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i i i *- PAGE FOUR . * . lautocratic self-seeking and narrow nationalism and | « The Bismarck Tribune jie scary. “0 tne wort hat planted, © 4 An Independent Newspaper jdid it reap, We 2 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) = no one was to blame. the Bismarck Tribune Company, .» and Cale at ae postoffice at Published by Bismarck, N. e & Bismarck as second class mai George D. Mann. t Nor will it en: for what may be oie hae zt Subscription Rates Payable {n Advance Leh, hd Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)........++ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Annsociated Pres r the use for republication of all news dispatches | trazedies will be credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- rer, and also the local news of spontaneous origin | ae alleueae published herein. All rights of republication of all) ad fi lb, other matter herein are also reserved. | _ 5.00% MAY rest_ass 6.00 Fortunately, on lishment of the E Foreign Representatives we are blue in the face, but that will not enable us to look on the World War as something for which we, as a nation, are now If we are blind and reckless ismarck)...... 7.20 | rialistic, as the nations of {similar to the one they garnered. tice our daily ideal is exclusively entitled to! broadest sense, we can rest assured that certain | A Boy That Will Succeed A 12-year-old boy in New Jersey wanted to buy THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE may talk about sun spots until able us to sidestep responsibility ahead of us. will determine happen to us in the near future. Surope were before 1914, ured that we will garner a crop Copyright, 1925, by Margaret Termbull. | WNU Service the other hand, if we make jus and work forever for the estab- kingdom of righteousness, in its THE STORY CHAPTER 1—With strange | whom he introduces as nephew, | Ned Carter, Claude Melnotte Dabbs | sturns from New York to his gen-| grocery at Valley, Pa.| ‘Aunt Liddy,” his housekeeper, | + explains that’ Carter is a chance | spared us. we mustn’t try to blame the sun a cquaintance, veteran of the World! G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY. (a $5 dog kennel. s whom he had met and taken a| Soren bite Kresge Bldg.| His savings bank contained just a few cents over liking to. } PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH three dollars. And he simply had to have that dog ‘HAPTER I.—Carter tells Aunt Rey YORK so = Fittn Ave: Bide: (kennel. : rd Mis eWwoet heart beciuEe | So the lad trudged to a bank and told the presi- of his resentment of their ultra (Official City, State and County Newspaper) dent he wanted to borrow two dollars, pacttic dendencien. |W ith Dabbs Ned . ; ‘i 6 visit oper i, ce | i —— wuilite The president, no doubt suppressing a smile, SF's “cliiection af pood natured | We Can't Duck Responsibility asked him what security he could give. The boy cranksj" according to the grocer. | Most of our major ills, says a Moscow professor, | gravely replied th: Th run over a dog be- = gve due to sun spots revolu- profound an effect on mankind that w: tions, famines, social and political upheavals of all!two dollars was given him. kinds follow in their train. : = This sun spot business apparently is something | banker remarked. that science hasn't quite made up its mind about) We think the or not, as he wishes. > It’s a comforting doctrine, in a way. later in life. So: | made of the right ing in a store after school. These spots, he adds, run in cycles, and have Sy out a regular three-months promissory note, bear- “Industry and sincerity are security enough,” the d the ordinary man is entitled to believe it ‘think that this boy is going to be’ a real success | Hous at he was going to get a job work- a girl whom Carter ap-/ recognizes. Ned delivers a grocery order and in his absence So the president made * ‘ % the girl, Dorothy Selden, reveals; ing 6 per cent interest, the Ind signed it and the that “ine knows him te’ be Ned ( ngeley, son of Loren a r R Rangeley, New York banker, CHAPTER UL commenees work soa , boy. At a_ residence, the * he delivers an order marked Johnston,” There he meets a girl who tells him she and her mother a lone in the house, th: banker w right. And we als> mehow, he sounds as if he were stuff. It relieves us of