Newspaper Page Text
1 EVENING EDITION. Weather Forecasts |pg!" WKATHEIt FORECAST. -f Minnesota: Snow tcffllght and in northoast portion Stuiday colder tonight an| in out portion Sunday, «. .. North Dakota: Cloud? and colder tonight snow In east tjor tlouj Sunday gviu^ralljr fair. Grand Xi*orkp Station U. S. WEATHER BUREAU Unlvetalty, N. P. Morning Observations, 7:00 A. M. •atlire m, 24 35 32 Tempsrat Mnximuril, 24 hours. Minimum, 12 hours. :...... Wind, direction and velocity, (north), miles .-... 10 Precipitation, 24'hours..... 0 Barometer, reduced 39.48 24 ity Briefs Dance Saturday Night at the Annex ticteria. dining hall 10c plan.—£d*r Danci'—At the K, P. Hall tonight. say's orchestra. Come eju'ly.—adv. Have Yon Tried 'tne so cent noon ay luncheon at the Hotel Dacotah? -Adv. New Year's Dance at Key West tonday night, January 1st. Euclid Eiusic.—Adv. Snaday Dinner—We certainly had tfine Sunday night dinner at ,the Ho-' hi Dacotah lor J1.00. Emjird'a or aestra played.—Adv. $12-00 per Ton for'stove size, and 112.50 per ton for lump, soft coal by "be load, also lignite at $6.75. C. H. poss. Phone 1651.—Adv. Banker Was in City—6uy M, Jami son, vice president ..of the Fin* Na lonal-bank of Crystal, was In Grand f"orks on business Friday. to work for board and room while at tending school. Write or phone Union commercial College.—Adv.' Deputy Marshal Hero—O. C. Haak nson of Bismarck, deputy/ atate Are ,„IUUCI1HJ „llu tVJ. ler with J. Fitzgerald, chief of the Jrand Forks fire department. To Incorporate—Preliminary steps Slaving been taken to incorporate Iniompson as a village, final action is Raxpected to be' talien by the county [commissioners soon. Elks Danoc—The Elks will g^Ve a [New Year's dancing party Saturday levenlng, December 30 in their club [rooms. Music by Emard's orchestra1. Ill Elks and their families are in cited—Adv. Leaves for Denver—Mrs. Bert Tlelds, who haft been visiting at the lome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. JLlbertson, 521 Oak street, returned to ler home at Denver, Colorado last fight. Big Snle—The ryral schools of Srand Forks county^ have nearly loubled the number" of Christmas eals sold- this year over the number liaposed of (last year, according to the pounty superintendent of schools. Inal «t so far received indicate |hat the Rale has far exceeded expos itions Action Deferred—The county com missioners meeting here'on Friday dc jerred action on the purchasing of a Ite for 'a soldiers' memorial, and al aough they considered the*question of ,' suitable mema.rlal for those whqi' ive their lives In the World warl leflnite action on this* phase of the PJ®*''0.n a s0 wa® r-Seeks Parole—According to infor- Htlon received here, an application is been filed with the state pardon atrd t6r the parole of Clifford Wentz this city, who Is serving a term of fe years at hard labor ln the penl utiary for burglary |n the third de ee. L. L. Stair, wardeA of the pr/il fntlary, and a member of the board, tes that a meeting of the board will held about February 15, at whieh »e the case of Wentz will be heard. Claim Allowed—The bonus claim of )avld Radcllff^ former resident of Jrand Forks county, but who now la Intthe Battle Mountain sanitarium nt Hot Springs, S. D., has been approved •and the rtioney awarded, according to |J. "B. Wlneman, service officer of the IJ'eterans' bureau, who took the mat- RICHER THAN BEFORE. We've had our share tCt "Sorrows And we've" had our time of fear. We have waked to sad tomorrows But we've lived another year And In spite of all the/gflevltig And the burdens that we bore, The oli le old 'year's truly leaving? -i Us all-richer than before. We are wiser now And kinder Than we were when it began^ We are Just alittle Jjllnder, To the petty faults ot man And-when days of trouble found us, Sending sorrow to 6ur door, To the frienda who gathered round us We are closer than before. As we run our b^nk book o'er,, In many ways we know it— We are richer than befora. We have memories to treasure All unknown a year ago, Little sparkling gems of pleasure' Which forever we may know At the end of December, With the twelve months almost o'er, We have much we shall remember And,we're richer than beto're. (Copyright, 1922, by Edgar A. Guest.) BUND STUDENTIS" TO BE GRADUATED AS AN ASTRONOMER 5 Ann Arbor, Mich., Dec. "#0.