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J ). WANTED—Experienced combination MALE HELP WANTED _ “WANTED MINERS I want four good mingrs immediate- ly. Steady work for the lignite season if careful, competent ser- vices are rendered. L. D. Under- dahl, Lessee, Glen Ullin, North Da- kota. 9-23-3t ‘WANTED—Some one to cut the hay on the south 1-2 sée, 22-F38-79, Apple Creek township, shares or cash, Write W. A, Ziegelmeyer, | Decorah, Iowa. 9-13-15t WANTED—Experienced Reliable Me- chanic, Lahr Motor Sales Co, eS y 9-23-3t WANTED—Boy to wash dishes at the Minute Lunch. 3-2t HELP WANTED—FEMALB bookkeeper and stenographer. Must be competent to handle all steno- graphic work with accuracy and dispatch and should have a general knowledge of bookkeeping and pre- ferably some proof-sheet experi- ence. Write Tribune No. 836 stat- ing experience, qualifications and references. 9-23-tf WANTED—Reliable girl for general housework. Inquire 823 W. Thay- er St. Mrs. Myron Atkinson. 9-24-3t ‘WANTED—Girl for general house- work, Mrs. Philip Webb. 400 Ave. Cc. 9-23-8t WANTED—Good girl for general house work. Call at 523 7th St. 9-24-3t 9-24. At HOUSES FOR SALE 6 room nearly modern bungalow, in- cluding 3 bed rooms, not old, a good bargain, for $2500., on terms, a room partly modern house, close in, 3 lots, for $1800., on terms. e room new brick house, including 3 bed rooms, one of best houses in Bismarck, near school, on terms, might take some land near Bis- marek as part payment. room modern house, east front, near roundhouse, garage, for $2650. on terms. - rs a room modern bungalow, about new, well located, ne&r school for, $4800. room modern house, including 3 bed rooms, near school, east front, hot water heat, for $4200. room about modern home, includ- ing 3 bed rooms, east front, well located for $4000. room modern house, including 3 bed rooms, 2 garages, a fine mo- dern home, near Wachter school, for $3750. = Haye a large list of houses for sale. “A fine 5 room modern house for rent with garage. 2 ° e Geo. M. Register. 9-19-1w. ROOM AND BOARD BOARD AND ROOM at 48 West Thayer St. Phone 623-M, -25-1wk LAND tad RENTERS AND WAGE EARNERS— We have an Improvement Plan in- stead of payments whereby you can buy a farm as cheaply as you can rent in Beltrami County, Min- nesota. Write for particulars. F. R. Duxbury Land Company, Bemid- ji, Minnesota. 9-19-1w FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—Furnished modern apartments, also living room, bed- room and bath. A 5-room house, partly modern, newly decorated, garage to rent, all close in, 212% Main St. Phone 905, 9-11-tf HOUSE FOR RENT-~7 rooms facing South on Rooser, Bismarck Hospi- tal block. House in good condi- tion. Inquire at Bismarck Hospi- tal. G, Worner. 9-24-2t ‘OR RENT—A seven room modern house, partly furnished. Hot wa- ter heat. 208W. Bdwy. Phone 459- W. after 5 P. M. 9-19-1w Classified Advertising Rates 1 insertion, 25 words or under 6 60 2 insertions, 25 words o: under 65 3 insextions, 25 words o under 5 1 week, 25 word: 1.25 Ads over 25 words, 2c addi- tional per word. ~ CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 65 Cents Per Inch All classified ads are cash in advance. Copy should be re- ceived by 12 o'clock to insure insertion same day. > THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 ———————— = SALESMAN SALESMAN—Wanted by Investment firm to represent them in this city, to buy and sell German Bonds. No ience necessary. Liberal com- Woebse, Diamond & Co., saleman. Must furnish Steady own work. We have some choice terri- tory open for 2 or 3 hustlers. Ap- ply to Singer Sewing Machine Co., ear, 9. 210 Broadway. 2. ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Two large pleasant fur- nished rooms in a modern home for light housekeeping. Also elec- tric washing machine for sale, cheap. 218-11th St. No. 9-20-1w FOR RENT—Large front room with board suitable for two, nicely fur- nished, extra large closet, hot and cold water. Phone 883 or call 217 8th St. 8-27-tf FOR RENT—Nicely furnished large rooms with board, suitable for two or three in a room, girls preferred. Call 301-4th St. 9-25-3t FOR RENT—Two or three nicely furnished rooms for light house keeping. Gas for cooking. Call 808-7th St. 9-19-1wk. FOR RENT—Two modern light house keeping rooms. Also sleeping rooms, 307-4th St, 9-20-1w FOR RENT—Nice large front sleep- ing room, suitable for two. Call 419 7th St., Phone 1066. _ 9-23-3t FOR RENT—Large front room, ni ly furnished in modern home. Phone 346-R. -25-2t FOR RENT—Large warm strictly modern house. Phone 643. 