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i PAGE FOUR | The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, ., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, as seit class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher | Bismarck, } Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) seececes 120 Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)... Daily by mail, outside of North Dak Memb Member of The Associated Press | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | use for republication of all news di to it or not otherwise credited in th the local news of spontaneous origin published here- All ents of republication of Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Tower Bldg. PAY ey BURNS AND S NEW YORK = er Audit Bureau of Circa’ 482.23 which There is only provide for its date Gov. indus Vi: has b A. vee e $7.20) ward step change which best advantage lished at Grand Gov. in this state tural commerci grow until it ota - 6.00 spatches credited 8 paper, and also ; all other matter DETROIT Kresge Bldg. MITGL Fifth Ave. Bldg. for their crops sible benefits to quate storage such as G (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Not a F the fact that The Tri to government ownership of mil it believes that. the exper hould be e a Sorlie’s busi i cut taxpayers and he othe will reduce the figures in red even n A newspaper Despite spirit ef has if the ye recently were | be bet ism audit by an official of the mill. figures as the assumption would be at this rertal tated. If the 000, the bond ciation of $4 charge of of the state. the mill m ated that m was Tak accurate, better off and interest 610.44, some § mill ator we! of $26 would ec 31 According tinue upon to the nent at opposed to the Sorlie administ rating earnings in the of tho: than pune is opposed elevators, Grand Forks Gov. the that Is or prtingg ign ble for bettering should hav fight for the first step to do ing p) fairness. the to r changes more. cost ill and elevator the state would ed upon ing the auditor's » that the state is not Kansas was established an cquali City bas an Omaha substan- It is ay commerce oper leased for §$ and dep | matter. bette to make a fixe the taxpay Spencer audit, 1925 of $143,- of course j $42,000 suggested as a fair rental. Sorlie and the jal commission must do the best they can. {It is a matter of record that the present admin tration have kept the losses down far below the | regime en shown in the plans formulated to make the mill and elevator a_p: is the of the grain terminal great demand and there nd terminal faci so that the farmers can get the very best prices | at the nd Forks, Many states of the union have provic warehouses for the handling of the farmers’ crops | I have seen to it that freight rates promoted growth of busines: markets. the Grand agriculturalists did nd indus! rates and storage fa Gov. Sorlie is marketing conditions and fluences outside the state has a string upon him. He cannot be swerved from his objective. is far in exe of the one way out of the mill and cle- gradual liquidation and until that other members of the and more business shrewdness ng venture, One for establishment of a grain course cannot function to the until a grain terminal is estab- Forks, n is to build up lat rates » to develop North Dakota’s na- centers, This state to be merely a feeder the cast. Its wheat i Ss no reason why storage hould not be created here zs for to and the state retain all the pos- be derived by creating more ade- great centers of the state Fargo, Minot and Bismarck. incident to the the the crops was that forced a time that conditions at the producer. market conditions, Gov. Sorlie state solidly back of him. His Forks terminal but the North Dakota what far sec- when a terminal is for at Wichita placing that city on} y in the handling of grain with Kansas and which fought the contentions of Wichita. other influential terminals function of the state to promote | and the matter of freight tilities xo tof the root of the making ja strong fight for none of the in- HER QWN WAY °¥a Girl FOR THE SAKE a “A girl puts the out of her that some day and take right off for him so D is to th ali} k of him and hi dove the | i aun who. is so d he makes her think etalon: | but himself.” nd, haven't yc ike