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i q PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class' Entered at the Postoffice, Matter. | GEORGE D.MANN _. - : - - - Editor Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - - - DETROIT | Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. 4 PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH. | NEW YORK Geke Fitth Ave. Bldg. ASSOCIATED PRESS £ MEMBER OF THE | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other-| wise credited in this paper and also the local news published | herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are | also reserved. : | OF CIRCULATION MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per yeqr......6.0 see cee e cee cence es BU20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) .. aetedpiethe nto eOO! Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............... 6.00| 2 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) { WHAT OF THE FUTURE? The battle against the Nonpartisan league in North Qakota started out as one against state socialism. And later a&large number of anti-leagué political leaders decided that state socialism was all right providing they. controlled the enterprises and it was somewhat limited. Now there is ap-} parent agreement between the leading’ political factions of ; the state on this score, particularly'so long as a mill and ele-' vator puts employes into Grand Forks even’though at state expense. Is it possible that in a short space of a few years many of the citizens ogcupying the limelight in North Dakota may become inoculated with the Townley germ of’socialism? And will the future .political ‘battles be merely to settle the} question of who holds the state jobs or will there be a real, | lonest-to-goodness campaign and decision on the principle | o£ the state of North Dakota engaging in competitive busi-| ness? i & If the state is going into the flour milling business on a big scale and if Grand Forks business men laud the enterprise | which brings money into their pockets through employes | brought to the city why shouldn’t the business men of Bis- tarck forget their beliefs on state socialism long enough to demand that the Bank of North Dakota be opened full blast sg that there will be a pay-roll of $100,000 a year in Bismarck instead of $40,000 to $50,000? And having settled on the| propcsition that state socialism is all right so long as it benefits some community why not have the legislators of Burleigh county get busy and have the state go into the creamery: business, the produce business, and other lines of Manufacturing and distributing endeavor? What if Jerry Bacon and the other Grand Forks men who are so strong for the state mill,object? Say to them that if Grand Forks gets a; $2,500,000 elevator, Bismarck has to have something. more than a bank! { i, This is just an indication of the ridiculous conclusion that may result from temporizing. or compromising. upon principle. A great number of the people of the state a few years ago decried state socialism as a menace to our form of; government, to all honest business. There is a large number who hold to this principle, and who have refused to com- promise. The experience of the state has convinced a large number of farmers that the state industry policy is a fallacy. Campaigns can no longer be fought in North Dakota nerely on the mistakes of the past. Good, honest officials will give approximately the same kind of a business admin- istration no matter. who proposes them for election, for the legislature fixes the appropriations. ., The old question of principle, state socialism, must again| come to the fore, and those who believe, like The Tribune, that state socialism or state capitalism if you please, is wrong, ought not to drop,the fight until it is won. THEY LAUGH, AND WE LAUGH North Dakotans who listened to the Twin City financiers who said they could not loan money in North Dakota because if was controlled by Bolshevists can now smile, for Minnesota has elected a papa eapsleasue labor senator. And North Dakota can also smile at ‘some other states, Montana, for ex-| emple, where Wheeler, a Nonpartisan league candidates for Governor two yeats ago, was sent to the senate. Our) ostracism is a thing of the past.. If North Dakota is Bolshe- vic she has company. ‘| » But whilé we are smiling at other states they also are! stwhiling at us inthe east, for they say we elected a anti-' lgague Governor and a league Senator. And two years ago! when North Dakota was supposed to be hopelessly Bolshe-! EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express the opinion 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, THIS RECENT ELECTION Where the voter of 1920 had an sometimes ance.. This THE BISMARCK citizens mad, but that is as yet