2 room in 210-2nd St. 9-25-lw FOR SALE—House, 6 rooms and bath, modern in every respect, full basement, maple floors throughout, fireplace, hard wood finish, Gar- age, lawn and trees. $5000.00. Lo- cated on 4th Street, House, eight rooms and bath, two sleeping porches, Sun parlor, built in features, double garage. $6000.00 Located four blocks from Post Of- foce. Bungalow, 5 rooms and bath, oak floors, cistern in basement, iwo glazed porches, built in 1923, $5500.00. House 7 rooms and bath, close in, $4500.00. Bungalow, 5 rooms and bath, addi- tionar bedroom in basement, gar- age in basement, $4400.00, Located in Rivervtew Add. House, 7 rooms and bath, hot wa- ter heating plant, garage, barn und chicken house, 75 foot lot, lawn and trees, $5500.00. All of above are in excellent condi- tion and exceptional values, If you are looking for a home see us, we have the best in the west, We have Lots and Lands at real values. Also write insurance of every form. We can finance any bona fide. proposi- tion. Investors Mortgage Security Company Phone 188, Office with First Guar- FOR RENT—Oct. Ist, strictly mo- dern Apt. furnished or unfurnish- ed. Varney Flats. FOR RENT—Four small flats part- ly modern, three partly furnished. Newly decorated. Call H. L. Reade. Phone 239 or 382. 8-25-tf FOR RENT—Modern furnished house at 416-12 th St, Also Ford Touring car for sale, in good condition, $100.00. Call 872. 9-24-1w FOR RENT—Very nicely furnished modern apartment including piano, 807 4th St. ! 9-22-1w FOR RENT—6 room house and bath, well located. Also Apt. Phone 194W. Geo. W. Little. ¢ 9-16-t£ FOR RENT—Strictly modern apart- ment in Rose Apartments. Apply _F. W. Murphy, Phone 862. 4-80-tf FOR RENT—Two small 3-room apartments for housekeeping. Call 803 7th St. 9-18-tf FOR RENT—Modern furnished + house. Write No. 841, care Tri- 3 nished house. Phone 618-J. 9-24-3t Inquire 9-1-t0 | ,) 214 5th St. BUSINESS CHANCES FOR SALE—Bakery and Lunchroom doing a good business, in a county seat town. The only Bakery Lunch in town. Also full restau- | rant fixtures in connection if pre- MUSIC SCHOOL, Alph. Lampe, Dir. Instruction Violin, Vocal and Piano. Rates reasonable. Apply at 611 First St. or Phone 1017. 9-23-1wk FOR SALE—Quick Action 1 Bed com- plete, 1 Kitchen Cabinet, 1 Gas hot water heater, 1 set of dishes, Wash tub, Boiler, board and bench, 1 singer canary bird and cage, wonderful ‘singer; 1 ga’ stove, oven, 2 library tables, 2 pedestais, 1 large oval looking glass, few lace curtains, some small pictures, 1 Apex vacuum cleaner, 1 electric iron, 1 electric fan, 1 electric heater, 1 small book rack, 1 large Victrola, 1 linoleum rug, some small vases, othef things. Phone 745 for information. 9-20-1wk FOR SALE—Fine coraer lot, 50x150 in the best residence district in Bismarck. Paving, sewer, water and gas all in and partial excava- tion made. Price and terms right. Address 757 Tribune, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE OR TRADE for Bis property, quarter Sectio# clear, im- proved land in Ward County Near Plaza, North Dakota, O, ©. Erick- son, Tappen, N..D. ile 9-25-1w| DAY NURSING will be started Mon-| ™* day, Sept. 22nd. Charges will be 10c an hour, 35¢’a day. Good care taken of children, ‘407-15th St. 9-20-19 LARGE green tomatoes $2.00 per bushel, small size for pickling, $1.00 per bushel. Phone 884. -Mrs, Wm. F. Exlenmeyer, 423 8rd Sh. _,, 9-23-8t WILL TRADE—076 Idawa Gold Mine shares for good automobile, Write ferred. Good reasons for selling. For particulars write to W. F. “Neutman, Steele Bakery, Steele, N.D., Box 365, .,. 9-289 ). Business for RAS a bateain] care Tribune, 1w| oth St. S, Bribune -No. 864, i 9-1! a bargain if taken at once. ’ 9-13-tf | Tribune Classified Advertisements =PHONE 32: FOR SALE One of the most attractive, 6 room houses in the city, over looking the cash, Cute 4 room house with bath, nice | part of city. $2,400.00, $800.09 cash, Good 4 room house with toilet, al- most down town, $1,900.00. Dandy 5 room Bungalow, south fron: commanding a beautiful view of the river bottom, close in, fine condition, $5,200.00. $1,500.00 cash. Farm Lands, Buy Now from a splen- did list of real bargains, you will never again get the prices you “can now., I also write Fire and Tornado In- surance. F, E, YOUNG 9-23-5t | the expedition camps for more hunt- can AUTOMOBILE—MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—Classy Ford speedster. | New tor. New paint, Atwater- Kent system, shock absorbers, Goodyear cords on rear. Built for speed. bune No. 839. 