that, Judy Just now I want to work. rve out some sort of al for 4 el 1 would — ha ything » world i me ever seen any- | e 1 want to : destiny given had let Tm ashanied to say [don't know. I don’t think [ have ent and I know | haven't any training, But 1 guess [ h cum of common sense and 1 have aj fi desire to make someth myself in the business world to be a free ay agent t | | walking mil }hat would pass unnoticed, | beautifpl black of — d live on it. 1 want to, y if mcieialiate then go back and it, do + you know, my nd what dear, you'y © you go-| ng to do now uM Costello," th Til cat the f Lord, Judy. I said it youl st thing.” | we've been I've been so interest- | din What you've been saying that! uo must think IT don’t even know| life. 1 know you} hungry with alt the! ng for you.! | Good cies of e very ge. bi rant which IT had f the t exclusi knew tha e in the city. | my black coat and little | but when | Jimmie, 1 turned aud looked at any special tal-| burst out laughing. ' He was a mess. Some of the other man’s blood had also hit his shirt pnt _and he was showing a most, Copyright, 19% GF ervice, Inc.) TOMORROW: Naw Meets Maid. | and bina they came to the little’ ory b uled “by Mister Rub Social and | cent tend the s\ Cloak shop, nected. le show with which he NEW SALEM VISITORS Mr. and Mrs. August Wilde two daughters of New Salem shopping in the city yesterday. and were | ex- | cannot | in| d bonded ; handling | crops at points within the state most | . Thaddeus THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE vator dilemma and that is for the legislature to! ERE TODAY D, a business ix found murdered in a cheap hotel in Grafton. Volic find agwoman's handkerchief and the stub of a yellow theater ticket. ' RAND, his daughter, her engagement — with Y VIN, because of the JIMMY RAND, his lansfield, where the is. The stub is traced to a political boss, THOMAS FOG- ARTY, who says he gave it to OLGA MAYNARD, a cabaret sing- or. Jimmy meets and falls in love with MARY LOWELL. Later he encounters Olga. She faints at hearing police want her for mur- der. Mary, out with SAMUEL CHURCH, a wealthy lawyer, sees Jimmy lift Olga into a taxi and misunderstands, Olga tells police the stub might have come into possession of a man who “picked her up” two nights before the murder. Jimmy receives mysterious warn- ings to leave Mansfield and later is attached by two men but ‘es capes. With Jimmy and teanged, Church gets Mary's comise to marty . Jimmy id Olga, out one night, see # they both recognize—she as man who got the stub, he as ne of his assailants. The man escapes, but they teal chim by his police photo as JEN- Church, motoring with Mar; runs over a His heartles: ness causes her to « their agement. Mary writes Jim- o tell him about it, but the y sticks the letter in his nd forgets it Jimmy gets a phone call from Olga, saying she has found The Jensen. Her eoends ina xasping cry. While he and O'D:y trying to reconstruct” the xcene the phone rings. O'Day answers it and tells Jimmy it for him. my tells O'Day take the call—that no one sed to know where he, Jim- re full of Obga's isappearance. sieuteaens O'Day then tells dimmy he found a picture of Henry Rand, taken when a boy. in Olga’s apartment. thought that Olga may been implicated in the murde after all, rises to torture him. Mary = ex- NOW GO ON WITH TH CHAPTER XLV he next morning there was a ght letter for Jimmy from Detee: He was still in New nd he had found Marie She was living in N | alone, still unmarried, But the | was thi “Twen amazing “part, to Jimmy, years h Rand, down in City. He was ‘living there. changed his name to Thomas Rolfe ago HERE ON BUSIN ! Lioyd Maynard of Painted, Wood {township is transacting business i the city for a few days. PTS POSITION | iner of Leeds, N. D., has epted a position Norther cific freight depot. AC the . Wilkinson has i position in the offices of the Robinson compan HERE FROM HEBRON Mr. and Mrs, Emil Krouth of Heb-, ron are spending a few days in the city. with friends. Gamble- ZIE VISITOR of McKenzie has re j was He came one night tv hear her and recognized her. Asked her she knew whereabouts of Henry { Rand. “She did, deus but she hated ae Thad- and didn't tell him. r seen Henry Rand s m the ring. when she was in Grafton. She wrote to him in, not even tell him about