The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1926, Page 4

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\ Sn SSE j REE SSN pe cetanceta ope erccennn RETR (PAGE FOUR . sections affected. The average bank has $100,000 capital, with a million and a half of deposits. The j banks that suspended during the last two years ave jeraged less than $40,000 in capital with $280,000 | deposits. “The Bismarck Tribune! An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Compan: Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffine at! Bismarck, as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher | Poison Is Poison Still H Chicago attorney swallows a tablet of ‘arsenic to | “prove” that arsenic taken in small quantities ; Subscription Rates Payable in Advance jdoesn’t kill. Well, he proved it. He lived. i Daily by carrier, per YOAT. es seseeeseeee $7.20; But don't try to repeat his experiment, even with | Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) 7.20 | Daily by mail, nek pat, ae “| part of an arsenic, or any other poison tablet. Your (in state outside Bismarck). 6,00) constitution may not be equal to his in combating | Daily by mail, outside of North D: aia i 6.00 | the poison. ! 3 i 1 Member Audit Bureau of Circulati And don’t relax your vigilance and care agai Member of The Associated Press : m ‘, exclusively entitled to the | When doctors or druggists mark anything “Poison, The Associated Press use for republication of all news dispatches credited | helieve them. to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also | the local news of spontaneous origin ublished here- i ! leaving poisons free for junior to reach and taste. | at same Chicago attorney will tell you that, | Be What Our Songs Say in. All rights of republication of all in are also reserved, Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY other matter | although he won his case through a “loophole.” { Do not be alarmed too easily after washing your | jears. All noises naturally sound greater then, | | ! ! CHICAGO z RESP ATE RINT Tower Bldg. PETROM | Among the- strange things in this life are bald | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH { barbers, skinny cooks and lazy married men. NEW YORK oe : Fifth Ave. Bldg. The difference between some people’s singing and ; te SNe SE CoSitey NEMPEERE) | having a fit Ins they can't help Having HVS: A Word From Helen ; = ae ' Helen Maloney speaks her mind. The Brooklyn{ The trouble with our music is it originates in New girl thinks the young ladies are not getting a square | York where every one is in such a hurry. deal from the government. So she addresses.a let- | ter to President Calvin Coolidge that reads like| Practice makes perfect. It takes quite a bit of this: i practice to kiss like an amateur. “I represent girls with a grievance. We are dissat- isfied with the way the government treats girls. We | Sour cream will not be noticed in coffee if eH think girls are just as important to this country as | throw it out the window. H boys and they should receive the same opportunities Sr LET { from the government that boys do. “But they don’t get them the way things are now. The government takes and trains thousands of boys every summer at citizens’ training camps free. Any | boy can go there and learn to hike, camp, swim and | shoot. i “What does the government do for girls? “Besides, these boys at college are kicking at | Editorial Comment | Write Your Own Moral (Duluth Herald.) William Allen White of the Emporia, Kan., G: {zette, is not only a successful novelist, but is prob- something they get for nothing, while girls in the |ably the best known newspaper man in the United same universities go out and practice rifle shooting | States. Although he has made a fortune with his | on their own time and expense without any encour- |books and is a man of large affairs and varied | agement or instruction from the government what- | interests he still edits the Gazette and personally ever. writes most of its editorials, editorials so readable “Still, it seems girls are not worth bothering ;and of such profound insight into American life and j about. After showing their desire to develop them- | thought that they ‘are constantly quoted in all parts selves they find that only the wonderful young mer. | of the country. | are given the chance to go to C. M. T. camps this; Last week he wrote-one about an Emporia mer- summer. chant and there is so much in it capable of appli- “Is that square, Mr. President?” cation to business everywhere that The Herald is It was just_like a White House secretary, opening | reprinting most of it here. He