responsibility. When someone SSP eal ea then “hecaus " KS inl " " i le promises to t mentions the World War or the present uprising in | Who Lost the War? procure household. help. Arratize- . China we can blame these terrible tragedies on the | Winston Churchill, who knows much of the “in-| ment is made for a cook to go to the far-distant sun, which can’t answer back, and side history” of the world war, declares in a book Johnstons’. absolve ourselves and our generation of all blame. | just published that the Germans defeated them.) (HAPTER IV-—The cook being un- But somehow it seems just a little bit too easy to! selves in the late conflict. }able to begin work at once, Ned vis- its the White House to inform Miss _ be true. French and British offensives on the western) Johnston of the fact. Explaining 4 For all we know the sun spots may, as it is) front, Churchill, were more costly to the allies | the situation to her mother, the A bail ek tae i of cpa om : girl, “Mary,” is astonished by that med, have a profound effect or of our’ than to the Germans; lady's emotion at the mention of activitie: Yet we might as well remind ourselves t all| United States to of the sun spots between here and the pole star! offensives in F) . would never bring about a World War if mankind | in men and mate * had not already planted the seeds. | Here is The World War, to cite a single world upheaval, | was the crop of the seed that many generations a new expect to hear all made possible only by Xperts can say whether Churchill is right; we can had sown. It was the fruit of blind greed and|ions in the near future. victory for the allies was Jermany’s compelling the Dabbs’ name. The cook seeires aod lary, with Ned, goes to the village enter the war and by her own, ar. with, Ned, goes to the village which proved too expensive Dorothy Selden. . obeying nothing philosophi- eal ¢ studied, drifted alo caught, as he put it to himself, i the mielstrom of Peace Valley was indifferent. to slant on the world war. Only the kinds of them voi x their opin- ee Pet —— discovery which Derethy : , represented. He was sure that 8 j ° 'e e : me a eeres, Some ineom" Daroihy was “tee good a scout” to « ri remembered. The. beaur'ful girl, &iVe him away, and he was equally a | who is responsible for the Leart in- | Sure that she wanted to Porget hime 5 jterest is played by the lovely Ruth, as much as he wanted to forget, a © 1927 6 NEA SERVICE, INC. ae | Clifford who easily convinees that! her, | District Attorney Tom Banning's| ing as it does, a complete chain with-| Sh, Nould inspite gallant men to It never occurred to Ned that, opening address to the jury, present-| out a single weak link, is the strong-| 7) the well chosen be Noah Dorothy was simply biding her ewn ing the case as he expected to prove|est of evidence. 1 will show you) yi tne Sip enpsen own) time, determined that when she! it by a battalion of witnesses, was| how this defendant had one of the| (ht “rom Rates, Nerman Maric and( sttuck at him the lovely Mary = 4 masterpiece of its kind. For the] oldest motives known to courts of) Cormen Le Roux ry is from| JOhnston should feel. the blow, As > most mat he spoke without passion,| justuce—that of greed. By the Perms the pen of Fran! | while| & matter of fact, Ned was doing in a cool, reasonabl of his will, Ralph Cluny had made |p Pen ott} : 3 . as el = occasionally tinged with a hypocriti-| this defendant an heiress, whether! {he continuity was w by Lloyd] very Hetle: thinking. He was:cre cal. sympathy. she married him or not be He began his dramatic story with! o'clock of Thanksgiving Da the finding of the body of the aged] also clearly demonstrated nillionaire lawyer, turning uside to| prove by witnesses and and will documents pay a tribute to Bob Hathaway, who] that this defendant was actuated by = faced him, pale, stern-faced, tight-| another powerful motive--her love lipped, his hand closed hard over| for another man. Faith's. ho would “I will not at this time ask you to, motive actually supplied ¢ fore picture to yourselves, gentlemen of | behind the terrific blow which crush- = the jury, the consternation, the hor-|ed the skull of the man who had ror, the grief, with which Mr. Hath-| loved her and honored her above all 4 away looked upon the murdered body | other wome I have also demon- Sof his uncle, an old man who had] strated