Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘PAGE FOUR * chains that » onj-an electrical basis, power gen- rn THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE AE SES Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, | N. D., as Second Class Matter, | GEORGE D: MANN) - - Editor Foreign Representatives Gk LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - + DETROIT 7; Magquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH SNEW, YORK - _. - Fitth Ave, Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘The Associated Press ts exclusive- cly:centitted to the use or republi- cation. of all news dispatches cre- dited to it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local news published herein, . All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also esarved, 7a 2 Sis MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF % CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE vit IN ADVANCE | “ally by carrier, per year. dail by mall, per year (in Bis: 2.20 MAPEK) ceceeecegeeeeeeeeras E20 | aily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 6.00) Daily: by mail, outside of North i ~» Dakota THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWS- t ER (Established 1873) | Were AFTER WE DIE | The young king of Siam, Maha} 2 Vajiravudh, marries his cousin, Princess Lakshi Lavan. One wile is enough, says he, abolishing the ~eustem: of maintaining a royal harem. ssoThis’is a big sensation in the orient. For the old king, Maha’s #fathex, had 300 wives. | Hmman nature being about the samé all over the world, the Siam- 7 ¢a¥0taxpayers probably are glad to. ee the harem expire, ai {Bhis’ new king,” you reflect, “must bea progressive chap with smoiermidéas. iHe is eftlightened.”. King Maha’s abolishment of the royal harem illustrates vividly the great changes that come as one generatiGh, goes” te. the graveyar ql oR generation takes its} plage. What tha@ypresent ‘keneration has’ frightful botéh of its job: -Men have walled*themselves into aad situation. They run about, | lke caged animals, seeking an exit. Beery day some quack steps forth ifthe field of economics and so- cology with a new “cure-all.” He; chins he has the magic medicine that will bring rest and peace out} ofsunrest and war. ‘AHthis attempt to stabilize con- dit is commendable. But the ne sy h the World war‘and all, made:.a fe ca aoesate do you expect to have in 19262! Make the Philadelphia trip if you can, Travel broaden | HOMES | Renters, ahoy! The Associated predict that 786,000 new dwellings will be built in the United States | this year. A long row to hoe, yet, however. ; The housing shortage at the be-| ginning of 1922 was 1,000,000 | jhomes. Out of the estimated 786,- |000 homes to be built this year, 611,000 are for normal require- ments, mostly replacing old ones. The balance, only 155,000, applies to the shortage. WRECKS Ships lost at sea in 1921 totaled 155 steamships and motor vessels and 83 sailing craft. So reports} Lloyd’s, insurance firm of London. On a tonnage basis, steamships; lost at sea are about 1 in 230 a year, The “dangerous” airplane! hOLD A young German working in a cigaret factory at Breslau was badly injured several years ago, Surgeons removed his fractured ribs and replaced them with ribs} of gold and platirum. Now the young man says he lives in a perpetual nightmare, afraid} hold-ups will operate on him andj take his ribs. We don’t know the! chances of that in Germany, but over here it would be nearly a cer. tainty. BATIK DESIGNS | A frock of white tricotine is em- bellished on its sleeves and pocket | with an all-over batik, design in black and ‘red. Red pumps are worn j ith this costume. p CONVENIENT A smart -frock, made ofthe most | suppe black satin, has a skirt drap- | ery which may be drawn up around the shoulders to form a smart loose coat effect, - SPORTS COAT. |, | A fur designer says the ort sports coat of fur will be decidedly "popular this coming winter and very moderate in price. EDITORIAL REVIEW | | Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opirion of The Tribune, They are presented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are probability is that the big prob- Joms. will be solved by the rising! -énevation. The man who falls into} a Well is not usually pulled out by; hinjself. | #]%e world’s hope is in the young-| sterys who are marching through} sdhpol days to take up where we} leave off. They are going to in-| hérit big problems, And