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So es —* GOOD NIGHT! There GOES TH’ CHAMPION OOER OF THINGS BACK WARDS.° HES CLUNMBIN’ A TREE, BUT STARTIN' AT - TH’ TOP ~ HES GOIN’ UP IN TH’ AIR, BuT OOWN TH’ TREE ~ AN! WHEN /® He'S COMIN’ DowN TT’ GROUND, HE'LL BE GOIN’ UP TH TREE ~ ‘ Mary THE WORRY WART ——————— 0 county, then to Abercrombie in Rich-| akes Farmer Dies After Operation Here Emil Hanson, 39, resident of the Oakes district all his life, died in a local hospital at 9:15 o'clock Wednes- day night. He had been operated on for gall stones Tuesday and failed gradually until his death. He had been ill for @ year. His body will be taken to Oakes Friday, where funeral services’ will be conducted from the Swedish Luther- an church Saturday afternoon. Bur- ial will be made in Oakesview ceme- tery there. Hanson was born on a farm near Oakes March 7, 1892. He was raised and educated at Oakes and had been & farmer since reaching manhood. He was married Oct. 9, 1914. He had been @ member of his township school board for many years. He leaves his widow, four daughters, three brothers, and sisters, The daughters, all living at. home, are Dorothy Helen, Alice Mildred, Evelyn, and Gladys. Brothers and sisters are George, Edwin and Albin Hanson, Mrs. Carrol Nelson, and Mrs. Edwin, Christenson, all living at Oakes, and Mrs. Bert Thompson, Hagelton. , Mrs, Hanson and other relatives of Mr. Hanson arrived in Bismarck early Thursday morning after being in- formed of the death. Mrs. Hanson will accompany the body to Oakes. Richland Official Succumbs in Fargo Fargo, Sept. 10.—(#}—Frederick An- drew Burton, 80, former auditor of Richland county and recently judge of probate court at Wahpeton, died in a hospital here Wednesday of pneumonia which followed an opera-. tion. Born in Rhode Island, June 1, 1851, Burton moved with his parents to Allamakee county, Iowa, in 1854, re- maining there a number of years. In 1888, he came to Wild Rice in Cass Modern White Gold Frames ‘With comfortable pearl pads Only $4.50 Expert Eye Service at Greatly Reduced Prices DR. MacLACHLAN’S Health School and Eye Clinic DR. A. 8. ANDERSON Optometrist—Eye Specialist B Fender Marks Vanish— dents, nicks and every evi- dence of a crash disappear —when our experts get to work on the damage. Here is a service that saves expensive repiacement not alone of fenders but of all sheet metal auto parts. If the damage can be —we can repair it perfectly and at a low cost. DINGLE TOP & BODY WORKS In Rear of Ack’s Radiator Shop Phone 290 606 Main Ave. grand ju the highest sibility. You pend upon us. order, as well as expert attention and We Understand. Webb Bros. Aichmonds Bootery means. Signals “Light With Dark’’ The new prado brown. . . and an “ivory touch” in the narrow pip- ing . . . give Paloma true Peacock flair. The arch is high. The heel is slender. The material is smooth kid. And the process by which this shoe is made . . . an exclusive Peacock process .. . insures lasting shape- . $] Qn BISMARCK, N. DAK. U. 8, District Judge James H. Wilker- land county where he entered the|son Thursday. grain business, In 1901 he went to Wahpeton as deputy county auditor. He served in that post until 1908,| formed the jury. when he was elected auditor, holding the office for 16 years. At the death of George Van Arnam, three years ago, he was appointed | to make and was discharged. Probate judge and at the expiration of the term was elected to the office. His wife died two years ago, but five children survive. They are: Mrs. Frank W. Price, Edwin, Victor, Cora and Gertrude, all of Wahpeton. Fu- ease arrangements have not been mi a Capone Jury Report Rejected by Judge Chicago, Sept. 10—(>)—A federal ry report on its investigation of the prohibition charges. against “Scarface” Al Capone was refused by “I’m not interested in reports, only in indictments,” Judge Wilkerson in- ‘A moment later the grand jury ap- peared before Federal Judge John P. Barnes, advised him it had no report TORIES ERVICE We grown-ups have a pro- foundly kindly thought today for the school teacher, who guided us through the dark mysteries of Reading and ’Riting and 'Rith- metic. These patient instructors deserve our heartfelt apprecia- {ion and every reward within our O.A.CONVERT Distinctive Funeral Service TELEPHONE 304; 112 THAYER AVE. Is Sentenced to Year Pleading guilty to a charge of third-degree forgery, V. C. Boyle, for- mer prisoner in the state penitentiary | here, was sentenced to 18 months in the state prison by Judge Fred Jan- sonius in Burleigh county district court Wednesday afternoon. Last May 15 Boyle forged a check for $300, signing the name of T. E. Oxford, Velva, and cashed