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: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 198f ished; and there, all the time, was Duncan, a part of the whole thing, soldier in the army that joined two seas. Already the pre-canal era looks re- mote, The day when ships to the Pa- cific had to round dreaded Cape Horn is fabulous, dim with the mists of a time that is very far away. Yet \inis man, who died oniy the other (fhe Bismarck Tribune 3 An Independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDEST ‘ NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en-| tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. {when it was a pest hole and saw it become one of the world’s busiest places. A man’s life can span great changes in the modern world. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20 Daily by mail per year Gn Bis- marck) ~ 7.20 Daily by mail pt 3 10 outside Bismarck) . ‘ Pr Daily by mail outside of North Moths Get Gift Dakota ...csceseseeeeee + 6.00} When General C. P. Summerall met Red Tomahawk upon a recent west- jern trip he remarked in an off-hand | | | ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 eee by mail in state, three sing manner: ‘Weekly by mail outside of North | “Look me up if you come to Wash- Dakota, per year + 1.50/ington. I'll give a party for you.” Weekly by mail in Canada, per Now if there is anything that an ba? aes ‘Soni Bascad ot Indian chief likes better than a party| sco Oo it is a string of parties. Red Tomahawk was not Jong in ac- cepting the invitation and he was} taken in state to Hotel Carlton and} spent four days, crammed with par- ties and sight-seeing. Upon leaving, as a token of grati-| tude, Chief Tomahawk presented General Summerall with a fine war bonnet. Latest news is that the moths have captured the bonnet and it is now in the Smithsonian Institute for treat-| ment. 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 news- paper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other | matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County | Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS Se Spaconeae pee (Incorporated) A New York newspaper says that! Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. _| moths also attacked the tomahawk] CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSON which the Indian chief gave General Shan Pahlignig | Summerall, but it can hardly be con- Republican Publicity | a eived that the S ot. S Press Teadquarters of the Repub-|celved that the eastern moth is as) lican National Committee have be ees as that j jday, saw it all. He went to Panama; | A Moratorium’ Wanted Here, Too! gun the usual grist which precedes; ———— j every campaign. The voters of the Where a Theory Breaks Down) nation are hardly so gullible as to| The way to @ better court system,| believe this effusion which was re-/We are often told, makes it necessary/ eased to the press recently that judges be appointed rather than} “Tt seems ... to be part of a |Clected. Relieve the Jy of the) deliberate plan, no doubt politic- necessity of going after votes and he} ally motivated,” says the letter, [can be more immune to the demands} “to hinder business recovery. ‘The Tf, inisddition; judgeship | regularity with which it has hap- Talocion /akig Geen eeiiaett pened seems to justify the con- lone sean pvetiad ia 2 clusion that the political inter- to the bench, and ests which are opposed to the re- will be imp! election of Mr. Hoover and the that iathwthecry. continuation of the Republican party in power are conducting a deliberate and highly organized campaign to protract the periodof | depression, hoping to carry it over until next year when it can be made politically effective. “The operations in the wheat | a pit, to which the president calls ike fire. Enot attention of the country, are ob- |proven to t viously a part of this plan.” jthe whole city | ‘The party in power, Justly or other-! But New York, as it happens, ap-| wise, will be blamed for business de-) points its judges. Furthermore, it! pression. Politicians are always alert] 425s them the highest salaries of any| to take credit for bumper crops, in- city in the land. Neither factor seems qustrial profits, high wages and tg nave been sufficient to keep the plenty of jobs. But when a slump) judiciary on the level. sets in it is usually due to a con- cy to defeat the party in power. Seek Air Supremacy Not even the Democrats want of-/ Outclassed by several other nations) fices sd badly that they’ would pro-'in the speed of airplanes, the United] long a depression even if they could./ States Na’ ment has awarded It is’ mere piffle to charge that they! a