The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1922, Page 4

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y THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1922 rs i] 1 Laing her, as he stepped toward her|a centralized government to control | under the light. From the other business organisms which , stretch side of the’room, where she had through several states and of federal been, women called her name| But|control of such organizations be- she did not hear them. | cause they were beyond the power of “This ig my son!” she cried, her, the state, acting as an individual hands clasping Barney’s. “My son to so control. The justice presented lost to’ me that summer of his birth| to his audience, the federal control Decause I wag made an outcast but | of safety appliances on railroads, the now—ngqw restored to me!” | licensing of the sale of narcotics, fed- So her son caught her in his; cral standards of purity, the prohi arms, as her strength collapsed; ;+'on of the ssle of lottery tickets, with the aid of s9me woman, Un-' the exercise of the taxing power to kpown to him but who lovingly) eliminate colored oleomargarine and called her “Agnes” and kissed her THE BISMARCK: TRIBUN! ‘the effect ‘of | noise, on’ human’ baked marble... To the delight of | ‘ nerves and brain.‘ jal, it revived and—somewhat un- Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, | rson, entering this stillness, Steadily—crawled away. | ‘N. D., aw Second Class Matter, |, Person, Entoring hs Susie) Did Dr, Franklin admonish his = has a peculiar sensation in the follow guests that, except ‘for its | gEonge Se baht ae en # feeling of terior soaking in wine, Musca domestica Foreign Representatives | Noise, which is making a nervous would not have been disgraced by LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY wreck of civilized man, has become the conduct of its many legs? Not CHICAGO - DETROIT | such a part of us that its total ab-;he. His imagination kindled in a Matquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | sence strikes fear to the heart. Deaf! spirit of emulation. He remarked | | _ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH = poopie are not affected this way,| that no fate could be kindlier than NEW YORK -_- Fifth Ave. Bld8./ +5. tne vibrations of sound reach/to be pickled for a century or two MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED ‘ PRESS ’ ; fi | ‘them through their other senses |)” sound wine and then to wake up | ‘;in a sunlit garden to the tune. of | | ee | ne plashing water and look ‘abroad of the circulating media of state Rosati ae te one Fit: ise eas es na night,| WOR 2 Rew and better world. i cheek, he bore his mother. through | banks, : cation of all news dispatches cre-) very munute of day and night. If Dr. Franklin were tof walk | the ‘door nt the back of the room “while all of these laws nre sus- dited to it or not otherwise, pe | 23,334 letters are dropped into/ forth today from his butt of Ma-/ and away from the hub-bub behind | tained ag valid exercises of the pow- ean ieee tn so the mailboxes. The total is 1,400,000, deira, undoubtedly he would be| them to where they could be quiet | ors granted the federal goverament, ‘All niente of republication of/ an hour. ; staggered. *But it would not be al- | and alone. las against the, objecton that they apecial dispatches herein are al8>/ siai! wonder, that a letter occa-| together because his bones | CHAPTER XVIII encroach upon the reserved police reserved. sionally goes astray. Our destruc. | been pickled in alcohol. For his} A week later Hthel was in Chica- powers of the states, it is equally MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF tive sense rages at these isolated kite and key we could give him the go, rejoining Barney and Cousin o.tnplished that the federal govern- CIRCULATION | dela * sane electric light, the telegraph, the Agnes and learning that Lucas| ir ee ———.