: have heard reports of a‘ “gum shoe campaign” being conducted by a man seeking of justice of the supreme court. a statement of Mr. .Stutsman’s ‘politics issued under the guise of which is really an attack upon strong, independ- ent men also in the supreme court. If Mr. Stutsman is nominated at least one able man who has declined to make a paign for a judicial office will be left out. And if Mr. Stutsman is elected, much time on the job as he does | tilled land” with cattle. able, it was the ARY | big that its heel and the people} are worth about late in a county We have seen corn or cotton: f workers. We the high office We have seen co-workers in neutrality but} The city-man butter and more political cam- and spends as on his present give all of his working time to that position) the supreme court will hand down about one decision ‘a year. FOUR-LEGGED . WEALTH splay her art before Queen Vic- ‘» Your mind runs from butter to milk, and itloc- childhood and even the whole of civilization would have a mighty tough time of it; without the faithful old cow. of our forms of original wealth granted, without pausing to think | But our ancient ancestors were under no delu- value of the cow If you ever study the origin of languages, you will find that] “cattle,” “chattel” and. “capital” all came #from back in the days before money, | when a man’s wealth was measured in the number of cattle he possessed. ’ f The accumulation of great fortunes originally began with the domestication of cattle. Primitive 6.00' man Was a rover. He could not take his crudely- him, but he could drive off his Being movable and internationally ‘valu- real‘wealth, from the days when the cave man stopped milking the Gianf Sloth, so bone was 15 inches long, and be- gan taming the wild cattle that roamed the earth. Milk cows in our country to ayabout 24,000,000 —or, roughly, one for each 414 Americans. They $50 a head. The faithful old American cow last’year pro- duced ngarly 99, ( Bat It will amaze even many farmers, that the dairy cow gives the nation ‘mor 000,000,000 pounds of milk. > is galth thi | wheat, Over near Vaudreuilyi Quebec, a Holstein cow named «Dekal Plus Segis Dixie, recently smashed records by giving, in‘one, year, 32,668 pounds of: | milk, which yielded 1439 “pounds of butter fat. That is nearly, eight: times.as big,as the average. forgets: Bossie, but: the farmer doesn’t. Constantly he-is striving'to’improve the breed of cattle—better cows, also better milk and of it. President Harding has called a conference of dairy experts from all over the world. Bossie de- serves such attentioh, and is entitled to'an extra- loud “moo” of pride. . job of railroad commissioner (the law requires he ' or DRUNKS Deaths by alcohol in New York City, doctors | report, are four-fifths fewer than in the old sal- gon days. New. York police add that arrests for public Mrs. William C. Mudd, of Yorkshire, England,| drunkenness are less than a third,as many as in| celebrates her golden wedding by winning another} 1913. # -buttermaking prize. In the last 40 years, her but- The national situation is similar. panty ter has entered 1888: competitions and “copped| @But still. there are people: who believe that off” 477 blue ribbons; gold * medals and “other | “there’s .more drunkenness than ever before.” |; ‘prizes. makers—so expert and skilled that she was once] question. _STATE PRESS REVIEWS The wish is father of the thought. The dyedn- Mrs. Mudd is one of the world’s greatest butter | the-wool wet has himself hypnotized on the: liquor PICTURESQUE LIFE OF ALEXANDER WKENZIE ALEXANDER McKENZIE Alexander McKenzie, whose death ‘occirred Thursday’ in St. Paul, must be regarded as one of {the last of the hi great frontiersmen who played such a “prominent part, in.the development of =the western part of the North Dakota continent. Probably ‘no man in the history of =*North Dakota had more warm person- al friends whose friendship amounted. =almost to idolatry, and more bitter ini- placable enemies, ) | history of the state almost from. the beginning of territorial days. While! he never held political office himself. except for terms‘ as deputy“United States marshal: and ‘sheriff, ‘he was for nearly half a