The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 8, 1921, Page 3

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)

Social and Personal MEETING OF COMMUNITY COUN- CIL. The members of the Women's Com- munity Council had a most success- ful. and enthusiastic meeting at the rest room Saturday/ afternoon. A “History of Custer Park,” by Mrs, C. M. Dahl was submitted to the cour- cil and this was read and discussed. } THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE... They went to Staples to attend the funeral of Mr. Robinson's mother. VISITING HERE, Mac Thompson, son of Dr. Thomp- son of Wilton, is visiting in the city, the guest of his cousin, James Ander- son, son of J. C. Anderson of Fifth street. LEAVES FOR DICKINSON. Martin Lenhart, of the City Na- tional bank left this morning for Dickinson, where he will visit his par- ents. TO MINNEAPOLIS. QUEEN DECORATES GRAVES | emer eathis tied recipe for CANNED PEACHES Jemove skins by allowing peaches to remai mint in boiling water. Tho skiue will then come off veo) seals Pee into sterilized either whole or in halves or quarters, tion of one ortwo peach stones, where the stones have been rem adde.a favor.” Fillup the jare with boiling syrup, made accord! taste” From one to tmocupyof sugar tothe sipa of war | Proportion. ee Ful in le Ing the cover slightly fone, Sterize 16 minutes by the cold pack (ani Yenty of SNES iif It was decided to make it a matt Mrs. Zora Svendagaard lett for of history and was put in the rec-; Minneapolis this morning, where she ords. The Community Council de- cided to co-operate with the Business and Professional Women’s club in the housing problem. This project is to help the girls that come here to work; to get suitable rooms for a reasonable price, Mrs. C. M, Johnson, who is in charge of the rest room reported that the rest room is steadily becoming more popular with the ladies of Bis- marck and the surrounding commun- ities. The ladies from the rural dis- tricts‘ especially appreciate the rest room. LEAVES FOR NEW POSITION. ney and Russ families spent the day at their cottages and there was a par- ty of twelve at the George Will cot- tage. Large parties from Dawson were also at Lake Isabelle. There were several’ picnic parties at “The Rocks” and also at Brush Lake. RETURNS TO BISMARCK. Miss Minnie J. Nielson returned last night from Jamestown, where she ad- will visit friends for several weeks. HERE‘ FROM FALKIRK. Mr, and Mrs. George Swanson of Falkirk, are in the city visiting at the O. V. Bowman home. Mr. Swanson is cashier of the Falkirk State bank. AT DICKINSON. Theodore Koffel went to Dickinson today to attend to matters in districy i court. i fcc Aa VISITING IN STRASSBURG. Mrs, Steven Fisher and daughter, Bernice, left for Straussburg, where | they will visit friends for about two weeks. VISITOR FROM WASHBURN. Mrs. J. Mann of Washburn is vis- iting in the city, a guest at the C. A Rust home. | oe LEAVES FOR CHINA. Dr. and Mrs, A. H. Quigley left last night for China by way of Vancouver, B. C. Dr. Quigley will teach social science in a college in Peking. of Many Years Ago. Newspaper advertising of 160 years azo differed greatly in form from that of today, but the differnce in sub- stance and intent was rather small. In the columns of the New York Mer- cury of that period one finds the fol- lowing articles offered for sale and extolled for their particular qualities: to this conception that of leadership, of initintion—Samuel P. Or+h In the Yale Reviey Clung to the Faot-Hilis. Humanity in its settlements has never cared for the high tmountains or their valleys....Byt the races of | men have ever been well disposed to snuggle up close to the foot-hills. JSineOrchard Fruits URE, home-canned peaches, pears and plums— put them up in Mother’s good old way! As preserves, sauces, jellies, pickles and jams they will add zest to many a meal this a healthful, appetizing winter. The season is short. Fill your fruit cellar while « G. B, Allen, who for nine years, has been Past of the collection depar -| ————_--— h ment of. the International Harvester WEEK-END IN MINOT. i company here, left this morning for} Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Rohrer re- these fruits are7on the market. See that you Sioux Falls, 8. D., where he has ac-| turned today from Minot, where they * cepted a similar position. Mr. Allen! motored and spent the week-end. have plenty of Ball mason jars. instilled a special sollecting system — Y third ere and he will establish the siwne; TO MINNEAPOLIS. ou save one- ir 2 . system in the South Dakota office.