The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 17, 1929, Page 4

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4 The An Independent Newspaper ‘THE STATE'S OLDTST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) 1 ES AEE ae ase nds petias Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck a8 second class mail matter. the advantege of living conditions, educational oppor- tunities and mental stimuli in the suburban and town regions named are greater than in remote rural sections. | It is generally conceded that the more active, aggressive | and successful types gravitate to the larger towns. RURAL THIEVERY REVIVES THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, DEAR READER: THIS IS --- AUGUST 17, 1929 i A Vacation Idyll! | BILL spivs! BILLS ---- THE GUY ---- A George D. Mann... President and Publisher While the midwest is having a wave of country bank : aia R ee let robberies, the cast has developed rural thievery in addi- ae ie ear able In Advance 20 | tion to its city gun gangs, hold-ups, Killings and racketeer “oe, | att By pom her seat dn Bismarck). 72.20 | battles. Thirty yeers ago the Buzzard ganz of the Welsh : , ~e Daily by mail, per year, | mountains of Pennsylvania was as noted in its way as REFRIGERATED FOOD : The great value of home refrigera. a Wty tech ouunlde of Norte” Lee ee SRULAGL © ena GUST: ERR SMERE “ie The health value of our modern| tion is that it keeps the molds, yeast Sy Daily by mail, outside of | North Dakota {and bank robberies. The Buzzard gang operated in areeH ‘ods of refrigeration cannot be and elt = quiescent state * Weekly by mail, in state, per year 1.00) accord with its name. It was the most notorious gang overestimated, Met ae ae the near ed that, Nano ehjoved i ¥ Weekly by mail, in state, three ise of chicken thieves in the land and its operations became . many Stren e = tan seats | cooling’ Hikle sof “Tes) even Autigh ee ee oe ition afte: the leader got religion and turned |year rou bid Member Audit Burcau of Circulation { | Gradually chicken thefts dropped off, like horse thefts. eelict—for several years, ago could be used only over periods of time each year. It seems but a short time ago when at Ie.st) Dr. McCoy will gladly answer + personal questions on health ana w : ‘ ‘ ited te Che Ue Hoid-ups of pay roll messengers and banks became the in small towns an icebox was a iat GE et oat to him, care of The ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitle je use | is, 5 o: he Sacmtain | 5 so for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | Oraer of the day. The once poplilar brand (gts The wholesale distribution of fresh] Enclose stamped addressed tion not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the | banditry languished and fell into innocuous desuetude. meat and other foods is possible only || envelope for reply. exp local news of spontancous origin published herein. All| However, old styles and old ways will hays their revival through the far-reaching develop- bass * rights of republication of all other matter herein are! and on modern large scale, with science’s aid, the revival ments of the refrigeration aera ore ‘ade not NdMe GE Whee Heskett som also reserved ES __ | of chicken stealing has made its appearance. Foods are now shipped in a whole- A POhAbly. CAPEIAA' fin fon, oft SRE ET tae ? at at some state from where they are but it was probably cabeled itt from nh Forcign Representatives Instead of the lazy darky who used to steal a hen or plentiful to other places where they | ice houses in the mountains at great ab SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS two on a moonless night, the rural districts are now in- are needed. 4 | expense, a m ‘ oft (Incorporated) is fested by efficient bands of chicken thieves who make Since meat is one of our best and] ; ah cone eee cia | Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. |away with every fowl on several farms as one night's most easily digested proteins, fur-| is s! y [e end CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON ju nishing one of the indespensable | one who can afford to eat can afford ae ———_-- ~~ | Woes : ishment to the body,|to keep his food in a clean, whole. abo (Official City, State and County Newspaper) The theft of a thousand hens or turkeys, which is said LS Wientiful and also| some, cool, state without danger of ied _—— Se LETTE ‘ive to be fairly common in many sections, sounds hazardous. now so well distributed that every-| putrefactive changes. ECL 2 OF NOTED DETECTIVE | ny squawking fowls would wake the countryside. one may have it, is a modern miracle’ palais oe be OLB decir apne) irre a eon trembled FSET one may have it ar'ineressed health| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Coo As a real deteciive, the most noted writer of detec