secret contract for the development oan: | of a powerful high-speed engine. The entire world is caught in the! More than $200,000 will be utilized present economic depression. There! sn experimenting to develop it. Ex- are some fundamental adjustments periments will be made with water- the) It loo! jout that way. corruption has been| 1 the good name of| | to be made before times will get bet-i cooled, chemically-cooled and air- ter and representatives of all patties copied engines must cooperate to that end. | Naval officials believe that air-| Se ‘plane engines can be developed which} ad pet for ante) Driers | will equal in speed those of England] you afe a poor auto driver, the aly. They ascribe failure to the] Chances are that you are also fel Faced nae ee ceited for conceit and general self--! Despite the fact that this nation! oon ge Leese racic drivers! developed the airflane in the early| according to Dr. Pau hroeder,! gave Jati s lage’ r Bee clcl of tiboe days of aviation, it has lagged behind After examining drivers whose recklessness at the wheel has landed craft, for national defense. | them in penal institutions, Dr./ | Schroeder finds that their prevailing) ee Gefect was conceit and a general ais-|| Editorial Comment regard for the rights of others. Most of these drivers he has found were| “not handicapped mentally by low in-| telligence or physically by being crippled.” Nor do a few accidents knock | conceit out of the poor drivers. They| For two years pleas for a wheat| repeat the offense. Dr. Schroeder| ducti south-! reaches the general conclusion that a west the retort that there was mone consideration for the rights of others|in growing winter wheat in Western is more important than a high order| Kansas and the Texas Panhandle, no} Per Udeilgence.. Tendency matter how low the price might go.| of some ; < ; : |The same interests that had begged Grivers to “hog the road as well as the) for stabilization were declaring in right-of-way” is traceable to conceit. |1929 and 1930 that any farm price} —_—— above thirty-five cents a bushel meant) a profit for them, albeit a slight one. jother nations both in the commercial) and in the utilization of air- The Tragedy of Wheat (Minneapolis Journal) In a Man’s Lifetime New York, July 22—Taxi drivers jremain New humans, still more. | Ioitering York's most garrulous and that goes in front of the Palace like a; Theater or column writers swapping jgood one; but it doesn’t always work| Yarns at Sardi’s. Rare indeed is a ride of more than four blocks in which the driver fails Ww New York City has just finished @/to confide his middle name, his wife's year of investigation in which three|habits and the smart sayings of his | judges have been removed from. of-| childrce:. ifice and four more have resigned un-|™ore than a dozen blocks, a life story ill have been started. The theory is that taxi drivers in}capes in traffic and to attract it to' If the trip continues for Manhattan are a lonely tribe, doomed to sit 10 to 12 hours a day, eyes bent on tortuous routings. A large part | of this time they dodge about looking for a passenger. If a fare shows the slightest in- terest they will open up. Generally their theme begins with persecutions | suffered at the hands of traffic of- ficers. If pinched in traffic, every other driver in New York immediate- |ly becomes a sap whose license should ibe forthwith surrendeged. Whatever happens, they'll convince you of their for actors inviolate rightness; or they'll try to jconvince themselves Their capacity ‘for cussing out other drivers, male or female, indicates some seafaring an- cestry. x *k * The latest gadget in taxis is a trick advertising device. Unlike street car | advertising, this is an automatic machine. To distract the attention of the passenger from the narrow es- i ALE TG BARRETT, poor aly seizes the opportunity e her daught: ets VAN ROBARI and rich, Cass shows alarm hearing his name and begs the sirl to have nothing to do with Ske promises although feel- a great attraction for the One night Van takes her with him searching for MURIEL LADD, ave debutante who in believed t oped with CHUCK DESMOND, rier, The couple Inter, Mrs, Ladd. The girl is heart broken at the news, Linne is left with the rich MRi CLEESPAUGH while her mother Cass becomes fll in goes to While in delirium, the wo- Goes on tour. Philadelphia and Liane her. man babbles af cerning the Jearns Robard and Muriel Lai pre engaged. Cleespaugh hy When CLIV! mystery coi of convenience—she accepts Van Robard makes love to young girl. Clive tells his m ot the engagement and pleased, Tressn visi newspaper off Ww Li NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXIII and ‘sling stock company actress, summer stock at Williow a small Long Island col- » LIANE, andsome turn up and ELSIE MINTER, the company ingenue, informs Ligne there is gossip about Van and Cass returns to the se to convalesce. CLEESPAUGH asks ine to marry him—a marriage unsa’ lee starts the heels rolling in a plot to rain ‘The terrific speed with which the ‘world changes may have slowed down somewhat within the last decade orsers in the northwest, growing sprinz i still span amazing developments. Be-| tween boyhood and manhood one can| still watch a great rearrangement of the scenery. s There died in Panama the othe! @ay one Basil Burns Duncan, said to)and other factors (not the least of be the oldest American on the isthmus—he was 88—and a eurviving | veteran of the old French attempt) point where the farm price in Kan- to dig the Panama canal. Duncan went to Panama just after the trans-isthmian railroad had been completed. The isthmus then was one stage of the road to California, Passengers came down from New York by sea, crossed the narrow neck of land by train or wagon, and took ship on the Pacific side for San Fran- cisco. The canal was still only a dream; Cape Horn, far to the south, was still a surf-fringed terror for sailormen. ‘Then the French started to dig the anal; and Duncan was one of the Xour men chosen to turn the first ots, “The four stood face to face ax ort, Ato signal they! gouid drove them into the ground, and work | hundred bushels of wheat, the farm- on the Panama canal hed begun. next epic. notorious throughout the world. The machin- ‘Why, they wanted to know, should; they be called upon to sacrifice this |slight profit for the benefit of strang~ and the saxophone wailed | planting, until this year Kansas alone! |produced more than two hundred vheat at necessarily higher produc- tion costs? i} So the southwest kept right on! million bushels of winter wheat. That them the farm board's accumulation of its huge surplus) have brought down the value of the grain to the sas recently has been, not thirty-five cents, but thirty cents. But how different this year would be the situation of the wheat indus- try, if the farmers of the southwest had long ago listened to the advice of Dr. John Lee Coulter and other experts, to take higher profits on less wheat, rather than to look for low) profits on more and more wheat A decrease of only thirty per cent in American wheat production would bring the annual supply within the limits of domestic demand, with a resultant doubling and possibly treb- ling of prices, and an even greater gain in profits. The domestic pyice would be the Canadian or South American price, plus the forty-two cent tariff, plus freight. And the basic world price be higher. For growing seven er would receive a gross return of nearly twice the money he now gets for growing a thousand bushels. On operation natural law, this improved situation is eventually coming to pass, but at casualties. . on forever,” heaven. Occasionally the man wi the brasses abandoned his multiple instruments of torture and rose add his nasal voice to the clamor. Clive observed. “I had felt it my- self. Never been here before. It’s new and Tressa was anxious to come. She said Van recommend- ed it.” “Oh, it’s nothing, really.” Liane shrugged. “Just my imagination I suppose. I've been reading too many stories of battle and sudden death among gangsters.” Clive said thoughtfully, “I won- der.” a ACK at the table Tressa with young Lambert Hammond was sipping a pale amber drink and looking like a great lady on a slumming party. She was magnifi- cent tonight in a sheathe-like frock of gold tissue. It fitted her as if she had been melted and poured into it. Liane, in her white satin, felt like a girl graduate beside her. “Oh, Clive,” began Tressa ani- matedly, “I see the Wayne Hop- kinses over in the corner. Take me a jover like a sweet thing. Bert and Wayne don’t speak, or I'd ask him.” Clive threw a swift glance at Liane. “Go along!” she told him. “Lordy, I am sorry,” Tressa trilled sweetly. “I forgot to ask permission.” She gave Liane a stabbing smile and marched off on Clive’s arm. Liane felt suddenly very young and inexperienced, An older woman would know how to treat Tressa she thought fiercely and indig- nantly,, There was something de- liberately cruel in her baiting. And yet the barbed shafts were so care- t= 8. ‘[THUMP-THUMP! Bong! The great {07 meena. f0- 008 ele bad saken, drum beat out a jungle dirge ‘note of them. to| She said “I bez your pardon” to ith| Young Hammond a moment later. “Want to try this one?” the to| languid young man asked again. Liane was rising with just the The beat went on and on end-| Proper