said: the mail, to observe that, judging from court records,! “Twenty-nine years ago A. O. Rorabaugh came to = women already have shown remarkable proficiency |Emporia from Topeka with a little stock of dry in shooting. goods. He spread out his stock in a twenty-five foot room—the north part of his present store. He ran along a few weeks, and then the writer of these lines who was advertising salesman for the Gazette in those days—also reporter, editor, copy reader, telegraph editor and printer in a pinch, who could also kick the Gordon jobber—breezed into Rora- baugh’s store with a proposition to sell Mr. Rora- baugh a page advertisement in the Gazette. He had tried a twelve-inch double, profitably, but it about broke him to pay for it. We were a fast-talker in those days. Mr. Rorabaugh tried to resist. But we fixed him with our beady eyes, and he succumbed to this proposition, to-wit: “We would write the advertisement. We weuld go over the store and get the prices and advertise a special sale. We would fill a page with it. No other dry goods store or any other outfit in town had ever used a page advertisement before with special prices for a day’s sale, And the terms would be as follows: Nothing, with no discount for cash. We would run the advertisement two days. It seemed reasonable to Mr. Rorabaugh. But it wasn’t. The man could not win this struggle. After seven | The crowd broke into his store on the third day and years Nature beat him to earth, rolled a torrent of | put him out of business. He couldn’t‘afford a page « words over his foolish dam, crushed utterly his self-| advertisement hefore that day. He has never been made restraint. The man found silence unendurable; | able to afford a month without one since, + at the last he spoke and spoke, a terrible storm of| “Rorabaugh’s store has thrived on two principles: words that his racked mind had stored. First, getting the goods; second, letting the people He gave the world one service, though. He lived | know about it.” for seven years in torment and wrecked his life to prove that the hater really kills only himself. Mostly Common Sense (Anoka Herald) Listen, fellow scribes of Minnesota! Do you real- ize that this year we are in for the regular patting on the back from the politicians which usually is the sum total ef appreciation we ever get for helping jelect them to their jobs? Political “Thanks, old man” do not meet the news- Paper man’s payroll or keep his Standing good with Hatred Kills 3 Nature has her own peculiar ways of retribution. Build a dam to keep back the waters of a mountain = lakes and, unless you build it very strong, a spring freshet may carry it away. A man in Iowa had some slight difference with his wife and decided he would not speak to her again as long as he lived. For seven years he carried out that silly yet sinister threat. Their simple home life, that had run on evenly for nearlly fifty years, suddenly be- came damned by hatred. - Stubbornness placed the barrier there. Self-will, * so used, becomes one of the most sinister of life’s = forces, holding back the refreshing waters of mercy from the meadows and the forests of love. But, in the endy who suffers most? The wife, who must look upon this reincarnation of the fa- miliar desert image? Or the man himself, who has imposed upon his natural emotions and instincts this terrible barrier to choke sweetness out of his life? e aw Music hath charms, but more than that it may be “ised as a criterion of the character and personality of the singer. A study of the music of the Tule ~fndians of Panama shows how the peaceful life of these Indians is reflected in their music. Tules, also Known as “white Indians” because of frequent oc- \ \ \ ete Gis JERRY PROPOS:! “Does it make any difference, Judy darling, that we ha t known each other very long? I knew the minute that Jimmie Costello introduced us the other night that you were the girl I was going to marry. love you. I never knew what love meant before.” The car gave a lunge, for the saan beside me had taken one hand off of the wheel and had pulled me up closer and was bending his face to kiss my lips. “Here, you guy, can't you see where you are going? Wait until you get her home and then you can kiss her without killing all the rest of the people on the street.” “Oh, you go to hell,” said Jerry, as he promptly hugged me closer to him. “I shall not let you send me there! if I can help it,” answered the mang] as he swung his car around from the sidewalk wh he had had to turn it to keep Jerry from running into him. “Good Lord! It’s Jerry,” said of man. T looked up and saw Jimmie Cos- tello and Mamie. “Come on