The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 27, 1919, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SIX BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE AUG. 27, 1919 Clover Land Fast Becoming a Range for Western Woolies Fifty Thousand Head of Sheep Moved in During Last Two Months Milwaukee, Wis. Aug. portation of skeep from Michigan, started three years ago, now has become an annual practice. No fewer than 59,090 head of sheep and 10,000 head of cattle have been moved into Wisconsin from western ranches during July and August. The movement is centered about Douglas, Washburn, Marinette and Oneida counties with, however, prac- tically the entire tier of counties in northern Wisconsin and upper i- gan participatng to some extent as grazing country. Among the first large shipments of sheep were flocks moved from Cas- cade, Mont., Ogeden, Utah, Riverton, Wyo., and Great Falls, Mont. In Minnesota and Wisconsin, com- prising the territory immediately sur- rounding Duluth, 12,000 head of sheep} were placed upon ranches within two days. These originated at Casper, Wyo., and Cascade, Mont. Upper Michigan in 1918 established | 43 ranches. Thus in less than a year approximately 100 cattle and sheep ranches have grown up in the states of Wisconsin, Michigan and Minne- sota. The livestock is kept on the grazing fields until ready for shipment to be slaughtered. The movement of im- porting livestock from the west began after a conference at tho ‘National Wool-growers Convention at Salt Lake City. The convention was induced to send committees into the prospective grazing territory and the result of their study is described in the words of Frank J. Hagenbarth, president, as follows “You have the best country on earth for livestock and grazing. It is a well-known fact that the best stock is raised in the colder countries, and that they produce the best wool. Sheep and cattle deteriorate in the warm countries. Nature designed this up- per country for livestck and favored it in that regard as it favored no other section of our country.” Mr. Hagenbarth, following the read- ing of his report, personally acquired 98.000 acres for the establishment of his own sheep ranches, ‘Milwaukee capital has become in- terested in a number of sheep vent notably those at Jim Falls. in the Chippewa valley and at Phillips in Price county. The movement now in- dicates that livestock banks must be created where the banking interests of the Great Lakes basin will enter a new phase of activity. a Eagle, Colo., is built on a clifftop, and to reach it from the railroad sta- tion one ascends in’a bucket suspend- ed from a cable, OISON OAK * (4 Wash with week solu- tion of blue stone ‘or lime water, dry thor- oughly, follow with light appli- cation of— z ed farm near Dallas. Around it she VICKS VAPOR < has built a village known as Adams- “YOUR BODYGUARD" -30F, GOF, 31,29 | ville. PHONE 189 2 ees BEULAH COAL SOLD BY BEULAH COAL COMPANY Cor, 7th & Main St. Bismarck Missouri Valley Motor Company R. B. LOUBEK, General Manager The House With a Variety to Satisfy Every Possible Desire DISTRIBUTORS FOR CHEVROLET - HUPMOBILE HUDSON — ESSEX and PAIGE Motor Cars ACCESSORIES AND SUPPLIES Distributors for SMITH FORM-A-TRUCK A 3-in-1-time-and-money Saver Expert Attention Prolongs the Life of Car Jobbers and Distributors of KELLY-SPRINGFIELD —and—— PENNSYLVANIA TIRES Our Painting Department is the best in the Northwest. Let us i make you an estimate. BATTERY DEPARTMENT PRESTO-LIGHT BATTERIES AND PARTS Batteries tested without charge, re- charging, repairing, rebuilding. PHONE 234 27.—The im- western ranges to grazing fields of northern Wisconsin and the upper peninsula of in eight years. fish market in Dallas, N. E. A. Special Correspondence, Dallas, Tex., Aug. -Financier, philanthro business woman, club woman, artist, ship manufacturer, ol magnate and farmer Mrs. C. Adams, of Dallas, T 1 and business is than perhaps any other one an in America, And she says she achieved it. by “sticking to the job” even though the odds were against her 10 to 1. A few thousand dollars left her by her husband who died in March, 1910, she swelled to more than a million. Before her husband’s death she was an artist, and when he died she took the helm and steered straight to suc- cess, She owns the Liberty National bank at Waco, Texas, capitalized at $30,- 000 with a surplus of $60,000. Her sig- nature as vice president of the cam- pany is attacked to bank notes now in circulation. She owns considerable stock in many of Texas’ largest banks, Many are her contributions amount- ing to thousands given to Texas insti- tutions. Three boys are now ‘being educated in college at her expense. Sho has a plan of buying homes for employees, allowing them to pay as they are able. No