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2 ‘ civ fre cal su he An on tu na” 3. of ter, Se ta ol wh pot qu wi't ln ed! tu i t ae a PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE! Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. | BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. - - - Publishers | Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - - aS DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced im this column may or may pot express the opjnion of The Tribune. They are pmsented here im order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. THE RIGHT IDEA IN NORTH | DAKOTA NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. BARE ACTS the SIC jot its si in the United States. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not : rf Py * tion. 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Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. . 7.20 | {2 most agr kind of talk in whi Fargo Forum sev ce ee 97.20 | Prospe thrift and progre: ++ 5.09 tention from an audience than a 6.00 | tale of one’s own woes lenged the claim of an- Dakota city, Zeeland, to that distine- other Mel Sorth h” county h the Nonpar- interesting evi- dence that Dakota finds happier subject to talk about t ort A story of wins better at- 2 pines Sas Zeeland figured its wealth by THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Wesnosits in its two (Established 1873) ling’ Galted states nonae anon am eS ees Sacha ee Sas viding t' $774 720.14, by vonsors of the in which to be voted on next Tuesday, have generally n_ecredit for good intentions but poor judgment the measure is quite in consonance with the view expre: by some of the more radical thinkers in the state i who are imbued with the idea that the so ic theory of + DEFEAT THE FEDGE BILL its populafion, 1 pea spate a ie ahor lien | Wealth iation of the Fedge farm labor lien antie te find fa ig a per cal 06. Kindred ta riches of $3,1 g two banks, 350 ate deposits and 36. Some may It with that od of cal- same sy3- 1 the world, it ulating government ownership of land is a necessary revolution. By any s to di varicus steps they urge measures wh uli!’ tend! to pub) Pate wo Ai oe: on the land in the ownership of the government. Ii matey CoclaidieBOta are The Fedge bill proposes to amend t¢ rm Labor Lien surroun y 1p ill farms by giving to the farmer himself, hi ° and children over a e explanation , prosperity 16 yeais old, liens for all services: med between April | ther starement SAD crop as 1 and December 1, on ail grain rai ny real estate On cation is being pra€ticed extensive whch ony such labor was performe o which any benefit thereof ures. The lien is given pi ver all mortgages d umbrances, except seed, threshers and hired labor liens, The assignment or alienation of this lien is absolutely prohibited. Many able thinkers in the state have pointed out the danger in the Fedge bill, a danger first of all to the farmer of little means and next a danger to all people who prosper if the state develops through prosperous farms and farm ownership. | First, most immigrants buy farms on the crop payment plan— they make a down payment and pledge part of the crop each year in paying for their farm. If a farmer should have two or three children over 16 years of age ,and he were | able to file liens for four or five people in his own family on the crop, the man who sold him the land on crop payment would not be sure of his security. Therefore, the man who now aids an immigrant or a tenant to get his own farm by selling him the land and permitting him to pay for it out] of the profits, would not do so in the future. The Fedge! bill would prevent many farmers now tenants from buying a farm; it would restrict immigration and reduce ownership of farms by the farmers. Second, if 2 farmer desired to borrow money, and pledge} ¢ part of his crop in payment for the money which he would use \0 buy seed, plant and harvest his crop, the lender would ro. have safe security because by the filing of sufficient licns under the Fedge bill the farmer might take all the crop. Therefore, the lender would not advance the money. If the farmer cannot buy his own home because of the * Fedge bill, if he cannot borrow money with which to plant his crops, there will be no crops on which liens under the Fedge bill can be filed; there will be no profit for the farmer from his labor. Thifs, the bill would defeat its own end—if that end is a sincere and honest desire to help the farmer. The bill was before the legislature and received little support from either the Nonpartisans or Independents. It was voted down. It ought to be voted down next