| delays. It rarely occurs to us t0i telephone, wireless, For Bushnell’s Cullen, Senior, had. ‘mysteriously |™e"t ™ay not rely. unon either the See Cre ON ye ice PAYABLE | give credit for the vast majority|“supmerged boat” of 1775 we could | ‘disappeared, He had not been seen | panes eine elie Bee cen that are delivered on time, for the’ give him the submarine. For James Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- | constructive instinct has not Rumsey’s steamboat, (which in 1786 at “kD wigit, "Bee PP | conquered the destructive tendency} Washington ‘looked to as making state outside Bisraarck) 6.00) in man’s brain. O erving a few! navigation possible beyond the Al- | Dally by carrier, per year....$7.20) after leaving the-seance. ~ | Bthel and Barney married six|* prea of sehitd Jaber 4 | weeks later, at the old house at St.) __.Jt is not my purpose to’essay any [ewe Jats | criticism whatsoever of the re2son- | Bennet and Julia and their moth-| i bv which-the results above men- Daily by mail, outsid isolated cases, we accept them as/leghanies and which Franklin | | ; 3 Dakota ... applying generally Crime, in par-|Shtewdly scorned) we could give jer came up for the service, after pened have been reached. So far 1s “THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWS- | ticular é | him the railway and the transatlan- -| which Barney and Ethe) went west, | this from my purpose that I would | : | Agnes returned to Chicago soon af-|tather declare that, on the whole, {tic liner. Then we could show him | | the airplane, surpassing all credul- | (Established 1873) \ter the Cullens went back; and old they constitute, in my opinion, a arah Cullen ‘remained at St.| *t*tevmanlike interpretnt'on of } ity of. sober minds, Doubtless his | | knees would give way, but his mind | would remain constant. But when | | We proceeded to take away his butt GERMAN MARKS Now that German marks are! EDITORIAL REVIEW | Plorentin alone wth the Indians un- | til July. when, after weeks of | drought, the fores tfires, which had | constitution, with-at which in deal- ing with present day problems, ¥ would be confronted with confu cheaper than high-grade wall Pa-') Comments reproduced in this |; ‘ fecal ce 3 || of Madeira and present him with | |rested for -many years, swept| Worse confounded. What concer er: specula $a are ing- y t express erent oop . ny 5 | q UE So apnea sem ce the opinion of The Tribune They || Prohibition, it is to be feared that jthrough the tinder-dry g!ashings | us, however, far above any attemnt- ing to them in a big buying move- | ment. | The obliging German government | promises that there will be plenty | forall. Beginning October 1 the, - ‘chsbank will print 4,000,000,000 | qy7p FUTURE OF “THE MOVIES”! >—__________.._4) (4*billion) paper marks a day. | It is called “Go to Movie Week.”| | A THOUGHT 1! For large investors it is rushing} Every week, of course, is movie| ‘| 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, | the seat of reason would totter | more helplessly than that eigh- | teenth century fly on the margin of the fountain—New York Times. | plates to print marks in denomina- | tong of; 500,0¢%\each, so that ama- teur speculators can carry around | a few billions, to show their friends | the-mrortgage ‘they have ‘secured on | the future, without tiring their muscles or tearing out the linings | of: their coats, | | On September 1,'German paper} méney-in circulation totaled around 259,000,000,000 (250 billion) marks. The presses have been turning | oft 2,600,000,000 new marks a day) sipce then. ‘Presuming that the presses are week for both the box office inter-| estg and the patronizing public, but this week is set forth a3 in a sense the beginning of a new fisea; year in respect of ethics, morals and art as these things apply to ssveen offerings. The official dividing, lina between what has been and what is to be, if the betterment program works out,! was signalized in Minneapolis by the visit of Will H. Hays, field mat shal of the motion picture industry : Motion picture menus, whethe. entertaining aloge, informing alone, or both, are of tremendous influence on American life, and more particularly upon those in the} -——— A righteous man falleth seven j times, and riseth up again; but the | i wicked are overthrown by calamity. —Proverbs 24:16, Falls have their risings, warnings have their primes. ; And desperate sorrows wait for bet- ter times.