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Pay Less 'Intefest and Get Out of Debt G Sy S S SSS—— Borrow ' on ‘the amortized = plan. Pay mterest an tafrmclpal in twenty equal annual installments of 390.68% per Thousand Dollars per annum or $1813,70, and when . the twenty notes are paxd the debt and interest is paid in full. ‘If you borrow $1000 and pay 6 per cent for twenty years you pay $1200 in interest and $1000 in prin- cipal, making $2200 or $386.30 more than on the amortized plan. Write us for full particulars. M. F. Murphy & Son GRAND FORKS N. DAK. John Knauf A L. Knauf KNAUF & KNAUF ATTORNEYS AT LAW Jamestown, N. D. YOU MEN WHO ARE NOT ACQUAINTED with ' the thoroughly + superior ' gcodness of merchant tailored clothes, who have mnot expetienced the .satisfaction of knowing ‘that your clothes “are yours alone, make it a point to visit us and have your clothes made for you and_measured to you personally. ROLF BROS. Merchant Tailors Grand Forks, N. D. Bacon Block .- " J.B. DIXON" Live: Stock' and Real “Estate Auctioneer . . I also breed Holstein cattle and Berkahh'e hogs. ¥ have at present my herd bull--and. some choice young hoars-for sale. and work, gunrsnteed Phone or write me at Roth, N. ‘D. s 'GET YOUR" Fords and Autos Repatred and: equipped at-. LEET & CO., Garage, FORBES, NORTH DAKOTA _ ‘e .-you trade with ‘J. K. Edelman, Pres. and Mgr.! GENERAL MERCHANDISE * Egeland and Reck Lake, N. Dak. The Edmore Mercantile Store- Want: your business; we also want your good will, Edmore, httreagnentshonld et bo . We try to be L. “N.D. OU always find’ Satufacttou 4 in buying at the Peoples Trading Co. General Merchandise - "HANSBORO, -2e NO. DAK. .Our established motto is : "““MORE FOR YOUR MONEY"' Miclngun Mercantile Co. - MICHIGAN - . NO.DAK. | When'in FargoGoTo =~ ' DEWEY’S STUDIO alld N. P, Ave,” Cor: Broadway hudqnartmu ; i i Gaunlmx‘sSanmShavhg Parlors' Good Work - CoufleousTmhnen . said. All=stock: § You willa.lways geta square denl it 1’ to be interested-in teaching the men who Clncago Cash Store Co., Inc.: : ; ithe warden and all the other employes . of lack of discipline. . ‘many: of other prisoners at work and he - .- Leader ‘man as‘a fellow writer with the . with ‘Mr: Johnston” and then dehcabely " Johnston came to bat nobly. . -he ‘said; Yand 1 don’ ‘believe there . WARDEN TALCOTT mmms Ao ' HIS PRISON IDEAS i3 (Conhnned from page 8) guard to Manughton, general manager . of one of the bxg eompaniesvinl'fl:e g,rest He was formerly . on th ,.poliee force et Stillwater. He is a big man: of typical police bearing. and manner. The warden expects Barnes to relieve him of fuch of the responsibilty of - guarding the prisoners and: to put new - backbone into the guard force. It may: be that Barnes’ training will bring about some modification of the lenient and gentle system now in effect. “NO COMPLAINT TO MAKE” SAYS ONE PRISONER A third prisoner to whom the visitor talked seemed to think that the “honor system” was on trial. - He himself is perhaps as good an example as could be found in.the prison of the type of man: upon -whom kmdness and - trust” 'is “ not * wasted. He is.a skilled workman ‘and ’ draws -pay at the rate of 25 cents a day. : All ofthe prisoners when they work are paid at a rate of from 15 cents to 25 . cents a day.' This young manis one of - the best examples of the possibility of developing good workmen' out” of men committed for crime. “ When he is re-- leased the state is likely to hdve to hire a mechanic at four or five - dollars a day to take his place . He is serving a long term and was in the prison under other administrations. “I haven’t any compla.mt to make, he-. | “If a fellow is square in here he is treated like a man.” I“think-that’s- right. “The warden gives us lots of priv- ileges, more than any other warden ever gave. - I:don’t think many of thé men . abuse their liberties.. - Of course there are always men in any prison who don’t * know how to appreciate good treatment, but I'don’t think the others should suffer .