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- tered with the police. * not ‘stop | WForcign Representatives } gsi Entéred at the Postoffice, Bismarck, : HD. as Second Class Matter. GEORGE D. MANN Editor LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHI®AGO DETROIT | Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. YNE, BURNS AND SMITH P YORK - Fifth Ave, Bldg. HEBER OF THE ASSOCIATED So PRESS NE ™M jd MIA cc The Associated Press Ia exclusive- ly dfititled to the use or republi- catign of all news dispatches cre- dite@ to it or not otherwise credit- }ed if this paper and also the local | new@ published herein, } AM rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also ; Tesekved. MEMBE R AUDIT RUREAU OF CIRCULATION N RATES PAYABLE eS ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year... .$7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in m@rek) . . Dail®& by » per year (in ‘ state outside Bismarck) .... pele by mail, outside of North Kota SUBSCRIPTIO. IN WHEN YOU WERE A BOY lrthis hot weather, your thoughts ck to boyhood and somehow ter is inseparably connected the cold spring bubbling. Mother Earth, and the old swimming hole. ence Darrow once wrote that never lived who could pass ynning water -or’a spring without pausing for a drink, Tied of the flat luke-warm fluid a ; through dirty city water | would you not give for, ion flat on your face in ie Be a d moss, drinking your} fill from the spring of boyhood? Oh, ;but it was delicious there in the Bhode, with the fragrance of| clover on the breeze. Bixtls thrilled in the nearby for- est. "From tar off through the dusty hot air floated the ambitious whitgof the planing mill, the soft ar-pf the flour mill, the whistle of a. digkant freight train or the crash of gondola cars shunted down a siding... Yoar faithful dog, his long red tongye; panting, though gorged with | water: watched you intently and ed his tail violently when you} him even with a glance. * i og watched closely, for he! 4 t soon you would join the gang.under the willows at the old im@ming hole. He was the best i tion's ‘candy bill is $760,000,000 a year. Half of this big sum is spent kels, We notice the government's cost because most of it is assessed in a lump, while candy and. similar | luxuries take their toll in small but steady nibbles." FAILURE | In the Far East, Christianity has come to mean “war,” says Fred B.| Smith, religious. investigator, after an oriental tour, In India they told him, “Christianity, a cannon-ball, & submarine and a gas bomb go to- gether.” Smith thinks the war set back, by many years,, what might have been | the progress of Christianity in China and India. The big job for missionaries now | is to explain this to the heathen: | Christianity, the religion of, peace, is not a failure. The rouble is in the failure to live up to the teach- ings of ‘Christianity. SHORTER LETTERS Americans are writing shorter letters, reports the postoffice de- partment. It reasons to this con- chision because the average now is 45 letters to a pound, against 40 in 1907. This @oesn’t necessarily prove that letters are briefer, for station- ery is lighter than it was 15 years ago. The average American, probably writes as much as.ever, Letters | may be shorter, but more:are writ- ten. It used to take a week’s raily— ing of the will power to get started with, “I take my pen in hand.” Sie LOST House wreckers, tearing down an old homestead in Worcester, Mass., find a sealed ‘envelope behind a secret panel. : Envelope was received through’ the mails in 1845 by James Munro Scho- field. He put it away by error and forgot to open it. Insidé is a will, leaving Schofield a Scotch estate | worth nearly $1,000,000 then. What is it worth now? Schofield’s heirs will rush to Edinburgh to find out. The case is an allegorical warning to people who continually. are saying, “I forgot.” That is the most costly | expression that ever rolls from the tongue of man. | | EDITORIAL REVIEW | Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented: here in order, that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, j swimmer of the bunch, that dog and,imaybe, the best scout, You had great day dreams with COLUMBIA'S BILL OF COSTS - the gang, undecided whether to be pi s or railroad engineers when youlgrew up. Your soul thrilled, withgknowledge that they were your | frien Oh, yes, you never would, forget thosa lads. . . . How many) have" you" kept track of? In par-j| ticular, what became of the young} demon who always i your clothes in knots, making you led in tying; vy beef”? ' \ -Itgwas a red-letter day when#you weré allowed to help unload a car of watermelons. The ripest .and mest alluring always slipped—ac- cidentally, of course—and had to be eaten. You recall that melon, Seeds as black as ink, the “meat” red and so ripe that it was like sugar crys- tals at the core? You compate it with; the half-ripe melons sold now in ‘cities, ‘melons with white- streaked hard centers, and you wonder if the watermelon of boy- hood has not been crossed with the squash, by “scientists.” As with the spring and the old swimming hole, the best part of that-watermelon was the water it- eelf. No. matter how much a person smacks his lips and sighs when the choicest liquor trickles down his throat, there is, after all, no real drink in the world except good old- fashioned water, cool and refresh- ing.