9-20-1w FOR SALB—1923 Ford Touring, starter type, no starter, good con- dition $190.00. Also bargain in used Maxwell and parts. S. E. Wagner, beside West end Standard Oil Station. 9-24-3 TRADE 5-49 Buick Touring fi class condition for late Ford Sedan or coupe or sell on terms if de- sired. Write No, 837 Tribune. 9-20-4t FOR SALE—Late 1921 Ford coupe in real good condition. Inquire Van Horn Hotel, Room 11. 9-22-4t Lost LOST—Rose hand carved Cameco ring. Valued article.’ Finder please return to 519 5th St. y 9-23-3t ——— 18033 NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that de- fault existing in that certain mort- gage, executed and delivered by Fred Clark, and Florence Clark, his wife, Mortgagors to A. M. Hovland Mortgagee, dated the 15th day ot July 1916, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 29th day of July 1916 at 10:40 o'clock A. M., rand recorded in Book 26 of mort- gages at page 37, and which contains a@ power of sale. Which said mortgage was duly as- signed by said Mortgagee to Farm- ers State Bank of Schaumburg, by written assignment, dated the 29th day of August 1916, and recorded in the office of suid Register of Deeds on the 2nd day of May 1924, at 9:00 o'clock A. M., in Book 139 of assignments, on page 543. Thereafter written extension time of payment of above described mortgage to Nov. 15th, 1924 was made. No action or proceeding having been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by said mortgage or uny part thereof: Said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mott- gage and hereinafter described at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, | at the hour of 2:00 o'clock P. M., cn the 18th day of October A. D. 1924 to satisfy the amount dué upon such ; mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to he same are described as The South Half (8%) of the and the Southeast Quarter (SE%), Section 35, Township 142, Range 81, in Burleigh County, North Dakota. Notice is further given that notice before foreclosure has been duly given to the record owners of the above described land more than thirty (30) days prior to the date of this notice. Such sale will be made in accordance with the original pro- visions of Section 7762 of the Com- piled Laws of Nortit Dakota for 1913, regulating the right o€ possession and the right to the value of the use and occupation of the premises during the year of redemption. Notice is further given that the defaults hereinbefore mentioned are the failure to pay the installments of interest of said mortgage which became due Nov. 15th, 1922. and Nov. 15th, 1923, and taxes, which are past due ‘and unpaid in the amount | of $141.74, and the mortgagee having the right to declare the whole sum due and payable under the terms of said mortgage, has elected ‘to and does hereby declare the whole of said mortgage due and payable, There will be due on said mort- gage at the date of sale the sum of $2069.67, Principal and Interest, and the sum of $144.24 by reason of taxes, and interest thereon from; date ‘of payment which were prior liens upon the said land and which were paid by the said Farmers State Bank of Schaamburg and _ which makes The total sum due op date of sale of Twenty Two Hundred Thir- teen Dollars and Ninety-one Cents ($2213.91) together with the costs and disbursements in this action. Dated at Kenmare, ‘N. Dak., this 4th day of September A. E 1924, FARMERS STATE BANK OF “SCHAUMBURG, | Assignee of Mortgagee. M. R. KEITH, Attorney for Assignee of Mort- Bagee, Kenmare,-N. Dak. ony 9-4-11-18-25-+10-2-9-16 NCORPORATIONS Articles of incorporation filed with ‘the Secretary of State include: The House of Oliver Denis, ;Inc., Fargo; capital stock $50,000; in fur, fur garments, wearing apparel of:every kind; incorporators, Oliver J. E, Denis, A. J. Denis, all of rE Tolley Independent Grain Co., Tol- ley; “eapital stock $25,000; incor- porators, F. 0. Johnson, V. R. John- son, N.-Mt\Sbores) all of Tolley. WAVE ‘TCHES GROWD Southsea, England, Sept. 25.