they are; gdihg to solve them, for they will Bett on the job with fresh energy and a new viewpoint. “The generation that staged the) Civil war in our country left everything “in an, awful mess.” The generation that. followed de- velqped the countrysand its wealth and restored the damages until prosperity hung on the trees. {It was the same in other import- ant? countries. Then the young generation got old and smashed things to ruins. History repeats. Naturally, it would be foolish for | ug to lie down and quit cold, letting problems grow worse until young— sters grow up. But the hope of civilization is unquestionably in the bays and girls returning to school after vacation. The best way to solve our problems is to make those bdy$ and girls as efficient, sensible and‘ straight-thjnking as lies within our | power. it ey LAZINESS TO harness the ocean’s waves and make them do man’s work, the Stpdder Wave Power Corporation is'formed at White Plains, N. Y. oats, rising on waves, will pull will\run compressed air | engines, /Sa-elaim: the. organizers. Whgather the schelits; works d} not, it 1s only aiquestion af! years} until | palrt of the’ gigantic power of Dcean waves and tides .will_become man’s slave. is, Haman laziness. will find a way to hatness tremendous power now go- ing-to waste in’ nature. jd » COAL: 3\" Whether you will uave enough coal\ this winter,depends more on rajlgoads than on mines. The mines can produce encugh soft coal. Get- tig; it hauled to consumers will be a bigger job than the railroads have ever, done. he only permanent solution of the fuel power is to put the nation erated by burning coal at the mines, Aj{starving man, however, isn’t helved by knowledge that food will betplentiful 20 years from now. fs HEAT Grandpa can remember when only; a few rooms of the home were | kep# heated in winter. Kitchen and | dining room were shut off after | méajtime and the family gathered | arbund the base-burner in the only wd4rm room. Bedrooms were s0| ccld the’ water*in the pitcher froze | during the night. Presént generation is soft, not sfied unless every rdom in the | hause is warm enough to fry an} egg.’ It might do the health good | tojgo back to,old-fashioned heating | méthods for a few months, Even a coal shortage can' have its good side; It may teach us not to be too cctravagant with fuel. EXPO Big plans under way, for the ex- pdsition to celebrate 150th anni- versary of signing of Declaration off Independence. Yt' will be held in Philadelphia in 1926, That is four years away, things mgve fast in modern times, and foi years may bring many changes. For one thing, you may being discussed in the press of the day, | HIGH FATE AND DECREASING The decrease in passenger reve- nue shown by the current’ reports of important railway systems is at- tributed to the greater use of the automobile both for commuting and for vacation outings and to the high cost of living. But itis not the funda- mental cause the high cost of rail- road transportation? The Ameri-| can public is, peculiarly fond of railway travel and prone to indulge in it to the sacrifice of other com- forts, But the virual, doubling of | Passenger fares as compared with the rates in force before the war has necessarily discouraged. pleas- ure trips. That more than the pri- vate automobile. mus be held re- sponsible for, dwindling passenger receipts, ra ; Assuming that this is the cause, why is not the remedy to be found in a return to old-time excursion rates? The theory’that high fares mean larger recéipts‘has been dis- pelled; the plan of keeping the equipment busy hauling more pas- sengers at lower rates might be| tried with advantage. Similarly on the sea there are an-| ticipations of a dull winter due to he high cost of ocean travel. Many large liners are scheduled to be laid off for repairs and others will be withdrawn for special cruises. | Doubling the price of passage worked well enough in the summer season; with the rush over and with third-class patronage cur- wailed the problem of income may become acute. Why does not the solution here! lie in reduced rates to stimu'ate business? The ‘American tourist public is’ as ready to travel by sea as by” land with proper induce- ments. But it balks at paying $250 for accommodations which cost $100 a few years ago and were rel- atively as good then as now.