‘ It is one of the greatest joys of life. a MURDER A Philadelphia mail order house adveftises “genuine German Ort- gies automatics,” described as “nice small size, easily carried.” Any crook who wants one ,of these revolvers can get it secretly by mail, delivered for $7. If the crook buys a gun in his home town, usually the sale has to be regis- Murders, burglary and hold-ups would-be cut down by a law pro- hibiting the retailing of revolvers by parcel post or express. Why private sale altogether, sell only to police and army, thus disarming the underworld? PAPER BULLET Boston, police think of adopting ‘the “paper bullet” system originated by Police Commissioner Inches of Detroit. The, paper bullets are birdshot wrapped in paper wads. They hurt when. they hit, but stop just under- neath" the skin. Very fine for riot duty. But for handling crooks, the police had better stick to Mr. Colt’s invention, and get plenty of target practice. A bean-shooter never stopped a professional gunman. 4 RE MEAT SUPPLY Nelson, chief biologist for Uncle Sam, avill cross the Alaskan caribou with ‘the reindeer. The idea is to breed a larger animal, now that caribéu ‘and reindeer are looming future meat supply. Better leave hemfalone. A precedent exists in some of the ientific” tinkering with certain fruits and vegetables, practically ruined ag tasty food by “improve- ments.” They look :better to the eye, but taste like wood, compared with,the original natural state. CANDY From the diary of Columbus and from other papers found available for ‘his purpose, a German statisti- cian has estimated at $7,250 the orig- inal cost of the discovery of' Amer- ica, The figures impress us as fur- nishing an amazing example*of ex- plorer’s thrift. It has to be consid- ered, however, that the expedition of discovery escaped by several’ cent- uries, the handicaps to transatlantic ‘travel in this direction now imposed by..the-immigration quotas, the tar- iff-and the high cost of housing. Not |' even passport fees had to be taken into account for the excursion of 1492. Amiral Columbus himself drew a salary of $320, according to the in- formation gathered by Herr tela- haus. There was in “those happy days neither shipping board nor other regulatory. body to interfere with this munificence of reward. The crews of-the fleet were content, it appears, on stipends tof $29.25 ‘per man. In modern times distinguished for- eigners have found it possible to dis- cover America at figures practically of their own fixing, It is a matter of record and of some local pride that a few men coming over in the steerage have found their venture profitable morally and financially than that of others who have paid out more than the) cost of the Col- umbus outfit. We recall the \panes of voyagers hither who have sought to get back the expenses of their quest by the desperate meats of writing books about the country and the people. The German authority agrees that the Columbus enabling fund was se- cured largely througn the pawning of the rings and necklaces of Isa-| bella of Spain. If Ferdinand’s queen is able to look from somewhere down; upon certain prohibitions, prejudices | and politics of today’s America, with what reminiscent pride may \she | murmur, “These are my jewel New York World. Z AUX ARMES, CITOYENS! A’ still, small news item stucksfar down in an obscure corner of an in- side page of yesterday's. paper car- | ries-to a loving world the:momentous news that jewelers are threatening to discontinue selling engagement rings on the installment plan. The story looked so innocent and demure that we'll wager its awful significance and threat went over the heads of the vast majority of our teeming readers. But not past our editorial department, clear-eyed as usual. We sense the first ripple of a great re- actionary wave and make haste to| sound the toxin (we mean tocsin) for) our brother modernists. 