The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1922, Page 4

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1 } a | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1922 “PAGE FOUR - {what’s inside. For 30, warehouses, «Mintéred at the Postoffice, Bismarck,| 59 marines or 30 ‘Texas rangers i N. D,, as Second Class Matter. | nouid be sufficient guards, ‘The “GEORGE D. MANN - - Editor| thirsty will note that the bonded stock is less than a quart and a half for each American, Forelgn Representatives i G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | CHICAGO - : - DETROIT) mx Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | STINNES PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH | Hugo Stinnes ‘tackles the biggest NEW YORK - °° Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS He negotiates to y worth of rebuilding | job of his, career. jfurnish 13 billion franes' ne | German materials, = for “<The Associated Press is exclusive-) war-devastated France. | |burglars and murderers to get! 7 in indolence and pouting he is tast-| jing the sweets.of rewafds won by, | hig own efforts and not in any sense ‘due to the accident of birth. It is a} ‘safe guess that he is happier than| | the other deposed big-bugs who are dawdling through life with neither hope to spur them nor brilliant memories to cheer them.+Cleve— j land Plaindealer, 4 | ; A DANGEROUS INTERPRE: , | i TATION . i ane Interesting employment. is being} |made of the “new” psychology in| 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 loca’ news published herein. ‘All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are alsn sreserved, | aah ha EMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF ia CIRCULATION | SCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE | ia IN ADVANCE | Yaily by carrier, per year... $1.00) Jail= by mall, per year (in Bis- Di march) Sane ‘yaar’ Gin 7.20 | “Daily by mail, per state Sutside Bistaarck) |... 5.00) Daily by mail, outside of North . Dakota 6.00 55 PAPER i (Established 1873) | DRESSING WOMEN | Paul Poiret, famous ereator of | “styles, Parisian fashions — will) be driven out of America by the} Chew tariff bill with its 90 per cent | “duty on imported feminine gar-/ ments. i Poiret predicts that prohibition | The grace cow, alias the cow} Control a suppressed desire to kill. Cof beautiful clothes is booked toi \yith one pure-bred progenitor, is! It is recommended that he be ré follow prohibition of liquor. In this you see commion sense at last returning to Europe. Germany ;cannot pay the reparations bill in gold. She can pay in materials— frozen labor There is hope for Europe as gal- lery-playing diplomats are forced to the background and busin men begin to take charge of r construction. Jurope’s greatest problem today, ag before the war, is her professional politicians, EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in ‘this column may or may not express the opirion of The Tribune, They are presented here ir order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day, A CHANCE FOR THE GRADE cow support of a petition to the North | | Dakota Supreme Court for new trial | se of Joseph Thorndson, | It is held that the pris-/ oner, who is now serving a life sen- | | tence, is unaccountable for his act. } jalist finds that the strain .and ock of service in the Argonne} forest, in short, war neurosis, su~/ perimposed on the barbaric instinct ; to kill, stimulated in the case of | the soldier by his daily training and | practice, has resulted in an impul- sive insanity. His mental inhibi- | j tions are no longer strong enough | to suppress the desire to kill, ané funder the stress of great excite- ment or passion, the margin, be- tween sanity and insanity, never in his case very broad, is reduced al-; j together. His act, therefore, was, net a/crime, but the irresponsible reaction to a situation of a maniac, who for the moment.was unable to ;The report of the examining spec-| . ' moved from the prison to a govern- There’s a coal shortage in Engl at a point where it is lost while States this fall if the mine strike Will Coal Crisis Here Come to This? | i | | her higher, he brought his lips te above named Defendants: A her, You are hereby pulicned: and re- Lik CHAPTER XV | quired to answer the