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rH <eucemccem Menor een wet WD ma aoe ne as ot a ot ? and Police Commissioner might continue the cru- . PAGE FOUR Th yn ; | e Bismarck Tribune An Independent New THE STATE'S OLDEST ? (bstablishea 18 spaper NEWSPAPER Where ne : pear leccsct Charges recently that in order to save helium <, Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | gas, the number of safety valves were reduced on Bematek, N. D, and ente at the postoffice at’, henandoah probably will be a subject of in-! igmarck, ay second class mall matter, i . stigation along with other assertio ade whe George D Mann President and Publisher | Yes 8aton along with other asserti ng made when | > tai dada ————|the huge dirigible collapsed in mid air, Subseription Rates Payable In Advance | Dally by carrier, per yea a $7.20 h ee Daily by mail, per ye: + 7.29 | the interview Daily by mail, per year sistant head Gin state outsid + 6.00 this arm of th y fon OOO ized and tere Member of The Assoclated Press The Associtted Press is exclusi entitled to the ase for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not ot ed in this paper, and also the local news of spontancous origin published here- to answer for ing the accide e ered Several mem intention of in in. All right republication of all other matter rvice, § herein are also reserved, ——— = | sto th Forelgn Representatives national d G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY that whe CHICAGO DETROIT ye some fire Tower Bldg Kresge Bldg PA BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK Fifth Ave, Bldg. A youngster (Official City, State and County Newspaper) the household panking, s ishment Fire Prevention Result cures pection of Bismarck fire hazard a barne Tack of ordinary pre We all kind necosuary® for tte the common | A grownup warden va oft ippalling unprepared. | Tules and regu hess from the standpoint fire protection, Seri | {he handle rowirine in the high school in addition | 4pologizes: ' fo allowed to exist in grade | Some people wt parochial retound by a squall Mayne that North Dakota fire | with Babe Rath fice in the thought that Bismarck is! Proletariat pre no off than hundreds of other com We have developed an interesting new “proletar munities of tine size throughout the United | iat"—our collegians. When the immigration law But it is now easier to visualize the toll | cut out steerage traffic, the companies looked about in life and property Laken every year in this country | for a substitute. They found it in college students | by fire sT oper-cent oof whieh are said to be pre |and profe rs Sentable How it in possible that a total of 15,000 | By fixing up the former immigrant quarters a bit bersons are allowed to perish in flames annually | they made them a very acceptable way of taking and $545,000,000 in property can be destroyed each ya cheap vacation abroad, and our intellectuals year by fires is now understandable jonee made them popular and socially respectabie. | There are two ways of preventing fires by edu-| Democratic education is democratizing a lot of | cation and by legislation Proper instruction in | thing: including “menial” labor, steerage travel and | guarding against prevalent fire hazards is neces: | Conspicuous poverty, { sary. Rigid legislation aimed at stringent super | 7 | vision of city property from the standpoint of fire! Betting odds are against Hylan'’s success in the iikienilon: should not be delayed | mayoralty race ‘ammany ought to know whicn Narry 1 way the tiger ers, fire expert on the staff of the West ern Actnarial Burean, at a banquet ‘Thursday night, automobile fatalites, Death by that route evidently too common for more than a passing interest There Is So Much Smoke Following the criticisms of Captain Heinen comes | of Col, William Mitchell, deposed of the air service. ne national defens orized He declares th is sadly disor by an arrogant bureaucracy He has been summoned before his superior officers tatements made nt to the press follow pbers of Congress have signified their nvestigating the administration of the o much administ been said in the past rel tion of this department o efense that many are inclined to be re there ig oo much smoke there must Sympathy violat is 3 the r at caugh “Em sorry” thire it, tened of sympathize with the tot lel 8 his dues and then comes down to man does a p ations Violates flies off arth and He ge never grow up s Why the general pnbi'c sort of sym is going to jump. They are