Tuesday. MYSTERY HOVERS AROUND YOU No one has ever been able to explain how lost dogs and cats can travel hundreds of miles over strange territory and| get back home. The force that guides them is a baffling! mystery. Consider the collie dog owned by G. F. Brazier of Silver- | ton, Oregon, Last summer Brazier visited in Wolcott, Ind.,| and took the dog along, then returned home without it. The | other day the collie, thin and worn out, crept up to the porch of his home in Oregon and barked feebly. The distance covered by the dog is at least 2000 miles. What guided the dog to his destination? Do dogs have the ability to consult each other when they sniff noses, and inquire directions? Sounds ridiculous? ‘Well, just try to figure out a more plausible explanation of how Brazier’s collie made the 2000-mile trip. The mysterious sixth sense is peculiar to nearly all forms of animal life. Years ago, when rifles were short- range and weak compared with modern firearms, the grizzly bear seemed to sense the situation—and it was easy to get within sight of him. As rifles became more powerful and of longer range, Mr. Grizzly began to keep increasingly farther away. Now it requires great hunting skill to get within gun- range of him, except by accident. . How does the grizzly know except by a mysterious sixth sense? Certainly it has been impossible for the shot-and- killed bear to spread the word to others, Similarly, fish in a lake get to “know” trolls and other | lures, according to Indians, and haye to be tempted with new baits. | Scientists claim that nearly all young babies can swim instinctively. As the baby grows older, the fear emotion | develops—and soon fear blots out the ability to swim. Then the child has to be taught swimming lessons., Fear has eliminated an instinct inherited from animal ancestors. The new-born baby will clutch a stick and hang by his fingers as easily and naturally as a monkey. Being close to the animal state, the baby—and later the child—has considerable animal instinct. That’s why chil- dren are such excellent and generally infallible judges of! human nature. If babies instinctively like a man, place your | bets on that man. > SNOW MACHINE. ' A remarkable machine for removing snow from city streets is invented by Mrs. Slater, of New York City. The snow is scooped up, dropped into a hopper and there melted by intense heat., The water flows out the side of the ma- chine and down the sewer. Such a device, perfected, would save millions of dollars for cities which now have to shovel snow into wagons and haul it to the outskirts of town. Observe that a woman is ‘the inventor. *K cynic thinks the song of lovée.is 4 swan song. }and lo and behold, there appeared on ja pussy willow branch, the | Queen herself. | dear little lady. | to the dingly dell to watch my fairy | eagerly, | “My, my! ly. Hogs, corn, cattle and poultry ed in abundance dred for several years, nd is the center of 4 dai. region. | Progress hag been made in all parts of North Dakota in recent years, for the same reason as stated by Joseph M. Devine, com- missioner of immigration, in a re- cent talk, as follows: | When North Dakota pro- duced only $17,000,000 worth of creamery products in 1919 and 34,600,000 worth in 1923; when* North Dakota had but 18,000,000 ‘bushels of corn in 1919 and 30,000,000 bushels in 1923; when North Dakota had but 18,000 acres of sweet clo- ver in 1918 and 370,000 acres in 1923 when poultry produc- tion jumped from $3,070,000 in 1918 to $10,000,000 in 1923, we know we are on the w toa bigger, better North Dakota. Next to prosperity at home, Min-| nesota likes to hear of prosperity) in North Dakota.— St. Paul Dis- patch. A MODERN KING MIDAS have been ri around K ile 7 During 1923 gold imports into United States have proceeded at a rate of some $25,000,000 (net) | monthly, Not a dollar of this was wanted, and the gold reserves of the Federal reserve system ‘have now reached the unprecedented figure of 80 per cent of their note- issue and deposits combined. Thus it has cost the United States during the past year about $420,000,000 to maintain gold at a purel value (made up of about $120,000,- 000 interest on idle reserves and $200,000,000 for fresh redundant gold imported). Yet if the United States were to close its mints to the reception of further gold, everything would go on exactly as before, except that an additional) 200,000,000 of capital reserves} would have teen available during the year for use in other for It cannot ‘be reasonable to suppose that this sort of thing will con- tinue indefinitely. For example, it will take less than three years at the present rate—assuming that inflation is successfully avoided —| for the gold of the Federal Reserve banks to reach; 400 per cent of! their liabilities. )2What will they do then? ‘They must close their mints to gold, or suffer an invol- untary inflation.