show of enthusiasm when a lessly, Liane, dancing with Clive, | tall man, like a thin shadow in his felt herself grow limply weary,| black and white, glided’ up to the Tireless, the musicians labored on, adding bells anfl cymbal to the cacophony, any heed. like in the shifting lights. danced without effort, almost w: cut spirit. melancholy pace. . Liane thought, “This might Quite suddenly wanted to scream. Cleespaugh had objected to the pedition. The girl knew in heart that she was being fanc! but all at once there seemed su! thing curiously depraved in the mosphere of this place. She sensed walter’s the grimness back of the almost cringing obsequiousness, dinner-coat threat back of the captain’s ofly welcome. “I'm slightly touched in they threaded their way. Now the man with the brasses ‘was wailing mournfully, His woes seemed to be the woes of the world. No one in the Alexis Club paid him The girls shuffled around in the arms of their escorts, their young faces curiously mai They The music led them a No wonder Mrs. ‘to Clive £ table. “Mister Hammond?” he asked deferentially. “A message for you. The telephone.” “Curious,” Lambert mused. “No one knows I’m here.” He turned back to Liane, “I hate to leave you.” “Nonsense” she cried, determined “not to be a crab.” “Go along. Clive will be back in a moment.” She sat alone at the table, fight- ing off that self-consciousness that attends the young woman left sans escort in @ public place. It was strange, but she could not see Clive and 1 anywhere. Strangest of all, the dark man who had sum- moned Lambert to the telephone was coming back to the table. He drew out a chair and without per- mission set down. Liane made one startled move- ith- a ex- her ful me- at- The low voice, Persuasive yet ted | With & note of command in it, said, “sit still.” the the| Llane did just that. In the mina] pl arose & troubled memory of all the crime stories she had ever read, numerable tables at the dance’s in-| “You have made a mistake,” she terminable end. “Does-it seem to|aaid steadily. “I don't know you. Saat are? r. will be back in a moment.” should sey that,”! “I know you all right,” the dark| well or break- I was reminded again the other day that you never can tell just who your driver is in this man’s town, Some- times it’s a poet, trying to get room rent; sometimes it’s a composer and sometimes a singer. A week ago, driver told me he'd like to write book about a oe have haj “only ser i“ couple of days off to do it.” ‘The saddest tale in many a came from a chap who had the “big” money only a few months. ago. He had been retained as a chauffeur by a man whose name since has been connected with a huge swindle. The chauffeur was let in “on the ground floor” and became something of a confidential man to his boss. While things were good, the driver ran his fortune up to $50,000 or more.’ He had no idea that he was playing with “bubble-money.” And when the crash come, the “big boy” took his earnings along with all the rest—and skipped out. So it’s back to the taxi business for the loser— Easy come, easy go! GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) People’s Forum comi terest. Letters Seating troversial religious subject: attack individuals unfair! % or which offend good ta: and fair play will be retu: writers. All letters MU! If you wish to use a sign the pseudonym first own name beneath it. W spect such requ the right to delet letters as may be *nece! conform to this poll be signed. pseudonym, and your ‘e wili re- 8. We reserve such parts of ry to McClusky, N. D., ; July 22, 1931. Editor of The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. D. Dear Sir: |e popular brand of It was with considerable pleasure fast food, the tex! ads flash from althat I read the evident truths con- tiny box-like ent and is,tained in your editorial of the 16th, \operated by the manifold which works the windshield cleaner. Also, I learn that the Gotham taxi- drivers have been forced to carry their identification pictures in their poc- kets to protect themselves from ‘‘col- lectors.” The display of these portraits, along with the license number and other data, is required by law; failure to have the card is punished by a four weeks’ suspension. But, for reasons unknown to me, bored passengers have gone in for collecting these identification cards, filching a dif- ferent one from each cag. What the collectors do with them after they get them is another mystery, but half a dozen drivers have complained about it recently. x # And while on the subject of taxis, man drawled. “You're Miss Barrett and you're engaged to that Clees- paugh baby, aren’t you?” Papers just now, with your engage- ment and