century. a: dominant figure in the political history of’ the state. He played the game of poli- tics not for the money that wasiin it, or for office or personal glory, but! . for the realization of his ambition to attain a place of power and domi- nanée, ape a Alexander McKenzie was of the type that refuses to recognize defeat. His physical _ courage |. was .. proved ‘many times in the’tumultuous pioneer days. Physical courage and reckless-! ;hess were the rule rather than the exception in frontier days in North Dakota, but even among such men Al- exander McKenzie was held in awe. The same dogged, determination. that made him a leader on the fron- tier, later won him countless victories in the fields of business and politics. His persistence was coupled with a certain Scotch shrewdness ‘and saga- city. None knew better how to. over- whelm an opponent by the sheer force of his attack, but he also learned to know how to avoid obstacles instead of battering his way through’ them. The man who was not afraid to pursue,the most desperate of crimi- nals into their own haunts and arrest them in the midst of their own follow- ers learned that while courage and daring were essential in the business and political world, they must also be coupled with shrewdness and tact. All his life Alexander ‘MeKenzie ‘was a soldier of fortune. He never “settled down.” He was a citizen of the continent and not of one town. In his later years his business inter- ests tookshim from New York and Montreal to San Francisco and from New Orleans to Alaska. He made im- mense sums of money in the contract- ing business and other ventures, but politics was always his chief interest. The hold which he had upon his fol lowers” was amazing at times. They spoke of him as almost a superman and their attitude towards him was “one approaching reverence. And few will dispute that Alexander McKen- zie was “a big man”—big in cour-! age, brain, shrewdness and dogged determination. The world “Big Alec” was never questioned among his followers. There =was no appeal from it. And whatever views of his political methods ,and purposes his opponents ‘structive things: for ‘his yof North may have held, they neyer ‘questioned his loyalty to his‘own friends and to the state which looked upon as: his jome, fon) This quality of loyalty was per- haps his outstanding characteristic. He did many big and splendidly con- his: home ‘state lakota, however ruthlessly. he may sought to rule that state. The ‘present generation’ of* North Dakotans is not likely’ to see another Alexander McKenzie. , the railroad. The leaders of this’ generati of ‘another’ type: but thesname: oft Alec” will always stand out, ins history of North Dakota. represe! one of the most picturesque. and fa: cinating characters of a picturesq period.—Fargo Forum. 2 $ ALEXANDER McKENZIE 4 ‘The man whose hand for more han | 30 years wrote the political histo of North Dakota’ is dead: Alexande McKenzie passed away Thursday. ernoon in St. Paul. Mr. McKenzie was, the and most enduring personification o! immense political power in the hand of a single man that North Dakota has ever known, or ever will know, for the day of such political rulers is. now largely past. For good or ill it was the hand and mind of Alexander McKenzie which controlled the destin- ies of this state over a long period of time and his passing is a definite milestone in the history of the com- monwealth. ; No man could have attained and held such power over so long.a period of time who did not poskess qualities. Alexander McKenzie such qualities, and he held’ his _posi- tion by virtue’ of them. He-was a big- ger man than those who sought, to overthrow him. He was the product of -his times. During: his period of activity the con- centration of political power into a single hand was the’ usual. condition in most of the states of the Union. Mr. McKenzie simply took conditions | as he found them, and be it written to his éredit that he used them in a big way. He was no reformer, but his code of political ethics was at least as high as that of his contemporaries. Much of Alexander McKenzie’s work was constructive. He was one of the builders of North Dakota. The establishment of the state university