The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 11, 1922, Page 4

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hi , fF ik Gi Sata S SESE SRTC ET RES PAGE FOUR \ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1922 Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N, D., as Second Clauss Matter, GEPRGE D. MANN) = - Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO : - - Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - MEMBER OF 'THE ASSOCIATED | : PRESS ———————_——$ The Associated Press ts exclusive ly entitled, 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 special dispatches herein are alsn resdfved, —s, MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF ~ CIRCULATION SUB: CRIPTION RATES PAYABLE } N ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year... .$7.20 Dail by mail, per year (in Bis- 9) mi Daily by per year (in state outside Bisinarck) .... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota 6, “THE a's ST NEWS- PAPER (Established 1873) GALLERY GODS Lee Shubert, prominent pian, predicts that in a few y: there will not be any “peanut gal- leries” left in New York City tth aters, except in grand opera hou The passing of this famous | n, the gallery, has become a notiveable tendency in the archi- tecinre of new theate And, .with its passing, another phase of glamour goes out of life. For what modern thrill equals the rday night stampede into the ry,years ago, to see such f tes. as “Primrose and West rels,” “Eight Bells,” Lotta, Leslie Carter, ‘The’ Black Crook” or Richard Mansfield “pr, Jekyll and Mr. Hyde Most spectacular of the old-time aganzas was Kiralfy’s “EXx-/ colsior,” which toured the country | i 1884 with 350 people in the com-| Q The gallery never forgot it. show- $ in| ‘ { The old-time gallery was a sym- | polof democracy, Elsewhere in| the theatey a spectator felt uncom- | fértably out-of-place unless he had! on his Sunday clothes and | starcked collar as high as a uae fence. “But in the gallery, even overalls were good enough. A big bruiser | ofa watchman, armed with a load- | d made doubly ferocious | rs mustache, kept order. | 3 off, boys!” { > the peanut-munchers | ped their feet and whistled like | a hurricane, as footlights went on/ and house lights off and curtain rose on the first actt. The gallery, with its vehement disapprevals of bad acting and. de- jaye in shifting scenery, with its caustic cat-calls that said more than a dramatic critic could get in a column was the terror of actors. They dreaded it beause the gallery} was the supreme court of public opinion. The performer who couldn’t please the gallery soon had to quit the profession. Hence the express‘on, “Playing to the gal- lery.” a : Big changes, such as the passing of the gallery, are dim reflections of sweeping and fundamental re- ‘ments in the actions and con— tions of the public. Some students of mob tendencies think the gallery is disappearing liecause the “gallery gods” now g0 to the movies. That is only partly true, for the gallery collectively had keen discrimination and an absolute intuition for recognizing and appreciating “fine actin’.” All this was on a plane that only the “legitimate” stage can: satisfy. More probable is the theory, that thohey ig more plentiful among the people than years ago, and that the cleinent that used to find it difficult to raise two-bits for gallery admi fion now .parks its car and § through the show with the elect. ts SELLING AUTOS How would you like to take a whirl, in business for yourseif, selling autos? Like most other s, it looks better from the ide. Thirty-one thousand auto deal- ‘s went out of business with a of $233,000,000 last year, ac- cording to Leroy W. Campbell York banker, addressing a conven- tion of used--car dealers. Most of these failures, says Campbell, were due to “lack of careful figuring when allowing for eld cars, lack of courage in trading and lack of selling ability.” An interesting situation. M of us- imagine that commercial ° failures usually are caused by bad! What is to become of melancholy ; But here are thousands! tradition if peaches are plentiful,! business, of failures due to too much busi* ress.’ ‘The victims literally traded themselves out of existence. A tremendous and fascinating ‘business, the auto game. It now ranks fifth or sixth among all American industries. Editor’ turned - Fifth Ave. Bldg, | of , knowledge. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE of the world combined outside the om ——— | United States, { wa and stared when Less than 20° years ago ihe auto such a novelty that everyone a “horse- hand to escort them home after j de They think it the proper thing that husbands should look to the happiness of wives by seeing that they are not compelled to face r {the ue remarks changers- | less carriage” rattled pi Even midnight. “ of hangers-on the wildest visionari never; And in this later group we have DETROIT dreamed that autos would ever be the hands that rc as numerous as they are now. One of the greatest thrills of liv- Amer! is the element of s not at all improbable that, s from now, people will be i airplanes as there are autos today. 20 yea DEWAR Tom Dewar of London, world’s greatest whiskey king, says Eng- land is reducing its saloons 2000 a year The British also are cutting ey drinking $35,000,000 a year. | Viewing our prohibition law with the perspective of long distance, he says: “If the United States can hold out, even with this unpopular law, ‘for a few years, there is no doubt the next generation will be much j more temperate” | You hear that on every -hand, among “wets.” They'd like fire- | Water for themselves, but are glad “the next generation the taste of it.” If a decisive refer- endum were.taken, many a_ wet father would change his mind at the last minute and vote dry. EDITORIAL REVIEW i| 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 being discussed in the preas of the rapid and conpiane | won’t know, ‘k the cradle.and {do so much to save the world.— Portland (Ore.) Journal, | o— The Editor, | Bismarck Tribune, | Bismarck, N. Dak. j Dear Sir: | | In Thursday's Tribune I noticed | | that seventeen of Mandan’s young people will enter college this’ year. Cne of these seventeen goes to the North Dakota Agricultural College— | none to ‘North Dakota University! | | I understand the proportions are | labout the same for Bismarck. You | taxpayers who are fathers—do you) realize that your state university is | being run for the boys and girls of | North Dakota at a cost of between | thirty and thirty-five hundred dol-| lars for every school day? And do| you realize, further, that every North | | Dakota student who goes outside the | state takes out of this state from one | to two thousand dollars? If you do} realize these things,'why do you send | your boys and girls out of the state} to school? Is it because you feel that | your own state university is not} qualified to give your children the, best? If so, be sure to read the rest | of this letter. I have had a boy of | | my,own in this University, and be- | fere many years will have anes | | and I have made a pretty close study | | of our: University as compared with | j others. The statements I make here | | may be verified by a careful per- | j usal of the catalog of the Universi- | |ty and those of other universities, | ———$* he abe, together with talking these things | | | | | BETTER SYSTEM THAN OURS In view of recent occurrences in ; St. Paul, the, following paragraph! fromthe Philadelphia North American will be read with inter- es! a ts “The first public parole hearing in accordance with the plans an- nounced by Judge Monaghan to in- sure the greatest possible publicity for all applications for the release of criminals from prison will be held at 10 o’clock next Friday) morning.” { They do these things better in Philadelphia. No paroling of crimi- nals in darkness and secrecy, to have'the facts leak out six months afterward. “The greatest possible publicity for all applications for the release of criminals from prison” is the theory on which they take up paroles. It is well to reflect upon this kind of procedure in view of {the parole of Lyons and Costello which has set tongues wagging in St. Paul. i The Philadelphia hteory is simple and sound. The law requires, there ag elsewhere, that the trial of an accused to determine his guilt or innocence be in full light of public x No star. chamber or council of ten methods*are toler~* ated in this free country. Then! why not the same light of publicity on the methods-by which a criminal | is restored to liberty? i This is the theory that Pennsyl-: vania is determined to writs into law, A bill is ready for the next legislature providing that no parole shall be granted without the publi- cation of a notice of the application, followed by a public hearing cr re- view of all of the reasons for and inst the grant of suspended sen-' Public opinion has forced' that procetlure in Philadelphia without the process of statute, but to make it general in the state the) proposed law will be enacted. i There is no cccasion to discuss: the value of this system. It does its own arguing. Criminals condemned} in open court shquid not be freed | by the secret back room proces3.— St. Paul Pioneer Press. i AN UPSET IN PEACHES Eugene. Field’s “tale of woe” ori- ginated, it may be recalled,'’in a/ peach. Johnny Jones and his sister | Sue are by no means the exclusive specimens of sufferers from the “king of fruits.’ “Peach crop, ruined” is so familiar an announce- | ment that a good many callous members of the public have ceased paying attention to the Jeremiads of chilly springtimes. i over with students of other Univer- | sities and our own and possibly aj visit to some. of the school them- ; selves, 5 ! 'PEOPLE’S FORUM. , tion at his own smartness. What the Hot Wave Is Doing in Tenement Cities ” Mother. and father and@ three children, unable to sleep because of the heat wave that has enveloped New York, take refuge on the beach at Corfey Island. Hundreds of tenement dwellers in many cities are unable ta aleep because of the intcnse heat. at (Continued From Our Last Issuz) tain for a minute whether the old man were wholly serious. His father was never more offensive to him than when he chuckled in satisfac- The range of studies covered b the University of North Dakota, is | indicated by the. presence of the! + Colleges of Liberal, Arts, Education, Law,’ Medicine, Engineering, Mincs, a Graduate Department and Wesley College, which is affiliated with the University. | But how do these departments | rank with other schools? i The University of North Dakota | is rated in Class “A” by the U. S.j Bureau of Education, | The Medical School: is rated Class | “A” by the American Medical Asso- | ciation. The Law School is a member of | the American Law School Associa- tion to which only the best are ad- mitted. | The Arts College has a chapter of Phi Beta Kavpa Honorary Scholastic fraternity, which enters only schools | of the highest quality. The high grade of work of scientific departments is shown by the presence of Sigma Xi Honorary | Scientifie Fraternity and Sigma Tau | Engineering Fraternity, of the Eng- | h Department by Delta Sigma Rho} Honorary Fraternity, of the Journal- ism Departmentby:Sigma Delta ‘Chi | Honorary Journalistic Fraternity, of | the Military Department by a chap-| ter of Scabbard and Blade. Perhaps all of the above is as rauch Greek to you as are the names | of the organization. But the sicni- | ficant fact is this: All of these hon-| o1ary. organizations insist on extra- ordinarily high grade of work in a department before granting a chart- | er and they average about 75 chap-/ ters each in the whole United States. | Thus the honorary fraternities have chosen the University of North Da- kota as one of the 50 or 75 best col-| leges out of the hundreds of colleges in the United States. Tho famous the | York Scholarship are given at our jived that I was a Cullen and of | course concerned ‘about him.” University. Of course we have not a large} University, as they go, but we have a) James Quinlan after Robert was “\ shot down in flames which probably >| made there last years but for those 1,260) who had taken’ grandfather's place we hired a faculty of 125, or about jove, to keep on. controlling. Qinlan ‘in the old way,” she said. ever it was, it made Quinlan want 44 i plant worth something like $1.50 060.00, We had just 1,260 studen one teacher for every ten students But why carry this’ on further? From the tremendous. strides’ out University has made in the t twenty years, anyone who will in- vestigate the situation at al] can see} that our State University is fast coming to be a leader in the United States, perhaps not in' size, but in| scholarship, in Standards, in .pres-| tige! Last year it drew students from | jtremor had attacked her when, she | deat has happened. I. found out a | good Rhodes Scholarship | Jan, ‘and the National City Bank of New| But somehow or other the con-) France, Brazil) Cuba and Niearaueua, | ventional schedule was upsct this: Now York, Pennsylvania and Cali-| year. Late frosts were not Calas-: fornia, but while the qutsiderg,come | trophic and even.Delaware is NOt} jereto get the benefité of our school | downcas. ‘It is reported from that) our own boys and girls must seck | state that its old prestige in peach | elsewhere. “A prophet (ora univer-| production is virtually regained. In Pennsylvania, records of fif-; teen years are broken, with pros-| er end of Montgomery county alone pects in Bucks county and the low-; of a crop in excess of 100,000 bush- els of fruit. It is announced that in many in-! stances grewers are disposing of their product direct to housewives | or direct to retailers in the large communities. Thousands of has-| kets ‘have been purchased by motor-} ists frequenting the orchard dis-) | tricts. Prosperity which thus flouts pre- cedents is almost disconcerting. | if their growers are flourishing, if |the puble s served and no bight has lyet been sighted? — Philadelphia} | Public Ledger. | | HIS SIN | A New York actress complains in |her suit for divorce that her hus- | band “made her nervous” by wait- In August the output of motor-j ing for her every night at the stage Rather a startling figure, showing how rapid has been the recupera-| tion from hard times. Germany, by the way, is expect- dng less than 1,000 motorcars alinstead of coming there to protect | month. well. We're doing nine times as American output of passenger jautos and trucks, so far in 1922, has been at the rate of 2,400,000 a ‘year, In rough figures, that’s as was about 265,000, against | door. cars in August last year.