But the thieves permit no sound. They release a little tnd energy. Also, the ability to) ‘ Cheesy Formations in Throat ; It stories of the day has proved a woeful flop, while a hick ‘gas in the henhouse and after the birds fall from the vPhiah wieotabless dairy products| Question: M. K. asks: “What lor sheriff from Powers county, Colorado, has turned out to| roost temporarily unconscious they dump them in bags oo eats et the very finest | causes the white cellular formations 4 con: be a Hawkshaw, a Vidocq, a Sherlock Holmes and an| and carry them away in trucks. condition insures plenty, and also BAL tied Eg the throat r Pile Old Sleuth all rolled into one. Gradually the rural states are becoming as well organ- acts as a stabilizer as to supply and. opposite the palate? ley cause a Thus we have the contrast of “S. 8. Van Dine,” in private and official life Willard Huntington Wright, assistant police commissioner of Bradley Beach, N. J., and L. E. Alderman, the Colorado sheriff who tracked down and tock into custody a gang of seven bank robbe! The cultured fictionist who has outdone even Sir Conan Doyle in the production of hig! complicated crime stories, bringing into play vast resources of learn- ing, including a knowledge of abstruse medical science, has been eclipsed by a “hick” official The dethronement of the great detecti “Canary Murder,” “The Greene Murder ve analyst whose " and other best ized against the chicken thief as they once were against the cattle and horse thief. The time is near at hand when the country will be safe for poultry raising. Large rewards, severe penalties, relentless pursuit of chicken thieves, state police organizations and registra- tions of poultry dealers and poultry sales are combining to make this form of thievery hazardous. ‘The registra- | tion of poultry dealers and poultry seles has been tried in some states with considerable success. Poultry raising has become one of the nation’s largest industries, a fact, combined with its staggcring losses through thefts, which warrants additional protection 7 |manding more personal _upright- price. All wholesale grocers, butchers and dairymen are dependent upon cold storage or some form of ar- tificial production of cold, and they) can now get this when and where | they want it. In the dairies, the! milk instantly cooled a few mo- ments after it is milked, thus pre-| venting the development of putre- factive bacteria. The cream is al- so regulated to the best temperature | for churning, and the butter can be| held in the cold room in first class shape until the supply is absorbed. slight soreness until they loosen and come out? What can be done to pre- vent their formation?” Answer: The cheesy masses which form in the crypts of the tonsi! be prevented from forming if will be more careful with your A good local treatment may be en with the ultra-violet light. This application of astinic rays will kill any bacterial growth in the tonsils, and also tends to shrink the mem: branes to normal size. If your phy- sician does not have this equipment he can treat your throat with some sellers had the whole country mystified as to the identity | from state and local governments. Che ber that long. We don’t imagine|This is an aid in price regulation, | medical preparation such as silver = of this new crime luminary—as he wrote under the pen [ness from everyone, Both male and | that’s any soft soap cither. since too great a supply alternating nitrate. cat 4 is Foca i e sa e sai P, emale, or that we simply get ex- eon oe with too little causes the unsteady ‘ “ ot GES RO a blast e el FRANCE DISCOUNTS FORTS cited when things are found out! | Tomt Ashe found a kettle contain-| price fluctuations. Question: C. T. asks: “Does chili found himrelf with a real murder on his hands. ank| rhe French government has granted the Lufthansa It all seems a bit unfair when) ing 16,000 silver dollars in an old} Perhaps one of the most spectacu- | Contain any ni hment?” messenger was found slain, There didn’t seem to be company, Germany's leading aviation organization, per- stump on his farm at Beach Ridge, {lar recent developments possible} Answer: Chili is very high in 1 <nescetedthabbhdbhehOeGeResPehedtbeids sd iii iy HPbed EEE £500.25 Bf bemeemmveer -SEEPELTLDE MEDEA TTL 0 much mystery to th hat, considering that “Van Dine” was | ‘on the job. He hu ried to the spot. It might be desig | mission to fly its planes over Fort Cherbourg, near the principal scaport of France, in order to speed up delivery i} y ‘one knows that this younger man, | japan to marry another girl who lost) ; his job for admitting his misconduct | ALLENE SUMNER with the dead co-ed, had doubtlessly Ky. How’s that for “pot luck?” * Oe through refrigeration is the shipping of fresh fish all over America, In- nourishment, being made mostly