and ‘agricultural college was largely due to his effortsyHe was the domi- mant figure in the convention which wrote the constitution, of the state, and eyen prior to that time had played a big part in the establishment of a ivilized community on the open prai- ‘ie where before only the Indian had roamed. , ES The steady march of progress has brought about. the death of the poli- tical system of which Mr. McKenzie was North Dakota’s greatest expo-' nent, and so’ whatever evil: the dead, Chieftain did will be interred with his. great | had; bories, Let the good, and there was]; much good, live after him, and be re- membered, for friends: and__ enemies alike will unite in saying “He was a man.”—Grand Forks Herald. MAN AND ERA’ BOTH GONE Alex. McKenzie was the product of the pioneer ditions’ which made his picturesque career possible. The period is gone, the conditions have changed and he has passed on with them. The same (situation and », similar, velopment of other parts of «the country, and other Alex. McKenzies | were produced, much ‘alike in their prominent. characteristics. The same } The frontier) causes produced the same effects. | tP The name of Alexander McKenzie which produced men of his type has| But there is no longer any new coun-| has been closely identified with the vanished before the automobile and: try..in the United States. days. belong.to the past and one-time plitical:.conditions have disappeared “forever. So will be no more Alex. wai ‘fe upper half ydding<territory of Dakota youn) cKenzie appeared Fstene, in the early Seventies Nand took/one step into political promi- ence. It was’ the est without ny of.the attributes of the “wild wooly hi in eastern } leadership woul vitself and get recognition, icularly if it went with — personal! ‘courage and'resolution. Alex. Mc- Kenzie added to these a giant frame and a temper no less well-known be- cause held in leash. He: knew when to command and when to mollify; but he never knew when he was aten. In those times and in those condi- tions a boss was indispensable. The activities of McKenzie were not only tolerated, but approved. , Political dictator in his place probably. ; would have lacked the qualities which made him popular as well as power- ful. He was necessary to meet many of the situations which were not of his making: His friends liked him and his enemies respected him. .Years have drifted away since he laid down the baton of political czardom and his name means little to the newest gen- eration. But the news of his death will revive throughout all of the twenty years ago when no more pic- turesque figure strode through the pa- Pioneer-Press. “ ATHOUGHT | -—__________4 Fret not thyself because of evil-doers, neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity. For they shall soon be cut down, and wither as the greeh herb—Plalm 37:1-2. Wicked thoughts and worthless ef- forts gradually set their mark upon l'the face, especially the eyes.—Schopen- hauer. ANNOUNCEMENT Thereby announce myself as a can- ddate for the office of County Treas- urer at the June 1922 ovrimaries. R. G. PHELPS. (Political Advertisement.) \ ‘ period and political con-| conditions | ; game with the early history and de-|' Pioneer | Another} northwest memories of the days of ges of current local history.—St. Paul: LOOKING ror New BODY > PUTS MG OFF BvsiIness, Bor Cueeye ° CETIS) LooK For CONCERN ! PICK UR FOR You AF ESS AND SOvP YWeure VEST S55 I THINK BUSINGSS WILL PeTalNS, TAKEN .OFE A _ DRY CCGANING TER Sou HAVE THESE Com ' CHURCH NOTES | “Ts. MAKVS. PRO-CATHEDRAL 8 o'clock a. m. Low Mass and Holy Communion and, English sermon. 9:15 a. m. ‘Low Mass and German sermon. 10:30,a. m. High Mash and Eng: lish sermon. 