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PAGE FOUR Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER as second class mail matter. Mann....... George D. z orto! Rates Payable in Advance ‘ Daily dy carrier, per year........... re Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck). . Daily by mail, per uk (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Di Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press § The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the { use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alsu ublished here- the local news of spontaneous origin ; in. All rights of republication of a! herein are also reserved, Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITII * NEWYORK - - - Sed The World Shrinks The trip through the Suez or Panama canals from London to Tokio is upward of 12,000 miles. By steamer to Canada, across, and again by steamer to Tokio is about 11,000 miles. By the Trans-Siberian railways it is 8,000 miles. By way of the north pole it is only 4,600 miles. The time factor involved in the regular routes is in the neighborhood of 21 days; in the Polar route it is from 30 to 60 hours. As time has=become the most important unit of meas- urement in travel, the trip by air over the pole would reduce the distance from London to Tokio to one- fourteenth of the normal time over existing routes. It is true that, at the present time, the hazard is great, but man is the hardiest and most determined of all the animal kingdom. Man will not be denied. ; In the past, seemingly insurmountable obstacles reasonable to suppose that in time he will also con- quer and tame the north, and that his hips ply in comparative safety from London, Paris Rome to Tokio and Pekin. | Within a hundred years the world has shrunk to lessthan a.hundredth part of its former size, as rep- resented by the time factor. By sail packet from London to Tokio was once a matter of months, with a danger element equal to that now attending the polar flight. It has shrunk from months to weeks, from weeks to days and from days to hours. The average person fails to grasp the full signifi- cance of this change. The majority of the world’s f population is grouped about the polar region. One of the great causes of war is laek of understanding and sympathy between scattered peoples. Every shortening of the processes and channels of com- munication and transportation brings the peoples of the earth in closer touch with each other and in- creases the required sympathy and understanding. The world advances with such bewildering rapid- ity these days that one is constantly at a loss to keep up, mentally, with the march of progress. and Scholars Outlive Athletes The athletic tradition is said to be endangered. The ancient and persistent habit of athletes to sup- pose themselves vastly superior to the bookworm in point-of health and physical fitness has received a jolt at the hands of certain statisticians making a comparative study of Princeton University alum- ni of the class of '75 in which they found that the scholar éutlives the athlete on a general average. A similar survey of Bryn Mawr supported this theory and furnished the additional information that none of the members of this class who attained prominent positions took any special interest in athleti University men claim that this case against ath- letics is unfair, but, granting that the athletics of today and of fifty years ago differ, the injury to health resulting from the strain of the highly com- petitive athletics of today places the advantage with the class of '75. However, it isn't athletics that are at fault, but the present form of athletics. Students of '75 went in more for the spirit of ath- letics than to enjoy glowing triumphs. Today, vic- tory is coveted at whatever cost, even the cost of broken bones and weakened vital parts. It is time we returned to the spirit of athletics and devised ‘2 form in which all college students could take part—not just a chosen few with the others “taking their exercise in the grandstand, : srepneareeomernset The House of Despair If yoyth could see the end of the criminal’s road: could visit for a day the house of despair and sorrow that is . last@tagion on the route of the trans- q gressor'! wOtA Two Kansas City boys were given the chance the other day. The judge had sentenced them to 30 days in jail for motor car thefts. It was a police cap- tain’s idea that one day in the penitentiary, where they could see closeups of the result of crime, would help them more. So fot a day they went to the earthly hell where men are caged. On the way they passed green fields where birds were singing. Other men had gone the same way, years before, heard the birds and reveled in the gorgeous beauties of field and stream, for the last time. In