a | matter of theory and not of effect. | The service men and their'friends: failed to win the support of the ad-| | ministration. They had a_ griev- ‘ance. Two years ago politics al- | most without exception {their adjusted compensation. Al Republican administration and con-| ‘gress failed to give it. to them. ‘Yhat pleased a great’ many import- ant industrialists, commercialista,| issue the voter of 1922 had a grleV-| 44 ecomonists, but it aid not happens please several million voters, and) when the country having changed |» gain discontent is a better voter; party control and policies votes OM | than content. congress two years later. helpless, misguided complicity Under Democratic adminjstration, war, prohibition, inflation, and high taxes had come. ‘The Republican administration tried to get off the stilts. It could keep out of Europe, but it could not keep out of trouble. Prohibition had come as a war baby under Democratic administra- tion, but when the Republicans went in, a department ladministered by Republicans had to enforce it. The party which has td try to en- force this law is the party against which.)the grievance of the wets will lie. the principle and not the declara- tion of it which makes the wets mad. Few citizens in southern states waste any. time denouncing the constitutional» amendments _ en- franchising the Negroes and giving them civil rights So long as.in their states. the enforcement, is what Two years ago the country de-| defiant. cided. for Harding and -for a Re-| itself upon the farmer, but organ- publican congress, going to them | ized labor could fight. Agriculture for protection against involvement | dces not know what to hit when it! in the league of nations and against carries a load of wheat to the ele- in) vatoy or sends pigs to the stock-, ;European affairs. ’ That was a jsound gense of selfprotection. i ' Labor, we imagine ,is politically Deflation simply imposed yards and is disappointed in the | price. Y Organized labor has a direct em- \ployer and can hit at him when ; Wages go down. The government, | trying to get off stilts, had to sanc-; ‘tion reductions. The process: of! | getting completely off the stilts is; hard, and there are injustices be-; ‘cause everything does not come | down at once. | The United States has been lucky! beyond the imagination of its citi-; j zens. It fought a great war with-| jOut excessive casualties, It came; out of the war a creditor nation! with a gound currency. It pre-| It is the enforcement of} served its sound traditions and es-; caped entanglements. It has been| able to do a great deal of general: humén: good... It is pretty well fed: ans is organically sound. It <has; had some strikes, but it has not | suffered deprivations, People do} not féel the ground quivering under | | their feet or the shingles flying off; indorsed| ' iter. The people who go to it want they want it to be. 7 their roofs. But these people have} People are practical, Ra pase erlevances, and they voted them. | a law to please half of them and; ‘They do not know that the world fail to enforce it to please the other melted to hot lava: in 1914 and that | half there will be no complaint/ since then people’ have been lucky from the half which does not like/to escape extinct'on. — Chicago. the law. That is an American | Tribune. | habit. | Enforcement ig a federal func-) tion. Most of the states avoid it.) No wet in Ulinois would get mad at what the state or local govern- ment does to interfere with him.) Iie biames the federal government, | and yet Illinois has a more string-j| ent enforcement law than the fed- eral act. i In spite of William J. Bryan the} Democrats are, regarded as wetter than the Republicans. Large cities are wet. They.-aleo are mainly Democratic. Probibitionists have the condition they want, or some-| Every day is Armistice Day for thing” xpproximating ‘it. Anti-pro-| the henpecked husband. hibitionists have something they| . decidedly do not want. An activ®! Nothing makes f defeated candi- discontent, votes; harder ‘than ee date madder than hides his’ picture Mele Or, gem erties Sooteertal still in'a window a week later. ‘one, as results show. The person-| Nights a: 5 Ps ally dry but politically wet Edwards ce eo DAE ree now ; fer} of New Jersey took away the sens ‘ ’ A 4 ¥ i torial seat ofthe personally we' Id \you. can fiiakel your “idk Se, Erelingniyten| chiefs do a few more weeks you wil cause he votes for liquor although! set some new oned for ‘Christmas. he drinks water, to take the place of a Republican who may drink water, but votes against liquor. Gov. Miller of New York had not madé a great deal of trouble for the drinkers of New York City, but Smith, the former governor and the Democratic candidate, had a wine and beer platform. New York City will not tolerate dryness. It can