complaint of ; ' the plaintiff in this action, a copy of Bennet, having gone directly howe which is hereto annexed ‘and here- from Scott street, na oun) j with served upon you, and to serve granfather still up and reading. a copy of your answer upon the sub- “Well?” Lucas demanded, thrust-' geriber at his office in the city of ing his: fingers throguh his thick Bismarck, Burleigh County, North hair, as he looked up when Bennet Dakota within thirty days after the entcred. “Where have you, been this | service of this summons upon you, Aievcine?! te j exclusive of the day of such service Se eres ik i «noi. and in case of your failure so to ap- Be aad aaa relate all incl year and answer judgment will be (rai bi cpumiee ait aren, taken“against you by default for the Rn td iehowe chat | relief demanded in the complaint. letters “J.Q.” ei a) at the summons and complaint any reference to Quinlan was un- have been or will be filed in the of. land, too. Here you see children at Leicester fishing for coal in the canal uation may find its counterpart in the United barges are loaded. This sit continues. . DAA Ae | | ma ‘he told aobut the spook wl ‘a differtnt quality of attention, but: | ESET TOUR TAS | ‘ She had not intended to say what she had; but having said it, she | meant it. She would: not care if he | were un outeast born. in a Chippewa | shack; but the certainty that he was | not was never clearer to her than! \ Peggy Joyce said she was in the; She, Kissed} now. iwest for hard work, “Lig Sthiow" hy grandfather | Chalie Chaplin the other day. feared the Kock all these years, me Boston man br [displayed a caiptal J. and Q. | } This evoked from his grandfather Residence and P. 0. Office Address: there was no distinct alteration in| | pleasant to, his grandfather, Bennet | fice of the Clerk of the District de the most of his satirical de-' Court, Burleigh County, North Da- | seription of ther “acts” before , kota. scription of the other “acts” before) Kort. Avsus 19, 1922. McCURDY, Attornev for Plaintiff, Bismarck, N. D. The property described in ‘ the | Lucas’s attitude until Bennet related complaint is situated in Burleigh ‘how the medium had said that the CountyaNorth Dakota and is describ- i spirit had land associated the tore! word Galilee. \(To Be Continued) raised afalming torch ed as lot four, five and six in block h with the ¢ighty-two, Williams addition some- times called Willams Survey to the said city of Bismarck. F, E, MeCURDY, Plaintiff's Attorney 9-5-12-1926—10-8-10 | STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, ‘Coun- ty of Burleigh. IN, DISTRICT COURT, Fourth Ju- dicial’ District. William Adair and J. P. Jackson, Ad- ministrator with the Will annexed of the last will and testament of Helen Adair, Deceased, Plaintiffs, vs. Etta Adair, United Presbyterian Board of Foreign Missions and all other persons unknown claiming any interest in or lien or incum- brance upon the preperty described in the complaint, Defendants. jto have her chance at the coming ) This, of course,43 Big Talk. Aj National Dairy show to be held on! Ment psycopathic hospital fr cure. | back! That’s why the house was tariff might stop the importation of | the Minnesota State Fair grounds in| If the North Dakota court accepts built and left to wait; for yo ‘finished garments.,, But nothing) Qctoper. p i this analysis of Thorgnson’s case a| ; But this which we learned to- ‘can stop the spread and copying of| ‘pnis departure from old lines in| (angerous precedent will have been | ~~~~~ 7 aie night, Barney, helps a lot; your| estyles. Thaf, is, nothing except s.5 wise means that the standards} stablished. It almost amounts to| (Centinued From Our Last Issue) | ing his sort of a fasttime. That pani gone win your! he sare Fd ar A - i ‘ % x . Pere Pal Cmts P 2 a ae an ‘hicago’s “5 | gently, “to the shore there beyond | common sense” And when it comes| tr ine show are to be lowered, but| (Ris: that a man who Kills is ipse|_ “lle had a boat; he wants to say,| part of Chicago called, by -people | oe Wiorentin ee facto insane. The proof offered of| ‘I was a humble m his insanity is his murdergus act,| hooks and in nets.” and nothing more. 55 | Barney wrote out his next question more than ever. before. heretofore. ; Dr Engstad a8" before saying it aloud: “Maneto o TON ‘There are many farmers looking} S¥Mes that the was mus have UN-) jikweniman on nossan gaie nin- .