-on that account: The warden is “trying. - to turn men out of here as good citizens - . and you can’t do that by punishing men. “It seems to me that a place like this 5 ought to. be regarded by the public as an educational institution.. The state ought come here to be useful citizens. ' I.think ought to be chosen with just the same care ‘as the president of the university and the professors are selected.” This pnsoner didn’t -think’ there was anything serious behind the complaints If heknew about any cursing of the guards or defiance of their authority he played the part of a gentleman and a true friend of the war- den by denymg it' flatly. He works in a. part of the prison where he doesn’t see probably had. no first-hand information about it. Besides: talking to the pnsoners the visitor talked also to a young man who has ‘been living’ in the prison to get ma- terial for a magazine -article he hopes to - publish. ‘The “warden introduced = the Temark that “You may like to baye a talk withdrew. I perhaps was the' jntention of the warden that the other visitor would -}~ shed a \not unfriendly light' on prison af- . fairs. If that was the- eXpectahon Mr. “1- -have been in a numbet,of i other in' the conntty whe A have been: put into practice. with such good: “effect. T have never seen any whare the men ‘are-so well: treuted. That, probably, is true, it th the. From Behmd __the Prlson Bars ‘institution where they would get: privil- ysrd. Wardm ’.l'a.lcott showed the co 'wrespandent samples of ‘& large’ collecs: = tion of Weapom ingeniousl made, wi thensnltdfioommypnvflegee. Priv- ; . ileges are- all nghtjftheymgimto i the rlght men. 2 s “Myideadthenghtsortdsyatem : would be to have two separate institu-" tions. . One would be for men who had not proved themselves worthy of trust and’a chance to reform. Society would were a number of saws perfectly uited tomahngasmooth;gb cutting a e steel bar. Someofthesehadbeenfash- S ioned from steel corset st;ays ?:}:ed \;11: Sean e outside the walls and ' other ps SN have to be protected against these men. - 1 t21 ™ Ope ,man, a mnegro, had picked They. would have to be locked up. But - up a huge, round lump of lead which he .when men show themselves: anxious: to made into a crude but “diabolic weapon | make good I would transfer them to an - merely by drilling holes through which he had passed loops of shoestring. R Against weapons of this.sort the keep- pES ers, excepting only the’ sentries: on the.: S . walls, haye no protection in the way of . weapons. of their own. =~ (It would bo G ¢ - more dangerous: for- them to be armed. SRR -‘than not,” sa.id Deputy. Ws.rden Reld.”‘ Hl LT eges as they showed themselves worthy of them.” One of the most noticeable of the pnv- ileges granted to the inmates is that of free conversation. .They are allowed to talk in the corridors of the prison and at’ their meal.., which are served to them in a ‘large airy diningroom with . white - tablecloths on the long tables. - In the assembly room- there is a moving picture machine and occasional " entertainments are given.. ~Ordinarily there are two S chaplains; one a Protestant and the other ; obvidngl: is not o a . Catholic.” They ' are' both outside _auTl;ss:f < °f1fa°§‘;‘f,‘} fl?em woyéld talle clergymen :who come to the penitentiary frankly, he too, might have an i to preach and to carry on such other ef- el stor"y to tel,l fort ‘among the prisoners as they see fit ° and-as the warden - a.pproves Just now only ‘the Catholic priest. is. on' duty, the : Protestant minister who held the post 3 having removed from Bismarck. The = prisoners also have theu: baseball dla-' G mond wijthin the yard.: S 3 All this, however, dbes: ndt make “good cmzens" ont of every prisoner ‘in the ¢ weapon would always be an _ invitatior to a bold prisoner and some day a gnms i : . would be caught unaware and his eap-” B i on might cause his own’ death and 8 pris- S on delivery.” : & WOOD MINOT’S 'PIONEER mOPRACTORS Drugle eale; A HOME ENDORSEMENT OF TO, GROCERS EVERY WHERE : w2 We, the undersigned retail grocers of Saint Paul, havlng handled "AI’PLE mou : “Flour t‘or the oumber of years given opposite:our- tures, feel warmmdinuying 3 % in our. iudgment“there is nt’) baé'm"fi*’-m len this.alg:. that Mostofthelargemmsonhesmehnveapentmtmendn oring to get a wcceeded.and &SOM this market, only-a few have through all xhe ynts “*APP! hg!d its trade mlmt Icomy dng ;the exclusive Isflfi lor"APPLE BLO&OM city townmllnoonlnv a flour trade to be f: - In believe in “Apgfi;~nwmon"'me o ’s?in Paul Sehe best 1 only l'lour ‘made in Saint raul,:-me best flour made' ;