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“Tenicago . . .NEW york Pe _ Di STATE'S OLDEST NEWS-— PAPER (Rstablished 1873) ; PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1922 ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, | N. D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg.! PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITIL - Fifth Ave. Bldg. G. “MEMBER oF, The Associated Press is exclusive- ly entitled to the use or republi- cation of ‘all news dispatches cre- dited to it or not otherwise credit-j{ ed in this paper and also the local} news published herein, All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION CRIPTION RA IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by mail, per year (in B m ; Daily bh state Daily by mail, Dakota. PAYABLE UB! $7.20 7.20 yom per year (in outside Bismarck) ...+ outside of North | = s a3 SWARMS OF PEOPLE houses spring up on va- cant lots in the city—and you com- ment: “Property is building up sol- id. 1 wonder how far this congestion will go. Pretty soon, we'll be packed in like sardines.” The popular notion about civilized congestion is exaggerated. We are geting the hoyses clgser, to- gethér, but lying quarters; arg" not s congested now as they were 72 ars ago. i riking an average, the Census “Bureau. finds five persons to each dwelling. In 1850 the average home Shad six occupants. It is probable, too, that the aver- age home is larger now than in 1850. They had many big mansions in those days—but a great\many more small homes, including Top cnbing in which kitchen, dining and living rooms were, combined in one. i We moderns take a larger floor-' space, partition it off intoa greater number of rooms. We observe the smallness of each room—and get the notion that we are headed toward an existende in piano boxes. You see a man build his home on a small piece of property in the con- gested district, in preference to a larger property farther out,’where the cost might be lower, certainly would not be higher. If you are in a philosophical frame of mind, you see that human beings have a swarming instinct—like bees, Editor | i casket wa would make it seem that the German workman is toiling extremely “long hours.” is not true, according to an igation by the Iron Age, trade journal,’ It finds German metal workers on an cight-hour-day basis, with German coal miners limited by law to a maximum of seven hours a day. The worker in German stcel mills is getting about $3.20 a week in our money. That provides us with an interesting problem in canvassing for foreign trade. EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in th or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They ented here in ord Y ers may have both sid important issues) which being discussed In the press the day, THE STATE CAPITAL HIS MONUMENT The funeral rites ,for Alexander McKenzie were held in the Capitol building at Bismarek, The ceremon- ial and the attendance comprised a fitting tribute to the man who lo- cated ‘the capital in that city, and whose early life and purposes are inseparably entwined with the struc- ture, the construction and the in- stitutions of this state. The body lay beneath the speaker's stand, in the House of Representatives, and the almost concealed by flow- ers, whose fragrance filled the hall. ‘The strong, commanding features of the dead, now placid in the re- pose of death, were viewed by hun- dreds of old friends, and by newer citizens of the state, many of whom knew little of the work and career of the man at rest. “After life’s fit- ful fever, he sleeps well.” Alexander McKenzie had a domi- nating, but engaging personality, a physical strength and endurance equal to his mental gifts, His main purposé or ambition was construc- tive—to build up the state; to leave its history, its institutions as his monument. In this he succeeded beyond the efforts of any other man, | Linked with his ambition to de- yelop and build up the state, was an almost equal passion for power, and| the exercise of it and to gratify this he naturally delved deep into the field of politics, He made friends that he bound to him — by hoops of steel. He made enemies who never forgave or forgot. Strong friendships or friends, strong op- position for opponents, worthy of his steel, of this most, remarkable man. Me- Kenzie had great faults, and great virtues, but his work and his life history as a state builder, and. loya citizen of the northwest, overshad- owed in importance the human frail- ties of his nature. In his desire to| retain pqwer and use it for what he vere prominent characteristics | who have the, public welfare in view to forget the old animosities, the old political prejudices, and unite in a common purpose to protect from fyrther disaster, the structure which the pioneers have created in the commonwealth of North Dakota. This duty is a privilege, worthy of the best efforts and the highest pur- s of our best citizenship and Jamestown Alert. RIFF’S. SALE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- |” ty of Burleigh.