The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 17, 1928, Page 7

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PSF RETR ESE ITTSS SER: SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1928 By The Associated Press) lew York—Bruce Flowers, New Rochelle, defeated Billy Petrolle, Fargo (10). Manuel Quintiro, Tampa, Fia., outpoint- ed Joey Kaufman (10). die (Cannonball) Martin, won from Daveu Abad, Panama (10). Chicago — Jack McCarthy, Chicago defeated My Sullivan, St. Paul (10). Lew Kirsch, New York, won from Jerry (Red) Dolan, Chicago (5). Herschie Wilson, Gary, Ind., outpointed Santo Reed, Omaha (5). Mastro, Chicago, defeated Frankie Bauman, Brooklyn (5). Toledo, O.—Andy Martin, New ford, Mass., won from Chuck Feldman, Toledo (10). Soldier Dombrowski, Detroit, outpointed Steve Nugent, Cleveland (10). Johnny An- drews, Toledo, and Midget Mike Moran, Pittsburgh drew (10). Akron, O.—Eddie Anderson, Chicago, defeated Augie Pisano, Cleveland (10). Harry Crisp, St. Petersburg, Fla., outpointed Andy Tomasky, McKeesport, Pa., (6). Gorilla Jones, Akron, won from Allen Beatty, Pitts- burgh (6). St. Paul—Billy Light, St. Paul won from Al Van Ryan, St. Paul (10). Ritchie Mack, Min- neapolis defeated “Spud” Mur- phy, Moorhead (6). “Wildcat” Eddie Mason, St. Paul out- en Dave Atler, Sioux ‘alls (6). San ‘rancisco—Young Jack Thompson, Los Angeles, won by t-chnieal knockout over Johnny O'Donnell, St. Paul (8). Bat- tling Dozier, New Orleans, won oO Benny Wolff, Philadelphia — . Tamps, Fla.—Billy Alger, Phoenix, Ariz. defeated Alex Simms, Canton, O., (10). Young Russell, Tampa, won from Joe Pina, Havana (8). Hollywood, Calif. — Vince Dundee, Baltimore, wort from ria) August, Bridgeport, Conn., Savannnah, Ga.—Osk Till, Rochester, won from Frankie Kearns, Utica, N. Y., (10). fs emi Ga—W. L. (Young) Stribling, Macon, knocked out Pat Joyce, New York (1). Springfield, O.—Jock Ma- lone, St. Paul, knocked out Sol- dier Buck, Louisville (1). Denver—Whitey Black, De- troit, won over “Onestep” Wat- son, Omaha (10). Cando-Gafdner and Kenmare-Enderlin Meet in Semifina) Cando, N. D., March 17,—(AP)— Cando and ee wee ee HH ms opening game of the semifinals in ths state independent basketball tournament here today, while Ken- mare will clash with Enderlin in the next contest. Kenmare defeated Wyndmere. by a B9 to 16 score, while Cando trounced Colgan 54 to 27. Gardner and En- derlin enter the semifinals after drawing byes in the second round of the elimination contests. Pyle Pacers Head For ‘Flagstaff With Art Newton Still Leading Williams, Ariz., March 17.—(AP) The 14th lap of the Los Angeles to New York transcontinental foot race today found the field facing a B7-mile trek to Flagstaff, 6,000 feet above sea level. The number of contestants dropped to less than 100. From Williams the trail led upward, reaching an elevation of 7,400 feet. The rank of leaders remained unchanged. Arthur Newton of Rhodesia, South Africa, to the list with 74:21:06. Yesterday he showed his heels to the rest, checking in first. Nicholas Quamawahu, ‘Hopi In- dian, one of the luminaries of the race, gave up yesterday on account of a sprained ankle and leg injury. Ada’s ’28 Presents to Majors Are Feur Ada, Okla, March 17.—(—Just off the sandlot on which Paul and « Lio; Waner, Pittsburgh Pirate outfielders, had their early train- ing, four youthful Ada baseball layers have just reported to major clubs. Pittsburgh teom signed t recruits, and tl St. Louis Cardi. nals took @ pair. The quartet got its contracts on the recommenda-, tion of A. O. Green, local druggist and sendlot baceball manager, who started the Waner act on its way to the bie time. Travia Wener, an outficlder, and Parker Prewer, pitcher and out- fielder, have jo‘mpi the Firates at spring ogres at Paso Robics, Ca!. wis is doubis f-:ct cousin of the Waner brothers. His father ise are Played Football Together Grant Gillis Shortatp rant ‘ te, ih is estimated. May Have Better pitchi should - " a harder team year, says Manager t devclop- pyr A. N. (“BO”) McMILLIN Manhattan, Kas., March 17—(4)— A. N, (“Bo”) McMillin’s advent at the Kansas State Agricultural Col- lege next fall as head coach of foot- ball will be a homecoming to the Southwest for the former Centre Corti ‘idiron star. McMillin was born at Fort Worth, Tex., and has spent most of his life in the southwestern states. After leaving Centre, where his leadership of the “Praying Colo- nels” carried that team to national fame in 1919, 1920 ahd 1921, Mc- Millin went to Centenary College, Shreveport, La., as football coach until 1925, when he went to Geneva college, Beaver Falls, Pa. After two successful years at Ge- now ceeds Coach Charles W. Bachman, who resigned last fall to become head coach at the University of Florida. Davis Cup Play Will For American Zone to Be Played in June Chicago, March 17.