—J. M. Keynes ia} the New Republic. , ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY:OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON “Hello there, kiddie!” said a voice, Fairy “Hello,” called the Twins happily. “we didn't know you were here. “Oh, I'm everywhere,” Jaughed the “I've just been down gardeners put in yome more violet plants for spring. On my way home I passed an old stump, and stopping a minute I heard the funniest sounds. I have to laugh when I think of it.” “What were they?’ cried Nick jo you really want to know?” cried the Fairy Queen teasingly. What a curious little boy! But there! I'm only fooling. That's why I'm here, my dears. “When I heard all those funny sounds, I said to myself, ‘I'll have to | send Nancy and Nick to this place down the old stump, for they will have lots of fun.’ So I came to leave the magic green shoes with you there just the same, and the way to venture. Do you want to go?” “Oh, yes, yes, yes!" cried the Twins pester, “What is the funny falled? May we go right “Yes, if you like,” answereg the queen, flying down to the ground and slipping the magic shoes on their feet. “But I'll tell you a little about it first. The place is called the Land of the, Doofunnies,” “Doofunnies!”” exclaimed Twins. “What are they?” “Just odds and ends,” said the quee! “Thi People -wake and th forget about. After they grow the up they wonder whatever became of ‘ rtificfal | gy THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE And Father Said— this and that they had when they children. They don't know that there is a special place where these things go. They just slip off when nobody is looking. But the place is there just the same, and the way to | get to it is down the old hollow stump beside the button-woog tree.” “Odds and ends!’ puzzled Nancy, “What are they? The Fairy Queen laughed. “Oh, they, are all odd, the people of Doo- funny Land are, ang sometimes they are ends. Master Fuzz Wuzz, the pipe-cleaner man, rung the place, and his subjects are the clothes-pin doll, and the napkin rabbit and the wooden soldier, and the potate- horse, and the peanut boy ang the gingerbread man and the pin-cush- ion lady and the stocking cat, and the little tin mouse and a rubber bow-wow that whistles. Besides there are a,lot more. The cut-out people and Teddy-bear and Radié”Rex and] - the wooden clowns, and animals from the Humpty Dumpty Circus.” “Sounds grand to me,” said Nick, turning a somersault. Let's go right away, Nancy. May we?” “Yes, run right along,” nodded the Fairy Queen. “Tell Fuzz that I sent youl Away went the Twin (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1924, NEA Servige, Inc,) ° | Overworked ‘ ¢ By Berton Braley That much abused adjective, “hectic,” The Flapper has grabbed for her own, To use in a manner eclectic To qualify everything known; She seems to have almost a passion For making it fit any noun, Or characterize every fashion Of person or party or gown, “I'm feeling just hectic this morn- ing! That party was hectic last night! And father, today, gave a warning That—well, it was hectic, all right! I've got a new gown y ‘arty,” Though awfully hectic in hue! ‘That new man we met at the party Is hectic, I think, over you!” Now here is the humor sardonic; Consult Mr, Webster, you'll glean The knowledge that hectic means or “vivid or “k But who cares what books say about it? 6 The Flapper does not, I aver, For hectic’s her word, and spout it ce it i (Copyright, 1924, MANDAN NEWS | Commerce Club Names Officer: Members of the.Mandan Sommer cial club at ‘the annual meetin; which followed a banquet at the Lew is and Clark hotel Thursday evenin;) attended by more, than 150 men, ga unanimous approval to the activitie of the board during the past yea: heard an address by Judge Fran Wilson of: Stillwater, Minn., electe seven new members to the board an later met the emergency of the 192: budget. The new members of the boarc chosen from a field of 14 nominatec by a special committee are: R. A Countryman, Mandan Mercantile company; Dr. G. H. Spidlman, physi- cian and surgeon; Earle H, Tostevin Mandan Daily Pioneer; H.C. Schulte, Purity Dairy company; Frank P. Homan, Homan Drug, and H. A. Roberts, Russell Miller Milling com- pany, W, G. Renden, Mandan Electric company ang A. J. Sylvester were tied for the seventh seat flipped a coin with Mr. Sylvester winning. This noon at a meeting of the board Jt was found that the railroad men had no representation on the: newly reorganized board and B. E, Kennelly was elected to the place to which Mr.’ Sylvester was elected when the she'll nie with her! Service, Inc.) i gee: SIMS PEOPLE A man who travels in a circle gets back to where he started. This seems to be true of those traveling in political circles. With eleven investigations under way in the Senate our political ma- chines have become threshing ma- chines, threshing out wild oats. The product being chaff, it naturally chuffs. Why not some really important probes? Who struck Billy Patter- son? Why. does.u chicken cross the road? How olg was Anne when Hee- tor was a pup? And, even more im- portant than any of these, why not some definite results from the pres- ent investigations? ® AUTO) HELPS Before buying an auto sce if you can marry some of your kinfolks to a mechanic. Then you may get your work done cheap. MUSIC NOTES Buy a cow and teach her to stay away from home. Calling her will develop your vocal cords for grand opera. FASHIONS Women may drive cars with over- size tires, but they never will wear oversize shoes themselves. BROTHER TOM’S KITCHEN Anything can be made to boil over quickly by pretending you have to answer the telephone. MARKETS Hugging is quoted lower today, hugs being so plentiful many of them are given away. SCHOOL NEWS A pair of school pants lasts a few weeks, barring accidents, HOME HELPS Old electric light bulbs are very valuable for throwing at cats, | POLITICAL RING IS IN NOSE.OFp LET’S SQUARE A CIRCLE 4 j | | Published by arrangement with Associated First National | Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screen version produced by Frank Lioyd with Corinne Griffith as Countess Zattiany. .. jee : Gertrude Atherton of congratulations—publicity of my private affairs. I've always said that whéen one marries a second time the decent thing to do is tc marry first and tell afterward.” “But they guess it, you know.” “That ts quite different.” It was Madame Zattiany who spoke now and her tones were deliberate and final. “Quite a different thing from being congratulated, and tormented \ by newspapers.” She dismissed the subject. “I shall be free two weeks from today. What do you think of that?” Her voice was both gay and tender. “Judge Trent will see at once about engaging my stateroom, 1 Don’t tell me that that play of yours will prevent you from follow: ing shortly after.” “Not a bit of it.. We shall only be gone two months, and even if Hogarth succeeds in placing it with his manager as he expects, it might be several months before rehears- al Copyright 1923 by XL (continued) Mary, being human, felt the pin- | pricks, but was glad on the whole to be rid of them. Those first ' weeks of almost girlish pleasure in what was to her a novel society, had vanished forever on the night of her dinner. Scornful and indif- ferent she might be, but although they could not kill her youth, they ‘drove home to her what she had guessed in the beginning, that the society and the companionship of ‘young people —fashionable young People, at least—were not for her. | Their conversations, fnterests, shal- low mental attitude to life, bored jher. THat curious brief period of mental rejuvenescence had been due to the novelty and excitement of being in love again, after long and arid years. | And now, Judge Trent had told her that shé would be free to leave in a fortnight. She had walked the three miles from Broad Street with a buoyant step, and she had vowed that never, not for any considera- tion whatever, would she set foot in America again. Vienna was the city of her heart as well as of her future exploits. She would buy the old Zattiany palace from her wid- owed niece-in-law and make it the most famous rendevous in Europe. But of all this nothing tu Clavering until they were in the Dolomites. She rang for her maid and ex- changed her tweed walking suit for @ tea gown of violet velvet and snow White chiffon, with stockings “Then it all fits in quite charm. ingly, You are coming to dinner tonight?” “Well, rather.” «mind you come early. many things to tell you.” “It'll not be for that I'll come early.” Mary smiled and hung up the re- ceiver, She would have to let him return to New York for a time— possibly. But herself, she would go on to Vienna. No doubt about that. She returned to her letters, Tho: I have AD/ Said an ordinary father, to an or- dinary son, there are lots of tips I want to give you, Just plain advice, but helpful, and you'll know, when I am done, the daily things you should, and shouldn't do. You've heard it said that smoking, in your youth, will stunt your zrowth, so shun the corncob pipe and sigaret. There comes a time, when you. are grown, when you can use hem both, but, son, that time, re- member, isn't yet. Be sure and get the hours of sleep hat mind and, body need; and with! tips—the things I didn’t do. that required answers she placed, in a separate heap with a penciled note on the back, for she was neat and methodical; she even slit the envelopes with a paperknife that was always at hand for the pur- | Dose, and the envelopes were drop- | ed at once into the waste basket. ~ | The contents for the most part were expected, and related to her | work in Vienna, the disposition of ‘P a& Pp EB R moneys she had sent over, and the | usual clamoring for miore. But when she had read halfway through a long letter from Baroness Tauer- sperg, in rae capable hands she ie i a had left the thost important of her ADVERTISING charities, she involuntarily stiff. fhcaisiat casgicconuionaciscite coca anal ree carwerdie/ tela leny it. jumshoe had was BatinatsREWarintarstise scien. hess, the rest to gossip. In return EDITORIAL Mary enlivened her own letters Everybody likes women except with many of her American adven- women, They are nice to look at| “The telephone rang, and... as} tures, although she had made no and some of them are very handy| she had expected, It was Claver-| mention of Clavering. around the owes: Bul when sum-| Ing.” “I need not ask if you remember mex comes they have their pictures a a ina painted in bathing suits ‘for maga-| nd slippers to match, She expect. ranenhauer,” continued Fran>yes zine covers. And buying magazines! ed no one but it was always a de-| 12Uerspers, “although, I suppose. AN Just for the covers is too expensive. light to her to be exquisitely and | ike the rest of us, you saw nothing SOCIETY becomingly dressed. Even in the of him after the war. He was; at Mr. Soandso, whose doctor says he! seclusion of her Hungarian estate | YOU know, not in bad standing with must quit smoking and whose wife| she had arrayed herself as appro.| ‘8¢ new Government, like the re says he must quit swearing, has de- priately for outdoors, and as fas- actionary nobles, as he had always plump Sadie Glublub gained’ half a| Rad been under the aritical eye of | oaiord “but then de cee ae pound on fudge, yesterday she cried| heF World, for daintiness and lux-|inrdord. | But they did not’ Have until she lost it, according to the|UrY Were as ingrained as ordinary | jm lise re enough to ask hint to drug store scales today, cleanliness and refinement. During | °° ® member of the Cabinet, or te SPORTS the war she had not rebelled at her | 5°44 him to the Peace Conference, A series of pedometer tests show] hard and unremitting labors, but} “#ere he alone, of all Austrians, average man walks three miles an|she had often indulged in a fleeting | P°*2aP8. might have won some ad- hour while paying pool. Perhaps we| regret for the frequent luxury of vantage for this wretched country, could arrange some gas meter tests! the bath, the soft caress of delicate|, “THe Dresend Government seeme poace: ne -uateatod golfer really | underwear, for charming tollettes; oe eae that initial mis. 4 GARDEN HINTS end she had sometimes scowled at Navited ae rea aor arabare Never wear gloves while planting| Ber white cotton stockings 'with a] 1200 i Switzerised, whee ae a garden. Gloves protect your hands | feéling of positive hatred. beancataet Sutera ipamapcal and leave you no blisters to brag], Judge Trent, while she was stiti| Deen staying, and to act in some about tolyourstriente: fn Austria, had sent her a check |2Visory capacity. That means, we MOVIE NOTES for forty thousand dollars, she| ‘ink here, that he will. soon Two men plan movie seats. A|had given half of it to relief organ-|‘#® Whole thing in his hands. The short one measures the knee space | {zations in Vienna, and then gone| itTst step he took was to paty a visit N while a tall one sights at the screen. |to Paris and indulged if an orgy of |t© Bavaria and have a conference ; " ae clothes. She looked back upon that | With Count L., and no doubt you Smoking a pipe when calling upon|wholly feminine reversion, when | Will surmise what that means, He ie Menlbe acquaintance is considered | sho had avoided every one she had| ¥5t. incognito, however, and few a eae ee ever known, as one of the com-| People even here in Vienna know Men with no sense of humor shoulg | Plétely satisfactory episodes of her of that visit, much less the rest of not try to grow mustaches. lite, Even with unrestored youth|@urope. Very shortly he goes to and beauty, and a soberer choice of | America, whether for reasons con- costumes, she would still have ex- aU vod sudden erent in perienced a certain degree of ex. fe no means of know: cited pleasure in adorning herself, |!"& but ostensibly because his New She had always liked the light York lawyers demand his presence freshness of chintz in her bedrovm, |!" regard to the large sum of mon- \ leaving luxury to her boudoir; but | &Y he invested in the United States. here she had Tarnished no boudoir; ae pai makes no obiee her stay was to be short, and her 8 Journey, as you may im- bedroom was aa large as two ordi- Aan for hey know, hey een ae Qary rooms. She spent many hours im to spend it in the ane ., |{m it, when its violet and white sim-| Cause of Austria—under his leader. Gr) novels purasns pol dnignt oil. |plicities appealed to her mood, To-|®h!p! . Imagine what it will mean mie Jou. tive! ale lay long, a: day it was redolent of the Iilacs|t© have the income of several mil: night ortelael walietuealth “will ea Clavering had sent her, and through | !ion American dollars rolling in to Don't squander: pocket money that |e open windows came the singing | be exchanged for Austrian kronen! your dad has given you. Don't fig- | birds in the few trees still left in| OF the capital, if he thinks the end ure “easy come and casy go.” From |the old street. justifies it, every dollar that: you get just save|, She loved comfort as much as} “No doubt you will see him, for { a dime or two, The benefit, in|she loved exercise, and after her| he always had the greatest respect later years, you'll know. ‘ careful toilette was finished and|for your opinion—was it not you Just sum up all these little tips!her mald had gone, she settled her-| Who advised him to sell out Pract!- and act accordingly. I know the |self luxuriously in a deep chair be-| Cally everything. he posses, id, ex- worth of what I'm telling you, For,!tore her desk and opened one of| Cept the land in Galicia, and invest listen po the hardships that have |the drawers, The European mail| it in America?. I.have no doubt he made it hard for me, are just these had arrived yesterday and she had | Will confide in you and ask your ad. only glanced through half of it.| Vice. You have a wonderful flair | But she must read all of those let-| for politics, dear Marie, and you |ters today and answer some of|know what we all expect of you, J- ithem before the sailings on Satur day. The telephone ona little stand at. jher elbow rang, dnd she took the Hurry, hurry and come back to us, We need you in a thousand ways. But what a rest that sojourn in the gay and brilliant and rich city, of latter withdrew ang declined ‘to ac- cept the election. 4 The board elected the same offi- cers for the ensuing year: J. H. Newton, president; E. A. Ripley, vice- president; A, H. Peterson, treasurer; and E. A. Ketter, secretary. Mr. Newton at first refused to serve gn- other year claiming press of personal business and poor health, but, the board}unanimously refused to allow him to retire and he agreeg to con- tinue as head of the organization. , ENROUTE HOME Miss Marguerite Reynolds, daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs. J. C. Reynolds, formerly of Mandan, now living in Ollie, Mont., is spending few days in the city, a guest of Miss Grace Allen, Miss Reynolds, who has been attending Valley City Normal, is en- route to her home in Ollie, for a rest and to recuperate from a recent ill- ness. ATTEND FUNERAL Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Reko and Mrs, L. C. Peters drove to Flasher yes- terday, to attend the funeral of Mrs, Martha Aarnes, who died/on Wed- nesday at the home of her daughter, ' receiver from its spreading violet skirts and raised it to her ear. Ags she had expected, it was Clavering. He told her that he had promised Gora Dwight:the evening before to ask her permission to announce |New York must have given you. It {e both wonderful and saddening to’ .tead of the almost unbelievable contrast to our poor Vienna. But they are generous. The second check from your Vienna Fund came their engagement, For a’moment she stared into the instrument. Then she said hur- tedly, almost, breathlessly: “No— Ud gather not, ‘I hate the vulgarity Mrs. Ben Peters. The funeral was ut 2 o'clock: yesterday afternoon, Rev, C,'J.-Fylling of.the Lutheran. church of this city officiating. - MONT. RANCHE! ABBE Michael Crowley, prominent: ran er of Townsend, M&ntana, who is enroute to St. Paul with 4 trainload A yesterday. Do leave the oeuvre in Tellable and sympathetic hands, dear Marie, so that it may go on until—well, Gba only knows when,” (To Be Continued) .' of sheep, spent the visiting with the J, K. Mrs. Porter, ad agner’s Orchedtin's! St. ag om day in the city 4 Porter family. Mr. Crowley is a brother-it-law of a