The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1926, Page 3

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-¢ yh ' MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1926 LECTION IN. CANADA WILL ’ BETOMORROW Voters Will Decide on Protec- tive Tariff and Other Important Issues _ Ottawa, Sept. (M)—Voters of nada in the general election tomor- ‘vow will have an opportunity to decide whether ida should have a protective tariff, whether General Byng was, in their opi! right or wrong in refusing a Canad- ian premier’s request for a dissolu- tion of parliament, and whether the xovernment of former Premier Mac- Kenzie King should be indicted at the poll» for alleged mal-administr tion of its customs department. These subjects have been strongly to the fore in the campaign conducted by ‘the conservative and liberal lead- which followed the defeat of the itive government, he: Pr Arthur Meighen, house of commons July 1. There are 528 candidates for the 245 seats; one of which was ulready filled by a liberal progressive, who was elected by acclamation. To secure a majority in the sixteenth parliament, one party must therefore elect 123 members, The conserva- tives had 116 in the l parliament, liberals 191, progressives 24, labor two, and independents two. Would Revise Tariff Mr. leighen has stated that his party elected, will ‘revise the whole tariff on the protective prin- ciple, “giving to every industry the protection that is necessary, and no more, to keep it a Canadjan industry and help it grow and develop W. L. Mackenzie King, leader, has stated that his govern- nent, when in power, aided the basic Hollies and through them whole by in the the industrial gtructure of the by its tariff policy. He changes in the tariff will he made that might prey on any legitimate industry if his party is returned to power, The constitutionality of Governor seneral Byng’s refusal to dissolve parliament on the advice of former Premier King, which resulted in the resignation of the King government in the face of a vote of censure and hen to the rship, has been raised by the liberals. Saint and Sinner | (Continued “from. page one.) dear! If life isn’t one thing after another!” uch is life, Mother!” Jim I. chuckled, as he left the room. “Faith, it does look like I could have a decent egg, considering the feet that I have to work hard all day! thin ene broken and the yellow’s glue!” Cherry pushed her from her in disgust, her lovely petulant and aggrieved, like a sulking child's. “If you would get to the table when breakf: prnndys your ¢ wouldn't be cold,” retorted. “Ill fry you another aa How do you want Sunny side up or scram- bled “Scrambled, in butter, with creai Cherry gave her order languidly and stretched her pretty, almost com- pletely bare arms*above her head in 4 great yawn. “Oh, Muggy, I learn- ed a new step of the Charleston last’ night over at the Warrens’. Look!” Cherry sprang up from the table, spread her petaled, crisp green or- so short that it showed knees in their gleam- ing white silk stockings, blew a kiss to her mother, then began to fling y feet and her graceful arms Junior obliging- that’s my baby!” clapping his hands to accent- uae the tempo. Joy jumped up and joined in, her thin little sticks of erms and legs making a grotesque burlesque of Cherry’s graceful per- lormance. “Say, kid, you got that all wrong!” Junior interrupted. “Here, it goes like this!” His long legs began to weave the intricate figura with prac- ticed ease, his arms swinging madly, then crossing themselves as he bent forward in the last African frenzy of the dane “You’re good, all right!” Cherry, ‘breathless, watched him admiringly. “I guess you learned it from that fast Fay Allen!” ‘Say, young lady, you lay off! She’s just as good as you are any day in the week, and especially Saturday night!” he emphasized meaningly he flung his long, thin. body back in his chair and reached for his coffee cup. Cherry flushed, so that the lovely apricot tinting on her cheeks, deepen- ed to a ripe rene, “If you say another word, Long Lane, I'll