4 Oh, feminists! Fellow apostles of free love and free divorce! Whither | are we headed? By slow and pain-| ful steps, he Bohemians and uncon-| ventionals of our personal liberty! cult have worked toward trial mar- | | riage, building on the firm founda- | tion of the trial engagement. Our | ultra-advanced comrades have abol- ished the wedding ring and raptur- ously joined the Luck Stone league, by the kiddies, in pennies and nic- | ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS se Sinis |Says These sideburns are hard on check- to-cheek dancing. You can't get close to some ped- ple because then you would get next. These nights. are dog days and cat Normaley is back, but look: how shi. has changed. \ Man reaps what he sows—unless the chickens get it. There are grov'n people in Irelana who don’t know tow quiet sounds. Things could 1¢ worse. Suppose Ford was making airplanes? We know a hen-pecked husband who lost his voice and didn’t find it out until three Jays later, Not that anybedy cares, but over in China Dr. Sun sets alone. If the coal miners stay out, there will be a slate shingle shortage. Some say higher education doesn’t pay; but big-league clubs signed up 60 college players this, year. Women’s fall fashions show’ the ears ‘but not the legs. The ladies may have heard something, Méney: gots further now, but it] seldom reaches next pay .day. Looks like Germany has given up the gooses-tep for the side-step. We sec where i man caught a fish as big as he was: ‘Wonder how big a fish the man was? Since a Pennsylvania alien can own a dog the onlysthing left is fo him ton get 0. tich{p: | any. 4 doesn’t want’ Bad thing about being a New Yorker is you have to live there. Two princes are advertising for husbands. Real princesses, because they say they are broke. The baby born ‘in an airplane is doing nicely, but its parents arc still up in the air. “A man can at the North Pole,” says Amundsen. If this 18 ure, that’s our new address. Sometimes we thing being an ulti- mate consumer is a bad habit. Ray McNamara claims he has driv. en farther than any other man. How about the man who borrows a car? “Walking helps the complexion,” says a doctor. They often walk to the drug store foF it, © 4 * Don’t worry, yeu fellows the June brides rejected.. Washington was turned down twice.* sae Fighter has his hands insured for | $100,000. A lot of moncy to have on his hands. It may sound strange, but a wel! rounded man is square. ——#; By Olive Barton Roberts Nancy wondered and wondered | how she and Nick could get the/ Fairy Queen’s wand from Flap- Doodle the purple fairy who had! stolen it. : ‘ Flap-Doodle and the Twins were} eating rice together owt of bowls with chopsticks. The Twihs”had in- ° vited. Flap-Doodle¥ to Haves t sani¢’) lunch. \ By are Salty | Suddenly Nancy thought‘of;a plan; “That's -a’ nice: “chopstick «yéb' brought with you, Mr. Flap-Doodle,” she said,. “Do you care if I try it?” | Flap-Doodle didn’t..know what to say., He looked over-‘to the. place he had put the wand and wishéd he | had: kept it by. him, NSE “Oh T guess, not,” she said: oB-hand’ like; as, though Re‘didn't-gate, So Natiey, went and got the’ Fairy.| Quéen’s wand" Pt Flap-Doodle nevér once guessed that the little Chinese boy called} Nick Qo Ting was just plain Nick, and that the little Chinese girl called | Nan Soy was his Twin, Nancy, So he didn’t worry much, He went on eating his rice and that Nancy was motioning to Nick behind his back. ; All at once he heard Nick say: “Please, Green Shoes, take us down to the Earth.to the Fairy Queen’s palace.” : Flap-Doodle made a jump and a | for. flapping his big ears, never noticing | { y AAMILNE © G22_& PDuttON Comparry (Continued from our last issue.) From the beginning Antony had seen this answer coming and -had drawn back from it. For, if Mark had been killed, it seemed’ such, cold-blooded killing. Was Cayley oqualsto it? ake Bill would have said “No,” be- cause Bill wouldn’t have killed any— body in cold blood himself, and be- cause’ he took it for granted that other people behaved pretty mueh as he did. But Antony had no such illusions. Murders were done; murder had. actually been done that afternoon? The only ovidelite here, for there was Robert’s dead body.’ Why not another murder? Had Mark been in the office at (other than Cayley’s, which ob ously did not count) was. Elsie’ Kisie was quite certain that she had heard his voice. But then Bill had siid that it was a very characteris- tic voice—an easy voice, therefore, to imitate. If Bill could imitate it so successfully, why not Cayley? | But perhaps it had not been such a cold-blooded killing, after all. Suppose his cousin had had a quar- rel with his cousin that afternoon over the girl whom they were both wooing, Suppose Cayley had killed Mark, either purposely, in sudden passion, or accidentally, meaning only to knock him down. Suppose that this had happened in the pas- gage, say about two o'clock. Sup- ‘pose Cayley there, with the body at his feet, feeling