—ss. | Mills Oil Company, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs, Western Sales Com- pany, a corporation, John H. Mursu and I ness a fendants. Notice ig Hereby Given, That by virtue of an execution to me direct- ed and delivered, and now in my hands, issued out of the Clerk’s of- fice of the 4th Judicial District the Motor Inn Garage, De- | Court, State of North Dakota, in und for the County of Burleigh ‘upon a judgment rendered in said Court in favor of Mills Oil Company, a cor. poration, Plaintiff, and a jtern Sales Company, a corpori John H. Mursu and Frank | partners doing business as the Motor Inn Garage, Defendants I have levied upon the following described real estate of said Defendants to-wit: ‘Lots Eleven (11), Twelve (12) and Thirteen (13), in’ Block Ninety-two (92) McKenzic and Coffins Add tion to the City of Bismarek, Bur- leigh County, North Dakota. And that I shall on Tuesday the 18th day of July A. D, 1922, at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m., of said day, at the jfront door of the Court lease in ‘the City of Bismarck in said County and State, proceed to sell the right, title and interest of the above named Western Sales Company, a_corpora- tion, John H.' Mursu\ ‘and Frank Lake, partners doing business as the Motor Inn Garage in and to the above described property, to satisfy said | judgment and costs, amounting to | Fifteen Hundred Eighty-four Dollars and Seventy-eight cents, together with all aceraing costs of sale, and interest on the same from the 24th day of May 1922, at the rate of six per cent per annum, at Public Auc- tion, to the highest ‘bidder for cash. . ROLLIN WELCH, ° Sheriff Burleigh County, N. D. NEWTON, DULLAM & YOURG, Plaintiff's Attorneys. at Bismarek, N. D., June 14th G-17-24—1-1-8-15-22 or NOTICE FORE- tt | Default ha occurred in the | conditions of the mortgage herein- jafter described, notice is hereby given that that rtain mortgage ecuted and delivered by W. H. Ebeling and Lucinda Ebeling, hus- band and wife, of Burleigh County, North Dakota, mortgagors to the First National Bank of Bismarck, North Dakota, a corporation, of. Bis. jmarck, North Dakota, mortgag dated the 20th day of February, A. | D,1918, and filed for record in the loffice of the Register of Deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota, on 2nd day of May, A.D. 1920 at o'clock A, M, and recorded on “xe 264 in Book 146 of mortgages, will be foreclosed by the sale of the i premises described in such mort- i ants, schools of fish and herds of deemed the larger purposes of his) vage, and herginafter described, at caribou, | Fear is back of this swarming in-) stinct. Men first banded. together in community for mutual protection against wild beasts. ce Later it was for protection against ; other communities of men. It was! discovered that it was, easier to build a will or stockade around ia village’ deeds of charity, helpfulness, fidelity West. One-half (Wis) of 1000 people than‘ to build ‘indi- vidual walls or stockades around each of 1000 separate dwellings. The swarming instinct, a form of fear, started civilization. Banded to- 'be life plan, he made mistakes, mis- takes of pursuing opponents whose opposition might have been forgot-| a.ten as a necessary incident in ac- of the complishing that to which he devoted | the best years of his life, and the! st that was in him. His personal qualities gf courage,| tenacity of’ /purpose, nuumerable to friends, illuminate and soften the asperities of a strong and determi- jed nature. He did good deeds with- out ostentation, and of his accom- plishments he was as modest as a jthe front door of the Court House jin the City of Bismarck, in Bur- leigh County, North! Dakota at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon 3th day of July, A. D, 1922 to satisfy the amount due on said mortgage on that day. The premises described in said mortgage and which’ will be sold to satisfy the same are situated in Burleigh County, North Dakota, und are des. |cribed ‘as follows, to-wit: . The of Section | Twenty-four (24) Township One | Hundred Thirty-eight (138) North | of Seve nine (79) West of the neipal Meridian? There will be due on such mort- gage onthe day of sale the sum of $3483.44 together with the costs of gether, men discovered that each had &itl, always ready to give credit to} foreciosure. a natural knack for some one task.