— (AP) — The finals in the American zone of the Davis Cup competition will be played in Chicago June 1, 2 and 3, James C. Stewart, president of the West- ern Lawn Tennis association and member of the Davis Cup committee, announced today. The United States and Japan are expected to meet in the finals as the two teams are in opposite brackets of the American zone draw. The United States netmen will play their first match in Mexico City May 19 against the Mexican team, the winner to meet Canada in the semifinals. Japan drew Cuba in the first round with the winner meet- ing Cuba. ¢ a | INNEW YORK | a ‘ ! New York, March 17.—Grim dramas lurk around almost any latyreasg | corner if you have the patience to wait a short time and the imagination to catch them on the wing. For they move with the speed of a cinema sequence. A_ shrill shriek, a shuffle of feet, the flash of guns, desperate youngsters jump- ing into an auto, police, shots and then—it all disappears around the next corner. You never know what happens. The city swallows its ugly scenes and goes on. Or a man and a girl meet at a corner. A second girl comes up, heated words pass. Suddenly a swinging of arms, a call for police, a shuffle and, again—the drama dis- appears around the corner. Was it an irate wife, come up a faithless husband? Or a study in cheap jeal- ousy, or what? Not one in the great crowd that gathered will ever know. Once more the city swallows its sordid scenes. ae The other night a dweller in the Bronx was called upon to aid three men who fell dying to the side walk while walking from the subway to his apartment—a distance of about four blocks. o% And there wag that strange story of the Broadway crowd that: looked on while a man wa. battling unsuc- cessfully for life—a tale one of the Russian realists might have spun. An electrician had been working on one of those huge electric signs that pwing over Broadway. Sud- denly the scaffolding on which he had been working gave way. He clutched at a swinging rope and caught it, hanging thus in mid-air far above the heads of the crowd. Precious minutes passed/before he was even noticed. When, finally, THIS HAS HAPPENED SALLY FORD, 16, with tor acting, teed sak Beye See home since che was four, in of efforts to adopt : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Oa ter wentinental, NOW GO ON “ITH TRE STORY CHAPTER II CAUSE she was leaving the or: phanage for a temporary new home on the Carson farm, Sally was permitted to take her regular Sat- urday night bath that afternoon. In spite of her terror of the future, the girl who had never known any home but a state orphan asylum felt a thrill of adventure as she splashed in a painted tin tub, gloriously alone, unhurried by clamorous girls waiting just outside the little cubicle. The cold water—there was no hot water for bathing from April first to October first—made her skin slow and tingle. As she dried her. self on a ragged wisp of grayish- white Turkish toweling, Sally sur- veyed her slim. white body with shy pride. Shorn of the orphanage uni- form she might havo been any pretty young girl budding into womanhood, 80 slim and rounded and pinky-white she was, “I guess I’m kinda pretty,” Sally whispered to herself, as she thrust her face close to the small, wavery mirror that could not quite succeed in destroying her virginal lovell- ness. “Sweet sixteen and—never been kissed,” she smiled to herself, ,then bent forward and gravely laid her pink, deliciously curved lips against the mirrored ones. Then, in a panic lest she be too late to seo kind Miss Pond, she jerked on the rest of her clothing. “Dear Sally, how sweet you look!” Miss Pond clasped her hands in ad- miration as Sally slipped, breath. less, into the locker-room that con- tained the clothes of all the girls of her dormitory. “Did you bring the card that tells all about me—and my mother?” Sally brushed the compliment aside and demanded in an eager whisper. “No, dearie, I was afraid Mra. Stone might want it to make an entry about Mr. Carson's taking you for the summer, but I copied the data. You go ahead with your packing while I tell you what I found out,” Miss Pond answered nervously, but her palo gray eyes were sparkling with pleasure in her mild little escapade, Sally unlocked