all, would you?” Cold fear clutched at the girl's heart. “I—I had nething to do with that,” she stammered. “It was an accident. I was was blame- less. And the man fived.” © “Oh, yeah? Well, whether he lived or died there’s a lot of people in this man’s town would be keen to know this rich boy’s fiancee had such a past.” lL“ sat frozen. Only her dark eyes showed her terror. “You—there’s nothing you can do,” she said through stiff lps, “Anyhow, how do you know Mr. Cleespaugh doesn't know all about it?” “Oh, it ain’t him we're interested in, It’s the old lady,” the man said dryly. “She's gotta approve the bride, so I hear. That's town talk. And it seems she’s pretty strait- laced. We want money to keep quiet about it and we want it quickly, Liane asked for want of some- thing better to say, “How much?” “Ten grand. And right away!” He made an agile, catlike motion rising. “Your boy friend’s coming back,” he said out of the side of his mouth. station Tuesday at: noon or well spill it to the tabloids.” He moved languidly out of sight. Lambert Hammond came bustling up to the table, stirred out of his customary torpor. “Some stupid fools!” he said in an exasperated tone. the wire for ages and then an- nounced they'd got the wrong Hammond.” “You look queer,” he went on bluntly, D'you feel ill or something?” T must be it.” “Well, here comes the rest of the party. Let's pay the check and blow, Clive. This is a rotten show.” Tressa looked blithely at the pair. “Sorry to have kept Clive so Jong,” she said in @ voice of honey. “Y turned my ankle and he had to help me to a dressing room, ~I do hope you two didn't mind.” Liane said “Not at all,” very faintly, Clive managed to get to} q her side as they all went out through the narrow passage, “That girl's the limit,” he ex- he’s trying to start joded. something.” ly. Clive gave her a sHarp, concerned ‘what's up? You look pretty wrecked.” near’) lane. celebrate a birthday.” Liane yodded. She was too/her arm. “You're a big girl now. frightened to fesent his intrusion.| Nineteen. Think of it! World to “We're interested in you,” the} conquer.” man announced lazily. “You| She tried to smile. “You're all wouldn’t like your part in a cer-| so good to me.” tain shooting in a 24th street speak-| “Who wouldn't be?” His tone easy to be dragged through the| held a new warmth. He took her arm going down the dimly lighted, velvet carpeted stairs. Liane felt giddy as she saw a man at the en- trance. Was it—? No, thank God! The face turned toward her was one she'd never seen before. shivered. that had been his mother’s birthday present to her, asked, “Cold?” folds, over my grave.” to this did you warmth into her faint voice. was interesting. that dark man in the shadows. She almost managed to bel! reached the luxurious shelter of the big car, that she had dreamed the horrid interlude. turned dryly, “but what a gang ing out over the shadows of tho trees, She had put out her night “Be at Williom Stream| light and, wrapped in her satin and eiderdown dressing gown, had curled up in the big chair to think. through the newspa surely kill her mother. so proud of her. “They kept me hanging on| had been, in that adventure, so innocent, 80 younger starved young girl who six months ago had gone unthinkingly Ch din- , y ner with Molly Cronin and “a ‘Air in here’s like @ zoo! Baile ef the bors. i ld end in a ' Liane said, “The air—yes, that Aegon fhe dinner ics mind the events of that fearful Molly's impudence ... Shane Mc Dermid’s kindly Irish smile. al all the world here was one man who might be able to tell her what to do. Because of course the ques- tion of getting the money for these people was simply absurd. heard of such things. She had known wicked Lae happen to her! and began to tremble all over with “Tt doesn't matter,” Liane saia| fear and cold, Ufeless! into bed before I catch pnoumonia.” mid, she finally did fall asleep. inst., relative to your Lloyd Spetz post of the American Legion. I bave just returned from the Legion con- vention at Valley City. As a citizen who is fairly active in his community for the public good, I like to see appreciation expressed for the wholehearted efforts of any or- ganization which unselfishly works for the best interests of its com- munity. No one in the ranks of the organ- ization, as I understand the Legion principles, benefits by his member- ship personally, either financially, politically or otherwise. A Legion- naire is a public servant who gives of himself, his time, or his money to his community and the state and nation. As I saw the business mren of your town blowing bugles, playing drums, and taking an active part in the whole convention, the thought came viMABEL