= The tariff, fumes Poiret, MAY | forward to greater dairying activ-| balanced the prisoner’g mind, he-| gaian?? \ éven keep away the trailing skirts) ity who feel that they cannot afford to dressing, the common sense Of that the influence of the show is to 3 T took fish, on American women is on the Job) pe gemocratized more fully than) cause, after leaving the service,) © «1¢ wants to say,” replied the of the Italian Renaissance which | ¢9 invest in pure bred aristocrat he killed a man. It is not a! voi , “I have never heard of father.” ‘are the approaching Parish fash- animals. There are others whom | &28€ of established insanity, or}; “Ninga?’ }even so-called shell shock, be-| “He says, ‘Yes.’ Ile says, ‘Mother ion.” {t s been difficult, t ach at! it hai ficult to rea fore the act, and except |for|{ knew; mother came to shore bear- Barney; it was for fear you'd come | a snowshoes,” she. re- petcd the poetry of tha Indian phrase,’ “Noah: Jo—we may as well call him,that—took her in his boat across. the channel to Resurrection Rock where the and his_wife took care of her. You were born there; i tember ‘your mother was sick. She did not die—there, at least. But she went away and .did not come back,* though Noah Jo waited there | who go there, ‘Little Paris. Barney made ro comment, they both sat down. “Do you want to tell me what you thought about it?” , “You mean whether I helieved those were the cirzumstances of my birth? Yes, I did, Miss Carew.” “Who cculd the Indian be? Noah Jo? sree “T suppose so.” and The State of North Dakota to the above named defendants: You are hereby summoned and re: i zs uired to. answer the complaint o: One man earries $4,500,000 insur-/ the plaintiff in this action, a copy of ance and 50 others a millor, They| which is hereto annexed and_here- flatter themselves. i with served upon you, and which is . ee on file in the office of the Clerk of In Hurrah, Okla, citizens kick be-; the District Court of Burleigh Coun- volo |-ty, North. Dakota, and to serve a cause 9 o'clock curfew wakes them | yoy of your answer ‘upon the sub- up and that's, the truth. scribed at hi soffice in the city of | Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Grasshoppers are bad in, Alberta,| Dakota, within. thirty days after the Cana It may boost the price of | service of this summons upon you, Alberta peaches, + {exelusive of the day of such service Shull and in case of your failure 0 foap- * , | pearvand answer judgment. wil e They had to chloroform a New! taken against. you by default for the York waitress to close her mouth.| relief demanded in the complaint. Another evil ‘result of the cozl strike. . empty coal bin. Dated March 23, 1922. ~\ If the tariff can prevent a return) of sidewalk-sweeping, germ-col-; Aecting skirts, it should be given a| rising vote of thanks, especially by; Chabies crawling about their moth-| crs’ feet. | <A trailing skirt can carry more | *@isease than an army of rats, ‘Nine months ago the mannikins employed by M Poiret paraded in} *Parisian hoop-skirts, trying to res- urrect grandma’s styles i =< You haven't seen any hoop-skirts | lately, though, have you? ' “The bet overlooked by Poiret was that the hoop-skirt is a physi- “éal impossibility in modern Amer—| ica. It couldn’t be gotten through Sthe door of the average apartment, let alone a street car, auto or thea- ter seat. The only possible way In which ‘a hoop-skirt could be used now would be in a farm-field or for trangporting a few cases of liquor! under cover. * all with the message of sound, economics that has to do with high: grade cows as compared with low) grade cows. This grade competi-| tion show will afford object lessons as to what can be done by infusing: into,a cow’s offspring better dair: blood than that with which sh herself is ‘endowed. In other| words, it will c)monstrate how; farm herds can be built up into better and more productive herds| by a careful process of-breeding. Some of the cows in Minnesota, Wisconsin and other state that) have taints of common blood show| up exceedingiy well in pbutter-fat producing qualities.” There will be a place for many of these ani-| mals in. the October exposition They will come glorified