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* 1832; electric motor; 1834; typewriter, 1843; Bes- | The Bismarck Tribune| im. steel, 1855; telephone, , 18765, phonograph. | An Independent Newspaper 1877; X-ray, 1895; airship, 1901, as well as the won. THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER derful progress in automobiles and radio. | (Established 1873 It is hard for anyone to visualize just what it | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company,| means to witness the developments of more than | Aaa ae PG a ee Postoffice at/a century. Few are privileged, but the opportun- George D. Mann .+.President and Publisher |it¥ afforded Mrs, Louisa K. Thiers to live through | so many stirring epoch: rare indeed, i 1a -{§ #220 | BEGIN HERE: TODAY HENRY RAND, 55,-a business man, in found murdered in a cheap hotel in’ Grafton. Police find a woman's handkerchief and the yellow. stub of a theater ticket. JIMMY. RAND, his son, goes to MANSFIELD, where the the- ater Is. The ih in traced to THOMAS FOGARTY, : who says he gave it to OLGA MAYNARD, { a cabaret singer. Jimmy meets. and falls in love with MARY LOWELL. Later he encounters Olga. She faints when she learns police want her for murder. Mary, out SAMUEL CHURCH, a wealthy Marion Talley \ America’s youngest prima donna has stirred the | - 5.09! musical circles of several nations. A plump, blue- | + 6.00 cyed girl of 19 captivated a critical audience at the | | Metropolitan Opera House, New York, the other, Member of The Associated Press | evening. To make a metropolitan debut at that age | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | is no mean accomplishment. i use for republication of all news dispatches credited | Kansas City discovered Marian Talley in 1921, | ‘ ; r ° . | sas y discovered Marian Talley in 1921, to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and algo | a alased ; A ri the local news of spontaneous origin published hee. |\dimirers of her voice backed their faith in her with | in, All rights of republication of all other matter | ¢o!d cash and the triumph the other evening was | 720 Daily by mail, per year, Ns (in state outside Bismatck)....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... Member Audit Bureau of Circulation lawyer, sees Jimmy lift Olga into herein are also reserved, | the culmination of it all. She is probably the | atts “age epee ge to yg ER ERASED a ry oa 7 ‘ sj) i ! iga tel pol an <i Foreign Representatives erat eh eas Pisa ‘ ne aie ais idl H handkerchief might have come ‘ G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY We, ee ae ee ee cee | Into, possension of a man who “. CHICAGO DETROIT Once her ability was recognized thousands of | Pea The tine ing rectives Tower aL eee nie Kresge Bldg. dollars were donated to train her voice. Two benefit | several mysteriou’ iraraings to AYNE, BURNS AND SMITH concerts in Kansas City netted $20,000. She studied | pried ieee dps gina pe ORK, 22 ts PHN AVe. Bld. sroan -avolded Hie limelight) jaze ‘endl vaudevitic;| Later he ta attacked at ‘night by two men. Me escapes, after seizing a blackjack from one of (Official City, State and County Newspaper) and the other evening came her opportunity. seit ne T ‘With: Jimmy and’\Mary es- One likes to cite Marian Talley and Helen Wills ; If King Tut Came to Life— as the really typical American girls. Their carcers | tranged, Church: presses Ris sd- King Tut is out in the open again, and, through disprove the cynic and blase who advance the flap- | ee erctalls aiiay i the wonders of modern science,,doctors will learn per as the typical modern American girl. this when they accidentally meet used the death of this youthful mon- | a | tele bee ey { 100 years ago. It is even hinted tha: | A Good Leser | NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY # murder, buried for thirty long centuries, will come} Miss Helen Wills