—Quarles, ie word . is—PUSILLANIM- It’s pronounced‘—pu-si-la-nim-i-ti 6 A | || TODAY’S WORD || with accent slightly upon -the first | and more strongly upon the fourth! { | i | | LSSShhioss | SATAN —- miles all around. ‘Lucas Cullen was one of these men. “My father bought from the government five hundred acres of ‘standing timber which he found that Luca Cullen was cuting. . This caused trouble for a refind on his purchase | 2nd second growth of the peninsula }and burned the’ old house to the |grcund. So Sarah. retreated, per- to pray and wait. ; . Throughout the western forests | mer. \ Here and there the flames sud-| denly burst on two sides of little |and in one of these places—so,the | telegraphed news related —a huge dominating in. manner and plainly [expert in ways of fighting forest | fire, placed himself in command and turned away the flames from the town. He himself worked tirelessly in \the fire lines with ax and spdde; }and when word came that two of | his men were missing and probably had fallen and were lying overcome ‘}for Cullen when my father asked; by smoke and grass, close in front) in its stride.all the activiti of the flames, he went in and ; brought out one man and returned j force, to. the home of her older son | | also drought prevailed that sum,; ; villages, all but cutting off escape; | | old man, strange to the settlers but: ed criticism that might be suggested, is the fact that we are becoming | more and more dependent upon a centralized government for the rept lution of our internal -nffairs, and that constitutional distincton:, seew- ingly artificial in character, are be- {.ing “established: to afford a line of demarkation between permissible and | prohibited action. i Becomes a Colossus, | “We have not by any means, ex- i hausted the subject. The govern- j ment is conducting a warfare upon | certain diseases, both among human | beings, liye. stock, and even in the vegetable; kingdom; it is promoting | education;..It is furnishing credit for | various enter es of a_ private jeharacter; it is éonstructing roads !and reclamation projects on a large j scale. In short ix is fast hecoming | ® great colossus encompassing: with- sof men. “There is a tendency to regard | these multifarious activities with idJe oy Sundays, to prevent them) impressionable stages of that life.! syiable Toney: 1 i. : . b i i 5 q i i e! “ os: ,for the other and never came/ alarm. It is freely asserted that the from meltign or gettign hot-boxes, Much of the entertainment is de-| "Ty means—weakness of spirit, cow-| Geen ne eaten ton Henne pike: | back ; | general government is being weaken- about 000,000,000 paper marks / signed to appeal especially to the | ardice, destitution of manly strength had one wife only “She was my, Days later, when the fire had|ed through the sheer wajght of its willbe in circulation October 1! when the new preses get started with their output of 4,000,000,000 a day: ae Ey the end of the year, some] 660,600,000,000 (600 billion) marks} will be on the market, so don’t! burst a blood-vessel trying to get ta, the bargain-counter. » | plastic minds of the youth of the land whose characters are in the formative period. It ‘makes a vast; difference whether this entertain-| ment be wholesome’or the opposite, hence the profound interest in the business by all that part of the! public that's concerned about the! future of the country. Mr. Hays holds a strategic posi- tion of immense responsibility as, between producers on the one side; It comes from—a combination of the\ Latin words “pusillus,” meaning | “very little,” and’ “animus,” “the mind.” ‘ It’s used like this—“Editorial | writers generally, agree that the pre- | sent serious situation at Constanti-| nople is due mainly to the pusilla- nimity of the European government's policy -there.” and firmness, I (Continued From Our Last Issue)’ Barney gazed into the fa¢e.of Lucas Cullen who staréd i with eyes widened, with jaw @rop- ped; the dim, pink, Jizht upom hts skin lost a tint as the blood, we from Lucas Cullen’s face; andspat= ney knew that he had, recognized the voice. i mother. Cullen spread about lies. One of the lies, which proved in the ; burnt out, and men were able at | last to go through the black, smol- Cleared a farm in the woods, mar-]end the most dangerous, was that| dering region, they found his re- ried a Gentile girl from Big Rapids, - ua Was living an hongqrable, useful life when he \crossed the path of Lucas Cullen who recently had ar- forest” ‘ The source of the voice was dis- covered. It came from that dark- the Mormon had lust for the wife of another lumberman, Henry Lay-! lor.” As she spoke, Agnes Culjen came to make his fortune in the| forward and showed herself more! plainly in the light. No one—not even Lucag Cullen ,in his guilt- clouded consciousness — believed |maing beside those of the man for /whom he had returned. Identifica- |tion was not easy; but soon the j Wries carried to Chicago the infor- mation that the old man had been, j beyond doubt, Lucas Cullen. |. Bennet brought the message to {his father at the. office. ; complex machinery and through lack | of cor.ordination. However desira- | ble efficiency might be, the lack of it is not after all our principle con- ecrn. Our principal concern it seems to me, is with the sacrifice of indi- vidualism, both fsem the standpoint of initiative and responsibility, and | with the substitution of paternal. j ism, which is supinely accepted as reflecting progress in government | guose be aaa ed t Haas and the. patronizing public on-the i |. “Direct voice!” some one, aap d} cned end of the room,where Barney }}hor a phantom now. |_.“He went with his boots on,” The individual citizen, the locality, ee rey cca hone amuta other, it was fit, therefore, that} j in awe: and others whispersd it] had supposed. his mother to bes} “Lucas Cullém told the lie about! Siuaes Hew hed, Ike tooo. Red reser tee ae somereign state, is p3t, “as investors” hope—would| ji. presence in Minneapolis should “We're hearing’ a diréct volée!#4| nd, jaa people craned. about. of! richard Drane and Laylor’s wife| “2at’s how he'd like to go. And) strongly inclined to appeal to the be. worth, $142,800,000,000. have been looked pypom.as_ a. Teal | OTM | tots tier voice!—1 knew. nef" 7] s:090.to see. the speaker,,She arose | only to haim the tam. who had | pre rnaeaes it couldn't be better! federal government for that which That is twice as much as Ger-; many’s national wealth before the war and about six times her pres-} ert national wealth, making al- lowances for what has been taken from her by war. The “easy mark,” buying marks for a rise, admits that he never ex- pects the mark to return to par, “Int a rise, ever so slight, with me holding millions of them. , .” and event, What he dogs or fails to do —provided he igsgustained heartily by Ahose whom he directly repre- gents—means much to this com- munity and to all other communi- ties throughout the country. It ig not enough that Mr. Hays should find the picture producers working in full co-operation with him to bring about the results at, which he aims. He must have the strong moral support of the people ; who are interested in the screen! offerings only from the seeing side. | Given these two things, he should be able to go far in raising the, Sd; on.- ¢ | ‘As John Moody points out in the| American Magazine, the Germans} Sims | Running an auto is no.excuse for /running amuck. H Mind your own: business or under- mine your own business. ‘ Longer skirts are not so bad, as | clearly and steadily. “It begins far Bennet Cullen had ‘retogniged:At and dropped down into ‘his’ deat, astounded; his mother. knew ‘the voice; and Jaccard; most certainly of all, Lucas Cullen continued in the conviction that one dead was speaking. . “Tam going to tell the account of Lucas Cullen and his family and of myself ahd my son.” said the voice back; yet is brief enough. So fer, even to Barney, the voice emed to proceed from:no located He hod believed his moth- cert among the veiled women and having cast off. her. veil and. the dark coat sho had. worn, she stool a little apart, ‘dressed all in whit. t 's.. Cullen-——Agnes!—Mrs_ Ol- iver Cullen!—She’s here!