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Py (i Be PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i a ee bare at Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. 5 BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. : - - Publishers | Foreign Representatives G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO - - se DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. 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 otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. All rights of are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE republication of special dispatches herein Daily by carrier, per year..... ae $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) 5.09 | Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) A PRESIDENTIAL IMPASSE The serious talk of a third party movement in the has brought forw a consideration of the dangers which may be encountered by too great a division of popular opin- ion between parties, and the advantage of pe rule by two ; dominant parties. The Constitution provides that no can- | didate can be chosen by the electo college for President or Vice-president except on ar ty vote of all of the members. If a third party movement captured a large block of votes in the electoral college, a situation might result nation wherein no candidate could gain a majority of the votes there, regardless of the decision at the poll In the event a new President is not chosen by March 4, the date of the expiration of terms of Presidents, the Con- stitution provides “then the Vice-president shall act as Pres: ident, as in the case of the death or other constitutional di ability of the President.” The section, of course, is open to various interpretatior If there is no Vice-president to take the office, the presidency would go to the Secretary of State. If the electoral college fails to choose a Vice-pres. ident by a majority of all the electors, the Senate shall choose between the two candidates having the highest number of electoral college votes. The election of a President would be thrown into the House of Representatives. In the house the voting would be by states,’each state having one vote and a majority of all states ne for election. The house could ballot only for the three presidential candidates having had. the highest votes in the electoral college. No other names could be considered. ,Too great division of party votes makes for minority government. It is possible that this should bg brought home forcibly to the country next year. | WRONG USE OF COUR “Gilbert Semingson” was the title of an editorial in a Williston newspaper at the time a grand jury was sitting and an effort was being made to indict the state bank ex- aminer. The vitriolic editorial may have been calculated to bring public sentiment to a point where a grand jury indict- ment would be returned. The grand jury did not return an indictment. U. L. Burdick filed a charge against the examiner, Mr. Semingson was put to the exper of engaging an attorney to defend himself and going to Williston but this he did, sub- mitting himself to a court in a place where sentiment doubt- less was hostile because of the public attacks. Mr. Seming- son’s accuser dismissed the charge. Another charge, embracing several bankers and Mr. Semingson will be heard April 21. Mr. Burdick announced in court “if I haven’t any better case on April 21 than I have | now I’ll dismiss the charge.” | | York politician EDITORIAL REVIEW Comments reproduced in th column may or may Rot express the opjnion of The Tribune. They are p@sented here in order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the press of the day. A $100,000 MAN FOR A 2,000 JOB s choice between Har- nd Federal Judge . Kenyon, the President William has decided in favor of Mr. Stone | tor the Attorney Generalship. | Our opinion was that Judge| Kenyon should be setected in -or- | der to heal the wound in the na-| tion's morale which has been| caused by afte: the midy but there werg other h decided the «President in favor of Mr, Stone. Prinei among these reas we think, was the consider: that the nation’s morale has been hurt not only by the adversity of the farme but has also been hurt, very seriously, by the reve-| lations of dishonesty and incompe- | tence at Washington. The admis sion made by W. A. Orr, the and by other: the Wheeler committee's investi- gation have shaken the confidence | of the people in the Department of | Justi - | Accordingly Mr. Coolidge, in ap- pointing an Attorney General, | elect Judge Kenyon, whose hon- | 1 by a dilemma: Should h est sympathy