that, so far as my office been his best friend. The whole | disinterestedly working in the cause world knows the dilemma in which) of justice-—can dixcover, this defend- “this sterling young man has since|ant had what the law aptly terms found himself—related by one of the| exclusive opportunity to commit the + closest of blood ties to the victim of | murder with which she stand: murder, but even more closely relat-| charged, and of which I believe 1 d by the bonds of love to the sister! to be guilty. If 1 did not so believe, ‘of the defendant who sits before you} 1 would not prosecute this defend- today, charged with the murder of | ant, @ Mr. Hathaway's uncle and her own} Again Banning threw a ® fiance. | sympathetic glance toward “And when Mr, Hathaway takes | who. stared the stand for the state, | want! “Now, that is the evidence, gentle- all of you to hear in mind tha men. It will be elaborated upon by doeg. 80 in the interest of justice,| these witnesses, and I am sure after Rwhile his heart, or at least that part! you have heard the defense, you will “of his heart which is filled with love | be justified in carrying out what this for his own fiancee, Miss Faith) grand jury saw fit to do to affirm sLane, sister of the defendant, would) their ‘indictment by pronouncing dictate that he do everything in his! Cherry Lane Wiley guilty of murder power to remove the stigma of mur-| in the first degree.” e able to say which would-h Cherry t him unflinchingly. der from the family of the girl he} ‘Tom Banning sat down, mopping intends to ma\ | his perspiring face with a huge white ~~ Rob's face flushed a dark, angry! handk Churchill pertiet and Stephen red and for a moment Faith was su Kfocatingly afraid that he would to hic feet and denounce the motives | indictment. Gof the hypocritical district attorne As Banning smilingly accepted the Her tight clasp on his hand held him/ congratulations of his assistants, *down, The bad moment sed, as| Faith knew for the first time in her & Banning swept on into a dead! Jesgi-| life the bitterness of a hatred that eal, blackly convincing summ up| lusts for the blood of an enemy. of ‘testimony which he expected to rose to the court, di in a rou- el tine appeal for the di missal of the? Spresent to the jury. | TOMORROW: Banning brings out “You may say, gentlemen of the! the fact. that Boh Hathaway was jury, that all this lence is pure! mee engaged to Cher: circumstantial. 1 to you th (Cop: i right, 1 NEA Service, In such circumstantial evidence, build- of the night crying purposes > 4$—What did General Sherman say = ea 2 the battle of Bunker Hill? er yho eats the fewest onions wh EWhen she com going to visit his best girl on a nice thousand wa: SI fashion, to myself, the tenderness | “P7INE evening? ff my glad welcome; 1 siall trem- ble—yes; nd touch her, as when first in the ' old days gl touched her girlish dared upraise "Mine eyes, such was my faint heart's sweet distress; hen silence: and the perfume of her dress room will sway a little, and a home again! A i} ito. | | 1 re | | | An Indiana farmer lifted an mobile from a tourist's neck saved his life. He got his pi on the mortgage on the home hand, nor A Russian ship is operated entire- ly by women. We wonder if they put | one another in curling irons | While the White House is b fixed up, it wouldn't be a bad idea | to send in some experts to revise} the White House dictionary c seems to give the pronunciation of hostile as “hostyle.” | esight—soul-sight, for a space; ‘And tears—yes; and the ache here in * the throat, ‘0 know that I so ill deserve the place z ler arms make for me; and‘ the ing note foe i ony ith kisses, ere the tearful face in is hidden in the old embrace. —James Whitcomb Riley: “When Comes: Home.” 2 BARBS HOW INTELLIGENT: even-- Hy t At The Movies | we nd CAPITOL THEATRE | A happy balance of romance, his- | tory and thrills have been blended | together ‘Don Mike,” Fred Thom- son's latest starring vehicle for F. B. QO. which now showing at th: Capitol Theatre. The story laid in California just after the state chan its ownership from Spain to the ited States, and the spirit of this colorful and stirring period H been brought to the screen with a on 14 to 20. Reduced to $15.75 Ingraham who also directed the pi one | ating a fosl's paradise which ture, | sentence from Dorothy would i