proved a good loser on the ter- | CHAPTER XXII | out at Jimmy had seized her ‘by the,ha1 nis courts of Cannes. Her oppcnent was pressed just for amusement, that King Tut were hardly at every turn of the game. It is to be hoped to sit up in his golden coffin and return to life. that the two will meet again under more favorable Think of the things that have happened since he auspices. The commercializing of the tournament } went;-into the quiet of his dark tomb with the depressed Miss Wills and she was stbmitted to| massed thousands standing on the desert sands many annoyances. But she had no excuses to of- about the entrance. fer and said that everyone had treated her “won- The empire that he ruled is gone, a thing of in- “erful” and that it was the “most interesting voice was agonized. turned her head away and was ery- Le “Mary, look at me. Look at me ‘then, fell t you're marr; me, ime an Reeaurs you Tove him."| called her office to say that she was " Her voice was muffled,{not feeling well and would not be He walked over, want a job.” ‘The man inspected him, noted the ‘trim figure and the neat clothing and shook his head. “Sorry, we have “Mr. Porter, I out an office job, Vl do betes ae . “The only thing we have is driv: nhs be inte i alk i right, 1° rive a truck—anything.” yale Again the man surveyed him. “Say, what's the matter with you? You're not cut out for driving a You're a college man, I'll bet Aren't you?” Does that handicap me any ing @ laundry truck?” Mr. Porter laughed. “No, I can’t say that it does. What's the matter? Down on your luck?” “Ne, I just need @ job.” “Drive @ car?” “Yesi I used to sell them. ‘All right, I can use you. I can't seem to get hold of a man that's any good. I suppose you'll be quit- ting just about the time that you MT dont be gaitting “I won't be quitting for qui while,” Jimmy said, if ahd “All right. Report for work to- morrow morning at seven-thirtv. Your job will be collecting and deliv- has ie 7% ‘Thanks, i'll be here.” He walke out of the door, : * “There's a fanny one for you, Miss called Mr. Porter to the girl id met Jimmy in he came ‘College man driving a layn- He was leaning towatd her. His|4ry truck.” She looked toward the door that had closed ibehind Jimmy Rand’s back. “I'll say,” she ahswered, and resumed chewing her gum. Mary Lowell sat onthe bench where Jimmy had left her for fully an hour. en she went home and “Why, Mary, what's the matter?” terest only to antiquarians, Bats flit by the ruined Match” she had ever played. : Fa see eee iets na back “tor duet aHovaeOn, columns ef the’ temp aces that, in his day, ‘The California Phi Beta Kappa girl is only 20 her lips, represented the greate s on earth, "years old. Her game will improve and she wil! continue to be heard from. Kingdoms have risen and fallen by the score since then. Greece flowered and declined; Rome brought | oe the world under its sway and then fell before the barbarian throngs from the German forests; the Editorial Comment scheme of religion that King Tut leaned on has gone the way of all flesh, giving way to gentler, Oue-fourth For Taxes i °e Gi 1 T more enlightened faiths; the seat of the world’s PRUE ERR | a Of! power has shifted from the Nile to two rivers that | (Chicago Journal cf Commerce) i ij . i 3 jouer tae were unheard of in his day—the Thames and the| If you want to realize how great is the burden| 7, ,,,HE FIRST STEP | |! “That's nice,” said Mx. Brown. Potomac. of taxation upon the nation’s business, send to the! turned the check over and over in| c Tati strial Conference Board, at New| my hand, after my father left. It! ha onfidence in your ability | prs ne National Industrial | did not seem as though that small bit| to take care of | Pay en MneE I Pino thy to hurt her. it will. is mal words rushing insanely from his lip: fathers would be as gen- When Tut was alive, a creaking, springless char- “Jim, don’t. Please