back home, Mamie, and il) tell you all about it.” “If you ever do get th eiled Jimmie as we raced ,out of ‘hearing. “You haven't answered me, swee heart,” said Jerry. thinkin’ ‘bout. Don’ you know I]the doorman to a tip. Perhaps “Yes, I have. I cannot marry ain’t goin travelin’ with no strange|this is the beginning of a new democ- stranger.” man nowhere with all that cash} racy...... And then, hough T had come so! money?” ' Going! Going! Gone! The world near a tragedy or perhaps ‘because] TOMORROW: Mamie Suspects famous. Vanderbilt mansion is now T was so hysterical that I could not] Sellera, but an irregular sequence of brick- SaaS A ES SEEN |" 5s Lea Ee reo br) ee fe -TWINS Naney and Nick and the Whiffet kept right on looking for his shadow —the Whiffet's lost shadow, you know. They asked everybody they met if he had seen it, but nobody had. Jack-in-the-Pulpit, however, who is a very learned person ard knows about most things like shadows and such, gave them some good advice. “Why don’t you go to the second- hand store?" he said. “They keep all| sorts of things. And even if you| can’t find your. own ‘shadow, ROWN.WAY of Today | gurrence of white skin, tow heads and grey eyes ‘among them, have songs of the happiness of life. There are no songs to give success in gambling, no songs connected with the food supply, and as they have never been at war, they have no war songs. Many intempretations of America’s modern songs have been attempted. Opinions differ with the in- terpreters. However, the lightning rapidity with his wholesalers. The newspaper who yearns for office. “But I can’t afford to advertise in the papers, there are so many in the state!” plaintively sighs a lads of the state are being seratched back of the ears, tickled under the chin, petted and exclaimed over that free publicity may be available for every Tom, Dick and Josephine ffet. | ' you may find one just as good. “Why, so I might,” said the little Whiffet happily. “Where is the sec- ond-hand store, Mister Jack?” “It’s kept by a fairy called Dusty, up behind the barn,” said Jack-in-the- | Pulpit. ‘Ask the Old White Horse. rect you, And while you're at it, if you see a shadow cheap that would fit me, just have Dusty wrap it which we change from one song to another must reflect a restless spirit in this country, a spirit which urges us to seize upon “something new and different,” quickly tire of it and continue the search for the unusual. on candidate, H Listen, Mr. Candidate, does the auto manufactur- er furnish you the car in which to campaign, does the shoe dealer give you free shoes, the clothier free clothing and are you always fed for nothing at the hotel in every town in your territory? Don’t talk nonsense about not being able to affor:| to advertise your candidacy. Face the truth and admit that you expect, the newspapers; to give you free space because they have always thus. been worked in the past. That day is about over. Some newspapers still | fall for the free plate graft, some are led into giv- | ing space to long winded palaver from candidates. But most of the live papers in the state have quit | giving away space for this sort of thing. The wise candidate is'the man who makes a list of fhe newspapers in his territory which he thinks have the circulation, standing and influence which will help him. Then he sends a:nicely worked ‘out they'couldn’t get along, he could have left her! He | political advertisement to each of these papers and = ’t have to murder her!” , pins to it a check for what he thinks is cach paper’s Surprisingly human! Dramatics get us all at first: | regular commercial rates. - But, given time, common sense asserts itself! “The result will be that the astonished and de- lighted publisher in nine cases ‘out of ten will do wonders for that wise candidate. — Don’t talk “can’t ‘afford it” nonsense to the, coun- try publishers and buy large space in the Twin City where nothing is ever given away. as honest with the country publishers as you - | want the voters to think that you are with them. | reserye|- Try paying your way with the publisher as you ks in’ the |have to with every other merchant, Common Sense Asserts Itself Jake-Nesbitt, college graduate and fraternity man, who confessed to murdering his wife because she ni him, goes on trial soon. fl EB and his wife were leaders of the younger set in.the little river town of Troy, O., where the murder aise 42&.During the month when suspicion pointed at Jake, + Froy ‘rallied to his defense, shouting “impossible!” Ph even when dapper Jake, wife murderer, con- Pet. the town still rallied to him, saying, “Poor Jake! He was nagged into it!” y That was two months ago. Today a soberer, juster citizenry says, “If he did it, give him the chair! If | you? up and mail it to me collect, will But I won't pay over seven and a half cents for it, or three fora quarter, mind. They haven't given me and salary since i started preac! ing, and I'm living on my savings.’ “Haye you lost your shadow, too?” said Nancy in surprise, “Never had any,” said Jack. “The sun never gets in the woods here. But I'd sort of like to have one around if [take it into my head to go visiting. I may go to gee my grandmother any day.” is and the Whiffet thank- he-Pulpit for his advice and promised to get him a shadow also if they could pick one up cheap. Then they said goodbye and started off to find Dusty’s second-hand shop behind the barn. . “Yes, fou're on the right path,” whinnied the Old White Horse. “Keep to the right when you pass the corn- crib, then turn to your left at’ the pump. That takes you right through the grape harbor and when you get to the end of it you will see the wood- pile. Mister Dusty’s second-hand store is between the wood-pile and the batn.” ; The Twins and the Whiffet thanked the Old White Horse ‘and followed his directions. And in three winks and a shake of a lamb’s tail, they were there. The sign said, “THINGS BOUGHT AND SOLD. BOUGHT EXPEN. SIVBLY AND SOLD CHEAPLY! KITE-TAILS, EAR-MUFFS AND] INGREDIENTS A SPECIALTY. STEP IN!” < So in went the Whiffet and the Twins, and a little 1) somewhere went tingaling—aling, and out came @ small person with a business-like color? and dark black.” “Oh, T'll take any Whiffet. “Perhap: shadow, though, Mister must have found it.” dwell upon the strange episodes of the evening, I giggled. Jerry looked surprised. “What are you laughing at, dear- est?” he asked. |e ‘A story Mamie told me this morn-|* ter. in, Again Jerry looked surprised at this serious~ juncture in our lives I should think ‘of a funny story. Hows ever, I determined to tell it to him. At the rate we were going I knew we would be home by the time [ had finished. “Mamie has a story which abso lutely illustrates this stranger com- plex. ‘We were talking of something] .. this morning and I remarked that we were all strangers in this world and Mamie laughed saying she had a friend whose colored cook had been in the family for many years. The woman had given her husband all her money to invest. One day Mammy Liza came to my friend and said that she would like to go away for a week on a little vacation. “You sce, Miss Annie, I’se goin’ to get ma’rid, and I want about twenty- five dollas—jes about twenty-five dol_ las, Miss Annie. “But Mammy Liza, you had better take a hundred dollars on your wed-| i ding trip.’ “Now, New York, May 12- from an afternoon's Manhattan: sounds obtained by a couple of knobs organ man and way less keen The sight of millionai: ijss Annie, what you all look, who said he was Mister Dusty and what could he do for them? “Do you keep shadows?” spoke up the Whiffet in his high squeaky | tracts crowds La bce hae skyward at the pi “What size?” asked Mister Dusty. | planemotor...... “Whiffet size,” said the Whiffet. “Whiffets are all alike. They're just as big when’ they're babies as they are when they are grown-up.” “I see,” s: Mister Dusty newer than the newe: comes marching down up on his shelf where several folded} jt will be tough on hatters but-fine up shadows were lying. “I'll look and | for barbers...... " see what I have. Is there any special There never WAS ANGER ONE Uke iT = hing!” You have my own} pack 1 lost | slowly. it coming over the stile and someone: ter in a single block than Kan it jurri The new is old: old is new, and if it’s old enough it’ asec I have light black, middling Dusty. “Maybe so,” said the fairyman, un-'one seems at home.. folding all his shadows on the coun-/hats and many (To Be Continued.) { (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) ’ IN NEW YORK |, : BID BE BAER SOS EAA cattered notes | street east of Third avenue. ramble about! Hurdy-gurdies giving up their old; t Side haunts in despair now that’ 0 Joud speakers shout, sing and! orchestrate from every third window! - What chance has a mere asth- | and organ against the endless |g... mere twirling of I meet an old wending their westward where competition is! sing generation of street gam./ ins will stand in noawepf wealth and Wachter a y A’ generation ago the and society. folk stepping, in all their splendo: hotels and theaters would h: something to record in a Horatio Al- ta Today impudent and ply nervy youngsters rush up to any taxi stopping at any public spot! and open the door in hopes of beating in A sandwich man rides past