—New | York’ World. =" } ANOTHER PION EER PASSES Forty-eight years ago a dashing young cavalry man rode out into the vastness of the untamed west! with the gallant Custer forces, rid- ing always in the forefront through the most dangerous places and only; by a strange trick of fate was saved from being a victim, in’ the massa— cre, Three years later he gave up| the life of a soldier to hecome a pioneer: of western North Dakota and to do his bit in the building up and unfolding the destinies of a great state. The other day all that was mortal of this man was laid at rest in the “City of the Dead,” just outside of Dickinson. For 37 years Walter Sterland was a resident of Dickinson and Stark county; During that time he suf- fered the hardships and endured the privations that came ‘to all pio-| neers.’ He did his full part in the development of,the city and county, When his help and counsel were asked, he did not spare himself but put his shoulder to the wheel and; | pushed. For 37 years, he worked as he lived quiétly among his neigh- |bors. He was honored with many | Positions of trust yet he sought glory not for himself but only for the community in which he lived..} | During his tenure of office as a} magistrate many offenders were brought before him. He was quick to mete out justice. Yet it was jus- tice that always tempered with! mercy. His fine sense of honor and, fairness and his great respect for the law of the land increased the, wisdom brought into play in: ren-' dering his decisions. j tact with air transportation, such| | that-are unjust as they are dis-| and a wise judge. Yet, many of those who in the days to come will | miss him the most were not there to say farewell, For Walter Ster-/| land’s greatest work in life was done as juvenile commissioner. General Contractors check up and! * Scores of young men and women !on the Slope today are praning Walter Sterland for setti! ng them jright when they first encountered the storms of life. Scores of boys and girls who came under his :su- pervision in recent years will re- vere his memory with grateful hearts for the helpful counsel and | consideration given at a time when | the world seemed dead set against | them. They learned to know him as a friend rather than an official. It was to a friend that hey told theif troubles and it was their) friend who set them on the right} track, who hade them forget and gave them another chance even in; the face of a storm of criticism. | And, only in rare instances have | they forgotten their deb. 1 His was a life of great useful-/ ness. He made the most of the full! span allotted to mortals. He ful- | filled every duty he felt incumbent | upon him and in all things acted | wisely and well. Peace be to his | ashes.—-Dickinson Press. H A NEW FLIGHT RECOR The average American: is. not greatly thrilled by the report that a European aviator’ has made a sustained flight of more than two hours in an engineless monoplane. Removed as we are from daily. con- as the coming and going of air-bus lines between capitals and across | the Channel, we have not ag yet; acquired the right mental attitude toward the plane. Steps in its de- velopment, therefore, mean little to most of us. This is unfortunate, . The air- plane is one of the great inventions | of the twentich century and prom- ises to revolutionize transportation. | If America is progressive, it will have to get in step with the prog- ress of the plane. i Twenty years ago it was a tre- mendous feat even to fly a plane by. motor. Now we have an airman soaring about for some six miles} with nothing more than air cur- rents to propel him. As the pioneer American flyer, Glenn Curtis, puts it: “We may learn to soar like the albatross over the ocean.” However, motorless flight prom-| ises to be a turning point in the de-| velopment of aviation. It foresha- dows the time when heavy, expen- sive motors will not be needed for | air-craft. It prophesies the day; of planes with small motors that almost any man can afford to own. Aviation is to be popularized and put in reach of the masses. The plane will enable the next genera-| tion to follow a very different model! of life than ours of today.