one with a worthy. plea appealing to her for help will go unaided. ‘As ‘a business woman she is un- «| equaled, owning the biggest fish and oyster wholesale business. in. Texas. She in fact controls the fish and oys- ter market of Texas and’ Oklahoma. Her business enterprise is reflected in many ways. In, addition to retailing fish and oysters in Dallas she retails green truck, operating her own irrigat- achieved more finance suc It has a store, a postoffice, a black- smith shop and other shops. This Dallas business woman turned a few thousand dollars into a million She is a banker, rail- road and oll magnate, and ship own- er—but still manages her little retail who Has iz THE BEST BUSINESS WOMAN IN TEXAS MADE MILLION DOLLARS IN EIGHT YEARS MRS. ; f DAMANS* Dallas has profited considerably ‘by her work as a club woman, Her chief ambition in this connection is to aid girls to reach a high position in Ife. She has been the promotor and organ- Art Association. These organizations have been organized to help girls aud women obtain an education in life’s greater branches, “The Kathaleen,” building Co., of Beaumont, Texas, of which Mrs, Adams is president, now plies between Hawaii and gulf ports. The company expects to have several more on the water in a few months. Mrs. Adams’. biggest enterprise is oil. Her income from oil in the last several years has amounted to almost} seven figures. She owns a controlling interest in the Tarver Oil Co. . The company operates nearly. a ‘hundred wells in Texas and Louisiana fields. And in connection with the oil-busi- ness it ‘has been proven that Mrs. Adams is not superstitious. Thirteen is. said .o ‘be an unlucky number. Mrs. Adams was born on’ the 13th day of the’month. On the 12ta'day of October, 1913, she. set. stakes for a well, the 18th well of.a tract in thé Scur Lake ‘field. “The well came in with 6,000 barrels of oil, per day. The North Texas, . Transit: “Co, a railroad . concern -has ‘her heading the} i of its stockholders. It has ,been mored ‘she will be -on. the board of directors. But decked -in diamonds and a plain everyday dress, Mrs. Adams sits from early in the morning . until: .Jate at, night \in her ‘little retail fish) market on Main street, Dallas. ‘ There she Iives-up.to the creed ex: pressed in-her favorite verses: “Let melive.in a“house by. the’ side of the road. And.ibe a friend to man.” learned the joy and protection of an emergency shelf in her pantry, is the Sort of housewife who will be glad to add the “picnic shelf” to her conven- jences. Every well- conducted family has or should have the picnic habit—in such. aggravated form that the fever for a picnic is liable to break out only an hour or two before the happy event it- self—too late for preparations unless the luncheon material is on hand and easily assembled. Therefore the “picnia she It Should be kept stocked all the time, | replenished after each using, and kepi sacred to its particular purpose. The picnic shelf should contain: Two or more cans each of salmon, tuna fish, sardines, potted ham, chic- ken, corned beef. Jars of peanut butter. ‘Bottle of salad dressing. Boxes of salted plain and wafers. Small jars of cheese, and jelly or jam. Whoden plates and trays, paper cups, napkins and tablecloth, tin forks and spoons, long-handled toasting fork, long handled spoon, pail with fitted cover, salt and matches in screw top glass jars. A supply of empty boxes of differ- ent size, rolls of waxed and plain pa- per. Also there is a little list of pic- nic necessities kept on the shelf, to be checked over each time a picnic basket is packed as insurance that nothing important has been forgotten. sweet marmalade, LEMON JUICE FOR FRECKLES t Girls! Make beauty lotion for a few cents—Try It! Squeeze the juice of two lemons in- to a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white, shake well. and. you have a quarter pint of the best ‘treck (2 ana tan lotion, and complexion beauil- fier, at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter three ounces of orchard white for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fra- grant lotion into the face, neck arms and hands each day and soe how fleckles, and blemishes disappear and how clear, soft and sory-white the The fore-handed housewife who has For supply | HOW TO PACK FOR A PICNIC BY BIDDY ‘BYE picnics where-:salad isto be served “put in individual. paper’ lily, cup, lined: with waxed. paper.: Cover. the ‘tops of the cups with oiled paper and set them upright. luni §$ Unpacked* the salads. may. be slippeil out of the cups on to, plates and the clean cups will’be ready for the beverage. served. Prepare the lemonade at home. and. carry in a-screw-top fruit jar, ,ready to.mix at the picnic. “Allow the juice of 1-2 lemon and 1. tablespoonful of