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| ““PAGEFOUR The Bismarck Tribune ‘6 An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Cen neice Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher ———— Subscription Rates Payable in Advance = Daily by carrier, per year sibesieeie’s 65.68 EU. * Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck).. 0 Daily by mail, per year, J (in state outside Bismarck)...... - 6.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota....... 6.00 Member Audit Bureau of Circula Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- rer, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) tects ry Auto Insurance Insurance are taking firm s a stand land pedestrian alike, It places a responsibility r which will grant to an injured | upon each dri |reduce accidents ‘careless driving. proved effective. statutes and prac’ tions, invariably mandatory. be diminished. say. complaints and third o: tion, sin “crime demeanants. inst the extension of compulsory automo! chusetts on January first. Similar © been proposed in sixteen states and th tien of insurance men been most surprising. inasmuch as they would be the ones to benefit fi- nancially by such regulation. Yet, when we examine the matter furtl find that it is not so much a matter of principle as dt is detail. The insurance men are not abso- lutely against compulsory insurance, but they ob- ject to the advocation of it as a measure tending to reduce the number of accidents and very prop- erly C nly if compulsory insurance is to be justi- fied it will h to be on the grounds that gener ally the motorists are responsible for the accident and that if there is no such compulsory insurance when a claim is made the injured party not k of financial re ar owner or driver AC has so es because of a yon the part of the matters stand today if there is an a ne of the cars involved is an old second machine picked up for a hundred dollars or the driver is a clerk store making twenty dollars a week, it is ¢: to see that even if the ent was entirely fault, that t would little help the p justly entitled to ges suffered ason it is certain that an era’ of com- surance will come and it is ju: certain that it will be a very good thing for autoist ESaint © 1927 & NEA SERVICE, INC. Bob Hathaway had been on the, row to rescue Cheri witness stand an hour before Ban-|elopement with Alt ning permitted him to finish his story of the finding of the body of and on » ace his | | is uncle, Ralph Cluny, his notifying| posing body slowly to the witness the police, trip to the} enair, to rest one nand famil on church to inform the rector, the Rev.| the arm of it. Hathaway, the Mr. Ashburn, and Faith, of the death of the bridegroom. “That is all, Mr. Hathaway. Oh,| has been’ twice rai pardon me, ‘just a minute, Mr.| ning. Will you te Churchill,” Banning spoke — suavely| t to the defense attorney who had]—-you or Cherry?” sprung from his. seat to cross ex- c amine Bob. “Mr. Hathaway, do you remember the tember 26 last? Bob frowned, looked puzzled, then shook his head slightly. “Then let me refresh your memory, Mr. Hathaway,” Banning spoke gent- ly. “Were you in Darrow—the city of Darrow, Chelton Coun’ ‘on that date, in company with Miss Faith Lane who is now your fiancee, and ~ with this defendant, who was at that time your fiancee?” “Objection!” Churchill thundered. After the customary session of wrangling and arguments on both sides, Judge Grimshaw overruled the objection and Bob was forced to an- swer: “I was in Darrow on a Sunday in ents of Sunday, Sep- agement with you ed i comrade y, in the father, her brothe and her sister, Fai agement over my ht—” The night of Si 26 last, when you, Miss Faith had Churchill prompted. row, to the Lame h ed our engagement ry m After a few app September, in company with Miss & Faith 1 nd her sister, who is| was through with M ey. Ido not remember | for the sts and ately sprung a ; Banning expelled the —syl-| him: lable with acute satisfaction. “Now,] “ Mr. Hathaway, you admit, do you hot, that Mrs. Wiley, then Miss Cher Lane, was your fiancee at that time?” She was,” Bob answered in a low Mr. Hathaway, this defendant to Marlboro Country ning of Saturda me , but distinct voice, his face going| proximately the & quite white as he remembered the| Ralph Cluny died, “© events of that dreadful day, when «he and Faith had hastened to Dar- a ; In New York | old ear A ham actor, w being sola fessional = ppens to the poor cee 5 gent at 9:15 or thoresbouts ina # Broadway supper club, where the} (ie O° pi Mbuvert chorge goes inte effect at 10] here she got it telock. cost. "Long