—That’s she—Why did she—How changed! How ‘could it be—” It seemed to Barney that every one must recognize that she was before them in the body; yet 80 strong had been the spell of the illusion that a few still saw her as a phantom. Lucas Cullen did. When she snoke.on. Barney rec- ognized that the deliberate, careful made him troublévand to injure a rival; for Henry, Laylor had built a mill only a few miles from Cul- len’s near a little place called Gal- ilee. “Neither would let the other drive him away; so they fought till Henry Laylor was burned out; and, | as you have just heard, he\ was killed. O | “Lueas Cullen had: that fire set; {he met near Galilee.a man in his | Pay—Quinlan—and sent him to ‘light shavings upwind from Lay-| ‘lor’s mill When it was known that} Ethel and Barney received the | news together. | “I knew grandfather wouldn’t go | without doing something,” she said ‘proudly, “You, see, he can better | face them all now!” | “Yes,” said Barney, and he knew |she. meant her father and mother | and his own grandfather. | Book of Mormon, and* Laylor. and} | Kincheloe and Quinlan of the flam- of the; |eould be more advantageously and j economically accemplished on the | spot.” ‘ Mine Mule Disappearing. | West Frankfort, Il—The mine mule, whose history-dates back to the days of early coal mining in southern Illinois, gradually is dis | appearing just as is Old Dobbin, the once familiar dray horse. With the gradual disappearance of the faith- jing torch. “I guess,” Ethel said, “old J, Q.| ful “hard tail,”‘old miners are pre- can put cut his torch. I can’t think! serving for posterity tales of pathos that one fine act at the end canj and sympathy, for the once , es.en- 2 t repudiate the mark, but oe | fe 5 at 1 ° Layler was killed, Lucas Cullen); oe " tira | tte cas ASS ky Tee mark alread? ‘has within a| standards of this kind of entertain-|“*7 “* We can see jat the iett of the rows where the] words were being recited from re-|saiq that the man who had set the| ‘MANES, One all at once; put its tal draft animal of the mining in bee a i | ments. The seidecgteoal” will abste tive lights had gone out; but such was] hearsals within herself repeated: fire was the Mormon Drane who! * ng begun which, over: there, | ve ‘ lair’s-breath repudiated itself out) "0", +6 told that the “pitch” for! gunn pric ‘gal’ will’ abate jthe quality of her tone that it|through years of waiting for such! wanted to kill Laylor to get his) ™USt have power to go. [Me Serf eeesege ine ’ | of; existence by attaining nearly). ’Coming year is tobe set by of-| "eke Buisance, seemed not enunciated: from one|a moment. | wile: "It gan # basieo Taette le ot| THE END | HORSE RACING POPULAR ! | alolute worthlessness. ferings of the quality and type pre-| y¢ a’ val ee both jspot.but pervasive throughout the! “My father,” she said, “had aban-' the sort which exicted men like to! ST | Horse racing in Russia, nearly The Germans, in their own coun-| sented in Minneapolis this week.! not brecking a locking bis WAYS) room. s . doned farming |to take out lumber, believe; they went to get the Mor-| jas popular in the old days’ a3 tea ' | try, are discarding the mark in| This being true,, the. people have) 10C Dreasing:.8 ai Hig glass means’ Every one was silent. cutting from land he had home-jmon and lynch him; then Lucas! i drinking, is slowly coming, baci: } pus'ness transaction and reverting| something concrete to measure by| "Yo 8008 (BC™ Fol eeeaN NES scourinted. the stoned and from surtonndiie Jeri Cullen—partly to save Drane from | You knew “about. the. hort, -st | i y i ti for the ; po, “was W. sa chi lons which he bought. uc t bei: | i ; d My F 4 to: barter and the use of foreign v sel ine, neler peca ons tory Our objection to putting Europe the Michigan forest. My father wag| buy timber, land cheap in those | Pons juurderes Het i unk abut plenty; but the horn of too much is q curriences, especially the Ameri-| year ahead. By these tokens 'Y | on her feet is she wants to sit right ,; i partly also to stop suspicion swing: ay blowi A # 7 the man whose spirit just now was|days; but there were men. who); + as | | a° man always blowing his. can ‘dollar. are to judge, at least in a general | pack down again | sow i jing “to - his guilty self—made aj even “Th ‘ i etite for! Way, What.Mr. Hays has in mind in oy here holding the Book of Mormon—| thought it foolish to