The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 21, 1926, Page 3

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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1926 EUGENE DEBS PASSES: AWAY. DURING NIGHT (Continued from page one.) party, editor of a Socialist er, and | frequent speaker on soci 5 | ~in addition to his wife, the Socialist leader is survived by a_ brother, Theodore, of Muncie, Indiana, and two sisters, Mrs, John |S. Hi Haute, and Mrs. C. 0. York. Eugene V. Debs was dominated by two important factors in life. He loved’ his fellow men and remained firm in his convictions, suffering the equences, but still upholding the prissintes for which he fought. While in the federal prison at At-! wut, Un, charged with obstfucting | the draft during the world‘ war, an interviewer asked what had been his! greatest experience in prison life and he replied: “I have discovered that love is om- nipotent. All the forces on earth can- not prevail against it. Hatred, war,| cruelty, greed and lust must all give way before it. It will overthrow all tyrannies. It will empty all prisons. It ill not, only emancipate the; human race eventually but to a great) extent it lifts us individually above | the struggle while we are in the thick! of the fight for human brotherhood.” | A native of ‘Terre Haute, Ind., born on November 5, 1855, he remained a resident of that city and obtained his first railroad position — locomotive fireman -- on the Terre Haute & In- dianapolis railroad, working from 1871 to 1874. The next five yeurs he was | employed in a wholesale grocery | house, but in 1880 he again answered | the call of railroading. - Hie Start in Politics Debs first came under the political seurchlight in 1879, when he served as city clerk at Terre Haute, Ind., holding the position until 1883. In 1886 he was clected to the Indiana degislature, Debs opened his labor activities in| 1880 when he was chosen grand sec- retary and treasurer of the Brother- hood of Locomotive Firemen and served till 1893. As president of the ican Railway mn he directed a strike on the Great North- 1894, and in the y ike | western railroads, he was with conspiracy, but was This was the first time was in court records as a defendant. He served his firat jail sentence ut Woodstock, Il, where he was held for six months on a con tempt of court charge for violation of an injunction. ; The American railway strike, which paralyzed traffic in the west, had Leen hroken,showever, by the inter- vention of President Cleveland, who ordered federal troops to guard the trains. Released from jail Debs urged the workers to “sell your shovel and, buy a gun,” and announced he would consecrate his life to their emancipa- | tion. He become a Socialist lecturer, writer and organizer and trayeled all over the United States, i From that time on Debs, the Social- ist, rallied round him all the sti rty could muster. In 1900, his mpaign for the presidential hair, he polled 87,814 votes; in 1912, 901,872, and in 1920 nearly 1 000. And so his popularity grew. Undaunt- ed by a penitentiary sentence, the Socialist party nominated him as its) standard bearer while he was a pris- omr in the federal penitentiary at Atlanta, Ga., serving a ten-year sen- tence for violation of the espionage act during the war. Speech Brought Arrest Debs’ conviction came as the re- sult of a speech he made at Canton, in 1918, in which he attacked the goyernment’s part in the war and as- sailed the terms of the selective serv- iee act under which the Am@rican army was being raised. He was found guilty in September, 1918, of trying * to obstruct the draft and wa: tenced by Federal Judge Dav Westenhaver to ten years in Moundsville, W. Va., penitentiary. Tebs made ‘no effort to prevent the imposition of the penalty. John Brown of Ossawatomie was his fa- vorite e: lar. He offered no ev dence in own defense and made | | Mailloux, New; | | yea the | leint, Terre| dangerous, refractory negro “lifer” in | in publie-polities, for Debs, the man, as the gates of the penitentiary rolled open, giving im his freedom, but for Debs, the prisoner, a thundering rour of cheers arose from ptison cells as he ‘rode aw To those inside it was not just, the release of another “old-timer” but | the departure of a frictd, sad He had been a friend of every | friendless convict. He found the most! said after his arrest unlovable wrecks hi them in their ema! a prison rule, He e could and helped | He never broke transformed a to an exemplary prisoner. There were! other instances of his power to bet-/| ter his fellow inmates and these were! the men who cheered Eugene Debs as! he left the prison. : i American friends were not alone ih their work for their leader's re- Debs repeatedly declai favor of bolshevik p of government, and said that he was “heart and soul for the Russian rev- Russia Wanted Debs Shortly after he was sent to pri on, the soviet .government of Rus-| ia endeavored to obtain his release! in exchange for an American zen named Dolomatiano, who was in| custody in Mosca’ congress of Moscow in March, 1919,| t announced that Debs was siate become “the future soviet president of the United States.” The Amer- ican Federation of Labor, after a} heated debate, voted down a resolu- tion favoring. clemency for him.