| Specialization followed, then barter, =the primitive form of business, Misery loves company. So does’ joy. The swarming instinct crops out inevitably in everything worth while, also everything futile. Let half a dozen pedestrians pause “to. inspect an’ unusual ‘auto: parked “at a carb, and the crowd. grows like ig flies around sugar, The chief rea- # -gon for such swarming is the monkey instinct of’ imitation. “ We talk a lot about being individ- ‘uals, but ready at all times on nearly ‘every tongue-tip is, “Come on, join the crowd.” There is no great lesson to be ‘learned from studying the human swarming instinct. It is just one of the peculiar, natural,Jawa that can- _not be altered, -by~pWflosophy—part of the “destiny,that shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we may.” ‘ESKIMOS Gatiadi’s? “mounted police count noses and find only about 2700 Es- kimos living in the Far North, not including Alaska. The low figure is surprising. Be-| ginning With ‘dle first lessong in) geography, we have heard ‘much about the Eskimos that most of us! imagined they existed in much greater numbers. In bidding for fame, the Eskimos ‘have had the additional handicap of never producing a great man. i Despite mediocrity and fewness,| the Eskimos have become known in! all parts of the earth. | This shows the power of advertis-! ing. TRAINING A professor in a co-educational col-! lege boasts that his school “places , great stress on training its young women to become good wives and| mothers.” Mrs. Elizabeth Sears, president of ‘the New York League of Business! and Professional Women, interrupts! with this: “And what method do you, use to train your young men to be-! come good husbands and fathers?” No answer, of course. DIAMONDS Diamonds are being imported at {the rate of only $32,000,000 a month.! Two years ago, the figure was three imes as big. How many diamonds, there are in! the world is beyond even a rough! ‘guess. South Africa has produced ‘about $500,000,000 worth since’ the two children of a Dutch farmer, playing in the gravel of a river, found the first Kimberley diamond, “in, 1867, Our country has corralled half of the world’s diamonds, which reveals something about our national pros- perity compared with that of other ‘countries. FALSE REPORTS i Some of the reports brought back! by modern Baron Munchausens | claiming | gone, the services of others. McKenzie has often been accused of working for the interests of large | corporations, of railroads, of the im-| personal machinery of business or-| ganization. But to whatever extent he directed the early and some sub- | sequent administration of the state; 'to whatever point he led the legisla | jign of the state; to whatever de-| gree he was responsible for the se- lection: of men as officials to do the, executive work of the state, his ef-| forts were at the same time for the! ‘equal benefit of all the citizens the state. If the taxation, of corpor-| ations and business enterprises that were adding to the development of | North Dakota, was kept within rea-/ a= sonable but adequate bounds, to the necessities of state government, the taxation and the rights of the en-| tire population were also protected | and promoted, The.“old guard” ad-| ministration, with its centralization | of power in Alexander McKenzie, | provided all the necessary funds for, our'\progress and development. Tax-| es' were light, and the small popula-| tion of the state had no complaint to utter; while education, public char-| ities, administration of law and or-| der, were gifts to the citizens that cost them little or nothing. © With only a slight increase in population since the “old guard” were deposed from power, and the! leaders set aside for the exploits and | the management of an aggregation! to represent democracy, | where in the men in control showed what a loyal or constructive purpose, what a change has occurred! Great debts have been added to the state, | divided citizenship has followed; | controversies, accusations, prejud- ices have been created, and the sta is now struggling to recover a posi tion in the nation and a protection for itself that it once enjoyed. | Most of the old time leaders have McKenzie is one of the last to go; but their deeds will live in the history of achievement, in the build-| ing of a new state wrought on the confines of a prairie wilderness, and wrested from the Indian, the buffa- lo, and the trapper of furs. This task done, the people who came af- ter them, are the beneficiaries. Looking back over the record of McKenzie and the period of his. po- litical control of the state; viewing his personal faults and accompanying virtues, the old regime was far bet- ter, far safer for the state at large, than that Which has followed the defeat of the old guard and its ad- ministration of state affairs. The ery of McKenzicism cannot not now apply to him or his friends, but what has happened to the state in the last five years, is far worse for the wel- fare of the state, than any act of the old guard in relation to the state; is more dangerous for the future than any act of the old guard in the past. With the death of McKenzie the | dominating personal element of poli- tical control has passed, as far as it was embraced in the activities of one man. It is now the duty of those ‘P.