tell Muggy what I saw on the River Road! Now, Smarty, I, guess that'll hold you!” Her golden-yellow eyes. blazed at. him like two hot metal disks, her long, curling, bronze lashes spread like ‘two rows of silken’ fringe upon the milky whiteness of check and ce heck!” Junior grinned sheep- ishly, with a sidelong glance at his mother, who adored him only a little less than her beautiful eighteen- year-old’ daughter. G rent” with her knuckles up- ne dining autom ically on the table. “I don’t see how you can cat eggs serambled with creanyand butter, and stay as thin as you are,” Faith Lane com:nented, a litte envioysly, as she set the hot plate down before her sister, “I'd get fat.” “I dance it off,” od laughed. That tastes good! You are cook, Faith, you sweet old tiger’ "1 stayed at home all day, lolling around the, house,, I'd at fat, too. Of course, you aren't really fat—just plump!” Her secretive yellow. eyes took in oe Be Ung opener of ae 8 beautifully but catiraly rely unflapper-like weigh ninety-five,” Chatey Jin the world! mouth. Toning Belk. eho | A tear Seiled out of each eye. and. traveled s! mova her pales nite, 1 livectinte ee r large, rot inde her ri nose--neither Grecian nor a burt child’s. mah—quivered i ny Ht * roay-| pad inger cheek.| —" a hae alt Bh er tagy Bude i snot id, Chester, Hart Thlske al Sei aerate Bt in town, so “Chotase wale bean mevoand The ankle corsage is the very latest wrinkle. If you don’t believe it, look at these two Chattanoor (Tenn.) Birls, eral | % ET his life! little She rapped] in, much lately,” Mrs, Lane remarked,! me. I'll bu: in her complaining voice. I thought, if thut'll do you and Chester was going to make} “I didn atch of it, Faith. But “Lordy, I know what I'd do without you,! an ind all!” worry, Mother!” my clothes ready made, good.” mean it that w: ye ftened, and she put arm about the sobbing girl's | shoulder, “But Iv to heaven I Don’t Faith's! could get out and work, too, 1 get chin went up sharply. “No dang { ng nothing to w “J could tell you a thing or two! ied to the s aboub Chester, the blue-eyed boy! friend,” Long began, but Cherry's! Hittle high heel eame down shar) y| nd I could man to help with the housework and stay with you during the day. Please, Mother! 1 could cook break- ast before “ft ft for work and t ” The youth pushed so violently that it clattered to the floor, He let it lic. “You'd better get a move on, Cheri if you don’t wanna lose your jo It’s cight twenty-five, and it tak forty minutes to get to t street car, But I guess you'll dig an auto ride. Some teehnique, kid! T've watehed you, Oh, them come-along ey Oh, the helpless little baby dirl! ‘Oh, mister, | please’— “Oh, let me dollars a week, til: be just another mouth to feed. And who'd make the clothes for the family, like to know? Besides, Cherry don't make enough now to dress herself her coffee cup down with a clatter. she wants to, much less pay half lugey, if you don’t make Long quit] a woman’ No, Faith, I can’t icking cn me-—" spare you, and T wish you wouldn't Run along, Junior. What about} upset me like — this h, Lordy, your job?” Cherry's obedient moth I'm jetting: turned her complaining voice upon! nein If lif her son. “Ain't got one,” the boy grinned at her from the doorway. Then, b fore she could question him further, he had ducked and run, sla sacl the front door behind him. “Well, of all things!” Cherr: sical voice was sharp with irrita “That boy can’t keep a job to si I believe he fires himself. I don’t see why he had to lose his job the same day I lost mine—darn the luck, anyway ou've lost your job” c alone herry set vages. -gold bird I between s. She ie bua: it southern fri chicken and waffles and some of your heavenly aj 5 Dad introduced me to Bob Hathaway on Main Street the other day, Giie € oh, boy! About thirty-—look iny fault if old Preston has to go and| Ben yon, lots of | mone get fresh! I--I slapped him in the| bachelo What could be face and—gee, Muggy, you oughta| Don Muddy, darling seen how comical he looked, with the | get another job at the agency tod print of