about 9 o'clock the orches-| }y tra disappears in the general direc #tion of the hors d'ouvre his, i you are initiate, is the _ diners to start making their e : The place has been crowded with * the $2.50 dinner guests. And those .unfortunates who straggled in about 8:30 have heard a couple of enter- tainers thump a piano and, perhaps, Beare macocted in one dance. % - Suddenly in the back corners of _ the cafe tables are yanked about and Siehairs hauled forward. As fast as 2 diners leave their tables the chang- ing about of chairs and tables goes It’s all very simple; they want red out, if possible, well ening’s couvert charge hey, want to clean up : . The average visit- grows self-conscious, timid and 4 Verriod and, of course, flees. B | Jue one block from Washington are we came upon the last word e other day. It is a sign announc to the world: “Ye Drug Shoppe.’ ‘a couple of months ago it was 3 of the coming of the ier shoppe.” When we encoun- ter a “newspaper shoppe’, it will be ‘vpanimous. | ed time of his death. for Fighters certainly this man’s town. Bartels, who hi strangest job: . ancient armors foi who go in for such Oddly enough, he the warriors. theatre,” boing: party on the Ne where she appears the Wells.” é admitted her sai mary ‘Kart Kitchen, Broadway columnist, has prod the wisest * Common “Your witness, Mr. Churchill.” Churchill advanced his heavy, im- question of your engagement to this defendant, little Cherry Lane Wiley, he jury who broke this engagement “Bob answered clearly. did Cherry been in (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) have heard in many a day: “Well,” advised Mareh °22.-Remember| “Well, i i hE" of she old-fanh-| “OE i tun trerence due: FJ joned circus? : ef ia ae A ifforence foee And how the seats began to come] that, make. Its the same on both 3 down almost out m under you] Ses: see even the “concert and dix] Seon about town: Pegey Joyce) * oa tune} driving along Broadway in the gor- sa pretty good picture} pegus Italian that was being! ay on ancient line of armorers. crack these. fortune is tare.—Juvenal, é tion, it shall felony tion to that effect. the court. He he so ch he or alone jail wi have to make rey vunished wi y reports, a The Entertainment party damages justly due. That come from ceaseless education in the dangers of | Editorial Comment - | The Baumes Laws Upheld (New York Times) The so-called Baumes laws of 1926 have thus far The court of appeals now holds that they are constitutional. mental novelty in them. tices of sl for tender-conscienced judges or district attorneys ymen to pass upon them or try to evade them ative “shall” and “must” can’t be whit- tled down to “may.” They must be impose In short, the laws mean what they ) The sentences ordained are! They cannot Persons who don’t like them can make their , Albany. It is well to remember .when “severity” of the | Baumes laws is harped upon that, so far as ffenders are concernod, there was mitiza: | the substitution of the word “felony” for exempted a large class of repeating mis- It is well, tee fore the Baumes amendments the penal laws pre- le lia-| scribed for a fourth felony a mandatory life sen- | insurance laws such as went into effect it} tence, but refined or ju; | bills | determinate ten-year sentence. Baumes laws bit aw: too soft-hearted to indict pre If at any time, either afte pear that been previously convicted of a felony or felonies, the district attorney must fild hfs dntoema4 The defendant is haled before ; told of the charge, of his right, if | ses, to a jury trial to determine whether | not a previous offender, as charged. ne admits it or a jury impancled to settle this fact y th he ge' rdens, police, pro ports. ha life sentnece. he court of appeals found such a ‘alid but mandatory, Judge Crane's opinion is full of reproof to district attorneys inclined to show morc | nerey than the law. We hear eve | aments over the number of prisor o be built if old offenders with. So long as the Baumes laws are not monkeyed | they will continue to prove a dimin- rent of felony. with, perhaj isher and dete bourgeois” may prefer ined by the courts, 1 But it will not help to desirable result can only There is no funda- They were adopted from ld date and other jurisdic- It is not cond | , to remember that be- | ed it away into an in- The “teeth” of the | he habit of district attorneys us offenders, entence or convic- person convicted of a) If | 1 sentence. All ion officers, and so on, | The fourth “offe: must be Monday's decision of | entence not only | \ jon and | ni 'y now and then that will have | are to be so rudely deal: | If not, “the stolid