Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Berta Baker Tells Treasurers of State’s Single Depository System od jp EXCELLENT METHODS DESPITE TS YOUTH, ORTH DAKOTA HAS ee pip, Fist State Levy in 1890, Im- {ne —s mediately After Admit- tance to Union FARMERS BORROW MONEY Farm Loans Mace to Enabie 1 Farmers to Get Low Inter- est Rate, She Says ) sixteenth governor is only since 1909 have been required to capital. Before that ) the state and traveled to the capital only when necessary to perform the: carriage, with harness, for the governor. This was onl years after the consus-take: torial days, was crea enced in his efforts to get an acc count of the population because such in @ large proportion of the people were | away on their annua! buffalo hunt. All of this made me realize how few have been the years of our statehood. while eastern states date from the Revolution. We. as a state and peopie hhave gone far since that day and time. “Incidentally, it occurred to me that &@ state so young in vears and experi- ence might have little to offer on an occasion like this to older and more experienced states. Then again, I re- called that the youth of today feel that older people and instit may be fettered by their v precedents ‘and conventions, however worthy th: may be, and it gave me courage to tell of our young efforts to gain that static of fection in public affairs for which we are al) striving. Public a few in tel application to loans are allowed cipal as well given in conseq the and kept on fi fice, bonds be: the state to co’ At state has mor: a Feature “One of the outstanding features of our system is the single depository for act the above loans are suppor’ age All collections from the "s office are required by law equal amount of mortgaces wh be deposited in the state depository, +, known as the Bank of North Dakota, Girected and supervised by the indus- trial commission of our state. The gages which North Dakota @ 2S I am able io bonds on a pre-exis instead of on an ant: interest. Bot! of the state 2 35 million ords are compar: | check. University and School Lan: fund that labie in for mak loans on farm the board of Highest ¥/that many other states hav? | same feature. so will not comm | On it except to say that the state Clear Cloudy e cu: must keep a complete record of the standing of all loans made. and! Cldy | has on file in the office all notes, Clear | mortgages and abstracts in connec-. Clear | tion with them. The state land de- Cloudy | partment acts as the agent cf the | PtCidy | state in making the loans, and also Clear | Clear keeps its own record. Clear Clear PRE ies oblate Fo cok i i LANCES - - - - By George Clark = ; 1 dit ws THE BISM. Nelson Named Grain Inspector of County times * Thursday. the DSPUTESPATRIARGH LARGE ENROLMENT OF CONSTANTINOPLE, POR Erected as Seif-Governing Insti- Expect to Compiete Wings on Two Halls Before Open- ing of Fall Term tution Against Patri- arch’s Orders BISHOP WAS N. J. CAFE MAN jareest registration in the history ¢ the North Dakote Agricultural col- [SIDE GLANcES- by Genes Gur] CHURCH OF ALBANA INQUIRES NCATE AC. AT FAROO Fargo. N. D.. Sept. 5—Praspects for! ese are evident from early inquiries; school studen the AE Par = coliegiaze Difficulties Placed Before Al. banians by Constantinople Astonish King Zog a enrali- ear Was i500. September 20 and 21 registration for fresh- while September 23 and 24 are Br GEORGE HALADJIAN Asscciated Press Ccrrespondent 35. now nearing com- as expected that bah will E the opening < N Pai work and some remodeling of ihe OWNERS ON MANDAN TO DISCUSS LAYING OF MAINS, GRADING : Report on Laying of Sewers is Submitted and Action Again Deferred he McKenzie. Harringion but an offer of Gaschk to puchase L& 2 in the Governor Pierce ad- the east end of Main ave- a petition reet between Avenue P ‘amG were instituted by e¢ at the farm of C. P. automobile thieves A WORD TO THE WI Vacuum Clean: % you a reall Business and no trace of them has Pushing the car out of Man: ome y hand. the thieves ran Vacuum Cleaner Ag! motor, reports state. AD arage at the Carl Walberg farm. Se ee ; Way. you'd simply laugh at my ad- i Past regular college | upperclassmen. @ new car belonging ' dont rou? I'll Jove you. Gear, I swear” 0 @ nearby field before | reall. ARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1929 | those days, to have twins, and name them Lalun and Jale. Jale is a Turk. ish name, and means . Molly never knew what Lalun meant. :t i; | didn't make any difference. at y., | @ beautiful name, and, since she was as well use it somehow. It seeme: more appropriate for the heroine of a » SISINING | TALENT] S2ec= QQ [hese etm dewdrop, ELEANOR EARL vice INS =| Lalun had an intriguing sound tha: cies Bik ‘nink over what | Might mean almost anything. THIS HAS HAPPENED Here's Rix cae eed might | She had a hard time getting the fare worse. | first chapter started. It was differ- = ~tops | to think of a was . Ace Mt and ineckiee Look at my daughter! tion and dialogue, soit! " sthing prettier in! But with a novel like “Ashes of De- : sire” one must be whimsical. Tender, 228 | Profound. Molly went to her book | shelves to see how other authors did, was Wearing a cashmere of ll- | There was George Moore's “Sister T. Sprigged with pink roses | Teresa,“ which was, also, the tragedy ns Ppers | of a woman's life. and Load Molly turned to the opening page: | “She was conscious of her indo- They fluttered | ience: within and without her there and were | was a strange, lifeless calm, a stranec in a perky nosegay on her | inactivity in the air and in her ming. jer. In the landscape and in her there seemed no before and no hereafter. | But a glance inwards revealed to her ne hew | the ripple of some hidden anticipa- ‘Fermez/ tion moving under the sullen surface.” your! Molly loved introspective stu‘f. {Lalun must be introspective. She +9 say | wondered if it would be plagarism, if ¢ primly.| she should begin, “Lalun was con- common | scious of her own futility: within and T shan't al-/ without her there was emptiness . . .” her again. | She considered a moment, and then * declared Mol-! began, swiftly, to type. Before she ne Rita got rouzh.| stopped. Lalun had became a livi accent. Bob? I'll breathing woman. A creature offfire ong now, and not bother you.' and of promise. And, because sh- Be a good girl, Precis | was beautiful, she was beloved, of and Bob | ¢ hat I had| i= to have twins now, she might mamma! Hello daddy!” kissed them im sl ourse. The man who loved her was six Se i | feet, one. He had dark hair, and eyes “she told himito match. Laughing eyes. And a nd laughed because | very strong, determined chin. His ed annoyed {hair had a little wave in it, and his to her chin had a dimple. on the| Molly took the sheet out of the ed 10 typewriter, to read what she had not Go @S/ written about the man who wa; 2 enough | Lalun’s lover. he had | “Good heavens!” she thought. “I've more success y. He could | described Jack Wells!” ... And so hire a capable woman to care for the | che had. It was like a portrait. child, and Go the housewo: also. | (To Be Centiny-3) \First I. W. W. of Year Gets 5-Day Jail Rap | Minot, N. D., Sept. 5.—An I. W. W. organizer, the first to be arrested in Minot this year, was sentenced to the city jail by Police Magistrate Carl N. Cox, who told him that such activities tious marriages wear better, and last would not be permitted in this city. pecple bring to; The organizer, who gave his nam: he same sound reasoning | as W. L. Davis, of Pittsburgh. Pa., and they consider any other | who said that his trade is that of a tract. Well, why not be practical? | furniture packer, was advised by the Me = sighed wearil: Police magistrate that the labsring caaitk 9 it's not worth | hat’s the trouble!” she moaned. | men on farms near Minot are gettin: Fvhrcdige oes t you? Sey aoe | ‘m not practical. I'm romantic.” | along well enough without the I. w. : perticular attraction for! If only she could banish Jack from | W. organization. have something infinitely her mind! She had heard ‘rom him! Davis told the court that the I. w. more important. ‘Thave Rita. | once since he sailed for England with | W. organization is intended to better Mour st d back. | Mrs. Bulwer-Eaton. He had sent her | working conditions for laborers on the “You Te not trying to bribe me with | 2 Colored postcard of Ponte Vecchio, | farms. Rita, are you?” she asked. “| Where she had bought the Borgia ring.