betting an . and regulations of} with a} and likelyteseapes pun | THE BISM | | i | — g bred a = <— ooena® . i | gh | ees), ' four to one that “Jimmie” Walker will kind on top. | 7 cus nothing! It was the city of ¢ else did you ask N . ee i i was a = (Zs an e iriver. I learned that it was call ithe bail j the Nile. And across the r "great pointed things t looked li oa Ack: will “more heebenl f with all the camels | | hearts to his credit than almost any val on vee ee | other man of modern t and yet) Qrgued in aur stritee he has contrived to me. cons | ey ad Gee Melville Sartoris| enough to be t . ! SATURDAY, DUTIES OF SAFEGUARD BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING Surgeon General, United States Pub- lic Health Service Few realize that the health de- |partment is a department creaced nd supported by the people to look fter the health of the community, o protect them and their neighbors from exposure to sickness. A health department will be as ef- ficient and watchful as the people insist that it shall be or allow it | to_be. The department and its work rep- resent the desire of the people to | avoid disease, to live useful lives, to their protect themselves children jand their families, ; Disease is not a necessary evil sent upon us by a chastening God, but is, in many instances, caused by | living’ things we call germs which {we got by direct or indirect contact with the sick or by improper living | conditions. | The health department is a result of our knowledge that disease can jhe prevented and that the degree of the community's health depends upon the desire of the citizens to have health; their intelligence, and \the amount ‘of effort they are will- ‘ing to make individually and through their municipality to attain it. ' MUST ENFORCE HEALTH RULES A part of the work of every health department is the enforcement of laws and regulations which the peo- |ple have adopted for the protection of the community's health, It is your duty as an ‘intelligent citizen to know what these laws and eculations are. You should“also be able to com- | pare these laws and regulations with | those of other communities that you i know whether your city or state lis doing as much as it should to protect that which is of so great SEPTEMBER 12, 1925 FABLES ON HEALTH CITIZENS IN ING HEALTH | importance to the individual and the general welfare as the health of e community. a is not the laws on the statute books that are of value but the ones that are observed or enforced. You and every other thoughful citizen should know what work your health department is doing and the extent of protection from disease that is being afforded you and those dear to you. EVERY HOUSEHOLD SHOULD HELP Every household should see that it does not spread disease to others. that it does not become a focus of infection endangering the welfare of the community. ses As_a citizen, your responsibility for the public health means that you should esp your premises \clean, that you should see to it that you do not maintain collections of gar- bage or refuse in which flies may breed. ; You should see that all sanitary regulations are complied with and then should supplement these efforts with as many more as your knowl- edge tells you will be useful. When- ever any member of your household contracts a communicable disease you should take such precautions as will prevent its spread to others You should bear in mind that every case of communicable disease is contracted directly or indirectly from some infected person and that a case in your family is probably due to someone's neglect of his responsi- bility to the community. Your own household ‘should not become the cause of the further spread of the disease. If the dis- ease is one that should be reported to the health department you should see that this report is made, and in any case, if in doubt, you should communicate with the health depart- ment for advice or instructions. BALDWI Miss Gertrude Fricke accompanied by her brother Ralph motored to Bis- marck Sunday afternoon where she will attend high school. The Baldwin school opened Mon- day morning and after the arrange- ments of seats and books were over the school dismissed for the day. Mr. Peterson is the principal, the grade teachers being Miss Peter- son and Miss Erickson. Threshing operations were delayed by the rain of Sunday night, | so ed ke | A SHE wing : ay be hie wast he hae found : of lthreshing being done Monday or’ part - | Tr ie to heads | fume scmething Re has