—Minne- | apolis Journal. | THE KINGDOM OF THE MOVIES | There are some fifteen thousand | motion -picture theaters in this) seats. Allowing for two perform- ances a day it is figured that twen- ty million persons look for am hour. or two on theyscieen pictures every twenty?four‘hours. They‘do not go from a‘sense of duty, but with the ‘desire to be entertained, and inci- dentally, instructed. Is it any won- der that United States Commission- er of Education John J. Tigert said recently: “Within the celluloid film lies the mest powerful weapon for) the attack against ignorance that | the world has ever known.” Here, | indeed, is a kingdom whose power | and influence cannot be accurately assessed. yf Blanket indictments? are some-'| times levelled against the movies! criminating. A fairer idea of their) problems and shortcomings, how-/| ever, ig gained from a recent ques-| tionnaire carried out by the Ince Studios of Culver City, Cal. The Tesults indicate that present day) opinion is more favorable toward; the movies than it was a decade ago toward the speaking stage. | Some of the criticisms reported in! this survey that chaHenge atten-| tion are that too many sex pictures! are shown, that the ideals and stan- dards represented are too often| low, that vice and crime are made too prominent, and ‘that domestic relations, which’ should be person- al, private and sacred, are cheap- ened and ‘degraded by too much} publicity. These changes come) from the friends of the movies, and | thus ‘constitute a critique that! should be heeded. | With hardly an exception educa-' tors gave their approval to the mo-| tion pictures, on condition that they | be used in the right way, Just be- cause they are so powerful for good} or ill, they must be used in: the/| Tight way. It is well that they now; have in Will H. Hays a Sir Galahad | willing to co-operate with schools, | homes and churches to make the; movies more nearly what they) ought to be.—Minneapolis Journal. Wheeling Register: Really, the! strikes will not be finally settled | until the public pays the bill. Buffalo Timeg; “We would like! to sce a girl dress on $1 a week,”! says an exchange. Shame! | Roancke Times: After a young) man kas had enough of petting; parties, he begins to look around for « wife—elsewhere. i Danville Register: The man who; will not quarrel’. with a woman} when she is fairly itching for a! quarrel, is an unaccommodating! brute. | country providing fifteen million |- | and cold? | gulped half a cup of tea, hot. Hthet Svracuse Herald: Nowadays a September Morn picture coming) after the August pictures of bath-| ing girls wouldn’t attract any at-' ention at all, at all: | Washington Star: We'd all be fine people,” said Uncle Eben, “if! all dee growed-up. folks was as} truthful, kind an’ polite as dey ex-; pects de chillun to be.” | When he was laid to rest hun- Akron Beacon Journal: The. go;to the expo in a flying flivver— dreds bowed in silent tribute at his junior Rockefeller says the wood | eléctricity, sent by wireless, its) grave. Hundreds mourned the loss pile helped’ to form character in’ table; motive power, How much monsy of a true friend, a kind neighbor boys. So did the wood shed, | ‘reach for the sugar bowl, miss it BEGIN HERE TODAY A mile from the shore of Lake! Huron was the mysterious and) ghostly Resurrection Rock, symbol! of some great wrong done in the past, which now became connected) with a supernatural . force in the! mind of ETHEL CAREW. That | morning! she came to the home of her; grandfather, old LUCAS CULLEN, SENiOR, who had! won millions in violent struggles for timber lands, ,in northern! Michigan. She asked for money to carry on ‘the engineering proj-| ects undertaken by her father be) foxe:he had been killed’ in France} BABNEY; LOUTREBLE then entered her life. The young ‘army officet! had ‘received miessages from her’ father during a seance.. He must: go to the Resurrection Rock. He| felt that the trip would solve the! mystery of his obscure parentage’ and’ of his rearing by Indians.| The news of his presence ‘throws! Lucas Cullen into a fit. of rage, and he tries to bribe Ethel to tell! what she knows of Loutrelle, CO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER V It was fast becoming dark, as the! swift, midwinter evening closed| dewn, With the night came wind; ! and ‘upon’ wind returned the! cold. . The gaunt outline of the} Rock withdrew to dimmer and dim-j mer distances until Ethel at her) window, could see it no more. Sud- denly a bright dot glowed through the darkness —a light upon Resur- rection Rock, a light yellow with distance illumining a window, Ethel; theught. It went out as suddenly] as it appeared; then it glowed again; and cnce more went out. She! watched steadily for some time| longer; but no light appeared again.; She heard a soft tap, tap, tap at’ her coor; and she went over and cpened it to find the collies, Lad