ng a little higher tax pay to provide a permanent home for these angels to, fairy t having them as uninvited gues being shot down by them on the street. ry from her rash bert Ettleson. ised by Mr. Ban- ell the court and the engagement break this en- . Bob?” Churchill ely_manner. presence of her r, Jim Lane, Jr, ith, broke the en- protest that same unday, September Miss ‘Cherry anc Darrow “Yes, after our return from Dar- ome. I announce- to Mr. Lane, and Cherry said that she would not mar- Rob's voice w: his cheeks were flaming. steady, but arently irrevelant questions, Churchill indicated that he Bob as a witness Banning immedi- ther question upon did you escort a dance at the Club onthe eve- October 32” TOMORROW: Dr. Paxton fixes ap- minute at which ing hit hard luck, by a fellow. pro: the first. “The Don’t know ‘or how much it! Boston 1 get the mob in! the world’s He collects} gentleman) aS. H from if -8 h collec comes Mrs. Thomas) Whiffen, the “grand old lady of the given a birthday! Amsterdam stage, | in “Trelawny of he was 82, and ILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) y plies cli THOUGHT ~ fee oil | It is easier for a camel through the eye of te a needle ‘then in his home or ate f dishes, Washington, Ma’ And even in W THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Com » the 6 Sumner er XI h 22.-In the old a king and queen never anything but gold car up in om solid robe shington it seemed gas if someone should own the tradi-| sively to J set of dishes for possibl Old Masters ting royalty. So Mrs. Thomas F.) what to See cee eee 4 Walsh, acknowledged to be u leader | came for fof the most exclusive Washington On a s upre Tired of his dark dominion swung the Above the rolling ball in cloud part screened, tre And no leaned, Now hi c Now th tie Soaring pric With m we, He reached a middle height, and at! the eened, red night Prince Lucifer, society (Wh | Vice P | hooked ors, fiend of repose, fixture: woupon his western wing he; eS late M is huge bulk o'er Afric’s sands | The e black planet shadowed Are-| Siver ) Belgians were in borrowed ‘ js intact so as to be Where sinners hugged their spec-| gold plate. It seem Poor prey to his hot fit of pride|in the V were those, silver step to the porch because the silver mine. \ | the house with the gold plate and the circles, got the gold set. limousine. n the king and queen of the Washington, the resident Marshalls, who were to entertain the roval visit- Mrs. Walsh's house the scene of the you? keep u that one of the bathrooms sh house has solid gola » and at there is a cars. in every serious ‘ r. Walsh made his mint in a vice presidents who borrowed step are just a sample of snows. et ne fede have a ked his scars fe | pressman's wife asks another. * emory of the old revolt from) Sou must!” (This in hushed tones) | WM: ‘she stars, maids and butlers galore, Which are the brain of Heaven, he | your x Tanke sandianni your entertaining over there a beautiful house with al if she ‘ou you'll get a chance to do abs in Was bills. ne ne ‘heq | And this is the Mecea of the con- Around the ancient track marched,| grogsman's wife—to "get in” with| ty he army of Unnleceable lay |some upper who will ask her to give] the Jak Ceoree ‘Matedithe ‘Lucifer in|, tea oF “be at home” with her. and s Starlight : thus pay off her social obligations | 6m : in a style to which she has not been| © eer | aceustomed. dam an *~At The Movies |. —— —— ee Ben | Fourflushing. It thickens the of-] the bills.” New York er says the devil ELTINGE THEATRE | ficial atmosphere until you can cut is busy in Ri Then somebody Lyon will be seen at the Ej-| it with the proverbial kni (Tomorrow come some further | actually is working over there. again tonight in “The Perfect mon my way to Che woes of life in this big city. You've) (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) rooks. Virgini Whitlock are in the supporting News 1 comedy i ble he Eltinge syamall era gry dae cone) get - FF LOOKUT THis ONE 3 pe cesth: store clerk who lose ni to the GIRANGER, DID A COlAle many comical experiences, You EVER SEE 4/ cot For p jeomedy of the hi good, wholesome other words—see Fox Films version of | he Re | greatly | Capitol last. tim Alec 1 Richard Walling w made for Rudolph Valentiné at thej excellent Victor version Also I hear that many! drama which deuls with life's greatest ke to have possessed it. y, the Irish boy from {whose name suddenly flared up in fistic cireles, being ogled by a vast mob in a Broadway night club. . . -| questio’ the livit One of the highlights of the photo- play comes when the kindly but pep- pery old Peter Grimm