seeing Thaddeu: “She didn’t read about father's murder and was broken up when I told her. 1 think with her it one of romances thaa! never die. I'm writing you in full and we're looking up Thaddeus Rand in Mexico City “Well, can you beat that He looked at Jimmy making an ap- never to cried n blank told } said Jimmy, “that Thaddeus and had said some- an apartment in! ¢/not going to marry That was years; your! He grinned. “Shall |your regards?” ” Jimmy said | ,Brimly. of lead pipe.” the way, Jim," to appear casual, |heard anything lately Loweil?” “Why no,” Jimmy keenly. “What makes you ask: “Oh, nothing particular.” Barry shifted the subject. “I wish you'd take ime up on my proposition of taking you to a little money: until | get on your feet again.” othing doing, Barry.” | “Weill, let me be your financial j manager, then.” Jimmy laughed. “I'll agree to per- mit you to keep me from starvin| old socks. When I’m up against i hard, ['ll call on you.” 1 give and from Mary Knowing that Lieutenant O'Day's jrising hour was somewhere about; noon, Jimmy hastened to call him by telephone and apprise him of the ie news from Mooncy. said O'Day, “He's a smart | lad, “tat Mooney. s Tell him. af che ‘over needs a job there's a place waiting for him in’ the detective j bureau here.” | With Barry, O'Day agreed that it was not so strange Marie Rellanc’s refusal to disclose to Thaddeus Rand ithe whereabouts of his son. “If you ask me, Rand, ft! J old boy ishment, nk the had it coming to him. Pun- you know, And I along fine now. we're going to get this before very Day had no idea “said it just how wonderful he wa 1 going to win nm satd when, fresh nee, he met Jimmy Rand “I think they see I've got licked. This fellow Church made me another proposition toda: and it was just twice as good as the ifirst one he gave m You're getting pretty oman, aren't you? what they say about Church. He doesn't licked.” “['m not afraid of him. ifact, he seemed Cy from cky, You know this man know when he’s Matter of to be a good deal you see Mary Lowell, Barry paused to ‘From behind his cupped hands he watched Jimmy narrowly ashe ‘spoke from lips that were clamped ght on the cigaret end. “Y. saw her. She asked about you. } “Asked about me? No, Barry oh, don't kid me about it.” ; “I'm not kidding. I say she asked bout you—and she scemed greatly interested, too—a good deal more ‘than you deserve. You're just a stub- born_ blockhead. “Wait a minute.” the other's arm short. “Stay Now what the ing at?’ “Oh, Vil put you out of your mis- light a cigaret, Jimmy grabbed and stopped him right where you are. devil are you driv- him “With Barry “have you looked at him! a “a0 RNA MR N15” BO LZ IT TET IS OE ie REY CTO [Gal nid Bie ‘|Gas ard Electric Rates Reduced in Grand Forks, Fargo: | (Continued from one) |tion “at the expiration df a reasona- ble test period.” Under the comn sion’s rules a “reasonable test ‘per- iod” is usually from six months to a year, In the Minot and Grand Forks elec- tric rate cases the length ef the steps ‘in the present roomerate schedules were reduced. Under the room-rate plan the amount of electricity paid | for at the high rate of the first step ‘ig determined by the number. of rooms in the house. The old sched- ule was 11% cents for the first four kwh consumed per room, and 10% ! cents for the next four kwh per room, jA rate of five cents per kwh was {charged for all electricity consumed in excess of 8 kwh per room. The new schedule maintains the present rates for the first two steps but cuts the steps to 3 kwh per room, All electricity consumed in excess of 16 kwh per room will be charged for |yt the rate of 4 cents per kwh, a re- jetion of one cent in the rate charg- ed after the first two steps. Towns Also Benefitted Reductions jin electric rates also were made to the villages of Berthold, | Des Lacs and Lone Tree, served from | Minot. Commercial and industrial electric rates are not affected by the new residential schedules, Investigations by accountants for jthe state board shows considerable improvement in the status of the var- ious’ public utilities — companies throughow. the state, Milhollan said. He regards this as one of the basic indexes of the state's general pros- perity, Remarkable strides made by the companies in_ increasing their earnings since 1922 have made