of meat. It is highly flavored with pep- “x re s ‘ On a per capita basis an average|stead of making the housewife rely|Pers and therefore is irritating to mated as the spot “X". There he stood, examining &| or tay between Germany and the United States. The is + for Performed not a whit differently; of 205.4 telephone conversations are|alone on salted fish, the fresh fish|the stomach and cannot be consid- a und waited breath: That there is one moral law for A ach | ; - battered hat. The crowd gathered aroun - {mail bags will be dropped on the deck of the Bremen,}men and another for women from a handful of other men on the/held by the people of the United|such as salmon and halibut—cheap |Cred & wholesome food except for lessly for some such utterance as his hero, “Philo Vance,” conviet faculty. But he got found out. They | States. Believe it or otherwise, those who have been accustomed for might have made under similar circumstances. But he made no declaration of theory or fact or even any cryptic pronouncement of profound mystery in which might be embodied, for all his hearers knew, a with-/} held solution of the crime with which in due time he would clinch his title to the pedestal on which his} “Philo Vance” had placed him, He merely said: “I'm! @fraid I'm stuck. I have no theory.” Now, of Alderman nothing great was to be expected. He was simply a six-foot, rough-hewed, two-gun guardian of the law in that remote Colorado county. A rural Col- ofado farmer until his election by his neighbors two years go, he stepped into the limelight with all the sagacity and acumen of a trained sleuth, solved the baffling Germany's record-breaking transatlantic liner. France's action is commendable, because it indicates less of the distrust and suspicion that have marked rela- tions between France and Germany sinee the Franco- Prussian war in 1870, But at the same time will there be much necessity for any nation guarding the secrets of its forts if another big war should come? Will not those forts which helped stem the German advance into France in 1914 be as obsolete as the cannon of Civil War days? If that war should come, death will rain from the skies and what good will a few forts be? The long-range cannon that bombarded Paris during the World war amazed the entire world, but since then aviation with nenstop flights for planes of more than 4000 miles and of our most accepted “The double standard” believed in despite all protests. Columbus, O. The man fighting for his life was a professor in Ohio State University till he was accused of A murder trial is in progress in is heartily. didn't. {no cheap talk. | (Copyright, 19: ' * * WOMEN ONLY! It probably explains right now! why teaching has never been con- sidered a man’s job, and why so few) , that’s | NEA Service, Inc.) | murdering a co-ed, Miss Theora Hix. his job away before this fact was|!" known, and when only his admission that he maintained an apartment with the girl was known, * * * *"NOTHER ONE FIRED Another member of the faculty who was forced to admit knowing the dead girl not wisely but too well,) j to al {men are in it. out too much protest. have learned, and probably But teaching needs the right It is preposterous | the hands of women teachers, but that’s | | | C 1 just what it’s coming to, if it hasn’t/¥C¥ and your children clash wills jwill, |sort of men, too. 2” into their personal affairs w place all growing boys. in ready come, * Women have been} Iniversity authorities really took! forced by tradition to accept “nos Men never | never | Talks To ¢9, 4.3... Parents MOTIVES (By Alice Judson Peale) When disobedience seems rife, when |More frequently than usual, when |there seems to be an enduring an- | * mystery, rounded up seven alleged members of the gang for dirigibles of more than 6000 miles has made the “Big | “2% also told to lock for another| “voune - o” |tagonism beneath the surface, look in various parts of the United States and has furnished an Ea apes aia: pling aaapOn Lata 8 | job. Seas. | Sianee. Aha reese charm. | fF the motives at the root of the police departments everywhere with photos and finger- ie “ 3 |_,The same university issued a x trouble. Look for them not only in prints of the alleged ringleader, who escaped him by only 10 minutes in Peoria, Il. The most amazing part about the whole case is how | this ex-farmer, untrained in the ways of big cities and | in the ways of criminals, succeeded where other officers, with more opportunity to know the devious ways of the underworld, had failed. It looks like a man who probably would be referred to in criminal parlance as a “hick cop” and snecred at by professional detectives has out- smarted one of the most daring gangs of desperadocs the southwest has known since the days of Jesse James and brought them to bay. Well, maybe Sheriff