my hand right spang across is cheek! And then—well, I walk- ed right out on him! Fresh old! if thing!” ma’s poor little girl!” Her mother opened her “fat arms wide! and the “poor little girl” snuggled! a b Ans her embrace. I the had been expecting a Hello, Chester! ye eetie! Of course! You bet! I sort of thought you'd give me N-o-o! Oh, quit ig! i Honest, I didn't! ot honie at half past twelve! H didn’t do any such thing! The idea! Yeah, she’s here.” Cherry's voice sank to a confidential undertone. t i Oh, don’t lifet wonde them f—you couldn’ keep from getting—fresh, Cherry, you tried a little bit harder,” Faith said slowly, her eyes, heavy with angry tears, fixed on her cup of cold coffee. “Oh, it’s easy for you to criticize me!” Cherry cried, struggling to a sitting position in her mother’s en- ormous lap. “You don’t have any- thing to do but stay at home all day! Pretty soft for yout 1 could kill myself working for a measly little old twenty dollars a week— “Which you spend entirely upon! yourself,” Faith cut in. “You don’t pay a penny for board, and Junior pays only five dollars a week! No wonder Dad looks like he’d lost his last friend. And then you give him the devil for being a carpenter! He’s mo to work to feed us! all, hasn’t he?” Tears choked off her voice, “Children! Children! Faith, I'm ashamed of you, when your poor sister has gone through an awful experience with that old Pres- ton! Old, snake in the grass! ‘I suppose you'd rather she had—had let him take advantage of her! Oh,! dear! Life is just one thing after another!” : “To hear Cherry tell it, every man she works for tries to take advantage of her!” Faith dabbed angrily at her streami ns eyes with her napkin. “First there was Kirkpatrick, and then old Doctor Mullins, and then that~young architect—” “Faith!” Cherry's voice was: shrill “I won't stand for I guess if you a lot of old he- it one of ‘em want- ie “{ should think they'd all want}. efficient stenographers!” —_ Faith’s voice waa aeigily saresatie “It didn’t go to work-all dressed up like a chorus girl, with your cheeks and your lips painted up like a—like a North Second street girl's—: shut up and let me talk a while!—and it to work for once in a blue moon at nine o'clock, and didn’t .play sick every time you wanted a day off to go on a pienic with one of your half dozen parlor-sheiks, maybe you gould keep a job, and nob have to pull that gag about your boss getting fresh! All right, Mother! [ll hush? But if you didn’t spoil Cherry and believe every, word she says, you’ "d know I’m lous. You'll hurry, won't you. I'll wait on the corner of Myrtle Vine for you. No, better not clear to the house. Poor old Fait! Oh, Chester, I'm sorry, not tonight! Ye-e-s. Oh, just a friend vf Dad's. A handsome young plut Bob It’s Suzanne with indignation. your insinuatiot to work w right!” et think you're the meanest thing Cherry banged her clenched fist on the table and broke as a by wild see: Se “Yes, I suppose I am mean,” Fai itterly. “I loll around the ho se all day—all I have to do is to ia, for six people. Prien a six-room i ite a ohelke the place, clean u e yeas, shells, take care of Mother, ae fe Sg her lessons, make of clothes that the whole emily a wears Uy hrowing it up to me because you For once Susanne Eeasin is photo- tt] made me tits dress!” Cherry sobbed.| graphed withoup her tennis paste. “and I sine", ask you to clean my} ani pihoming | her kuegs without. one hite: shoes for met I'd rather. be) of st lee e famous leaps which send pee! late for work than have you do {tel sk ing. was adalat to throw it all up to Sraphed at the Lido, nosr Venice, you know’ who. he "ist In ten: minutes!” « 4 (To Be. Continued.) (Continued from page one. will realize the ambitions of millions,, and get enough cash to make Paris and Palm Beach take notice. Opening the American Legion con- vention at Niagara Falls, Theodore, Roosevelt. said: “Since the war we have slumped ‘A great wave of material prosperity has swept the country. Men and women are thinking simply in terms of dollars and centa; automobiles and creature comforts, Although a Republican, with a capo| ital “R,” Mr. Roosevelt attacks Re- publican money spending at elections mn pe oieag ane and eiewnere, e would be the strongest vote ee er the Republicans could nomi- nate for governor in New York. thi fall. But the owners of the Republi- can party don't didn’t want his of the father and made him vice president. You know what happened. ‘The Democrats are overjoyed at Lenroot’s defeat in Wisconsin. 1 make trouble for the Cooli regime. It may make more, trouble for in- erests that control many Democrats nth nate. Blaine a Democrat in the real sense of the word, although in the Republican party. fortable person, country should iy the 1M millions live and work in it, not by the few that sign ‘the big checks. Such a man will disturb Democrats as well as Republicans in the Senate. The country is prosperous, there is lots of money. Wall street was hap- Borrowers, to quote literally had money push- Mellon, offered only The whole in advance, (0 millions, per cent interest, was oyersubseribed We have lots of gold. But we haven't: any. flying fleet. One of hese days those that have the flying y have our money and give exchange. of Biarritz muy an car, Fashion says ar rubber earrings, Dlilliantly colored. Also highly. col- id or satin shoes. If fish in 1, like trout in the streams, are brilliant color es and slippers may cost some charming- iy intellectual bather an ear or a foot. ieago trade union colleges, ae- cording to ‘Miss, Herstein, chsitman, propose to add “charm, grace of man- ner,” to the college curriculum. aughs and shows, the s really held Yet every- or originally. The public things comes f Englishmen like to think that they y| descend from William the Conqueror. His mother was a tanner's daughter, washing clothes in the brook, when the Duke of Normandy first saw her, Leonardo da iMegitimate son of a poor peasant’ woman, sup- —— aristocratic brothers and s, born of a mother whose po- made it impossible for h father to marry her.” bet for dessert.! HEARING RING ON — GRAIN RATE CUT BEGINS ntinued from page one.) in the case and will appear in sup-— port of the new rate lineup. Farmers and business men of North Dakota are especially anxious that the proposed rate reduction be made effective for the purpose of keeping Minneapolis as the milling’ center of the northwest. Figures presented by Springer and | Cadieux of Jamestown, in behalf of the Bismarck Association of Com-| merce and civic organizations of other North Dakota cities, show that un-| 2) der the 1917 rate the combined water and rail rate from Bismarck to New York was 42 cents per hundred, while the all rail rate through Minneapolis was 49 1-2 cents per hundred, givin; an advantage on the combined rate of 7 1-2 cents. Under the Present | rate, the combined water and rail! rate is raised to 51 3-4 cents while | the all rail rate is boosted to 87) cents, giving the combined rate an advantage of 15 1-4 cents. The pro-| posed reduction of six cents hundred would, therefore, Ml give the Duluth and Buffalo route an advantage of 9 1-4 cents over the; Minneapolis all_ rail route. Would. Benefit: Many | The provosed reduction would be T'|a. direct. benefit to. North Dakota to North Dakota farmers, it -is contended by the pet Briefs presented by. Spring- Cadieux read in part: during the years is. shown by the following figures from the United States cen- sus reports of 1920, which show that In“1909 there were 87 mills in opera- in operation within North Dakota, which produced ‘for that year 1,8: 920. barrels and employed 435 people. 