| “Go back to your trade—rou have “Why. yes” he admitted, “I sup- There was no mes: Only | no occasion to be interested in the pose 1 ax—if you want to put it like | Dis name. But she hi condition of farm workers,” was the that. You see. I know that sia don’t | finding his ring there, in the old sil- | court's comment. love. me. Mol I have to advance | VeFsmith’s on the corner. And he had| Davis had $1.40 in his pockets when some reason to argue my plea.” | Probably gone, seeking something for arrested. The court ordered that he ilies to talk of mar- | Mrs. Bulwer-Eaton. Something costly, | pay this amount in a fine and serve rage without love!” the protested. to suit the woman's flamboyant | five days in jail, and serve an ad ee he. commpadieted calmly. tastes. Molly had up the postal tional five cays if the fine is not paid. ve pa m 1 furiously. And th unreasonably, | The charge was vagrancy. she cried, and dropped the fragments | H in ans ence and sealed it. and put Buck Put in Charge Aas | Of District Census | , She kept Jack's letters in a secret | , Grawer of her desk. They were tied; Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 5—7i— Know it wort las?” around with purple ribbon. Once, Charles 8. Buck Jr., Jamestown 1 dont Know anything of the | when she was younger, she had scent-! torney, has been appointed supervisor ” she contradicted indy tly. ed the pack h sweet lavender. The | of census for the fourth district. ac- = | little book of Oscar Wilde's love verse cording to word received here. The jhe gave her was there, too. She/ district comprises the counties of ynicallr. ; bought another copy. because she; Stutsman, Burleigh. Kidder, Sheri- ng eternally for love. I sup-; could not bear to handle the one in| dan, Wells, Foster, La Moure. Dickey. . Fou cant make me believe | which Jack had marked the passages| Mcintosh, Logan, and Emmo! Some women are that he loved. Inside the cover she put | Buck's headquarters will be at Jamzs- way. I know. But you're different.” [the verse about love and a carcer.! town. “Im neti” she flashed. “I shall| that she clipped from a newspaper never be loved enough for my happi- | the day of graduation. It was a long ne time now since she had opened the 3 I Jove you!” he cried. “Molly, drawer where her one-time treasures | Tm cffizy about rou! You know that! Jay. She felt that she could never} Stand to look at them again. | . Red's letters cluttered her bureau She tried to laugh. j@rawers. They were witty and en- “But you're not romantic. Bob—not | tertaining. and she hated to destroy | You make beautiful, grand! them. She was always meaning to| But you're not a bit my | gather them together, and put them | mt from most gir ae “Youve go more ye what experience does— | “**, ww enough T dent 3oe ew nat Mis all remarked, having her about was al- you know what t mean.” like having a grown person in 3 conceded, “I'm no in. | the house. She was such a depend- ee able little creature. | If marriage with Bob was unthink- able. so was life without Rita. Lots of | People mar without love. and are happier than the romanticists. So upted coolly. “You Many romances are failures. Expedi- his throat in evident give you much of ed. fe she w § 1 do. the transitoriness of pas- | { looking for romantic love, REST MISSED HIM Constable: (to auto victim prone we ground): Did you get kis num- er? Victim (peevishly): that. I got the deus wheels and the axle!—Passing $ protestations. was made to break into the | kind of a sweetheart. Youd never do’ away somewhere, so she could laugh | Td adore. | over them when she was old. | She wondered what Red would, olescent nt : | think of Bob's proposal. And she lay “What kind of notions?” he de- | on her pretty chaise longue for a lonz | manded. “What do you mean?” | time. meditating. | things.” she | The trouble with me, she decided | “is I've been idle too long. I ought | j to be ashamed of myself! I'll get to, Pig on that book—that’s what Tl! lo!” | | ‘The thing had been taking shape | jin her mind for some time. Gradu- | ally. Hazily. Like a furtive dream, | full of vague shapes and shadowy sub- | { stance. The story of a woman who had bartered romance for a career and hated the career, and longed for ail the silly, sweet things i It must be a beautiful beok, beau- tifully written. The heart cry of a woman. She must find lovely and magnificent phrases. And | blend them exquisitely, so, be perfect. The de- ar Ef ie Hil at Hi i Fated tpat cays 4 ie tel ti |