don't say any “I might have known,” he said] While. It will be better.” nico? I had no right to hope. And she went in her room, to fling There wi fellow in your office.jherself face down on the:ibed and ‘They call m Mac. He said money | wet her pillow with tears... . . On would uy anyth: He was right; |her dressing table was a portrait of hi ‘And then again hot anger over-|asked Mrs. Lowell. “Aren't you whelmed him. He was seized once| well?” more with that uncontrollable desire It’s just a headathe, mother. I'll go in my room and lie down for a Samuel Church, placcd there re- cently by her mother, But" he went heedlessly on, the| Jimmy, after leaving the laundry i 8.} office, walked, without being con- “This. man’ Church has money[ucious of direction, back to the, park. ; He suger ta it, He can get anything he| He ‘was way ‘through it before ung daughter. He must} Kaster’s coming. We'll need exes. [lots of Ut tt Gio Bot Sou with it [he realized where ‘he was, Then, You’re marrying him for his money; {drawn iby some irresistible impulse, he walked swiftly over to the bench nj where he had left Mary. She had gone, and he sat down wearily. A small handkerchief was lying on the bench, and he recog- t . self and your ¢ for a copy of its report, “Cost of Govern-j of whi ag 4 " Perot nha A ib ’ : 3 what, you're doing.” iot drawn by oxen or horses represented the last| YT : waco (Of white paper, when my father’s| money in a big city. thi bout buying a| that’s what, you're doing. word in Alsstey ‘Now the maven citizen can ride ; Ment Ph eS RE cite gee beworetwe na ra aa Sud titty alee ne uere a ' ic ae al home: isthe’ tires: don't wear out coy ane , y. D s Elias saute ara : $ | be we wo hundred and fifty dol-| Brown knew how little confidence in conveyances that would seem miraculous to the ee ae wean) to beuthorouayl vaens\ gece Dy Pas ee Dad had in me— but I answered: | | ‘tn Alma, Ga. a boy put a stick of a H nets pian: e board. ms EAs soon as possible, I made some} “Well, Dad also thinks that he] aynamite on the fire. It made a good | scornfully.. : re | Ly’ ‘ de ; ; Every time the average corporation in 1923-earned: Gx¢use to, other about wanting to/ may be doing something foolish, but] five and so did the house. you love hin. You can’t, You don't| nized it by the perfume as, Mary's To him the stars were lights placed in the sky : : . ; do some shopping before I left, and| he d to me that ohly by experience Societe dare, look at ‘me and tell me you} He picl up and pressed it to his Se warnings ‘tothe sons of ‘men of what the fated a dollar, it paid more than a quarter of that in| hurried down to the bank. Rather would I learn how to shoulder re- don’t love me.” Sometimes a girl smokes so many cigarets about all she has in her hope chest is one lung. Sas rh ire net income of the nation’s cor-,Uncertainly, I pushed the qaper| sponsibilities.”: « might have in store. Now we know that they are| 1%<* wee Ss See Of this sum, the} thteueh the cashier's window. H had| "The cashier looked at me éuriously. i Rei becii Saickarit worlds” go\ fav varmoved thet porations was 269,000,000. is * never cashed a check for morg than| |, knew he was one of my father's g i i i 2,5) | ten dollars i y life. tes! iends vas skepti t= 1 , ia 7 Bal rays of light which left them before Tut was born | CO™Porations paid taxes amounting to $2,572,000,-| ten dollars in my life. oldest friends and was skeptical, per In Jasper, Ola., a hen laid 70 eggs | facts. 7 000— or 27.7 per cent. Special assessments and | 4, 7he cashier of my father’s | bank| haps for the first time in his life, of sume a great deal.” t j including Christmas and ‘egraine¢ . : H naa ee cua ; i ! artfed at} Dad's sanity. Vee new: She sald trfing to wound him.