stand that social rule just about as} i i Fi is fi well ag Paris can. It isa port, a| "Inside information is valuable. | cosmopolitan, a tavern, and a thea-| That's why doctor bills/are high. | You never have to sit around and be a phonograph to sing. j These are ticklish times for those wearigg scratchy heavies, a Furnaces are like husbands. you dont watch them they go out If This North Dakota man with whiskers 17 feet long isnt worrying much about Christmas neckties. a fling. The people who live in it; We are sorry for the man without} want them to have it, and they want | ° country—especially when leaves it themselves. New York will per-|2re turning in the country. mit Emporia, Kas., to decorate life with pineapple sudaes, but it will not try to. The moral cake eater may be the New Yorker, but he will not eat dake. Kansas may be aj bone crusher, but it will eat angel There ‘never has been enough neace in the world to go around. A goose never acts Jike an owl when! he goes out for a lark. food. New York. voted for its) liquor. a The family, skeleton looks better; Ohio voted for beer. Massachu-|in longer dresses. setts voted not to make the state laws conform to the Volstead act. California defeated an enforcement act. linois voted 3 to 1 wet, with Evanston, original foe of rum, just barely going dry, and Oak Park, which had no saloons when it might have had them, going wet. It may be inexplicable to the drys, but there is in a part of the Many in> the mackover oil fields ran smack over severgl: miles. |/_Near Johnson City, Tenn,,a drink nig led officers to g still. The farm- mer may plead he was raising pickled nig’s feet. A federal divorce law has been American conscience a_ revolt) ¢ramed. Too mbn: 1 t M f E y ‘couples seem to against prohibition which does Not) nave the state divorce law framed. sanction debauchery, alcoholism, wife beating, economic waste, or fn Cincinnati, soapmakers pay was any of what were known ag the, Do erad Lhe te vic she gave Warren Harding a majority of 120,000. | The Nation, a magazine in New York which boasts of; Liberal tendencies and is castigated by others as socialistic, | reprints an item from North Carolina stating that the \Gov-; ernor there plans to put before the legislature the question’ of organizing a company, with the state of North Carolina! a the chief stockholder, to operate a fleet of steamships be-| tween North Carolina and North Atlantic ports. ‘And this’ magazine observes: “If North Dakota had had coasts and had proposed a state fleet the welkin would have rung with denunciation of so un-American and socialistic policy.” And it declares that while the state of New York is praised as it gpens state Warehouses at the terminals of the Erie Canal in New York and Buffalo, and Louisiana spends millions for términals and cotton warehouses, these states are praised “but when North Dakota issued bonds for the same purpose | they called it treason.” : ; 3 The East has long rather regarded us in the west with s€orn, and we have laughed at the east. We don’t like to see | them laughing at us now. We can’t well deny that they have’ aoe to smile at our little inconsistencies, but de don’t, ike it. f : i . There are lots of peculiarities in North Dakota polities, | we might reply to The Nation. We might point out that’ ian J. Frazier was helped to Washington through the Mc-! umber defeat in the primary by some well known and Ioud opponents of the Nonpartisan league. Indeed, we might in- climb. jeause of prohibition,. but hey are cies — mad because deflation started on, [ET | the ground. Farmers, with fair || A THOUGHT | weather, are Republicans. It has | @——_. e| not been fair weather. Wheat, | evils of the saloon. This may be saibedrsy his is) comipgcelenne perfectly inexplicable to the person who believes in moral dominion by coercion, but it ig explicable to peo- ple who know that a republic is founded upon individual selection. This may be called an issue, but we should call it, in the fashion in which it generally wag submitted, a\grievance. The agricultural dis- tricts are supposed to be dry. They do not ask for exhiliaration after daylight but for rest and for the ability to get up at or before dawn 1 No one knows what the future has! in store, but it is a store where you} must go after what you want. May we say a_ salesman has a right to blow. about his goods be- cause it is the trade wind? i A mans wife has, to yhunt his things for him, but a bachelor knows; his are on the floor. | 1 | and doa day’s work.. A great many| We can all be thankful this farmers like their occasional trip) Thanksgiving that moths don’t eat to the clouds, but they do not look|*8. much a8. alligators. forward to the cabarets at the end day. The tree of knowledge is hard to! They probably were not m2¢ he-: hogs, and cattle have not