'In 1919 there were 87 mills in opera-| tion which produced during that year 2,250,155 barrels and employed 568 aple. ‘A. reeent survey by the forth Dakota Commissioner of Agriculture and. others showed that by 1922 the number of mills in opera- tion was reduced to 45 and. by 19: this was further reduced to only 18 who were able, to operate and shen f for only a Portion of el time. is not. contended that ht bok are ansible for ait of this decline and nether it contended that the Proposed rates east of Minncapolis would re-open. all of these mills. However, the commission in another docket dealing with the transit situa- tion and difficulties of these interior milla has been presented with a very complete analysis of their situation, and without doubt the. copper hrs will agree that the proposed reduc- | tion and Papen of srolatingshine} would be ‘substantial aid, not only to th “North Cakes mills but} to the others affected by the pro- Posed rates.” KILLED: Wi Lt ae ee te Be funeral of Mrs. ‘rents pouring fron vacuum gear shift to Harry Hartz, way, N.°J., atid to racing drivers and officials. Left to right: E. L. The: son, Chairman. Contest Committee, A.A.A., Fred Wagner, starter at the » Ire Vail and Harry Hertz. big rac ITER: four years of rigid test A an important safety device for automobiles has been perfect- ed in the vaéurm gear shift which makes the shifting of gears as simple as retarding the spark. By the use of a partial vacuum ob- tained from the engine all faults of, electrical, mechanical and magnetic gear shifts are avoided. For beginners and those nervous when driving in traffic the vacuum gear shift removes their great han- dicap since no complicated coordin- ation of leg and arm movements is necessary. The full braking power of the engine may be used. descend- ing steep dangerous grades. Left hand turns and stopping and start- ing in dense traffic becomes a simple question of movjng one finger. ‘The gears can be shifted by this finger without trking either hand from the wheel. It is only necessary to move the speed selector just un- der the rim of the wheel and then throw out the elutch as usual. A special latch makes it impossible to ed after the arrival of the fire de- partment. The residence is owned by Matt Clooten, H. F. Keller Buys Warren’s Interest. in Bottling Works Ht, F. Keller has vurchased the in- terests of L. P. Warren in the Bis- marck Bottling Works, Inc, and a: sumed active management of the com. pany this morning. Mr. Keller will be president and manager, the posi tion held previously by Mr. Warre: as Elberg will succeed Mr. as secretary of the company. Keller has been a resident of smarek for the past 12 years, hav- ing been salesman for the Stacy Bistnarck company and the Gamble Robinson company prior to his con- nection withthe Bismarck Bottling Works. Ot I: sented the — la y territory. He will continue to cover the territory tributary to Bismarck during a part of each . week. Keller will be in charge of the office work, Mr, Warren purchased the bottling business seven years ago from F. W. Murphy and has since been in act charge. He plans to leave B the latter part of the week, with Mrs. Warren, for Long Beach, We where th will spend the with Mr. Warren’s mother, Mrs. } J. Warren, und brother, J. They will make the trip by bile. ite. J. Warren is at present ig here but will leave for her home Pay. train within a few days. THREE RIVERS RISE RAPIDLY | AFTER STORMS | (Continzed from page one.) Kansas approximately 25 miles wile | and 60 miles long. Today’s rise was caused by tor- | the Cottonwood into the Neosho seyen miles south- east of here. The Neosho was ap- proaching the record high of 27 feet recorded in the flood of 1923. The raging Neosho today covered a territory from three to 10 miles wide from a point several miles west 6f here to Parsons, about 100 miles southeast. Only three deaths had been re- py ported this morning as caused direct- h ly or indirectly by the electrical forms and flood. Billy Brandon, four, was drowned near Madison, when a boat in which he and h parents fled from their homes cap- sized. Charles Rogers, 60, a Bur- lington farmer, fell dead as he watch- ed the water rise about his home. An Osborne farmer was killed by lightning. The Burlington Natdonal Guard eomnany was mobi last night fot sulased to guard duty to preve: ‘TAKING LEAD IN. SEED POTATO WORK Seed improvement work which ist being carried on by i Serhan and | ing ie production oe high Hi! gy potato seed. Ine of the most interesting pro- js is that of. raising tuber