Alderman was a “hick cop”; maybe he didn’t know any more about criminology, or clues, or Bertillon photos, or blood tests and things like that until he undertook to solve this case. But the fact remains, The next war cannot be confined to combatant armies. statement to the effect that moral; Now that the farmers have been relieved, how about aid for the 48 Ycung Edisons @hose questionnaires were failures? The hardest thing about lying to your freinds 1s that | it makes you think they are lying to you. Pity the poor bachelor who frequently lacks an audi- ence when he feels in a humor to brag. However, the laws should not have tecth cnough to bite off more than they can chew. Any gocd car would lact three years if there were no rectitude would be demanded from| its staff with more searching out of personal lives than ever before. A state educational sociation took up the subject declaring that teachers everywhere must submit to an intimate questionnaire and inves- tigation designed to show whether or not their characters would permit; them to be teachers. ® “NOSINESS” Besides, this whole tendency subject teachers, both men and wom | en, to more personal investigation | | than workers in any other profession | | must undergo, can not help but re-!® flect unfortunately to that profes- m! orbid remorse, and how all BARBS The rocking chais marathons re-| avare that she is, How she at. ing new book by, Martha Ostenso| called “The Young May Moon” is a} perfect example of what community | ,, nosiness” can do to a human soul. Marcie Gunther, quarreled with her j husband, Rolf, one_night and ran! away from him. was back, repentant, to find that he 's dist hod aeawhed Meneett: \your child's disturbed behavior. Yet tempted to rebuild her life and fight her fighting was ruined by the town’s fiendish curiosity is the interesting * to| theme of the book. By morning she | your children but in yourself. Very likely ordinarily you are quite illing to admit that you are a weak and erring mortal, but in your role of parent you generally claim infallibil- \ ity. Rarely does it occur to you to look ;to your own motives as factors in ‘hose who undertake to straighten out the tangled skein of childhood troubles have learned to look always for the part that parents unconsciously play. A mother who was herself dom- inated by a severe and high-handed parent often takes out on her children her own suppressed resentment at the treatment she received. She calls her harshness “ and “righteous indignation,” scipline” quite un- in reality, reacting foods which are highly desirable— are made available for the inland districts by freezing. Another result of refrigeration in the fish industry is that fish no longer have to be caught in the cold countries, such as Newfoundland, where it i ships. The profuse supply of fish in these southern waters has ways been known, but now refrig- eration opens up a whole new world jof supply to the people who like ee fish on Friday or any other jay. DAVID CROCKETT the birth of David Crockett, famous pioneer, soldier and politician. Born in Greene county, Tenn., on typical backwoodsman, but shrewd, and skillful as a hunter. war against the Creek Indians. In 1821 and 1823, he was elected to the Tennessee legislature, and in cold enough to salt them {without spoiling, but they may also {be taken from the south seas and im- mediately put into iced or cooled al- is the 143rd anniversary of Aug. 17, 1786, Crockett became a unlettered | He served under Jackson in the 3 years to its use. Arms Get Numb Quesiien: Mrs. E. S. asks: “Will you please tell me what to do for niy arms? They get numb up to the elbow every night.” Answer: You are probably suf- fering from some kind of circulatory disorder, possibly due to some heart derangement which is usually caused by the pressure of excessive gas in an overloaded stomach crowding the heart. Try eating a smaller meal at night, and be careful about the food combinations. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syn- dicate, Inc.) UOTATIONS the “I believe’ America enjoys {Peaceful record it has because it has been able to drain off its pent-up feelings in games like baseball Secretary of Labor James J. Davis. * oe OK “We must remember that the othe: nations are our neighbors. We can- not live to ourselves alone.”—Senator Thomas of Oklahoma. * * “Business is beginning to run the world. And good business hates war.” —Secretary of Labor James J. Dav et sion. : jmind one that the-e are a lot of in hate against the harshness of her |1826, 1828 and 1832 wi i eae j ioe he aia tt tslenbone poles akeng the highway, hls, man or woman with the most champs sitting still in @ straight-| oun chughood whieh at the time she | Congress, where his oddities of ess | yt carat thet oF gece cael There ought to be a moral to these two contrasting e ih ene en eee ake if SRA tiay Attia cand look ‘ * * |dared not express. : attracted considerable attention. | all matters that affect his wages and com cases. Perhaps it is that it would be a good thing it we | If te fools were all ceed, what would the coroner do? | oT iton'm long time before he or| When a phone girl gocs to sleep | ycutivate, the habit of criticizing! | At the end of his third term in jworking conditions."