in great er or less degree by records of: which they have done as producers for their owners. It is desirable for everybody concerned that thé cow that is merely a “boarder,” eating her head! Thorndson’s unsupported statement, hat he suffered a temporary loss | of memory after a certain horrible! experience under fire, the court has! no evidence at all that he was not | normal. | The wisdom of establishing this| type of psychological defense in erfminal law is doubtful. If it ap- plies to ex-service men, can it not} with equal justice be applied to ev-| ery one? Even the professional gun man might bring forward a defense of inability to suppress the desire to kill ‘because of ‘some improper training in youth, the loosening of his mental and moral fiber through envronment. Such men may actually be, as Dr, Engstad says, insane, hut! the question is whether they de-| serve the same treatment as the ordinary insane, or whether the best | place for them is not’ the peniten- tiary. The distinction is almost too; fine for society, in its own interest, | to draw.—St. Paul. Dispateh. EES SNC ing child; not born child,’ he sa‘ ‘she wa3 very sick. I took her canoe, that is.’” 4 “What did he do for my mother?” “He’says, ‘Took hed to my house in thé lonely -place where was wo- man, my wife.’ He says, There boy was born; you stayed there.” “What happened to my tmother?”. “She was very sick; but she did net die; she went away.” “When?” fer “At the moon of the wild rice gath- ering.” 7 “When ‘she went away, he means?” “Yes.” Ty “Then when did she come?”: “In the moon ‘of the braking ‘snow-} shoes.” if “What year?” poll |The medium ‘made .no_ direct’ an-, swer; but after a pause the woice, continued: “Hhe says that, allisum-) mer she fed the baby at her breast till she went sick again. He wants to tell you that she said, when she went ‘away, she surely would return. He says, ‘There. I*liver until water froze again.’ He says, ‘But no one came sback; so I went .away.’” -He stocd up.and, turiing his back ‘to Ethel, he strode. away, as he had a habit of deing when, beset by emo- tien. i “@ou see—you ste—Miss Carew, it hadn't oceurred to me then that I” “What, Barney?” “That I might have been born on the: Rock,, Miss. Carew.” “Barney!” Ethel rebuked him by his own name gently. “Barney!” “You can’t want me to call yo—” “Lean't?” “Ethel!” ‘he sa‘d, hardly whisper- ing it; but she heard. . “Ethel!” he clenched his hands: behind him, and she’ stepped. farther back. “That's the way I was born, I believe!” “Ebt’s believe it, Barney!” “Miss Carew!” “EV don’t mind believing’ it, Bar- neyt It doesn’t change you! . Ex- eept to:make you finer!” “Finer?” “Because you've had to do it ail yourself! Don’t you see how I—” she faltered a little and substituted —“how everyone must, admire you until winter—” This, however, is nothing new. “November, he mean,” Barney supplied. “He spoke of the freezing of water; that is the Chippewa name for November—the moon of the freezing again.” : Sie “o8 Gee” Beng ed Tae Gee pera : atue of Mi andish got its “I see. And then, as he Was @14 0.4 knocked off by lightning. May nomad, he went away and took you; | an he died--now you're coming. to af- | have, been thinking about a flapper. fairs you learned from Azen Mz a you learned from Azen Mabo—| vi, sinia farmer 126 years old is and gave you to:Azen without being able'té. teil anything about, you bur | 424 They say he could remembe. that the ring,went_ with: you. We| When farmers were not having a really got quite a lot tonight, din’t | hard time. we, Barney?” | et iu | New York state has 8,000 hiking “Pye got,” Barney said, his hands |.) 4. Lg robe | Sein leleethea Rebioas lant “oieee ela lath another evil result of | than I ever had in all my life be- ; for.” dje moved.a tittle nearer her. “I mcan from you—Miss-—Kthel Carew. You're a strange girl; ‘the finest and noblest. ini all. the world,” he added quickly. “You turned against -your own people, and you trusted me!” | Society to exterminate. cats is | started, It could be done by teach- ing dogs to climb trees, 1 In Des Moines, from ‘the jail garage. policemen was taken, an uuto was stolen: None of the’ | California isa healthy state and! besides she has 21,000,000 gallons of wine stored. “You, Barney? *.Why. not? How could 1 