stroy; dreaming of a place in this | peaceful little world, whose chief inhabitant was Mary. To be re | ceived or rejected on his own mer- | in lavish surroundings, But—when| tts as Claude Dabbs’ nephew, and | are used, the| not Lorén Rangeley'’s pampered story must, be even greater—-or the| and eligible son; surely that would | spectacle will overshadow the story.) ge | ‘This is the theory on which . @ triumph worth while. Ie; cn Love Diamonds” the. sensational | Sought diligently to make himself | of the I ich coming} popular in the store and the vil- and Satur-| lage and indispen: e at the | White house. Ned had the field practically to | himself. “Save fur the Saturday to! ELTINGE THEATRE Drama may be either in humble surroundings, with the main attrac- tion the poignant story itself—or set to the Ei day is produced. ‘The result is some of the most spectacular settings ener designed for} a picture. Estates of millionaires; | Monday week-ends, when men ap- the gorgeous apartments of the very 4 A Wonlhy, inaNew Nauk eoers worth| peared at the hospitable Manu fortunes, diamonds and gems worth} Meltn’s, there were no available a king's ransom and even a boudoir) SWalns. stocked with perfumes valued at; it was a time when a cautious, more than $3,000, are incidentals to! or ambitious mother might weil | the tale. | have taken alarm, for Mary was | Pauline Starke plays the heroine; indisputably intrigued. She had | - the oo —, with Owen) never before seen so much of a} have the two next important roles in| man had thoughts, Ideas and hub- | the’ unique drama, and others in the| 4t# that too closely approached her cast include Cissy Fitzgerald, George, OW to admit of only a country } Cooper, Gwen Lee, Dorothy Phillips, store as background. | Carol Wines, and others of equal However, belug human, Mary | note, did not tell her mother everything. | For instance, she simply could not | tell her mother that this grocer’s { clerk gave her the feeling that sie, | —— oOMary, was utterly right and charta- Sr aret ss a, 4 ing, no matter what she said or Fifty-six convicts whipped for (nS mutiniy Kilby prison as Mont-| did. It was something to treasure gomery, Ala — up, and remember when she was PERSE alone, Grand Forks—Daniel F. McGowan —-Mif®. Johnston, like a cornered of Grand Forks was named manager animal, was wholly token up with of North Dakota state fair for Grand | one great and pressing problem— Forks. how to get out of her corner. Oth- | er and lesser problems simply did not exist for her. She disliked in- ction and hated the policy of | vuiting to see how the. cat jumped,” yet there was nothing for Representatives of 25 organizations | her to do but walt. Always before in Washington plan nation-wide pro-| this, when things became in any test against lifting of American em-' way impossible, Mrs. Johnston had | bargo on arms to Mexico. ‘ian Commander de Pinedo, Italian flier, missing since he left n Luis de Caceres, Brazil, on new leg of 4 four-continent flight. i turned her back and run * ji hem. Now, without Message from President Cosgrave &Way from t . of Irish Free State attacking Eamon ey to run with, she must stay here in this quiet count place which, like a false prophet, kept | breathing “peace, peace,” when | there was no peace—for he: } This morning, in the hope of dis- | tracting her mother, Mary was | urging a ride to Hillsborough, not | only as a chance to see the coun- | try, but because Mr, Carter said | Pee ee was an ie there where the | - y | was good. SURE RELIEF | Mrs. Jobnston did not look en- | Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound thusiastic, but intimated to Mary relieves at once distressing, alarming; tyut she did not mind trying. Beapebial Spnntens MS loosens. in| While Mrs. Johnston put on her arsh cough, raises phiegin easily. hat, Mary found Ned in the kitch- soothes the irritated mucous mem-| en, deep in an argument—lieated ane, eases the disagreeable tight- " ness that grows worse toward night-| 0M Mrs, Pulsifer's side—as to some fall From M ‘M.—Charleston,! new potatoes for the use of her W. Va.: “I am glad to say that] own famliy, which she had ex- Foley's Honey and Tar helped me: pected Ned to bring with him. over a bad attack of bronchitis.” It! Mary's entrance hushed the| pd See ra Pain pty rie’ tay | storm, but unfortunately, owing to ive for coughs ai sells and , recommends i sk of! \ shone for it.