been get-| The law of the Lord is perfect,| ting the war prices. The farmer|converting the soul: the testimony | may. think that’ politics can help|of the Lord is pure, enlightening} him, but it cannot. It said, in Rus-| the eyes—Psalm 19:7. Se sia, that it intended to, and all the! Much as I have seen of the world, | farmer got out of it was starvation. | of its'triumphs, of ifs gaities, and of | The reason the farmer is the first to! its magnificence, I have never for a| feel natural causes is because he| moment shaken the ‘conviction thut; is closest to them. Politics for athe best thing this side of heaven, time can do something for railroad | the delight of life, its chief cons pot at diamond necklace from the 1 {to the solution of this mystery; and , t | workers or for any other secondary |tion, indeed the very charm of ex- Forks for electing him. | workers, but when! it tries to say |istence, is in kind affections—Henry | = But North Dakota may not always be inconsistent, we! ‘!at,2 mam sowing the soil shall Colman, \ = A r my ats - tobtain so: much it has as much} doc SM cake (Siti would inform the eastern editors. And it is pretty likely chance as a weather forecaster who| RESTRICTS SALES | that the next campaign will be really fought out on the ques-| was foolish enoygh to try to cause | (By the Associated Press) i tion of whether state socialism or state capitalism is right or|# needed rain. | Ottawa, Nov: 13—The keeping of ig:wrong. ey With the city wet mad and the | intoxicating liquor in the province of = \rural dry mad, the administration | Saskatchewan for export and expor- had a load to carry. Taxes have tation of intoxicating liquor from} jbeen reduced, but not enough to! Saskatchewan by persons other than jenable the average citizen to buy (licensed brewers and distillers were | jhis wife a sealskin coat. That is forbidden today by the dominion ‘his idea of getting out from under.| government. The order becomes ef- (The tariff may have made some | fective December ‘15, firm them that Lynn J. Frazier probably is very heartily thanking some gentlemen of Bismarck, Fargo and Grand % The height of ignorance is sitting up all night because the washwoman has your pajamas. 5 M4 Many a fat girl has a beautiful figure at the bank. TRIBUNE 4 iumphs M-Jonquelle.. . by MELvILe Davisson Post, IT WENT oF ©. 1992 _NEA Service, Inc. ' | THE MOTTLED BEGIN HERE TODAY in France, is attempting to solve the ‘mystery ‘surrounding: the theft MARQUISE DE CHANTELLE, weal- thy American wife of the impov- erished MARQUIS DE CHANTELLE: The beautiful Me MME, ZIRTENZOFF was _ singing when M. Jonquelle entered the opera and proceeded to the bois occupied by the Marq@is. Before entering, ‘he stopped an. usher who 'was leaving with a~ large bouquet of orchids. On the pre- text of sending the usher for ciga- rets, M,. Jonquelle held the or- chids for a time and then entered the’ box of the Marquis. ! , The Marquis asks M_ Jonquelle if he can’ tell why Jean Lequex, who ‘confessed to the theft of the neck- Jace would not tell where the neck- lace was concealed. CHAPTER II M. Jonquelle smiled at the Mar- quis. “But I must be permitted, mon- sieur le marquis, to hold my explan- ation’ as a sort of wage against the details of your story. The Service de la Surete is filled with admiration for you; you must omit no item of the ‘narrative. . . Oh, how en- chanting Mme. Zirtenzoff is! Hair like a sanburst of dreams, and the figure of a dryad! One would do murder for her.” The Marquis laughed. “Murder, monsieur ?” “Ah,.yes,” replied the Prefect, “murder or any lesser crime.” The Marquis looked the Prefect frankly in the face. “You believe this robbery have been committed for a, woman “For whom other could jewels be intended?” replied Jonquelle. The, Marquis continued to regard the Prefect with a certain interest “You mean,” he said, “that the reason why the Apache, Jean Lequex, did not tell what he had done with the necklace, was in fact, because he had given it to a woman?” “ The Prefect of Police looked at the Marquis with some — concern, with, in fact, a certain element of wonder. “Why, no, monsieur, that, is not the -reason at all.” The Marquis seemed puzzled. tk you generalize, \then, to no could definite purpose?” ; “By no means,” replied the Pre- fect of Police. “I would generalize with M., le Marquis’ aid, I think I can arrive at it.” “Monsieur,” replied the Marquis caldly, “I believe the mystery has already been concluded;. I believe its solution seems complete.” “Seems,” ‘repeated the ‘Prefect of Police, “is the word precisely. While it i8 true that the criminai, Jean, Lequex, has confessed before the court and been sentenced to a term of years for the robbery of: these/ jewels, the jewels remain to be’ discovered.” He paused and regarded thé Mar- quis With an expression