already the rope round his neck! his mind darting this. way and that in frantic search y. of escape; and suppose thatésildenly and irrelevantly ‘he remembers that Robert .is coming 'y the house at three o'clock that afternoon—automatically he looks at his watch—in half an hour's time. .” Antony pictured to himself Cay— ley in the passage, standing over the dead body of. his cousin, and working it out. ~How could Robert be made “to seem: the murderer, if ‘Robert were’alive to deny it? But suppose Ropért.were dead, too? He looks ‘at -his watch again. (Only “twenty-five minutes now.) Suppose Robert were dead, too? Robert dead in the office, and Mark dead in the passage—how does that help? . Madness! But if the bodies were brought together somehow. . . And Robert's death looked like suicide? . . . Was it possible? Madness again. Too difficult. (Only twenty minutes now.) Too ‘difficult to arrange in twenty min- utes. Can’t arrange a suicide. Too difficult’. . . Only nineteen min- utes... grab, but he was too late, The Twins, holding tight to the magic wand, were already far away in the sky, traveling headlong to- ward the earth as fast as two little comets, ! “Hopping frogs and leaping toads!” cried Flap-Doodle. “This is an out- rage! I’ve been fooled. I'll have to gét that magic wand in my power again.” He flew after the Twins as fast as his ears would carry him, talking to himself every inch of the way. in which the title “Missus” and the | degrading slavery of a common fam-| ily name is no more (except on their! monthly charge accounts). And now; the bulwark of the trial engagement | is attacked when the Philistines threaten the installment plan en-| gagement ring. ~ Surely the modern, cold-blooded, hard-fisted, unimaginative credit sys- | Cost of running the national gov- ernment now is nine cents a day for each éf'us, and for candy we spend two cents a day apiece. William Moffet, of the National Salesman’s Association, says the na- , tem is a foe to progress. We are against all bondage, and to pay in- stallments promptly is bondage. But | chion bodice is joined to a skirt of had Jistened in silence. | to be refused credit is worse; it is They passed the Moon and Venus and Mars and Jupiter, also the star But people on the stars only said: “There goes something. What dropped, do you suppose?” (To Be Continued) TRAINS, Trains are frequently seen on the new gowns for winter. A beaded black matalassee, and a one-sided train is the finishing touch. ; degradation.—Chicago Post, | where the Weatherman lived. | (Copyright, 1922, NbA Service) | ‘And then the sudden inspiration! ‘Robert dead in the office, 'Mark’s body hidden in the passage—-im- possible to make Robert-seem the j murderer, but how easy to make Mark! . Robert dead and Mark missing; why, it jumped. to the cye at once. Mark had killed Robert accidentally; yes, that would be more likely —and away. Sudden panic... . Nook at his watch again. Fifteen minutes, but plenty of time now. The thing arranges itself.) Was that the solution? , It seemed to fit in with |; wondered. then, so did that other theory which he had suggested morning. “Which one?” said Bill. They were sitting in the copse withdrawn. Bill had listened with ;Gpen mouth to Antony’s theory, dnd save for an occasional “By Jove.” “Smart man, Cayley,” had been his only [comment at the end. afkidden-him in the passage, locked then had run; (Het Antony the facts as they knew them; but to Bill in the, above the pond, from which the in- spector and his fishermen had now | “Which other, theory?” , we iThat Mark had killed Robert_ac- | cidentally and had gone-to Cayley fér help, and that Cayley, having the office door frony the outside hammered on it.” * es,,.but you were so dashed mysterious about that. 1 asked you what the point of it was, and you wouldn't say:anything.” He thought fora iftle, and then went.on, “I suppose you meant that' Cayley de- liberately betrayed Mark, and tried to*make him look like a murderer?” 1. wanted to warn you, that we sHould probably. find Mark in the passage, alive or dead.” “And now you don’t think so?” “Now I think that his dead body is} there.” {Meaning that Cayley went down itt Killed him afterward—after you id and hi one: after the police had come’ Well, that’s what 1 shrink from, Bill. It’s so horribly cold-blooded. Cayley may be capable of it, but I hate to think of it.”, “But, dash it all,, your other way isl Gold-blooded enough. According to, you, he goes up to the office and deliberately . shoots a, man with whom he has:no quarrel, whom he hasn’t seen for fifteen years!” "Yes, but to save his own neck. That makes a difference, And 1 think that Mark’s dead body is in the passage now, end has_ been there since, say, half-past two yes- terday afternoon. And _ tonight Cayley is going to hide it in the pond. (CVSt e MOTHER WAS with HA! — “eal WHAT WERE FATHER'S. LAST WO BEFORE HE PASSED ‘Away 2” “FATHER HAD NO Last WORDS; ‘Bill pulled: at the’ :moss on the ground” beside hint; threw away @ handful!