4 Father’ Hiltner, Pastor. Southside Mission_and Charity Society Services every Sunday at 11 o'clock a, m, in German’and: 3 o'clock p,m, in English, Sunday, school, from 2 to 3 in both langumiges, 2/0") ‘The charity. society ‘needs always the help in ‘worn™elothés and shoes espe- cially and the. kind friends will re- membéf by their Wouse"ereaning and all up phone 557 or send it to 16th. and Sweet Street, South, ‘ -J, B, HAPPEL, ‘Pastor. f MBBURY, Assistant, | Engl ¥.sLut arch Services next Sunday morning and evening at the usugl. time. <3 IS The ev: ‘ Bebe, most, a song, al yy thre: pas’ Ey tor wil) be a partial report from our tannual meeting at Minneapolis and a tvisit to Dr. Riley’s church service,ant ‘Sunday School, . at I. G. ILLERISON, Pastoi Chrintian Science: Society’ Cor, 4th St. & Ave, C, Sunday service at 11 a."m. Subject: “Christian Science.” / 4 \ 3 Sunday school et 9:45 a. m. * + ea ‘Wednesday | evening testimonfal meeting at 8 o'clock. ‘A reading room is open in the chiircht building every Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday, except legal holidays, from oO . Mtr % ‘All. are ‘welcome to attend these services and to visit. the reading room. Baptist Church Johnson, Pagtor. ‘ morning worship and» sermon, “The Church of Ghrist Invinci- 12:00 Sunday school. | 7:00 Intermediate B. Y, P. U. Senior society is dismissed till Sunday ip August. & evening worship and sermon, : “The New Creation.” al :00 Wednesday, prayer and confer- L. R,. 1 the sccond ence, | "A ‘cordial invitation is extended the ‘public to attend the services of the “Friendly Church.” St. Georges Episcopal Ghurch Rev. T. Dewhurst, Rector, Services tomorrow—The second Sun- dav after Trinity.’ ' 8 a..m. Holy Communion, 10 a, m, Church Sunday school. 11 a, 'm Litany and:sérmon. , Sunday school pupi) pnd parents are reminded that tomo: of Sunday school.:During July and Au- gust the teachers and. scholars will take a much neded rest and vacation after, the. strenuous ‘work of the.past year, .The Church school, will reopen the beginning of Septamber. :In the meantime we would stronglyurge the young people of the church to attend ;the church ‘services which will continue ' venience is the last day; Clifford Merrill of Linton, an Evening un the cial : Grogs. ‘Spe- ers, The pastor will bring a helpfu¥smessage from the Synod at Jamestown. Not a dry convention talk but a-message of. inspiration. ‘At the morning service there .will'be a duet by Mrs,\Barnes and Mrs, Wilk- inson and a solo ky Mrs, Wilkinson: Come and bring your friends to’ the services of the church:-You need them, We({need you. Let us have fellowship togéthe! — "CITY NEWS NG Waggoner Transferred } | Capt. Robert Waggoner, who has been stationed in Bismarck in’charge of organization of the Eighty-Eighth, re- serve division trains, has been trans- ferred to Fargo, where he will maintain. headquarters. . May Yet Register. ow A..Falconer, city assessor, an- nountes that voters,’ ‘both men, and! women; may register for the prim; Ty Up uRtil the day ‘of, the primary) ‘giving the ‘asséssor‘ their party affili- ations. Persons not. registe are ureed to call him at) 152W. : Bismarck’: Hospital Misses Dorothy and Lidia’ Wilde of} New Salem, and Mrs. Andrew Widmer of. Fredonia; have entered the Bis- marck hospital for treatment. Mrs. N. R.. Pericle of Burnstad has. returned to her home after taking treatment. at the hospital. Pool “Open Longer Arthur Bauer, manager of the swim- ming pool, announced today that begin- ning Monday’ the pool would be open during the supper hour, from 5:30 to 7 p. m. for adults only. Hours for the swimming pool are to be 10 a, m. to 11:30.a, mj and 2 p. m. to 10 p. m. It also was announced that for the: con- of patrons coupon ticket books have been placed on sale,' St./Alexius Hospital i Edward Philbrick of Turtle Lake, John: Strasburg, Master Theodore Lang of Lehr, Master Anton Kottré of Glen Ullin, Miss Julia’ Wagner of Napoleon, Mrs. R. S. Mitchell Ri- chardton, Ulrich White of the! city, Mrs. L. S. Craswell of the city, Master id "Baby Opal Thrill of Douglas have entered the St. Alexius hospital for treat- ment. W. A./Riba of Rugo,sMiss Anna Nordin of Cole Harbor, ee U etal of Lefor, Mrs. Hargaret Wing bac of- Raleigh, and Berry Bptkend rf of to be held at 11 o’clock each Sunday morning. In this way. the! children of the church will learn something more about our beautiful Liturgy. Arrange- iments are being: made to mark the at- jtendance of Sunday school pupils at- tending church in this way and special credits will be given in Septentber. McCabe: Methodint ir. S. Fy Halfyard; or. 10:30 a, m.) publi Wrorshib: Music by the quartette ‘i inscrmon-theme: “Giving and Recelv- ing.” Wee # y 12m Sunday school, ~ A full attendance is requested. Class- es organized for all ages. | 3:00 p. m. a ‘program ‘will, be given jby the pupils of the Daily Vacation {Bible School at the Auditorium. | 7:00 p.m, Epworth League, At every service’ a vital theme is discussed in an interesting and very copal Church it , the church’ are. invited. ; 8:00 ». m. public worship. Music by the’ Men's Chorus. Sermon-theme: “The Two Recep- tions.” ‘ x Come and, bring a friend. i | Wednesday 8:00 p. m. prayer service. Evangelical ‘Chureh Church? Corner Seventh and. Rosser Sts., C. F. Strutz, Pastor.’ / Preaching service inthe language 9:30 to 10:30 a. m. All_other services are conducted in the English language, | Sunday school at 10:30 a, m. Classes for everybody and a weleome to all. Missionary address: “A Bible Lost at Sea." 11:30. a.m. : ‘ Young People's Alliance, _ “Duties: What They Are and How to Do Them. Grant McDonald, leader..7:15 p. m. Evening sermon, “Building the Foun- | dation,” 8:00 p.m. 2 eee music, A cordial welcome to all. Prayer service, Thursday evening at 8 o'clock. : ‘ German First Preshvterinn © h Harry C. Postlethwaite, Pastor. Morning worship at 10:30.;-Rev. W. S. Holt, D. D, LL, D., of Philadelphia {will preach. Do not miss hearing this apostle of sunshine. Special music, Junior Sunday school at 9:30. All other ;denartments at 12m: Christian’ “Endeavor at) 7:00.. » This compapy-of young people keeps up its service splendid organization, ‘helpful way. All. thee young people of | rough: the summer, Visit this « Dansig“have ‘been charged from the hospital, \; Funeral services for James R. Pollock, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Pollock, who passed away at Johnston, Pa., Tuesday, | will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3 o'clock from Webb Bros.’ Undertaking parlors. The remains. will :arrive: on No. 3 this evening. see The pallbearers’ will be: Fred Nelson, Frank‘ McCormiekyWm.- Morris, Pete Harvey and Charles Anderson. Inter- ment will take place in ‘the Catholic cemetery. : Mr, Pollock ‘was born in Bismarck; Nov. . 10,. 1880, ‘and attended the local schools. He ‘left Bismarck’ if ‘the | spring of 1905 when he began work for the Bridge and Steel Works of ‘Penn- sylvania...He is survived by a father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Pollock, 623 Tenth St. two brothers, Robert of Bismarck and William of Milwaukee, Wis., and three sisters, Mrs. Clarence Danley, Mrs. A. H. Scharnowske, and Mrs. Ralph Forsyth, all of Bismarck. TERRIFIC LOSS ~~ ISSURFERED Winnipeg, June 25.—Manitoba is re- covering from the effects of the. most destructive wind storm of years which carly yesterday swept down from’ east: ern Saskatchewan by way of Brandon, Portage La Prairic, Winnipeg and Lydi- att to the Ontario boundary, leaving a htoll of three dead, of many injured, Which will run into the hundréds. 6f, thousands of dollars. || ical ‘society last August. 9 || language. /dead, Since there were no duplicate, '| which’ was ‘written on loose leaves of *| paper might easily have been lost. With ‘| nianuscripts and will be -useful in ‘the '} of North Dakota. | + “Murle Ludwig of Portland, Ove, ; .| Mrs.’ Harry Warner of Glen Ullin, sonic’ seriously and, of property loss | RARE STORIES OFN.D.INDIANS ARE OBTAINED, Dr. Melvin ‘Gilmore, Curator of Museum, Back From Eastern Trip MADE MANY _ STUDIES Dr. Melvin R. Gilmore, curator for. the State Historical society, has re- turned from a six week’s trip to the east and in Nebraska. “At Buffalo, N. Y., he attended the annual meeting of the American Association of Museums from May 11 to 13 inclusive. Here, on May 11 the Doctor read a paper on “Muking Records of Ancient Arikara Rituals,” an account of the ethnological field work which he did for the histor- At the close of this meeting Dr. Gil- more spent about a week visiting \the various museums in, Washington, D. ‘C. He visited. the National Museum, the Bureau of American Ethnology, the Bi- ological survey, the Bureau of Plant In- dustry, and the Smithsonian Institute. + While visiting at the Bureau of Eth- nology, Dr. Gilmore obtained photostat copies of unpublished manuscripts written by George Bushotter, a North Dakota