sugar for cach glassful of “ade”'to be made. noe A’ good: way to carry ¢ake'to-a pic- nic-is to bake ‘it in a loaf-in.a single bread’ tin,- putting on -the icing »with- out*removing the cake from the pan and later-serving it directly from the’ pan. Inpacking” sandwiches ‘wrap: two, of different. kind, in .each’,square of ciled paper. Wring a clean cloth out of ice water and lay on:the bottom of the pasteboard box, on-top ‘of the oil-|! ed: paper.. Lay the sandwiches on the; damp cloth, cover with another ‘damp- | ened cloth and ‘wax .paper, and wrap with heavy paper. four extra‘ sandwiches for, ‘the chil- dren who are sure ‘to be hungry be- fore lunch. time. If father or brother will consent to carry a pail, a handy refrigerator may be taken right.along to the -picnic with ice, and cold’ food ‘thus assured. Jars of. salad, fresh fruit, lemonade, | etc. may ‘be set-in the’ bottom: of a deep -pail, and over them a colander containing chunks of ice and’ covered with-heavy cloth or.paper. . Put a lid ‘on the pail, and there. you ‘are. I just heard of a new way to bake potatoes in the campfire—guaranteed | tobe délicious. Wash each*,potato nd wrap it in double or triple thick- ness: of wet newspaper. ‘Bury. the po- tato © in hot coals.and ashes’ and let hem bake three quarters of an-hour —whe.i done’ they can be poked out of their newspaper’ jackets—cooked ~and_ clean, ‘ HALF-RATES ON FEED. ASKED OF MILWAUKEE LINE IN. THIS STATE In response to an application made through” the state e Treasurer Obert A. Ol- he has large herds of. cattle and flocks skin becomes. Yes! Jt is harmless and never irritates ca North : Dakota, a steamship, : the | first one made by the Tarver Ship-| _}in aerial navigation. According to ‘the When : the|’ Leave out three or |’ railway commis- son, who owns or leases 4,000 acres of «ca ands in Bowman: county, where of-sheep, Regional Director Aishton of the United States railway commission has advised the board here that he has petitioned for ‘half-rates on feed and forage to all evn aaa line points : ‘in By: Marguerite Edwards. “The, prettiest girl has’ the best chance of, marriage.!” Ah-h-h! THAT'S’ settled! ‘Science has’ the figures to prove the declaration! For centuries the dispute has raged between champions of beauty and brains as to which quality was the best matrimonial insurance for wom- an. Beauty wins, Argument is ended! Figures don’t lle! "The experts in statistics and heredity have gotten down to brass tacks ‘and made a chart to PROVE that beauty is the best possible ‘bet with Cupid! Professor Paul ‘Popenoe, editor. of the Journal of Heredity, and Profes: sor Roswell Hill Johnson, professor :in the University of Pittsburgh, have. put their wise ‘heads together and figured the result like this: Of the prettiest girls in a graduat- ing class of a certain normal schodl 70 per cent marr Of those mem: bers of the class graduating only 50 per cent on looks—or half-way pretty, —only one-half married, and those less than helf good-looking have al- most no chance of marriage at all. The prettier the girl the better her chance to marry. ’ Then take the matter of ‘brains! Another chart»of normal school graduates according to their standing in their classes showed that the smartest girls had-a better chance to marry than their dull sisters. Here’s another picture of brains helps a girl to matrimony. Those who ranked 90 in their class work show a higher per cent of mar- riage than those’whose grades were 70 or lower. (Chart from. “Applied Eugenics” by’ Popenoe -and Johnson.) The Physical Culture (Magazine re- cently conducted a questionnaire among its readers, both men and, women,—to determine the ‘ideal mate.” how The Ideal Husband is made up of the follow- ing qualities: per cent. Health j........... 20 Financial success 19 5,000 SACKS OF SPUDS RAISED BY.’FRISCO FELONS San Francisco, Aug. 2.7—Five ‘thou- sand sacks of ,potatoes have been raised ‘by San Francisco jail. prisoners an “war, gardens,” ihjld over into: peace. times, outside of the jail stock- ade, Sheriff Thomas F, Finn has-an- nounced, Many ,of. ‘the \prisoners, have been under the honor system and. not:.one of the ‘farmers’. has . attempted’,.to escape, Finn said, The produce ithey raised is to .be ammunition in-the war against : ithe high’ cost .of. living ,and the potatoes, a ‘part of: the crop, have" MEXICO PROTESTS FLYING ACROSS FROM FT. BLISS SEL) Paso, weds, Trade! 