it at the First National bank here in starting an account. A short time later he issued a; check on his account as first payment | on an automobile which he purchased, from a Bismarck dealer. Arrested at Aberdeen at the request of Burleigh county authorities, he | was extradited from South Dakota about two months ago. The automo-| bile was reco He began serving his sentence im- mediately. ‘ Byron Bold Funeral Conducted at Tuttle Funeral services for Byron A. Bold, 71, business man in Chaseley for the last 18 years and resident of North Dakota since 1900, were conducted from the Nazarene church at Tuttle ‘Wednesday afternoon. Burial was made in the Tuttle cem- etery. Pallbearers were Milton Gold- smith, Joe Goldsmith, and Ed Taasvi- John L. Hart, Chaseley; and Charles Liessman, Bismarck. Bold died here Saturday evening. He leaves his widow, three sons, two brothers, a sister, and 16 grandchil- dren. A German has invented a roll of. paper that can be withdrawn for tak- ing notes included in the shaft of a pencil. ‘The first three months of this year | Russia exported more than a million pounds of candy to the United States Dr. Clara B. Westphal FOOT SPECIALIST CHIROPODIST RICHMOND'S BOOTERY Phon Bismarck, N. D. ° | ! Geraldine Jackson, alias Ruth Cal-ithe employment committee of th ae He ne girl who served pens 7 TAG. : as a decoy for a prohibition agent in gathering evidence, Of The eke business men, and representatives of ions in Buffalo, is shown above as ited 5. ke AQURON in” COuEE have been inv! to the meeting. charges of intoxication. The garden webworm has infested | ployment st.uation. Some corn fields and gardens in Iowa. From Washington Morris will go to gan, all of Tuttle; E. M. Wiley, Steele; | - son out right. Bring them in. 216 Main Ave. The Farmers Union Invites You Listen in Over KFYR Every Monday Night at 9:30 to 9:45 p. m. to a program especially arranged in the interests of the farmer. “The Farmers Union is seeking to serve best the farmers’ interests” a aa And Half for Forgery}. Girl Rum Decoy to face Be Prepared! It won’t be long now. The hunting season is just around the corner. Why not trade in those old tires for a new set of Sieberlings and start the hunting sea- Reasonable allowances made on your old tires. No charge for inspection of your tires. Phone 356 A & M TIRE SERVICE O. P. VOLD, Prop. IN COLOR fl McCormick Heiress Will Wed Bachelor Bar Harbor, Me., Sept. 10.—(®)— | Muriel McCormick, grand daughter of 'John D. Rockefeller and daughter of Mrs, Edith Rockefeller McCormick, was to marry Elisha D. Hubbard of Middleton, Conn., here Thursday. Hubbard is 52 and Miss McCormick is 29. Like her sister, Mathilde, who mar- ried Max Oser, a Swiss riding master, and like her brother Fowler, who re-! cently wed Mrs. Anne U. “Fifi” Still- man, she managed her romance with so much secfecy that the news came as @ distinct surprise to her family in Chicago. Morris Will Attend Washington Meeting: Attorney General James Morris will attend a conference on employment at Washington as a representative of Governor George F. Shafer. . Morris will leave Friday and will participate in the conference to be held Monday under the direction of State officials, the American Federation of Labor The purpose of the gathering will be to obtain ideas which will be used by the Legion in aiding in the unem- Bismarck, N. D. Pu Atlantic City to attend a meeting of the Attorneys’ General association to be held September 15 and 16. John Lauritsen, a farmer near Bel- le Fourche, 8. D., chartered a plane to find one of his cows that had run away. Pure-blooded Indians constitute more than 33 per cent of the entire population of Mexico today. In 1816 in the northern states there were frosts every month of the year. FURS Repairing, Remodel- ing, Cleaning and Relining Come in and see our won- derful selection of the lat- est styles in fur coats. All very reasonably priced. State Fur Co. Sarah 23¢ TUBE OF COLGATE’S | Service Drug Store Geo, E. Schunk Phone 5 Bismarck, N. D. Use the Want Ads Gold Shop Style Without Extravagance 312 Main Ave. Bismarck, N. D. MELLOWED A HUNDRED MILLION While ferns grew high as trees in PENNSYLVANIA |OTHING but Bradford-Allegany crude oil—one of the few crude oils formed in the Devonian Age, one hundred million years ago—is used in the manufacture of Sinclair Pennsylvania Motor Oil. Sinclair refiners de- wax and free this crude from petroleum jelly at as low as 60° F. below zero—Sinclair Penn- sylvania is a year-round Pennsylvania grade - oil. Ask the Sinclair dealer. “SINCLAIR . Cennsylvanta MOTOR OIL 4y J. A. Kohler r} Agent Sinclair Refining Co. my Phone 73 or 1350 100 Third Street Bismarck, N. Dak.