-E, McCURDY, i lief Dated at Bismarck, North this Ist day of June, A, D, ‘HE FIRST NATIONAL Dakota 1922. BANK of poration, Mortgagee. Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. , 6-3-10-17-24—T7-1-8 NOTICE TO CREDITORS the Matter of the Estate of Annie Avery, Deceased, ' Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned R. G, Phelps, administra- tor, of the Estate of Annie Avery, late of the City, of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota deceased,\to the cre- ditors of, and all persons having claims against said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to said administrator at Sheriff's Office, at Court House in the City of Bismarck in said Burleigh Coun, Ys | Dated Bismarck, N. Dak., June 23, BR. G, PHELPS, ; ‘Administrator. First publication on the 24th day of June, A. D, 1922... 7 D. 6-24—7-1-8415 In SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. In_ District, Court. Fourth Judicial District. Nellie B, Hart, Plaintiff vs, Na- than Dunkleberg, and all other per- sons unknown claiming any estate or interest in or lien or ~ encum- brance upon the property described in the complaint, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the above named Defendant You the hereby summoned to answer the complaint in this action, which was filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, on the 1st day of June, 1 and to serve a copy of your answer to said com- plaint upon the subscribers at their office in the city of Bismarck, Bur- leigh County, North Dakota, within thirty day: ter the service of; this ‘summons upon you, exclusiv: of the day of service; and in of your failure to appear or swer, judgment will be taken against yon by default for the re¢ demanded in the complaint. Dated Bismarck, North Dakota, Ist day of June, 19 NEWTON, DULLAM & YOUNG, torneys for Plaintiff, National Bank Building, ismarck, North Dakota. NOTICE e e th To the above named Defendants: You will please take notice that the above entitled action relates to! the following described real pro- perty. situaté in the city of Bis- mari rleigh County, North Da- kota, Lot (1), Block Fifteen Northern Pacific Addi- tion to the city of Bismarck, accord- ing to the plat thereof on file and of record in the office of the reg- ister of deeds of Burleigh County, North Dakota; that the purpose o this action is to quiet in plaintiff the title to said real property; and no personal claim made inst any of the defendants, WTON, DULLAM DUNG, Attorneys for Plaintiff. ismarck, North Dako 6-3-10-1 -1-8 COAT SLEEVES Coat sleeves are said to be grow- ing smaller, but they compensate for this by original cuff treatments and a concentration of trimming in the region of the sleeve. The alphabet of the Tartars con- tains letters, 4 nk Lake, partners doing busi- ' ismarck, North Dakota, a’ cor- | dence of the other. THE .WHITE M AND JOHN — SToP On The way HOME AND GET SOME VACATION GUIDES AND We'Lt PLAN OUR VACATION THIS EVENING 1 i The Reason for His Defeat. Undoubtedly the defeat of Senator McCumber—provided it is a defeat as seems virtually certain at this writing—will be construed in other states as a victory for the Nonparti- sen league. Those not closely in touch with North Dakota politics will not be’ able | to see any deeper than the fact that a recalled leagué governor defeated a “conservative” Sepublican senator who had represented the state for (24 years. It is easy to picture the edi- torials that will be written about “the revival” of the league, and. its “renewed 'strength-—” Yet an analysis of the election re turns shows that Mr, McCumber's dé- feat was not due to league votes, but to the absolute refusal of thoi of independent voters to support ‘him. In, virtually every precinct. in. the istate, Senator McCumber ran behind Mr. Nestok. He would get votes than Mr. Nestos ’ receiv few of these votes would be found in | PRESS ON M’CUMBER’S DEFEAT of degd embers, that if Senator Me Cumber had been courageous enough: to follow a positive stand of his own intelligence and taken a positive stind even as recently as the recal campaign of last year in favor of sound economie principles and decent administration for his home state there would not wow have, been any question of nis nomination and clee- tion. e He chose not to do this, and he thereby alienated many of those whe otherwise would have been glad te support him, and he failed to attrac! those of the opposite faction whos support was n to overcome the losses due to his ‘own unwise course The situation i« which