hon weusche! We, were In and the tent things I) of Tuesday. described fire legislation common France, In} | I am_ not sure| ing for all hig life. | Zound gd Se hana Mit of aol |_Miss Mattie Rosenbect was shop- many Freneh cities, the owner ef property destroy ed | : -| isn't it strange, my dear Little! Byjamids They were built of ‘solit | ping in ‘town Monday morning. She St osast he has made himself & cues , ar hag | tives in the Cromwell district. hy fire is placed under arrest and held until proof t : Some old kings built them. I'll bet at apie Bag eed i lorsaerent esneacant prone] Editorial Comment : rve that finding what he seeks Southey conta ott stone’ beingey| Mts. C. W. Spitzer haf gone to as been advanced ta show that the conflagration | Sicviite: Sart ; be to lose it) and: forever losing. “dear, rything. Bismarck with her two children, Was not preventable. On top of that, tae owner of | The Northwest’s Better-Mindedness {fobter tiatat ee Pe HATE Te he will call Ae Bie. esosnatkintver| «tite laughed and so did the | Frances and Willis, who have enter- property gutted by fire originating from neglect of} | word he Flove him. n Holy Grail expedition, he “what else did you asked| Ernest Rupp is suffering with a neighbor, may bring suit in court to colleet dam (Minneapolis Tribune) j And yet tg be me fhe most ciatorats enter-| i sore hand, the result of pitching RGued by fires 8 salaiiiioh ww ve mene Vin his that he ton his yacht that was ¢ Sean: ald ai slock.| Brain. He went to Wilton Sunda: ages caused vy fire. Such legistition would he re The casual reader scarcely would risk the full! would in this country. He told me! «pq ready testis. litle: tsloek: fochave lt lanced. garded as unthinkable in the United States. But] significance of all that is connoted in the stories in| , heh 4 pometa ae gz. Just wait till I finish. There Rite oeuee peikey helped ere: t has this avor, revi 3 8. The re e me ’ Re ines Wis 0; a eve: Other!) wore $ hi ij 7: ichare jorner cool for ireshers thas this in ity favor. It prevents fives. The fire) the agricultural section of the Sunday ‘Tribune about | { had bet ather, and his wife| wore, lots of things. | The river was| Tchare \B loss on the continent of Europe is not comparable the progress of ties of North I Bismarek, Min Northwood to that in the United States Coming back to Bismarck, the conclusion remains t there is gross laxity exhibited by city authori- ties, { What is goin, the farm moven ‘A Fearless Attitude | culture is being placed on a more ure base, and Like Samuel Gompers, William Green, his suc-! this is being done through intelligent. cooperation cessor as organized labor's chief, warn i | between town and country folk. Business men,} growth of communism. In his Detroit. speech he} bankers and farmers are joining forces to raise the said: "We will strike back and strike back hard.| standard of a co We will not cease nd | In the big w. | ever the provoc yur efforts until communisn’ philosophy and who 1 re driven from the rank nized labor, the communistic pent if sof OF been stirr political consei nomic welfare a The nized adherents of « mmunismn friend They seck to use the great labor brin the downfall of the are not labor organizations to About | economic welfa republic. A real danger confronts the world in the! The effect, howe growth of communi It certainly has no place | is very consci hor should it he given any quarter under our sys {it on the rostre tem of government Gompers fought socialism and the “reds” in| Mon understanding. whatever guise they songht to control organized | labor. The man who takes his place at the head | leaders served of the great federation of labor has set hig tace Ike flint against the same destructive influences tions following Known to Some It just be possible that the crooked games of chance are not known to all the authorities in Bismarck. Giving the henefit of the doubt, it still remains a fact that one official has received | specific complaints of a certain place where thre may false lines as b Happily, the inction them dis is tables are in play, and where the house enjoys a | ‘he promotion comfortable rakeoff. One citizen complaing that | men and comm he lost several hundreds of dollars in a game in| interest of an which a marked deck was used. He says he hae | This the checks to prove it. ‘The complainant should be |™an into an in given a chance to aid the police in ridding the city of crooked gambling and the crooks that ply thei: trade upon the verdant