‘ or’ two, -arid“‘said ‘slowly, “You may be right, but it’s ali guess—werk, you know.” Antony laughed. “Good Lord, of course it is,” he said. “And tonight we shall know if it’s a good guess or a bad one.” Bill brightened up: suddenly, “Tonight,” he said. “I say, to- night’s going to be rather fun. How do we work it?” Antony was silent fdr a little. “Let's put ‘ourselves in Cayley/s place,” said Antony, puffing slowly at his pipe. °“He’s got the body, or whatever it is,.in the passage, What will he do, next?” fully. i “Yes; but which end?” Bill sat up with a start. “By Jove, you mean that he will go out at the far end by ‘the bowl- ing-green?” “Don’t “you think .so? Just imagine him walking. across. the lawn in full. view. of.ithoe house, at midnight, with a body in his arms. He can get out by the bowling—- green,-and then come to the pond without ever being. in sight of the house at all.” ; “You”re right. Now, what's the next thing?” “The next thing is to mark the exact place in the. pond where he drops—whatever he drops.” “So-that we can fish it qut again.” “If we can see what it is, we shan’t want to. The police’ can have a go at.it tomorrow. But if it’s something we can’t identify and get it out. worth’ telling the. police about.” “y_yes,” said Bill, wrinkling his forehead, “Of course, the trouble with water is that one bit of it looks pretty much like the next bit. I don’t know if that has occurred to you.” a “Tt had,” smiléd Antony. “Let's | come and have a look at it.” ie They walked to the*edge of the ae, By ; RDs e : HIM “TO THE — HAL ® cast?’ . WHAT'S DEVOTION 1S THat WIFe'S FAITHFUL o LAUGH AT fh so t FUNNY “Come out,again,” said Bill help-} from a distance, then we must try) To see whether it’s| copse, and lay down ‘there Su silence, looking at the pond beneath them, “See anything?” said Antony at last. ‘ “What?” “The fence on tho other side.” “What about it?” ‘ “Well, it’s rather usefut that’s , a jaid Sherlock Holm2s enigmati-| cally,” added Bill. “A moment later, his friend, Watson, had hurled him into the pond.” Antony laughed. “I love being Sherlocky” he said. “It’s very unfair of you not to play up to me.” “Why is that fence useful my dear Holmes?” said Bill obediently. “Because you can take a bearing on it. You see—” “Yes you needn’t stop to explain to me what a bearing is.” | “L wasn’t going to. But you're lying here”—he looked up—“under- neath this pine tree. Cayley comes out in the old boat and drops his parcel in. You take a line from here on to the boat and mark it off on the fence there. Say it’s the fifth post from the end. Well then I take a line from my tree—we'll find one for me directly —and it comes on to the twentieth post say. And where the two lines meet there shall the eagles be gathered to- gether, QE. D. And there, I al- er eagle, Beverley by name, do his famous. diving act, as performed nightly at the Hippodrome.” Bill looked at-him uneasily. “Tsay, really? It’s beastly dirty water, you know.” y “I'm afraid so, Bill, So it is written in the book of Jashef.” “Of course [ knew that one of us would have to, but I hoped—vh, well, it’s a warm night.” “Just the night for a bathe,” agreed Antony, getting up. ‘Well now, let’s have a look for my tree.” , They .walked down to the margin of the pond and then looked back. Bill’s tree stood up and took the evening, ‘tall and unmistakable, fifty fect nearer to heaven than its neighbors, But it had its fellow at the other end of the copse, not quite so tall, perhaps, but equally con- spicuous. | “That’s where, I shall be,” said Antony, pointing to it. “Now, for the Lord’s sake, count your posts accurately.” “Thanks very much, but I shall do it for my own sake,” said Bill with feeling. “I don’t want to spend the whole night diving.” “Fix on the post in a straight line ‘with you and the splash, and then |count backward to the beginning} of the fence.” | “Right, old boy. Leave it to me. |I can do this on my head.” | “Well, that’s how you will have to do the last part of it,” said An- tony with a smile. He looked at his watch, It was nearly time to change for dinner. They started to walk back to the! house together. * At midnight the pond wag wait-) 'ing for them, more solemn in the | mbonlight. “The trees whichcrowned ! j the sloping bank on the far side of} it were mysteriously silent. It; seemed that they had the world very much to themselves. Almost unconsciously Antony spoke in a whisper. “There’s your tree; there’s mine. As long as you don’t move, there’s no chance of his seeing you. After he’s gone, don’t come out till 1 do.' He won’t be here for a quarter of | an hour or so, so don’t be im- patient.” “Righto,” whispered Bill. Antony gave him a nod and a smile, and they walked off to their! 