CELLIOT NY a RCTION “ey “ne “Nothing. You just imagine it.” “Well, that was a rotten place to He squeezed She Clive, holding the white fur wrap ee Daily Health Service Golfing After Fifty : Before and After Play Urged for Men "akin "y Up | ting ‘in Middle Life—Overweight Dangerous concerned are not always those »f- fecting the arteries that supply the heart with blood. Sometimes the condition is angina pectoris, some- times a breakdown of the heart tis- sues. Dr. Riesman feels that the heredity of the individual and his constitution may be important factors in determining the form of heart dis- ease from which the individual will suffer. Many insurance companies em- phasize particularly the seriousness of overweight after middle age. Dr. Riesman believes that overweight people can be divided into two class- es—those who are excessively fat, but with a soft type of fat on one hagd, : 8 NOTE—Why men pak aoe from heart fallure after 50 is explained by Dr. Morris Fishbein in a series of five articles on “The Failing Heart of Middle Life,” of which oe is the second. * * BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN (Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association) Many physicians look askance at the modern tendency to over-indulge in strenuous exercise after middle age. Records are available of numerous men who have fallen dead on golf courses or at home after a strenuous afternoon at golf. Dr. David Ries- Sha snuggled in the luxurious “No, byt a rabbit walked “I shouldn’t have brought you You didn’t like it, Liane tried to iufuse some “It Such strange She tried desperately to forget » once she Clive “Music's all right,” ‘The girl did not answer. ary ‘HEN she was in her own room Liane sat, hands locked, star- What om earth should she do? ‘o have that silly old story dragged would Cass was And she herself ignorant. Worlds seemed that pleasure- that men who want to take wD ‘golf in middle life ae Ged KY Busco, cihich “ought to be re-|is firm, and who are not far above peated after they have played a little.|ideal weight. The former type is I have seen: men between 50 and 60) likely to be quiet and lazy, and there- years of age whose hearts stepped up} fore is not likely to suffer from heart tremendously in the rate and ihten-|disease; the latter type is the active sity of the beat after they had played| individual seen on the golf course 10 holes of golf on a hot day. and most likely to succumb to heart ‘The forms of heart disease that are! disease. INDIANS 10 MARKET LARGE CUP OF WOOL Reservation Sheep Growers to Sell About 11,000 Pounds, Agent Says and, on the other hand, those who are overweight and solid, whose fat to me that {f was indeed a splendid organization whose citizenry will do much for Bismarck. T have just read again the preamble to the Legion constitution and have been more forctbly reminded of its unselfishness. There isn’t a word of SELF in the whole thing, but there is emphasis placed on our duty to God and our ¢outnry. Let me review its tenets: To maintain law and order. To foster and maintain @ 100-per- cent Americanism. To inculcate a sense of the individ- ual obligation to the conimunity. Fort Yates, N, D., July 22.—Indian state and nation. | Sheep growers on the Standing Rock To combat the autocracy of both |reservation will market nearly 11,000 the classes and the masses. 01 thie Eee "To make right the master of might,|Pounds of wool this year, according To promote peace and good-will on » C. Lippert, agricultural exten- earth. sion agent here. To safeguard and transmit to pos-| A third of the carload of wool ship- terity the principles of justice. free-/ped from McLaughlin to the South Dakota wool pool last week was sold dom and democracy. ‘These are the high lights of the en-;by Indian sheep growers, Lippert tire preamble and no thought of pos-|said. Wool from 24 bands of Indian- sible self advancement creeps in. owned sheep was in the curload and I predict great things of any or-|from 10 to 12 1-4 cents per pound ganization that takes the above prin-|was advanced to the growers, Wili- liam Whitesell, of Mahto, John Crow ciples as its beacon. The preamble ‘was well exemplified by the Bismarck /Eagle, of Bullhead, and George Bear- Legionnaires at Valley City. I wish|king, of Kenel, sold 8000, 600, and 509 to go on record as saying that Bis-| pounds respectively. marck and vicinity are indeed fortu-| Other Indian growers who shipped nate to have about 400 men of this!from McLaughlin were Joe Good Elk kind attending to its everyday affairs.