—Blind rare that there are no text books with raised type. Therefore, he depends upon .fellow students to read his les sons to him. So proficient' has he be come, hip professors say, that frequently memorizes a lesson hearing it read only a few times. NOTOEIOUSPARIT PRISON HAS 1 It Was learned that Radcllft had a wife laid several children ln 'Pierre, S. D., Tlio needed funds. [pierce WOips ORGANIZING, Rugby, N. D.. Dec.. 80.—Farm ^omen of fierce county -are organiz ngf for -farm clubs, ln various parts If the county. A number of pro grams for the winter--have already Jeen arranged. -In the whole of England there/are |ut a dozen woifien who are qualified practice law. A FUTURE ik in store for the untrained man wl..'o' decides to become skilled, in some trade or profession n6w. To the un stained man with small capital we In* "/ylte* consideration of the opportn- Utles offered In the Bai-bar Trgdt. 5iir "graduates are in,demand and gat food salaries^ Many are ln business for- themselves.^. New. Illustrated I. catalog sent Free to thbse Interested, City Barber College 'Si-v 804 Hennepin'Ave. Hlnneapolls, au&n. ^Delicious Warm, crunchy toast filled with plump, luscious raisins. Be sure (he loaf has the tu^me •tamped on..the aide, then you'll be gettlns ^ho. beat. /"'.fL V.JL,V r!'' „'l-it ji-',.? £j ff' ?. from birth, witlrhls conception ot I P°lice the heavens formed by descriptions from others, Joseph Caldwelf of'indi- !„—. Vr Duluth Man Here—rB. M. Ruth 6f ana, Pennsylvania, is studying -Hs uluth is in Grand Forks today on tronomy at the University of Michi usiness. He will "return to Duluth ga-n In order that he may meet the evening. scientiflcal requirements to permit ... him to be graduated from the col- Wanted Toung lady wants place lege of Literature, Science and Arts. BEEN ORDERED TORN DOWN Paris—lilho Saint Lazarc prison for women, which is both famous and no torious in the annals of French his tory, has been ordered, torn down by the' municipality of Paris. Jt was in this prison that during the. general war-certain well known women r.piea in. the pay o£ Germany were detained, often previous' to execution. Mata- "b* R°" dav# ln ^)ent Postponed for the }jave |)een replaced by a smiling gar den there-will hove disappeared one aijd used the building as a monastery. During this period ot the building's history the grdat military and literary figures of France fre quented the gardens. -Then for a brief thirty yeays, It was used as a political prison, and with the coming of the French revo lution, in July,. 1789, during the famine, the place was broken Into by the mob, looted for food and set afire. Under ^the Terror, Satnt Lazare again became a prison, mostly for the detention of '"men and women of E&F up some time ago. Premature Prominence previous to their execu alvment of the claim was made when H0,1,1" Shortly- after that tim« the building, was converted. Into a wom an's prison. PARISIAN ARTISTS REGUIiATE EXHIBITS Paris.