The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 2, 1921, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE HALLOWEEN PARTY LUCHEON OF ROTARIANS. Geo. Will and Carl Nelson Ex-' plain Important Iudustries of Bismarck Hallowe'en favors and stories of the | pranks the Rotarians played in their boyhood days enlivened the weekly luncheon of the Bismarck Rotary club at Patterson's hall, Wednesday. A.; W. Lucas, Rev. Posthelwaite, P. R. Fields and Dr. Schipfer told of the! pranks they played, but it was left to | former Senator McGray to tell of aj unique plan to check boyish enthust- | asm upon such occasions. Justice) Christianson was called upon to pass | sentence upon the members as atone- | ment for the sins of their youth. Ex- | ercising judicial clemency, he placed them all upon probation. | Explains Seed Business George ‘Will, head of the Will Seed company gave a very interesting ac: | count of the problems of his busines: He told of the painstaking experi-' ments to produce a high type of! seeds that would give a maximum of | production. Bismarck has the largest! seed house in the state and products | put up here enter many countries iu the various corners of the globe. Mr.i Will is a well known scientist in his | line and his address was listened to with great interest. It is in line with | a policy of “know your own town,” be- ing carried out in the weekly meet- ings. : Produce Business | The produce business was next; discussed by Carl Nelson, head of the | Northern Produce Co. He told of the, strides made in the dairy business inj this section and sketched the growth} of the company’s business. More! than, 40,000 pounds of butter have} been produced and more than 12,000! cases of eggs handled. Most of this; \praduce originates within 100 miles | of Bismarck. He declared that great | By N. E. A. Service. Washington, Nov. 2—Washington, city of tips, is to have a tipless hotel And that isn’t the only “less” about dmprovermedt hal been mee the | it. It will be manless as well. The ua y Oo | Fre eempatgn of education. Mr. Nelson|“Tace Dodge ‘Hotel, opened October said that it had been urged that thi»|!9 is intended to demonstrate. that center paid ‘ower prices than others | an up-to-date hotel can flourish with- for its products because there were out the mpaniment of male servi- not competitive concerns. This was tors with their hands out! false, he declared, because competi-! From the woman manager dowr tion here was intensely keen as Bis-!through the women clerks, chefs, marck is on the main line of the > ckambermaids and porters, the staff thern Pacific and the producers in this; and the he!p will be—if the plan #rea enjoy an extremely low raie to! works—so high-class and so well paid the big primary markets of the nat‘on./ and lodged that not even the least of Acting For the Town Criers | the bell-girls will have any excuse for Upon motion of Henry Ducneland,: taking the tips the management for- it was agreed "that all merchants: bids would cooperate in advertising the| But why, the curious may ask, may American Legion show to be given'; nly women have these tipless privi- Nov. 11, by referring to the attrac-/leges? Has the National Board of the tion in their regular advertising. | Young Women’s Christian Association, Dr, E. P. Quain urged Rotarians to’ which owns and runs the hotel, a attend the meeting at the Auditorium | grudge against men? Not the least in next Friday evening under the aus-/the world! But it believes that the| pices of the Society for the Preven- time is ripe for an experiment in wo- tion of Cancer. man psychology. There are hotels for ‘Next Wednesday evening at the/men, and hotels for men and women, Masonic Temple. a meeting will be) but in some: ways a woman traveling held for the Rotarians and their alone can be better served in an all- guests. The ideals and the spirit of | woman hotel. 