| chance [I had I. suppose. f've- lost aA say Be tes Ae ‘ 11| improvement levies are not included in the tax fig: | the size of the check, howeve, Me] "Well, Julia, it probably will not New \Wean'a: toche so sure of yourself certainly 'now.” i is a fascinating subject, this recounting of all! ures calmly asked: \.,.,{ take you long’ to spend’ your -money i 1 1 f aeial ; By “How do you want it, Miss Jhtia?” | ind nee ur-money| You must pay for your sins, unless indie the wonders that have come to pass since King Tut), The amount paid in taxes was G1.7 per cent of| “I think J will take tea one hu es nen aon as all yaar come you can sell them to some confession eit,’ went to his leng rest. But it is even more fascin-|'the amount paid to stockholders in cash dividends, [dred bills and the rest in. tps” I | ottes™ magazine and colleet for them. reddened. “Perhaps,” he said, “f di said, congratulating my H ating to look into the future and wonder what we] ‘The latter stim — $4,169,000,000.— meant an aver- : would see if we could refurn to earth 3,000 years voice sougded calm : ; hough, :my|teft-the window. I had_a feetng the age cash dividend of 5.68 cents on cach dollar the heart was pounding a 0 _imy | tal sorry.” .” like g trip feashier’s eyes were following. me aside about a million dollars for his She drew, herself up,’ “You pre+|to her as.he had. lips and cursed himself for, talking “I was a fool,” he said.’ “Iibad no “[ presume nothing: I’m stating |}right to hurt her. like that,; even though she did ‘hurt me. It’s that She had regained her composure|damned temper: of mine, Whatever indieates you are not lacking in con-/} He took out his wallet and placed the handkerchief in it and then pu The barb went Homa ‘His face|it back in his pocket, His left hand, in id | fumbling idly. overcoat pocket. yf that my |< “Perhaps not,” I said gaily, as 1). pyery young fellow should ; put] take (tao. much for granted. I'm/came in contact with the blackjack , that hé had taken away from ‘the At the contriteness in ‘his tone she} man who had followed him home from now. % a 4 . ; hammer, : I with apprehension. asp ceded reached involuntarily toward him|that night, It had been in his pocket 5 { l stockholder had invested. : Every time the stock. expect, Miss Julia,” the old] Thad not gotten further than a ‘Accidents happen even in the best| with her hand, but he ‘did not see it/ever since O'Day had left him. He i erhaps we would see an even greater change | holder received a nickel, his corporation paid more cashier said smilingly, “that you are| block from the bank when I came families, Millionaire sailed aboard|and she hastily drew it back. had put it there, intending. to give it than King Tut would find if he opened his eyes| than three cents in taxes. us 4 site, ,new dressesg thts upon Aurelia Winston. She was] ¢he same shipias his ‘wile. And so he went plunging ches: to the lientenant the next time he $ today. The total sums paid in federal, state, and local bills out tomer N° Passe the} looking so unhappy and. physically! (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.)| still trying his best to hurt this gir ill that I almost cried at sight of her, saw him. whom he loved better than. anything] He took it out of his pocket and i i ri fee fieanasa a ‘i Lae CHURINGAaes, s fol-;, “No,” I answered happily. ?“Dad] (Copyri 926, NEA Servic ¥ eras BRAM AGED. TL ‘ tudied it: Beacey: wan. leakin, i First, in material things. Disease ‘conquered; pemencn by various businesses esuptel a ae Manetren anes eee ie a thin re (Copyright, 19: 6, NEA Service, Inc.) |g. Sc er scsi Serre aia aa toa daly 3 eee ‘one — ae machines so mighty and simple that three or four lows: manufacturing corporations, 22.4 per cent: Chieago with.” -Po@OMORROW: “Another Case. | A THOUGHT {Ir ‘thought there were some things |stitches. ‘He took his penknife from i hours of work a day would be the maximum for all of net income; trade corporations, 24.7 per cent; | — = r rn —— - |. in thig world. that money could not|his watch chain and ripped