returns in the spirit a Raymond | most touching elimaxes ever incorpor- ted into a photoplay is to be seen in eter Victor | throughout the filming. The story is, an] carried ulong at an even pace and the} a Back situations—both comic and dramatic— in the fourteenth century his grand-| have been built up in such a way as sires constructed suits of mail for|to get the utmost from them. Was Always Tired, Due to Stomach Gas “My we beg: what we like, years younger,’ relieves gas and that bjoat se so that fe BT eat Acts on upper, an for = rich man te enter into the howel and removes old waste matter. | kingdom No matter what or} your stomach and bowels. Adieri! among men of will surprise: you. druggist.—Adv, d his adventures with a gang of ith gas and tory of a would be detective € it She Pauline Starke, Sam Hardy, Lee Corbin’ and Lloyd} it. pictures and a Bobby Vernon , “Duck Out” complete an en- program. Boy Friend” comes to the for Wednesday. It presents | FA CAPITOL THEATRE oignancy, sweeping drama and ighest order ——- for entertainment, in eturn of Peter Grimm,” which impressed audiences at the Theatre, will be shown for the ne today, Tuesday, B. Francis, Janet Gaynor andj re included in the cast chosen by Director Schertzinger for the screen of id Belasco’s noted n—can the dead commune with | ing? after his death. One of the Grimm.” r Schertinzger used good taste i husband and I would bloat up sare felt tired, Then Just ONE spoonful. .Adlerika e feeli ng sl well. ryan ‘ou have tried for 3. Hutchinson,’ Fourflushing Atmosphere ith me and we'll talk as we go.” cing Intimate Stories oman’ Side of Official Life in the Capital om It was there, A most obei man swept us in, tucked a luxurious about plushy depths. The senator's wife talked posse nd when to call for her and just 1 spoke due decided to confide facts. “Fourflushing, ‘You would think it my car, wouldn’t) The hotel sees to that. 0 of them just for ‘us keeping- p-with-Lizziers’ who simply cannot ride in crass taxis, and whose in- comes won't let us drive our own The management protects us to a senator's family. “For five dollars an hour we can will be given the idea that it is our Fourflushing. There is a joke told which has to do with unpaid grocery There are more unpaid grocery bills to the square inch in the capi- tal city than in any other city. Mrs. five minutes,” she Whoosis’ nid. it door- us, and we sank into James, telling him where pe do with the car before he her. for such a swell | fe The nice senator's wife th Rented Limousines y dear,” said éhe. oi: Th a way. They understand how ‘keeping up appearances’ is a mi limousine with the under- that complete protection hington vaudeville houses doesn’t go over so big. aren't dishonest when they come here,” a congressman’s wife} on the sunny side of casy street. “put they get caught in the learn that a tea which they must give for ‘official obligations’|isn’t such a hot ambition. cost $500, and they ‘get so they live| the Eskimo. like the rest and trust to God to pay heard of eon,” said the senator's nice Mt call my car and you ride picked up the house phone, ~~ MY GOSH! ONE LIKE HIM OUTSIDE OF HW’ D-.S 2 INDIAN of course. You dent of the United States goes first|tizers. A hearty laugh before a meal and that a senator's wife gets out of} means a system more ready for food. OUR BOARDING HOUSE UAT 1o-T ach 1L WAG COMMIGSIONED “To GTecK FVWE AQUARILM AT NAPLES k~ GPENT OVER A | YEAR CATCHING ONE SPECIES, THE PHORLABERZATIUS I -~— \ “fo AVOID CAPTURE IT SEPARKTES HGELF « CAUGHT ONE HALF OF tT INTHE MEDITERRANEAN, AND THE OTHER SECTION INTHE this thing called precedence, know that the presi- Pur OCEAN '3, mittees Get Under Way a an clevator before a mere congress- man’s frau, but did it ever occur to and both legs. disappeared while on her way here from Europe. while on the High C's. on time easy mark for confidence men. one crook is dead, the other wounded. Confidence men proved easy mark for rancher. husband. -gerous thing. at last. They used to get last rites. be wishing for when we have the kind of days we're wishing for now. And| some goes on with eral | groce To of They Copyright, 1031 TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 1927 * STveCan't say anything private here,’ she said. ‘Maybe you'd bet- ter come to my room. “L'told her I guessed that would be all right, for I'd rik wae ed husband when I. came in. he ‘Oh,’ she says, ‘did you? Then’ it’s all right. Come along.’ “We went up and she opened the door and I went into her room.” Claude's pipe. went out. There * was silence In the'room’as he filled it, but Claude did not feel it. He had. forgotten that he wan telling the story to'Ned. He had forgotten everything that belonged to hin self in the present. He was back in the past, ores the shy, awk- 5, by Margaret Teredell | ward Claude Dabbs on the tbresh- wervies: old of that girl's room. He re membered that: already 4t looke@ THE STORY different from -the rest of the CHAPTER 1.—With a strange| house. She had flowers in a vase “Aunt iking to. dy he parently Liady,” has recognizes. GHAPTER 1f.—Carter tells j broken y and his sweetheart because of his resentment pacific tendencies, visits Cloper Hollow, abiding place “collection of good-natured cranks;" according to the grocer. almost run over a dog be- longing to a girl whom Carter ap- Ned delivers a grocery order and in his absence of whom he introduces as his nephew, Ned Carter, Claude Melnotte returns from New York to his gen- ‘at Peace Valley, his housekeeper, he explains that Carter is a chance acquaintance, veteran of* the World nes whom he had niet and taken a Pa, with = hi: their ultra With Dabbs Ned abbs Aunt table, She had spread clean tow- els on that, on the bureau and on her trunk, discarding the dirty- looking scarfs that had adorned They had been too shy to iook at each other. He had stared out of the window. | Every time Dabbe Brought his eyes around to her, he caught her looking at him, and finally she laughed. It was wonderful, that laugh. It made him feel young again. He had been feeling like an old man, with a weight of sorrow and care on his shoulders, but that girl's laugh had made him feel bis own age. Her laugh was young end iy ae Se the girl, Dorothy Selden, reveals| spiced with deviltry. Back of it SNP that she knows him to’ be Ned| all was the new strange feeling the \, Carter Rangeley, -son of Loren) girt gave him. Rangeley, New York banker. CHAPTER Ul. — Next lay Ned He saw himeelf solemnly giving her the papers. He watched her commences “work as a “grocer’s| while she put them carefully away boy. (At a residence, the “White! in @ bag, and counted out the rest House,” he delivers an order marked of the ane : “Johnston,” ‘There he meets a girl| NY POTPOURRI Casualties in the day's news: Man I 12 feet and fractured both arms Some people get all e breaks. . Cabaret soprano Maybe she was killed +. Min- is somnambulist walked off sec- tory baleony for the second in a month. Must have been fall guy, Rancher proved Now Woman practiced with revolver for a month in the base- ent of her home, then shot her A little learning is a dan- Pedestrians are getting their rights These are the kind of days we'll Some powder goes off with a bang; a puff. You meet a tot of shady people To be sitting on top of the world Consider Laughter is one of the best appe- By Ahern 4A! FIGH ARB’ BEING TREATED “To >’ SIGHTS “ToDAN! we-TH OCTOPUS HOUGHT IT WAS BACK HOME IN -W’ OCEAN, WHEN “THEN LOOKED IN Mary, for groceries. Dorothy Selden. CHAPTER V.—There is something fan Dabbs, and he is highly interested in village gossip concerning the mother Johnston Mary to an inn for lune! J and comp: con, his wife, He informs Ned he has son his mind that he uation “Mary emotio: bs’ name. about Mary It’s so hard to make people see, though, that sometimes you're one yourself and sometimes part of laughter, who tells him she and are alone in the house, the servants of the i pares ap to try to! Arrange- ment is made for a cook to go to the Johnstons’. CHAPTER IV--The cook being un- uble to begin work at once, Ned y: itg the White House to inform Miss a of t having left them because “loneliness.” He procure household help. the fact, to her nat the They vaguely Mrs. you that eee existence of > him. Merrit Sia Washington is Claude sighed. “It's you're another.” He began again, as though anz- fous to get on., “It was getting pretty late and I thought if’ T got there just in time for supper I would have to| ask her’to eat with me. think I could stand talking to her, At. a. restgu fg stopped. ‘on, 1. dor maké {you under might just as well have fad some- thing strohg to drink. The food made me feel go queer; Ike plow- Bret are her mother/ Explaining mother, * ig astonished by that mention of The cook arrives, and with Ned, goes to the village seen by iliar possible, the to ace ething on would like to tell) 1 dido’t Involuntary movement of his hand, to give it back to her, but she as involuntarily, thrust it back at him. ‘Then he laughed, folded it up and put it away. But ‘he did not go. He had known that he should, but he could not. He sat dowp beside her, and they .began talking, awkwardly enough at first. Then suddenly they were no longer the Claude and Polly of the boarding