her own particu- lar locker with the key that always hung on a string about her neck. but almost immediately she whirled upon Miss Pond, her eyes imploring. “It won't take me a minute to pack. Miss Pond. Please go right on and tell me!” Salford, an English industrial | center, is forcing its unemployed | Know the Lass? “Well, Sally, I'm afraid there; the fluor. isn't much to tell.” Miss apologetically. widow, aged 283—” sum in mental arithmetic. she'd be 40 now, wouldn't she Forty seems awfully old—” “Forty is comparatively young, | Sally!” Miss Pond, who was looking regretfully back upon 40 herself, “But let me hurry on. She gave poverty and ill- as her reasons for asking the state to take care of you. She said said rather tartly. your father was dead.” “Oh, poor mother!” the {ll, filmed her blue eyes. “The state accepted you provi- sionally, and shortly afterward sent an investigator to check up on her “The investigator found that the woman, Mrs. Ford, had left the city—it was Stanton, 30 miles from hore—and that no one knew where she had gone. From that day to this we have had no word from the woman who brought you here. She was a mystery in Stanton, and has re mained a mystery until now. I'm sorry, Sally, that I can’t tell you story,” Miss Pond went on. more.” “oh!” men to go to school two hours a day and to take physical training. Or the Laddybucks? he attracted attention the gathered thousands thought they were looking upon some nifty publicity stunt. One or two in the mob that began to block traffic had moments of doubt. A policeman was approached, but he merely brushed away the timid by- stander. That sort of Shing. hap pared all the time, the cop explained. meone was pity | to attract at- tention. One day it was a human fly climbing a building, and another cg was’something else. leanwhile the grip of the strug- ling man grew weaker and weaker upon the rope. Meanwhile his cries for aid finally reached the street and terror swept the army of on- lookers. It was too late! Slowly the strengthless hands slid down the rope. And the man dropped into space—crashing to his death! Something of the status of mod- ern-day entertainment in Manhat- tan can be gathered from a few fig- ures Roxy gave me the other day when his “cathedral of cinema” was le ore than ,000 have spent $5,- at one ent inment, Multivly this by the page t, the Capitol and one smaller film houses a aoe Eker ce y glamorous, pleasure-chasing Broad- way. se © Speaking of the’ s: cattbedvalat Ian told the they become as much a ist’s route as the Woolworth build- ing, Trinity Church or the Statué of lberty. An excursion of 100 col- eels made the movie-theatre their only 1 thousand uptown adventure. be shown about, pcreidag do 3 sl are not interested ye ‘the picture, seeil but merely want “to toss ie over the RT SWAN, GILBE) (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) »| One-Eye Seen any Irish around here? You don’t have to ask it twice of a St. “givin of-the foinest ye'd hope to lay eyes on.’ Do you know your Irish? Then, who are these seven. Patrick's Day, and here are Look at their faces closely, and it you don’t recognize them, look below for the correct ident jon. 1—Gov. Al Smith of New York; 2—Colleen Moore of the movies; 3— Connolly, world champion « “gate-crasher”; 4—Senator Tom Walsh of Montana, head of the Senate ofl investigations; 5—Join J. Mc- Graw, manager of the New York Giants; 6—John McCormack, king of the Irish minstrels; 7—John Dempsey, former heavyweight champion o! the wortd, “Don't forget me, kids,” she panted, her voice thick with tcars. she’s young!” Sally breathed | tically. Then her face clouded, as her nimble brain did a quick “But | A shadow flitted across Sally's delicate face; quick tears for the dead father and poverty-stricken mother Sally’s sharp cry was charged with such pain and disap- pointment that Miss Pond took one ‘of the little clenched fists between her own thin hands, not noticing that the slip of paper fluttcred to] you mustn't let them take liberties | chapter, for Sally mects David, CME RS ‘Jone-half hour before h si e s| “She didu’t write to someone who loved! g me—" $I “Remember she was sick and poor, Sally. she went to a hospital sudde dd died. | ¢ any pa-|t sit v grown now, You'll be leav-| t 2, ing us when you're 18, unless you ant to stay on as an assistant |i ron or as a teacher—' “Oh, no, not” Sally cried. “I—|} |T'll pack now, Miss Pond. And thank you a million times for tell- ing me, even if it did hurt.” In her distress Miss Pond trotted | I | meager life