the cam- paign is now left will’ require ad- justments which can be discussed lat- Fer on. So far . Frazier is con- cerned, he. asspciat If years ago with an clenjent' which disavowed everything in the form of party obli- gation and party loyolty, He has ad- vertised himself as a: “nonpartisan,” the Frazier column; a few ‘of ,them would be found in the McHarg col- umn; and some of them would not be found at all. It simply meant that a certain number of independent vot- ters would not vate for SAnator Me- Cumber under any circumstanees. A few of them preferred to ‘vote for Mr. Frazier. Some of them threw their votes away by casting them fo. Mr. McHarg who had no chance of nomination. And some of them sim- ply did not vote on the senatorship at all, Yet Mr. McCumber had been in public life more than a quarter of a century and should have had a much stronger personal following than Mr. Nestos. If, therefore, Senator McCumber was defeated, he was not defeated because he opposed the Nonparti league, as most outside observer doubttess will conclude. He was de- feated because he didn’t oppose the | Nonpartisan league at the time when the rest of the independent Republi can voters of the state were fighting it tooth and nail. That is the reason Mr. McCumber ran so far behind Governor Nestos and it is the only reason. The fact it that he lost be- cause he “played polities” with the league, and by an ody bit of what might almost be called “poetic jus- _tice” it seems quite possible that he ‘will lose by about the vote that w ‘given to Mr. Ormsby McHarg. Polit- ical observers in North Dakota may recall the fact that the late Senator Gronna was defeated by Senator Ladd by about the vote that went to Mr. Frank White, who was later reward- led with the job of treasurer of the | United States. : Senator McCumber will thus bring to a close 2 long, and on the whole ~ highly honorable and creditable ca reer in the United Stal cc. But | his retirement to private life will not be due to the fact that he opposed ithe Nonpartisan league. It will be due to the fact that he didn’t—, | Fargo,Forum. i McCumber’s Defeat. ! The defeat of Senator McCumber in Wednesday’s primary election, which now seems assured, is duc primarily to the fact that for y Mr. McCumber had followed a course by which he forfeited the confidence of one group of his fellow citizens without winning for him the confi Mr. MeCumber is‘a capable and industrious man. He has served a long time in the senate, has become thoroughly familiar with the procedure in that body and with national legislation in general, and has reached important committee po- ions, The logic of the situation ‘suggested the retention of such a man in the important position which Senator McCumber occupies unless there were imperdtive reasons to. the | contrary. bee | It is not necessary at this time to go into old es, but it may be ‘said now, without any raking over eye and the fact that in the peculiar working out of our political system he has become the official candidate of an organized political party neith- er affects his own attitude nor im- poses any political obiiga::on on any of the voters of North Dakota— Grand Forks Herald. | Sap Pea A | PEOPLE’S FORUM | ff * Werner, N. D., June 29, Editor of the Tribune: There appeared a news item in the Tribune in regards to the movement on foot in some parts of the south to spread the idea that Lincoln start- ed the Civil War. For what purpose this) falsehood is promulgated, I know not—except to defame Lincoln, Im his inaugural address Mar. 4, 1861, Lincoln stated plainly his atitude toward, secession and what he would oe G Malas sad aan | EVERETT TRU BY CONDO PLAS UG TAKE THIS OLD HEADSET !! Iv MUSSES VP MY HAIR TOO MUCH You've Got. TO GET OWE OCF THOSE CouD- SPEAKING GQUIPMENTS IL AN’S BURDEN 1 GilcHa WIFIE- do if the South persisted in it. The Tribune would do a patriotic duty to publish this address in full. -t would counteract any influence this: southern movement may have n defaming Lincoln’s character and the North. Here is one quotation that ought to convince any one that ‘t was the southern politicians and not Lincoln who started the Civil War. “In your hands, my dissatisfied fellow countrymen, and not mine, is the ‘momentous issue of Civil War. The government will not assail you. You have no ‘conflict without being yourselves the aggressors. You have no oath registered: in heaven to de- stroy the government, while I shall have: the most solemn one to pre- serve, protect, and defend it.” Lincoln kept his oath and by so do'ng immortalized himself to the whole world. This. southern move- ment is a, ghoulish, one ta rob the famed martyred Lincoln of his hon- or... This” Shall’ never be. To thy spirit, 0, Lincoln, humanity’s martyr, | we render’ revérential homage, rest in blessed peact, no