thé house of despair and silence, a train robber ff gave 7 the best advice a man can give. { “Boys, I ’m telling you the truth,” said Bill La ‘Trasse, ‘crime doesn’t pay.” The boys looked out over the barren prison en- clesure, where men broke rocks and rocks broke men. “They others toiling in the summer heat in a coal | mine, hepeless men, automatons, machines, human > picks shovels. They saw still others sitting in , oy | light of sanity gone from their dull eyes. : ve learned that bandit Bill La Trasse was cet eyes have been opened. aM Voters Must Not Sleep : the voters’ go to sleep strange things hap- at polls, Popular and efficient, candidates jp down in defeat because ‘the public had ; is ever “settled” in politics, and Knox- in., is one example. The people of Knox- ported the city The Bismarck Tribune ae (Established 1873) the Bismarck Tribune Company, ?°'t for the manager within the council succeeded. A manager cannot work if he is fought at every ust have the council’s backing. ident and Publisher} manager at Knoxville had broken his health in? ‘fighting the people's battles, without reward, so he $7.20 | did the only thing feasible when he resigned. . 720, - 5.00 sseeee 6.00) Published by, | eotiy N. D., and entered at the postoffice at (Official City, State and County Newspaper) have vanished before his iron will, and it is only} the saddle again. { councilmen, jturn. He’ | the polls, ‘cigar bands. Maria got the injunction. | We like this songbird from overseas more than Kresge Bldg. |ever. The spirit had grown a bit wearied of the i] | eternal, pose of prima donnas upon cold creams, per- | Fifth Ave. Bldg. | fumes, cigars, malted milks, nursing bottles, cab- | ; check for the saying so. | We thank Maria Jeritza for her good smacking | | slap at Bunk, \ ~ | The Dry Ruling | death. The Golf Title the honored title. isfaction in his new honors. ‘read. When he “put the bug” on $1200 of her money, she got suspicious, and then found out that friend’ the doctor thought so, too, whatever ! years, ‘hubby was engaged in the hazardous pastime of | he may have told you about epileptic betting that the people who bet on horse races were wrong, Her next husband, one ventures to predict, will not be so literary. A new Zeppelin is being built, scheduled for com- pletion next autumn, which will attempt to make a non-stop aerial tour of the world in 22 days, starting from Spain and crossing the Atlantic, then to Pana- ma and across the Pacific, and then back to its | .¢. Spanish base. time, either. | Well, anyway, the Rome to fall, so does America riow!” Bryanism. nobody but the depositor. is unnecessary. little or no loss upon the depositors. has lost a dollar. lose. Jeritza and Cigars Maria Jeritza, golden-haired songstress of the | | Metropolitan Opera Co., will sing, but she will NOT | have her lovely physiognomy on cigar bands, says so herself, emphatically, in asking for an in- | other matter | junction against Louis and Isidore Cohen, which | {would prevent their using her name or picture on | a tele ee sneer nam wate Ae es TLCS, eran tte. It all happened because the vot-| ers napped on the job, while the politicians didn’t, ; The politicians forced a recall election on certain} The voters refused to take the recall | |seriously and the politicians’ plan to weaken sup-| When the voters doze there are queer quirks at. Maria | -|bage seeds, and what have you, with their eternal ; eto of “Gooey Soap Makes Me Sing,” when everyone knows very well that the nearest said | prima donna came to Gooey Soap was via a nice, fat.} It now appears that President Coolidge’s ruling allowing state officers to also be Federal prohibi- tion officers is to be pigeonholed in the interests of peace and tranquillity. The promulgation of the ex- \ ecutive order certainly stirred up a beautiful rum- pus—in fact far more than could have been antici- pated’ from an innocent little ruling devised to give | a semblance of legality to an experiment which the state of California was trying out for itself. | The rule will probably not be rescinded, but, since the states are under no compulsion to take advan- tage of the order, it is to be presumed that the | _ scheme will die a natural, although far from quiet | The winning of the British open golf champion- ship by Jess Sweetser, an American youth of en gaging personality and possessing an uncanny abil- ity to lay an iron shot dead to the pin, will please many who were anxious that, America should win However, the greatest number of golfers will rejoice because Jess Sweetser is just what he is, a clean, hard-fighting player, cheerful j "% °R4,! would mot. loser, generous winner—and all around good scout. Golf fans the world over will wish him joy and sat- A Cleveland bride, seeking divorce, married a y bookmaker, thinking, in her trusting way, that he | bottle, Mr. Robinson, was a writer and manufacturer of books that we It may fail, but aircraft men won't be discouraged. |to jump and jerk and wiggle and Some day we shall see aerial cireumnavigations for tourists—and 22 days won’t be considered very fast Earl\-Carroll-girl-in-the-tub episode gives orators, ministers, educators and social reformers a new illustration with which to prove that “even as in the days of Sodom and Gomorrah, even as in those evil days that did cause dissolute [ Béitorial Comment | After Sixteen Years (Chicago Journal of Commerce) | After sixteen years of experiment with a law guaranteeing bank deposits, the Kansas legislature is expected to repeal the law at its next session. Kansas adopted the bank-guaranty theory just after the nation ag a whole had turned it down, You May remember that in 1908 Mr. Bryan campaigned vigorously in favor of a national law for the guar- anty of bank deposits, while Mr. Taft pointed out that such a law would put a premium upon bad bank- ing. Mr. Taft and his intelligent view prevailed’ in the nation, while Kansas shortly thereafter adopted The Kansas law is intended for the’ protection of And for that purpose it Experience has demonstrated that |that I just learned the day before a banking system can be so supervised as to permit the entrance into the business of only a very small Prcportion of incompetent or dishonest mer; and these men, after a brief existente, end in failure, which imposes a loss upon the stockholders, but | The Chicago Clearing House has been operating |” for twenty years. In that time there have been a i few failures among member banks, but no depositor | Path ley mot Praynd'just as aulet- Any arbitrary guaranty of bank deposits thereby penalizes banking ability and puts a premium upon recklessness and frauds on the part of a banker; while on the part of a depositor it removes the in+ centive to exercise caution in selecting a bank. Why should the depositor pick and choose? He cannot Meanwhile the honest and competent banker sees money going into the bank across the street when he knows that bank is using the money recklessly and that this recklessness is in some measure guar- anteed by him, as a contributor to the guaranty ; fund for the protection of depositors; and so he, | plan of government j himself, tends to get the what’s-the-use attitude’and | Nick said, “Can to slacken in caution. This development is not goo! for a state’s bgnks nor for the state’s business in- terests. ‘ The | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i | H 1 i} i} i | A BRIBE What are “My God! Miss Dean where did this, Mise Dean, you get ahis bottle 2” In his horror and fright Mr. Rob- inson dropped the bottle to the floor and it rolled under the counter. He did not date to stoop down to pick it You'll not tell one about this bottle. you will not. ctor Flint , | way he treated Miss Cleaver. I felt him kicking around among the papers and saw a look of come upon his face and I under that he had found the bottle with foot and kicked it, as he hoped, out of sight until after the store was closed at, night. “[ just told you where I got the & talk to you about’ thi truth. I pieked it up from the floor| “I on which Miss Cleaver was lying: I }| think it cont: d carbolic acid, and/ can't Cleaver did this terrible thing. S has ‘been in e store the last i drawing one of the 1 fits, for I know he gave his patient} among the; women. an antidote for the terrible burning poison,’ ‘ou will say nothing to anyone. Cuivs ROEEDTS ‘ shadows instead of t en the Twins and the Whiffet}had found his shado could be sure. epped onto the Zigzag Path that|ets, necktie, ears fand all! And th prays strangest thing of all was it led to Hidy Go Land, the path started | fyranmest Thing of alk was it | to jump, and jerk and wiggle 2nd) ple bombazine suit. “Do you suppose Mister Snoopsy starved it? ly keep their feet. They might yust (To Be Continued.) as well have tried to walk on a ham- mock. “Oh dear! I can’t stand up!" criéd Nancy, clutching at Nick. “Neither can 1,” said Nick rench- || ing for the little reg-bag boy, who had been bounced clear off—and ai- most head over heels himseif. Suddenly they heard a voice say, “Highty tighty! this won't .!o! And }you children with magic shoes ’n everything, too.” There stood their old friend Mister Havalook, with his laundry under his arm. BARBS BY TOM SIMS most as well as you can at home. Yep, It’s Hard to Teach ’Em New Tricks vou going to do about uny- Promise me Nid you show it to ‘ay much to him, for did not like the He seemed more anxious to get her out lief | of the store than of saving her life.” stood] “Oh, Miss Dean, you must let’ me But until I get.the chance I want you to under- stand’ that I will promote you to any position ‘in the