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oan fort and merit were necessary to By Ahern! ualify. for this guard duty and in those early days the guards had many a strenuous night. The guard ja stil maintained, but today it is ‘most! & formality. .The garden has won the respect of the neighborhood and raids are a thing of the past. | Thirty-six families already have | graduated from the ranks of the ama- tteur adult, gardeners to take + up farms of their own, MOVIE RANKS OPEN TO NEW GENERATION At Least 11 Children of Movie \ \ WME ue SUCH EGO BUT ITIS FR wR AS AUP AN’ DowWA E77 PARDON ABLE,~WAS,. I FELT-THE SAME IS STRING ‘OF TRON T / WAY WHEN L cHoT MY First: 7 a BY EXERTING Yu HATBAND Vel ELEPHANT! LET ME EXPLAIN How | BAND. st RY, Nou Yol) CAUGHT Hose TrouTI SPENT > qureciig TH | Wo HOURS ENTICING THE WILY » TP SiR Ted, AN" ALL You CREATURES “To-HAT PART OF WE 4, y CAUGHT WAS NYoUR BREATH: $4 STREAM, WHICH REQUIRES THE» i SHORT GASPSt4~ OF COURSE MALE HELP WANTED CLAY HAULERS be used at Stanton, N-D} Paying 20 cents a yard mile, Haas Con- tracting Co., Stanton, N. GOVERNMENT Forest Lem | Special ts (Investigatots) an Mail Clerks make $1: month, “How to lif free. Write OZMENS, Louis, Mi SKILL OF A WALTON, AND WHEN, You APPEARED { LET Vou HAVE “THE SIMPLE GESTURE OF CATCHING }, THEM, wo BUT TRUE To You, Nou 7 TAKE ALL THE CREDIT OF AN ELDERS 'y” mailed 38-P, Be MAN with car to séil lubricating olls and paints to farming trad eld, +-#, Manager will train. Excellent op- * portunity. Weekly drawing ac- Saat. Thre Lennox Oil & Paint coapeny. Dept. Sales, Cleveland, Ohio. i ‘WANT! * “housekeeper o1 ba to one cl 7 vies Der me _more Dobson, Box 216, Van Hook, N. D. LEARN Barber trade. Barbers in great “deman big wages, easy work, New catalog immer offer free. follege, Fargo, N. D. and special Moler Barber “WANTED—Lady cook for 60 room hotel, [town of 1000. Write Tri- 6. ts plain sewing or em- bzcidering. Work done reasonable. Phone 415-J. PERSONAL to drive through with someone to Twin Cities or lowa soon, Write Tribune No, 48, FOR SALE—A new mode: five rooms and bath, duit! fast room and other built. ures, oak floors and woodwork, full finished basement, double gar. age, 560x140 lot. Terms for pay- ments. 418 West Rosser Avenue. Ph FOR SALE OR TRADE -Feaqsmaller farm or business, my 320-acre im- proved farm, S: Tl health. make change. A Bargain. Bi New‘ Salem, N. New Eureka V Cleaner. Machine has never veen used, has all attachment: Sells regularly for $56.40, Give us $45 and it’s yours. Inguire at 606 Main street or phone 488- FOR SALE—One MeCo almost pew. Inquire Chas. McCor- mick, Menoken, N. D. Must Adam B FOR SALI 's Home Laundry. Phone 1017, buginess with apartment t arties must be in a posi- e over about $1,000) worth of stock and equipment. Place new. doing a good busines: —_ well located. Write Trnbung jo, 36. FOR RENT—Four room flat wit bath, Heat and water furnished. mower » Phong 905 or call at 222 Second street. FOR RENT—Six room modern house located on South side of N. track. Call at 511 Segond street. E. J. Schulte, FOR RENT—Five room modern house, bungalow stvle, well logis, Inquire of J. K. Doran, 406 Third street. FOR RENT—A nice corner onp room furnished flat, reaggnable rent, pag The! Laurain Apt phine 303, FOR REN’ lodern: jhungplew and furnished room. Inguitg, at 510 Fourth street. Fis miles from New| 5% Can’t_handle. min, a | Only. two nse. Have 8 water heater. Gentle- ~men only.’ Call at 562 Seventh street. ENT—-Light housekeeping room in. modern home, very ple: ant porch in front, nicely furnish- ed, gas range, close in. Ladies Perret 813 Thayér Ave. Phone 1064-J. large modern hi blocks! from ¢ automatic FOR RENT—Two furnished sleeping rooms suitable for two in all mod-/ ern home, close Call at 708 Main. street-or Phone 342. FOR RENT—Clean modern rooms with home board, also gar- age, close Call, 228° Thayer street or phone 730-8, FOr RENT tee tarp Tarntehed ping: on rivate entrance. Call it. ground floor, at 606 Tenth street iia FOR RENT—Four modern” unfur- nished room: Call at 806 First street or phone 413-J,_ icely furnished rooms a at 114 West FAMOUS’ Fata i New York, uly ea Wont think that ‘having a disting father makes the easier and” ph the famous governor- general of the Philippine: p, Reviewing his career as army of- ficer, oil-field promoter, theatrical producer and writ issue of McClure’s magi Wood declares fathers reputation, and the publicity at- ‘tendant upon every moment of a lic figure, have pursued and han icapped him’ at every -turn of his several: ventures, ¥ Of his father, he says: “I admire d love him more and more as each succeeding’ year teaches about the world and its peop! the'son of a famous man he tant trial before the bar of: public opinion\! 4¥ xays. “Whatever suchial'toni does, in school, college: dt bifeet life. he has the eternal deg fastened on him,” he “If he simply and ‘honesty imself, he faces criticism and misunderstanding on every hand. rooms for light. Call. at 618 Sixth apartment, ground floor, exception- ally cool. Call at 120 Rosser Avenue W. She F ENT—Modern four room apartment with sleeping’ porch, tially’ furnished. Two private Good location, Call Phone 643-W. FOR RENT—One of the fi ments in town. Clo: C Phone 347, * ee sb art nt othe Varney apartm Flats. Phone 778. FOR RENT—Modern sornighed apts. Mi its.” 206) Aye. neva“ 7 FOR RENT-——Furnished one room and kitchenette, Haselburst. a1 Fite FOr’ RENT “Unfurnished, apart hed: _ments at Per ‘Court. hans RENT—Apartment, in ane FOR Build'ng. Apply Trioune FOR RENT—Front furnished apart- ment. Call at 314 Third street. Speed of Is 25 _ t0.46 iles ayn Hour F; ee FS, speed. of “Wonder Philip R. Love (above), of -Wash- ingtor G., employed by the de- partment of commerce, and who served with Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh in the aviation service i 1924, will accompany the transatlan- tie flyer. hig speaking | tour Berl: P)—Scien- Sighs show some of the bi feathered iers capable of .ap- Ee ‘and a gradyate of Annapolis roac] a a be 1919, PI ee eS minute. < nal 19, will be Sains manager for throug! counti ons E. hoe (below), also of W: a an wy ©1027 BY FIFA Sew" A “seeing N.Y. CHILDREN | HAVE GARDENS Section of Dismal Gas House District Transformed Into Beautiful Spot New York, July 22—(P)—An ex- periment in gardening that started thirteen years ago with an idea—-a broken plow and a blind horse—| transformed into,a garden spot a sée- tion of the dismal yas house viet | of New York's East Side. ‘The idea was the property of Miss Henrietta Munckowitz, the garden supervisor. The plow and the horse! were borrowed. + | In Old Gas House Dintri a} Aided by a donation from the Rockfeller Institute, the idea devel- | oped into realism and today the Gardens," as they are known, cover two city blocks oh more than a thousand families. "| in the city’s most congested section raise their own vegetables and flow- ers. i They are operated under the super=-{ vision of the New York Plant, Flow- er and Fruit Guild. | Children work the greater numbe of the plots and any child over nine | yet may have or share a plot of .ground five feet by ten. There is only one stipulation. Each child must give one flower each day to a sick person or a ‘hospital, 1 vate Own Crops Qn planting day in spring each child his own -plot, caring for ‘it himself thereafter and putting a certain amount of time each day in the community garden whose pro- ducts: all share, Each child must plant the same tuce, radishes, but when that is harvested, each ms plant whatever he Entrance requirements for adults | are more stringent. The adult plots are twenty feet square, and to obtain one an adult must be married and have at least four children and must reside in the neighborhood. Graduate to ‘Farmers During the day the garden is used for the practical instruction of kin- dergarten children from ‘nine pub-} Bich an experimental