helpit?? "5° : ‘ H “Don’t!” he warned swiftly, “ve |, Women can smoke on Pittsburg | streets, Just the same, they can’t | ot to thinking about you i 4 A & ng About you in a Way it across the’ sidewalk, f F. E, McCURDY, Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence and P. O. Address Bismarck, North, Dakota. The land described in the com- plaint: is located in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and described as South half of the North Half of sec- tion sixteen in township one hundred thirty-eight north of range eighty, west of the 5th P. M. F. E. McCURDY, Plaintiffs’ Attorney, Bismarck, North Dakota. L 8—8-15-22-29; 9—5-12. « NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the Estate of C. H. Cooper Deceased. ‘Notice is hereby given bythe un- ‘dersigned, H. D. Cooper, Administra- tor of the estate of C, H. Cooper, late of the City of Miami, in the Gounty of Dade, and State of Flori- da, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against said leceased, to exhibit them, with the necessary vouchers, within four ‘months after the first publication of this notice, to said Administrator at Miami, Florida, or to his resident agent C. 'L, Young, in the City Na- tional Bank Building at Bismarck, off, as it were, and not showing the \snly ‘more for that!. Besides, my|1 never should.” * a : BRAINS Spitzka, top-notch American brain specialist and insanity expert, is dead at the age of 46. One of his “thost interesting jobs was dissect-| ing the brain of Anarchist Czol-: gosz, MoKinley’s murderer, Spitzka undoubtedly learned a lpt about the mechanics of thought | —the brain-machine that eventu-/ Vally goes to dust. As to the nature cf theintellectual forcethat operates the brain-machine, he was as much in the’ dark as the rest of us. That force’s importance is usually exag- gerated. It controls not more than a tenth of human activities, In- stinct and emotions govern the rest. ODDITIES, ; _ ( ’ Fifcen squaws are willed to Pat- tick H, McGarry, Minneapolis state senator, by Indian Chief Schmoc- Omi-Mom. Pat. refuses, < Undertaker, in. Jersey City says ‘he can’t keep, up his alimon pay- proper measures of gratitude at the; udder, should be eliminated from American herds. By like token it ig desirable in many instances that profitable cows be saved and that their progeny be refined for still greater profit. There are appropriate limitations' on the grade cows having a chance at prizes at the show. Those com-) peting with pure-bred animals must have been sired by thoroughbred bulls. They must have cow-testing asso¢iation records. There will be various classes based on producing! records of pure blood infusion, In short, the whole competition is de- signed to show that “blood will tell” at what'we may call the point of box office returns. It is promised that some of the grade cows exhibited will he offer-; ed for sale to farmers at auction. This plan will afford to farmers un- usal opportunities to. leaven their dairy heards upward in quality, and will tend to raise sharply the standards of the whole American; | suffered a broken arm at the Steve Gents because “they’re not dying fast enough.” “ » Drunkenness has decreased only. ¢O per cent , under Volstead act, gays Prohibition ‘Commissioner Haynes. Despite the current run of head- ache trouble news, something inter- testing seems to happen in the} ‘world occassionally, dairy industry. To a layman this grade cow de-| parture looks like a very worth-/ | while extension of the educational influence of the National Dairy show.—Minneapolis Tribune. ree | A SENSIBLE PRINCE Before the war Saxe-Meiningen| was one of the lesser monarchies of the German empire. It had a popu-, lation of less than 200,000, but it; was prosperous, and it thought it) was contented under its constitu— tional rulers. Now there is no Saxe-Meiningen. With a handful of other little states it now forms the republic of Thuringia, INFLATION The market quotation posted in Great Falls, Mont., announces that farmers there can get 90 cents a pushel for their wheat, less 40 cents’ a bushel freight to Duluth. That's half as good as the pre-war pros- perity days of “dollar wheat and The republicanizing of all Ger— ‘money in the bank.” jmany left a great many kings, Our system of economics still is; 8T4nd dukes, dukes