on an 1880 variety of velocipede; cutting cunningly in and out among the taxis and chummy. roadsters....... who would not look ing of an The army of hatless boys and girls the street. reaching |If this hatless movement keeps t East side streets are so much more EVERETT TRUE —AND SMINDAMR, TRUS, == AKING (OF THEO PERSON :: BECO =\tL CERTAINLY Do. Sous —==9{ } Ww ‘BY CONDO AERE’S NOT THE LEAST DOUBT IN MY . THAT MY THEORY OF HOW me \ THE ROBBERY WAS COMMITTED (Sen. RULES. mes - ( \ i HEALTH SERVICE Excitement Is Wrench Tossed Into Our Digestive Machine way, just as soon ‘as partly food begins to empty into the ‘in- testines, n chemical messenger is sent to all the glands taking part in in- testinal digestion and'a steady flow of intestinal digestive juice is ready for ‘the oncoming food. - ° In digestion of food in, the intes- tines, the most important in the body, BY DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING Surgeon General, United States | Public Health Service It has long been recognized that {various emotions are accompanied by special facial expressions. Certain kinds of feeling, especially the happy kind, help the proper functioning of the organs while others have an UN-) there is a beautiful interplay of vari-\ favorable action. hae ous juices’ and chemical digesting The energy for our activities comes] agents, from food. From meat, milk, eggs. 6 Excitement cereals, vegetables, fruits and greens WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1926 we get sufficient protein for tissue building material, sufficient starches and sugar for energy, sufficient fats, All these nicely balanced reactions of digestion go on best in happy sur- roundings. Surface effects of ex- mineral matter, vitamines, and water ‘to enable the body to work well and citement are well known. Thus the contraction of blood vessels with re- ried the | and chatter and gossip. fine ‘been He at- * O'Brien restaurant, meal ticket 5.00 ip sulting paleness of the face, the sto; ping of the flow of saliva, the ri ‘ing of hairs, the rapid beating of the heart, the quickened respiration, the trembling and twitching of the lips, are ‘bodily changes which all have seen in excitement, especially in fear, horror and pain. Not only are external organs affected by excite- ment byt the deep ones also. Studies have shown that the condi- tions favorable to proper digestion are upset when we experience vexe- tion, worry and anxiety or when emo- tions such as anger and fear are al- lowed to prevail. By strong excitement, particularly of the me agent kind, the secre- tiong of the glands of the mouth, stomach and the intestines and the flow of bile may be checked for some time. In such conditions the food lying heavy in the stomach is an irritant rather than a benefit. The moral is if we have experienced an outburst of passion or strong excitement it is well not to take nourishment until we are calmed down and are willing to look at things good mi ly or with a courageous poise.. This applies to man, Woman and child. If this rule were followed, there would be fewer nervous dis- orders. to keep up its power to offset injuri- ous neies. With a limited dict there is lack of proper building material, lack of proper mineral ‘balance and of vita- | mines, These dangers are especially marked when ‘the diet is made up mainly of highly milled cereals such as soda biscuits, white bread made without milk and yeast, white rice and similar articles, but these ticles of diet are efficiently utili ed by our bodies if mingled with meat, ‘milk, greens and fruits which supply ‘their deficiencies. Digestion Given a fair chance, the human sys- tem digests the food, assimilates the digested products and rearranges the absorbed material with a precise and | admirable harmony in which the vari- ous organs and cells interplay. This harmony begins even at the sight of food and with pleasant sur- roundings continues until the food is utilized for any activity we desire. ‘This may be seen in the watering of ‘the mouth, which is but preparatory stage in digestion. ri a vente of the sight, smell, d feel of food in the mouth, @ message is sent to the stomach, a | flow of digestive juice is started and tthe digestive processes are enabled jt go on without delay. In a like jalive than any others when warm! weather ‘comes. Broadway crowds! seem to drift without rhyme or rea- son,...In the push-cart belts, crowd | of neighbors gather....They laugh . The streets 0O—$$$__$_$__—@ solidiy....The people move) (Mercury readings at 7 @. m.’ ,More laughter and chat-; Bismarek?