—Hun- dreds of persons at Southsea Beach were thoroughly drenched iwhen a huge wave produced by the passing of two-big transatlantic liners swept upon the shore. The Berengaria and the? Majestic werg passing each oth- r off the Isle of Wight, and the wash set up by their combined mo- jay rolled Tike aw tidal wave on the lower end of the beach, river. $6,100.00. $1,100.00 i ‘ 7 | $150.00 cash. Write Tri- | 1 of theast Quarter (NE%),/ sy, ‘has a solid and lasting prosperity. | “Again, I once saw a whole region | ealers | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE SEVEN paper corre- | spondent, ace the Theodore | Roosevelt expedition into Africa in 1909. They arrive at Mombasa, the “gateway of British East Africa,” to their first camp on the game- crowded Kapiti Plains. With Colo- nel Roosevelt are his son, Kermit, and three scientific members of his mund Heller and J. Allen Loring. After a wonderfully ing at a farm called Saigai-S: ing next to Naivasha, the meets with continued good They are at Nairobi during . G conceivable honor., Now he is gi ing the main address at the Ra’ Institute at Nairobi rge audience. “I beli ry a great agricultu! dustrial future,” he says. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY “Yet, I hope that you will alwa. keep in mind that a real white man’s a this coun- 1 and in- country can only be built up by making the opportunities favorable for the actual home-maker. It is the actual settler, not the speculator, |who should be encouraged. The prime need is for the settlers who will make this country their perm: nent home and think of it as so jand it is on this account desira that the largest possible proportion of these men should live on farms which they themselves own, and make their living from the soil. “There is another point, gentle- men. So far I have your full sup- port. Now I am going to speak at the risk of not receiving your sup- port. In making this a white man’s country, remember that only the a of righteousness but your own eal ultimate self-interest de- mand that the black man be treated with pulous justice, that he be safeguarded in his rights, and help- led upward and not pressed down- | ward. “Brutality and injustice are espe- |cially hateful when exercised on the |helpless. I have no particle of pa- |tience with the sentimentalists. 1 think that sentimentality probably does more harm to the individuals for whom it is invoked than brutal- ity itself. The native tribes hereabouts are, of course, hopelessly incompetent to better themselves or to utilize this country to advantage without white leadership and direction, and prog- ress among them will be the ~ ‘ not of years but of many genera- tions, You must occupy a position jof unquestioned mastery and leader- skip; but, for your own sakes as well jas for the sake of humanity morality, you must e ileadership and mastery with Isense of all the responsibil ‘which it entails. ! “That is why I so emphatically be lieve in helping the — missionary whatever his d, who labors sincerely, so disinterestedly in his field: of work. “Naturally, I have a peculiar feel ing fer the settlers, because thi whom I worked and with whose irati and ideals I have so deep! ed in our own west. “But I also have a most profound mpathy for the government offi- cials, for I, too, have been a govern ment official. Ifyou will consult as the newspapers of my own land, you are a great dis- will find that there number of persons who semble any liking for me. “At the risk of seeming to pre: and because of the sincerity of my belief in you and the earnestness of my wish for your future welfare, | want to lay stress on tw@ things especially, “In the first place, the similarity in so many respects of your condi- tions here to what 1 saw in the west nearly a generation ago. This especially true of your failures und of the effect every failure produces \upon+the prophets of evil and the men of little faith, In a new coun- try like this you have to try experi- ments, and that means you have to make occasional failures. “Thirty years ago, out west, in a certain very large tract of land—a tract larger than all Britain—I settlers come swarming in utterly unprepared to cope with the pecu- liarities of the climate and yet cei tain that a golden future lay can is come of its own accord. “Boom towns were built where port them, and men who knew noth- ing of