man shall go un- challenged in its. unholy mission of |g thy defamation. When tlou wert in the flesh and asked for volunteers to help thee keep. thy registered oath “to preserve, to protect, and defend the union” the men of 1862 respond- ed, “We are coming, Father Abra- ham, three hundred thousand men, from, Mississippi’s winging stream and from New England’s shore: “We leave our ploughs and work- shops, our wives and children dear, With hearts too full pf utterance,; with, but a silent tear; We dare not. look behind us, but steadfastly before; We are coming, Father Abrgham three hundred thousand more.” We men and women of 1922 are coming not by the thousands but by the millions to defend thy honor and prove beyond peradventure that nei- ther thou nor the honored defenders of the union who are now among the departed fought and died in vain. Edward Ericson, ~\) Werner, N. D. | one ZA CISTEN, MRS, TRUG: OST Too MUCH Money It GNOVUGH LOUD SPEAKING AROUND ( As " ESS O86, THOSE THINGS THERE'S HGRE ANYeo | A cove How tut ce, RIQNT — It UP UU ‘even what he eats. Bet there aren’t any cugs words a tax collector hasn’t heard. in Georgia, the peach crop is great ithis year, Another peach has wot !a beauty contest. Maybe Ireland is paying herself an indemnity. An American ship has broken the world’s record, It has lost money selling booze. Wonder if any of our little girls lexpect to be president when they grow up? Sultan of Turkey has bought a auto. Pity him, with so many wives ‘explaining how to\drive, When a lazy man’s alarm clock rings, he-thinks it is the wrong number, ; husband for a model. At last we have. found a model husband. When a man isn’t contented with his lot he usually builds a filling sta- tion on it, i Motors are like men. motor knocks there wrong with the motor. When a is . something Our objection to the office boy los- ing sleep is he tries to find it at the office. Indianapolis woman.-doesn't know what became of her husbands. May- be they don’t either, Sometimes we think any street car conductor could whip Dempsey if he got mad enough. doesn’t do something, wrong you don’t hear about it. Every now and then a man tries to repeal the laws of nature, rules Kansas. attorney general What school teachers can dance, does he know about it? About 300 humorous magazines are published; but the | Records leads them all, Things ‘get better. Chicago has {started arresting crooks that try to join her police force. “Helen Maria” Dawes quits. His sworn off, sworn out.” Looks like the, backbone, of winter is broken. ADVENTURE OF | THE TWINS etietesrnm Ain By Olive Barton Roberts One day Naney and Nick were play ing down by the chestnut tree when ; Chirk Chipmunk came hurrying along. Oh, say, have you heard the news?" he cried, running to the top of a stone and sitting on his hind legs in his excitement. He frisked his tati this way apd that just as some peo- ple talk with their hands, | “No,” said Nancy, “what is it?” | ‘Come with me, both of you, and Pl show you,” replied Chirk mys- teriously. “Everybody in Whisper- ling Forest is talking about it and they’re not whispering either.” Off they scampered, the three of them, and finally Chirk stopped at a ‘smooth, grassy place between the | blueberry patch and the hazel-bush. | “There it is,” he whispered, pointing straight ahead. ‘ Nancy’s eyes nearly popped out of her head with mazement, and Nick whistled softly. For ‘there was ‘a j little new house, with a new shingle beside the door, which said Dodtor Snuffles would be inside whenever needed. “What will Dr. Mink say?” said Nancy. “Won't he be cross?” Cross! Humph!” said Chirk with a swish of his saucy tail. “I don't think it makes much difference ‘about that. He got so old-fashioned that all he could do was blood-let- ting.” “The people of Whispering Forest got tired of it and sent word to the Fairy Queen. So I s'pose its Doctor Snuffles must be a friend of hers.” At this very moment the door of the little house opened and an oda looking little fairy gentleman step- ped out. He had knee-breeches and buckled shoes and long coat tails that trailed on the ground. Also he wore wings embroidered with pictures ot j canary birds. He had a sign in his hand which he tacked beside the door. said, “Wanted. A bill-maker and a bandage-roller at once.” “tet’s ask him if we'll do,” whis- pered Naney. (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.) = — ' YODAY’S WORD | Today’s word is FEUDALISM. |) It’s pronounced—fu-dal-ie’m, with laccent on the first syllable. It means—the .system which pre- vailed in Europe in the midle ages, based upon the relationship between lord and vassal; the vassal being an inferior who placed himself ‘under the lord’s protection, accepted a upon hereditary tenure, but ter; minable at the lord’s pleasure; and a Nothing ‘agrees with a erodeh, not | fighting about | " | Famous woman painter uses her | It’s getting so that when a mat| Congressional | story is “Swore, sworn in, sworn ay | The sign | grant of land from him, generally ; who, in return for these favors, ac’ | knowledged his superior’s authority jover him and his right to demand certain services, varying from mili- tary duty to cash or property pay- ments or menial tasks, “It was char- meterized,” says an authority on the subject, “by the merging of public and private law, so that office, juri |diction and even kingship’ were | forms of property.” The word had a Latin origin, but | Passed through many changes and | can be attributed most conveniently | to Old English, “fe,” meaning a pay- ment. It’s used like this—“The | policy committee of the American | Fedeyation of Labor asserts that |‘industrial feudalism seems to have found a foothold’ in the country.” special i | Me A THOUGH Blessed is he whose trans¢re is’ forgiven; whose sin’is cove | Psalm $2:1. =e |. Forgivenness t8 the injured does belong, | But they ne’er pardon who have | doe wrong—John Dryden. | ¢—. 6 1 AT THE MOVIES | pee | THE ELTINGE _Ethel Clayton appears at the El- | tinge on Monday ‘in “Sham,” an in. teresting comedy-drama. As a society ‘girl, she is left penniles < death of her father. Her extrav: tastes ‘blunt her finer sen j And she resorts to little ‘tricks to | make people, her relatives included | buy her the things she wants. A ro. mantie association with a young man® of proper ideals awakens within her a realization of her ‘sh: vi [-aytenls eee view it es CAPITOL. At the Capitol thenter, on Monday, | will be shown for the first time here | “The Last Trail,” a special produc. | tion sereened by William Fox from the well-known novel by Zane Grey- | Whose stories have made him as fa- mous with ‘motion picture followers as in the fiction reading world. This lutest Grey picture, made under the rskillful direction of Emmett J. Flynn, is Ueseribed as most thrilling in inci. dent—as it must be if it follows the and, unusually elaborate and ssive in its staging.’ In short, the patrons of the Capitol theater should be in for a genuine treat,’ The picture is scheduled for a run of two days. Readers of the Grey novel will re- call that it deals with the mystery surrounding the operations of an out- law who works alone and terrorizes the country side by his daring and | ruthlessness. The Fox company is a notable one headed by Maurice Flynn and Eva Novak, jand including’ such sterling players as Rosemary Theby, Charles K. Freneh and Harry Dunkinson. SUPREME COURT Z From Durn County. ; GEORGE MORTON, Plaintiff and |. Respondent, vs, Albert Woolery, | Fred W. Brendemuhl, Farmer | Bank of Dunn County, a corpor: tion, Defendants and Appellants. Syllabus: (1) Where a person makes a de- posit in a bank for the specific pur- pose of, meeting certain checks to be thereafter issued, the bank on accepting the deposit becomes bound by the conditions imposed, and if the | money so deposited is misapplied i j can be recovered as a trust deposit. (2) Cértain assignments of error predicated upon instruction given to, the jury and rulings made in the ad- mission and .exclusion of evidence examined, and for reasons stated i« the opinion to be non-prejudicial. From a judgment of the district court of Dunn county, Berry, J., the defendant, Farmers Bank of Dunn county, appeal Affirmed. Opinion of the court by Christian- son J.’ ! W. A. Carns, of Manning, N. D. and Alf. 0. Nelson, of Dunn Center, N. D., attorneys for appellant. T. F. Murtha, of Dickinson, N. D., attorney of respondent. ’ “4 ne The Sitka widow, when she puts on mourning, paints the upper part of her face a deep black. A FRIEND IN NEED: A FRIEND INDEED Writes Mrs. Hardee Regarding Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable | Compound Ui) Los Angeles, Calif.—‘‘I must tell you chat I am a true friend to Lydia E. Pink- lham’s Vegetable Compound. I have taken it off and on for twenty years and it has helped me change from.a deli- cate girl toa stout, healthy woman. When I was married egetable Com- pound. I was in bed “| much of my time with pains and had to aave the doctor every month. One day I found a little book in my yard in | Guthrie, Oklahoma, and I read it through and got the medicine—Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound—and took ‘ight bottles and used the Sanative Wash. lat once began to get stronger. Ihave got many women to take it just by telling them what it has done for me. {T have a ‘one sister whom it has helped in the same way it helped m: I want you to know that Iam a ‘friend indeed,’ for you were a ‘friend inneed.’’” —Mrs. GEORGE HARDEE, 1043 Byram , St., Los Angeles, California. Let Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound be a “‘ friend indeed ’’ to you, | ii i