the re- ductions possible, he explained, al- though statistics filed with the board j Show no companies ar making an unreasonable return. Increased use of elect rie appliances expected to follow the reduction in ates at Minot and Grand Forks, thus increasing the consumption of cur- rent and enabling the companies to spread their overhead costs over a greater volume of business, he said. PRESIDENT LOSES: RACE TO“BEDSIDE (Continued - ‘trom pege one) fathers of presidents lived to see their sons inducted into the highest public office, and among those who did Colonel Coolidge had the distine- tion of being the only one to adpin- ister the oath of the presidential of- fice to his son. M was this more than the mere fact he had become father of the president that caused the attention of the nation to be rected to bim. It was only a few weeks before —_ ene thousands of persons from all parts of the country. To Washington. Occasionally After his son became the occupant of the. White House Colonel Coolidge made occasional trips to Washington, but always appeared glad to get back to his farm and the life to which he had so long been accustomed. Although naturally proud of the! success of his son's career, the fath- er never was heard to take any credit for it. “When Cal was in school,” { he once remarked, “I thought he would make a good doctor, but his main thought as a youth was to get a good education and I did all in my power to help him. As a boy he al- Ways went with me to the town mect- ing, town caucus and such things and always when we had a public exam-| ination for school teachers. He was} always interested in such things.! to do he attended to it and did it the j best he knew how, whether he liked | {it or not, and I think that’s what he, has always done.” Colonel Coolidge, although primar-; ily a merchant during most of the years of his active life, was a man of many interests. After his school- ing’ at Black River Academy at Lud- low, which his son later attended, he worked for the vitiage wheelwright cutting timber until he was 22 years of age. Then he rented the general store ut Plymouth and conducted it! until 1918, when he sold the business| to devote his time to insurance inter- ests and his duties as an officer of; the Ludlow Savings Bank and Trust! Company, He was one of the organiz-}° ers of the latter and a charter menr ber of the board of directors. Prominent In Politics At the age of 27 Colonel Coolidge was elected to the Vermont legisla-; ture and was the youngest represen. tative in the session. je sérved six) terms as representative and one a: state senator. In his home town he was tax collector for 38 years, a de-! puty sheriff for more than 40 years’ and schoof director for a long per-| iod. He also served as moderator | for the town meeting and was assist- ant postmaster for 49 years. In the! last® named position it was said in the village that he was the,only per- son there who was suffi tly fami- liar with the forms of the postoffice department to make out correctly the{ detailed reports required. His ser-j vices ulso were in demand in the set-! tlement. of estates. A visitor to Pl, toes once remark- ed that the colonel a “to have been everything in this town ept the undertaker.” To this he replied that as a youth | working * the wheelwright’s shop he ndilated in making coffins. “And we thought,” he Added, “that it was a cheat to use anything but hardwood for coffins in those days.” i Colonel Covli 4863 mar Victoria Josephine Moot They lived in a tenement in the rear of the store, whore President Coolidge was born, until 1878, when upon the death of his father the colonel mov- ed into the letter’s home, the present that the son, then vice president, with his family had returned to the paternal homestead for a vacation, In the midst of his family reunion and holiday came the death of President Harding. It was near midnight when the news reached the Coolidge home on the little mountain village of Ply- mouth remote from the railroad, and immediately plans were made for swearing in the new president, ery. he doesn't love Sam Chureh. No more than you do.” “And yet,” Jimmy said she’s going to marry him.” “Wrong wgain, | youngster. bitterly, off with him some time ago. “Barry, if you're lying I'll.” “Yes, 1 know you would, Cocky. ‘But I'm not lying. 