farming in countries of regu- lar and abundant rainfall, started to farm in every direction on every kind of soil. “Five years later the towns were deserted or had shrunk to a house or two each; and the immense ma- Jority of the farms?had been aban- doned. A decade passed, and men who knew the conditions and were willingsand able to work’hard, who knew about dry-farming and irriga- tion, came there; and now the land condemned from the standpoint of the sheep-man, because a company without much money, but with more money than experience, had tried various fatuous experiments in sheep-farming, which, in my imme- diate neighborhood, included the at- |tempt to run a good sized flock with |an ex-telegraph operator as shepherd land two Newfoundland dogs in place of collies. Nevertheless, sheep are a source of profit in that country at this “moment, Don’t, therefore, get \discouraged if there are some fail- ‘ures, and remember that, on exam- | ination, the pessimist will usually be found not to be a very competent creature. 5 “Let the people here not be dis- couraged. When John Smith settled in Virginia. for years thine: “ere s ibad that they started clearing out, mind me so much of the men with | there was nothing whatever to sup- | V2ROOSEVELT and then make the railroad journey, ate will ever have to staff—Major Edgar A. Mearns, Ed-! factor successful] vidual’s own cha party, the settle sport.!for the achi race But he week, where Roosevelt is paid every) lute certainty before a bu that | th deep {they would sag behind in the race of ! oj sen "| learn, i ' ‘consulted me, 1 should tell him that | |somewhere for | let | CITATION HEAR iu.| ESTABLISH RI mediately ahead of them and would | {against the estate of said deceased, | T ICA und they had to get their provisions from abroad. Mortality occurred sufficient to cause a panie in any colony. ‘The history of these colon- ies was checkered with di siderably more than this ee. “The second thing [ want to say to the individual settler himself. The | fovernment can do much, in various | ections, but: the one all- | | ter, con- protector- | vidual st be “tl ‘acter and cu settler shooting trip in the Sotik country,|If there is any point as to which he | make and more the government better | sponsive to the needs of | , it is his duty to work | ment of these ends. | set it down as an abso- | that a pound of com- | plaint won't help him as much as an | ounce of real effort to do his own] ess well, What he has to tace } ig the need for genuine hard work— | work that needs special training and | capacity. t is the farmer, the man who | Zrows wheat or cotton, breeds sheep or cattle—whichever it may be-the | man who makes his profit out of the | wool or the meat, or a dairy or fruit | or some other product of the soil, | upon whose sue the permanent | success of this country must depend. | The discovery of paying mineral de- | posits would be a good thing—but with not much stress on the good but it would be of no consequence dvom the standpoint of your perma- nent well-being when compared to the welfare of the farmer; for a sud- den boom, and a few great fortun in no shape or way take the place of steady and permanent growth among those who some to take possession | of the and to leave it as an inheritance to their children who are to grow up in this country. ] Now, a farmer's business is just | as much a science as any other Nobody would think that a farmer | could over night turn bookkeeper or lawyer. Yet, in every new country, | many people drift in who seem to | think that bookkeepers and lawyers, and have never done roke of real work for a living at | can suddenly become A quarter of a men met number of such men in the west. They were generally | young llows from the — eastern | pr from wzland, who perhaps done any work at all, or who had perhaps not been over-suc cessful as clerks or in some other sedentary occupation, “They would come out there with a small capital which they would proceed to invest without any knowl- ede; they would half-heartedly and feehly try to work at something to- ien to them; and then, unless | had exceptional stuff in them, life and gradually become what we emittance me -that to tures who lived on ir families were able to them, nee I have been in this country, I have known more than one young hither with five hund thousand pounds, and no whatever in