—The Society of Indepefident Artists has just iyesolved to regulate Itself. Its principal characteristic, heretofore, has beie'n the entire ab sence of, regulations from its annual salon. ,Menibers sent any ssort of a /picture and it was hung In any sort EAST GRAND FORKSm Breaks Leg In Fall From R* Rt Bridge iSimef Hurst, young eon "of Albert Hurst, 824 North Third street,. East Saturday afternoon. It appears that Elmer Hurst, tor* gether with several of his playmates, had gone down to the hill at the end of the bridge to slide down the hill and "that Hurst went-out on the bridge and accidentally" fell over the edge. His companions ran to Mr. Hurst's .store on DeMers avenue' and told To the old and tried and true friend, ^1' »~.f' 'TOii-h tho noocinv «v,» Hurst ran to the^cene of the accl- With the passing of the year. Came a' good and happy new friend With his comfort and his cheer Though our fortune doesn't show It dent immediately and found his son lying in the snow in great agony. He picked the boy^p in^his arms jand carried him to the front of- the Hotel Dacotah in Grand Forks, where he secured a taxi and took him home. Chief of Police Harry Gregg an nounced last night that this practice of using the railroad bridges as a playground for children is forbidden. SQUIRES 'tO PREACH. Dean V. P. SiftJires of the state uni versity will preach the seAnon at the Mendenhal'l Memorial Presby terian. church here Sunday morning. Services will commence at 10 o'clock, with Sunday school and at 11 o'clock the sermon will ,be delivered. GREQG TO PICK UDffolOWLERS. Chief of Police Harry Gregg ot East Grahd Forks announces that he lias instructed tho members of the force lns-s£ at late 1 Mr. Caldwell, a sophomore and 46 years old, isaoubly handicapped. In addition to his blindness, he lacks the Mrs. J. MacMichel and mechanical aids for the study of Betty Jane, who have been .visiting at neara. astronomy that often are afforded I the home of Mrs. MacMIchel's par students who take up other studies. I ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Kdin, 310 Da Blind students of astronomy are solkota street, returned to their home in t° arrest young men wl»p on Minneupolis last night. Mrs. A. Rutledge, 713 avenue, returned home by In addition to astronomy, Mr. Caldwell1-, is studying psychology, German, French and.. Italian. He ranks as One ot tha most adept stu dents in his' classcs. her Uie bu ld'.hg. I Before the war the grey walls of! jfr. Weber, me Strang- ht Fkfter. Figaro .league J.'r: T^r •••cs Jlumbol'U. chnrsed with one of the greatest swindle.? knoivn rpcent t'reucn liiattfry, and "a long list of other women involved in the criminal annals of nineteenth century France. When'the walls of this prison of the most^ renkirkable buildings of France, i'rora the point of view of historic association., Founded in 1110' as a leper house, five centuries later it "was taken in charge by the monks of the order of Saint Victor who abolished the- leper feature. 1 of a way without regardr to its class, merit or subject. The eccentricities of the Independ ent's felon sufficed to make It a suc coss, and with suefcess came the- ne cessity for regulation. The regula tions, however, amount to little more than to limit the number of pictures Bent In., The quality.still depends-up on the taste and talent of the artist. There will, aa of old, be no' Jury merci lessly to-reject, and the artist's will be permitted to set a price on all pictures shown. ROAD^ OPENED^ Hlllsboro,' N. D., Dec. 80.—Sevei^il cars made, the trip' from Hlllsboro to Mayvllle this week, the roads—being open for automobile traffic, for. th? first time in several weeks. WHAT GRAND FORKS PEOPIiB WKREDOUCG THIRTY YEARSAGO (Accmber SO, lftSj W. BC Henneaey left laist, .evening for Blspmrck.. Attorney General. Blandish was In the City yesterday. Col. Rrotfn. iflll go to. Bismarck to see 'the 'aeiMfbrlal clilcu»^'i^'^^' E. A. Gowran of Portage, Wisconsin is the sueat of his« brother, C. C. 3ow- 'WTA- .vj bound trajfi was only, a half h^tir lute last ,'evenlng and caused something of a co^inotlon.an ground. ypavia Buiibkak goes to Parneavlile ItRir evening to'offlcjate'a« flAor man ager at tl}e tralnmens* ball He will lead 'the grand majteli. imaa.