and princes far out of balance. stranded without jobs and without a if wheat is any indicator, the 22 visible/means of support. Most of them ha - present period of inflation in cities ity ‘useless ‘They live “aitner onl “will not live to eut its first tooth. | their family treasures or on pen-/ —_—___——_ | sions, and they do nothing % ICE | But there is an interesting ex- One million dollars a day is what ' ception. George of Saxe-Meiningen, fee costs the American people. The who was heir to the throne before national ice bill for 70 years is as, the throne ceased to exist, has de-| big as the present national debt. _| clined to spend the rest of his life! Paying for our ice until 1992 is as an unornamental loafer and a not going to start an economic|mourner for a lost cause. When! fearthquake. Why worry, then, the monarchies were put out of about the national debt? Somehow, | business George at once took up ig dollar handled by, Uncle Sam the study of law. He progressed MANDAN NEWS Two Sustain Injuires At Mercer Co. Fair Two accidents occurred at the Mercer county fair at Beulah. Roy Miller, a rider'in the Mercer county fair at Beulah, sustained se- vere cuts and bruised when he was thrown from his horse as it bolted a fence in order to escape collision with an automobile that was stalled across the road uring one of the} races. A farmer who had attended the fair was driving his car across the | road when it suddenly stalled. The | ponies in the race were almost upon) it. As Miller's pony, swerved and | jumped a fence, he was thrown into| the windshield of the car. Miller, is under the care of physicians, | Jim Cullighan, cowpuncher, who Weekes roundup July 4, was thrown | from a bucking broncho and landed.| on his back on the ground. He was! unconscious for sume time and suf- fered a severe physical shock. “Mr. and Mrs, William Walton and children left yesterday for Dickin- son, where they will make their fu- ture home. Mr. Walton hag. been connected with the Mandan Cream- | ery and Produce company. He will! become a member of the Walton Lumber company of Dickinson. Robert Derr whose left eye was severely injured while at work at the Northern Pacific shops has been discharged from. the Deancon- ness hospital. He will not lose. the sirht of his eye, as was feared .at | first, | oh I Harold Lawrence left Saturday | night for Madison, Wis. where he will attend the University of Wis- | consin, “He will enter the college of engineering. paEL | Mrs, Dan MeCadams. of Spokane, | Wash, is a guest at the home of her sister-in-law, Mrs. Emma Mc- | Cadam. She will visit in Dickinson, | and later leave for St. Louis. i Mr. and Mrs. A.M. Renden an- | nounce the birth of a baby at the! Deaconness hospital yesterday. | “Where did you go?” Barney cried : 5 quickly, as the medium’s' picture | €ople are to blame. changed; gone: from her, as surpris-| “How do you mean?’ he asked ingly as they had come, were ‘the | quickly. “They must be.- We both of us slight motions of her hands, the jerk- ings and azinerisms . which ~had4| know together that my people—my characterized the .presencé of ‘the| grandfather and my uncle, at least “control.” Mrs, Davol slowly sat|—tried to harm you. Not to hurt upright and gazed dully about like} you, perhaps; but they saw that an Ordinary, over-fed women making|'Quinlan was killed before he could an apparent effort tf memory to|ifind you. Why? You hadn’t;done recognize her callers. anything to any of my family; you “Well, dearie,” she said at'last to} hadn’t even heard of them before Ethel. “Did you get satisfied? Was| you met me. It was what you were there good results?” —because you were that baby born CHAPTER XIV on the Rock; and they knew it.” “You think we'd better “I said you might be—any one!” she recalled, gazing up at him with have Kincheloe arrested?” . Ethel asked Barney when she returned home: “Td like to know what he’s doing now,” Barney said. “Oh; Bennet’s told me. He’s hav- EVERETT TRUE eyes’ suddenly wet. “ You are not—, “How do you think about me, Barney?” “Think?” he repeated. “I don’t |, think about you, 1 can't. I love— love—love you! There, I've said it!” He snatched his hands apart behind him and struck them together before jhim in his, dismay. “You love me, Harney?” she ‘said. “Love you! Love you!” “I love you, Barney. I've loved you from our first morning together, 4 hink.” ‘No; no; no!” he tried to deny jher; but she only smiled up at him and said: “Yes; you’ve known that, Barney. That’s been what’s troubled you; not that you loved me, but that it 4 North Dakota. If they really want to change our] Dated August 17, 1922. national anthem we suggest “Keep H. D, COOPER, ‘ the home fires burning.” __| Administrator. i | First publication on the 22nd day : ; i 1922 Opportunity awaits one in New) of, August, 1022. York.’ ‘Another man who, went \there| BANGS, HAMILTON. & BANGS Attorneys for Administrator. a poor boy owes $18,000,000 now. Grand Forks, 5.0: = 8-23-29—9-5-12 They are typewriting by radio. — Py When perfected she can stay home and do her work at the office, NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the matter of the estate of Em- ma Olson, Deceased: Notice is hereby given by the fn- dersigned 0. R, Vold and Andrew | Johnson, administrators of the cs- a eae tate of Emma Olson late of Regan, in INVESTIGATING THE EMPLOYER: the County of Burleigh and State of ‘A new kind of advice is being| North, Dakota deceased to the credit- In these new talking movies they photograph and phonograph you at the same time. not just an. otucast born in an In-! was so plain that [ loved you.” given applicants for jobs by their ‘dian hut. I don’t think I'd care if ‘you were!” — 7 ay + SToP THs CAR once. % BErieve VD RATHER FRONT RIDE IN THE BY CO) Do| “So plain!” he denied, almost | real friends. It is: “Investigate |furiously, for her. ‘It wasn’t. It’s | your employer.” From the begin-! {not true now!” ning of employment | “Oh, isn’t it?) Do you suppose I’m | ashamed.” Or He dropped to his knees before her t and caught her hands and held| Not all the bad reputations are them. | on the employe side of the contract. He bent his, head and drew her | Ihands to his ‘lips; and his kiss, | though not at all like the first love | plicants for jobs. a yment employers tion of this notice to said admin’ have been “investigating” their ap- trator at the Farmers State Bank in Now both sides the town, of Regan, in said Burleigh are doing jt and doing it wisely.| County. | ors, of and all persons having claims ' agaifist sdid’ deceased to exhibit them with the ‘necessary vouchers within four months after the first publi Dated August 31, 1922. OQ. R. VOLD and ANDREW JOHNSON For that reason it is quite as need-| _. Administrators | tut for the cleenminded young! First publication on the 5th day of man and young woman seeking a, Bete eae 9-5-12-19-26 kiss she had dreamed to be hers | some day, brought her amazing | leestasy. She loved this, boy who so | loved ‘her and yet, half } in fear of | lhimself, half in fear of her, held ~!from her even in their rapture. She | \Wwanted him nearer now; she wanted | {his arms about -her, his strength | i subduing hers, overpowering and | jholding her; and yet she delighted | toa in his courtly awe of her when | ‘he had kissed her hands and re- ‘leased her, catching his breath, after ! {no>-more than that. * | “Pve never—” he said, “I’ve never | had anything like that before.” | |. “Nor I! Nor I!” Ethed cried; she caught his hands now and held him | before her. a “You'd not? All the men in the world must have loved you. Ethel, | WW, THEN, WE'LL RESUMG THe DRIVE. WE PASS ANY MORG "SPEED CIMIT ZO NOT BE BREAKING Tuc Law AND POSSIBLY CTHGR THINGS ALONG THs ROAD INCLUDING OVR OWN NCCKS Ie Wou'Re ALL FIxG Tdoks 10 times as big as a dollar rapidly, and proved himself both} | the moment they caught sight of | | you.” i” “And the women, you! Yet you didn’t care until you saw me! Not} even abroad, Barney, in England and | i France where girls—” He gazed steadily into her eyes, | knowing what she would, not, and | yet wished to -ask.; Had he been, ow ‘even without love, another girl’s? _ See | “There arc some advantages in i being brought up in an Indian shack. | | Ethel,” he said. “The only way one | Ey AND WHGN SIGNS THAT SAY MILES” WE'LL |room often, you know; with some- j | times two families or three; and lots ‘of human living is there. What you | fiearn turns you straight either one | ol eer ‘| TODAY’S WORD |) Fztton, Arkanses.