out the mankind; poverty abolished; crime unknown; slums construction enterprises, 25.2 per cent; financial Ay U &, [our tongues right. It’s no good | She will do him good and not evil buy. But I ene SON te feel. syesining sous, Reig ea a H voplaced by decent, clean, comfortable homes; the corporations, 32.2 per cent; transportation com-/ de. 4 FS) thinking things if you can’t say ef bas days of-her life—Prov, 31: Aeeh oe dae office. I offended you,| “It will never hurt anyone else,” sky darkened with a myriad airplanes, carrying panies and public utilities, 33 per cent; public serv- | 0 Eben: a i See Reha and so you had me fired.” ot he Feaas sheep on aaa $ things may well be realities in much less than 3,000 enterprises, etc.), 35.2 per cent; agricultural cor- OLIVE ROBERTS BARTG’ | We haven’t seen a sigh of it si Sopa pate ernely, ak erate “You thought I had you fired % ett He shoved the now sermons : yei Porations, 44.2 per cent; and mining and quarrying | 4+ tase Jupe, the kind kangaroo, le! | oLet ee cin rpee sels en 18) of adversity —Washington Irving. instantly he sew ‘he was wrong in KTS meek in Sie pert and stood i And then, in things of the spirit. Perhaps we companies, 93.3 per cent. the Twins to ‘the gate of the castl>|the Fairy Queen's palace. “We. must igreleden buicine ScCWhat else was I to. think? I found|" “Heli,” he said, and shook himself i would find ignorance and predjudice gone, and in-' When it is realized that corporations’ taxes; Where Blue Whiskers, the wizard,|find it as soon as possible, and cure Gartison.—J. B. House failed in his| you cold. “You. wouldn't even speak mete ing i tnt +, 3, | lived. im.” tolerance and suspicion. Perhaps all men could amount to-more than a quarter of net income, it is!’ “That inisbnuledathet doitheumect im, sng, A 5 work for di wnderstand beauty and truth, instead of just a few. easy to perceive why the tax bill is the most inter- wal ran at the foot of the gate. “ By, this time they were inside of| when he sent @ bullet through his ‘together. “ purpose to end his life Tuesday night|to me, and brews evening. the man mind off myself yo arge! 4 ugh Blue Whiskers’ palace and what | hody, missing his heart by two inches.) “I don’t think,” she said in a whis-|prisk gait and didn’t stop until j Perhaps the world would be run by kindness and esting piece of legislation during the present ses-.cqitty, cried, a large blue crab. }sicht met their eyes! Mr. House wae sitfing with « friend| per, “that Sam Church, would think had reached ‘bis room, a, walk, of ‘ neighborliness and love instead of by hatred and sion of congress, and why-the negotiations between i ice pudding!” said Jupe quickly. te Be fontinted) arean tec eaarey wee Fer bry Pane Sam Chanel be pared ing and cine ee a eenen mi he 4 i “Pass then,” ’s AEE fa nae. " Sates er 'm to thin t e tele i force, Perhaps every person on earth would be the respective conferees of the senate and the house | “Pass | Were ee eae ‘ oe Grand Forks.— Proposed * $150,000] behind a curtain alcove and a tow a ie cap eae it you want| Neynard at her apartment and asked getting all the richness and fullness out of life that ate so important to business. lobster on top of the wall. bond issue for building an addition | seconds later a revolver shot was) one Oth otnion of Sam Church,| her to-meet him downtown;for din- ; a few can get now. But federal taxation is only one item in the tota:’ The drawbridge came down and|{*® the ee high school passed in} heard. If is ‘prol able that I think he's @ dirty sneak.” be ss ear ‘ Perhaps? It must be so. It will be so if we of more than two and a half billion dollars of taxa- dupe and ine gins Rasher ove ‘i and femme! elettian Kore. Elna dela 2 |" “ft is hardly the chivalrous thing] “Anything to forget.” he said, af- h ? 