1 ar it on a stack of Bibles as s the Wool- worth building. + “Listen.” He laid a jJimmy’s shoulder. “Do you remem- ber my saying to you some time ago {to mark down the date in your note- book? You remember? I told you some day you'd appreciate me for ‘the great benefactor to mankind that iT was? ! “Yes, I remember. +What’s it got to do with what you're telling me?” * “Just this. I told Mary Lowell hand on A Dramatic Occasion The ceremony was delayed long enough to receive from Wash- ington the official form of the ggesi- dential oath and when it arti in the early morning hours the staggwas all set for one of the most solemn and dramatic inductions of a presi- dent in the hi Colonel Coolidge was thrust into the picture much in the manner of an understudy suddenly called upon to play the leading role in a drama, The vice president had decjded that his father, by virtue of his} office ‘of no- tary public of Plymouth, was quali- fied to administer the oath, which was done in the living roo of the Coolidge home by the light of a small kerosene lamp of the _ type commonly used in farmhouse kitch- ens. The coremony, thus performed amid surroundings that ‘were more like only ‘means of conveyande. Making. ory of the country. | Coolidge homest Mrs. Coolidge died when Calvin was 12 years old. The colonel’s second wife was Carrie A. Brown, who died in 1920. ‘Speaking of the affection between hia ‘second wife and his son, Colonel Coolidge once suid: “Calvin was never 20 busy “but that be wrote to his stepmother every week. and sometimes oftener. And she could see more in him than I could, She took more stock in his Some day begoming president than I Enjoyed The Radio Although thousands of automobiles visited his home after his son ‘be-| came president, Colonel Coolitige never had a desire, for this modern | the trips which his varied business inter-| ests demanded he stuck to his buggy and old horse, which he remarked in: 1924 was “about played out.” He took kindly, however, to the radio and in his later years abandoned his lifetime practice of retiriny early in order to listen in, especially when an address by his son was being broadcast, He was greatly touched when President Coolidge at the close of an address near the end of the 1924 campaign said a public good night to his father. The death of Calvin Coolidge, Jr., son of the president, greatly affected The point of it is, whatever he had| d up to $164. FRIDAY, MARCH 19,1926 Ea home. Aat the farm house the prea Attorney General Sargent ond. Mi- closely by Mrs. Coolidge and John. A battery of canieras mounted on cight foot snew heaps beside she porch clicked as the party passed into the house of mourning. Attorney General Sergent and Ma- jor Cours Uiellewed the president and his family nto the Coolidge home. Across the road in front of the gen- eral store, the entire population of the Village stood in silence as the presi- | dent passed. Funeral Tomorrow. Major Coupal announced that the, funeral would be held fromthe house * at 2 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Rev. John White, Episcopal clergyman of Sherburne, will officiate. Burial will be in the little cemetery here where many members of the Coolidge family Rev. Mr. White conducts Sunday af- ternoon services in the summer sea- « son at the Union Meeting House here where the Colonel and his family wo! shipped for many years. Dr. Shortridge Is Bound Over to District Court - Mandan, N. D., March 19—Dr. W. R. Shortridge, Flasher physician, waived examination when arraigned in justice court here late yester noon and was bound over to dist: court for trial-on charges of practi ing medicine without a license.” Dr. Shortridge was arrested recently for practicing medicine several weeks after the supreme court ape action of the state board of medical examin- ers in revoking his license. Bond was fixed at $500. Shortridge is also under $10,000 ibond pending supreme court decision on his appeal from conviction of sec- fond degree murder in Stark county district court in connection with an * alleged criminal operation performed upon Mrs. Angela Holta, Bismarck, nearly two years ago. Bidding Brisk On State Land Leases Bidding was brisk on leases for state and school lands in Burleigh county at the annual leasing, which was conducted