—Adv, 4 Ned was annoyed. He received his instructions moodily and went out- | side to look at his Smart two-piece sport! D. Valera censored before broadcast from New York. being President Hibben of Princeton Uni- versity says Secretary Mellon's claim that reopening of war debts settle: ment would be confusing to economi stability is not consistent with poli- cies of 1925 debt commission, BRONCHITIS—"FOLEY'S” engine. Mary found her mother looking | out of the window at Ned. Sizes; “Mary, 1¢ might be as well not to go, because—" Mary indignantly interrupted. “hel LSet hat of a diplemetin, ing at of a her relations with her daughter, - Wee aire. Jounston captentes $19.75. Twenty Hats re- | ~ to $5.75. Saturday } the handsomest women he had seen (A THOUGHT | den seemed concerned to see you ) riding with the grocer's Then she laughed, went up. “Maybe it would be diplomatic not to use this young man so often,” Mrs. Johnston suggested. “Let him go back to the shop to- day, Tomorrow we will go with vue of the other men as driver.” “And let that interfering little eat think we take her seriously" asked Mary, “Indeed not! Pm go- ing to Hillsborough, and with that young man! come—why, Tll go alone.” What could her mother laugh, and go along, though thought to herself: “Lite What is she up to now?” Before they reached the car she paused to say, “Be very sure Twill take a good look at this young man! /If 1 like him, we will con- tinue to champion him and his driving, If ldo not—he's dropped!" “We can't drop him fa Mary rejoined. “He's got to bring the groceries, you know.” | hereelt with saying: “Dorothy Set Mary's head For one appreciable second, Ned | forgot the chauffeur manner he had intended to try out on Mary. He.stared. Mrs. Johuston was his execu ‘This was the first day she had consented to ride with them. Ned found himself looking into two sleepy than one guessed, and at one of in many a day. The color of that hair alone, he admitted to himself, was enough to make anyone lobk twice. Her mouth was oddly dis- concerting, It looked capable of sneering. Then, quite suddenly, she siniled. i “If mother were my sister,” Mary | thought, watching her with that If you do not care to | she | Tos! | brown eyes that saw more Kei the | By Allene Sumner First Lady’s frank nature, If she Chapter IX has a story to tell, she tells _ it, | Washington, March 18.— The presi-] regardless of what this one or that do but dent of the United States and the} one might think. First L 2 cares of state be- It is no secret that certain promi- hind t The Mayflower,”| nent members of the Republican Na the presidential yacht, sails down the| tional Conbmittee have declared t | Potoma Mrs. Calvin Coolidge is worth a Invitations to an outing on the} round million dollars in publicity yflower are prized highly, for its| value to the G, O. P. cause, and that ¢ the scene of the best/ this million dollar contribution lies s told in Washington.| in one word--“charm.” oes like this desea Mrs. Shipstead Made Him Laugh i eee ea eee toa] Washington ladies who have shawl or robe spread over her knees taken in to dinner by the president, earned My Lesson” at oné time or another, tell storie u cold?” someone solicit-[as any woman in official life may be ked. laughed Mrs. Coolidge, “I've ned my lesson.” on the president as a table com- Shipstead earned a iter as “the woman president laugh.” that at one or two of the most the White House ve strayed into the st&te dining room and that the presi- “Fi aughed Mrs. Coolidge,! dent knows qne art of dettly slipping “Mr. ize brought her a shawl,'a chicken bone under the napery to wrapped sround her, and said,/ them, without any visiting potenate ‘There, I think you will be much more] detecting him. comfortable!" torte ; pe An Exclusive Dog Rai ag UC Las The dogs, waiting for their belated Aint eee eee ee tat, bone, gnawed at Mrs. Shipstead’s slip holes bribe ele Rick per. The president waxed wroth and was about to shoo them forth, but the lady at his right protested. famous self-con- tugging cent woman gues! yacht) who seemed us of her short very skirts, at them, trying to pull them I, too, them Mrs. Coolidge Frank The little story is a symbol of the odd pride in her mother's beauty that made her depreciate her own, “no one would ever look at me! Mary paused before