—Clenty roads faye. St. Cloud—Clear, 60; roads good. Minot—Partly cloudy, 46; roads rough. {see up town in half a mile....Every There are few The sun- Mankato—Clear, 60; roads good. shine draws them out....Two by t Grand. Forke— 38; roads ....+. Four by four,... Perhaps it is! goo ‘ the dreariness of the tenements.... Hibbing—Clear, 54; roads good. {Surely they spend little time there; Jamestown—Clear, 56; roads good. in pleasant weather.... And the up-| Fargo—Cléar, 50; roa towners seem so cooped up, even when) Mandan-—Clear, 58 out of doors... Winona—Clear, 61; In pleasant weather give me any Rochester—-Clear, rouds rough, Duluth—Clear, 53; roads good. shawl. | —GILBERT SWAN. | (Copyright, 1926, NEAA Service, Inc.) | —__ || MANDAN NEWS ‘ | Bills Allowed By 4 ag ARE City Commission || corm Eleanor ani larie Me- fiatna iain 1, Cormick, Hazel Bethke and Lily Rendickson will leave tomorrow for Fargo aceompanied by their teacher, Miss Hildegard Hanson of the Home Economi¢s department of the Mandan high school, to enter contests at the state agricultural college, The girls won honors in their classes during the year and earned the trip as a re- ward. The events in which they will enter are cooking, clothing, home management, health, home nursing, textile and table service and etiquette. Miss Hanson will remain for the conference of the .Smith-Hughes teachers of the state on Monday and Tuesday. The girls will return home Sunday. Modern Dairy Co, milk for de- tention hospitul...... -$ 16.64] Washburn Lignite Coal Co., coal 12.3 R, W. Sanders, supplies...:... 17,70) Bismarck Tribune, printing and advertising bees 175.18 Co, ice, ?y0.75 ‘Transfer Van R. Middiemas, paving re- wood, ete. 20.24 ++. 249.48 ma- £ +. 835.30 Sn herr ne eet F. 0. Anderson, labor and terial Montgomery's Grocery, groceries ee : G. G. Bertlion, paving refund. . J. B. Smith, groceries Mrs. Anna Brych, laundry.... Northwestern Bell. Tele. Co. services ...... Ed. Waterhouse, 57, employed as a teamster by Stephens Brothers, con- tractors building a new federal road in Sioux county, is in the Man- dan Deaconess hospital in serious condition as the result of injuries sustained late Monday afternoon. Wa- terhouse was driving a wagon loaded with dirt when,.in going over rough ground, he was thrown from his seat and beneath the wheels. He was run over by the heavy load, sustainin three fractured ribs, one of whicl puaceured i: june. ne was taken to ‘annon Ball and was brought to Man. dan yesterday morning by train, ¢-——_——_—__—__@ | A THOUGHT | Ye blind guides which strai en and swallow a cameli—Mate. Standard Oil Co., disti | International Association Chief of Police, dues. » 10.00 Lenhart Drug Co., barium carb- sote ......... French & Welch int or . repa! Bismarck Motor Co., repai Wachter Transfer and labor.’...../ Street Dept., pay roll. Cash account, cash. eee God has given you one face, and you make yourselves snether- Shakespeare. cast when German withdraw their cabi: cause chancellor. insi of flag with monarchists’ colors, Paternal control of fede Washington by. of Commerce, Downfall of Chancellor Lather fore. Democrats vote to t members be- on ‘retention president of United States Chamber proferly butche: mink skins, dressed and stretched five gray fox pelts or one silver pel together with 100 full-grown delivered in season, is the Charlie Big Eyes must pay That was the decision han down in aiveree ‘Rroceedings by tribesmen ird the case agai of this village. wunst the native found dead in his ——_. DON'T ASK HIM DICK: Where did DIGRL s ere did you go on your DENNIS: Gosh! Don't ask me. I was driving thi sia me ane i the car—London An. Negro shot and hanged in Labell, Fla, on theory jhe attacked-.white ‘woman who later told-friends he only frightened her. Chicago gato 4 crime _ investi, prisoners at honor farm ate allowed freedom to comnilt robbeties to buy son : Lig ope, tamed Flapper Fanny Says: Dorothy Jean Utley, 14,:of Bemidji, : Minn. was in: d to. President * Coolidge at Washington.» t Petitiom was filed’ at” Brainerd’ une recall’ of Mayor GeorgejA, Site cage ; ierr resotutir ing’ ‘sale of state-owned tion and equipment at ‘Watertown, dison and Coroner's jury at Arlington, Minn., returned verdict of suicide in case of Fred ‘Neimann, 50, oo who was ee St: Paul, causing Stapman, 54, a mai age, Minn. in th of Royce W. carrier, of Say- Lee Vuh 22, formerly of Valley | City and Lidgerwood, N. D., scheduled | to at Boise, Idaho, Ma; Ine. deen ‘posssoned “sending, apres ine mn po: n ing app ‘te supreme court, according to word received at Fargo, : A rig ‘ee. of daily use Some fiddler, le, inatead f just stviee ‘ihm ‘alcag® ae « *m ve r? “eo aw

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