- pell Mactti^aid ft ".With i'l..'.«d« ja. pro'okatbjy.,' Washington last night from-Minneapolis, where she had been confined in a hospital for about six weeks. 1 the evening. The party returned to town about 12 o'clock. The pedestrians on- DeMers avenue were treated to rfh old-fashioned run away Friday afternoon when' a teaVn of horses hitched to a cutter, dashed down the street. No one was in the vehicle at the time. The horses! stopped when they hit the deep snow near "the Farmers' elevator. Miss Rose Mary Oien of Warren, who has been spending several daj-s I With friends in this city returned Frl- aay to her home. and this old convent held in bondflKe such i?airibau!t returned Friday to their women as Mp.dame-( aillaux, ^"ho shotjhome after spending the Christmas and killed 11. Calme: te. editor of the holidays wSith relatives in this city and, Mrs. Frank M. Gunderson nt Fitter. Charles Carver left Friday for the Twin^Clties where he will remain until about January 10. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hoganson plan to leavo today for Dickinson, N. D., where they will spend the remaining part of the winter with their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Hoganson. !OD Dacotah for too.—Adv. 50 cents. XSood service Real Battle Results During Fihning Of A Movie Fight Scene Los, Angeles, Dec. 30.—A motion picture director whose studio is near here, hired 800 extras yesterday to be used an the "audience" in the film ing of a fight sceng. In the excitement two of the hired spectators forgot themselves and came to blows. T^he fight quickly spread to the other members of the "audience" and after the dust settled and a hurriedly summoned squadron of policc had herded'the combatants intb the streets, it was found that th,e arena was wrecked. THE SECRET of making good cocoa 'v is musing A BAKE ICS COCOA For its cjuaiit^ is good The purity, palatability and nutrient characteristics of kigK grade cocoa beans are retained in Baker's Cocoa/1 ov7jng "to perfection qf the processes peculiar to our methods. hmk 'T' i"\' MADE ONLY BY WailterBaJKr&Co.Ltd, CitebUdnd.1^0• ._ fckjlta4EStBIL i4A». GRAND FORKS JHERALD. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1922. POLES GRADUALLY CHANGE POSITIONS •,/ I London—The earth is wobbling on its aite. according to Colonel P. Jen Ben. Top Danish scientist returned re"- cently from a degree measuring •ex pedition Into Greenland. He reports that Greenland is moving westward at the rate-of-20 yards a, year.. This seems to conflrni the recent reports of surprising climatic changes at the North Pole. It is now established that there hf a periodic shifting of the latitude of the North Pole. The (movement is difficult to detect,because of the small Grand Forks, broke his leg at tho area of the pole—about the size of a ?(!,1e.rnen-, basketball team de ankle when he fell from1" the west tennis court, Some nuthorlties say ,e -a®8 t**® American approach of the Northern Pacific that the poles are gradually chang- LfKion quint last night on the Cass aUlons. and that this nl-iLake "oor In a snappy game by the bridge Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock, ing their posltipns, and that this al He was rushed to his home, ,where teration to the* world's axis will In score of 29 to 18. Thev first -half sturgeons were callod. Because' of time mean that- reglonswhich are the boy's nervous condition the doc- present ice-bound will'become warm tora decided-not to set his leg until and habitable countries. ROQUEFORT CHEESE MAY BECOME ONLY A PUNGENT MEMORY Venice—Venice officially istics collected by -the city authorl I ties revealed these numbers. A sleigh ride party, consisting of) "Closed on account of death," was' here, conducted by the school chll twenty-five local .people, drove out to t]ip poster hung lip outside a trades- dron tcy raise money for various the P. J. McCoy farm, six miles north Jna of fhe city, last night, where an oy- friends learned thwt the departed ful. Over ?111 was raised in two st.cr supper and card games were the member was the pussy-cat. days. features of 'V V- W *5- V""' y?" :^V ktfude? 