0: 3 sts, (Continued in our next issue.) ——______.__ | ‘TODAY’S WORD | ¢—______—_— Today’s word is—MATTOID. It’s pronounced—mat-oid, with ac- cent on the first syllable. It means—a_ person of abnormal mind from birth bordering on in- sanity or degeneracy. It comes, probably, from the Italian ‘‘matto,” meaining “mad,” though also evidently related to the Latin..‘mattus” meaning “drunk, plus, the termination “old,” from thel Greek, meaning “like, re- sembling.” ‘ It’s used like this—“The ‘moron’ and the ‘mattoid’ differ from one an- other in. that the moron is an adult with a: child’s mind, while the line between the mattoid and the’ genius often is so doubtful that it puzzles | alienists to decide on it.” oor | ATHOUGHT | ARO Tee ERT And. seek the peace of the city whither I have caused you to be carried away captives, and pray unto the Lord for it: for in the peace thereof shall ye have peace: — Jere- miah 29:7. It is a good and safe rule to so- journ in every place as if you meant; to spend your life there, never omit- ting an opportunity of doing a kind? ness, or speaking a true word, or ‘making a friend—vohn Ruskin. — |; . Unusual Folk pu By NEA Service. Sunbury, Pa.,’ dug. 18.—With a rec- ord of more tha: 6,000 musical com- positions and the organization and teaching of 190 bunds to his ere Joseph H. Feehrer, 80-year-old mu- sician of Selinsgrove, Pa., is still ac- tive in the world of harmony despite jhis years. - Feehrer, the oldest living bandmas- ter in this part of the country, is known internationally for his work. Among other triumphs, he wou the first prize for writing the best orig- inal quick-step selection in a contest open to all in. the United States, Jan- ada, and Mexico, Notwithstanding* his 80 years, ‘most forgot to remark, will the tall-| /, His Own ‘Strike Secretary of Labor Davis, himself strikes for an hour or so to forget all the worries that rail, coal and other strikes have piled upon him. Here yot hie at a Washington pool ready ‘to ‘plunge in and drown bis worries. : ——— |. “News Flashes | OO New York.—Supreme court Justice Burr granted an injunction restrain- ing banks from. releasing deposits from the Irish republican cause to Eainon De Valera. The application came from Attorneys representing Michael Collins and other free stat- ers. St. Louis.—Suit for-divorce against Loren Murchison,’ star sprinter of the’ Illinois Athletic club, was filed by ‘Geneva Murchison who said her husband was more devoted to ath- letics than to her. Des Moines —Despondent over the loss of oil stock investments Paul Bartel hung himself, and his sister, Emma, took poison. ° Geneva.—Three men and two, wo- men roped ‘together fell five hun- dred feet in the Alps, suffering only slight bruises. A cushion of snow saved them! aah St. Paul—Regaining consciousness after he had been clubbed into in- ‘sensibility by three bandits who 2t- tempted to rob his soft drink parlor, Nick Ballis shot ty death Lee Burtch trio. \ Madison, Wis.—A bill calling for confiscation of automobile’ in which “spooning parties” are held will be introduced into ext legislature, Judge A. I, Stolten, of the Dane coun- ty superior court announced. Salisbury, N. C—Eight companies of troops placed on guard duty at Spencer, three miles from here, as result of tense feeling. Uniontown, Penn.—Two building., quarters for\non-union miners, were dynamited and a group of non-union men were attacked .n Fayette county. No one was injured, Mexi¢o City.—President Hardin was eulogized by newspapers’ for his apeal for punishment of persons re- sponsible for the Herrin, Ill.,’,mas- sacre. New York.—The snights of Colum- bus announced expenditures of $2,- 794,206.49 for welfare work for Amer- ican War Veterans during the year 1921-22. New York, — S.ate governments have a total bonded indebtedness. ot $1,071,506,981, or $18.18 per capita} according to the Bank of America. STEPS RIGHT INTO GOOD POSITION The State Bank of Gurdner need- Fred New§ard finished, his. course at Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. DD. Fred got the place. In good times and\bad, the man who’s trained is the one who wins. Da- kota graduates forge ahead. 226 have become bank officers. This tells you what school te attend. “‘Follov the Succes Siul” by en- rolling for Fall term, now under way. Write for our magazine, Sic free for one year. Address Dakcta Feehrer still vocalizes and sings in a choir at Selinsgrove. Business. College, 806 Front St, Fargo, N. D. and seriously wounded another of the ed an assistant-¢ashier just when * . ne on