sons of toil the interdepend sumer, of field sum, the faet Vacation On one hand all of the vacation thrill is over That concerns the kids. On the other hand the vacation thrill is about to start Few businesses. In this same This concerns mother. youngsters realize just how much mother gives up, how much work she dbes, what effort she Boes to, to see that the kids ha school studies. When the little old school bell star teachers will be taking the youngs hands for a few hours a day. And Mom will get the much needed rest. neapolis diversification a west. ‘There wi ping with whea a real rest from to ring again, off mother’s ers were grain deal pin northwest a gr Fire prevention week and clean-up week are fine institutions, but the brooms can be used in other iplaces about Bismarck to good advantage in the pro- tection of the morals of the boys and the girls. When we are made safe against fire, the Mayor acted to it as sade into other places where prevention is neces- ‘sary. Make the clean-up coniplete. are possible no} communication, A Texas flapper bit one of the state coppers on the neck and was fined 50 omackers. .. We don't | in& drouth. know what her. new bridge work will cost. TI The political m Fourteen lives snuffed out in a dirigible accident] #8 !t was bound to do. Science is taking its right: frouses the sympathy and interest of an entire na- |{¥! place on the farm, and it is vindicating itself as tion—in Chicago alone since Jan. 1, there were 522 |# help above that which legislative bodies can give. able to hasten the day of common interest and com The propaganda that was set loose by misguided lation as one of the solvents of farm problems that | became exceptionally difficult in the abnormal condi ery above sound economic remedies to cure a farm sickness, and by doing that it wag bound to draw proving itself as common effort has brought farmer and city fore experienced. specter of political boundary lines or of classes and Dakota communities was a joint testimonial by Min- business makers and dealers in agricultural implements to | urge the wisdom of the agricultural transformation that is coming over the spring wheat country. ‘There is not only room for, but that there must be, in the they have been used to in the past. others—lumbermen, wholesalers—who have caught the truth and re- ‘be worthy of the name, is all-embracing. City and country made so in part by good roads, automobiles, radio standing of common requirements. terent atmosphere in the northwest despite the try open will easily sense the fact at the state fair. diversified farming in the communi dakota whose commercial centers are | jot, Mandan, Inkster, Kenmare antj & on in these localities is typical of ment throughout the northwest. Agri pmmon prosperity, y it was an unfortunate thing, what tion may have been, that there should dup in this spring wheat country a] jousness which conceived of the ece of the city as one thing apar re of the farm nother thing apart. ever, Wits not all to tie bad. jousn. Perhaps | $9, and the political reactions to | wm and at the polls, were indispens i to overemphasize the value of legis the war. It exalted political quack etween city and country interests, consciousness that has made for this ly passing. Diversification is sound economic’ tenet, and in of diversification, bankers, business nercial organizations have taken an intensely practical and helpful sort. c timate touch such as they never be It has set forth incontrovertibly lence of farm producer and city con- and factory, of buyer and seller—in | that community solvency is no re- section that told the story of North organizations 3a financial bulwark to the north er8 millers to say that single crop: | t is not a good thing. There were to the virtue of ers with the vision to see that there eater variety of farm activities than] There were hardware men and realtors, men who believe that prosperity, to vamaraderié, and cooperation, W as never before. They have been and # consequent clearer under: | There is a dif- hose who keep their eyes and ears ind is yielding to the economic mind, nd the | ag best locations are the sidewalk: covered with ga Some had brigh sun off the pa: to get enough ith the man she! awnings to keep tl | Money to go away ngete loved compl i ally 1 : : ap. called dahabiy. There were peo- means the pure f of livin I felt sorry for him, Little Mer | nie from all over the world there, won vund invite. | quise so sorry that T put out boths going hack forth all