plots, they can watch| ment mai the development peanuts tobacco and hemp. lie and parochial schools. There, ih 's a little non-sto) of Charlestown, lass.? Not a thing! of cotton, THING AND ONE HAS + To CLAMP ONE'S tramp of 200 miles or more to William Joc So, he set out to heel- e it from Boston to New York. You see him here receiving the God-speeds of Mayor Malcolm Nichols, the Hub chief executive. auding raids on the garden's flax,! products were frequent, so a guard composed of the juvenile gardeners In the early days of the experi-|was formed. Superior cultivation, ef- TUL SEND AM LITRE CLARA, SHE'S YOUNG AND OU6IT Actors Have Made Debut on Screen 4 The sec- picture " es is mak- ing its appearance on the silver sheet, At least 11 children of movie ac tors, the parents of some being star: have made their debut on the screen, jThey are Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Ralph and Virginia Bushman, Lin- jcoln Steadman, Richard Walling, Ed- ward Piel, Jr. Rita Carewe, Dolores Costello, After Fathers’ Laurels Young Walling is the 20-year-old son of William Walling, stage and actor. He had taken up com- mercial art and was working as a helper and studying photography in vered.” His only previous in acting was at the age “Jimmy” in “Salvation by a stock company in experi ni Ralph Bushman also recently made and immediately was placed under contract for another picture. He thus is competing for a place among the Klieg lights such as that of father, Francis Bushman. Vi ginia, Ralph's sister, was after her screen debut. Young Piel, about is who usually is seen in “he: Others on the Wa: Lincoln Steadman is th old son of Myrtle Steadman, star and now @ character act married 20-year- win Carewe, Miss Rork the daughter of Sam Rowk and Hillyer the son of | Edith Yorke, im, son of Jack Holt, has had few small parts in his father’s pie- | tures, Miss Costello, eldest daughter of Maurtee Costello, the screen hero and idol of ten years ago, hailed as a “find” at the ‘ag Her sister, Helene, also is contract, Several movie actors and actresses have children who have not yet had r first screen tests. Florence Vi- has a young daughter, Suzanne; Gloria Swanson has a five-year-old adopted son; Noah Beery hi son, Junior, aged 12; Harold Lloyd und Mildred Davis have a very young daughter, Mildred Gloria” Lloyd; ich Von Stroheim has a young son, and Richard Barthelmess and Mary Hay have a three-year-old ; daughter, GRAPE JUICE 1S COMMON IN LEFORS, TEY, of 19, under Town Haryests Great Crop of Grapes Yearly Lefors, Texas, July 22.—()—This quaint town in northeast Texas has enumerated quence. lowing: < , _Lefors is the smallest county seat in Texas. Lefors boasts that it is the only county seat without a jail, has been town. Among these are the fol- leased to a neighboring Saw Mill on Though’ located on an otherwise treeless plain, the town is hard by a forest of giant cotton woods. _ This fact leads to "another distine- tion. The town has the only saw mili jin a territory-larger than half a | dozen rthern or eastern states. There areno other sawmills out on | to saw. The water wells are only nine feet deep in Lefors. But perhaps the most interesting | facts are these The cottonwood the residents drink grape juice the year around, and although 50 years old this town’s cemetery contains ‘only four -raves, Valley: Like Japanese Near the town is the Valley of Le- river.” which separates Oklahoma. This valley gives the im- pression that it is @ corner of Japan or an imaginary kingdom in a dream. While the plains may be swept by cold winds and the frost may creep down from the north, the Valley of Lefors is warm and cosy behind its rock wall shelter. “% The towering cottonwoods do not actually bear grapes, but they sup- port the wild grape vines that ent- wine them and hang down like veils. Here in protected dells grow. fruits of all kinds, and ‘the cherry blos- soms enhance the Nipponese picture. From the wild “rape vines, a