19 to 8 "'on the doc- present ice-bound wiii'tiecnmn impm "1® long end of the count. In the The price of ewes' milk has drop-!*'- Phlbbs 1 out of 3 ped to such a figure that the breed-' ers find no profits In milking arid are considering whether It would riot be better to rear the lambs they have hitherto sacrificed for.the cheese. An other factor in the situation is that mutton is now bringing a higher prlco than other meafs. PARIS TRIES OUT AMERICAN "STOP" h°urs- These young men, if I boulevard intersection this week, a calif?,' which resulted in the death picked up, will be compe.led to policeman seated on a clialr operat-: ot i=to Th.™ vniin. mon I boulevard intersection this week, TV answer t) a charge of vagrancy and ing four electrically connected signal no leniency will be shown, he said. posts on th«'corners.of th«' i"f EAST SIUE BRIEFS iu'e T*~* 7 BEMIDJI WINS OVER CASS LAKE Firemen Beat the Legion ^Team In Past Contest By 29 to 18 Score. Bern Id Jl, Minn., DM. ST.—Ths .wiLh the *i! Paris—(By The Associated Press.) M. Phibba —Unless something Is done quickly. Movold ... The summary: Bemidjl 'Firemen.' Roquefort cheese seems doomed to Jueb become nothing but a pungent mem- F. Phlbbs. ory. This cheese Is made mostly froni Barrett .. ewes' milk, and from time immemor- Field Baskets:.- M. Phlbbs 6, Jueb ial Its manufacture has teen the 4. Kowahl 4, Movold 2, Jondahl 2, principal industry of the region in Phibbs 1. Barrett 1, Repetto 1. France known a's Aveyron. Free Throws: Jondahl-4 out of 0 ^lre"len second half the .Cass Lake quint played the Firemen on even terms, each team scoring ten points. M. Phlbbs at right forward starred for the Firemen, while Kowahl at center starred for the Leglonairos. Cass Lake American Legion .RP... Repetto .liS*........ Jondahl ..C Kowaljl .. RG Caswell LG..: Skarbo Referee—Rorthert, Cass Lake. Inspectors Find Wrecks Are Due To Deliberate Intent Washington, Dec. 30.—Investigation into three recent railroad accidents which took place at widely separated pointy, has disclosed that all were due AMI) ^inNAI to malicious tampering with railroad XlllV VIV tJlVlllrlLiJ swu(.hes, prowling around" the streets illumina.ed traflic signals at a busy peka and Santa Fe railway at Landco, according to reports filed yesterday with the Interstate Com- ParlSj—(By the Associated Press.) :merce commission by Its safety in' —Tl^s Paris police mnde their first spectors. test of the Amerfban "stop" and "go" deiisilmcnt *«1 the Atchison. To Fi ot two em bell signal and whistles were drowned £i train derailed on the Great by the noise of the traffic, so they Vrthern railroad at Andover. Minn., daughter seeking something that can [jar '(•auso 60,000 CATS PURR IN VENICE HOMES pjoyea and a'mall clerk and t, lniurv of sl thirteen others the in- ,ect0^ found was caused by'a switch Ul.lCiaia saia tne uevice WilS a, SO- V, ,rln[. Knan nnnnn/l n-lth mnltnlnna ity. lution of many of their problem's but' }^nnfvbe?" th? details must be perfected. Their i^p, 1 unknown, while a aS a possesses track laborer, who deliberately open- 60,000 cats, harbored by 35,000 fam- .ed the switch, expecting, the insnec ilies. Venetians adore their cats, and tors said, to wreck a freight train and frequently give them an airing in rob broken cars of the merchandise gondolas on the canals. Recent stat slm" The wreck of No. 24 on tho Texas and Pacific railway at Macks, in which one person was kllTed and thirty-one were injured, was caused, the inspec tors, declared, by a discharged negro TAG DAYS SIJCCKSSFC1 Hlllsboro. N. D.. Dec... 30.