27,—Com- plaints made ‘to military ‘headquarters: here iby. Mexican ‘officials in Juarez: ‘that. American ‘ayidtars ‘fly ‘across the. borier from ‘the ‘Fort, Bliss aviation: field, ‘has. ‘raised’ an ‘interesting point aviation officers at the Fort ‘Bliss field, noneof the ‘American-aviators have; crossed the tbordér, , ‘hey’ explain the’ statements of the Mexican offi-, ‘cials ‘by saying that, ‘when an air- plane is flying at a’great elevation, it: is extremely’ difficult to tell from the ground whether itis on the Ameri-, car Or ‘Mexican ‘sides ‘although the: aviators’ have landmarks by which they are :guided” jn keeping on the American ‘side. «Berea, 0) has “the aFaeat ‘grind- stone: factory ” ‘in the world. SS Ford: touring 1918, -excellent condition; . demountable rims,'5 good tires, speed- “ometer, radius rod sup- ports $425.00 Dodge touring 1918. Brand new rear tires. ..$875.00 ‘M. B. Gilman-Co., 212 Main St.—Phone 808. Dodge Brothers Motor Cars f Bert. Deennen, Mgr. 214 Main St. NOW OPEN With.a Complete Up-to-the-Minute Mulcanizmg: Retreading EQUIPMENT With Expert Workmen to Do Your Work DONT a aEOW AWAY UR OLD TIRES We will save oe at least half the. cost of new ones. OUR SPECIALTY WILL BB QUICK SERVICE Mail Orders Filled in 24-Hours LOVE NOT BLIND, SCIENCE SAYS; BEAUTIFUL WOMAN FAVORITE OF DR. DAN CUPID, EUGENICS SHOW ' en than ever before—higher now than| They-demand that girls they marry they were even ‘ten years ago. shall be | fitted for duties of~ home Women now demand > higher stand-| maker, wife, and mother. 4 ard of morality and physical fitness} After which cheerful figures. and for marriage in men, conclusions we may . safely assume 2.. Men of today also, have :higher|that “the little blind: god’ Cupid, \is standards in choosing wives. not so blind as reported. ‘Paternity . “_ Appearance Disposition . Education ‘Character ... ‘Housekeeping Dress. .... Columbia_Phonographs Columbia Records ON EASY TERMS WHEN DESIRED COWAN’S DRUG STORE ‘When the men took a turn at defin- ing the “ideal wife” they described this “not impossible: she” :as#follows: The Ideat ‘Wife’ is, a combination’ ‘of These’ ualities: i Health “Loo ‘Hous keeping | Disposition ‘Maternity Education - Management In general, the scientists cheerfully. conclude, the tabels of ideal qualities as.compiled from the opinions of sev- eral thousands of average . citizens. show: 1. That the standards of desirabil- ity in a mate are higher among wom- * How ‘tan, anyone: With 4sout, gaeiy S¢omach, iho ts eonitantly-belghingshias ‘heartburnvand suffers from indigestion have anything .but a bad breath? All ‘of theec stomach disorders mean just one: = EATONIC, ‘the wondertd! new étomach remedy in pleasant ‘tasting: Keres dhe reat you eat like a Bie of ean andy, Fine Ati Fallet from these stomach: ries. wih eweetens the breath fecaue it makes ‘the stomach sweet, coo) and'comfastable. Bo it dor that nasty taste, congested threat and “heady feeling” after too much smoking, ; If neglected, Acid-Stomach pia came 70a Blot ot werioea) paper leads ye mess, headaches) ingomnig, melanc! matism, sciatica, heart _trouble, vaeee a and. cancer ofthe etomach. It makes Ite millions | me ‘victims -weak and miserable, listlese, lack- tn energy, all tired out. 1F often brings abpat chroni ic invalidiem, premat svhaen age, . asbottening of one’s da: Youmneedithe;help that EATONIC can give )you-it you are not fecling as.strong and ‘well’as:you should. You ‘will be surprised tosee how much better ‘you will feci just as gon, a9 ‘you begin taking this wonderful stomach Remedy Geta bie yh cent ‘box:from your ‘druggist today, He will ier your. mioney if you are not sa ‘Every grocer everywhere ‘seds : Kellogg’s everyday gr You Can Get This Summer -Many a.woman beaitutes to ey putting up fruit at home. ‘She fears ‘she will only. waste expensive _ materials. Tt really i is very simple. Just make your preserving syrup with 4 Karo (Red Label) and ¥% sugar.instead of sugar alone. You can then be‘as sure of your results . as the woman who always has “luck” with, her ‘preserving, _ Nice fine, clear Karo Syrup has a natural affinity, for the fruit juices. It blends the sugar with the juice—brings out the rich i fruity” flavor, and insures firm jams and jellies that never “candy” in: the glass. A well-filled fruit pantry will :give you much pleasure this winter, when fresh fruita a@re.scarce and high, if you just use. Karo Syrup with your sugar. ‘For'Cooking, Baking and Candy Making Karo (Red Label) is used in millions of homes. Invall ‘cooking -and baking recipes use Karo insteati of sugar. It is sweet, of delicate flavor, and brings out the natural flavor of the food. ‘Preserving is easy when you have FREE the sixty-eight page Corn Products Cook Book handy. Wonderful recipes—easy to follow. “Beautiful ilustrations. ‘Write‘us” ‘today for it. It is free. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY P.O. Box 162 New York City NATIONAL STARCH COMPANY Sales Represontatives 306 Guardian ‘Life Eidg.: St. Paul, Minn, Delicious Jama, Jelliesand Pre- serves made, by this recipe: Use % anda sugar || fl pe ALUALE 7 LULL i.

Other pages from this issue: