The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 29, 1926, Page 4

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‘PAGE FOUR -The Bismarck Tribune An Independest Newspaper | : THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER oth (Established 1873) ick and easy death. Perhaps the producers wi the Bismarck Tribune Company, |“ 9!¢ n ‘cei ND. and entered at the postoffice at draw a moral from this. Bismarck, as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher prot io basilica anlatcitahspabaatantatastiatsal Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | Daily dy carrier, per year.... + Daily by mail, per year, (in Bis! Daily by mail, per year, = (in state outside Bismarck). Daily by mail, outside of North D: . Member Audit Bureau of Circul you know the rest. But this time something went wrong. Editorial Comment The Crown Prince on World Peace (The Minneapolis Journal) Member of The Associated Press apropos an examination of the Crow The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the n use for republication of all news dispatches credited istian churches throughout the world is to worl to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also | for international amity, the local news of spontaneous origin published here- | in. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. ing for such a momentous task than the Church, he says. jought to resound forever as a call to duty. Fo CHICAGO jnothing could be more obvious than that th Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - : Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspayer) Do Your Duty As the din of the campaign subsides, the voter y can see one duty clear and distinct and that is the! treaties, bind all the nations to submit their dis: cbligation that citizenship places upon him to cast} pute to a world court, sink all the navies, junk al his ballot. Government is jsut as good or just the cannon, and, without “mutual trust amongs bad as the voters will it. i sible for many political shortcomings. ; War to enforce the peace. Arguments to the great jury of voters have been; Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT claim peace and mutual trust amongst men.” | workable formula for the abolition of war. | tent. Through its columns, The Tribune has sought first get rid of the disease. to present fairly and impartially all the issues of; ‘ous issues in suffic i its readers. ‘would be done by, and the disease vanishes. f Tt is not the function of a newspaper to dictate, Disarm the nations, we are told, and there could the votes of its readers or seek to drive an elec-; be no more war. Perhaps. Nobody knows. torate to this or that candidate. Whatever the re-'never been done, But processes of our political life will continue to func-| which to fight. tion. The peace, health and safety of this sovereign! Disarm the nations, indeed! “state will not totter and sway in the balance in any, as said. event. For weeks the voters have been talked to, argued needlessly expensive. with and pressure brought to bear by this or that of its symptoms. faction. All of which has been perfectly legitimate. | It is part of the great American polit But the tumult and the clamor are now over be nothing wrong with his vision. Attack the disease, instead time the censors describe a play as immoral—well, “The | Bunk,” remaining open under a tethporary injunc- | j tion, failed to gather the expected crowds and died 11 { | The coming to Minneapolis of that highly ver- atile royal personage, Gustav Adolf of Sweden, | Bob, who enables her to taku a Hono “Peace on earth’ is the very word that! Kresge Bldg.| Church neglects its duty, if it does not earnestly try, with common consent and one voice, to pro- ; “Mutual trust amongst men!” The Prince has here | condensed into four simple words the one and only Outlaw war on paper, draw up and sign solemn| With Isabel he collapsed ‘after her visit “to Indifference is respon-| men,” there would still be war in the world if only | War is but a symptom, the symptom of a disease Closed or practically so. What is written or spoken’ that combines distrust, greed and racial hatreds. tat: this hour will not sway the voters to any ex-' Nations cannot get rid of the symptom unless they Let all the nations mutually trust one another, | the campaign. It has printed both sides of the vari-'let races forget their traditional tribal hates, let nu nt length and clarity to guide’ governments do unto other governments as they | It has remember that men with | ult -tomorrow at the polis, constitutional govern-' hate in their hearts, with greed in their souls, with | “ment will be safe in North Dakota and the various, distrust in their minds always can find tools with | Not so easily done But get the nations to trust each other |and they would throw away their own weapons as That is the way Sweden's’ Crown Prince looks field day.|at the problem of world peace, and there seems to THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE : condition “6¥ affairs Wilftiot come into the Dakota elections, He claborated at some length on the work of La Follette in prying off the lid of the Tea Pot Dome and told jhow if Senator W Montana, had ‘not been put on the committee inve gating the charges, there would prob- ably have nothing come of it. BY WHAT HAS HAPPENED 1N THE STORY SO FA Sandy McNei riage with Ben Murillo, j sacrifices her love jchildhood sweetheart. Frequent jrels follow. A son is born, {almost immediately. leseapé, Sandy appeals to her Unel for Timmy, yin; lulu trip with her mother. ‘There sh n| declares his love. At home Sand: tells ‘Murillo she must be freed. H. “No human organization has a more direct call-| declares he will never release her. it GO ON WITH THE STORY FROM HERE | Chapter 39. “|post with its bronze dancing gir balanced on one toe. She now clutched its base, whisper. ling hoarsely yo Vo «and now?” + {lous care, Without looking at| P ™ om THeAday July Oth, 1926. | “The doctor doesn't know. You| andy. she said: “She's dying. | Idawa Gold Mining Company. ‘Oh, Ally! She looks all right hetter go and see her. for you.” Sandy pulled herself up the stairs, her heart withering. Mrs. McNeil had her eyes closed 2 ing. breath short and labored. The sight of her moan to Sandy's li Vy features. “Sandy? You—got Madeline—phoned?” She little gasps, struggling breath, “Oh, thought you @ morning call. aret “Why— hausted. “It’s my fault, y| fault. Oh Lord—” 1 “No— Crying, j—kiss me. ‘I'm glad of the re Sandy put her cheek agai She pr her mother's fluitering eyelid whispored in her mother's ear spoke for no! Nobody phoned. Tsabe The Church, he for a few months and the time has come for the! says, is the ore great agency to weed hate out of | because you were worried over me. ‘voter to act. and under the sacred obligation of American citizen-' among the customs of nations. “ship to go to the polls and vote honest convic! Be sure and vote. est missions. “Bunk Is Right 4 = ‘Contrary to the opinions of a great many pro 4 ducers, the rottenness of a play does not neces- “sarily assure its success. Witness the fate of “The i Bunk of 1926.” “The Bunk” has shut up shop. Its scenery has gone to the warehouse and its girls, presumably, 4 “have gone home to put on their clothes. “The . Bunk” apparently had little to justify it as enter- tainment save its scantiness of costume. The New York play jury had ordered it closed as detrimen- tal to public morals, and this, the producers thought, would be bound to make the play a success. Any | HER OWN WAY THE GREATEST THRILL not brought peace on earth. Why? to answer, love and international gentleness and honesty? thing more than a beautiful phrase, but only wher pa ht. TO more, Barry questioned: cipal business. The Swedish Crown Prince is ri her finger to her nose behind his hack to show me what she thought of t “‘Of course, you know, Miss Mere-| hi: hy’ said Lela, for I had foolishly f given her my name, ‘that Barry Corn- i wall is the best dancing fool of all . the lot that are here. All the old f hen. peacocks are crazy about him. ‘i They bid against each other for him every night. They won't like you a i bit, but he'll play fair with you. He'll hi take care of you. He's the best guy | here, and I'd like to see you get the best; girlie, for I have taken a fancy When Barry returned he s: wish { had told you at the beginning, Miss Meredith, that it was against the rules for me to buy tickets for you. As it was, I had to square it by paying ten dollars for five dollars worth,’ He held a ten-dollar bill to me, but I pushed it back sayin; ‘Keep it. We may want to dan another ten dollars worth.’ “‘We'll dance some more if you here ?’ “*Because I was bored to death.’ again.’ mind that I'll come every day.’ like -.u to come here alone.’ “But you'll be here, will you no I asked. ‘You'll take care of me. You'll protect me from everyone to you. You're so kind of innocent.| wish, miss, but the next tickets you | else,’ oe you-know, a regular babe in the] must buy yourself,’ “‘Yes, I'll protect you from every- Wools. I didn’t know they made| “He stuffed the bill in his pocket,| one else.’ ‘\ them like that any more. I put them| and then we began to dance. “I was content, out'‘of my life when I stopped be- “That was the beginning. Neving in fai “And if I live to be a hundred years old I shall never forget that dance. I cannot describe it, No other man’s dancing had ever been quite like that, “The musie stopped and under the cover of applause which asked for! Hi up and we again, commenced es. You'll get your thrill, girlie, when you dance with Barry and I know you'll say I steer- ed you right.’ “Just then a corpulent red-faced man came up and she danced off with him, making a face and putting from every man but himself.’ louse. | people, the Forty Winks and the queer ; Policeman with the neck that stretch- ed around corners, and the rubber jalligators and the giant duck and bi And where could Inco or your dictionary, his savage attacks on of bitter invective, Suddenly Snore called out, “I have no more gasoline! We're going to “Come with me,” said the Dream- | fa Maker Man to the Twins, “We shall try to find your lost friends, the china elephant and his little clown driver. They must be on the moon somewhere.” dust then Snore came back in his| airplano with seventeen dimples off the dimple tree. “Put the dimples in the ice-box to Keep: them fresh until I need them that made ‘you feel wonderful. for my dreams.” said the Dream-| “I could keep this up for quite u ker Man, “‘and then come and take | while.” said: Na ee vonvaues @ journey | “f shouldn't mind es, sir!” said Snore obediently.’ Dream-Maker Man, ere was |gaway he went. | anything to fall on. Byt—” But pretty soon he came back and} Suddenly bang--- bump! They had mey and Nick and the Dream- | landed on something dark and hard. Man all climbed into his air-| And Shares ats lane flew to pieces. ‘o . mtinued.) way they went—bzzzz!—like a pytight, 1926, NEA Service Inc.) bee, for moon airplanes make ore noite oe Fe Ser j ey we: R i Saat ef TODAY | adventures and what they had —___._.¢ doing since they had climbed (Cortinned trom page ladd gion, and wrong twice, ar the iden ler to the moon. ll, I declare!” said the Dream-| orth Cape, under the cold mid- piss sun, reading tests from the Long Island torpedo, carryi stead of dynamit ‘And without anything to fall on!” thought ancy and Nick. “Well, | that’s one comfort. At least we won't | get bumped. |” The airplane turned with its nase straight down, and the fall began. | But it wasn’t a fall that made you ‘dizzy and took your breath away. It 8 lovely, cool, delicious, soft fall water, past the rum patrol boats, are both beaten. for the present. publicans City Spends $2,230 During Past Year to elf.” said the ‘Poor relief city by Miss Mary © 1, 1985, to July 1, 1926, cost Bismare! $2,230.71, according to Miss Cash annua! ee presented to the city follows: A va Ella cag Pas would not quite, say that you had been reaming, But of 998.11 That must amuse the angels that 58 I know better. But we must| look down upon millions of suns and Me 50.60 mee where we are going.| planets. They Coal ne 289.75 to ask my friend, the Man rer dish caste ould] Board and room 464.00 we something. e a hi; 8 microbe he D: -Maker Man looked | traveling to th rt id of it ‘edge of Snore’s airplane and of mend to ry through solemn ‘reli, down. gious exercises. The : . a file +: “You owners affected Philippicsito the isi The philippies: alley ne ope ed | Trappients .... report was accepted Ys say that Cicero delivered against Antony. “peor ‘Nye's connection with the progre: It is his and her duty under the law the hearts of men, and thus to take war out from If the Church can- s. not do it, then the Church fails in one of its high- For nearly two thousand years the Church has sought to bring peace on earh. But the Church has Not so hard When churches cannot keep the peace among themselves, when churches assail each other’s power to guide the human soul, how can they hope to inspire nations to put their trust in brotherly “Peace on earth, good will to men,” the keynote of the Gospel of the Nazarene, can be made some- the Church consents to make the attainment of peace on earth and good will toward men its prin- i ‘Don't you know that this is no place for you? Why did you come “ ‘After today you must never come “‘Why not? I have made up my “‘It is not always safe for a girl The music started to dance I did not know at that time that a man will protect 2 woman (Copyright, 1026, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: A Night at the Road Demosthenes, in hilip of Macedon, caused the word “philippic” Pp to be used in describing any speech Bootlegging has become scientific, British ships send whiskey ashore on a device much like a the alcohol load in- Other ships put whiskey bottles in submerged thanks, and drag them behind the ship under The farm bloc and the farm bill That settles that The ghost of that bill may come back to bother the Ke- Assist Peor People ice worker, for the year from July night. The report 493.50 38. fp 46.17 $3,890.71 and placed | ing, a Pl ition-signed by all the odd: iit dors areas ee. as ‘an " rth andjin connection f anything happens to I'd just as lief di thing about that. matter at ali I won't do an ~not at all. I thought you were @o chipper—” like eagerness: Sandy?” Sandy turned _ her answered only: | “Yes.” “You mean face. She went down to the said to Alice: len say?” “What does the Alice -put down her cup, chin shak able to answer. Espinosa, who was plump and blonde and five years older than Sandy, had her head buried in her 1 the mother of forced by her im-| poverished family into a loveless mar-| a rieh Italian, | ¢), war. Seeking some meets Ramon Worth, who saves her 's suggestion that the great present duty. of! life in the surf. ‘He boards the same k | Steamer home and during the voyage! Sandy leaned against the old newel In her childhood as she had regarded this statue Ithe final note of elegant distine- ‘ tion. “Something wrong; ewe She's asking lay in the great walnut bed, its fault! massive posts reaching w the ce.l- Her hands were clasped and quiet; her mouth open a little, the 0 brought a faint At the sound 4 look of joy lighted her mother’s here—soon in, the! her head on ‘hey arms and cried : I just alone I'd saunter over and ‘pay And here you d her lips on! you, Tsabel,| Ah, ha, it doesn’t! I never ; cited. Siistese would have said all those things, but Isabel smiled. She said, with child- ning ‘after thi: that, She kitchen, where her sisters were gathered. She ing. She raised her eyebrows, uny | He closed his address with-a review of the record of in the senate, | declaring that his votes had been uni- | versally right and that a vote for him jwas a vote for a cleaner and better And it now seemed ghastly to her | Country to live i at she ‘iad annoyed her’ mother, sca at en nc gee Her own phrases shouted in her ear,|,, The talk of Lieutenant Governor How bald they sounded--how utterly | Huber was followed by a few remarks K\ crude and indeliente, No’ wocae.|by Mr. Dale in which he commended bel turned white as the napkin | the work of the present railroad and ‘her iremblitig hands. warehouse commissioners and those in bas ike <peaven charge of the state owned mill and e cline ‘picked up a long brown | levator. Ho declared his conviction tre pmopping bag: “I'll come back! that the stale owned industries will {his afterngon, Ally, I'll relieve you | show a gr ater profit in the future if c . ‘ ithe majority for Governor Sor Don't mind. The children will he | the.” icket “is ding you. And Essie has her kid-(S08¢ 00 his ticket “is suffi congress from the si made w few remarks, position on various day, and recotinting hi from farm boy to la’ He declared he was acq| @ eight hour day on the farm. Eight hours before dinner and eight hours after.” thinking desolately: “It would be jtrue. It would be my fault.” y | ein candidate for ond district, relating his stions of the arly history, rand judge. around.” “Will you, Sandy coming up and k ing sorry I said that, but just I think the very ‘least you can do is to tell mamma you haven't tha, re- 1] motest thought of-—-of a separation. I know it’s ‘worrying over you that’ killing her. So you should tell = 8 Madeline, er, “I'm the same that, at least.” “Yes,” said Sandy quietly, mark- 1g @ pattern on the earthen floor .| with her toe, “that’s the least l-can jo.”” STOCKHOLDERS MEETING The regular annual meeting of the stockholdérs of the Idawa Gold Mi ing Company of Bismarck, North Da- kota, will be held in the Grand Pa- cifie Hotel in the city of Bismarck, state of North Dakota, at two o'clock | When the two married sisters were gone, Alice hung a wet dishtowel on the rack, spreading it with metic- | just a little blue around her lips.” | “That's from her heart. It's weak. | ae going to last.” W \ | ‘Then Sandy said brokenly: “What .! Madeline says is true.” It’s my Get Quick Relief / Alice had been up most of the When some food results in night. She dropped dejectedly to a bad stomach’ ache—just a litle Chamberlain's Colic Remedy in water will give quick relief! Be prepered— get this reliable remedy from that pr your druggist today! For trial This might have | size, send 4c to Chamberlain Medicine Com. Ma’s had a rich, 7 Midenly ‘Alice dropped | PAn¥:708Sixth Avenue, Des Moines, low ohai If you're going to’ stay, I'll a while. Mi need someone w her day and night. I guess you'll be on tap, won't you? And si L were you, kid, I wouldn't be too much of a fool on that proposition. M nearly 60. happened anyway veet life ibitterly. She cried in the sense of ss—the emptiness and ache in | her though | Sandy stayed at her mother's hous at night and the next. At ock the second morning she hearing a frightening She went swiftly sto the CHUMBERLANS ound. ‘oom. But there was nothing. eyes opened in @ puzzled wi ‘as propped up with pillows. reached aimlessly for Sandy ui here?” To be near you, sabel's In What Month Is Your Birthday? rling.’ Mrs.’ McNeil shook her head. ~no—home- with Ben ‘No want you with your And she grew’ ex- So Sandy went home toward eve- i On Saturday, she found a newspaper folded on her table. An‘ item was marked with blua pencil. She read it, a saw Beatrice Murillo’s hand i —a crafty wi for offsetting g P, giving the lie to that other item It told of the postponment of a din- ner dance in honor of the homecom- ing of Mrs, Ben Murillo.- The post- ponement was made inevitable | be- cat of the severe illness of Mr: illo’s mother. It went on glibly: ‘Mr. Murillo, who is devoted to his mother in law, has also post- poned a business trip to the Eas being unwilling to leave his bride in On your Birthday send i your Mother Flowers Hoskins-Meyer three children and now expecting] the event of an emergency ari the fourth, held her lips ri Madeline felt she had performed tinetive services to the world in gen- eral because she had accepted these rapidly arriving children. Her good- ness in this matter entitled her to special consideration on all occa- sions. It also gave her. the right to be superior and dictatorial to her sisters. “He says she has a slight chance,” she now answered bitterly, letting the tears run to her lips. “There's a slight chance our mother may re- cover.” got ‘home last night?” “It was after dinner, Sandy.” Alice now interposed: “She was all right when she arrived here.’ “Yes,” said Madeline. “She takes that terrible Jong. walk in the heat ‘to your place. he was just heart broken when she read that clipping. hat's what did it! We can thank if mamma——” ‘an we?” asked Alice, miserably. “Maybe it was trotting: over to you in the heat and baking lemon pies. Very good about shifting .thing», ren’t you? It didn’t hurt her to work a slave when Dicky was born, did it? Doing the washing and carrying up trays! That didn’t hurt her, did it?” “Oh,” sobbed Espinosa, now rais- ing her head. “I’m sure mamma‘d be glad to have -us quarreling like ‘this. Si se she were to come down and hear it? Did you leave her alone, Sandy?” “She fell asleep.” Sandy was standing at the stove, her back to them. She raked the red embe “You say she collapsed when she|ith The young couple plan a trip to Eu rope as soon as Mrs, McNeij is re- covered.” Sandy read it. She turned. Murillo had eatered the room. -He said suavely: “It’s not con- venient for you to go on with your plans just at present?” She folded the paper 3 ‘He went on, smiling: “And leave . things while? Very and walked out. she was starting for ‘her moth- er’s, she stopped to get letters from box at their gate. She open it. She pulled at it. Then she saw that a new lock—a ed Yale lock is rather One morning a week later, Murillo was oe See she came to breakfast. T place was an envelope, partly ‘torn, e postmark and part of the name was left. Sandy picked it up, a pang shoot- ing to ‘her heart. It was in Ramon’s writing. She recognized it in the first instant. She picked up the en- velope, ran to her room. She com- pared it, letter for letter with his writing on the back of some kodak | pictures. The same—identical as though the characters were traced. She could scarcely draw her | breath. Was it Ramon’s writing? Was the letter to her? What had he said? Sho tore the envelope to tiny: reds—opened the window and let ie’ fragments ride on the breeze. What did Murillo know? What would he do with this knowledge? (Continued.) \ we may n statu quo’ for a well.” He shrugged th Gerald P. Nye must be retained in the front rank. Wisconsin wants him, Dakota needs him and the United States needs him in the senate, dec- lared Henry Huber, lieutenant gover- nor of Wisconsin and wheel horse of the La Follette forces in that state. addressi| a public meeting which yesterday afternoon filled the :Pat- terson hall, leaying some listeners to stand at the rear of the hall. Noticeable among the number of those who turned out to hear the Wisconsin lieutenant governor speak in support of Gerald Nye and the Nbdbarti ‘League ticket were a very considerable number of women. While they probably did not number half the listeners, they presented a very respectable percentage of those who attended. In introducing the speaker of the afternoon, A. 8. Dale made reference to # plot te break ‘the Non- rtisan meeting at Spiritwood Lake. is effort he termed a gloriou: failure. of all ‘that could be done to discourage feorle, from ¢@t- tending, he estimated the crowd there bout 10,000, Fills La Follette’s Date en ate - vee ibility of ater: . ‘ollette appear- Lieutenant’ Governor Huber too lace and delivered the principal In. spi of -the afternoon. ir, Le lette had been detained ‘by'th ne- Presence in Washington with the Rivers and pehate. “ ‘After dotallivg the histone of ae SENATOR NYE’S VOTES HAVE BEEN UNIVERSALLY RIGHT, SAYS HUBER “ [ve movement. in (Wisconsin, Mr. Sam, do these Ronee uber outlined the things for which the Progressive party stands, naming across the road keep among other things, progress in gov. i 9 ernment under the constitution, belief chickens? in, the constitution in letter and in . spirit, ineluding even the right t ainend it, cs Sam:'They keeps some He declared the party stands for i ik ballots. rather than bullets and is of "em, si ‘ against corruption in high places. The ery of “Wolf,” and “Bolshe- vist,” he asserted, was for the pur- nose of distracting the public while pockets were being picked by crooks, and he deplored in feeling terms the excessive and corrupt use of money ‘to control elections, which he said is becoming niore prevalent in publig life. “A crook in an alley is preferable to one in public office,” he declared ‘in, later, is ‘tendency. is “i it will Soderling the government,” te: ig to the cor- ruption ibe on alre: dy spoken of, ferred pointedly to various. jection: scandals the past few years, enarging owe i 1920 there was spent Tf a fire loss or a burglary -should occur on your pre-” mises, you might keep Some of your property. But why risk a heavy loss? Let this agency of the ™ au to take care of in- alin of Gencral Lsonssi Weed, |p| PAD? pr He also refensed to scandals in con-| | surance protection today, . ceeeaeith ane conaiars of Sovase ‘ vernor Lowden a: 8 a . activities throughout the por be MURPHY behalf. of one candidate whom he did ; not name, which were aimed at the bu: of ine megro vote. |i lead, money or fagein “Which shalt heed: yr intel ‘ hope that this moi Lhas been a patient at the St. Alexius TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1926 FOR “DAKOTANS” No job-hunting, no long climb to living wages for pupils of Dakota Business College, Fargo. Students keep regular 8-hour day, practice real business in fully equipped of- fices, begin work with experience, and at good salaries. (Copyrighted course—unobtainable elsewhere. ) Before finishing her course, El- vira Nelson was placed with Fawkes AutomobileCo. Ongraduating day, Theo. Lybeck was engaged as ac- countane by Lane R. E. & Inv. Co. Watch each week. ‘‘Follow the Succe$$ful.”” SummerSchool Mare day. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St, Fargo, —————S MODERN SHOE REPAIRING at reasonable prices UNIVERSAL SHOE SHOP 111 Fifth street Bismarck, N. Dak. LEAVES HOSPITAL” ** Mrs, Alvin Thiel of Judson, who Hospital, returned today to her home. VISITS SISTER Albert Ryckman of Pollock, 8. D., has returned home after a visit in the city with his sister, Mrs. Harry McGann. HOME FROM MINNESOTA S. W. Robertson, who has becn at Ottettail Lakein Minnesota for the past. two weeks, returned home yes- terday. Vote for John H. Bowers! for County Auditor. ‘(Political Ad.) DR. R. S, ENGE Vote For Bertha R. Palmer Candidate For. Superintendent of Public Instruction (Political Adv.) Dr. T. G. O’Hara Dentist Lucas Bldg. Bismarck, N. D. Successor to Dr. C. C. Hibbs Telephone 281 | For County Judge W.L. SMITH Hope I am worthy your vote. , (Political Ad.) OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO SALES CO., INC. 212 Main 8. Phone 489) Half way across the Continent on a GREAT LAKES CRUISE Prrenesny: nocngmetine vacation pleasures in rica’s greatest playground. / 2230 Interesting Miles of ever-changing scenery; on luxuri- joni ee a ae Transit ; a 4 cuisi ig gr ee commodations. Dancing, vel shore trips. Meals and berth inclad- ed in fare, er farther information, tick ‘reservations call any Tourist or BR. R. Ticket Agent, or - G. C. Williams ew. a Candidate for Re-election Coronér of Burleigh County Your Support Will Be Appreciated Pol Adv, Great Lakes Transit Corp., 101 Palladio Bldg., Duluth, Minn, S. J. KING Candidate For ¥ SHERIFF of Burleigh County Your Vote and Support Will Be Appreciated \ (Political Adv.) For Fuller Service}: | Phone 766). H. B. LOVE D.C, PHC. Doctor of Chiropractic. ‘ EXAMINATION. FREE. Eltinge Bldg. Phone 174 Bismarck Fur Co. Furs Exclusively Storage - - Repairing hone 610 207 Fifth St. Candidate for coroner of Burleigh Co. at primaries June 80, 1926. Your vote will be appreciated. a DR. R. S. ENGE Bism N..D. (Political Adv.) + WHY OPERATE for A icitis, ‘tones, Stomane ana Li cat . 4 the rs within 24 hours without pain, danger or loss of time? ep 4 ¥ ‘ : | irom ‘the pcivia ot te iddneys Reelect vel from the- bladder. | ‘Frank J. Johnson Candidate for County Audi tor, Burleigh County. Vote for a’ mani who is famil- ar with the affairs, of the

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