great crop of grapes is harvs every year. The juice of the grape is found in every hereabouts, When a wants & well here he procures 9 posthole digger, bores down about nine feet and obtains ba rkling water. his initial appearance in the movies | BY BIL show, but, if n rmer | fandom's Miss Carewe is the daughter of Ed-| made the big ‘a young + so many distinctions they must be! of the in some kind ot se-| Why didn’t |the plains because there is no wood; fors, formed by a branch of the Red | Texas andj James D.” Hill, New, York-to-Cleve- | land airmail’ pilot, is. to accompany | Lloyd Bertaud, another nirmai! flyer, in his attempt to fly from w York to Rome. The New York- Rbmg plane, a single-motored Fok- ker, “is now being conipleted: in: a New Jersey factory. MAJORS’ STYLE the Lasky studio laboratory when he | ve e Are Only Three Brothers Playing in Big League at Same Time Y EVANS New York, July 21.—This brother stuff is getting to be quite fashion- able in the major leagues. The Sewells of Alabama are setting the of brother | hav ured in. the | There are now |,duo brother att stars majors. mething like eight ctions in the big memory serves me \cortwetty, ‘the Sewell family is the first to present three members for pproval at the same time. the O'Neill family have league grade. Steve is ut present a member of the St. Louis Browns, but when his two brothers were strutting their stuff he was a mere kid on the sandlots. - Three Joe and Luke of the € dians, and Tommy, recently signed by the'Chicago Cubs, are the three as been | members of the Sewell family now doing business under- the big tent. They hail from Titus, Ala. Joe and Luke are stars. The for- mer is generally considered the best shortstop in the American League, while Luke is one of the leading ‘atchers, Tomm, es every prom- ¢ of developing into a star at third se, Jov was the first of the Sewells to come up. He did so under rather ie conditions. Picked up by nd while he was a star at the University of Alabama, he was d over to Ni rleans for sea- Then the Chapman the of Cleveland's * shortstop, as a result of be- hit on the head by a pitched call to New Orleans Sor vell. That was in the ei the pennant. in most capably. down the home stretch and did a mighty series, ¢ Indians triumphed over Brooklyn. It was a most un- usual and trying debut for a rookie. Luke Makes Good Shortly afterwards when Luke Se- State’s Smallest County Seat) well began to cut up high jinks as a catcher at dear old Alabama, the fame of his brother Joe proportions that nd he was signed, He has since developed into one of the best backstops in the majors. Now we come to the third member illustrious family, Tommy, Cleveland sign him? Probably both Joe and Luke advised n that two members of the same mily on the same big league club is company but three is a crowd. Anyway, Tommy, on graduating from The jail| Alabama, signed with the 8. Cub ‘ogny was much slower j imto, the limelight at Alabama than either Joe or Luke, As a matter of fact, it wasnt’ until his fourth year that he became a regular, Taking a five-year course, Tommy in his fifth year a star and captain as well. Resembles Joe In, style and physique Tommy greatly resembles Joe. He gained his greatest collegiate fame at third base, but also played ‘second and third during his “rah-rah” career, | He throws right handed and bats left. If Tommy has the ability of either Joe or Luke he should early develop. i$rees bear grapes and virtually all! into a star nuder Bppanee Joe Me- Carthy of the go Cubs. He will have a no chance to get lone- some for Alabama with the Cubs for one of his teammates is Riggs St phenson, a former star at that in: tution, who came up with Cleveland shortly after Joe Sewell. Now, altogether boys, with the old college: yell: “Yea! Alabama! Sewell, Sewell, Sewell—Joe, Luke and Tom!" Too Late To Classity HELP WANTED—First class shoe- maker. Call at Capital Shoe Hos- pital. Jack Gardner. z : Little Joe f Oye.