—Thomas E. Mit- n had more of these “hick cops” in some of our big cities. _ = the will enter a profession which at the switch it stops her train of | benavior you expect or demand or | qonetess: Crockett enlisted with the|ten, Philadelphia transit, cyerator. _ ‘They may be inexperienced and perhaps a little unsophis-| S¢l90i time 1s approaching, as ail youngsters know. /makes so many inroads upon the | thought, Gs | your child. Think of your own child- | Mexioo, pan Ser yale t ae “T don't like ree Be ccs law.ot Batt ticated, but they are intelligent, upright, diligent and s is decent inalienable right to a little M le were killed N ,| hood, of your present unsatisfied|six survivors of the 140 defenders |it stands, because Xt is making the lyin persistent. No thought of graft from bootleggers, no fear | Don't Worry scout the weather. There may be more. | Privacy. * * work ateeete in aoee7than da the | ieee tramerce bearing on the | ou tte Alamo, where on March 6 the | younger generation drink, and. no- Tong of political pressure sways them, and they don't play] ‘ WHATS IT MEAN? famous battle of Bull Run. Indicat-| conduct, you so deprecate “in. your | Gir, @arrison was killed by Santa|body gets the ‘benefit but’ the boot- ba politics for a current city administration. It's fine to begin at the bottom, if you don't stop there. | Several questions lurk in this trend |ing that the battle of Pedestrian Run | child. sacred. by ate grea) Grama tener Poe cute ton and The moral also might include the suggestion that Mr. of affairs. One voncere if it really |was much wornee Your child has problems enough of| “ Crockett’s well-known eran Gomin mer U. 8, senator fr emmeee ep- Pine chold stick to. bis. Jast, as. cobblets have cea att sce ea'that we are| “The first 50 years are the hard-| burdens: toe" Be mare tint ora Your |“Be sure you're right, thea go * kx “ae been advised to do. He should write keen detective Editorial Comment | demanding the same moral rectitude |est,” says Nicholas Berens of Stev-| demands are wisely motivated before ahead. “Wall Street has become another stories. They are great mental relaxers. Both Benjamin from men as women; that we are de- tens Point, Wis., who has been a bar-1 you expect the obedience you desire. world power, with more authority 1 aYOTPD EEE tz. 0EEMEOTEEDTE TH Harrison and Woodrow Wilson used to resort to them for such relief from the onerous cares of the presidency. Writing detective stories and ferreting out mysteries in Teal life and catching foxy criminals are two separate trades. It is good to have both types of men around. As the St. Paul Dispatch comments, “the laughing at Mr. Van Dine’s expense, however, should not be too Taucous or prolonged. When the world finds a detective who can write good detective stories, it will be high time to expect a writer of detective stories to be something more than a sophomore criminologist. We don't recall that Mr. Burns (William J.) ever wrote a best seller or that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ever headed Scotland Yard. ‘The picture of Mr. Van Dine shaking his head at the spot marked ‘X’ is merely the picture of a gentleman who had an excellent last and forgot to stick to it. But at been singularly acute.” ENVIRONMENT ‘The old dispute whether environment or heredity is the determining factor in shaping men’s lives will not down. In one form or another scientists are helping to throw light on it. Current tests and investigations have brought yout new facts relating to the influence of climate on ~gaankind. - ot example, there is indicated a southward decline in “the production of leaders.. At first glance the cause for this might seem to be climatic. But detailed studies of s sections show that in regions with similar climate May be great disproportions in the production of cially their ideals. If this is true, it is an in- @f the South which. no one who knows the GIVE UP RADIUM PAINT (Milwaukee Journal) ‘We can do without radium paint on our watches. Fifteen persons have died from radium poisoning con- tracted in making or using this paint. Eighteen more are known to be suffering from the disease, and it is @ particularly terrible doom, the sufferer knowing for yealg that the malady has attacked him and that he is conmemned to increasing weakness and pain without pe. Now the department of labor recommends that the