today at the court house by Frank Keibert, deputy state land commissioner. There were about 50 people present at the bidding, and bids ranged all the way from the minimum of $15 per quarter section, to well above $100 per quarter. One 8#-acre piece of land, the north half of the southeast quarter, section 16, township 188, range 80, was bid This tract is in Lincoln 4 township, just south of the city of Bismarck. Salvation “Army Fancy Work and Food Sale at Quality Meat Market, tomorrew afternoon. beens and see what we have. Women’s Peace-of-Mind under trying hygienic’ condi; tions is assured this new way. Gives absolute protection— discards like tissue DANCE, a sheer gown, to be A worn; a dificult hygienic situ- etion. You need no longer give this complication a second thought. The hazards of the old-time sani- tary pad have been supplanted with a protection both absolute and ex~ quisite. It is called “KOTEX” .. . five r ub, where all — thing about not being worthy of the; your story. I explained to her who] ¢y, 1 f th « her|the colonel and his friends said! gimes as.absorbent as ordinary cot- | the meadow folk have to get groom-| VISITING HERE name of Rand any more. It's not| Olga Maynard was. Now wait a thabieethe twentieth contumn a fn[ that he never fully recovered from 4p pads, i y he shock. jed up so they'll look decent for; Mr. and Mrs. George Pehl of Arena| surprising to learn that he changed| minute, let me finish. I realized 1| conformity. to the simple teaditione| the shock. Abtorbs Ghd Wendorines vatatie«“ ew OLIVE RORERTs BARTON | spring. i ity today with, his name.” was butting in and all that sort of | that have marked the lives of the ;E PARTY REACHES time.. Thus ending ALL fear Before Grubby so much as opened fri “He kept the same initials. Isn't! thing, but you're such a darn fool,| Coolidges of Vermont for many ycars,| COOLIDGE PARTY REACHES same. a GRUBBY GROU INDHOG FOLLOWS. his eyes, they were right at Ruba- i it queer how people do that when i ‘ ee Colonel Coolidge—he obtained his ss halaatiti pearly rm co of tendita: = ee S NOS! dub’s house. n change their names?” what did she say?” rank from service on tl atalf cof ||) caymoute, Vt. Marc Riana aS ‘ou discard it as easily as a piect eae sal. Wick Mens t person’ Grubby| and Mrs. A.W. Mundy and] “Not. so queer, when you realize %, Governor "Stickney ‘of Vermont--ai-| 2zesident Coolidge came , home 1 7 Socallagand ic au canly ate ese stood beside, Grubby.” Ground, | 8 Was that man with a towel daughters left this morning for Min-|how often they have clothing and ways lived in Plymouth, where he| Plymouth today. At 10:10 o'clock the| barrassment. underszround | Oe bis arm anda big pair of seis-, neapolis. Jewelry and different things marked imo. doubt. sbout ib, You know, she| sax born: March it 84D. ‘The: fact |peeldent seeved sat the wilt fei)” 7 so altew content any. sors in his ss ci ‘ i Bere ee rnce tam as he: slept. Graliiy tried italy bul he wae | “ROM GhGREI: Hin haalesaeahic ile wintice Manat — Het change his ane oy C, Coolidge, lay dead. He was driven| drug or department store simply by Where-Spring: Wa Comtaet ent, | too stow. ‘ uM. ilfang of Sterling trans nd strode to the win-| “Bub Chu ou aid —" the exception that, he to Plymouth from Woodstock, accom-) saying “KOTEX.” Women ask for TEL Sand: tine where he wee They washed him up and trimmed business im the cily yesterday. gaze thoughtfully at the} “I just learned today that she had’ spend considerable _ ti panied by ‘Mrs. Coolidge, thi san it without hesitancy. Outside the snow was just about! ay “untied Min ‘and bewthea ttl HERE ON BUSI Baus Bend woalill hte Lock, Day Raa lola har comer yous int | eicee ehnsraure ts * Golldee Major demos. Coupale White Hote, TfY Kotex. Comes 12 in & packness # ipo Little naniltal ombed and ed ERE OD si jeus Rand is still alive. Lord, Barry, before I told her abou , tov.!of the place whare Calvin Coo . , essary ris! Sticking in. around] a4 J think they put a few. drops of} J. Allensworth of Brittin was | this thing might be cleared up before Jim, she’s crazy. about you.’ But|was born and spent his, boyhood. | Physician, Proves old ways an unnecessary evga the sky | Prilliamtine on him. But, it, was of in’ the ‘city yesterday on business. know it Hf we cantinae to made you're such a pig-headed fool, She )These tourists came by “thousaids| The presidential party arrived in es te : e loo bette my e « YES ler. Imagine . not hinder motor * ic to Henle " r } a Nick “andthe March oraies ff to the Ea Wher Ode aaah ot Mott paca busi: finding Nee Rie iecniiie agaenal lage, The colonel took-a. great pride| seven miles of snow covered roads. Hare were laughing. For oe ee ping. Oh ves! f for. ness visitor in the city yesterday. Rellane, as she’s called now, so Why T'didn't know all this about her | in showing them the table where the _A military guard saluted the execu- No laundry—discard like tissue er ee taney, Ini Bia sleeps | he wuant mad eee | SON BORN er "she ‘rald sh dl taet pent ine kitehen late and tie magcintntiuatesan eedineite nosed nae ? tell you now why he was acting | * cys & 1 Is oath -\ “All I hope is that we’re not fol-! he said she wrote to you an he » the ki in lamy d so funny. (To Be Continued) Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Culligan are the fi win, blind trail to be running: you never answered Bible used in the administration of Bees cin Mares is ed atl cm Parents of a son born March 19. iiss abl Rcllang aya Theldcue ls et size dimmy’s | sleeve, | the, onth, He also prized highiy’ his a big red apple in two and laid tne R “Come, let's move along. el get zistar, ‘i A pigees right under ¢ : arge Audience Dea eS Stee je eiaormethings boli. tan -sectew n'y Laue aed for biocking the sidewalk.” | books containing the signatures of Bon groups Hears Judge Burke auoeieeanaiaeee ca Baciy.. Semetnine tells. me. the sail i, BBR Ronen cepoge te aan City to Mansfield. When — we| only known — custard pie. Judge John Burke delivered an in-! ROM WING Nidisaut “Mate Mimenttiine toal Thee walked plone beighly. tabs So it’s no wonder Grubby’s poor | teresting address last evening on the K. Skeis of Wing is transacting jyeurs that Thaddeus Rand has been!luter, when Jimmy had time to re- st wriggling itself off nearly.| subject, “A Trip, Through the United business in the city today. in Mexico, we're going to be at the! flect, he wondered that Mary Lowell Quaker Oats ie was dreaming. ry,” to a large audience, a aaa i y's: Tad i d t they He was dreaming that it was sum-|a nt chufeh as the shind| (5). J MERE TODAY, = oat of ‘all this snyhpery, jehonid. beve popenred JHAb Oe they A MODERN HOME IS mer and he was stuffing his sides out| Humber of the entertainment course! John Monroe 0 win is In the) «What gets me,” Jimmy said r! It was Barry who first attracted 73 29 3 with sweet apples in a sweet apple spane ed by the Baptist Young P city. Fedex. on takiness, that day as they were cating lunch,| his attention peaking ‘of 8 E ‘a orchard. f Judge Burke's informa- : why Maric. Rellane should relugey angela” he: sighed, there sg : There's a fine one,” he would mut- — nipbions eee i nan, | McKenzie Hotel serving | to tely Thaddeus Rand about my) now. - : or i »{ gained during the time he was i rhe ti Meee Shei Ue tho ‘ol pusactin® | States treayacee me" noonday. lunch at 35¢; eve- Pees ican umdoratand TEA gerade ag bee Thee you-through —and household finances. ry a f Saal " in ce a P en rei fe rd . 4 Serre tak fall off the tree and nev. | ine high nckool wee eniorede Te, | Ming dinner, G5e. Luncheonst piety “aia. | “it she. really. loved | Words formed on her lips, And just i these days are handled much t anyvants on it. Not that I'd mind|c@ncluding number of the course witi|and dinners served for pri-|Henry Hand as much us Mooney las. he was about to Jift his hat and th morn 1 : an ant or two. Some of them are|be given next Friday evening. vate dinner parties either inj scems to think she did, she certainly erect her, he spied a familiar figure e 0 more convenient Iy and. sys- ii " | . . , t J e fo ut to rd a street car. ee a: wick? ead Ton Late To Classify | main dining room of private| sno broke up the affair “even if at| J "He wheeled suddenly and ran‘like tématically than in the days tammediowe VOR RENT—A garage. 417 ‘Tenth | @ining room, 35¢ and up. We the time it was nothing but a school; a* mad ~man, leaving a surprise- hen Moth d to as, Ts thai “with. odkwa Ss . aot ee oe he day | kid romance. 