4 Rotary will be explained and exem-| But it won't be babyless. There is plified. jone “less” you find in many high-class WELFARE WORK aeean'y exiot' Hove at’ Gree | Dodge OF RED GROSS IS DESCRIBED Representatives From, Slope| Counties at Meeting Here Tell of Undertakings plans its own service or a group o? schcols may unite in a joint project. These activities vary and may include the making of layettes during the sewing period, the making of furnt ture for hospital or orphanage usa during manual training, clean up; campaigns, equipping school grounds or supplying utensils for use in the school in serving hiot.lunches. Prob- ebly the activity attracting most at- tention at the preseat time is that of filling boxes with toys, handkerchiefs, ;marbles and hard candy for a Merry Christmas for our little foreign boys and girls. These boxes are very sim- ilar in’ size to the ones sent to the soldiers in France in 1918 by their families on this side. Poll Call was summed up in the fol- lowing words: “Give every one the Discussion on nursing service was| reopenad at the Red Cross regionai! conference yesterday afternoon. Sev-' eral chapters reported on the service being rendered in their respective | counties, special emphasis being plac- YOU MAY BREAKFAST IN BED AND THERE’S A CRIB FOR BABY. upon the capitol, so that lady lobby- — ee EEESESESEEEEEaEaaEaast™s ed-on the health educational work. Discussion brought out importance of} employing for a county nursing ser- vice only the graduate nurse-who has had special Public Health training and experience. | The Slope counties reported on the! which their chapters have| ith the relief problem. Threej ccunties had employed welfare wor! ers.. Often the necessary help medical care of children. whose par-! ents, due to drought conditions. were | unable to provide it. Miss Ruth Koll- ing, welfare worker for Burleigh coun- ty. told of the various problems she is | helping to solve. She pictured the} people who come to her, orphans, half | orphans. girls from the police court, | unmarrici mothers, dependent and} delinquent children from the juvenile, court and the aged. Most of these! people are without a normal home life. \Her effort is to learn what is needed; to make normal living possible and to help them. attain it. Occasionally material relief is necessary. Mr. Young, chairman of the state Children’s Code Commission, asked for the cooperation of the Red Cross chap- ters in helping the commission to ob- tein the facts in regard to Child Life in North Dakota. Program of the Juniors Mr. Schaffer of central division descriped in detai] how the Junior Red Cross lives up to its motto “Hap- py Childhood the World Over” through service to other children. Juniors are organized ‘by school rooms. Each room = FREEZONE Corns Lift Off with Fingers Peruana privilege of joining\‘the Red Cross. Be sure that every one knows the pres- ent program if the Red Cross.” Mrs. A. +S. Polland, of Stark coun- ty, invited every one to attend the pageant, “The Red Cross of Peace.” which their chapter is putting on at Dickinson on Red Cross Sunday, Nov: 18. Three hundred people participate in this pageant. The conference concluded last eve- ning. ATONEMENT AT REX, The starring vehical of Conway Teral and Grace Davison, Atonement. now showing at the Rex, may well be termed a super-special. The Har- old Lioyd comedy is also a winner, and the musical comedy “Two Awfui By N. E. A. Service FIGURES ARE "IBABY CRIBS BUT NO TIPS! 11S THE RULE OF WOMAN’S HOTEL [ROSS NO LONGER FEARS “RACE SUICIDE” i t | years ago, coined the expression “race | } su uh i There are special suites where Mother will find a nice crib and sanitary de- vices for preparing their Majesties’ milk. & \ Men will be admitted to the first floor, as callers, to admire and envy, but above that they may not go. On the first fioor they may test the res- taurant. They may sit in the lopnge,! which is both wide and lofty, planned to give full scope to the eloquence of women's conventions meeting th y observe well groomed wo- | | | | i } | | i | By NEA Service, | Madison, Wis., Nov. of the olden times are out of the tion today, ~ This js the opinion of Prof. E. A. Ross, head of the Universty of Wi: | consin Sociology Department, who, 2 21Big families | ques- i gaining enough | 1 in death rate, | h rate to meet! “The nation today i population by reduc! compared with the bi the situation which 20 years ago was j considered alarming,” s:ys Prof. Ross | That is why he now is in favor of} small families. | “Nobody, 20 years ago, could have! foreseen that life would be saved a3! we are saving it,” Ross said. “Cer-! tain diseases that reaped a heavy death! toll have been successully combated. As a result, the death rate has fallen off cne-quarter since Lis “Under the circunistanes large} families would make our population grow so fast that starvation would men guests emozging from the com- | modious vanity parlors, and they may | even profit by the knowledge .of the lady information clerk, who has po-! litical Washington