and Lass, who had been out with Kin- cheloe when she arrived. The dogs, wet from the snow melting in their long hair, turned Ethel’s thouhgt to Miss Plat’s husband. He had: always, affected: the man-) ners of a gallant and always before had made it a particulr point to be on hand to greet Ethel when she ar- rived at St. Florentin, She had been too excited to attribute any signifi-: cance to his absence this time; buf now the’ fact stirred disquiet. | As he, had taken the dogs with him, he probably had been on the lake, for the dogs would .not have been able to run except on the ice where the wind ‘had. cleared the snow. ‘Now what had kept, Miss! Platt’s lazy, comfort-leving husband | cut so late this evening in the dark Every cne was at supper when Asa Redbird returned with -o tele- gram which—like all Cullen business telegrams—was in code. : Lucas at once left the table and,’ with Miss Platt, went ‘into his office to decipher the brief. ‘communica ticn, from his son. When’ he re- turned to the table, it was so plain that he had exciting news tat ‘ms wife could not’ repress Her ‘question: “Something has happened’‘in Chi- cage, Lucas?” as “Nothing,” he denied, and” he watched Kinchcloe -as -Miss’ Platt returned to her seat. He was trying to catch his wife's glance; but Miss Platt avoided look- ing at him. ; “Asa Saw several foxes about,” she said casually to Ethel; I sup- pose they’re after our chickens.” Lucas was taking another cup ot, tea, and Ethel was watching his hand and reach again. He was drinking when suddenly he dropped’ his cup and jerked up and away from the Kinchelce and Ethel herselt) { voice. t rifle;,and a few moments later-his WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1922 MILDRED, WHAT HAVE. You DONE THERE? SAS27) SAG YouR BIG DOLL! 4 }MADE HER GO. BATHING AND Now !’M DRYING HER ovT!, ): rang, sharp and clear, outside the, house. ‘The gun fired again. Miss Platt and Ethel’s grandmoth- ter alike had revealed no alarm. *) “Asa said he woald get his gun,”; ‘Miss Platt volunteered quietly,; “and come back for the foxes.” “Of course,” her. Hae ay dropping back into his seat. Lucas remained at the table only ja moment before he proceeded to, ‘the front room where, in recent] ‘years,,family prayer was said each; ‘evening after supper. | 4. While Ethel knelt, listening to ther .grandfather's voice, go’ on and) iJon, an.amazing panic possessed her.| “She was felling,that the ,long, de: liberate reading and now the endless ; ‘upplication was for a purpose other than, devotion, and that purpose was} to keep her kneeling in that stutty yoom,with her face to the back of a chair. Suddenly “she “arose and! slipped into the hall where she found| her. -epat and =cap and. skis. “She drew, breath, when she opened the; outgrdgor, as thocgh she had':been; stiflitie? ignd she,went out upon the snow in the direction of the lake. i She heard her grandfather's voice shouting: after her; but she did pot! heed. it, and. he did not pursue her.! It was after cight o’clock and very} cold, with‘a constant wind blowing) off the ice. The Rock lay lost in cbseurity. She gazed frequently for, the reappearance of the light which she had seen the hour earlier, Its, absencg filled her with dread, ; She turned “back to’ St. Florentin and ;soon heard a shout which she recognized to be Sam Gren Sky’s When she replied, Sam has- tened up, reporting friendily: “Qld man send me after you, aw- ful mad;/old_ man tell you to come right home and. stay thére.” Ethel found’ her grandfather to be “awful, mad” indeed; he met her at thé door and’ ordered her to go to her room and to bed and stay there. What did she mean by going out: 3, the dark to’see a’ stranger whom she had met on the train? She was his granddaughter and at his own house, and’ he would be obeyed, At eleven o'clock when the -house- hold, gexcept Kinchelce, had’ gone to béd, Ethel rebuilt the fire in yer stove and sat in a chair on) the other side/of‘the wall at her left she could hdar Squnds which told her that her grandfather. was still restless; she; heard: him open his door,and go out into the hall’ and»come. to her door) and stand there. He was¢listoningy| she’ knew;; but he probably supposed her ‘to be in ‘héd-and asleep. At any rate, he moved qway and went down- In: her. stoeking feet, she moved noiselessly across to her door which she \cpened carefully. She Serept}: halfway, down. the stairs. Something clickelly she recognized that her grandfather