pay the g0V-| great* play for justice and for a 2 LA i ‘The buyer whose appetite itrying to, make motion pictures} An’ absolutel isel istol hi ‘whose cabin Lucas Cullen entered ernment anything at all for the!triat for the Morman and stopped | NOTICE AND CITATION, HEARING * / . ngrks4s8°glittonous need not wor-, worthy of the important role they | , Mae ely, eg neta ‘48 "to quarrel with him and kick the great treegy on the state laid’. | the lynching—and’ periured Rich-| | OF FINAL ACCOUNT AND ry” .because...only .600,00000,000| nay in the daily life of the nation. | yin," eeing eon ws" | Book of Mormon from the doorway. ‘they bought one section and set.ayq Drane into the ceil where he, Y' | DISTRIBUTION OF ESTATE _ f We marks will be in circulation by the) Mr. Hays is right In saying that |” bikie bey als _ |My father was Richard Drane. He up a mill and cut over the square. qleq—my father—tor a crime which | Fel STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Coun- || caifof the year. Never forget, oth-| it is not thé part of the interes:s he! We hear the Ohio politician who! j Lucas Cullen and the’ man Quinlan) Aj} Must Recognize Founda-| . Qyuct Bunci#hzs sm, Gounty- crzyearsHevahead. |represents to “mother” the chil-| goesn't expect to be president has | s7~ ‘had done. ‘ ; ‘ | liege ORES ‘Judea, Sear i he more the mark falls, the) drep, There runs a heavy respon- | consented to see a doctor. ») 1 “It it not so, Lucas Cullen? Stan ion of Our Government, In the matter of the estate of / : || more Germany's profit on the deal. | sibility from “the door of the motion z | EVERET T TRUE BY CONDO up and deny it, if not 30!” S: Bird: | Charles Arthur Rapp, Deceased. || ENentually- she gets all, like the| Picture house to the screen on the} Since men are flying around like | She stopped and waited for an- ays Judge Birdzell |” George M. Register, Petitioner, vs. } “Kitty” in poker. stage, but this fact in no wise re- birds we may have scarecrows in- jswer; but Lucas Cullen neither ; Almeda M. Hawthorne, otherwise Ei fig | lieves parents oftheir proper res-| stead of lightning rods; ff {stirred nor replied. 'SPFAKS ON BASIC LAW known as Mrs. J. M. Hawthorne, t - | ponsibility in the home, Children “My father did not die for many | %* (Florence E. Long, otherwise’ known ; TURN ON THE UTS ee eee ene some ons’ a WN ob Baran hee ‘ jas Mrs. J. B. Long, Elmer Rapp, q Biémiarck ‘his tor'iffoiittis been go: PAlie BO to..too many, shows,” no| “Orchestra Leader Shot”—head- years,” Barney heard his mother: F \ Gebrpet Be Rapor athorving knows } Tec enee oo ) S| matter how clean, wholesome and/jine, Let it be, a lesson to others jsay. “My mother worked constant: | Minot, N. D., Sept. 15.—If we are to as GE, Rapp, Maurice E, DeWitt. poorly lighted “that many automo- | helpful the “shows” may ‘be. A| contemplating such a thing. H ily to get my father free. She died! retail free government every citizen | Wendell E. DeWitt, a minor, Ken- ‘ ‘ bile drivers have escaped very right proportioning of the time, of ene SE20 or | ‘when I was a young girl, and I took | myst know that the only. foundation | neth W. DeWitt, a minor, the sole u na¥rowly accidents which would| children’is a thing to be determined| Our idea of fun is being so rich up the useless attempts: I changed | upon which it can rest is a common | heirs of Gertrude DeWitt, formerly have been excusable. One acci-| by parents, acting in accordance | you have three or four homes to stay | my name and came to Chicago to/ intelligence, a common vigilance and | Gertrude Rapp, deceased and J. P. >| dent would have been a great price| With whatever laws and legal regu-| away from. ' S| {watch Lucas Cullen;-he left Chica- ‘a never dying patriotism, Chief Jus- | Jackson,» the special guardian of , i lations there may. be’ governing igo and built his.house at'St: Flor-! tice L. Ex Birdzell of the North Da- | Said Wendell E. DeWitt, a minor and to. pay, for any economy. resulting | re | of said Kenneth W. De Witt, a minor, | in discontinuance of lights by the! their choice. The laws, for in-| Years and years ago twin beds cntin; ,and I went’ to live near} {ota supreme bench ‘old members, of of ante ee . . be