| Late in 1920 he denounced Samuel! Gompers and declared the soviet gov ernment was “the hope of the race.’ On being released from prison Debs} left immediately for his home in Ter- re ite, with a brief stopover in Washington where he again con- ferred with former Attorney General Daugherty. On his arrival at Terre) Haute he was given a public reeep-| tion. Debs had announced on leaving on that he expected to rest before | making plans for the future and he went into seclusion, taking no part except: an occasion- al statement of his views up to the time he went to a Chicago hospital suffering from u nervous breakdown. | This climax was not surprising to his friends, as they had said when he| good left prison that he looked a broken and much older man than when hej had entered. i} His determination to espouse the| cause of labor, however, was un- daunted by his incarceration or by; illness. When the strike of railroa shopmen threatened to paralyze trans- | ° portation in the summer of 1922, Debs wns ‘one of the first to issue a proc- lamation to the men, urging them to stand fast and stand togethe the future of their federation was at stgke, Riverdale Homes Company Shows Deficit of $13,082.14 (Continued from page one.) having been stopped for want of funds. “While we have not gone into the details of the cost of con- struction of homes built, it is very apparent that they have cost more than the sale price. Construction of new homes in the near future for many holders of stock and notes seems to have been promised. Un- der the present methods of doing business by the company, such as paying agents a commission of 15 per cent for securing eight per cent loans for one, year, does not appear \to us as good business practice and | the company had small chance of suc- cess, in my opinion.” | name of “C. | two «in | wen The communist be" THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE FRANK WRIGHT | MME. MILANHOFF | ARE ARRESTED Trooners: (Continned from page o ¢ight-months-old. child of | whi e.) ich hej ‘My fortune and my career do not compare with my affection for that bab; Wright, his companion, two chil by polic tonka, 20 miles southwest of where they had resided since tember 7, while a search for him was conducted in several states and in Mexico, * When police entered the cottage, where the architect lived under the ichardson,” he was en- giged in dictating to a stenographer | the last chapter of the first volume of an autobiography. | After a short conference with the | deputy sheriffs, who gait mi ice to the cottage b maid they desired to see . 8, Wright admitted his identit: and the dren were taken into custody ¢ at Wildhurst, Lake Minne- | here, | | | \ Wires Hin Attorney her he would fight ex- ight declared he was not | sure as to what charges he was held on, “We'll have a showdown now. hat’s what I wanted z, but. my attorney thought | avoid The ferred was Levi Bancroft of } kee, who was counsel for the a ect in his divoree case, to whom the architect. sent a telegram’ after his| it, asking him to come to Minne- | | >! | I */ ‘Funny Men’ of Movies Must | Have Stamina to With- stand Hard Knocks New Jersey state treopers, it ‘FALLING 18 SCIENCE FOR COMEDIANS |'Temperature and. | Road Conditions (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) Bismarck--Partly cloudy, 47; roads food. | ‘loud—Cloudy, 45; roads good. jot-—Partly cloudy, roads} ate ‘ ood. . Devils Lake—Partly cloudy, 40; | New York, Oct. 21.