the time. It nothing. reverence | hands to hi das he bent to pre: Was very g from the his lips to my palm, Jack stood in Ts that ail?" asked Nick this time. In hi the doorwa ‘or 4 moment he was} «Groedy,” sputtered thé clock. “OF, me that his h intensely jealous, but the next day,! course not. There were big pink love for me jatter he had nearly lost me, he/yirds with long legs and red. bills would not t| seemed io 1! in love with me alll, t built nests of mud in the river. he never expect ver again. Since then he has been! Some of the nests were as high and face a never moody, sometimes extremely; ag round as el They were fFow- ait ng,.and others very grouchy. | | Canned ningoess the bitdsuw . [t's a queer situat | You" know, Little Marau “Is that all?” asked re Some: tinies h | Em not in lov Iville Sa ith a gti Soh [that he is onl i I'm only n-| “Greedy!” said the clock. men like him if | shall ever (To Be ontinued.) in the wo! ne [see him ainly has an DEE man ‘effect upon me that no other man! cithe had, not even Jack. I am} and expert squire of dames that ever glad he is sailing to the An- lived, or else he is really in love wit for Iam afraid 1 would see me, | too much of him. 4 You li Marquise, he has TOMORROW—Letter from Leslie the reputation of being the most con-| Prescott to the Little Marquise, ~ J of New York around the subway en-| trance: There congregate of peddlers in the the crowd is push rush how ing a Pride may goeth before a fall, bi it also cometh with a fall hat. Living a long time takes a gre many years and a_ whole pile money and philos@hy. part is that people stop and buy. Among the metropolitan should he recorded the jacks which recently ended with a 12-year- old miss from a public playground being awarded a solid gold medal and proclaimed the champion s| plaver of New York. Jacks is a game | of the paved streets and the crowded doorsteps. In other cities than New notes test Never judge the quality of man's religion by what he sa: when his wife is mad at him. “ We like summer better than wi ter because our radio works bett in winter. ve which things with in h ty ligent dis tel ston dozens of dev s local color for a politic : x York, of course, children — develop ae : the hinterland a generation ago. | cnampionship skill. But not out. in| Dessert seems to be a. food which Red fire is the flaring iumination | the" art play. jacks Comes and goes only with company. the scene, ‘or Bands and pa of course, A modified ealliope tow by motor through the streets. sc t would ; in preference to such a simply rolling on the pastime as j After you get to know the ave age boats of all kinds. They were double time, these salesmen ‘are| All the good people are not dead. shouting their wares—wrist watehes,! They are just quiet, for instance, and imitation pearls] and table ornaments. The strange man you find he is above the Little Eugene Fevold is home from a week’s stay in ‘the capital city. John Rinehart, who works south of Mandan, visited with his family over the week-end. Rev. E. V, Headen was a business caller in town the fore part of the week. Alfred Casper of the French & Welch Company of Bismarck spent Wednesday in this district. Martin Burgess of the Riverview district spent the past week here looking after his extensive farming operations, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Stewart and family passed through here early in the week en route from a week's out- ing in the Black Hills to theie home at Wilton. \ Miss Emma Jiras has returned from a short visit in the capital city. Miss Gladys Rupp, who attends high school in Bismarck, visited at home over the week-end. Mrs. Willie Borner spent the week- end in the capital city visiting with friends and relatives. Mrs. Fred Hernbloom has returned from a long sojourn in the Bismarck hospital and is recuperating nicely from her operation. The Hernbloom family will leave in ser days for their home at Omaha, Nebraska, af- ter spending several months at the Charles Bleckreid home.’ George Swick was a caller at the John Monroe home Saturday. Mr. Swick is improving nicely from a long illness and is again able to be up and around. Labor day was observed as a holi- day by the bank and postoffice. The stores and other places of business ‘were open. Section Foreman Nels Anderson and crew spent part of the past week in Wilton and Washburn, where they were helping fix up the track. ‘he Falkenstein boys motored to the capital city the last of the week to attend to business affairs. ; Mr. Stone, of the Bismarck Tri- he ut at of a ys Re er re today to ct attention to the ban- | JAMES W. DEAN. | average, pane, Company, was ajeallee fo als ner of one candidate and tomorrow, | a aintelst, Medneaiey, _leskin to that of is rival: Celluloid cap If you are down now. it afforda| "Nes Herbert: Little hes returned aign buttons rain down from upper you a chance to be proud of the wa: baa ‘4 windows as one loafs a : ADVENTURE OF '¥) from a short visit in the capital city you get up again. ner. The p 2 tween conte: jailor in Pu THE TWINS Summer's about gone. right. play adverti BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON |j damage to last several months. calls attentic > prese yor's | free picnics and boat rides for “whil ve are cleaning you out} Most people are .either ahead wil mothers. and fixing you up, can't yourtell us| their work and. behind. with It's the Roman public \the story. of your travels?” asked | Worrying or just the reverse. riots in the form all ove | Tick Tock, the‘ clock fairy. “Well,” said the bright little clock The ordinary citizen just trying 0| who was all brass and glass when he j ticians will continue to be scored. get along can console himself at the | Via. S his loathen: jacket 7an —— |lack of an automobile more easily (Giant have his leather jucket om] 1 ing able to fight id @ poor here than almost anywhere else. He | gating, I will tell you as much as I| Way of developing a good disposi- can tell himself, with sincerity, that | ¢in remember. What would you like | tion, but it seldom fails. he wouldn’t know what to do with a| (an remember: «Wo i car if he had it. If he lives in down- i ‘a, said Nick. When the cold spell arrives an town more the ing, for traffic conges- ‘gument said the little clock, i clock could tell you more. When I am on the sea, I am usually shut up tight in my leather case and down inside of a trunk that is down wasted entirely. Cigarets are. replacing pipes. danger from fire isn’t so great sin home and the open sort of thing to break a 's heart. | That’s all Picnickers have done enough their en after baseball is over, poli- enormous supply of sunburn will be The with friends, Mr. Harold Hopton, of the State Record, was a recent caller in this district, He also spent some time at his former home at Regan before returning to Bismarck. H. A. Muchler, well known business man of Wing, was here Thursday looking after business: affairs, ". Muchler reports the recent sale of his hotel at Wing to Mr, Tyce of Bismi The Muchler family are lone-time residents of Wing. Eddie Meyers was a caller in Wil- ton over the week-end. Clyde Freeman is spending some time in Bismarck this week. Oscar Backmen of the Grass Lake district was a recent caller in town. ith cinity motored to Bismarck to at- tend the play the Lost World. Those ce who read Mr. Doyle’s story said the . One moto I know—a woman—| in the dark hold of the ship. That's | celluloid collars went out. play was true to the story and gave keeps her car over in Jersey near! a gért of cellar. All I can tell you one the shive one of the tubes. She uses the sub- about the sea is that sometimes I way or occasionally a taxieab for all| jearly turn inside out when it gets p tical purposes. Then of an eve-| rougin, and I am always thankful | face at the man with an open car. ning or for the week-end she goes to| when we land in some country or] c, ; ies her. car and takes it spinning when. ai ain taken oan y (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) through the country on accessible Fe “Then tell us about some of the places you have been,” said Nancv. “ail ight," said the clock. “il || tell you about Eeypt. Once my mas- ter took me to Egypt. I didn't know where I was until he took me out of my leather case and set me on a table beside a big wide window. “Ft gave me quite a start to see camels outside and people riding them. Also little donkeys with don- key-boys running behind and twist- ing their tails to make them go. Poor things! I nearly fell off the table I was so mad, and my master taught tig. roads which erase all thought of the city. Another car owner, and there are many like him, simply keeps an au- tomobile as an investment and has a driver operate it for hire on a fif- ty-fifty basis, But the arrangement is more profitable for the driver than for the owner. And the owner never gets a ride. Hl beam out of thine own eye; then shalt thou see clearly to ci out the mote out of thy broth eye.