she followed | her mother into the car. “Oh, mother, Just a moment. This is| Mr, Carter, Mr. Dabbs’ nephew, who has been so kind in driving me about.” ~ } Follow the Introduction, Ned helped Mary in very carefully, This | was the moment for which he had | watted, aud Mary had stood the test. She had not “Cartered” him! to her mother, Neither Mary nor her knew Hillsborough, ited it several times with Claude | Dabbs, and suggested the Iron | Hand inn as their destination, The idea was acceptable to Mr his ton, who merely stipulated, “Any- | where, except Peace Valley.” Mrs, Johnston was conscious that she was one person too many. It was curious. Not a word or a look that she might object to, yet the feeling was stro! Mrs. Johnston was irritated. ‘Se had much to, worry her. Surel¥ ft was impossi- | ble that her precious, level-headed Mary could be about to further in volve them. Mrs. Johnston, who was really tired, tried an experi- | ment. She closed her eyes, com- | plaining that the air made her! sleepy. Contrary to her intention, | it really had that effect. When she opened them, sume fifteen minutes | later, Mary was on the front seat | with Ned. | "Oh, mother, I dida’t want to dis. | mother Ned had vis- tarb you. Mr. Carter's been telling me such interesting things about the country.” Mary Joined her mother at once, | but Mrs. Johnston was not pleased + with the resuit of her experimeut. | When they had crossed the cob- blestone parking. space to the en- trance, both Maury and Ned walted. | ‘Things were {n Mrs. Johnston's | hands. She knew it She could not treat this young man as a paid driver, “Mr. Carter,” she began a little hesitantly, “since we've so freely accepted your uncle's car and kind- | ness, Won't you accept my invita: | tlon to luncheon It was very graciously put, but | Ned knew how little Mrs, Johuston wanted him, even if she was thor- oughbred enough to ask him. He thanked her, vowing that he had an errand to do for his uncle but would take them in and introdace them to The Iron Hand. He strolled along a quiet real- dential street which terminated in ap old graveyard. He sat down on a flat tombstone, and thought about life and Mary. “Hey, Ned, for one minute I thought you were a monument!” Claude Dabbs was smiling at him | over the fence. } Ned rose and went to him, | “Thank heaven I saw you first,” | Ned said. “I told the Johnstons I | had to do an errand for you. Cane | back with me.” Claude, however, was too busy to | do more than stop at a lunch coun- | ter near the courthouse where he | had to look up several property records. As they ate he listened absently, Ned thought, to a de- | sacripti of the morning's drive. When they had finished, Claude | said he would walk with Ned to: the door of the inn. As they reached the inn, the door opened to admit a large party of cheerful farmers’ wives and chil- dren. Through the door, which the | last lumpy child left wide open, | Ned caught a glimpse of Mrs. Johnston, Mary and the proprietor. | They were examining a print, hung rather high above the hall wain- | scoting. Mrs. Johnston’: glorious | hair and strongly modeled head | were thrown into relief against the ; wall ro BE CONTINUED.) ——________» Ye blind guides! at a gnat and swallow a Matthew wxiits24. 48 You pity a man who is lame or blind, but ie never pity him ‘for being a fool, which is often a much greater’ misfortune.—Sydney Smith. j Justajingle Said she, “I'll pay my grocery bill She did, then she went right «back And charged just twice as much. —_—_—_—_— > AB Pe edie Bid the city of 1666 may of fire insurance. Piven berg company ‘was formed at Montana, outlined the success which has followed the working of the plan to make Montana Indians self-sup- | port INDIAN WORK | IS DISCUSSED. BY GATHERING! Medical, Farm and Economic | “other speaker: | Washington. D. Problems on Reservations j tendent ot” th z. Conditions Not the Best Conditions on practically all of the reservations are bad, it de- veloped, because of the general crop failure in this part of the country. One result of this condition has been that especially hi been made on the y demands have government for were H. B. Peiars, general superin- omans Side of Official’ Life in the Capital om dential And the “What? eaters? in_ history ie They say learning gowns, read in the pa; his switching for breakfast, what about