—(AP)—Com- roads goods edians who make good in fast- mov- Winona—Cloudy, 46; roads good. good. Rochester good. Jamestown roads good Fargo—Cioudy, 44; roads good Duluth-—Partly cloudy, 41; Partly cloudy, 45; roads! hard knocks: and fails. “Te i Tt "t what a man stands for s 's what he falls for”, wisecracked Walter Catlett. “And it’s not the fall which nocks him out, but the way he |falls”, supplemented Charlie Win- Forks—Cloudy, 45; roads! niger, PP ie Win Partly cloudy, 40; that count: roads | rood, | Mandan—Cloudy, 40; roads good. Grand good, Hibbing—-Partly cloudy, good. Crookston—Cloudy, 43; roads fair. Curious Facts About Your Car and Its “Gas” By ALAN P. INGALLS anal Little Ones That Hurt (hurt, but man fall of three or Bobby Vernon. “The fall not properly broken is ‘the one that keeps the comedian laid up in bed for several days”, concluded Al St. John. Catlett and Winni days are now clowning for Fox Films but they are serious when it comes to falling. “Falling into a net should always times it’s a little four feet”, added + A meeting is to be held in St./ ‘Louis in November of representa- itives of motoring and oil organiza- itions to initiate an effort for uni- ‘formity in the gasoline tax laws of the states. These taxes vary from |.one to five cents per gallon in dif- iferent states, while four states, New York, New Jersey, Massachu- | Winninger say moment of stri jelevate the feet so to strike on the back. If that is impossible, you [should gather yourself as nearly “put at the you should Lund said that if the company affairs were liquidated the value of the* assets would not total as much | as the book value he had placed upon! them, some of them rey tangible values. Vold Testifies 0. R. Vold, former manager for the company at Minot, contended that presenting in- the books showed him owing the com- | pany $809.41, whereas the company owed him money. Accounts receiva- ble were listed by Lund at 83,760.97, mostly advances to stock selling agents. He estimated $2,460.97 of this amount as wholly uncollectible. his own address to-the jury, an ad-| g dress characteristic of his style, just a elear statement of the facts as he upheld them. To the jury he said: | “L have no dispute with the ev dence presented by the government; | no criticism of the counsel for the! prosecution. I would not take back a{ . word of what I believe right to save; myself from the penitentiary. 1 am! aceused of crime, but I look the court in the face, I look the jury in the) face, 1 look the world in the face, for in my heart no accusation of wrong fosters. “Gentlemen, I have been accused of obstructing 1 admit it, gentle- Cars bought too hastily, second- hand cars junked too hastily, must now be digested. Dr. Dunlop, professor of experi- mental psychology at Johns Hopkins, says that smokers are more depend- able than non-smokers, It may be true. Smoking is a r. men; I abhor war. / I would oppose the war if I stood alone.” Although Debs -made no effort to resist penalty, his friends rallied to his support and the fight to save him was carried to the United States supreme court, which,.on March 10, 1919,-upheld the conviction. He was taken to Moundsville ‘on April 13, 1919, and a few months later w: transferred to Atlanta, Ga, Still in prison made no cf- forts to obtain his. release, but his friends worked uncéatingly 4h his be President Wilson on several oc- ions, was petitianed to pardon Debs, but refused on the ground that it would seriously affect the morale of the people, e last time such a peti- tion was backed by an inquiry by the uepartment of justice and a recom- mendation to the President by At- torney General Palmer that Debs be released on February 12, 1921, Lin- colin’s birthday. The president again, however, declined to. grant the ardon. 2 Sentence Commuted Debs’ followers then pinned their hope. on the Harding administration. Their leader finally was released from substitute for thinking. A man blow- ing smoke into the air is not think- ing up mischief, or anything else— men smoke with chin tilted upwar they think with the chin down. The professor says there is no proof that tobacco hurts women more than men, d,| easy. Police investigation in cities 1 all your muscles loosely. You can break 4 setts and Illinois, have no tax at ' prope: all. Methods of collecting the tax vary even more widely. Under the | Indiana law the Indiana motorists | -who fill their cars in another state continues: and then drive into Indiana must “If you can run full speed into a |-Pay the Indiana tax on the gas. ‘The | heavy parlor chair, fall over it and constitutionality of the law is be- | keep on going and come off with ing contested on the ground that it nothing worse than a barked knee, is an interference with interstate | You may qualify as a screemcom- commerce. One annoying conse- | ‘ou have no idea how many quence of the wide variation of | ‘t ny ind edges there are on a | taxes is that many touring motor. |Chair until you drive into one go- ists become exasperated with the '"& 8 fast as you can run, s While taking falls is only the | iit acbinlgu cing in the cost of gas least of a comedian’s requirements. | io different places. | it is one of the most trying thin: jin the profession.” | Al St. John, whore stunts o When you get your car's tank |trick bicycle are well know: » in | filled with “gas,” you'll be wise to |new picture rides