history. But Sally had {not forgotten it. She snatched it | from the floor and pinned it to her \“body waist,” a vaguo resolution | forming in her troubled heart. When five o'clock came Sally Ford w aiting in the office for Clem Ca her downcast eyes fixed steadily upon the small brown paper parccl in her lap, color stain- ing her neck and cheeks and brow, for Mrs. Stone, stiffly, awkwardly but conscientiously, was doing her institutional best to arm the state's | J outside world. “And so, Sally, I want you tg re member to—to keep your body*pure and your mind clean,” Mrs. Stone summed up, her strong, heavy face almost as red Sally's own. “You're too youns to go out with young men, but you'll bo meeting the hired hands on the farm. You— MH together down the long cement walk to where his car was parked at the j curb, nearly 300 little girls, packed {like a herd of sheep in the wire- fenced playground adjoining the front lawn, sang out good-bys and 8 kerchief, craned her neck for a last hamed little girls, the only play- mates and friends she had in the world. homesickuess shooting through her heart. How safe they were, there fn Pond | know how I was, didn’t care wheth-|the playground pen! smoothed a folded bit of paper er I lived or dicd! I wish I hadn't “The record saysjasked! I thought maybe there was you were brought here May 9, 1912, | somebody, Just 12 years ago, by a woman who said you were her daughter. She gave your birthday as June 2, 1908, | and her name as Mrs, Nora Ford, a and sheltered life was iu the Home, after all! dren, "| figure as graceul as @ fawn’s, over orphans, she spread her arms, as embrace, pauted, her voice thick with tears, and I'm sorry for every mean thing and mamas and have ice cream the|every day! Good-by, kids! Good- jmemorandum of Sally’s pitifully | by!” | tle whining voice pleaded, \lips, through the fence opening, against the babyish mouth of little Eloise Durant, the newest and most forlorn orphan of them all. won't have nobody to play-act for us now!” Betsy wailed, pressing her tear-stained face against the wire. seated primly beside Clem Carson, you, Sally? How about a little kiss for your new boss?” {of any kind with you. We try to | Bixe you girls in the Home a sound | Feligious and moral traini ind it | it you're 1 astray tt willbe due | March 27 of Crystal Springs to the evils im your own nature an | not to lack of proper Christian Alth ay Fi Slashed by Maniac \training, You understand me, ough petitions for a change in —_— \gally?”” the gas tax law are being circulated! Tappen, N. D., March 17.—-(Special ES she added severely. es, Mrs, Stone,” Sally answered | in a smothered voice, Sally's hunted eyes glanced wild- {throughout the state, only a few have ly about for a chance of escape and lighted upon the turning knob of the door. In a moment Clem Carson was cdging in, his brown-leather | face slightly flushed, a tell-tale odor of whisky and cloves on his breath. “Little lady all ready to go?” he inquired with ispiciously jovial laugh, which le Sally crouch lower in her chair, “Looking pretty as a picture, too! With two pretty girls in my house this summer, reckon I'll have to stand gua: a shotgun to keep the boys away.” Word had gone round that Sally Ford was leaving the Home for the summer, and as Clem Carson and is new unpaid hired girl walked E jood wishes, “Good-by, Sal-lee!_ Hope you hare od time!” ‘ood-by, Sal-lec! Sal-lee!” Write me a “Good-by, good- y, waving her Sunday hand- ight of thoso blue-and-white-ging- There were tears in her yes, and, queerly, for she thought he hated tho Home, a stab of How simple Suddenly she knew, omchow, that it was the last time he would cver see it, or the chil- Without a thought for the tron- lad “Keep off the grass” rule, Sally urned and ran, fleetly, her little he thick velvet carpet of the lawn. When she reached the high fence hat separated her from the other if she would take them all into her “Don't forget me, kids!” she "I—I want to tell you I love you all, ever did to any of you, and I hope out of the locker-room without a | You all get adopted by rich papas | thought for the bit of paper on which she had scribbled “Kiss me good-by, Sal-lee!” a lite Sally stooped and pressed her “Me, too, Sal-lee! Me, too! We A little later, when Sally was jolting rapidly down the road that chargo for her fitst foray into the | led past the orphauage toward the Teor eee | business district of the city, the farmer nudged her in the ribs and chuckled: “You're quite a kissing-bug, ain't (To Be Continued) Life brightens a