—“T used Lydia E. —$@ | bawling, clamorous, offensively ob-| } Position to ascertain in advance the, sort of person for whom he or she, | is to work as it is necessary for the! able employer and employe in a} quire investigation and every low-! r ee j L] mutual inquiry as to who's io. | 1 i} standing boss will deserve '~ Suggzets to Suffering Wr men employer to know something of his! employes. i Nothing is lost for either reput-' a F No high-standing employer will re- Harrisburg Patriot, . | the Road to Health wn) 'Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ter a soreness in my side. H]i wouldsuffer sobad- ly every month from my waist down that I could not be on my aifect half the time. [ wasnctable todo my work without help. 1 saw your Vegetable Compound adver- tised in a newspaper and gave it a fair trial. Now] am abi> - to do my work and don’t even havea backacheevery month. I cannot praise your Vegetable Com- pound enough and highly recommend it to those who have troubies like mine. I } am willing for these facts to be used SUMMONS | a testimonial to lead all who suffer with 7 | femal bl i ight STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun-| ‘Male troubles, as I did, to the righ ty of Burleigh. In District’ Court,’ road to health. "—Mrs. LULA VANN, Box Fourth Judicial District, \ 48, Fulton, Arkansas. Today’s word is—BLATANT. It’s pronounced—bla-tant, with ac-! cent on the first syllable, and the! first “a” long, as in “play,” but good || authorities say originally is proba-| | ly was short, as in “cat.” | It_means—bellowing, like a calf; | trusive, demanding undue voluntary attention. The word’s origin is uncertain. It’s used like this— ‘Nothing, i says Senator Robinson. of ‘Arkansas | ‘reed be feard by this country from| those who make blatant attacks up- on its institutions, but beware of those who condone violations of its laws and constitutions.” | or in- handled by the individual Ameri- can. LIQUOR industrious and intelligent. As a jreward George was recently ap- | pointed a judge in a small section |of Saxe-Meiningen. To hold the -—_ — ATHOUGHT |: o—_—_______—___- ‘Love never faileth.—I Corinthians | The 40,000,000 gallons of “hard”, position he was required to declare , 13:8. i guor, now stored in 300 bonded ‘yarehouses all over the country, Will be concentrated in 30 ware— for the republic of Thuringia and |this he did unreservedly and with | apparent enthusiasm. | So here's to Judge George! I'm proof against that word: “fail- ure.” T've seen behind it.. The only | failure a man ought to fear is fail- | ‘ure in cleaving to the purpose he; houses, announces Internal Rev-| here ougit to be more like him.| sees to be best.—George Eliot,’ | ‘ene Commissioner Blair. “The fewer the warehouses, the | He is ever so much more edifying than the rest of the royal has- Health hint:: Never phone your | harder for forgers, counterfelters,) beens, Instead of wasting his life wife and ask her where’ she is. | ; fe jle Syn it turned me to’ FE. McCurdy, Plaintiff, vs. Mar-! prey or ithe, ollie ive wait till | aretha Weisgerber, Michael Weis. cou (yous gerber, Joseph Weisgerber, Franiz [Td found you. ; _.| Weisgerber, Annie Weisgerber, Ma- [She bent down and kissed his! thilda Weisgerber, Lizzie Weisger-| Ifingers; so he arose and drew her ber, Ralph Weisgerber, Victor Weis- lup with him. For a few moments gerber, Mathilda Wetch, Mrs. John Ihe held her against him with her) Gross, William Weisgerber, Mary ‘yosom trembling on his throbbing ; Berger, and all other persons having breast; then, slippirig his arms lower, ov claiming any estate in or interest : ties |in or lien or incumbrance upon the |he lifted her and, laughing at her property described in the complaint,’ ‘quiver under his strength, he strode | Berendants, with her a few steps and catching |" The State of North Dakota to the \ Itsthis sort of praise of Lydia E.Pin':- ham’s Vegetable Compound, given by iy word of mouth and by letter, one wom another, that should cause you to con aking this well-known medicine, i you are troubled with such sympto painful periods, weak, nervous feel! njserable pains in your back, and can- ot work at certain times. Tere is a woman who is se grateful al glad to be relieved from a painful | and “herve racking. physical condition at she wishes to tell all sick women,

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