|Wakpala; Dwight Grindstone, Ed ‘They deserve the whole-souled back-/ Noisy Hawk, James Kills Alive, Reu- ing of Burleigh county in its efforts|ben and Joseph Takes the Gun. to, perpetuate the demands of its|Frank and Owen Has Horns, and Thomas White Horse, all of Little apace Ah ss spectfully, Eagle; Henry Twin, Paul CHARLES A. SCHWARTZ. | Indian Boarding choot, Pot vate Mark Walking Elk, Sr and Paul Claymore, Kenel; Josephine Hawk Bear, Harry Hawk Bear, and Charles Ramsey, Cannon Ball; Jack Silk, Fort Yates; Moses Grey Eagle, Bullhead; Walter Horse Thief, Wakpala; Soe Red Bear, Bullhead, and William Hawk, Wakpala. The Yellow Earrings clip from RUSSIA’S NEW POWER south of Morristown was pooled at On July 22, 1917, the Joint Congress|Lemmon, S. D., and the George De- of Workmen's and Soldiers’ Counells¢fender wool was sold through the and of the All-Russia Council of| Dickinson pool. The Pete Looking Peasant Delegates conferred supreme|Horse and Bede Uses-his-Arrow clips and unrestricted power on the new| from Cannon Ball still are to be sold, Russian government. ‘They passed/ Lippert says, the following resolution after an all North Dakota Man night session: As “Recognizing that the count . iS Ill with Ptomaine Former North Dakotans now resid- menaced by a military debacle on the front and by anarchy at home, it is ing in Colorado will gather for their third annual picnic Sunday, Aug. 2, resolved: First—that the country and the which has been designated “North Dakota Day,” according to informa- revolution are endangered: Second—That the Provisional Gov- ernment is proclaimed the Govern- tion received here from Earl M. Crocker, formerly of Lisbon, president of the North Dakota club, ment of National Safety; Third—That unlimited powers are The program is arranged for Wash- ington Park, Denver. accorded the Government for reestab- Families from Greeley, ‘Windsor, Ft, lishing the organization and dis- cipline of the army for a fight to the Collins, Loveland, Longmont, Mead, Boulder, Grand Junction, and cther finish against the enemies of the public order and for the realization localities are expected to attend. The Purpose of the picnic is threefold: of the whole program embodied in the Governmental program just an- to meet old friends from “back home,” to spend the day sociably, and to nounced.” ——_——_—_—_-+ further perfect the organization of the club. | Quotations —— James B. Halloran, formerly of Bis- marck, is secretary, and Harold W. The United States talks fast and flies slowly. England flies fast and Chorley, former Mandan resident, is treasurer of the North Dakota club. TODAY 1S THE“ talks slowly.—Alford J. Williams, for- mer navy speed ace. * * It used to be easier to make 2 col- lege address when the world was more traditional and habitual.—Newton D. Baker. ATTEND ANNUAL PICNIC Sentinel Butte, N. D., July 22—sey- eral hundred attended the second an- nual Golden Valley county Old Set- tlers picnic on the Felix Murphy farm, near Sentinel Butte. Golva defeated Sentinel Butte, 11 to 10, in a baseball game, one of the features of the Sports program. Several speakers ; Were on the program of the day. xx # The mass change to optimism, which will mark the beginning of the upturn in general business, is about due—Ambassador Charles G. Dawes. * ok ok The American public should real- ize that Germany's financial relief can be no greater than America’s fi- How was she Step by step she reviewed in her night. Cass’s strained face .. .. Shane McDermid! thought of him before? Out of Why hadn't ‘Who were they and why had they jecided to prey on her? She had happened in a big, bd But that this should Liane shuddered She thought, “I'd better crawl ‘And, thinking of Shane McDer- 7 (Ne Be Continued) nancial sacrifice.— Professor F. R. Fairchild. %* k # The nearer you can bring the war- making power within the control of those who must do the fighting and the dying-when war comes, the more certain it will be that war will not come.—Senator Borah, BARBS | rer ee A superfluous American gesture is the habit of preset distinguishes visitors “keys” to our cities. Most them are wide open, anyhow. * * # ‘When it comes to certain interna- tional . conferences, the French, it seems, simply won't “parley,” se * Credo of the American business- man: First the contact, then the con- tract. e * eo. The trouble ‘with most girls today who sigh for slenderer figures is that they are penny wise and pound foolish, ‘Those club swinging New York cops probably have their own ideas of what, ® policeman’s Bi a should be. Not that the Germans ha ieved Me 8 whole world is giving them credit, ed. of particularly im-| portant lately, but it seems that the Qeas Arange 15 matches as shows ania i ef 10. Mstertektebeta the matches i the original ‘ix away to leave 100, ele FLAPPER, FANNY Says: °AT. OF