down the stree get out and watch the operation. with a growling lion perched on Even the visible pumps can be and | the rear seat of his bike, the bea: often aré manipulated to give |jumping up behind the comedian short measure. The big companies | before his bathing beauty friend | Use every precaution to assure that | 2" eet on the bieyele to escape full measure is given, but a good ‘TOM the animal, many retailers find it possible to | “gyp” the motorist of from a quart | to a gallon if he sits casuaily in | his seat and makes the operation! ome Qualifications Bobby Vernon, a chubby athletic jchap who plays for Educational, has shown many pumps Sxed to give short measure. But ff the Chicago, Oct. 21—Boxes upon boxes of his papers, now safely ing operation, the attendant will stored away, bear . evidence Hunt Machine-gun’ Bandits earching for the machine gun bandits sponsible for the Elizabeth crimé, halt a motoris dentials. jing pictures not only must be ath-; Mankato—Partly cloudy, 45; roads|letes but they also must have the! | stamina and courage to withstand, “Tt isn’t always the big falls that i {be done with the feet downward,” } {as possible into a ball, but hold] r leg by not grounding} . e- t to examine his cre- | | . Juanes Cuniffe, alleged confederate of “Bunt” Rodgérs, gangster, both of whom are sought by the author- a in connection with the Eliza- eth, and murder, Too Late To Classify NT A goods n up town buil } FOR { pat Market. m at For sleeping j windows and hot hed with coral 621 Sixth St. Phone 619W. ticket to Saint. Paw! ed price. Phone 195W or East Broadway. H 1 i ! { WAN Ave. FOR RENT --Two furnished rooms in modern home. Hot water heat. Inquire 3 : Competent cook at 320 A Russian Wolf hound dog, der and right ear. a dog of this des commissioner Tentler was presi- dent of the bank, which had deposits 000, and’J. G. Sehreck w k of reserve was given of closing. Nt hree. iood heavens! The master was down there when al into it!-—Sondagsnisse LINCOLN FRAMED NOTED ADDRESSES IN THOUGHTFUL WALKS, PAPERS SHOW jsueh piece: 8 of envelope for head- ings, are Lincoln’s papers. In- thoroughness, for ex- J., $300,000 mail rcbbery A brass | white with gray spot in left | you began to There is proof that it makes wo-| see that full measure is given. men smell of tobacco, and that hurts! Most people imagine that the fine, their marriage chances, big, graduated or visible pump: are automatically honest, but it i doubtful whether any bf them ai fmore honest than the operator, Why do many Americans never “get ahend”? Here is one answer: “One billion dollars is the total of siege stocl ae yearly in the Uni tates. ‘arge UP an-/ There are still some pretty am- other billion. to race track gamblin, and more than a billion to. Wall|Dle open spaces left in these Unit Street gambling, and you see where|ed States. For instance, there is the savings go, motorist has his eye on the fill- | vier +{the death of Robert the Panhandle of Texas. The Pan-./his ideas, the fact that his mostjbonds of affection. Abraham Lincoln sought solitude! ample, the last two drafts of the | for his thoughts, as‘he walked. {final paragraph of his second in-| To visualize Lincoln’ scribbling |augural address are cited. They| thoughts on envelopes on his daily | show forcefully the working of his | walks in Washington-was the privi- mind, the careful development of | lege of one of the few men who an idea into a thing of beauty. his letters and papers before; “I am loathe to close,” the |: . Lincoln r raft read. “We are not enemies moved them from further perusal but friends. We must not be'ene- for twenty years. They show Lin- imies. Though passion may have coln’s method, the development of | strained, it must not break our mystic Three thousand million dollars thrown away every year! That's money enough to buy cach year one million bungalows at $3,000 each. Professors Hussey and Rositer of handle {s, on the map, only a little'|famous addresses were re-phrased Jog off the corner of Texas, but. one. bagel iag semanas eon and measured up it.proves to be just'|five times, unti ey ame about half the size of Ohio, ‘The'| finished gems of rhetoric. Tecent rapid development of the oil Put Ideas On Envelopes flelds in this region forced atten-:) A scene is reconstructed. It chords of memory, stretching from every battle-field and patriot grave to every living heart and hearth- | stone all‘ over the broad land, will jyet swell the chorus of the Union | when again touched, as surely they will be, by.the better angels of our 1 SORLIE AND OLEF TO TALK T | “AT MINOT MEET | Open Session Will Be | State-Conventipn of. Par- ents and Teachers e Part of » ND, Oct, 21—@)--Parents hers from many