Indian , in the native Dakota They were written a num- ber'of years ago and the author is now copies “of the manuscripts which con tain accounts of ‘the customs and tolk- lore of the Sioux Indias, the account these copies in the archives cf the state historical society here they will stim- ulate the ‘collection of more original continuation of a study of the Indians From Washington Dr. Gilmore at- tended ,the Second National Conference on. State Parks which was held at Bear Mountain Inn at the Palisades Park on the Hudson River, an interstate park of New York-New Jersey, from May £2.to 25. After this conference Dr. Gilmore spent two days in New, York where he visited the American Museum of Natur- al History in New York City, the great- est. museum on the continent according to Dr. Gilmore, and conferred with men of science. Here he met Dr. P. E. God- dard, assistant curator of, anthropology in the American Museum of Natural History of New, York City, who collab- orated with him.last summer in the making of records of the ancient. Arik- ara Rituals of the North Dakota In- dians. They talked over plans for further work in the same field. At the conclusion of his ‘official busi- ness trip, Dr. Gilmore spent a couple of weeks visiting jn Nebraska. He call- ed on old friends at the University of Nebraska of which he is a graduate, It was while he was .curater at the Ne- braska Historical Museum: ‘which is sit- uated on the campus at, the University that he gave. coursé in: the depart: ment. of geography on ‘Indian: Geog- raphy and: Industries.” ANNOUNCEMENT. fam a candidate for re-election to theioffice of clerk of the district court; thi#teen years. experience; competent service and courtesy to all. CHAS. FISHER. (Political Advertisement.) TARE 4 ANNOUNCEMENT ‘thereby announce myself as a ‘can- didate. for re-election for the office of County “Auditor of Burleigh County at the June, 1922, Primaries. ~. )\ FRANK JOHNSON, (Political Advertisement.) ANNOUNCEMENT , I hereby announce myself as a candidate ‘for the office of County Auditor of Burleigh County at the June 1922 Prim- aries. t ‘ PReen :4 Harry Clough, Bismarck. {9's (Political Advertisement.) ANNOUNCEMENT Y-hereby announce myself as County’ Auditor’ of: Burleigh County at’ thé, June 1922 Prim- aries. \ ; H. A. Thomas, Jr. i Driscoll. N. D. “} (Political Advertisement.) | CANDIDATE HERBERT. A. HARD. Democratic Candidate for Secretary of State. Resident of North Dakota 12 years. Flood control’ engineer past six years. I believe nomination carries an. obliga- tion to stay on the’ ticket through No- vember ‘election, and the undeniéd fact that certain Jamestown candidates agreed. to withdraw, makes them, un- worthy of you ballot. I further believe that Democrats’ who are regular, - pro- gressive and constructive, can assist the national organization to a clean-cut vic- tory in the next general election. North Dakota hgs- vast: natural» re- sources which if has as yet made littl. effort. to develop.) believe the, state should at once proceed along sound bus- iness lines to. develop, its lignite, clays and water power; to aggressively carry out, its flood control projects on the Missouri, Red, Mouse, Sheyenne, and James rivers and its irrigation projects in the Missouri and Mouse valleys; .en- courage the Great Lakes waterways ‘pro- ject. Poet Mr. Hard has in the past six years developed, shaped and to an’ extent fi- hanced extensive plans for prevention of disastrous floods in the Red valley; has directed extensive surveys and pre- pared maps, designs and cost estimates on dams, reservoirs and channel im- provement: for same; These. are! ready for use when the: next flood has driven the three affected states to action. (Political Adv.) _ L. 8. PLATOU.’ a candidate for, the office of| The Democratic Candidate for Gover- nor. + . — June 28, 1922. (Political Advertisement.) space ae Washington state provided 59,338 men to all branches of service in the World War. i 4 40 years; “JUSTICE In this Hague conference, the “H” is silent. Ve _ THOMPSON | _- FORSHERIFF HARRY A. THOMPSON Resident of Burleigh County for Your Support Will Be Appreciated. 4 “A TO ALL.” ¢ ony | | t | ee > | | | : “ t { P ’, 4 A \ , ‘ ‘ »