with the farmers would help restore the midwest | and northwest to a reasonable state | of mind; or should he select Mr. Stone, whose administrati ity | would assure the entire country that the Department of Justice would be restored to honesty and, efficiency? | The President has made his | choice, and we think he has gained | the end he seeks, Mr. Stone's qualifteations are admitted. For a year or more he has heen on leave | of absence from Columbia Univer- sity, where he was dean of the law school. He obtained the leave ‘in order to become a memb: w) York w firm of ‘anfield and Stone. Since enter- ing the firm, he is said to have re- ceived retainers of $125,000, Manifestly, then, Mr. Stone i one of those teachers of the law who are also able to practice what they teach He is a good lawyer. And since his office at Columbia was administrative one, it is fair to assume that he is} also a good administrator, ago, President Coo- id he was trying to find a ‘a-year man who would ac- cept a $12,000 job. He thas found that man Mr. Stone will enter his high of- fice th the good wishes of the American people. Perhaps his methods will not be as spectacular as the methods of some barking senators, but he probably will get| results. He probably will do a| £000 job of cleaning out the graft- | ers and the political hangers - on who have been cluttering up the Department of Justice. — Chicago Journal of Commerce. HIS NAME The fact that LaBPollette’s name had tobe written on the Republican ballots in North Dakota is entire- ly in accord with the ‘acter of | senator's member of the .—Detroit Pre ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - = you've got today unless you | around?” “Well, I won't turn around, haven't any tail. Who'd have are only in the asked the dog and the e rabbit and the Just e 's_tail. Suddenly they heard a wh king sound. The rag doll was cleaning ci for the pin-cushion lady and be her rugs, And what do you think! She was using Puss’ lovely tail for’ a beater! They got her broomstick in and Puss got his tail back so it all turned out finely, I'm glad to ss (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc. (To Be Continued) | MANDAN NEWS EMIGRANT 10 STATE DIBS Elderly Minnesota Man in Mandan Rail Yards Plans to de ad owned near Killdeer for ybody—but nobody,had the elop a homestead he; - turn and I jacking, house &; STRONGEST NERVES QUAKE SOME STUNTS Leach, who went over Ni- AT | Bobb carpet | agara in a barrel, back in 1911, plans to go over again in a big a jiffy} rubber ball. If Bobby comes out saf@ly there are more dangerous stunts he could try. Wonder if he has ever hammered on a table in a swell joint to call fa waiter? He might try ‘telling a golden haired girl she is red head- ed, or telling a motheryher baby looks funny as everything, Ow many other such, SPORTS Every fan should train for eating the peanuts sold out at the ball park. Chewing burnt coffee, rocks, stale cottonseed and just ordinary or j garden variety of caterpillars will {help you along this line. SPRING NEWS. + Spring is just summer sneaking in with a little soft talk before it starts in to make things hot for us. CLEAN NEWS You can scrub the floor yourself. ; Get some soap for the floor and ‘some liniment for your back, ADVERTISING Wanted: To learn why moths eat Dies many} DAREDEVILS DO NOT DARE EDITORIAL In St. Louis a boy found the school on fire and notified the teach- before it any headway. ughtless or No ordinary boy could ist the temptation to let the school burn, especially if it was a nice spring d BOOZE NEWS Six firemen were either gassed when a big booze warehouse burned in New York or else they just nat- urally fainted at sight of so much good drinking liquor going up in stoke, er He was either FLYING NEWS An Australian has built an air- plane to fly like a bird, with pul- sating wings. The next move should be teaching the thing to eat worms instead of gasoline. MUSIC NOTES Rush right home with a new ree- ord so you will get there before the record is out of date. TO STAY SINGLE Tell her how hard you expect her to work after you are married. This will help you stay single. MARKETS Oh, how we hate to admit such, Published by arrangement Copyright 1923 by LV (continued) i She looked at him with) hostile but agonized eyes. “Your calculated brutality does , not affect me in the least. And you | are merely one more victim of con- |vention—like those old women in New Yorx. It never has been, therefore it never can be. Many | women are not able to bear chil- dren, even in youth.” “It is your turn to quibble: Tell me: until you were, attracted