bit in the nezt UH [Litchville People Are Granted Better Electric Service | Meters are the best gauge for de- ining what an eccentric con- ould pay for the service he the state railroad board of certain citi- zens of Litchville vs, J. W. Haars- ager, operator of the clectric light plant at that p The petitio: ked for increased hours of electrical service and a re- duction in the rate. They wanted service during 18 of the 24 hours daily, except Sunday, and a rate of 15 cents per kwh. After a hearing, during which all phases of the business were consid- ered, the commission established the rate at 20 cents per kwh and di- rected that service be given from sunset until midnight and from seven o'clock in the morning until noon. On Sundays service will be given from 10 o’clock until noon and from one-half hour ‘ore sunset until midnight. In its investigation the commis- sion found that some of the consum- ers had meters, which they owned themselves, while others received service at a flat rate. The company was directed to take over all meters within the next year and that other consumers be put on metered basis within 90 days so that not more than five per cent of the consumers shall be on a flat rate basis. The commission promised to make further investigation of the ‘ease to determine the reasonable- jness of the new rates under the changed conditions of service.. $$$ if Flashes of Life { (By The Associated Press) » New York —There’s a difference of spiaien between Colonel Henry) Dickinson Lindsley, retired banker, and Miss Victoria Boshko as to whether they are engaged. An ad- vertised announcement was _repudi- ated by the Colonel. “In fact I’m married,” he said. Miss Boshko re- pled that the ad was inserted by r family after the Colonel had made the announcement at a tea. Springfield, Mass. — Nat is a | pointer who knows his stuff. Fifty pheasants escaped from a park pen. | _ffet= to evnture them were futile till Nat solved the problem. He sneaked up on them one by one like a cat, pounced, grabbed them with his mouth, and took them to the pen unharmed. Cambridge, Mass. studying the action of oil in a Diesel engine by taking pictures at the rate of 4,000 a second. The process was |described by W. F. Joachim, re- search enginecr, at the Massachu- setts Institute of Technology. POST AUXILIARY REORGAN- IZED La Moure-The Women's Auxiliary to the Frank L. Townsend post, American Legion, of La Moure, was recently reorganized with 16 charter members. Mrs. H. R. S. Diesem is president, and Mrs. C. V. Payne, sec- retary treasurer. LARKIN FILES OATH OF OFFICE When Frank Milhollan, present chairman, leaves the state railroad board April 1, Ben Larkin, who has been spprinted to succeed him, will be ready to go to work. Larkin al- ready has filed his oath of office with the secretary of state as re- quired by law. » FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: some girls are good PAGE SEVEN field for be time before turning the ge ) ioe Rey lot. ly Bae jortl otan recently pur. chased one of the old ranches in his * neighborhood which demonstrates that he has considerable faith in « North Dakota land and the live stock business as a whole. present time he is operating on h own account and experimentin; a load of baby beeves which fattening for the market.” Stock in Vicinity PETITIONS FOR GAS TAX BOOST IN CIRCULATION Only a Few Received to Date —Must Be Filed By | to the Tribune)—Residents of the Crystal Springs vicinity are on the lookout for an apparently demented man who has been visiting various farms there during the past few nights and slashing live stock so badly that the animals in many cases have had to be killed. The J. P. Kennelly farm, the Mrs. Edna New- berry farm and the Perry Robinson ranch have been visited by the fiend, and milch cows, brood sows and calves have been severely injured. While at the Robinson ranch the man slashed a fine hog, several caives, and even cut the ears off the watch dog. The supposed maniac was tracked part way across the field, but the trail was lost. Tracks \indicate that he is a man of large |build, and wears one overshoe and one rubber, been received by the committee which is receiving the petitions here, it was announced toda: The petitions, which are being cir- culated under the direction of the North Dakota County Commission- ers association, ask that a vote be taken next June on the question of | increasing the present two-cent gas- | oline tax to four cents. | For many years this state had aj one-cent gasoline tax. In June, 1926, it was increased