at her tongue’s tip and will tell anybody anything they want to know on a moment's notice But, they won't see’ the best features, fior those are in the upper regions. | They are; A valeting room on! every floor, where guests may cheat / the high cost of traveling by doing} their own pressing with electric irons; furnished by the hotel; shampoo bas- | ins where guests may launder their’ | i talk endlessly in the serene knowl- edge that there’s no man creature anywhere around; all outside —bed- rooms. with windows mostly trained ists, having their breakfasts in bed, can keep one eye upon the dome un- der which their congressmen perform. Dads,” promises to be one of the best) offerings of The Rainbow Girls dur- ing their engagement. It has more/ laughs than rubber has stretches—a j bee has hums, a Brazil has nuts, 2 gum has chews, a chorine has Johns, Bermuda has onions, or a worm has wriggles. Some fun! K, “What Love Will Do,” a William Fox photoplay co-starring Edna Mur- phy and Johnnie Walker, will open at the Bismarck theater tonight for a two days’ run. It is announced as an) exciting romantic drama with an ex- ceedingly strong love interest, pro- viding the two young stars with ex- cellent opportunities to sustain and add to their reputation i eal lov- ers of the screen.” The picture tells the story of 2 young man soured by the knowl- edge that his mother deserted him as an‘infant, and his father, dying, left him penniless to struggle with the world. He seeks pleasure in the com- pany of toughs, eventually ruling the gang by his superior ability as a fist fighter, and assumes a -disrespecttul attitude toward all women. ‘Then the “one girl” comes into .his lite in strange and dramatic ;fashion, and marked ¢hanges in his nature grad- ually take place. At length he takes up civic betterment work with all the force and energy formeriy devoted to an entirely different sort of activity; but his old fighting spirit and ability prove cf service when two robbers try to take chureh ‘funds from him. In Japan, dresses are often sold by’ hair; sunny parlors where women can| _ eventually result.” ' Prof. Ross’,,three soa: are an indi- cation- as to what he thinks is the proper sized famil. MANY ANSWER SLOGAN QUERY What Comes After the Pur- chase: Price?” Causes | Nation to Talk | i | a ‘ing an advertisement for tae past ; month or two, with the one sentence; \ “ sclonseoo A, ROSS PROF. E. What comes after price? the purchase storage. ’Phone 490. ‘What comes after the purchase price. “The automobile is a tremendous boon for business. It has undoubtedly kept down the cost of transyortation. It makes it possible to get packages and freight there on time, and it simp- ly’ annihilates distance and time, so that the person living three miles from church is but six or. seven minutes away. It turns every country town- ‘ship into a neighborhcod, and it trans- forms the city back into the country. It unites families for a joyful holiday, which cannot be estimated in value, and it brings many out into Giod's great out of doors, and gives every- body a prospect in life, which they knew nothing about heretofore. “Much of this other expense can be avoided. To be sure, you must have a license to run the car, and while membe-ship in the automobile associa- tion is a valuable: thing, you can live without it. You do not have to get a WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2 | NIGHT WATCHMAN {OAC RU We not only keep open all night—we also operate a night watchman service under the rules of the National Association of Fire Insurance Underwriters. Our aight watchman goes to two stations on each floor and registers his visit at each station every hour from 7:00 P. M. until 7:00 A. M. You'll like our prompt, courteous service and our eentrally located, warm, fireproof as often as they used to; in fact we have driven five thousand miles with- out @ puncture, and there are people who have driven for 15 or 20 years an: never had a collision, and of course speeding should not be indulged in in any case. “There are some things a family should have before they have an auto- mobile, but we do believe that the automobiles: have kept families to- gether, have dissolved approaching divorce cascs in the thin air, and have been an inexhaustible joy to the home. “Yes, the automobile is worth what it costs to every family which can af- ford to have it. After the purchase price, is business, pleasure, union, mingling with others more