store and make your salary double that of the place you buttit seems] take if you will only attend to keep- you did not listen, Maybe you| ing.silence about this deplorable epi- thought I was not telling you the, sode. understand why — Mis hin the; Ist’ 10: hus been rgest salaries My dear, I will make your salary equal to hers if 2 And that minute a streak of some- thing dark seemed to shoot out of the cave and throw its arms around the little Whiffet’s neck. But no one What they were sure of was that. in the patch of sunlight where they stood, there were three The Whiffet at last, pock- (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Ince.) “o Some recreation sports are so quiet and peaceful you can rest there al- Sixty miles an hour is plenty fast. cept when you are in a hurry to silent, Mr, Robinson. 1 will not say anything to anyone. I am afr: however, that you will have to in- crease your salaty list to unheard of Proportions if you shut the mouth of each person in the store who is talk- ing about Miss Cleaves.” ‘ This recalled Mr, Robinson to him- anyone was listening, and then he said: “IT cannot talk to you here, Dean, Miss Won’t you come and have dinner with me tonight and we will settle this matter, I think Miss Cleaver will take a vacation until she recovers. Indeed, she may not come back to the store at all, and perhans you might work into’ her position in time. How would:you like that?” > (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) reach some place. Then thirty is about right. Wouldn't it. be nice if you could wear a pair of new shoes a few days before putting them on? : If you have kept coal in the bath- tub all winter it should be serubbed out with sand this spring. é during Every home A man around the house the day_is useless, should be without one. The hard thing about making ends meet is they won't stay met. Knickers make most men feel like a nine-year-old and look like ninety-year old. Chop early and avoid the weeds. (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) “A héspital b out to be put in service on the Yukon river in Alaska.. “You—you don’t se—em to—to have any troub-trouble,” sat Nancy. “How—do—do you stick on?” “It’s a charm,” said Mister Hava. look. “I tie a knot in one corner of jmy handkerchief. If you have no handkerchief along, an end of vour necktie will do, or the end of your! apron-string. Just anything so you, ave a knot along.” it Well, THAT worked all right, for; in spite of their tumbling, the Twins got their knots tied. But the Whiffet had nothing to tie. And I don't know what would have happened if Mister Havalook hadn't brought his laundry along. But he had it right there so he lent “Whiffet a sock, | and that fixed it. “Now then, go right along until | you come to u large silver maple tree with reddish blossoms,” said Mister Havalook. “Right behind it you will see an ivory door. That’s the door of Mister Snoopsy’s cave. But lis- ten here! I want to tell you a secret yesterday. It may help. you out if the old rascal gets obstreperous.” With that Mister Havalook whis- pered something to Nick, and picking } up his bundle, he was gone. No, I won't tell you just yet exact- | ly what it was that Mister Havalook whispered to Nick. It is to be a sure} The Twins and the Whiffet had no| more trouble after that. The Zigzag ly as a pam of taffy. They cr@ssed the violet patch and the hepatica patch and the anemone | patch and the arbutus patch and the dog-wood patch and pretty soon they came to the silver maple tree. And there behind it was the IVORY! cd OF -MISTER SNOOPSY’S; “Oh dear! Do you really think that I am going to find my shadow at last?” said the poor little Whiffet, as Nick knocked loudly. But ‘before Serboay could reply, the ivory door opened suddenly and there stood Mister Snoopsy himself— @ terrifically tall, fierce shadow in the shape of a pirate. “Who are you and what are you—” he started to roar, when suddenly | - enuffers!” just like THAT was the secret’ Mister Havalook had told him. And here is the surprise! Instantly Mister Snoop- sy melted into ‘smoke. In:a minute and a half he was gone altogether. Fe} { MRS. TRUE, L SEE FoR ONCE Re ACTUALLY ON TIME. WHAT'S GOING TO HAPPEN, ANYHOW !? “| to ring up given a getl to. Fats ven not back “You don't have to pay me to keep THE STORY 80 FAR rries Ben Murillo, a weaith Ital , to please her impoveri ily. She, sacrifices ‘her Timmy, a boyhood sweetheart, married life is a serics of humilia tions by Murillo, ‘near seems to cement her bondage. GO ON WITH THE STORY FROM HERE Chapter 18. those invitations?” agitation. the best. son for including those names.” reason for ineluding my friends?” here were some on that them.” “Timmy? Oh, you megn Timmy ?"