| How .can a poor girl properly | play her role when she knows that | home? Shouldn’t he permit her to | fight her way through the revelers | of the night and to her home alone her? Shouldn’t he know better than to shower so much attention }ona temperamental wife? Shouldn’t he be intelligent enough to let her drift about by herself at midnight?| Of course, there are still. many ; Women wko | from husbands. | sity) is not without honor, save in| his own country.” But, to sum it all up, the real test of a university is its product. ! The University of North Dakota has: produced the leaders of this state of today and is continuing to pro- duce them as fast as the misguided | fathers and mothers of the state | will allow it to. You don’t believe this, Listen: Our last two governors, | one of our present United States | congressmen, both candidates for the United States. Senate. the past three attorney-gencrals, at least one of our supreme judges, three of the candi- i dates for: the Supreme Court and heaven knows how many more of our prominent men, are graduates of North Dakota University. The Pay- master-General of the U, S. Navy during the war, the managing secre- | tary of the League of Nations, and j the president of the North Dakota | Agricultural College are Univeristy | of North Dakota graduates, Few are | the schools which can show such a} percentage of leaders among its gra-' duates. The cost of attending the Univer- sity of North Dakota (approximately | $£00 a year) is nowhere near as! The next day, when Lucas ¢om- pleted his business with his lawyer, vactard, he himself made an ap- poiktment with a private detective who proved so competent that when Ethel left the house on Scott street that afternoon she had no idea what- ever that she was followed. “Started work 2:15 p. m. opposite —Scott street. Miss Ethel Carew, left by front door 2:58.” So read that portion of the confidential re- port which was supplied to Lucas carly that evening. “Followed her to-—N. State strcet where she rang, was admitted at 3:20 aad remained until seven min- utes to four. Inquiry established that number —is establishment of. Mrs. H. J. Davol, a professional psychic medium of apparently high- class practice; no police-court record of arrest or conviction?” CHAPTER XIL The young man who called him- | self Barney LoutreHe, had never, zor himself and upon his personal ‘er- rand, entered such a home as <that on Scott street. : Ethel, upon the floor above, had been ready for many; minites, She had seen Barney. aoarbachit the house; but: she, fad ‘waited for, the servantito tell her that Mr. Loutrélle had come and then, amazingly, a reached the head of the stairs. The sight of his strong, vigorous figure striding toward her. had stirred a flutter in her breast which no aount of argument. avith self could quiet. “Miss Carew!” he name when she appeared. “I'm, so glad you're here!” she said. “Oh, I’m_so glad! A gréat spoke her deal more about James Quin- “I told the landlady where he “Something had happened inside for my unele, it possible “What- EVERETT TRUE | Now, ‘To. GET MUCH ‘DATA WHAT “LITTLS DaTA LT NO IMPORTANCE. ' ! | | CoucDn't GIN hy THINK JENKINS HAT SOME ‘HE HAS ANY DATA ~~~, We MUST HAVE MORE ‘DATA: BEFORE PROCEEDING. E ME ANY DATA_AT Ate ti c to go to ReSurrection Rock; I don’t | Luké gazed at his father, uncer- | kn@yv whether he went there to find | I can’t quite see how that! you, could be, but he. certainly went there; and grandfa‘her was afraid | of his seeing you. That's quite clear Grandfather was afraid, too, I think, of QuinJan coming to him. But Quin- lan doosn’t seem to have gone to Florentin at all; he went to. Resurrection Rock; Sound hi that he could never speak to you.” “Your ring,” Ethel recalled to her- ‘self suddenly. “And the device carved on the mantel in that room.” She did not need to mention what room; he was thinking of it, too... “They were identical, Miss Carew,” ‘a said with 'a sudden emphasis which betrayed to her soemthing of what he had pent up within. For a moment more Ethel stood duiled with fecling for him—for this boy from the Indian shack in the Charlevoix woods finding at last, something which traced to his ring and to himself. Then her thought | went to