frequently, and brotherhood. As the fellow said about marriage, it costs more than to be single, but it’s worth it.” An elephant rarely sleeps more spot light. Punctures do not happen| than five hours a day. Siem tj waht, y a Sy Heys any wun, STE TCP oy » syuutitnnes, STR eT ety NOUR EE SS > & rf On Losiy, arr CG NIIEHIPEASISSYEPIE LP CUZ EES “Pape’s Cold Compound’ is Quickest Relief Known y stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound” taken every two hours until three doses are taken usually, breaks up a cold and ends all grippe misery. The first dose opens clogged-up nos- trils and air passages of head; stops Don’t st nose running; relieves headache, dullness, feverishness, sneezing. “Pape’s Cold Compound” is the quickest, surest relief known and costs only \a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice. Contains no quinine. Insist upon Pape’s, Ever since this cryptic phrase began | appearing in the national magazines, | daily newspapers and ion billboards ; from. one end of the country to the! other, Dodge Brothers, who pro-; pounded the question, have been re-/ ceiving an, incessant stream of com- ments, Some were from critics who; questioned the prudence of flaunting | a “negative suggestion” before the! world, Others were from admirers: who waanted to say that it was the! “best attention-getting . slogan they! had ever.seen.” Hundreds came from: ‘Dodge ‘Brothers Car owners who! hastened to’venture the opinion that! “satisfaction” or ‘dependability’ oz} “low upkeep cost” would soon be; flashed across the country as the of-| ficial answer. i In the opinion of those who bad op- | portunity to see all these comments, however, jthe masterpiece, the truc summarizkticn (of all the impressions expressed in the mass of letters and marginal notations which reached Dodge ‘Brothers, was an_ editorial which appeared in the Ohio Daily, of Elyria, O. Judge its merit for your- self. It follows in part “& well know car has been cdrry- ‘Sor Raw Sore Throat Zt the first sign of a raw, sore izoat rub ona little Musterole with your fingers. It goes right tothe spot witha gentle ‘ingle, loosens congestion, draws out sorcness and pain. ‘Musterole is a clean, white ointment made with oil of mustard. It has all the strength of the old-fashioned mus- tard plaster without the blister. Nothing like Musterole for croupy children. Keep it handy for instant weight. tic sea. HER, HOBBY Omaha, Nov. 2—Mrs. Chestnut, it is said, holds the world’s record as woman mathematical com- piler, Mrs. Chestnut’s latest compilation is 8 carload shipper’s price table, upon which she worked seven months, writ- ing figures eight to twelve hours every \day. It cost her $60 at 25 cents an hour |to have the table copied after the com- |pilations were made, The table cov- ‘ers 120 pages with 1200 compilations |to the page. |__“I enjoyed every minute of it,” said Mrs, Chestnut. “I was proving up on a homestead, and would have been very lonely had I not had such a pleas- ! Mollie E. Drop a little “Freezone” on an aca-|ant pastime.” ing corn, instantly that corn stops} Mrs. Chestnut has also compiled crib hurting, then shortly you lift it right|and bin actuaries, a silo table, giving off with fingers. It doesn’t hurt a bit.'the full contents of every two fest to Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of the bottom, for any diameter, and a “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient | hay tonnage table, giving number of to remove every hard corn, soft corm, tons in both circular and loaf stacks. or corn between the toes, and the cal-| She is the inventor of several type- luses, without a particle of pain. writer attachments and of an improv- | | i i hue Adv. ed garden spray. = i SLAOTRS. MOLLIE CHESTNUT About 200 rivers flow into the Bal- use. 35 and 65 cents in jars and tubes; | hospital size, $3. | BETTER THAN A MUSTARD PLASTER CABBAGE) Holland Cabbage Solid Heads $3.50 100 Ibs. CAR EARLY OHIO POTATOES Best in the State $1.25 Bushel. NEW SALEM LIGNITE DRY MINE COAL Best in the State $5.00 per ton delivered. Place Your Orders Now at these low prices.. We deliver all orders to your home. « NEW SALEM LIGNITE COAL CO. Phone 738 Office 801 Front Street. Bismarck, N. D. ) The first cost 1s practically the last M.B. Gitman Co. Bismaacnh = —— Prone BOB Friday, November 11th. Donse BrorHers Remember the American Legion Musical Comedy, “Look Who's Here,”

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