units, iw ese ig, being carried on by.» num- of the adults and club ymembers plane ae worked nt. Re McNutt. rig state pure seed Iaboratory a! North Dakota Agricultural ‘ate ‘was “started three REG co-operators. M, ‘Sténehient of Al rd: and Pai i map go into reverse and gears cannot be | ? strip Ae inal text of the new device was recently made, Three cars cauipped mont, N. Y. and made the trip to Boston with the driver of the Ment e car manacled to the wheel. His right | ™ hand was made fast by 9 handcuff which was. not removed until. the | >! ear reached the automobile near Atlantic City. continued from Boston he n Massachusetts, ,Connecticut, New York and New Jersey to Philadel- phia and then to Atlantic Ci During the return tri test car was driven by Ira ed er pion dirt-track. driver, who manacled as the first driver hed been. At Larchmont, N. Y., the handcuff was unlocked by the Chief of Police in the presence vd ing town officials and of George L. Sex- ton representing the inventer, ‘paeen by day and by night and through two very severe storms the entire Journey was without any mishap and a new safety record was made. extra space left t divide cach unit in the row. High Quality Seed Results Throughout the growing season the units are carefully watched, and whenever a plant shows any signs of disease or weakness, all four plants in the unit are cut out, with the [result that the secd produced in the ey is of the highest quality obtain- able. Most of the tuber unit fields con- sist of about one acre with 1,500 units or 6,000 plants, or less, By the end of the season, an average of about one-third of the plants have been cut out, depending, of course): on how good the seed was in the first place. From the best hills in, the plot, seed is selected for the tuber unit field to be planted the following, year and the balance of this high quality seed is used for growing a seed plot the following year. The seed plot is again carsfully inspected times during the growing seas) diseased and weak plants are cut out. At the end of the second year, the grower then has a supply of seed potatoes of the highest pos- sible quality which he uses for Planting in his regular field. Pay Good Prices Southern potato growers are ex- tremely anxious to get seed potatoes which are not infected with the mosaic and spindle tuber diseases, and they are glad to pay handso! prices for this seed, Through the methods which are being followed in McKenzie county, it is possible to reduce this disease to a minimum, and the result is that a very profit- able market and a good reputation for McKenzie county potatoes is rap- idly being worked up in Texas and | Oklahoma and states to the cast of there. While the mosaic disease causes little damage in this territory, it is very destructive in the south and if j there js a small amount of infection the sced, it may destroy the whole crop, The disease cannot be controlled by seed treatment, and cannot be detected by examination of the tu- bers, the only method of handling it being through the field inspection work, Weber Bros. of Alexander are fol- lowing a slightly different method but through careful work are Ket: | - ting. equally ‘ood results. T' raise 20 acres of potatoes cach year and they rog tnat 1s, cut out wi weak and diseased plants, in the en-+ tire field, going through several times during the summer. Three boys’ potato clubs were ganized by County Agent McNutt li fall, at Alexander, Arnegard and Wat-/ ford City, and each club held more! than a dozen meetings during the winter ut which the boys studied potato production under Mr. McNutt, | using the Potato Handbook baleNse published at the North Dakota Agri- cultural college. Rev. G. A. Hanson of. Arnegard is acting as local leader for the club there, and has been very, | active in encouraging the boys to' carry their projects through to a suc-! cessful ‘conclusion. “These are the best boys’ club. plots. that I have Oia een,” the state-! ment = mad Mr. Cr of the Agricultural caltens, who spent the past seven years inspecting sced potato