5 went in throu igh gate eof j and those who come after us do our part. The sci- tion paid by corporations in a single year. State’ sea shells. bsacciey Focassnanidine se xc, : : pregeaies mera ‘ aaah 4 i j- |, Suddenly eight) fat codfish with rl: entists will work their miracles, never fear; it is and local taxation must be given increasingly se: forks te wien flopped up on their - t ike that of him when|ter he had hung up the receiver. 2 a Ee eae tee + he MTo Be Continued) | EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO |) Mite tied shout me!” Jimmy cried. “He poisoned you egainst me—the up to the rest cf us to see to it that man progresses cus attention. The problem is’ complicated by the fins and demanded. the password ca ei anesk.” “ Ay Temperatures and : : : ‘ pt Se ait & i Oa 1e "she > re “you in cther things as well 'act that the states and the cities have been con: “Wht iaike inipddingal” aeld: June, f AND AT TIMGS, Mie. TRUG, L Have my RD cant, aS acetinecilanan Road Conditions H ——__-_-_—__. structing an enormous number of permanent im-| «Now will the lady and gentlenan {DOUBTS ABOUT Hs PATRICTISM. BUT & ‘AM \ lis better than mine. The ledy you F The Cathcart Case provements. These add to taxes, but at the samej please give the password also,” said |<! PER CENT AMGRICAN M Ss ge +: ey A were seen with is not ‘exactly un-}@——_—_—____—_____—__-® Fi The Countess of Cathcart is detained at Ellis |time they often add to the wealth of the state or etowapces Lone ree loo persis oe rit, Ce! “a HATS \. known, you fen hotly, “and 1| _ (Mercury readings at a. m.)_ F Island and ordered deported because she has been |the city. Accordingly it is impossible to make a} tings!” seis } wat I e. AN EIICAM * Tee er nearly every night. What] Bismarck— Snowing, 9; - roads ‘ guilty cf a crime involving moral turpitude. sweeping condemnation of all tax increases. fe isk fears ppsapat brittle!” ‘A ‘{do you think of-that? I'm wigh her rough a pia ta adie, i The lady had tired of her husband, some years| But the immense total of taxation should be! ne harder they tried to san “lag y - = = every Bie” the’bench and clamp-| . Minot.—Cloudy, 6; tosds snowy. ago, and he had tired of her. So she left him and | realized by the business element in every commun-' pudding,” the more their tongues be-| { wi ling ed his het down viciously on | Mandan.—Cloudy, 8; feeds All : fled to Africa with another man with whom she jity, in order that each improvement project may be |‘#me.twisted. |) ecmane H d ee head. ‘his Sack pa ber. ane ei ighes by gli i Pah cloudy, 3 had fallen in love. That is the “crime involving | considered in relation to the tax problem. “If you don't say the password. in r =e | conan het he was pt looking. || "Grand Forks.— Snow | lest night t a ” i she ii ity. ii ve shall have to dump ts ‘i a = “Goodby,” he said. “You seem cles above; roi good. i moral turpitude” of which she is guilty. 2 we iene, ee KH ee tent 4 choice. I only hope] Fargo.—Snowing, 8; roads fair. 4 It probably will be a long time before immigra- .. Tired of It water either. It is made ‘of cod liver Z ‘ have mie 2 AahAEy He] Duluth—Partly cloudy, 6; roads i tion officials have a chance to pull a stunt quite (St. Paul Dispatch) oil. And no one likes cod liver oil . | walked away,: without<another back: good. Recs 'a0;) sonal. ‘ a as asinine as the ordering of this woman out of the | Probably the best description of the attitude of Eda etibvcied tanto ate kai s i = V4 es ir aianee,,. tabla < tang” Smit Wineas—Cloudyy 207! roads rough. M country. the rank and file of the Nonpartisan league in| geant’s ear. < i; i i } ‘She sat- perfectly still for several] Rochester. Cloudy, 21}; road! i In America men and women wh» have been co- | North Dakota, and of that of the people generally, | , 0h? 1), Sit! said the codfish : VW) P minutes, doing nothing but gaze. af- | rough. : 5 respondents in divorce suits are allowed. to come | was that made by-J. A. Gray, a:delegate from Ran-|we apologize. And