house da: but two young things who jots to say to each other, and enjoyed saying it. She told Claude of her plans. She meant to travel and study und see everything. She was fond of reading. Indeed, she had read and ned In a way that seemed re- markable to him for a girl, a serv- ant girl, too, but he noted that she did not ask about his plans. Every time their conversation touched his | life, present or future, she changed the subject. Then he knew that she meant him to understand she would have nothing to do with bim after tonight. After tonight Clagie would not see her; after tonight she would be away enjoying things, out in the freedom of the world, with money, and she would have no use for hime no use at all, It had eaten into the young Claude's consciousness that she was going to use him as a shield until she ek can | met some one she really cared for. it. but | Them she would drop him, and his name, “After tonight” echoed and re-echoed in his mind, and he for- got that he had no right to expect fi sha p | anything else, for he had taken her thing. ott eokte ithe nike Rea money. Jealousy gradually took then I said to myself that now I'd | Possession of him. He watch r only got to get it over and then I could take the nine o'clock train home—and that would be all of t “The hotel wasn't far from the station, and it wasn't very hand- some, I guess, but it was finer than I asked for Pelly by her own name, only- sa: ing Mrs, instead of Miss. her own {dea. any I'd ever but nobody. sit still. and talk, but I held myself. in. looked at the people who came in. and they all seemed the same kind of red-faced, common people. body I knew. “Then I heard a voice near me “| Leoked Up and There Was Polly.” say: ‘Well, been in. I knew. It She didn't wish to have anything like talk about us. I said 1 was her husband. woman called up and told me that Polly would be down in a minute, “The parlor was full of people, I sat down and waited, and while I waited that hurry and rush of excitement inside me kept up. It was hard to I wanted to walk Abert up and there was Polly.” Claude glanced eyes shaded with his hand, seemed The No- talk and smile, It struck nine. His train had gone. He. did not go; merely sat wafth- ing her. He had known, even then, that shg saw what she had done to him, and it had gone to her head. had been one of the “boarders” in the old days, one for whom she must fetch and carry. Now he was at her mercy. He began to think of lots of things that proved she had not been as indifferent to him in those old boarding house days as she had pretended. Even before the money came, Polly Jobnston, the man- hater, had a soft spot for one man —Claude Dabbs. All unconsciously she had let him see that. Claude had wondered afterward if it was not a conscious use of her new- found power. He began to believe that it was not entirely by accident that she had made him come to her for. the money, instead of hav- ing the lawyer pay him. He had never, until then, guessed that the girl liked him—that way. But now she told him more than she meant, or knew, and when she realized ' this, she pulled herself up and began telling him that the lawyer had arranged for her to go, to’ France. She would go as a young ' widow, to people who would help her; let her see everything and do | everything she wanted to do. J (tu BE CONTINUED.) ‘ At the Bismarck | Public Library | ——————————_——_0 A new group of religious books, Hl banks fee Lenten readin are ready yr circulation at tl iblie Lib today. Their titles are: ssa id Brown. These Twelve, Chapman, A Modernist ,and his Creed. Clarke, Sixty Years with the Bible. Dawson, The Man Christ Jesus. Glover, Jesus in the Experience of Men, Goodspoed. The Making of the New Testament. Hunting. The Story of our Bibie. + Lake, The Religion of Yesterday . ad Nae GN P lps, The f ist. so it's you.’ I looked! Roberts, That One Piedad Christ. —— Ned, who, his to be listening intently. “Wish I could make you see just what she fooked like to me. never seen her in right clothes; and apron re, beside me, was one leat girls I'd ever seen % _, She was dressed all tn black—mouraing for her uncle— it set off her fair skin, made her red hair look like aj fumin leaves, kinda flaming and yet Pa 8 T'd mostly seen. that hair up in a dusting cap. Well. | I guess I gawked at her before [ rose to my feet, and Polly wi -faned, t00,-and ‘kept looking: just house ‘A oF ‘in my ite. * an dresses us rd It as con “away. |: A garden But. shucks, he The neat door chickens d on the rough, cheap, pine dressing , v % x HY f—Fustajingle I He planted many seeds and for didn’t gain fo thide. ' — <<