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“PAGE SIX | The Bismarck Tribune THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) : Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at ismarck, as second class mail matter. I want the clectorate. The sole issue was “elect me, merely a mad hunt for pelf and plunder. Voters more and more sense this and are inclined to let well enough alone and if an official is doing fairly well, the: turn him to office. Reports from all sections of North Dakota reveal _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WHAT MOTHERS SHOULD 3 Nor BE be dear, I hadn’t sent her many themselves but which her mother? (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Ine.) | TOMORROY Armstrong, as it seems rather incon- gruous that a young girl carrying a Yoming Back to Earth, x ggeternumno rere a eae naa oben 6 aa bBo SI at aaeee THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1926 It was a big house made of sticks and homelike, ‘There were Grandma and Grandpa ver, sitting on splint chairs. and ng comfortably. And there were the Beaver -chil- dren playing tug with their little flat tails, all over the place. thing.” the | e 1 had coe ine OMe oul? mud, with a rourided pode Ye Nancy had ‘noticed -a a. in ‘ i "i | jan't it, that the modern] side, it was pretty dark, but glow-| the wall. “I think you nm new ‘An Independent Newspaper Under the primacy system most campaigns iare sun yetdeentiices (hut are| waphaiinem:senderit TORE. vey ene OCs paper,” ake ald? “Oh, no,”-snid Mrs. Beaver. “My husband will fix that up nicely with w little glue.” A ‘ouldn’t ‘you like your paintsat" asked Nick, “They would only wear ‘off again!” said Mrs. rn ae floors joodness, no! D. Mann..........President and Publisher 4 , - Miss Cleaver | started I thought bag with gold fi T Pa -| + “Don' ‘i fie ri : s gold fittings should And there evas: Papa Beaver whit-| , “Don’t you need your roi an indifferent attitude toward the approwching Priv} syther guildly when T told her the] ing for a twenty-dollar-a-week job.” ting some atieke with nis-aharp teeth year PumnTmnGasdo Or abyihing ?” Subscription Rates Payable in RAVENS maries of this state. The mildewy platforms of! bag she was examining belonged to} Silently I still held my hand out, to get the bark off for soup. asked: Mister Tingaling, with a} be- { le ; waling, Daily dy carrier, per year... yeste! y and the moth-eaten red flag, grasped | ™¢, and the woman had no other thing to _ And there was Mama Beaver cook-| wildered look. i Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). aaa iat ves of North D “I was just looking ‘through it,”/ do except give it to me, but she e ing dinner, or supper, or whatever it] “Not a thing,” declared Mrs. ) Daily by mail, per year, arg und waved in the faces ef Nor M-I she said, “to see if there were any] looked at nie with hate, that showed cuve 8 RADToN is that beavers have at night. Beaver. ‘‘Do we, Daddy ~Benver?’ (in state ‘outside Bismarck)....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. Th The: ¢ political trap! ate as flat as} kota voters, fail to stimulate. pings have lost their kick. | ment.” identification tags in it before send- {ing it to the Lost and Found Depart- she wished might have seared me as she did it. T had a rather sinking in my heart | MISTER Piet CAN'T BE- “Come. right in and make your: selves at home!” said. Mrs: Beaver hospitably, when she saw them.” I “No, sir!” said Mister Beaver. “Not a thing, thank you. And -here’s your rent money, Mister Landlord. -Jt’s Member Audit Bureau of Circulation funeral baked meats. | IT looked at Mr. Armstrong re-| as [ realized that I was not going to) z ALEVE HIS EARS was just thinking it. was time you! little enough for such a nice house.” North Dakotans nre reading the weather reports |Pfoachfully, and said, “Surely” this} have as easy tine as I thought in the) | “We must go and collect Mister] were coming around, Mister Land-) Mister ° ‘Tingaling blinked. and Member of The Associated Prens North Da ts igentleman would have known that 1| Morton Department Store if this wo-| Beaver's rent next,” said Mister| lord. See here, Mister Beaver, here's| blinked when -he \got outside again. i The Associated Press in exclusively entitled to the | with vastly more interest than they are the mouth-| Would be right back for it.” man was going to be my boss. ngaling. “I completely forgot| company! And “Ma and Pa Beaver,| “Children,” said he, “will you please ' use for republication of all news dispatches credited | ings of the politicians. Let well enough alone seems |, “That is what I told Miss Cleaver,”| [ looked at Mr. Armstrong, Was | about it when I made my last trip to can't you wake up long enough to] pinch mé to see if 1 am* awake or i * ‘ the man protested.’ “But she said} it meant for nk, that slow ciosing | ple Creek.” ‘our guests good-day? Here, chil-| dreaming? T’ve never heen: treated | t it or not otherwise credited in this paper. and also | to yo the most popular issu " at's! le i ee ith j br the local news of spontaneous origin published here- o be the most pop ss jthat it was such a yaluable bag that) of his left e I took it for one an We'll, have to put on our swim me and shake hands’ wi like that before in alt. my life.’ ! in. All rights of republicati { all oth socal she would send word to the Lost and| dete ned to ask him the first tin ming clothes then, won't we?” said ople who have come 'to| « «To Be Continued) | herel eee akan mene {Found Department, for that is prob-| 1 got a chance what that woman | Ni ‘ You go and get chairs (Copyright, -1926,. Bt Sect) rein are also reserved, 7 ably where you would look for it. In] hated me fo A I had never seen her know ee wate) acre eh iditari the meantime she would take charge] before in .my li " said the fairyman landlord n't two minutes before a ree een res | Editorial Comment of it herself.” . AIL WETS AobRACH hunch. “She is en if w to go underd Mis, Heaver had each person feeling ANY { “Thank you, TM take it now,” I] in love with the man Robinson.” 1| water to ge ; can't get wet] as though he or she was the finest CHICAGO DETROIT 5 ey t sai I held out my haad for my} said to myself, “and she is jealous of | with so much magic along.” person on earth. Tower Blig. cigs Bidg Why Shut Your Eyes? 4 "T couldn’t resist’ winking back | “I know, Mister Tingaling,” said] In about three minutes Mister PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH (Des Moines Tribune.) x e sure, Mr. Armstrong, . Armstrong from behind Miss k. “I was only joking.” | Tingaling was saying, “I came to see } NEW YORK 2 3 Fifth Ave. Bldg. ‘ i oe nein seaeieaacel ww | that palsile the young lady who left rs Hid to let him know that I ‘i Well, then. let's be going,” said it there wah ane ioep A coud (ut Safely { : A curious item of news has come in the last few | this bag here?” ood ister Tingaling. ‘ ix up your house a cer, Mrs, is 4 { Maal (aie, jays fron the Phillppitiee: Tt was a nasty inference, and 1 was! It was rather late in the afternoon | It wasn’t more than five minutes| Beaver.” Beacanl® \ Wit | “ficial City, State and County Newspaper) _| ‘!tys from the Lda at fitat going to vocally resent i, but when I left the Morton store. 1 didnt | and fifteen steonds before the Twins] | “Oh, no! No indeed!” said. Mrs. Na , Mane aoa ee ent Wood's object! I kept my temper. want to go home where I knew that | and the little fairyman fount them-| Beaver, “You don’t need to do a Voters Apathetic Governor Gen, aes Wood Tee st the “Yes, Miss Cleaver, 1 am perfectly | Mamic’s other would ask me all selves “in the underground, “hallway | thing for us, Mister Landlord: |Our ‘ St. P: nak cee og ‘ me asp 0 the inscription on the stone tablet of the sure. I noticed the bag when she ts of questiéns in her querulous}of the Beaver Warren. For t so low for this beautiful place, Sie Paul:had & sity election the other day,‘snd-of | ee ee ee waiting” which reads,» \/leame In 3 T determined to go out to the| what the Beaver family cal erything is 40 convenient, We money BARC UELE STRENSTED py pac : 104,000 registered voters not more than 55,000 voted. ey ee ie cry ich reads, 4} “Na. only asked the question, Mr.| park and scribble a note to my mother, | house, A couldn't think of asking you for any aoREs The same condition obtains in most cities and states “Erected by Filipinos as a Monument to the = —_——————— Rights Won in the Cause of Freedom,” a " caused its removal despite the bitter oppo- sition of Filipino politicians. A more appro- cription is being prepared by an ' of the union, Unless aroused over some vital issuc { the average voter won't take the trouble to vote. He | usually dismisses the obligation of citizenship with | } x shrug of his shoulders and the trite remark: “1| priate in : i um not interested who gets the job.” American architect. t Too many lections, after all, are merely battles | Now why should not the Filipinos put their own oe between the “ins” and “outs.” Under our system , ription on a building ereeted by them and paid | of government in this state, we elect a governor and | for with their money? then allow a legislature to divert all his power and! In what way is Governor Gen. Wood interested responsibilities to a multitude of boards and com- | in the inscription the Filipinos put on their buildings missions, even the appointment to which he is not | and why should an American architect be engaged to | always entrusted. He is hamstrung in many other | substitute something for what the Filipinos hav ways as far as initiating policies goes. planned? St. Paul refused to get excited over its election; Is it not about time Americans were waking up to fast Tuesday. The voters realized that Larry Hodg- |! what our American rule is meaning in the island de- son, who had served two terms as mayor and was | pendencies? serving a term as finance commissioner, would have} Within ten years if this keeps on there will be a} * no trouble in defeating the candidate of organized; great hue and cry for American boys to go over and! labor. No outstanding | issue stirred the emotions + of | whip rebellious: Filipinos into subjection. | ———_———-. as a dangerous practice for intimidation | of writers. |. NEWS BRIEFS War department abandoned 1926 de- test b of opposition; | distrivts tests or a quadrennial national test. struction when they formed | fighting brftade and extin, fire which destroyed a sm house annexed to an cle a fire | ed a 1 engine | Grand Jur: indicts warden and four convicts at Flat Top prison camp for murder. Polish cabinet resigns. The regular quarterly ex: aminations will be held in the | court house at Bismarck | Thursday and Friday, May 13 and 14. Examinatiotis will be-| in promptly at 8:30'a. m. each elected | | day. Robert Scott, brought from Cali- fornia to Chicago to be tried for murder, convicted of robbing phar- macy. Democratic senatorial candidates fail to poll a majority in Indiana Mid state convention must ponent to Senator Watson, Mrs. R. H. Demaris N. D., was-elected pre: District of Federated Club: ildings bill) lier, N. D., and-Langdon w to conference. "for next year’s meeting p! 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