—Matt. On the theory that the value of a business location depends upon the number of persons who pass it daily, Of all the cants which are cant in this canting world, though tl ini — J mentingsLaw ber a And the season is coming when the man with a closed car can make A THOUGHT | o—_—________-______ Thou hypocrite, first cast out the cant of hypocrites may be the worst, the cant of criticism is the most tor- Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rupp motored to the capital city the latter part of the week. CLEAR LAKE Miss Bernice Pasley and brother, Paul, accompanied Miss Clara Kru- ger to Steele Tuesday evenii where she left for her home in Min- nesota after visiting for a number of weeks with friends h Donna, Emma Schaffer spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Albert Christensen, B. F. Pasley and daughter, Ber- nice, called at the Albert Christensen home on Wednesday pornine. m Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Beyer have had the pleasure to have as their guest ed he ‘NEWS OF OUR NEIGHBORS uite a few from Baldwin and vi-| 7; ‘Doyerst: sister, Mrs. Hurley and children from Leith, N. D. Harris Winberg and L. B. Olson and his sister, Mrs. Quist and chil- dren, called on Willie Olson Thurs- | day and Friday evenings. Olaf Olson called at the L. B. Ol- son home Saturday morning. |" Mr. and Mrs. Ole Newland and i family spent Saturday evening at | the Henry Olson home. | Olaf and Reidar Olson called at jthe Win Koterba home on Satur- | day. | Mrs. Ed. Ericksen and son, Lowell, | visited at the Elmer Ericksen home | in Driscoll Saturday. | Miss Vivian Shaffer spent a few days visiting with friends and rela- tives of Steele. Marie Olauson was a caller at the Ed. Ericksen home on Satur- Olaf Olson and Paul Pasley were callers at the Ambers home Sunday. Miss Priscilla and Reidar Olson spent Sunday with their friend, Miss Myrtle Christensen. Elder Clarence Rentfro of Bis- marck is spending the week with the Albert Christensen family. Earl Ericksen spent Sunday with hig friend, Erling Olson. Miss Myrtle Christensen was a caller at the Ed. Ericksen home Sun- day evening. Those who spent Sunday evening with the Albert Christensen family were Mrs. J. E, Sharp, Everrett Chap- pell, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Gibson and Miss Emma Locseka ¢f Lay.aan township. What might have been a very ser- ious accident happened Sunday night about twelve o'clock, when the car in which Mr. Ambers and Tom Olson were occupying turned over on the Slattenhues grade. Mr. Olson was taken to Bismarck on Mond WILD ROSE Mr. and Mrs, Nels Thompson have purchased a fine new Essex coach. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Lawson of Glencoe and Mrs. Harold Brownawell and little son, Bobby, of Flasher, spent the week-end at the W. H. Brownawell home. John Peterson was on the sick list several days last week. Herman Johnson, who has been as- sisting ‘his unclg, John Peterson, through harvesting, received the sad news of the death of his sister, Miss Elsie, at the parental ‘home in’ Wis- consin. He left the same day to attend her funeral. Miss Florence Elliott left Sunday to teach school near Tuttle, the same place she taught last year. Fire of unknown origin destroyed the new cow barn on the farm oc- cupied by Mr. Ed. Boynton. It was too far gone when discovered for help to be of any avail. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Donaid Snyder of Bismarck came down Sunday to visit relatives here. After attending the Labor Day celebration at. Pursian Park they returned home in the eve- ear d from h large crowd from here attended the Labor Day celebration at Pursian Park. There were three aeroplanes in the field, and a number of the young folks enjoyed a flight through air. There were boating, bathing, dancing and contests of various kinds and last but not least a ball game. Schools Nos. 1 and 2 will open next Monday, September 14th. Miss Mary Metealf from Russell, Minn., Bill teach No. 1, and Miss Gertrude erg of Kathryn will take cha school No. 2." tent Mrs, Ernest Saville, who has been confined to her home for some time, Was out calling on friends Sunday afternoon. A good. rai Sunday eveni threshing, fit to the in_ visited: this locality ing, which delayed the but will be of some bene- late garde: Fastest time made by anyone in traveling around the world was made by John Henry Mears in 1913, is time was 35 days, 2! rage agi 'y8, 21 hours and | LITTLE JOE | Dad THINKS w, CLOTHES Is ray NS UNTIL He TRIES IT ‘ }