fiel Gas Price'War Is. | On at' Grand Forks| Grand Forks, ND. D., Sept. 13! on cent has been cut from the price| pf spooling. by by _all |. corapanias Operat- ing in Forks. The ee es opened ag been selling gasoline at one cent be- low the: — pri RNS CLOSED se, Pau ‘tort nyt air at e Bank: t| Seat with a mn pital of ‘f Pty was red ur - J Haier Sison is was ty of this institution and da vice president,” wane era nd land. values of | it military academy. otal roads rough. Crookston—Cloudy, 44; roads good. Black Leg Takes. | | FOR SALE—A 9x12 Anglo The dreaded cattle disease, was discovered in a prize herd of cattle near Jamestown the lust of the; week und eight calves and yearlings; Iva Vail, national dirt-track champion, demonstrating the di er of the 1 cination. 20 mile ra in one of the pastures of the Finch, Farms when a party visited farms and prize herds to take photo- graphs for the state immigration de- | (Mercury readings at-7 a. m.) Bismarek—Cloudy, 50; roade good. St, Cloud—Cloudy, 48; roads good. Minot—Cloudy, 60; ronds rough. Roo hacen n 51; roads fair. Duluth—Clear, 45;, roads good. Mankaio— Cloudy, 50; Brg? od. Fargo—Cloudy, 44; roads good. Devils Lake—Clea: roads good Grand papers ta cloudy, 46; ‘ood: Mandan—Cloudy, 46; roads good. Roehester—Clea' 3} ronds fair. Hibbing—Clear, 46; roads good. Jamestown—Cloudy, 61; roads | | { Eight Calves From Herd at Jamestown Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 1 | (P)— k leg, | ied before it was checked by vac-! The discovery was made! these; artment. Steps have been taken to check any| further outbreaks in the county by warning of the seriousness of the dis- ath with the shift started from Lareh- | vaccinations recnon Mfforded by} ‘ination. Dr. G, A. Ottinger, Jamestown vet- rinarian who was’ called in, pro- | jounced this outbreak the most viru-| lent form. He urges that all farmers | asturing cattle along — running speedway | steams inspect their herds frequent. | This Tap wan | Jy, a8, this is the black leg season | ha virulent outbreak in the com- unity, eight of the prize Aberdeen | i ‘ PAGE THREE Angus herd of Finch Brothers having died within:4¥ ours, :); FIRE UNDERWRITERS MEET Fargo, N. D., Sept. Ee The North Dakota Fire Underwriters asso- ciation held a-short meeting here to- on tem Se en en all parts o es present he meeting, was called to discuss: pore. minor cnangee in the by-laws of ine organ. tion. Wi Teo Laie To Cimtty WORK WANTED-—Lady wishes: work taking ¢j of children: by the hour. Call 132LW. Write 682 Third Street, Room 5, Ww. ANTED—A girl or woman for gen- eral house work. Phone 1191. FOR SALE—A fumed oak, buffet. Call 826M. 818 Sixth St. Porsian rug. Phone 333 or 798. FOR RENT—A very nicely furnished small modern apartment for onc lady. Clean, warm, and always hot water, 807 Fourth street. Is the best in the state around SALT LAKE. Salt Lake Hunt- ing Lodge will be open during the entire hunting season. Kocms, cottages, tents, meals, lunches put up, Shells, gro- ceries, auto accessories, gaso- line and. oil service. You can have breakfast at four A. M. if you want it, and sup- per when you get in. You are welcome at Salt Lake! 16 miles southeast of Tappen 11 miles northwest of Streeter E. M. CANFIELD, Mgr. Capitol Theatre 3—Days.Commencing today, Monday— Performances—7 : Adults 35c 15 and'9 P. M. Children 15c Special Matinee Tuesday 2:30 ‘! aan l= MADGE AND RE MIERIERIN' sing ind BEI LAMY; HARRISON Waar RGR ce She defied ‘Of: Conventions in Her Search for Thrills It’s a drama of today; tingling, with romance, throb- bing with adventure, pulsating with heart-throbs, yet bubbling. with joy. YOU MUST SEE THIS When the doorbell rings you answer it Promptly be- cause you ¢ oe t like to keep people waiti ing. * ‘Itiseven more important that your telephone callers are:not kept waiting. Calls are often lost because the person at the other end of the’ line thinks ‘there is no one at and hangs.up. Answering 'the telephone promptly. helps us to Vide you wich tae bet ioe sible service.

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