| Mr. and Mrs. E. MA Lahr left yes- h FE s to one-half by canning at Mrs, Allen and son, Kenneth, will join} terday for Minneapolis on a several ome. i ** ae Allen, in several weeks. Mr. and| days’ trip. actory prep ared fruits are extravagant. rs. Allen have made their home ‘n RR F é : : *. . Bismarck for some time and their| || RETURNS HOME. : sie Your family and guests will instantly appreciate many fri ill av-| Miss Irene Belanger, who has bee» " a3 A A . P ing y eenls willrogretthelr jleay visiting here, ihe, guest of Migs The Queen of Belgium decorated the graves of 87 Belgian soldiers at the difference between canning-factory fruits and ig or stats 93 Wie We Eichorst, returned to her home at Mi- St. Mary’s cemetery at Konsal Green. The photograph shows her sprinkling ak ff ON PICNICS YESTERDAY. not today. the graves with holy water before placing the wreaths. the pure, delicious preserves put up In your own A great number of people went to a AR Ree kitch the lake and other places yesterday ROYAL NEIGHBORS MEET. “ itchen. and spent Sunday in picnic parties. 4; The regular monthly meeting of the WORLD HAS CHANGED LITILE they hau: thotight of fhem. . large number of people were at the| Royal Neighbors will be held at the —_—_— ‘The constitutional conception of the picnic grounds at Lake Isabelle and| Knights of Pythias hall Tuesday even-| Marked Similarity in Certain News | President is that of a chief executive, PACIFIC N. W. GROWERS & JOBBERS * spent the day there. The Corwin, Fin-| ing- paper Advertising Today and That | an administrator; custom hus added ASSOCIATION General Offices, Minneapolis, Minn. dressed the members of the Stale Edi- ga a aw “Godfrey's General Cordial,” which ; if , Pl e 0 1 ee ee et eee a o * 4 torial Association @n Friday after- TO ST. PAUL. was the oplated soothing syrup used the modern mae ae eee ie WHISE 1 WOU Vecome a W make ; is a beautiful job of printing, with an noon. Miss Nielson went to Fargo! Mr. and Mrs, John Bowers and fam-| iq that day for peevish, teething | put i § Ibis 1 an a ‘ith vere | that cobweb would stop the bleedin attractive cover and profuse illustra- : : ut in Biblical . times cities were! oe a wound; that a stiff breast bone tions, It was printed by the Tribune from Jamestown and spent Sunday there. RETURNS FROM STAPLES. | Mr. and Mrs. William Robinson re-j turned yesterday from Staples, Minn., where they have been for two weeks. We keep :2: fexch with the whims of fashion You will find here the latest millinery fads and fancies, as well as the beauty and quality which are the real criterions many of the patches frequently each| the pivot upon which all the adminis: | gseation and ‘sale of his Wbrarz. Louls | HERE’S ONE GUESS of “Style.”- year are about cleaned out. The ber-| trative machinery operates. sent Fouquet with unlimited power to| «what was that address of Sparta- AT ST. ALEXIUS Produc y 2 ries are not as numerous as last year.| He appoints the heads of depart-| pid it in, but the parliament, compre: | gus to the gladiators?” Whatever your tastes or ideas,}|a spring frost having nipped the buds! ments and may direct their major pol-| hending that {t would in this way be; “am not sure, but | suppose it had IN NEW BOOKLET BARKER BAKERY and wild plums are very scarce. Wild] jcies. His power of appointment to] returned to Mazarin, ordered its com-) something to do with the high cost of ‘The 1920-1921. booklet” of” the St. we can please you. legislation. His control over foreign | that he died of a broken heart. The | first | ii 5 | ee e 's pened in 1885 when it was | affairs is virtually complete. He . sile of Mazarin's paintings was to! bought by the Benedictine Sisters of TYREWRUTE RS, be ’ Mi li | . Baby Girl. commander in chief of the army and! fave followed, but they were saved. | St. Joseph, Minn. The booklet gives Nielsen $ il inery Born to Mr. and Mrs. George Price, the navy. In short, he is the most ORS | a most interesting story of the founa sold and-rented d W. . Sh jot 302 South Ninth street, a baby sir.| potent constitutional functionary in Safety in Mid-Air. | ation, history and advantages of the Typewriter Co. an aist op | pee ae the world. A foreign investigator has made a noenitale It pee fpr a Bismarck, 7 All these constitutional powers have Ps A 7 : | 1 classification of a ew lone 0: .D. 420 Broadway | ‘ Have Baby Daughter. ‘i a Sa ak i we alee special study. of the possibilities of A Discovery the hospital this year. ‘The summary Mr. and Mrs. Harold Arnold, 1016] been vastly augmented by practice | jightning stroke in wid-alr and as 9) Prof, Bug: No wodder the Red | of three year courses would also be | Sweet street are the parents of aj and custom. The President today can| reguit of observation of nearly one | Sea smells so good. it’s tomate | of interest to those who contemplate \ | | | NEW SHOE SHOP Opens Monday, August 8th.]) 111—5th Street Laskin Block, across from McKenzie Hotel. H Our aim is to give the best work-with prompt service at reasonable prices. ' Particular attention given}! to the repairing of work shoes. J) All work done is fully guar- fj] anteed. | Our charges are the same as before the war. All repairing is done by