that-photograph upstairs. She went over with him in detail svervthing she. had done since leav- ing him, including her call of that afternoon at Mrs. Davol’s where, she reported, she had made an appoint- mentjfor a sitting that evening. } She. heard. a servant opening/ the front door,and real'zed that this was the houratwaich, Bennet dropped in to scold and?argue with*her. “Hello! he called before him, com- ing into’ the. drawing-room; then, seeing Barney, he squared about challengingly. { * “Mr. Loutrelle, this is my cousin Bennet Cullen.” . “Lotifrelle!” Bennet fading; about to Barney again, you dire Loutrelle.” " exclamation was so insulting thatBthel rejoiced that Barney of- fered on reply. “What do you want here?” net was demanding. “Miss Carew knows why I am here,” Barney replied quietly. “Tl ask you to tell me!” Bennet attempted to command. “hat’s no use,” ,Barney shaking his head slightly. It was no use; and Bennet was alert-minded cnough to recognize it. Finally he became calm and the new developments were thoroughly explained. He examincd the enve- lope and postmark of Ethel’s letter from, Hudson Adley; he again pro- nounced the entire a‘tair a, lunatic’s ‘repeated, “So Ben- said, RE RE A BY CONDO 0 “MRI TRUS THEN BEEN ABLE ON THAT MATTER. MD Get WAS OF SMITH DATA, AND IF “Data! a para’! t Ger ovTt AND vee evo “DATA” YOU'vS HEARD SOMEBODY USE THAT WORD AND Now Sou OT DON'T SPRING "DATA" ON HIM OR YOU'LL QUGER THe DEac i!!! her husband i+ waiting to take her, great as in the big colleges, the as-| sociations are a million times better, | the training is the finest, and it’s) like little attention sn»npy They appreciate! with very elaborate nockets, and a) your own University! What are the fathers and mothers of North Dakota thinking of, fr Very. truly yours. I. M. CURIOU! JERSFY FROC | Black and yellow braid little frock of gray jersey many autos as exist in all Counties | tite thoughtfulness of men who are, short cape lined with yellow. | <A“L "DATA" ABUSE ty I! HUNT UP JENKINS “DA and Kincheloe’ there and killed him. so! | | i i i i | to | hoax and then determined to accom- pany his cousin and Barney to the #55 i sitting with Mrs. Davol that night. CHAPTER XIII explained. :the spirit communication while Ben: net,, Barney and she. drove Mrs, Davol’s in Bennet’s car, Bar- ney, having attended stitting in Eng- Ethel details of j land, was of course familiar with the, Was; ordinary methods;: but Benne almost ‘whally ignorant of the sub- ject, dee i The, medium wore ,a -plain, gray, woolen,,dress. which. closely fitted the ample lines .of her figure. “These, your friends?” Mrs. Davol nquired as Ethel. greeted her. She pointed to seats close togther while sh_ herself took the large, leather hair near the center of the room. “Sometimes, just before Eva comes, I'm clairvoyant I see things pretty .clear;” Mrs. Davol volun- teered. “When I do, of course, I'll tell'you what Ise.” Strangely the presence of the me- dium, instead of intensifying for Ethel the solemaity of the room, had dispelled it. “I feel a lot of force here,” the medium said, “She ought to feel the police force,” Bennet whispered derisively to Ethel, who ‘made no reply while she watched Barney who had sup- plied himself with a pad and pencil, which he now taok’ from his pocket, ready to record what would be said. “I think sure we'll get something,” Mrs. Davol continued. “I sce—I sce a woman, very beautiful. She is no longer young; she is middle-aged; she—now I see water; 1 sce a lot of water and people swimming; she is in the wate ¢ is drowning; she | is trying to swim, I sce a great ship sinking. I think, it is+a steamer; it is going down. ~Yes; it is a steamer. I fee many people in the water; but*now I’do, not see her.” .The ;voiga sof. the, medium halted, and Barney filled in, from memory, the gaps of unimportant words when the medium spoke too fast for his pencil to follow. 4] still see water,” continued Mrs. Davol, “but not the same water; this is smooth and blue and very clear: Ice floats in it, 1 see trees on the shore and a girl in a cloak walk- ing under the trees. She bears a burden bencath her coat—Now I see her more, clearly—thé burden she bears is a child—unborn—she stum- bles and is afraid—she looks upon the water and seems to think to cast herself in—but now some one eppears in a boat—paddling—it is ja canoe— Again the voice of the medium halted; and now, through the de- scription recalled nothing to Ethel’s mind, yet the manner of this recital of vision lessened Ethel’s feling of fraud. Mrs. Davol suddenly thrust her- self back in her chair and her voice marvelously altered. “There is some one here with ‘much. difficulty,” this new voice said. Quite old. He wants very hard to jpeak. He is with, two others, both much younger. Eva has seen one of them before; Eva, fells one of them was waiting. for him, the old man not well built up. He had a long, troubled life—he wants to say—but cannot—” The voice trailed off into murmurs, unintelligible and then in- audible. ‘ “] suppose, said-Bannet, leanins again to ,Ethel’s ear, “this is the trance; she’s under her ‘control.’ Little Eva spoke that piece.” “Can ‘you describe ‘the man bet- ter now?” Barney inquired of the medium, writing this own question as he had reached the others. “He shows me.a capital Q,” the voice of “Eva” rong and distinetly, “Now a J with it; the J is before the Q; J Q.” “Q?” Bpnnet challenged. The voice did riot reply directly. “Eva feels like a blow in the breast; there is gushing from it. not know he is giving this. He has not done it on purpose; tricd to make. him forget that; but Eva gets it from him. he says. can say that; holds up in his hand a torch— He does they have ‘I am happy,’ ‘It is true, 1 am happy.’ He but that is all now. He a fiam- i soci: ith the jng torch. Associated wi torch is “the word Galilee. The The younger man Icads him away.” voice again ceased. Ethel gazed at Barney who had stopped writing and turned to her but made. no comment; Bennet waited silently; and Ethel knew that both of the the reference to James Quinlan was as clear as to herself. ‘Galilee’ and torch stuff 4 s that Dee a?” Bennet de- mean anything to yo manded of her. ‘ She shook her head to tell him he medium be- that it did not as tl an to speak again. ; : Belsome one stands behind you,’ she said to Ethel; and Ethel turned about, startled. : “Who?” Ethel cried, bending for- ward. “Who do you sce?” ; ““One who loved you much; he is tall; midle-aged; he smiles lovingly. He has brown hair; blue eyes; good features. He says he is your father. continued strongly | to} | soul—Psalm 121:7, | sale, or so much thereof as the pro- ceeds of such sale applicable thereto His hair is lighter than brown. Eva cannot sce his face very clearly. He has been trying to come to you many times before; but there have been difficulties. “What did he want to say?” Ethel demanded again. | “He builds up something; a let- ter.” the voice continued. “The let- ter L.” ‘ : | “What does that mean?” | “It is his name; no, he.shakes his head. It is the name of a place; a city where something has happened.” “London?” Ethel put in again. “Yes; London. He sayg it is the name of a person, too.” “What about that person?” | “He says important events, will |come; he wants" to say, they are happening now with L, Now he is roing. Another is present. He is a brown-faced man with © stajght, black hair; an Indian—” Barney put the next question in a strange word, and Ethel, glanging at his pad, saw that he wrote as his question: “Otchipwen?” “He nods yes,” replied “Eva.” “He was a Chippewa.” (Yo Be Continued) ee ee i A THOUGHT | re LENE AINSI NE Tig 31 preserve thee le shall preserve thy _ The Lord irom: all evils Lands mortgaged may return and more esteemed, But honesty once pawned is ne’er redeemed. —Middleton. — ee --: | TODAY’S.WORD | ———__——_—_—_-—_—_4 Today’s word is—MALFEASANCE. It’s pronounced—mal-fe-zans, with accent onthe second syllable. It means—the doing of an act which a:person ought not to do; evil conduct; an illegal decd. It comes from—French “malfai- sant,” meansing “injurious” or “do- ing evil,” the term being a combina- tion of the two words “mal,” evil, and “faisant,” doing. ‘A man with a.son in college learns a lot. : The price of coal is a joke and-on us. Mexico is, talking prohibition again. So are we. If winter comes, can heavy under- wear be far behind? When hubby can’t smoke parlor you know who is boss. in the It’s used like this—‘A bill has been introduced in Congress propos- ing to broaden the defintion of ‘malfeasance in office’ so as to in- clude ‘the use of such office or its authority in an attempt to deprive, any person of his lawful freedom of! speech, of press or of assemblage’.” AUTUMi* COLORS. Autumnal colors are the. vogue now, browns, reds and yellows are combined in the same costumes with excellent effect. —— A-wise man never stands out in the rain or opens a milk bottle with his thumb. The man who uses perfume is the kind who always eats His lettuce. Truth crushed to earth rises again. Pedestrians are not truth. There ‘can be no universal pence while neighbor; have phonographs. Corl and ‘the coal situation about the same color. are Many a rich man has a hard tim keeping his daughter in her clothe People born boys seldom outgrow it. Harding says he would like to ride on a roller coaster. A new hat is worth more than an old one, but a new friend isn’t. We had forgotten about chestnuts ripening until we saw a worm going somewhere, = \ An apple a day keeps the boy away—from ‘school, if it is green. “Airplane is as safe as an auto.” say makers, That isn’t saying much. What makes a woman madder than a new dress fading? “Stop, Look, Listen” is not safe. You stop, take a look, marry her— and then you listen. One sign of winter is when the frost is on the pumpkin and the shock is in the corn price. Hays Not Concerned in Hart’s Affair ————_s $ Pe) Both Bill Hart and Will Hays to effect a reconciliation between Winifred Westover. lleging cruelty. Hart denies _her. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is Hereby Given, That by virtue of a judgment and decree in’ foreclosure, rendered and given by the District Court of the First Ju- dicial District, in and for the County of Cass and State of North Dakota, and entered and docketed in the! office of the Clerk of said Court’in and for said County on the 8th day of August 1922, in an action wherein Seth GXWright, was Plaintiff, and James C> Young, A. W. Bjorkman and F. McAuliff, were Defendants, in favor of the said Plaintiff andi against said Defendant James C. Young for the sum of Nincteen Hun- dred Ninety-six and 22-100 ($1996.22) dollars, which judgment and decree among other things directed the sale by me of the real estate hercinafter described to satisfy the amount of! said judgment, with interest thereon and the costs and expenses of such will satisfy, And by virtue of a writ to me issued out of the office of the Clerk.of said Court in and for said County of Cass and under the seal of said Court, directing me to sell said real property pursuant to said judgment and deeree, I Rollin Welch, Sheriff of Burleigh County, and person appointed by said Court to make said sale will sell the here- inafter described real estate to the highest, bidder, for cash, at public suction, at the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota. on the 20th day of September A. D. 1922, at 2 o'clock p. m./ of that day, to satisfy said judgment, | with interest and costs thereon, and the costs and expenses of such sale,| 0» so much thereof as the proceeds! of such sale applicable thereto will setisfy. The premises to be sold as; aforesaid pursuant to said judgment; and decree, and to said writ, and to this notice, are described in said Oe jin the Bismarck Tribune, once have dented that the latter attempted Hart and his bride of less than a yeare She says she will soon bring suit for divorct. charges. 4 CITATION HEARING PETITION FOR APPOINTMENT OF AD- MINISTRATOR STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the Estate Francis McLear, Deceased. John MceLear, Petitioner. vs. Phil- lip McLear, Thomas, McLeur, Harriet McLear, Loysious McLear, George 0. McLear and Henry McLear, Respond- ents. The State of North Dakota to the above named Respondents and all persons interested in the Estate of Francis MeLear, Deceased. You and each of you, are hereby notified that John McLear, the peti- tioner herein, has filed in this Court a petition praying that letters of administration upon the estate of Francis McLear late of the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased, be granted to John McLear and that the said petition will be heard and duly considered by this Court on Thursday, the’ fifth day of October, A. D. 1922 at three o'clock in the afternoon of that day, at the Court Rooms: of this Court, in. the County Court House, in the City of Bismarck County ‘of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, and you, and each of you, are hereby cited to be and ap- pear before this Court at said time and place, and answer said petition, and show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of said petition shold not be granted. Ry the Court, (SEAL) of I. C, DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. aad the 25th day of August, 922, Let the service of the above Cita- tion be made by publishing the same a ivdgment, decree and writ, as fol-| weok for three suceessive weeks, and lows, to-wit: : fae The Northeast Quarter of Section’ that such service be complce’ fy ighteen (18), in Township One Hun- | dred forty-two, (142) North of Range seventy-seven (77) W. of the 5th P. M. situated in the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota. ROLLIN WELCH, Sheriff of Burleigh County, North Dakota. LAWRENCE, MURPHY & NILLES, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Fargo, N. D. 8—14-21-28; 9—4-11-15 day of October, 1922. (SEAL) I. C. DAVIES, 4 Judge of the County Court. SULLIVAN, HANLEY & SULLIVAN, Attorneys for Petitioner, Mandan, North Dakota. 8-28—9-5-11 Health hint:: Never phone your wife and ask her where she is. ‘ . | si ’ “ ‘ ’ U '

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