was loading a repeating said,| great figure came’ dimly into view when»ho halted before’ a window. She tculd’sce that he was holding his rifle ready but lowered; and her muéeles ‘went taut all’ through |her. If he’ raised: his: rifle~to fire, she would, rush. down upon him. * But he did not; he only.moved from one window to another, looking out; and -then-he came toward thé stairs. She ‘regained, her room without alariping him;,.and ‘he went back to his room.) Close to midnight; she. made out a man’s figure|.moving under the trocgz.dogs floundered, beside hi Lad and Lass undoubtedly. So she knew the man -must be Kincheloe, returning. . He carried the’gun which he had taken to aid Asa in killing the fox;" and as he neared the house, Ethel herd cher grandfather go down: airs. They went together to the fice” and locked themselves in. For a minute Ethel stoed in the cold started also as the report of a rifle hall, held by numbing dread; just) WHY, YOU'VE RUINED | back to her room and shut herself Vet as she started to descend the stairs, she heard the office door: open and! her grandfather-say distinctly, “All ‘| right; all right!” + They had lit the office lamp, and the:beam of light from the door showed 'Ethel her grandfather stand- ing while Kincheloe went past him toward the kitchen where he turned on the water. - Her, grandfather turned Slowly about, and the light from the office’ shone upon his face, inclined down- ward a little, strained and with mus- cles at the jaw drawn tight. She had) only a glimpse before he. stepped into the room and turned out the | light; but, having seen, she gripped hard at the stair rail for an instant to steady herself before she cerpt in to think, Kincheloe and were _ planning her grandfather som deed — some wrong, secret, act of violence, In no, other way. could she account for what she, had witnessed in that glimse ~of her grandfather's face —| vindictiveness, triumph, fear. She heard a whine at her door and the pat of a dog’s paw at the panel, and, 0) yening, the door, she let in’ Lad “and his neck — something which seemed to have frozen and dried there. When she realized this was blood, she set her fingers to ‘feeling’ for @ cut-from which it might have: flow- ed; and when she, - could. find, no; until he went to Fargo as an employe wound, she clung to Lad, demanding’ of him: ge “It was the fogy Lac! caught the fox!” «But her own terrors denied her; her own térrors snatched at her | heart and overwhelmed her struggles | for calm thought. The dried, brown| mat in the dog's hair was not, about | his jaws where it must. have been/ had he caught and killed the fox; it was under his neck where it would have come if Lad had sniffed over, some one who lay bleeding. That. deed,,. secret and violent, which ‘Kincheole and her grandfath- ed had considered ;— was it already done? What sort' of deed? “Ah, j’y_etais mosquetaire!” The yoice, Barnéy Loutrelle’s voice, seemed to float to, her from far away over the snow; and she seemed to see him, when she shut, her: eyes, lying stretched out, with Lad sniffling over him. ‘ “They've done it—they’ve done it,” she repeated again and again. to| herself, without yet-daring to allow any closer defining of “at77, But whatever it was, “it” was done. She waited until dawn, was spread- ing over -the eastern sky before she went downstairs, carrying her shoes; she put them on and found her skis. | The. dogs roused and danced’ about her;. she. tcok them out with her! and made for the lake. 1 The light had strengthened svffi- | ciently to show her the: gaunt out-| lines. of \Resurrection’ Kock, white | and lifeless’ above the lake :ice. | When she glanced back toward St. Florentin, she saw that some one was following her from her grand-| father’s house, 2 man who must be! -| he was a member including the A. roked His. head. ““isomes|? thing. matted® the’ white “hair, under), a oy,caught) the fox! Lad, tél), me—tell fme, yout PIONEER EDITOR ALELLSWORTH PASSES AWAY New Rockford, Sept. 6.— After a period of sickness lasting over six months, Alf H. Ellsworth signed his “30,", completed his galley of lite,| and passed. into that “undiscovered! country fiom whose bourne no! | traveler ever returns’! at 6:00 o'clock| ip. m, Saturday, September. 