Sl F city. commission. stance, stipulate that children must | were beds with twins in them. | there. j the North Dakota Bar association in | The State of North Dakota to the i Di ing th : tt th a spendis tye Line: in genool, and > phatiwas the summer Hetore his | discussion the police power of the /-above named Respondents: uring the next two months, an |-the school authorities are privi-|, Speaking of cooperation,, a San’ daughter married, when he had her state in their relation to the powerof! You, the said respondents are ‘ St. particularly the first three days of| leged to lay down certain standards ‘Francisco man met, wooed and won friend, the Marquis de Chenal, a9/ the constitution. hereby notfied that the final account + |. next week, Bismarck will enter-| of study and conduct’ for the chil-! 9 girl in half an hour. | | his guest at St. Florentin. So De| “the chief justice took as his sub-/ of George M. Register, the admin I tain many visitors. The visitors, dren. These requirements, and Chenal happened to meet. me one je¢¢ “The Constitution and Modern | trator with the will annexed of the ougtit to be able to see the city, at; cthers that should be enforced by night as well as in the day time. Parents,.have a bearing on the time Bismarck should be in full dress allotted for amusement, whether in \ “movie” for the. occasion, so that visitors the movie” theater, or, out: 1 ° Mr. Hays and his employers have may-feel they are in a live city,| the best wishes of the good people may see the goods merchants have} of Minneapolis in their avowéd digalayed in their windows’ and purpose to better the moral tone travel about in safety. ;and to increase the educational A system of discontinuance of) Value of the picture offerings. The “Every German,” says M. Reibel, “must go to work.” Wouldn’t it have been awful if we had lost? New York crooks stole a patrol wagon, There is talk of nailing down the Woolworth building. There is nothing strange in the discovery that an uncivilized African MWERES RETTS THAT You Sit as day; he left Lucas Cullen’s house several times after that to find me. | He attracted me, too. I thought he loved me.” Her voice for a‘moment failed. “I told De Chenal why I was as I {was, how my father was in prison, falsely accused. by Lucas Cullen. De Chenal swore to help me; he | was hit in my cause,” he continued. Police.” In the beginning of his ad- | {dress he presented the jealousy of | state power exhibited in the framing of the constitution. ff | | “In order that here might be no | misapprehension of the intention to | perpetuate the benefits attaching to local. self-government,” declared |Judge Birdzell, “The tenth amend- ;ment was passed almost concurrent- estate of Charles Arthur Rapp, ‘late ot the city of Great Falls and State of Montana, deceased, has been ren- acred to this Court, therein showing that the estate, of said deceased is ready for final settlement and distrj- bution, and petitioning that his ac- count be allowed, the residue of said estate be distributed to the persons thereunto entitled, his administra- tion closed and he be discharged; | “white way” lights whereby, for, Past Is past, not to be-recalled. The | tribe practices dentistry. |THE WAD OF .| “He swore to iyatity my father and yy ‘with fhe ratification of the Con- that _Aucaday,cthe: Ae agave! Octo: Bt example light burns brilliantly | PTesent and the future are now to} 'I@Hewine GUM THA punish Lucas ‘Cullen. rst, itution itself. It stands as an ex- 4 i” i f xample, a light bu Y + deal with, and it If tair.toM : would I loved and be-| Stitution itself. It s forenoon of that day at the court | in front of a theater not being op- yy), with, and it is only fair.to Mr.