to this young man—attracted, no Goubt, because he was so unlike the European of your long experi- ence—had you deviatéd from the conclusion, arrived at many years before, that you had had enough of love--of sex—to satisfy any wo- man? You implied asx much to me a few moments since. I know the mental part of you so well that I am positive the mere thought would have disgusted you. If you had been starved all your life it would be understandable, but you had experimented and deluded yourself again and again—and you were burnt out when you came to Vienna to live—burnt out, not only physically but ‘ spiritually. Your imagination was as arid as a desert without an oasis. If any man had made love to you then, you would have merely turned on him your weary disillusioned eyes, or laughed cynically at him and yourself. Your keen aesthetic #éense would have been shocked. You were playing then an im- portant and ambitious role, you had the greatest political salon in Vienna—in Europe—and you went away to ‘rest that you might con- tinue to play it, not that you might feel fresh enough once more to, have Haisons like other foolish old women... . But the part you played then was a bagatele to the one awaiting you now. With your splendid mental gifts, your politi- cal genius, your acquired state- craft, your wealth, and your re stored beauty, you could become the most powerful woman in Eu- rope. But only as my wife. Even you are not strong enough to play the part alone, There is too much prejudice against: women to per- mit you to pull more than hidden strings. Masculine jealousy of women 1s far wore irritable in a with Associated First Natlonal Pictures, Inc. Watch for the screeA version produced by Frank Lloyd with Corinne Griffith as Countes Zattiany. Gertrude Atherton remember. . Nor could you have been of the same service to me. Even if your fatigued mind had been refreshed, by your stay in Hungary, you had lost the beauty and the energy, the, power of ardent interest in the affairs of state, which have now been re- stored to you. With your rare gifts and your renewed youth, 1 repeat you have it in your pow Europe, and perhaps the most use- ful. But not with a young alien husband. Not only would you au- tomatically revert to the status of an American, but the dignity which, unlike so many women Ut your age who had been dames galantes, you took care to impresy on the world, would be hopelessly sacrificed. Incredible. To spend yourself on a love affair, wantonly to throw away an historic career, merely because a young man has hypnotized you into the delusion that you may once more enjoy the passions of youth—” “Stop! You shall not!” She had sprung to her feet. Her face was drawn and pinched but her eyes were bla#ing. “Every word you say is for a purpose. If that were all I should have hated him, As much as I hate you. My mind never dwelt on that—not for a mo. ment—I-—I never faced it. ‘You don’t know what you are talking about.” me “Ah, but I do.” He had risen also, and he put his hands on her shoulders. They were long thin hands but very powerful, and it seemed to her that they sank slow: ly through her flesh, until, Mowever painlessly, they gripped the skela ton underneath, “Look at me, Marie. Your Mary Ogden died many, many years ago. She died, I should say, at the first touch of Otto Zattiany. There was nothing in your new life to revive her, as suredly not your first lover. Cer. tainly- you were Marie Zattlany, the most subtle, complex, and fas cinating woman in Europe when 1 met you—but abominably dis!!lu, sioned even then. I revived your youth for a time, but never your girlhood. You have been able to deceive yourself here in the coun- try of that girlhood, for a time, with this interesting young gentle to be the most famous woman in _ ‘ The courts of law were not intended to provide means for fishing expeditions, and that apparently is what Mr. Bur- dick is engaged in. years were cut short yesterday when A. L, Hart died in the Mandah rail- road yards. Mrs, Hart and daughter arrived in the city this noon to take holes in summer suits only where the holes will show. This puzzles the greatest scientists in the world. | Perhaps you can inform suffering but Mrs Kutusoff is now president of the Russian textile trust, perhaps because Russia has been cut offi from the rest of the: BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON | “Will you please help me to find commercial Ap my tail?” asked the patent-leather Chae of the body and carticd it humanity. | world. ee cal sT es Fa fas Gat iets we back to Annandale, Minnesota. Hart, SOCIETY | GARDEN HINTS " C FORD TO TRY A NEW VENTURE rn Gienesasngentae aad ants Fuzz With # nephew, H. F. Hart, were tra’ Some say the Prince of Wales is} Your hean vines ambition may be! tht The real traffic problem in most of the large cities i Wath cIMGeE at foie se ith Yeling with an emigrant car load of very foolish to keep on riding hor-! aroused by telling them the story ing curbstone parking—the use of streets as sar.7. eGvinto al if someone had ead, Uvestock and farm implements from ses when he falls off so much. We, of Jack and the Bean Stalk. | : * t 5 ‘ ama fonishment, If someone had said, Annandale, Minnesota, to Killdeer think it shawe an admirable streak | HOW TO MARRY | *4L should probably be quite overshadowed by you,’ she murmured.” uy Ne any busy thoroughfare and you find the s eVect Nar- “It's going to_rain sumdrops tomor- .; ¢ 5 ‘ rent FT tA H ious! e iat a y t a y i ea -tain gumdrop, when the elderly man was taken ill of nerve. Foolishness, in his case,| Even though he shows atrocious is rowed 15 feet by the cars parked along both sides. stow : ey couldn't have been mora shout 9 o'clock Sunday morning on would be to take up aviation. jtaste in buying clothes you should democracy than in a monarchy,)man in. love with you, and, no Tr Some of this parking is ethicall legitimate Owne: “Your tail! Lost!” they all erieg, *ttival here. He died before a phy- _ AUTO HELPS | pretend to like them. where women of rank are expected | doubt, extremely ardent.” ia leave their cars outside while they hop or make busine ea ea aceon Mey all cried. sician could be summoned, | Chewing gum will patch a Take | BEAUTY SECRETS | to blay a decorative- and tactful) -h!” Her head sank. But she San calls. But a large group of owners leave thei at tht Preity eure.’ said the cak Cat s ee top so always garry a/stenographer.! Have your suit eee) | Part in politics. But if they step|could not turn away, for his hands { i A u PLAN FOR PUBLICITY a | down aud come into contlict with | still gripped her should 7 Me curb all day, until ready to drive home, «spec side, You can see for yourselves.” And i cn a j down aud © con tli sull grippe shoulders. The af ay, y 3 ome, espe ee meet al : A meeting of Town Crier clubs abitious men of the peopie,+class|roar of the stream sounded to her an streets which nevertheless are importa: / ie © (uined slowly around until their | throughout the state for the purpose | janiausy taccravatas Wy 1 e gegravat sex jealousy. | horrified ike : Se rene! ‘ A Ny astonished eyes beheld his back, as of areanmin lana andl datas ee jealousy aggravates - | horrified ears like the crash of fall- , by This isn’t uniformly a system of doi illess as a guinea pig’ Edvettigne Neri Dakota te, Ge | You might have a salon again and | ing ruins, an the expense of traffic congestion. Th.‘ | “Oh, dear!” eried Nancy. “What world in its true light will be called | | become a power somewhat in the] “Listen, Marie,” he said more he ve aren’t enough garages in or near the down oO s*happened to it?” to order at Valley City on April 10.1 | oid fashion, but you never would !gently. “It I have been brutal, it. ‘i : most cities. Furthermore, ther: matang lay _ “I was asking you that,” answered A nation-wide campaign of edneation | be permitted to play a great pub-| was merely because there was nd~ 6 rel for sufficient garages. Citics : ae : e he cat, brushing a speck of dust off on North Dakota to counteract the ’ | le role. But as the consort (Ijother way to fling you head first ie - faayal ndene: hd eats Al ANepaiies eee nt; | his coat. He was most particular unfavorable publicity of recent years; There are many. combinations that | There's no doubt that mere bread; think the word will pass) of the|out of your fool's paradise. If I eo problem. derground municipal garages are suggested about his, appearance. q will be the chief aim. ; the world knows mighty well. What | and milk have oft appealed to you,| President -- or Chancellor — you|had not known the common sense 3 by some. : | “It was really my fault,” he went H. S. Russell, ident of the; mean ‘is, things we mention in| Steak and onions are a winner that| could wield almost sensgtional | that forms the solid lower strat “ i _ tum Dv. ‘ oho I Enew that times loose. Last | Mandan Town Crier club is en-{ duet. And they come in close reta- | is always bound to please, and an-| power.” of your mind, I should not have , it’s r “ a *: a + E night when curled up to go to voring to interest other members | tions; just for instance, let us tell other dish that’s sure to hit you| wld probably be quite |come here to sa: Me Bi - Henry Ford, it’s reported, will build garages in Boston—_ Sicep T noticed that all ght Stitches in the meeting and will personally | of a line of combinations we can get.