2nd, at} | the age of 57, still on the sunny side/ | of life. That seemingly incurable | disease cancer of the liver and other | complicatioas hastened the end, He awaited the end with faith and con-| mugen the future and passed“into the vale cf tears as if having been weary and needing rest, using his burden fer a pillow, lied down on a couch Gf pleasant dreams, His wite, daughter, and two brothers, Will |and Jim with their families were at the bedside. His two sons Howard W. and Frank C. were unable to ar- | nive until Sunday morning owing to | train connections at the weck end. | Rev. Snyder of the Methodist Kpis- cecpal church of Fargo officiated at | the services at 2:3) Monday, Sept. 4, | in the church followed by the Udd | Fellows beautiful ecremony and then| | the Mason, of which he was a mem- | ber, took charge and held the last! '\snd but most impressive rites at the | grave. The pall bearers were rep- resentatives of each lodge of which | FP &AM,L 0,0. FP, AO. U. Wy M. W. A., and the K. P.’s, with hon-/ | crary pall bearers in a like manner | from among his many old time | friends’ and admirers. Prominent Lodge Man Outside of the newspaper fratern- | ity, in which he spent his life, true fraternalism and lodge work was his | greatest hobby and he was known over the state by members of the | different fraternities for the’ inter- |'est and zeal displayed at all times. He was rated as an eloquent ritual- ist of high rank who aimed at ef- ficiency in that which he undertook and real fraternalism, as it should be, was his aim in life. He was a grad- uate of the pioneer school of news- paper work from paper boy to editor and applied his talents always in a zealous and proficient manner. His. | election as Grand Master Workmen| | of the A. O. U. W., with other Grand | Lodge offices he held, was perhaps the greatest honor and tribute to his ‘years of patient and painstaking lodge career. “Alf,” as he was known by his newspaper and frater- | nal friends, who are legion, was of| that) sunny disposition that makes ‘for a better and happier world, al- ways the dispenser of a pleasant smile and an optimism that was! worth while to see. Alfred H. Ellsworth Born at Eldora, Iowa, Dee. th, 1865; the third child of Col, and Mrs\ D. F. Ellsworth, who became pion- eers of that. state after the Civil Ware ia. aT iaa¥ Pioneer in State ‘i Came to Dakota Territory in 1881, and, as an apprentice printer helped issue the. first paper published at Lisbon in June of that year. Be-| came editor of the Sargent County) Item in 1884, which he published of the Daily Argus in 1889. Subse- ! quently was editor and part owner; of the Daily Capital at Jamestown,! and for several years foreman of the Daily Alert. Was telegraph editor of the State Center at New Rockford in 1916-1918, ‘and went to a Fargo Job Printing Co. in June 1921. Survived by Frances S. Ellsworth, wife and 4 year old daughter, Hazel. | Also by two sons and a daughter) from a former marriage: Howard} H. Ellsworth of Killdeer; Frank U. Ellsworth of Bismarck, and Mrs. An- drew Erdahl of Dickinson, Other surviving relatives are, his aged mother, Mrs. Mary E. Ellsworth of New Rockford; two brothers and & sister, W. A. Ellsworth of New Rock- ‘ford, J. E. Ellsworth of Forman, and from 1896 to. 1900. Never was a can-! didate for any public office. Became an Odd Fellow in Fargo Dec. 0th, 1889; received the En- ‘Tom Sims Yes, skirts are longer. But we still have mice, , What makes a half bald man madder tlian buying a whole hair- cut? Fi / Love nests are hatching out breach of promise suits, The seven-year itch has broken out in one Russian town. They are looking forward to 1929, ‘Miners won’t dig down as deep as the man who buys their coal. Some towns have all the luck. Philadelphia ‘landlord is missing. Men who long for the old days would hate red underwear, “Train Wreck Injures Nine” — headline. That reminds us, foot- ball will be back soon. Every man deserves a_ living wage except a saxophone player. Beauty secret: Never argue with a mad dog. When school opens a boy’s neck thinks every day is Saturday night. Why don’t some women have to pay, income tax on three-fourths of what their husbands make?? Getting along nicely in this world is not inherited, Travel broadens’ some. Others return as skinny as ever. This may be an awful country; but a Swiss firm is using Austrian money for wrapping soap. Efficiency'is the modern watch- word. !NearLondon, a duck egg hatched out twin ducks. The line of least resistance leads downward and the line of most per- sistence leads upward, Actress has a hard life. About time she gets used to her husband it is time to'get another one. You can do what