parts of | North Dakota ‘are it Minot todey td Jattend the seventh annual convention jof the “North Dakota congress of parents and teachers, which opened i this .afternoon at the Minot state | teachers college. Miss Elsie’J. Cook jof Minot president, and: will pre- side at the convention, | The convention is expected to bring |to Minot between 160 and’500 educa- | |tors and parents, a number of the | | teachers being here at this time also | y, for a teachers’ institate. An executive board meeting was held at 11 x. m, today, preliminary to opening, and the dele- d astembly ‘in the col- ium at 1 p. mi before the meeting s called te otder. Prac- , h, I tically “all of thé state ‘officers and | 9: department heads already are here | k for the eting which will be con- jeluded y session Snturday morn- ing, at which Dr. Cargline Hedges, ; ichild health specialist, «will sp Tomorrow night, in the ¢ jauditorium, there will be an open session to which the publit is invited, | and at wi the speakers will be | i Sorlie and James W. Foley . Calif., former North Da- spapernian and poet. | \Passengers on Air | Liner Rescued When Plane Lands in Sea! Folkstone, | | | plane landed in distress in the sea, {off this place. t | Responding to SOS signals from j the plane which had developed en- |gine trouble, many boats, including the American steamer Republican, {rushed to the rescue. A Folkstone trawler was the first to arrive at the scene and took aboard the passen- gers and the two members of the crew. |W. A. Donnelly, One | of North Dakota’s | vi tl je Big Boosters; Here W. A. Donnelly of Fargo, president of the Dakota Maid Products com- is in Bismarck this week and i vorking the company's territory in this part of the state. was for 12 years secretary of the North Dakota Retnil Merchants’ asso- ciation, making that organization one of the most active in the state. Commenting on the rapid growth of Bismarck, Mr. Donnelly ‘states that he notices the constant improvement | here on each visit to the Capital Cit He also sees a great change rapid! coming over the state, in that peop! are getting away from the ica! which has burdened North in the past, and are working ‘ereater North Dakota.” Inci- Dakotans are be- 1 trife | Dakota for a “ ducts state, all of wi Dakota's prosperit: ‘Regan Woman Held | on Larceny Charge. Dora Lewis, living near Regan, was | bound over to the district court by Justice of the Peace R. H. Crane last, ‘night after she had waived examina- tion on a charge of grand larceny. | In default of $500 bond, she was plac: | | ed in the county jail, Complaint was | | made by Nick Ukronk of Regan, who | charges the woman with stealing poultry valued at $250, | A charge of petit larceny in con-| ,; nection with the alleged theft of an} [auto tire has also’ been brought | against her, and hearing in that case | has been set for October 27 | Nye’s Campaign | Expense Is $459) Washington, Oct: 21—()—Senator | Gerald P. Nye, Republican, North Da- kota, today reported to the secretary | | of the senate that he had spent’ $159 in his campaign’ for re-election. | | Senator Nye reported no contribu- | tions, McKenzie County Farmer Is Killed Fargo, N. D., Oct. 21—()—Don Monson, 34,° a McKenzie county farmer, was shot and killed last night, a dispatch to Fargo says to- day. George Mfg 405 a neighber, at whose home the shooting occurred, gee issing h held quai ever m: ogs is hel responsible for the affai: i Thief River Falls anufactured within ich adds to North | Will from the territory tributary to Bis- | marck were bop at the Lahr M pal address was given by Otto Kira- mecting 4 dintier and snioker was held at the Grand Pacific hotel ‘and the dealers. driving out a:number of late models. Kiracofe left for Minot to conduct a! 2 . meeting of the dealers tributary to) fine in) Bismarek- and: Mis¢ Minot. to the program which is to be given | tol_bi —LDBD.aady ———SS——=—==_= PAGE THRER of Manslaughter Cleveland, Obie,’ Oct: aba renchy” Balanescu Was ¢on- i victed of the pois of his sweet- jheart, Dorothy Elizabeth King, 22, bj | admleneriae potions to whe the jury in his ‘trialfor mansladgliter | returned a verdict of guil late to- jday. The jury had been deliberating sinee 10 a. m. | afternoon, lys-Overland | chamber of Dealers Meet Here) y Forty-five Willys-Overland dealers nit _gt n-meeting held | ft Salés’ company of- ices Tuesday. : The, meeting was openéd by «Mr. Lahr with a short: talk.. The prindl- , who talk- After the ofe, do factory rapresentatir Policies.’ returned to their homes, | Dakota Maid extracts and: ; baking powders: are: going After the smckér Mr. Lahr and Mr. | Suri Slope.’ Governor: Urges , Observance. of! Roosevelt’ Day A. G. Sortie hae isaed a state- sking that the people of North observe Navy and Roose- and” calls their attention ko elt. day. LAST TIME TONIGHT THURSDAY afternoon, Wednesday, October in the house chamber of the capi- ilding. The details of this program h: ot been comple! Th owever, will include f Pasadena, Calif.-the ota Poet, s ause of the rs Roosevelt spent in the state | Ip hh H nd the material the United nd achieved Cistinction t “We i y visit the this and Roose. From the famous story Tusk by Peter B. Kyne With a big all star cast elt Day, in a hat as many xetecises to be h je attend the | n ib! on Wednesday | nos eld Friday - Saturday FRED THOMSON and his miracle horse SILVER KING IN “LONE HAND DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consultation Free Be p-cteratr built Frigidaire ¢ is designed caclusively’ for clectric® i . It is thoroughly insulated against heat. The Frigidaire ~ coil—a development that replaced-the less efficient brine tank—maintains uniformly low temperatures and provides greater cooling power Frigidaire Offers More for Less frost PRICES eshgecel nig Fd Sia2""$i70 Medel M32 metal cabinet SET S225 SPs s5i0 Steded 69 eneat cabiaet Only in Frigidaire can you get these features of Frigidaire construction, Frigidaire design and Frigidaire economy. And only in Frigidsire can ice making capacity, the finer finish, the Michigan University leave Sout Africa néxt Saturda: doub-| tion to its limited transport and:|shows Lincoln stopping in his wall Stee nature,” the penitentiary Christmas Day, 1921, his Sentence having been commuted by President Harding along with thove of 23 others convicted on var- ious charges of having hindered the government during the war. The president's action did not restore ebs’ citizensh\ ic ame ip. i his confinement federal prison Debs never whimpered over his sentence, never asked for ik gevernment trasted Kim was evi tl im id deeced syhen, several ere rege rdon was grant er of: Sttors General a jerty, hi alone to Washi rence, and his only comment jis return was: “I have nothing) take back; I did not ask them to me. Reeaaee (etn Setarmen r ent in. the = tie and his kindness to fellow | pris- Sere cy stmt ie tense ich | re | There was no greeting from Atlanta Ssh Ra was’ individual phere. | mail facilities, In order to get fast-'|to reach in hi State|er communication one of the big:|paper. He tablished'|number of fx the;|enevelop from one, tears it opén at eleacope and’ work in wonderfully clear atmo- sphere, oil companies has hain of radio station: , through which it carries on: tically instantaneous communi-; juarters ; bigy dntsreats ane ree cltisen 3 cs6 an an; etal in the wor! of crime, divoree, football or. pugilism,| cation with tts headq It will interest future ages more than| Tulsa. the battle of Waterloo or any other human dogfight. Lloyd George praises Asquith a conquering gamecock crowing tree Sem ah le pra ition, 4 a, yin never persuade Britons to. adopt OP ie it. h They retain the the that the + should decide personal DOGGONE IT questions for himself. Master—How is it that your essay ‘Yhey even maintain that enjoy-|on “The Dog” is almost word for ment of 9 glass of beer is more im-| word the same as “Jones”? - portayt than increased savings. Snooke—We must have Think of that for depravity! about the same dog, sir.—Tit-Bits. ON THE BOULEVARD “Garcon, bring me ai am waiting for a lady.’ “Light or dark, monsieur?” “What difference does that make Journal like}, || Reasonable Rates — 24 Hours Service: edgect nother sbock, | envelo| Amusant.| developed. been writing} have two revisions interlined. is coat pocket for note none, but finds a letters. _He takes the As It First ideas. It was the last revision, each end and turns it inside out. There he writes his idea. His walk ‘Jeontinues. Perhaps a second en-| Bef ‘|velope would be used, a second ieee as follows noted. ded Back at his desk, he would take ‘a piece’ of foolscap paper, trim the pe down to 'the size of his notation on it, and that clip- ing at the i the foolscap. Beneath that clipping the idea is The si is marked number one. , Ui it, a second sheet whereupon the original idea is developed and then a third sheet and ips. a fourth and fifth, bearii revisions. sheets Hundreds of foolseap notes with Delivery Day or Night Expert Car Read That evidently met with Lincoln’s { Me pinch Washi: Thief River Falls, Minn., Oct, 22 WA double orl ony eld here today for Mr. Gi of his .wife and few minutes later. ES peers ad ’ i operation and the more precise Call at our display room, telephone or mail thi¢.” coupon for complete information. B.:.K. SKEELS 408 Broadway Bismarek. N: D: ‘and. (Al preset. 0 0. Besan) ei

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