| right is the spare ribs and its saver | eae is Pai fie ears [sein corte haugierelbs a rine i three to start with, housing 3000 cars apiece. These garages,” were out but one, I decided that I| attend the session. According to} Ham and eggs are surely listed | kraut, or the bite of pie and cheese, | id; but she was hardly con-| But remember, Mari ‘ th: Spa? Ee M as planted, will be conducted on a co-operative or club plan, Werld come to you the first thing information received recently repre-in the places where you eat and] that you eat before you go to bed cece, fon : in a o ee was|this new miraci bs ee at under 4 In connection with them will be cafeterias and gasoline ‘hs morning and have you sew it sentatives of the Great Northern, Soo | You'll also fil the fomota’ ana night. eitinet ere oe body may go back but never the : si mira ; org abt. #But when awoke today it and Northern Pacific roads will be/ and Heans. -Many years they have | Now there ina be many dishes that| "iting: 7 may 80 back Dat never the S. : i a ’ was gone.” BON) Ga ot ietanee: existeal and stood forth as quite a} pov there af Hane fit Which are| ...YOUf Position would be too emi-/mind. You, your ego, your mind, a In view of Henry Ford’s customary foresight, it’s logical |” “Stolen!” exclaimed Nick. — treat ‘and have caused you to bring inant i on or; Bent for that, even if 1 wished it, | your self, are ho younger than youk 5 2 \ Prominent at morning, noon or : to expect that he contemplates going into theBarage busi-| “There is only one thing to do,” TO MUSIC FESTIVAL money, from your jeans. night. But, with these, my little| Which I assuredly should not. I) fifty-eight hard-lived yeard, And A id ness on'a large scale. decided Nanéy, . “We shall all go! Mrs. W. H. Stutsman left Saturday] ‘Then there's liver with its bacon wish is that-the aim in mind's not| Value you too highly. Perhaps 1|what object in being young 2 Why logical? Because the sale of cars will sh rtly be 274 #8 everyhody in Doofunny Land for Grand Forks, North Dakota, to| that we all have heard about. And migsed and those mentioned give you| 4M one of the few men in Europe|again for any of us if we are to m ‘hy log: ? s cars will shortly be jif he has an extra tail. If he has, attend the annual convention of the| the well-known dish of beef and cab- all'an” appetite. who admit—and believe—that a/make the same old mistakes? Re- sh curtailed unless downtown garage space is made sufficient. | then it must be yours.” e Nett Dakota Federation of Music bate, too. Where's the man who ee ; woman may have as powerful and|mentber, that when you were as a We venture to predict that, whether Ford goes into the | “Extra!” cried the cat, “Why, clive if Mis Shuenen stopped volt as not taken cakes and sausage?| (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) | accomplished an intellect as any | young as you look now you had no serene business we a large scale or not, auto manufacturers feme: oh eremananeapone at all! Boma a open ie Ae Beles i ij man. 1 did not appreciate your euch eppertunlty, offered you as in = as a class will. ‘It wou e a logical sales development He ae t? Lose q ; z Pe pe ange ae Oe lg ar gt you geserved when I loved|this terrible period of European ’ 5 ‘ at's 80,” declared Nancy. “Well,| North Dakota Agricultural college. ; * a that’s all the more reason why some’| The convention opened today with af| ‘LOM Sims Says it A THOUGHT you, but I dfd during those subse-| history. Nor would you have taken 4 r National manufacturers long since learned that their | one would have it.” meeting of the Board of Directors.] @—-———________"___@]. cite e seat years io) vignae: i easy savautage ott if you xa, for me! eG . *. 7 P; i i con- = a not ask me mal anc: s prosperity and growth require more than the mere sale of | 5° of they all went, _ On \Tueeday,, the Raderswaktc conti iy your pavdeotceeas according] We know that the law is*good, if Thea dated| cannot tske the! sldce of tne He . AA e First they met the. tin-mouse. cert, the feature event of the con- eer hnaie : F A you then—when you apprecfated|cannot take the place of political Poars their products to their immediate customers. f “Turn ayound and let us see your | Vention, will be given. A number of| '? difectiohs or you will be sowing] a man use it lawfully.