you like if you like what you do. Love makeg the world go round; but knocking a man on the head has the same effect. Hunt the bright side. If we knew what the weather was going to be hew could strangers talk? * Lightning never strikes twice in the same place, but miners do, A wise ‘man never throws rocks Speed cop a liar, King of Siam has only one wife while hig father had 300; but then, that may be. the reason. s Two wrongs don’t make a rigaé. They, often get one left. When hubby cooks his own breakfast you know who is boss. ——— >——____. |. A THOUGH | a And the Lord shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought—Isaiah 56:11, Self-reverence, self-knowledge, self-control, These three alone lead “life to sovereign power. ; Yet not for power (power itself ‘Would come uncalled for) but to “ive ‘by law, Acting*thé law we live by without . F.G. Sims of Grand Rapids, féar,’ Me pines ¢ Raplcs:) and becausé right is right, to fol- Was a member of the King Me-|.., low right, morial Methodist Episcopal churen| Were wisdom in the scorn of con- at New Rockford. sequence. Prominent Politically Alfred Tennyson, Served as a member of the Ke- Ree ae publican State, Centra} Committee Cincinnati dishwasher . inherited $75,000, Tell daughter and she may help with the dishes, , If.winter comes, we will put our campment degree at Jamestown in 1892 and was admitted to the Grand: Lodge at Valley City in 1894. Served! as District Deputy Grand Master rapresenting New Rockford Lodge’ No. 146, and lodges in the 9th dis-, trict, 1919-20-21. Joined the Ft! Seward lodge No. 16, A. O. U. W., at Jamestown and served as its Master Workman in 1897. and representative to Supreme Lodge! at/ Buffalo, N. Y. in 1901. Again| Was elected ito stimulate th Grand Overseer in 1898,,Grand Fore-| growth of their hair man in 1899, Grand Master in 1900,/should try Van vest back on and then we will be in our winter suit, Quickly Regrow Your . Bobbed Hair Women who wish Ess_ Liquid Scalp Massage, which is Kincheloz. Suddenly Ethel changed} her plan and swung from the direct 991 put ill health prevented attend-/growi : line to the shore and cut into the! ing, Beame a Pythian Knight in| Strong, ng hair, woods to the little clearing where! Columbian Lodge 1894 and received hair surely follows 9 | the Grand Lodge rank in 1916 as rep.}a heaithy condition of the scalp and Deposited Grand Lodge a good circulation of blood to the ‘hair roots. Ask us for Vane Ess, Was a member of Century Lodge No. which comes in a patent applicator jAsa Redbird lived. “I want you to come right away! o¢ No, 9, uot to the Rock, Asa,” she said. “I'm’ going there; come after me) quick as ‘you can. You understand.” She turned away, and started di- rectly for the Rock. Kincheloe was ahead of her mow and hurrying, without apparent regard for her and | withcut looking (To Be SAFETY, - The fear emotion is working overtime. “Insurance Press, trade paper, says that Americans this year will take out a total of $9,000,- 000,000 of new life insurance. ‘Life insurance ig growing eight times faster than our population. A fortunate situation, for at least seven-tenths of men would leave their fdmilies practically penniless except for insurance, systematic and scientific. saving. Bet them back. Continued) 2 that you. will die before they ex-) pect you to. ~ Here is a fortune. Get up some- thing to take rouge off coats. elected as Supreme representative in| | eard in Fargo No. 2, Nov. 7th, 192 | 60, A. F.. & A. M.. and New Rockford | Camp No, 2214, Modern Woodmen of | America. Served as State Lecturer | for M. W. A. in 1904-05. 49 FREIGHT | ~ CARS BURNED | Great. Falls, Mont,, Sent. 5. | ‘teen freight cars were burned in a, fire of-mysterious n that swept over fire tracks in the Emerson. yards | of the Great Northern system in West Great Falls last night. The yards, | contained 800 yards which were en-! ; dangered by the blaze. i The fire was reported to have brok-| en out simultancously on five differ-; jent tracks in most cases in cars| | whose doors had been pushed: shut. \ so successfully vigorous bottle. Easy to apply. If used as directed it will cause your hair to grow 8 to 10 inches each year. Finney’s Drug’ Store Bismarck, N. D. For Real Estate Service List your Houses, Lots and Farm Lands with me. Have more prospective customers now than for years. (also write Fire Insurance in reliable companies. F. E. Young First National Bank Bldg. | Phone 78 at_ the .jail windows. or calls a