4{ stricken Mary Lowell and an equally Z when Motner used to manage apple? he muttered. ““iv's gone: It| WANTED-by couple without ‘childs | CAM S@rVE YOU any hour, day) eye she thought so much of| flabberganted Burry Colvin, Important for Children ithout a bank ft. was over by this old grindstone and| ren, two or three room untweniehed | OF Might. ee bee, way: Shomianty see aioe (ip Ee Saeinben) and Grown-Ups Alike without a bank account. " cl : Sa aaEe na EEitieeenaee of his happiness? Wouldn't she realy} enrsinwemer en a 4 ¢ eke 5 Pee eRe ce emell|, spertucat, private hath. Best rat: Remember the Style Show ji that he would like to know where; QUIETS “DIST RB 9 RACKING sed da Here in Bismarck and: on a is own father was ou feel all-morni deviate io big ices ot pe Se naa are a WANTED—Competent girl bs aia tonight. 7:30 to 9 o'clock—) “Not necessarily. Like most of! 3 Li SLE A ea H hence on what, sind oes for’ i nearby farms. are many wo neler ageeE Grabhy’s nese. Cone] “for general housework, One who| Bismarck Cloak Shop. + {the other pronie im hele tittle town.) fs ie ine tar ure hen ‘Nigred. | Breakfast, ‘Thousands have’ uncner- ‘/ men who consider an account along, old man,” he said firmly. can go home nights. 222 8th street. Rend had killed ‘any catlection: Habe ipaere: zo into the making of FOLEY’S | getic forenoons becausc of wrong “Geubby thew buck the covers ana} PHONE 869-J. Call after 5:20 p, m. | might have had for-him. She's of the, HONKY AND TAR, No opiates, just- | breakfast. cating. at.this ban ean indis- got slowly out of bed. ‘Then. all he I! Tg Holding His Own |e herseit, you know, that saree eked etihour medion salae |p. tesee mee ave aan have a well pensable household conven- did, my dears, was to follow his nose, ‘ a grudge for a long, long time. ul, nced, etc breakfast ration. At just follow his nose! = Faia hae ee 4 tne could see was old Thaddeus eat-| Read the bottle contents aa xiven on | Palanoet complete breakfast ration. At ience. We'll welcome your 1g |, Muncie, Ind, March 19.—Elmer| «Ten y, I wiih Se as arn why FOLEY’S | most other mea y se eit " igeled Nancy. “He's! Hoffman, 49, volunteered to direct! derful help from your medicine ford ie lent thet cette foe tia (HONEY AND. TAR ls the superior | You get i. But brealcfast isa hurried - account, too. ; Sid Nick. “He thinks he’s tae iB ae oe vtgre uo. Pelee my stomach trouble that I have rec-! And why should she, with so “much | cough remedy, safe for children and | meal, ofteri badly chosen, sea roerd smo hy i) Rotem ne, alinan ot emesis cena oc gat fe algo, nye mae anegn eye an clue, fr |""Ths Quaker Oats conning 19% | get 0 i a ry 5 a a ‘ , tis ilder, : — Tight along, Grubby;” suid| the, Workhouse for 68 days to “sober| whose brouser in & distant city was) MEBy Feil; it takai/all:baliecto aka EMR CRRA li anes eeianaes tree A art a ppd ete i. ihe Tels hich i Masten thie ee was bk ocepeind ene Boe. Sinktgnericig: tuppaae. But if she heq|Manas® Sabstli¥iae: Ad | clement, plus all-important ‘vitamine 8, wi is the way i . only told my father, things might! - . . obalk” i wink at you sometimes. “Come right Dance t, Elk’s Hall, brother to take a bottle on my ad-/have turned out so differently, All| MeKenzie Hotel serving | and the “bull: it aoa lesadics al ter Groundhog.” Mandan. Music by by the KFYR I have just received word that|this*—with a vague wave of his : = | seldom is the dietetic urge a i he ook «step, and Grubby te Lis brouey woe nobel thats aa hand—“needn’t have happened.’ noonday lunch at- 35¢3 eve-| the world today. Sep fod Ny ete tvrac'a | Curing Mir. Welk, Plano Ae-|irrcoe tel” "net cite | ssa, hedn, Rng_| ning dimmer, 6c, Lapcheons ist ~,. Tul ° » Le —j - Magch Hare always carefi ap armless preparation that removes'| have “died Aer cians cea, re served: fe i Start every rery breaktast in your es Beningon wae joce of apple. just tat the catarrhal mucus from the intes-| "Barry stood up and signalled for| VAL dinner parties either. 7 is A, Graham, Vice President and Cashier, Grins te 5] | Remember the Style Show iar ck cietaamyutans | bi. ae gent, ge malin dining i Ot te 30 § Cone ; pace the crooked hall tonight, 7:30 to 9 Pie een. ANSES thet diay: utes, t's faster than plain toast. age suit. I suppose I'll have another. MH h, liver and intestinal ai! indi \terview Church.” Don’t deny yourself the FOR Te) simulation this righ.food offers you. 4: oy: | Bismarck Cloak Shop. your friend, Sam