| Some of these new cigarets. smell ; {would marry, tae aM believed | Press declaration that the powers not rcoms of this Court in the court erated while there is no light on a avs to say that his work is Just! as if they swept up the woods and jMeved him;. perhaps he believed! jtecated are reserved to the states house, in the City of Bismarck, Coun- Wy Pn : now coming into its real test. He i it in papers. himself in those days; I was very ack arleigh. Be. y A ! rolled it pape ! or to the people. Surely no fact in’ ty of Burleigh, and State of North |, busy street intersection a hundred imhcrited difficulties that could not | a young and he was young, and—we | i Laas the founding of our | Dakota, has been’ duly appointed by feet away, can only reflect lack of | be overcome in a hurry—Minne,| The stingiest farmer we know went to a priest—” 3 peeeneyces ated canbe ee ob-. this Court for the settlement there- | careful study by the ‘city commis- apolis Tribune. jabout had barb wire fences so the Barney began to make his Way | vious than that dt was intended tof at which time and place any my _ sion in working it out. } Ses | birds can’t sit down. 'toward her. Now she was stripping person interested in said estate may » Tre |, Bismarck is a wide-awake town) TEMPERATE BEN FRANKLIN. [o> SO"! SY SOR her soul before these gaping peo- Secure to the people, both the recog: appear and file his exceptions, in to 1 } and it would be very unfortunate _ The mind that can confuse Poor) In Boston, a speeder hit a seven- ple not: to punish Lucas Cullen, but nize ms Cee ra cational eter writing, to said account, and petition ‘ Me | if.visitors to the city durigg the Richard’s early humorous plea for} story building. They say he claims, to acknowledge him, her som. | SNC Of oer or administering those | "And nen the abare named respon x temperance with advocacy of pro-. he blew his horn. “Lucas Cullen learned of it, but| ment, ¢2 A i you, por a pageant should form their opinion hibition is little likely to rejoice in| ie gave out that.his guest had gone on| fairs in which the interests of the dents, and each of you} ered Hereby Pin ¢ , y ity | Bibit a Ke 2 ‘iti tate were common cited and required then and there ri aad ave eae way the city, ionic subtleties: yet it may well! Our strikes may be bad; but one |a.buntnig trip,” she pressed on. “He itizens of every other” "°" to be and appear before this Court, = enth managed. .; consider a certain anecdote of| closed Mexico’s movie houses. | followed and finally found us. His) 7 Rise of Power. and show cause, if any you have, why. utr ’ 'Franklin’s life in England, if only| PRs rey i} money, of course, was an tnflence; | a ieee Il then went on to| Said account should not be allowed, are i NOISE. [as a paralytic tries calisthenics.| Among new inventions is a col- I,had nothing; De Chenal ceed oe ‘aus ie Flstoe thelaaeiee’of the sk the residue of eld estate clistribut, cpt i i ii ii ing a visit i ii ‘i ike a - illion francs. | Lucas Cullen made" a x '- ed, the administraton of said estate ; Quietest place in the world is a During a visit in a country house Japsible grip. It acts like a man ask- million francs. s preme court in the construction of closed and snid administrator be ‘aise w laboratory at University of Utrecht, the company at dinner found a fly ing the railroad fare. Netherlands.. Walls are insulated) in a decanter cf Madeira fresh from i — so that no sound can get in from! the cask, Reminded of the popular! “Music hath power to soothe the the outside. belief that a fly thus’ sepulchred savage breast,” sang a poet who ne- Th this absolutel: isel would come ‘to life when placed in ver tried it on a rent man. In this absolute'y noiseless TOOM, the sun, the ever-curious’ philoso- | important experiments are being | pher took it to a fountain in the “There is coal, carried on by scientists studying garden and placed it on the sun- and diamonds, E ‘ says Hoover. Yes, ‘his escape easy. I was under age; | legal necessities had been ignored. | He married De Chanel to his; daughfer, gave him money and; packed him off. It was easier than! before to make me an outcast. The | next spring, my son was born.” ~ | “Mother!” Barney cried, forbld-) where the state and the nation had powers beginning with the decision written in the case of Gibbon vs. Og-, D. den. written by John Marshall. Fol- lowing the speaker went on to show the development of the industrial | power of the country and the need of | , charged. By the Court: (SEAL) I. C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. 9-9-16-23-30 Dated the 7th day of September A. « 1922.

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