| she trembled. iA ‘k flush spread over his‘ sal low face. He leaned: back chair, blew the smoke from hi: arette, watcNed it curl. can let our friend Ti of the picture. iy the best move for all concerned.” She stood looking at him, white and still as marble, het hair a:flamé »I cheeks and She said, icily:| friends had’ come, against her blanched smoldering eyes, by “You think it best for all ‘partie concerned, do you?’ Well, “I don’t! and walked out of the room. Sandy went upstairs. @ little. table pushed near hier wi them—were bobbing on the~ water. white sails gleaming in the sun. tain islands. ‘ ithere in San icolas, girl abandoned for eighteen years. Santa Barbara remembered word she said. on the forlorn, rocky waite. known’ She said, ‘grimly, self and he looked around to see if you. opinion. dod: snub ‘ing. -If you do self wi threats. last one. Don’ t try % carry it, d desperately: ? “He'll not dare to“test me. Hé's afraid of what I'll do!” would be easy-——EAS box of correspondence cards. Sandy MeNeil, of Spanish lineage, love for Her| She writes to her! of her. covery that a young life is hovering aware “You mean to say there was no! you! his}ran out into tig- “T think we |‘mined to 4 out! tween Mu: he She sat at Sea gulls—-a whole ‘floek of They looked ‘like tiny yacht¢ ed je) let her eyes wander far* across the ve Hy She thought of that. girl ‘lost out! artee'E. Wolfe the. Indian | Presiding. her baby in the windswept isle of skulls—forgotten Old people in ‘i h d, id he time she was rescued, and not @ ; living soul, not a man or woman on! °% his sister, Mrs, L. all the earth, could -understand ‘a “Hers! Suddenly she snapped oben her She| } orders to t! ir one maid and to the caterer, came in suddenly, closing }-; the door behind him, This unusual ing with approval. -; looked very |. San ye he, we're going to | time tonight.” i “TE hope so.” ; “I've done everything 1 jing is going to mar the affair . He got control pf-his momentary| He came to a signifjcant paus. “I thought a long while, Sandy, and_I believe I’m acting ‘for There really was no rea- The blood le: Sandy’s ears. Jon’t make a sceni nt evowd me to the wall!, I've \'speak. list 1) a don't consider your friends, Sandy.|/ When the: machines It’s my duty to protect you from! ing she became hension. Every h guests she made the danisters. And she was Yo ‘the tra “flash and her friends, {ing him to belitite them. {By 10 o'clock she was wondered if Murillo had recanted ‘her invitations. One o’clock.: doned—utterly abandoned. STATE. DISTRICT COURT AT Tuesday with Judge CI resident of Golden Valley, since 1 died Tuesday moming at the h . Kigst, in thi TO BUILD HIGHWAY inton.—Residents of |D., and southern } Emmons {have reached an agreement ; Emmons county commi: whereby a highway is to be ‘from Pollock to the Westfield high: way. wrote hastily—-eager personal ' notes | $!.000 toward the expenses. to the friends Murillo had snubbed.| id she eouldn’t account for. the ; eir invitations and it would; ty chilly housewarming if! Sheriff, five for clerk of cou: She ‘said EMMONS COUNTY BALLOT Linton,-Fight didn’t come, She expected them.; for register of deeds. and three for shaking with fainting desperation. what consequence: act. She put the bag. Immediately came out quietly, em. cold. talking with a neighbor. H. i in a loud, pleasant voi ‘ve been waiting to take you fora ride.” Her cold, still manner repudiated him. But he smiled down at her inj © ‘the loverlike way he adopted. in the resence of strangers. er into the car. It was nearing the middle of No- vember—already dark, The rich purple shadows fell like garments over the “nude, quiet hills. .The took the road along the water ,an finding a point hedged with jtrees Murillo stopped. The gleam of the moonlit water wavered, through the branches, . “Do you like this, Sandy?” She smiled faintly. “Does that matter? Is that of the slightest con- sequence?” He put his arm about her, but she ache délibprately and upright, eyes flashing. Then almost immediately he was looking at her with amused toler- ance. “Feeling. ‘a little sulky, darling? Don't you really think 1 acted for the beat? I may know there was no harm in that affair. Othera don’t. Why should you; I, in. view of what is coming, giv meat to ‘th ge ips? That incident is pas dy; I've overlooked it ‘once. There’s no need toibe continually. raking it in my face.” She answered nothing. In the morning she, went out and mailed these. invitations. She. had no sooner done this than she was guished with alarm. Murillo had already snubbed Heinie nly. She began to fear that he She could meet any he might visit upon herself, but she quailed at She didn’t care | the ight attend -this | 12, { fier dinasr shel county ticket follows: tending to maid) Ws Murillo was in front of the house Hoy. Tefuse | Kj her friends admittance to the house. wal She found it impossible ta (Continued) © it 4 —_—*e LA MOURE La Moure.