—Tag days shop the other day. Condoling school purposes, were highly suecoss- American Gold to Save Europe Again?' Now Comes a ''People's Bloc" American Blood and Oil England's Unemployment Plague Niagara Not So Valuable Deathls Revelation of a New Author Baptists Enforcing thevGolden Rule V^ •^.'1 :i -•-li,.':/i |. ',. ''i nOV nfl $200,000 FIRE IN JACKSONVILLE, ftl ILLINOIS, TODAY Jacksonville. m.^Dec. 80.—Two thirds of the business buildings on one side of the public square were in ruins heta today, an- estimated loss ot $200,000 as a result 6f lire of un known .origin early today. Two of the buildings, housing Ave Arms, were practically destroyed by flames before tho fire was under con 'trol. Exploding shells in the armory of the Jacksonville Howitzer company ot the Illinois National Guard added to the danger confronting tho flrpmen. .Two .firemen were injured. FATHER ANNOUNCES HEIRESS' WEDDING WILL TAKE PLACE Pasadena, Cai.. Deo. 30.—The mar riage of Miss Delora Angell, heiress to the c«tate of her late uncle. John \V\ Gates, estimated at J20.000.000, to Lester NorriH, .Chicago newspaper art ist, son of a furniture dealer at St. Charles, a suburb ot Chicago, prob ably will take place at St. Charles, III., some time next fall, according to her father, R. P. Angell. been set for the wedding, some peo pie have supposed it was all tiff. But It Is not. The date, is still to be decid ed upon. It will probably be sonic time next fall." SHERIFF AND HIS DEPUTY ARE CHARGED WITH LIQUOR THEFT The charges against .Sheriff Kobb were -filed by William McMurray. Polk county jailer, after McMurray had been locked out of his own jaiC tinder (he sheriff's ordem, and after McAlurray's son had been arrested by orders of AsHiMtajit (,'ounty Attorney Seeburger for aneged complicity in the booze theft. McMurray charged that, o'n August 8, Sheriff Robb sold niore than seven ty quprts of whisl^j-. The lazy'and dreamy old Nassau that in other days traded in sponges and tropical fruits, is\to-day ,a busy commercial center. The sponge-baths are now usted as the small craft of the smugglers to reach the South Atlantic coast of the United States, while vessels df all sizes that .range from sea-going tugs to a converted Spanish battle-cruiser, carry the cargoes of^rum to New York and the New England coast. In the ir-rooms. at the dining-tables, in he lobbies and on the porches of the hotels and boarding-houses at Nassau, the capital city of the Bahama Islands, the bootleggers and whisky smugglers "talk of their plans, tell of their profits dftd laugh at Uncle Sam." There, according to Frank K. Dolan, who went to the Bahamas.to study the rum-runners' method for the New Yopk Daily 'right-'-or 'quepft'" If a stranger is suspected of being "quee^"—thought to be a revenue officer, a detective, or some one likely to interfere with the rum-smugglers' operations—"he is curtly told to leave town, and in some instances blackjacked and beaten." In THE LITERARY DIGEST this week, December 30th, there is an informative andointeresting account, of the methods and operations of the whisky smugglers. Among many other news-features of timely interest are: "Laughter is the Sweetest Music in the World" states the Detroit Fress Press. "Like the refrajn of an enchanting melody it lingers in memory, recollection of happy moments. More pleasing than the most delicate symphony is the spontaneous laughter of a crowd. It dulls care and