practical shoe repair men. | FP SUNICH | Shoe Repair Shop ily left.yesterday for. St. Paul, where they will spend two weeks visiting friends. FOR MEDICAL TREATMENT. Ira Scrgggins of Seventh street is confined to the Bismarck hospital for ; medical treatment. FROM COLEHARBOR. George Robinson, Jr., of Coleharbor is in the Bismarck hospital and wi!l undergo an operation. GUEST FROM FARGO. | Miss Katherine Kuntz of Fargo, is visiting in the city the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Thistlethwaite. Miss Kuntz will remain here until Septem- ber when she will return to Dev!!s Lake, where she is attending the | Governor Frazier and Commission- er of Agriculture Hagan attended a Nonpartisan picnic at Persian lake, Kidd-- county, Sunday. Nonpartisans evident that the taste and qual- ity is satisfying our customers. They are the real home made kind and besides made in Dohn’s Market. | CITY NEWS UES EEUU cA Cherry Season On. Many Bismarck people spent Sun- day picking choke cherries. They have been ripe for several days and grapes will be ripe in about a week, it is said, and they are very plenti- ful. Blueberries also are plentiful. baby girl. TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS | You need never be in doubt, in making a new acquaintance, whether take him to your bosom as a friend—if you carry along a Plastometer. It’s a machine invented by Dr. William Burger, of Berlin, to measure a person’s to Sanitary and Exclusive Meat] united states Chief Executive “Most i| The legal functions of the Prest- PICK YOUR FRIENDS BY MACHINERY babies; the “Princely Beautifying Lo- tion,” by use of which the ladies “made up” for the street; ‘“Turling+ ton's Original Balsam of Life,” which must have been disappointing since all the users are now dead; “Dr. Ryan's Incomparable Worm Destroying Su- gar Plumbs,” “White ‘Drops for the Scurvy,” “Red Pills,” “Sweating Pow- der,” “Dr. Radeliffe’s Only True Spect- fic Tincture for the Toothache,” “Es- sence of Balm of Gilead,” “Potter's Water, for the Safe, Easy and Specific Cure for the Stone and Gravel,” “Key- I"s ‘Golden Tincture for Hys- terical’ Diseases,” “Genuine Harlaem Oyl” by the bottle, “Levine's Well Known Eyewater,” “Bloom of Circas- sia” for off-color complexions, “Lady and Face.” The bottle of Stoughton Bitters. by which old topers used to give an addi- | for immobility. GREAT POWER ‘OF PRESIDENT Potent Constitutional Function- ary in the World.” dent's oftice are so eminent that he cannot escape the responsibilities of executive action, however much he may be inclined to avoid them. His constitutional powers alone inake hin 1 the greater offices is far reaching. He can recommend, shape and veto do innumerable things that George Washington or Thomas Jefferson would, never have dared do even if} mental, spiritual and physical characteristics. Dr. Burger is shown measur- ing the young lady’s capacity for friendship and trustworthiness. ong fin on the top and bottom ridges. ‘Its upper. surface is brown, and cov- | founded upon rocks In. the lower hills; and where no hills existed, a3 in the Mesopotamia valley, the Assyrians bufit'a huge brick :plétform Ip. Imita- tion ofa flat hill, “and reared their city upon that. Athens was built upon and about the A¢fopoiis, the Areo- Ppagus, and .the linwistone heights be- tween Cephissus and Iissus, Rome and Constantinoplé’*are both buitded on their seven’ hills, and the bills around about Jerusalem are femous.— John C. Van Dyke. | One of Ocean’s Biggest Fishes. ~The turbot is one of the largest of the flat fishes, and one of the species that is of most value commercially. It is seldom over two feet Icng, and ered with hard, round knobs. the eyes are on the upper sid2 of the | body. - The turbot abounds off the western coast of Europe, where It 18 | caught for export. i | Mazarin’s Great Library. At the beginning of the Fronde tn- trigues in Paris in 1648, when Anne of Austria, mother of Louis XIV, was in a goose betokened a cold winter? Every countryman believes some of these and scores besides. These superstitions are merely sur- vivals of countless beliefs which seem to us- mostly ridiculous, but. which were once gravely accepted by every- body, even the most learned. How far back they go nobody knows. — But Pliny, in‘ his. “Natural. History,” \writ- ten in the First century of the Chris- tian era, is full of them. And all down the centuries, espe- cially through the Fifteenth and Six- teenth centuries, there were scores of books: which gathered and advanced such “wisdom,” and they found a pub- lic way down Into the Eighteenth cen- examples of them. SURE THING _ 4et Bug: Why do you think-there are bugs in it? 1 of’ 2nd Bug: ‘Cause ticks, "od 1 can hear the queen regent of Irance, Cardinal Maz- | arin’s library held 40,000 banks, and | was the most important colluction of | books then existing. Mazarin was compelled to retire