—1 Tim 1:8. }in@ go highly. You never Seemed |experlence and an {ntellect edu: : It doesn’t do any good to load a grocery up with a stock | tail,” commanded Mister ease Wuzz | Mandanites plan to go to Grand] the seeds of discontent. . | Laws can discover sin, but not re-{ t@ know whether you were, talk-| cated by the world. It may be that of breakfast foods unless he is able to sell them. This is the | sharply. Pe yr ee LORI || fa baal move.—Milton, 28 (Oe ee oF 8 momen: when wecahall both be: destroyed, that. purpose of national advertising campaigns “What for” squeaked the muuse.| Mts: M. Morris, Mrs. Jos. P. Hess] Tf your memory is bad, you can = you were with me. And yet I was,|our efforts will avail nothing, and , ieee hoe, Pus. “Because someone has stolen the |{?d daughter, Bathilda, Audrey Mel-] improve it by trying to learn all the CHECK TRAI possibly, more interesting psycho-|we shall all be swallowed up in ~ ’ pipularly, the sale oF auton | By HECLONOS is bound to suffer] cat's” the pipe-cleanes aan tig tons, Reon Richardson and Roberti mew soft drink names. “HECK TRAIL logically than I had ever been.” | chaos. But at least we shall have 3 by any restriction on the use of cars—such as inadequate | him, ; : ‘ackjn. ee : - oe aaas LEADS TO JAIL] “no man is interested in an old|done what we could. And I know j downtown parking space. “The cat's! Do you think I'd have BIG K. C. MEETING Haircuts are so high now it almost aps los | woman’s psychology. I am not/yqu well enough to believe that ee 5 ‘ aes a ¢ lked the mouse. Attorney ©. F. Kelsch was the} Payé tobe a musician or a poet. Dickinson, N. D., April 7.—Melvin | interested in your psychology to-| such an implacable end would give 3 R IVALS Whiet wena Maeneca pees principal speaker at Dickinson Sun Anderson, Hettinger young man, who day. And I did not ask you to|you greater satisfaction than dally. By 4 eae “Tut, tut, tut!” said mM ( et day when a elass of fifty candidates| The hot summey months are com-| spent several months in Dickinson; marry me then for a great many|ing in the arms of a handsome pF i Europe, gradually convalescing and regaining her] w,,7.’ “We. believe ae Vewreniige was initiated by the officers of the| ing. A practical hot weather cos-| last summer, is in the toils of the! seasons, 1 waa too handicapped to | young husband,” 7 % 4 strength, continues to “invade our country in competition] going on to the nest Since.” cag Fite compel, Tallintlan' as uments: ® Pacha £Oll Ox wetar, siden Fer Ha rcp Ma Seer ee oe wu A7oi Me Contin fe ] with American goods. Next (hey mat the Teddy Bear. | the evening af the Risite Piece | Awuntien aay is a/place where| trail of bum checks from Fort: Rice, | guilt They Were IoURed ii” the gun ——_____—_____~ i French, Haletum, Briton and German sgl sander: eas At b mmanded Mis-| consisting of a moving picture, ad-| the mosquitoes start in about dark,| Morton county, to ithe Place. Ander-'ty jail to await the return of Judge! ‘ a selling‘some kinds of American steel in New York and other] **. Pad ‘ | dresses and musical numbers. just, when the flies quit work. | son had been teaching school at Fort F, B, Lembke, : : pee corte file festen id that ocean freight ii cca ‘What for?” Teddy asked curiou's- pill Sr 4 peed Ley Rice. A day later he, with a young Both ‘are graduates of the Hetting- SHO EP ‘ e j th il rates f; a ills to these port For th an oe o ne FROM CANNON BALL There is a big crop of fried chicken|fellow by the name-of Olson,. were! er high school where they ‘became ; lower than rail rates from our mills to these ports. For the PN ARR A Miss Elizabeth A. Bowen, Episcopal | this spring. arrested on a charge of burglary in/ prominent in athletics and school af. (I First Class. Work i : g { same reason, the foreign steel invasion will not extend far Braue a got any tail, £00d | chureh’ worker at Cannon Ball, N.| °' ’ connection with breaking into a farm ‘fairs. During his stay in Dickinson|§/ ue orkmanship. ag : H into the interior. Our rail rates “get” it as soon as it be-| *"iyS4! I know you hadet ona772 | Do and Miss Lucy Pongat are spend-| If you are well bred, you will buy|home near that city and stealing @!Anderson became involved in several|| Joe Markus Shoe Shop. i ee | Ge can citing easeieatd feo the coast, , terday, ‘but how dof kroon’ eee ling a few days ‘in the city, guests} your new: straw lid instead off get-| quantity of cash and other valuables. bad eheck deals. Early last fall he : ie Ne i | gil y yday, but how do now what of Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Davenport. ting it in\@ restaurant. i Both are said to have admitted their was married to a Hettinger girls: " ht , ‘ 4 By : y vA 1 ate x ave et we 4