his past | ted him to become an East farmer. If any such red or a oxperie’ which f an man the best thing he could do with his money was to put it safel at least two and meanwhile to remember that social and sporting life must — be considered purely as play and never allowed to interfere with work, and that he had his whole profession to “Therefore, the wise thing for him to do was to go out on some farm kept by some real farmer and ask to be allowed to work for his keep, re- that unless he steadily and the man who keep would membering always worked very ha with much intel him work for his make a losing bargain. “If then, the young man stood the trial, worked till he really knew the business well and, in short, showed that he had good stuff in him, why it would be all right; and if he did not stand the trial, it would be proof | positive that his presence was of benefit neither to himself nor to the colony. (Continued in Our Next Issue) PETITION TO| 'T OF HEIR. SHIP TO REAL PROPERTY. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. | In County Court, Before Hon, 1. C. Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the Estate Edward P. Lindley, Deceased. James J. Lindley, Petitioner, vs. Hattie I, Lindley, Mabel L. Sargent, Eleanor V; Price, Catherine S. Cole, | and all ‘other persons unknown | claiming any estate or interest in or lien or incumbrance upon the prop- | erty described in the petition or] of | Respondents. The State of North Dakota to the above named Respondents, and all other persons unknown claiming any estate, or interest in, or lien or en- cumbrance upon the property des-| cribed in the petition or against the | estate of said deceased: ' You, and each of you, are hereby notified that James J. Lindley, has filed in the County Court of the said County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, duly verified petition praying for a decree ascertaining and establishing the right of suc- cession to the real estate within the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, of which Edward P. Lindley, late of the City of Nevada, in the County of Vernon and State} uri died seized; which real | estate is described as ‘follows, to wits “The Northwest Quarter (NW 4) of Section Eight (8) in Township | Ong’ Hundred Forty-one (141) North | of Range Seventy-eight (78) West, in Borleigh County, North Dakota, And that Tuesday, the 21st .day of, October, A. D. 1924 at ten o'clock in the forenoon of that day, at the Gourt Room of this Court, at the Conrt House in the city of Ris- ees Revlo'oh ond State | of North D. ta, has been set by id Court, as the tire Dated d petition; |A.D. 1 | (SEAL order of this and pl of hearing sa at which time and pla interested may appear and object to the granting of said petition. And you, and each of you, are hereby cited and required then and there to be and appear before this said Court and show cause, if any there be, why said petition should not be granted MOM’N POP THERE'S NO DOUBT BUT THAT y person maar thr “MAGIC MUD" 15 THE EIGHTH WONDER OF THE WORLD - HERE'S A Let the service of the above cita- tion be made b; “A One Sided Affair’ less than twenty days before said meeting, d the 10th day of September, sg SAL) ) 1. G. DAVE I, C. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. Judge. 9-11 -18-25 One of the most curious fish found uropean waters is the red emits a sound lik in nard, which row. tion in the h week all not publi ck Tr once ee Successive wee Sy By Taylor Onty 1©¢ TO SEB THE STRANGEST FREAK OF NATURE YET IN CAPTIVITY “45 ED MAY WALIC * BUT, NEVER. RUN! I~s7 % » AA 1 ea WHEN IM ELECTED \ SHERIFF ILL CLEAN | DP THAT GANG OF | SHEEP KILLIN’ DOGS/ | AND ILL IDG ae JOE: You Tool OTEYS 7 sy NEA Seavice _//AVLOR_ BY STANLEY es) Pi LACE) ee ue THOSE OTe | Snicicen —} WIN INA TAL WALLIS 2) cme THIEVES Freckles and His Friends i SURE I TOOK OFF NY IT, L SENT IT To THE LAUNDRY THIS. 5 are) a TOWN MARSHAL TO RUN FOR SHERIFF MADE HIS FIRST APPEARANCE TODAY - JOE COBB WAS APPOINTED MARSHAL To TAKE OTEYS PLACE i) GEEWL~1 THovenr | WAIST YESTERDAY AFTER SCHOOL AN’ PUT IT y~ | LEFT ON TH’ CHAIR HERE ON THD” | LAST NeuT P ‘ GHAR ; WHY, COME To THINK, OF IT HAPPEN YovuR, WIFE LETS You BRING THEM STANCES He’ll Flunk, Now ) If ff BOM, WHAT DID YoU | y DO WITH My WAIST WITH / TH CUFFS ON THAT L 6000 Nigyr! Ty" WHOLE HISTORY OF UNITED STATES WUZ ON THEM