—Jurors have been drawn ee » | GOLDEN VALLEY PIONEER DIES |" Beach.—James Henry ‘Lawrey, a city. The body was taken to Dodge- ville, Wis., where the funeral will be Sandy imagined herself alking | helt She could imagine isolation more deso-| late--a spiritual aloneness far, more! terrible ‘than the Indian girl had candids for ed fam-} activity made him excessively. tense. He watched Sandy, his eyes light- He told her she autiful. He ‘was proud cousin, Judith Moore, a San Francisco, ~ He waited for her to turn. She ; Stenographer, for advice and possible; ran the buffer aver her nails, her « assistance in her plight. Then head lowered. piercingly € fs sould to “Do you mean that you didn’t sond| make things pleasant. "f hope co thunderously to” wan' ‘ naar arriv- | faint with appre- fl hime the bell rang" If she was upstairs excuses and | the ‘hall leaning over levastated, learned of her notes and in some\ dastardly way ' Not one of Sandy’: a She felt ere ‘ wi pe Pollock, S. county Residents of Pollock donated three ir j county superintendent | are listed on tive ticket. The ‘Senator, representatives, leppe, Carl Larvick; Herman Sueli Yeater; sheriff, John H. Ai Gerson, Alex, ich, Gast. B Andfew H. Fischer, William H. John son, E..M. Klein, J. Rott, Wenda; auditor, E. T. Atha; treasur. ry, M. Dick! sert primary ballot: of Emmons, coun- The stiffest fight will be on the complete Joe oe Graf; clerk of ceurt, John register of deeds, A. H. Irving, Klaudt, Jacob A. Lai ney, Charles Lyn j Adam Coventry, Thomas; esia Grunefelde commissioners, ins Dahl, | trict—Anton _Grunefelder,, j Shepherd, Fred Spyder; trict—Adam Kraft, first Curtis B, Jenkin: fifth di . J. MeConvill district aniel. comb, FIVE AFTER SHERIFF'S JOB Beach.—The Golden 1) ieee / matched candidat field. , There is no oppo: iW. Mentiand fer M4 «Nol ‘or deeds; Lewis Odland, aie first. district; and A. ‘ion to J. tin, DeSart; and Charles Sentinel Butte, for the G. B. Magee and A.B. Kasi ty judge; W. G. McConkey. fi auditor; Grace Houc! A. Olson, treasurer; H. L. Hal and J. A. Miller, state’s attorney; BR. |. Smith, atu: | A. Bronson, J. Mahlon, Stecker, J, L. ler, Elmer Odegaard, Andrew He helped) Sperle, Don L. Tracy, C, F. Waghe ; lenry state's attor- Harry C, county judge, Norman Engel, Superintendent of schools, William Louis Angell, Ther- it. district—Math- Wallace Kyes; second dis- George ‘homus: Kuhn, R. Vetsch; fourth district—And: 7 Ro: denburg; fifth distriet—John Biddle- ° race for’ sheriff in ‘alley county promises to be unusually interesting with five fair- s in the inty superintend- of » Q. C, Mar- ‘the thoueht of rabiecting. these un- suspecting friends to insult. / , e finally went to Murillo, She said to hit “I just want to tell you e. back to you intending to he 1 could.” He closed’ his. magazine, a faint reastic curl to his moist ‘red lips.! understand perfectly, | ‘think 1 ‘Sandy, your reasons for returning to ‘me.’ She flushed. “I admit it. I ‘had to come. But I. mean to do the best! and securities. A son te. tell| take Mall home: I can. So now, I'm going Don’t think you’re God in my the friends of a 1 expect that I'll obey yo I think and feel gp.I please and ask no one’s permission! “I’m saying this 2, an: fetime me or my friends, you'll find your- out a wife, And I'll take! at you shall never see my fe thik | and Dewi You cant tpl me to! viding for the constructio1 ivé you -warn-! i, to insult Barkland, L. J. Erickson, Zozima Viasoff, sheriff. —__—____—_- || NEWSBRIEFS | Cincinnati.—-Searching the clothts of Fritz Mall, 7 formerly, of ‘St Paul, found wandering the stree! police found ‘nearly $20,000 in cas! id he would Washington.—The house “bill: pro- of 10 ves- nd; sels’ for the United States coast I won't. guard was passed last night by the senate. The- ships will be used to combat rum runn Moscow.—The floods in the lower Volga region are spreading and the dykes built around Astrakhan to pro- tect the town have broken. Part of ithe town has been flooded and much Not a muscle:,of ‘his: face moved;| damage done. s{ but there went over it @ mottled,; bluish pallor. He picked up the Maneaing Fea peau in a cl mor. | 28, _— Greensburg, Pa—Michael Dorosky, , a coal miner of Salemviile, disaj standing before closed the book. In; committed suicide by i : Keotitiaae nigh ene OO meee ie tried visibly to coi “You're very good making | Don’t try to carry out ee) eta: Timmy" and teil him not a She didn’t do this. She'd ‘ id wa. She told herself vinted al ip the family was a girl instead. of a: boy, ee CLOCK THE PASTOR ; folowing complaints of ‘mons preached in Exeter: cathe- dral, a clock is to be placed in the pulpit, The clock will . ser a check agai: Ne sat at ‘her dressin; le. e wore black with fiom ee etal beads. He; dark —the faintest col Gark——the fa feheeks,