of compli- ment,’ “We feel, at the Service de Ii Surete, that if we could bring to the remaining feature of this matter the seme degree of excellent acumen that was brought to its initial stages, by the Marquis de Chantelle, we should. be able to restore the neck- lace to the Marquise upon her re- turn from America. She returns tomorrow, does she not? It seems a brief time for so difficult an un- dertaking.” M. Jonquelle smiled “[- regret to intrude..upon, your February, , Monsieur opening the’ door of his apartment’ at a late hour, saw a slip of paper be- side the door. At the moment. the Marquis gave this item no attention; it did not impress him, It was late, the servants having retired, ‘and the Marquis withdrew to his bedroom alone. \ “Tt appears, however, that disgres- sions of the mind occur to all 6f us, even to the’ Marquis de Chantelle on the border of dreamland. It oc- curred to him that this slip of paper was a memorandum by the con- cierge to. call the attention of the Marquis upon his arrival to some inquiry that hed been made for hin The Marquis, however, did not arise BUTTERFLY 0 pleasure, Marquis, and- especially on M, Jonquelle, chief of the Service| this, the final night of Mme. Zirten- de Suyete and the :greatest detective | zoff's One He paused. “But. monsieur, I The “On the night ape “trivmiph—amazing adorable’ woman! no mioment ‘of: her-exccllence.” cannot quately admire your oxcellent hand- ling of thisjmatter unless I am quite certain’ thet Fhave*the details of il correctly. / Permit’ mé, monsieur, . te repeat ‘these details, and ‘correct me, I beg of you, if I should present them_with an item of inaccuracy. [ was absent and I’have only the mey ory of inferiors.” Prefect of Police rested his arm on the seat of the box, whi the Marquis fingered his monocie idly, twisting the silk cord. sumed -an attitude of careless at- tention, and M. Jonquelle went on: of the le TO HIS HEAD woman, should lose ade- He as- 18th: of Marquis, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1922 |the name in print of Moore-Poole & |Co., a firm of American brokers in | Paris, “Old Forneau at once suggested that the robbery must have beey committed by some one from the of- fice of these brokers, probably an American, since the slip of paper must have come from some one em- | ployed in that establishment “But here the Marquis Chantelle, showing an intelligence superior to that of this. officer of the Surete, pointed out that no one would come on such an adventure bringing witn him a piece of paper, and especially an indicatory piece of paper, upon | which to set down such a memoran- | dum. It was far more likely that the piece of. paper had’ been acquired somewhere in the apartment. “He then suggested that an inquiry, be made “fo discover whether some one fromY this American firm of Moore-Poole & Company had not ai one time occupied an apartment in the building. “Porneau acted, upon this sugges- |tion and ascertained that Monsieur the Marquis was correct. He. dis- covered & quantity ‘of these blank | nrinted slips in the basement of the | building, where, with other rubbish they had been retained by the con jeierge to kindle fire in the furnace. | “Thus \Monsieur the. Marquis at |one stroke removed any suspicion [that might have been attached to the inquiry to some one having ac- cess. to the building and knowledge of it, else he would npt have been in the basement where this debris from |the apartments of old tenants hac | accumulated. i | “The query as to how the robber j had obtained access to the Marquis’ ‘apartment on this. night now ad- vanced itself. There is no, key tt these apartments except the one de- livered to the tenant by the bank {this firm of brokers and confined, at that hour to verify this impres- sion, but in'the morning when he j.awoke, he remembered it, and going into the drawing-room in his dress- ing-gown and slippers—it was before the arrival of his valet—he found the slip. of paper where it had re- mained as though it had been slipped under the door. “The Marquis was surprised when he came to examine this bit of paper. lt contained some numbers written with a pencil. and the words in a strained, unformed hand: ‘The combination of the safe of the Mar- quis Chantelle.’ 7 “Monsieur turned at: once to the small safe which is built into the wall of the apartment after the American fashion, He tried the com- bination written on the slip of paper, found it correct, opened the safe and discovered that the necklace appeared.” . : The Prefect of Police ‘hesitated in the narrative and addressed an in- quiry. : “It \is’ true, monsieur,” she “that you’ did not know the combit tion of this safe, that the combina- tion was known only to your wife, the Marquise, and that.more than once, for example at the Cafe An- glais on the 14th of December at midnight, when any-créature from the underworld of Paris might have been. present, you spoke of the danger of keeping this necklace in a small private safe in the, apartment when it should be deposited with a banker, But to.these objections the | Marquise always. returned the same answer—that she alone had the com- | bination of the safe? This is true?” “It is true,” replied the larquis. “But it was not discreet, as after- events have demonstrated. Perhaps by these discussiorls we gave infor- mation of the whereabouts of this necklace to this Apache Lequex.” The Prefect of Police made vague ‘gesture and continued speak. a ,“The Marquis, upon the robbery, at once Service de la Surete; old Forneau and an agent arrived immediately. Upon examination of the bit of pa- a to discovery of notified /the _ EVERETT TRUE LOOK THERE, EvereetT — HE WAS BY CONDO NOT A CRIPPLS BEFORG CAST NIGHT AT THE]: Movies BACK hadj ids i making the lease. | “When the door is closed, it is locked from’ the outside—that is tc say, the knob of the door does not turn onthe outside; it turns oniy on the inside, so that it can always be onened from the inside, whether locked or not. ud “It cannot be opened from the out- i side because the handle of the door- knob, as I have said, does not turn. How, then, would this robber ente the Marquis’ apartment? Aga \the Marquis was able to give For neau an explanation. “On the evening of the robbery, it was his intention to remain in his apartment. He had dismissed his valet and the servants and w alone. Later he changed his mind and concluded to go out Upon re- lection he remembered that he did not entirely close the door; but it 'was a-thing which did not at the moment impress him. | “It was his habit, always, of course, to close the door,.and he had closed it, but upon returning for a glove, he had left the door ajar. This {he was afterward able to establish beeause of a trivial incident. He refhembered the glitter of the elec- tric light on the point of a gold frame at the corner of the drawing- room table. \ “It caught his eye as he descended the steps. But it' did’ not imptess him with the fact that he had neg- lected entirely to close.the door. It impressed him merely as an incident which) he afterward remembered, and he continued to descend. The final installment of “The Mot- tled Butterfly”, will appear in our next issue. “— Sense ao ADVENTURE OF | | THETWINS | isha abbr Sse LSE ’ By Olive Barton Roberts The Twins climbed _a mountain and before long they to a place where there was a’ lot of snow. Right near was a little house where woodchopper lived, and out in the front yard stood a big white figure looking thoughtfully at noth- ing at all. “There's” Snow Man,” whispeted Naney: “Let’s surprise him.” So they tiptoed up softiy from be- hind and yelled “boo” so loudly that Snow Man dropped his gun-stick and his butter-bowl hat slid down over his eyes. “Who is. it?” he gasped. “Is school out already? I thought from the looks of the sky it was only ten o'clock. Billy, please pick up ‘my Fsticki and straighten my hat. I'd be mortified to death if anyone saw }me like this.” | Nancy. and Nick stepped around whage Mr. Snow Man could see them “We're not Billy,” laughed Nancy, straightening his hat. “My; my! Hello, children! How jdid you get jhere?’ exclaimed Snow | Man, talking as well as he could j with his pipe in his mouth. | Nick explained that no mountain | was too steep for them to climb with their magic Green Shoes. And the tcld about Mother Goose losing \her broom, too, and how they were |hunting for it. | _ “Did you happen to see it?” asked | Nancy. “[’m not sure,” answered Snow | Man in a worried voice. “The chil- i dren found an old broom somewhere | and chopped off? the handle to make |my gun, Will, you please see if it’s | the one you are looking for.” |. “Does it change color?” asked | Nancy. “Mother Goose says her | broom always matches the sky.” “No.” ‘answered Snow Man - in a “This can’t be came . | relieved voice. fatter all.” | INCORPORATED The Knight Printing Company of | Fargo, which has operated as a {unincorporated concern. has incor- porated for $100,000, with the incor- porators the present owners and heads of the business, S. F. Knight, His To@s UP THROU! HE KEPT POKING ;D. DeHaven, Harry D. Anderson. aH THE | ENTIRE FAMILY HAD “FUL” |.“ Keep right on using Foley’s | Honev and Tar. Jt will give quick | relief,’ said the doctor. when the lentire family had the “fn”. Never |saw anything so rood.” writes | Mrs. A. B. Griffith, Andrews, Ind, | Neelected courhs and colds often jlead te serious complications. | Folev’s Honey and Tar gives quick | relief. Free from opiates (ingre- dients printed on the wranper). Targest selling cough medicine in | the world, oF MY SEAT | per, it proved to be a slip bearing ‘ ith t