when Sergeant ihe ZA. = pa geet Then she bowed and go as they please, to vote and hold office and |som county, and the radical candidate fcr chairman Cod apsloaiies Ne, feet it sight 89 \ SS er’ head of. her arm and cried as apt! + 1 yl eC; ——S=——_ - g enjoy all the privileges anyone else has. Why |of the convention at Bismarck last ‘Thursday. He |*buitets” and took out a hendiel at pee Ee ae don't should we bar foreigners who are in the same boat? | is credited with telling the convention: faand ‘ebsaets. which he divided be- 7 T - " "+ |eare, You don’t care, or you wouldn’t Imagine the roar that would be raised if every s ‘cages : He weTRREE ‘ate codtiah en eee talk like that.” American tourist to Europe were stopped: at every uote pene ram ae cypeades of stale | boiled, and baked very hard,” ‘he said, 7 7 Sees ZN ———< Jimmy's job that ‘he had been border and asked if he or she had ever been mixed cies Habel eee eae Bue eras bagless well. They 10° PER CENT” TWICE ae as honting aul mare was waiting for + : y s % il B ven, r i : ce he en + Cis a aeeee Salesiacore aaa r ten years of it, beginning with denuncia- | thang nappens to 3 i wai eno donger : A ples e eae : , just say: rt. England, regarded as conservative, has just di- | tion of “Big Biz,” descending naturally to an assault ‘Roly poly fish-balls, : : PROFRITEER! NS I whew lunes through the park with- rected English industrialists to open up the Kent- | upcn all men, not actual farmers, as enemies of the Get me out of these walls! . ce to left or th ‘his ante ri y 0 “and puff! You'll b bef +. fout o glan ft or right, his ish coal. fields. Principal and interest are guar- |farmer, taking in those. who dared to differ from |ynow fer, *oUl! be out before you hands sbusk: in. his overcoat packets, anteed for a period of thirty years by the govern- | the dictates of Townley and at last coming home to|- “The “wins took the fish-balls ‘ana | ; ES =z /JtyStort® he’ exclaimed “bitterly. ment, Jobs for the jobless are needed and the po- | roost and ending with as fierce denunication of each La ise , tele Poekets. pus on . “Mad was right. All you need is litical leaders may find a government subsidy to | other, the Nonpartisan Jeaguers scemed .to have codfish, Nancy could ony on “To J 2 13-3 == aga ic a oe i vg ‘opert up new industries will pay better than doles. | developed a political method into a habit. But |™ato-soup!” And all Nick could stam- \ f . and looked backward. But the bench! even they have grown weary of it. While Jack mire gee eens es \\ 3 \ bie gible) A AL, mm Mrs. Louisa K. Thiers Pfeifer of Dickinson, Roy W. Frazier of Crosby, | said Sergeant Cod stepping back into \ Seer ‘ 4 = pte te a : How young the nation is as time goes is brought| Dell Patterson of Donnybreok, prominent in league Tet comes Gy. dee eo hie rhe g . ; : = «He. walked yblindly on ‘and death recently at Milwaukee | counsel, were howled down with cries of “Throw e wank cage saved so much poy S J ' 2 sodaenl teune ie rg ee ah a “hi 17 f d M ‘our heats, too, maybe.” . “s t h de te of the original Daugh-| him out!” “Choke him off!” or were ruled “out of CMMED cope ERRE Oak. wibkex ee He Arresdiutely. dr a Soment mm. Her age was 111 | order,” by the chairman, Gray was permitted to| again!” thought Neace. “1 liek ‘ WY ‘and ‘then a in the revolu- | voice his sentiments uninterrupted and with indica-| bearing oft. If only’ we had head “What the well.” he ssid r iy in 1814, she had jtions of approval from the convention. Any man|énd a little le aft who knows what league conventions have been since | better as after, it would be * ‘ we could that old fell — who advan to meet him. Pata knows- what ‘that means, Whiskers before cellist pret 14 a # Me Poster. aver thero-is the a little more of it. before we came, : / Siereiee docs, it make?” and walk- r all, around. But 1 do: wish ~“T want a job," he'ssid to the dad oe nn