creates joy. It tones, the system. The urge to join is irresistible. The Literary Digest gathers weekly from the world's press the brightest of the current laugh-pro yokers, The best of these are presented in the merry motion picture, "Fun From the Press." The fun niest incidents, the most laughable jokes, knd„the,pithiest patter on the serious questions of the hour are all included. It's sparkling-new every -week. Watch for it at your local theater.'"Fun From the Press" Prpduced by The Literary Digest. W. W. Hodkinson Corporation, Distributor. ,, Get December 30th Number, on Sale To-Day—At All News-Dealers 1 ers "Strangler" Lewis ing News, mm. vmsmsfM San Francisco. Cal,. Dec. 30.— "Strangler"/ I^ewis, champion wrest ler. announced today arrangements had been completed for a mixed match betwrn-n Jack Denipsey antl', himself. Lewis produced signed bp tides covering (he match which weixo drawn nt Wichita.^ Kansas, and cai rled the signature of Jack KeaHis manager for Oempsey. The articles, a sporting writer obr served, "contained 1.000.000 ruleg^jas to how the two are to behave them selves." J^ewts said: "We have made this match. There are only a few details to be worked out." Tho date and place of the match were not announced. KEEP WATCH "FOR STEAMER SAID TO CARRY BERGDOLL The heiress, h«r father and mother. and Mr. amj Mrs. W. H. Wilcox.' all of St. Charles, haye come to southern California for the winter and are nt the Angell residence in Altadena, a suburb. "All this talk about a broken en- pensacola, Fla.. Dec. 30.—Lot ij gagement is bosh,' paid Mr. and Mrs. police and port officials were early to Angell. "Delora and Lester aro goins|duy making preparations to meet right ahead with their plans to marry (he steamship Jupiter raid be en and they luvvo the full approval of us route to this port with (irover Clevc both. land Bergdnll, Philadelphia alleged "Just because no definite date has draft dodger, on^board as ,a member of Its crew. No word hnd been rec.-eiverl froir the Jupiter early today and the houi of Its arrival was not. known. Porl authorities said they were expecting the vessel to-arrive here either today or tomorrow, ln the meantime otliei gulf ports were being closely watcher, for the Jupiter. Leon county authorities at Tala hassee, Fla., were still holding today the young man .who claims his nainr is William Jones uf Erie. T'a.. taken into custody yesterday suspected of Des Moines. Ia., Doc. SO.—Warrants i,PinK ^Bergdoll. SherifT Jones of Le^r were issued early today for the arrest f.0„n(v. of Wlnfred 13. Kobb, I'olk county said while lie did not beiievr sheriff until January, 1. and his broth- )„, Herald Wants Bring Results ALWAYS ASK U8 FOR GALUMET The Bconcmv BAKING POWDER j- SORBO'S GROCERY 70S Cherry St. "a man is either Our Transportation Strangling Snags In the Way of a Loan to Germany Austria's New Start In Life How Paper Barrels Are Made Radio Eliminating Sea Distances What Nqw Many Interesting Illustrations Including Humorous Cartoons Replaces Opera and Ballet In Russia Tim Healy and His Ready Tongue -s Why notmake s^thatyoMr ^hadnp the jjj fm «hM»nt^:of unn£ tlte Pohk,ft WagnatW Cocn- w-fw&mw Breltenaivwi SfndaraxHcnpriaiiw m-aobaai •nU .hotne? It Tneara^iciwr progress. €0CIYGTS i1 'SsusfL —•. u«i a 10 Ceats^, fi^S -AOJ 1^'?* -.51 & mm •#fei Champ Conqplete Arrangements. o- I r"l who has the suspect In nl er. Deputy Sheriff 'Ceorge Kobb. in would continue to hold him until hl: c.onnection with the thefl of $:t0,0Y)0 linger priirls have been compared in worth.of liquor from the Polk county Washington with those of Ilergdoll. jail booze Boom last W-ednesday night. Uotli are in custody. ,n being .held is Rcrgdoll. h« ."4 -i '-s'f Vi{ is i-'t 3 Bsr ,y. r. -Al 4 iir .'5, 1 .,31 I st!1 *f{i (,s| J'w 'im rX\