to two cents by a! vote on an initiative measure. The/| two-cent law contained a provision whereby farmers could obtain re-/ funds for taxes paid on gasoline! used for power and purposes other than propelling vehicles over the highways. -Now they’re As house -to- house saleswomen, bookkeepers. | One Cent to Counties The proposed four-cent law would present law. It would provide an additional tax of one cent a gallon, jfor use by the state highway com-! | mission in building state highways, | |and a new tax of one cent a gallon to luse in building county highways or! | to defray the county’s share of build-! jing state roads. The proposed initiated law would apportion the money to the counties on the basis of the ratio of the num. be= of vehicles registered. Such pay- ments would be made quarterly in| the same manner that the county’s | shares of motor vehicle license taxes now are disbursed. The only other important change committee said, 10,000 signatures to| the initiated petition are needed and! the petitions must be filed with the secretary of state not later than March 27 to get the matter on the} ballot at the June primary. | Dakotan Says Open | | Markets Are Best! |_P. L, Beckley of Bordulac, N. D.,! who topped the market Monday with | 12 head of 1,145 ound mixed Short-} horn steers and heifers at $12.50 a hundredweight, is a regular con- tributor to open markets where he feels that competitive buying re- turns the consignee the highest pos- sible prices for their live stock, ac-| cording to a current issue of the, Scuth St. Paul Daily Reporter. The | sale was made through the Seckins | Commission company of South St.} Paul. | “Mr. Beckley asserted that com-, peuute buying at open markets is! neficial to Northwest live stock | producers, a conclusion he reached after having experimented with di- | rect buying at private yards,” the | | Reporter continues. “He said that | {his last experience with direct buy- | |ing when he found an unsatisfactory | | outlet for his shipment of stock, left no doubt in his mind that the open; |central market is the proper term- inal for farmers who expect to re- | ceive the highest prices possible for their live stock. “In_addition to Monday's cappers, | Mr. Beckley’s shipment included 42 | head of Hampshire and Duroc Jersey | hogs which shold well and also drew | a 10 cent premium owing to the fact | that these hogs had come from Fos- ter county, a district free from tu-| berculosis for the past three years. | The cattle were bought by the Bordu- | | lac stockman in his own vicinity last | September. He ran them in a corn-| jretain most of the features of the! Reiiemesnemorse ssh Incorporations | —— Crosby Supply company, Crosby, i Monson, Daniel be turned over to the counties for | Hallquist, both of Crosby, and Otto $25,000; Edwin L, Wannagat, Minot. Mott Mill and Elevator company, | to operate a mill, elevator and light plant, $25,000; H. P. Jacobsen, L. V. | Ducanson, E. H. Trousdale and P. E. Trousdale. Dakota Refrigeration Fargo, $24 son, Valley Cit: Security Building and Loan Asso- | ciation, Minot, $5,000,000; W. A. Ra Christine, Martin Ss Carl Lindgren a Cook and seven others. CANZONERI IN HOSPITAL New York, March 17.— (AP) — world’s weight champion, was convalescing in a private hospital here today after an operation for the removal of Tony Canzoneri, tonsils, m and P. E, Johnson, New Eagle Telephone company, Albin E, Johnson, Albert Johnson, Sam Anderson, Interstate Fair Association, Beach, L_. R. O. Niece, J. A. Miller, C. P. A. e 000; . Taber and Jen- nie E, Taber, Fargo; and H. L. Wil- from the present law would be a | Langer, B. Dickinson, A. vision requiring applicants for Bratsberg, . Bray, 0. B. funds to file their applications with-| and 23 other: ‘i in six months after the gasoline is Incorporations purchased. Pe Shipping As- Under the law, members of the so Swendseid, Clyde > company, feather- Offers Paying Interest — The — “Savings and Loan” 11 Broadway, Fargo, N. D. Write For Circulars Organized 1893 Resources over $3,500,000 If you are one of those Brazen Beings that be- apparel are in the same class as those who ride in hansom cabs. Be in the Big Limou- sine Class. Wear clothes that bring out your dis- tinctive personality. And that reveal style in every line. Worthy long to the Mothball Woolens | Club, you should reply ; | “Nothing!” For folks Trim who wear out of date Tailoring Sound Stitching For Easter April -8- DORUM Exclusive Tailoring _ | .First Guaranty Bank BMg,

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