it? the Indians’ problems at senoot t night. being “Cal's girl.” one of the most popular of official women with the president, “t adore dogs,” she told her dinner companion. my young son's friends learned that we were coming to Washington, they said, ‘Gee, maybe Rex (our dog) van play with the White House young son, Rex play with those cake 2 Not on your life!’” Gossip has it that the president laughed a4 laugh which will go down h Washington women tales over the tea cups of “what Mr. Coolidge said to me and what I said to him,” when they have been his dinner companions. Th ime of Small Talk that the the game and “sweet nothing: together quite charming as a “ the left or right.” Mrs. William Borah is teased as She is said to be Just wait! farm and Wiison conditions encountered in ire in the reat Plains area and ways of meeting them, The 35 persons attending the meet- ing were entertained at the govern- tor indian girls The two-day conference will close tonight. DANCE At the I. O. O. F. hall Tues- and aghast, love to president of “small that hi (Tomorrow we may chatter about the First Lady's permanent and various thin, tale or two about the rs, Oo rom saun: resident course, about terested in the five-year program plan as one which will help to solve economic outlined the garden- | tendent of the reservations, and 5 9 Wallen Up ate Robert Wilson of the federal agri-|@@¥> March 22. Old and new ‘aken Up at Meeting | cultural experiment station at Man-/dances, Jenkins’ orchestra. Be dan, _Peiars snid he is esnecially in-| Evervbody welcome. Medieal probléms of the Indians| = = = = on governmint reservations in North a South Dakota w a meeting reser ents here this morning. Dr. M. C. Guthri superintendent of Washington, D.C. and Dr. Emil Krulish, district’ super- intendent of Minneapolis, spoke on sanitary conditions on re e discussed at | who also described the program no’ ng carried on to mong Indians. mditions Whittemor rsified farming on the Berthold Reservation was discussed by Superintendent L. W. Page. Page reservation inked sing of various crop in sheep raising but said that dairying had not yet been taken up xtensively. Farming and economie problems facing reservation Indians were dis- cussed at yesterday. afternoon's ses- sion. : Plans were laid to institute. on} each reservation a five-year pro-, gram with a view to making the In- dians wholly self-supporting. ‘Th program includes teaching the “cat wag) END LAXATIVES, MOTHER rvations | in the Dakotas and told of the work! that is being done to combat oF ease, The need of more sanitariums to : ommodate tubercular Indians, and | Wore visiting nurses was 5 d d | by the two men. D Strauss, physician for | 7 i S t’ Bismarck, told here and Dr. A. A. state” health director, spoke on the gelation between — the: federal and staté healW departments. 1 | Food that “Stands By” through the morning. Toasty, wonderful flavor. Cooks in 24% to 5 minutes. Has laxative “bulk” plus important «When to operate a garden to grow egetables for family use and also to diversify their farming operation: include, corn, wheat, h: and similar products. Special stress will be laid on the value of cattle in farm- ing operations. The value of sheep, cows and chickens was especia!ly stressed. E. W. Jermark, superintendent of the Pine ge, S. D., reservation, explained the manner in which the program scheme has operated among 8,000 Indians there and F. C. Camp- bell_of the Blackfoot reservation, CAPITOL THEATRE — 108 Third Street A flashing speeding western’ 106 Main St. Free -1 bb. ...60e 3 Ibs., $1.75 pound Post Toasties, large size ........... Small: OE ies has og as ys Van Camp’s Milk, tall cans, 5 for ....... Prunes, 80-90, per pound . Raisins, 4-lb. -~ «Peas, per AP.» “Our Gang” Comedy “Baby Clothes” ag Me 4 ‘ ANNOUNCEMENT ’ OVS Mit PE ee, T am a candidate for reelection pretes nel Daih, to the office of Police Magis | Sun Ray Pancake bitin Thiele per Saturday Specials To Introduce Princess Patt Coffee We will give free with every Purchase of this coffee 2 Lbs. of Sugar Complete Protection If It’s Automobile Insurance - “We Write It” Whatever your insurance need may be We can render complete service “Let Us Make Sure of Your Insurance” The Helling Agency... Sam Nicola Grocery Free Delivery Phone 231 5 Ibs., $2.85 10 Ibe., $5.65 Free 15c 10c 50c 10c dogs.” said, talk” re, her so a