in- dustry be abolished, saying that it is not necessary in normal times and that the American companics are ready to give it up if importation is prohibited. The recom- mendation ought to be enough. No one needs a product which he cannot have without condemning some brother or sister to suffering and death. Radium paint is useful in many ways, it has added conveniences to life, but it is not necessary. Men learned the time at night before LORD BADEN-POWELL (New York Post) In the bestowal of title there is a greater niceness than in the system of titles. Just as there is a greater nice- ness in the “name” of the title, so to speak. “Lord Byng of Vimy” and “Viscount French of Ypres” imbed into British history names of great battles fought by British soldiers but not on British soil. So did “Lord Kitchener of Khartoum.” It is not clear from the dispatches whether. Major General Sir Robert Baden-Powell is to be Lord Baden- Powell, as he was apparently called by the prince of Wales, or whether he is to let a new title displace the name by which he is known whetever a boy scout is to be found the world around, But the bestowal of the title gave England a great chance to give recognition to the creator of one of the finest ideas that an has “jamboree” held in England on the twenty-first birthday, the “coming of age,” of the organization which he | OUR BOARDING HOUSE HEY, LIGHTNIN” STR Vou | ~ Gtt oFF'N THAT STEED ae IT'S A MIGHTY MARVEL YoU AAT KILT! <TH’ ONLY THING SAVED Nou , IS “THAT JosEPHINE KNoWS A BLAMED Foot! ~~ [ve BEEN RIDIN” You» SHE KNow se (KE LY Wf s! 4 By Ahern AH, MR. BUTLER “TH OL' WAR SPIRIT HAS COME BACK IN DOSEPHINE SINCE T RoE HER! ~~ ONCE SHE BROKE INTo A-TRoT FoR A YEW STEPS , WITH TH? HIND LEGS, ~ YEH, ~ IT "BROUGHT BACK MEMORIES OF SHERMAN’S MARCH To “TH? SEA! ~~ WHY, Do You KNouw THAT SHE GOT GIDDY oNcE BUT “THAT OL’ ARTHRITIS 4 SToprPeD WER! | Our Yesterdays ~— FORTY YEARS AGO William O. Mulcahy left last eve- ning for his home in Grand Forks. The constitutional convention is to- day considering the location of the various state institutions. A large delegation, including many of the city’s business men, arrived from Ellendale yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. D. Dwyer and Ole Anderson, Sterling, are here on busi- ness, golden wedding anniversary at the old home in New Hampshire, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Hogue, Wash- burn, stopped here today on their way to Minneapolis, Judge Edgar Tibblis left recently for Frazee, Minn., where he has pur- chased dn interest in a bakery and restaurant. Miss Cora Simpson has returned from a visit to St, Paul. TEN YEARS AGO Mrs. Emma G. Wheeler was chosen president of the North Dakota dis- trict of the National Federation of “| Music clubs at the biennial conven- tion at Peterborough, N. H., recently. Miss Helen Riley is visiting friends Halstead, Minn, at Fargo and at @|than the League of Nations, with more subtlety than Bolshevism.”— Viscount Rothermere, publisher Lon- don Daily Mail. ROAD BIDS ADVERTISED Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 17.—Bids for a new highway west from Spirit- ;wood lake are being advertised by the Stutsman board of county com- missioners. The road is to be 5': miles long and will connect with the Spiritwood-Clementsville road. BARTON HARVEST BEGINS Barton, N. D., Aug. 17.—The first grain of the season to be marketed here was the harvest of a 40 acre field of rye owned by Mrs. Gertrude |Gronvold. Harvested by combine, it | that his embarrassment, as he faced the reproachful | We ever heard of illuminated dials; men found their way HER YoR ELEVEN AN’ “TRIED “To “TAKE Pyro Brite ie perigee PURE RRO BL NS 1 78 Por | glances of his own omniscient Mr. Vance, must have| before we had illuminated compasses. NEARS, AN’ [ “TELL A HURDLE 2 cast, and will attend his parents’ : woaglned Bhd crested: in ‘the ‘years tallewing the Bor If ever a man deserved recognition by his country for cf] @ fine creative accomplishment for the good of mankind Baden-Powell deserved it. 1f ever recogni- moment it was mthern people will be willing to accept. earner ber 5 . Belk is home aft pags saa ae, years in the service: He Sg with assertion that the engineers, and was at the front in France for nearly a year, Mrs. J. C. Taylor entertained terday in honor of Mrs. EA. Almos, Watcrtown, 8. D., who is her guest. whe and then by the smaller county | trom all over the Seven Seas and six fei honor to their founder. conclusion flies in the face of the | America cannot highly of Baden-Powell “thinks that his coun- seal of Britain's approval on him It's tough on Dad that 2 lot of tr main highways are buy ways. Most of the bacon eaten in Britain 4s imported from Denmark. * or rencerermmceremnen rh

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