from cogrt, and | the French parliament. voted zhe con: | plete dispersion, by selling §t tn sinall | lots, ‘The librarian was so_ affected | hundred flights, in which the airship: experienced some adventures with | storms, he has come to the following ; conclusions: -There is no danger to} be looked for if the machine is not in the direct line of discharge, and if it does so happen there is little danger of fire result from the nature of and distribution of the conducting metal portion. In 30 cases where the machines were struck directly, the writer maintains that there were no evil effects and in all eases where ma- chines fell during a storm there was no evidence of scorching of parts or melting of metal. ODD BELIEFS ONCE COMMON Until Comparatively Recent Times, Silly Superstitions Had a Great Hold on the People. in regard’ to the most familiar things, well_as the most un- | familiar, still er, even in a scien- tific age like ours. Superstitions What man of middle age cannot re- member as a boy firmly belleving that if he should touch a toad warts, would grow on his tingers; that if-he should i drop a, living.” soup. GAIN STRENGTH IN THE SENATE Measure Moves Forward Though Violent Discussion is Started Washington, Aug. 8.—The Willis- Campbell anti-beer bill moved forward in the senate today several amend- ments being acted on without discus- sion. One modification adopted would authorize importation of wines for can, South Dakota, in charge of the bill who offered the modifying amend- ment, said that in one year after the fine and imprison prohibition enforce- ment agents who violate citizens con- stitutional rights. That started a dis- cussion. In many cases Senator Sterling said +] arrests. without warrants, where vio- lations were flagrant were justified. Senator Williams, Democrat, Missis- sippi, objected to the opening of bag- gage without warrants, “The owner of such baggage would he justified in shooting the agent if he had anything to shoot with,” Sen- ator Williams declared. DESCRIBE WORK Alexius hospital has just been pub- lished. The St. Alexius hospital was nursing. The booklet contains 54 pages, and IT’S HAWAII company, the department being highty complimented by the hospital man- agement for the excellent work done POSTOFFICE 1S LOOTED Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 8.—Rob- bers early Sunday morning blew the safe in the postoffice at Garski, N. D., located in the Garski Mercantile com- pany. store, They got away with $40 in cash, all the stamps on hand and a mail pouch. No trace of the burglars has been found. school for the deaf. Molyneux’s Italian Paste,” “Best Corn tury. They find their way—these be- They gained entrance to the build- Fy RE OIA SRS Plasters and Lip Salve,” “Venetian | Welehs about 18 pownds, although He Hefs—Into. literature, and Shake- | 8#cramental or unbeveraged purposes} ing through a forced window. It is LEAGUE PICNIC Paste for Enameling the Hands, Neck | Pound turbot have been caught. Its | cpeare’s plays are dotted through with | When domestic production was not) evident they used nitro-glycerine to body is very. flat and. wide, with a sufficient, Senator Sterling, Republi-| plow the safe. Thunder is rarely, if ever, heard at agreater distance than 18 miles. from various parts of Kidder county| tional tang to their nips of whisky) “11S tushot is a sea fish, and tts Volstead law wine imports jumped were present. stood behind every public bar up to egys—five oF 10,000,000 to a fixh—float from 20,000 gallons to 1,200,000 gal-} yrrance has nealy, 709 different oe See ae auatoceant anal jon the ocean surface, but the full- pana Broussard, Democrai, honorary: decorations, Our Frankfurters have gained until “standing like a Stoughton bot- | Brow" turbot prefers a sex bank, Louisiana, offered for Senator Reid,| TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS, in sales each day which is quite} tio" hecame the common expression | Where It Hes on tts lighter side. Both | Democrat, Missouri, an amendment tu rl KODAK FINISHING Quality Work for the Amateur SLORBY STUDIO Successors to HOLMBOE STUDIO ASK Your Grocer For Humpty Dumpty Bread ae WHEN YOU ARE TO BE MARRIED TTA Our line of high-class En- graved Wedding Stationery is very tasty in design, and prices are most reasonable. After the wedding, at-home cards are needed which we can supply. Our line of Engraved Station- ery consists of the following: Wedding Announcements. Wedding Invitations. Visiting Cards, Plain Stock. Visiting Cards, _Panelled Stock. Birth Announcements. Dance Invitations. Business Announcements. Business Cards. Commercial and Professional Cards. Mourning Cards. of A Hy inauve wita.s ana gariands were festooned about tne nec! ir; from a: horse's tail inte | R, Farrington when he was sworn in as governor of the Hawaiian Islands. BISMARCK TRIBUNE'CO! Phone 32 :

Other pages from this issue: