The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1922, Page 3

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- at Iowa State College here tod THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2 © . Hl 5 jcountry social.to a more or less sys-| tematic drift to the nearest town to be}! jentertained by such movies as happen | {to be upon the reels. The country | people, like those of the city, have} DEVELOPMENT \too far lost the power of self-enter- | ltainment, For part of the time at) x least, they need to look in and not) out zor sources of amusement and of| aY 1 a ee ‘action as spice to the serious | [business of life. ‘The good work is; : z {beginning in our better schools, but | Qld-Time Three Months Winter 't has yet far to go. ‘Too Much Amusement School Developed Into Modern misemnenk ah rears |. “Both amusement and recreation are } iy ¥ ;too much employed as a mere means Community High School jot getting i po nal BN car ly in the winter, and all too often rid of surplus time, espe- c ‘they cut into the serious business i COUNTRY CHURCH NEEDED production in even the busiest season, {The practice of taking Saturday after- ‘noon off, which obtains in many places Eugene Davenport Claims, From "esardiess of the condition of the heii! % jerops or th and spending the a Religious Standpoint, We —_| time mainly in loafing at the neares' Are “Slipping” itown is a social custom that he jgrowa up without sufficient reason, | and it should be either discontinued or he United States Something really worth while should | conquest, but by occupy the time. ae the home builder. ‘The pioneer with | “AM in all, the open country is just his young wife, his gun, his and &t the threshold: of a social develop- his dog went into the wilder to}ment which ought to result in an ild a home. The farm came laier as | American type of citizenship, not only sttlement developed into a com- industrious but, cultured and in every This community is-the heart |Way thoroughly Consistent with the | he soul of America today, Dean | Standards of a self governing people.” } Eugene Davenport of ;the College of | ‘ Agriculture, University of Ilinois, told the gatherers at the Farmers’ Week Ames, la./ Feb, 2.— was settled not b “The development of country life in | 5 { Ame has been a slow and in many | | respects a complicated matter,” Dean , J | Davenport said. “The old-time three! & | months’ winter school hag developed | NOW REAL GOOD school, and in many-,localities, the d i farmer’s sons and daugHters can pre- | cs Hl pare for college while sleeping every | { | Ocracoke Was The Rendezvous: “The religious life of the community | is SE has not equally developed. In many re- | of a Band of Daring and Fam- spects We have gone backward as com- ous Crooks Years Ago is no feature of farm life that needs now more earnest attention than the; development of the country church. | cult than ever to secure a home upon | : | the land. For those who arg fortunate’; The Recent Crime Wave Has Not | enouzh to inherit a gocdly property, | ‘< - met Even Reached This Town | For those who begin with their hands , and-tndertake- to purchase, the prob- | Jem isa serious one. As for the the) —_— tenant, he may secure a farm by pay-| Ocracoke, N. C., Feb. 2—Although | ing cash or crop rent, but he cannot | this little town about a century and a have a real home u ui he owns it, [halt ago was the rendezvous of one of | “The Bee Hinanclal nese homes | the. jvorld's most daring. and Epos i 4 i ith ¢ “S'gang of cnooks—Eward Teach (Blue- areg now equipped: with all modern | jyeard) and his band—it is, tod convenience: and they are real cen~| community the recent crime wave has ters of culture, but their number nor reached. ‘There has not been an | needs vastly to increase. ‘There i nO | arrest here in more than ten years | larger problem before the American | 4nq {he crimes wf robbery, burglary, | people today than is the financial) tort and murder are absolutely un-| machinery for facilitating the pUr-|;nown to the population, insofar as, chase of country homes, they refer to Ocracoke. “Landscape art has only begun to| John Oneal, after holding offtce z do for our homesteads what trees and | justice of the peace at Ocracoke for shrubs and flowers and sloping lawns | ont years ened a year or more are entirely able to accomplish in the | je ‘not ha “had ‘a. eriminal case matter of beauty and all in an inex- ng his administration. A succes- pensive way. A good tree once planted | (or has never been elected. Mr. Oneal, takes care of itself. Shrubs and grass} who was born at Ocracoke, say: | need little attention, and in respect | worst crime he can recall to have oc- to what may be accomplished ‘by out-| curred at Ocracoke in 50 years. was door art, we are only at the threshold |yne of assault and battery. of what needs’ greatly to be done. | ‘There are only one or two homes st prairie ompire of the UD-| here that have locks on the doors and | per M sippi valley has begun ani the ke se that are thus equip- extens. stem of road building. | pe Mice. ots: the There should go with it for beauty’s [hous { sake and for public satisfaction a {parti into the modern communi high | night under the father’s roof. | pared with the early days, and there! NOW TRANSFORMED “In the meantime, it is more diffi-| Hl the farm-and the home come together. Up To Present Time y one lly constructed w comprehensive plan for roadside | gh which were wrecked on the! planting. 3 | treacherous ols off the North | “Our ainusements have in too many | Carolina coa Every family here; ed from the old-time | oven their home, H |° Ocracoke is at the extreme jern end of a little island by the Iname, located about 29 miles off the | . i nland of North Carolina, and. is junique in many respects. Ocrac island, which art of Hyde county, | | North Carolina, is a litte strip of land | jabout 11 niles Jong and, rangés in| , ‘ {width from one half to one ainda hult | en T ym population of the Island; 5 j [numbe ut 700, about 659 of whom ; Because Lydia E. Pinkham’s jlive at Ocracoke, Those who do not ilive i the little town are be! ' Vegetable Compound Re- . ive in the little town are membe' lof the families of coast gud hdsmen, | who patrol the coast. | stored My Health Hees TET ! bitants Hunt and Fish 1 - are no railroads, automo- | Hornell, N. Y.--‘‘I was in bad health | bile theaters where but there didn’t seemto be any one thing | vn, many the matter with me. fe a I was tired out all never 4 ‘ over anditwasan ef- | the exception of the men employed by fort for me tomove. |4°° I was irritable and Coast guardsmen a couldnotsleepnights |Chents in the little*town, all Ocracok- | and had trouble with $s make their Jiving hunting and} my bowels andat my | fishing. peciods, It scemed | very person on Ocracok thatnearly everyone |? Methodist in religion. Th around me knew of ‘Vided, however, as to thes your medicine and nch to which they belong. wanted-me to try it, If being members of the Methodist : go at last f tool, | Episcopal church, south, while the oth- Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- attend the Northern Church; und Tablets and Lydia E. Pinkham’s | Ocracoke is one of the oldest settle- lood Medicine and improved every day. | ments in America. The people are ‘be- Ido all my own work now except the [lieved by many historians to be de: washing and doit withease.' Icanac- |Scendanis of the “Lost Colony” of complish as much in a day now as it Sit Walter Raleigh. | would have taken me a week to do last NITUING winter and I try to get every one [know 7 to take your medicine to build'them up. | You are welcome to use this letter as a |“* | testimonial if you like.”’—Mrs. CHas. | Baker, 21 Spencer Ave., Hornell, N.Y. | In almost every neighborhood there i are women who know of the value. of | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- { i | | | As ther 8, street cars or ures a nd is are di- fronal about pound. They know because they have taken it and have been helped. Why | don’t you give it a trial? i jen U.S. INOREASES 1870-1910, Grain Production Increased lin From 13,625 to 19,788 Lbs, | of | From Se E Farmers, Trappers—Atiention {| LET US ‘TAN YOUR WIDES AND | such as ps, fur | rtiel s, mitt ind of leather. | send your |) Columbus, Ohi ~The most, m (1) | Fae FARM LABOR IN svc cans gainfuly employed were in agri- culture. Per-Farmer consider is striking evidence of a wonde \ itchen-weary housewives N a whole century there has been no achievement so import- _ ant in lessening the work of “kitchen-keeping” as the per- fection of King’s Dehydration. That is a bold statement to make but every woman knows that the’ elimination of the worry of fresh f fruit and vegetable marketing, and the tedious hand-roughening work of washing, peeling, coring, slic- ing, etc.,to prepare fresh fruits and boon to her—a genuine achievement looking. to greater efficiency in her work. And yet all this:lessening of work is at no sacrifice of old-fashioned “home-cooking” flavor and the natu- : ral healthful value of fresh products! | Fresh foods for winter meals For King’s Dehydration brings an era in which fresh uncooked fruits ahd vegeta- bles are as easy to obtain in winter ag in the summer. Imagine the wonderful possi. bilities! Juicy apples, fresh prunes, loganberries and other luscious summer fruits—succulent tender stringless beans, spinach, pump- kin, etc., served in real “home- cooked” style in winter, when markets are bare of anything but cold storage or expensive hot- vegetables for cooking —is a real , house produce, Winter meals easier to plan How the “family” will enjoy these “out of season” treats! How much easier to plan the variety for winter meals that keeps appetites on edge! How much more healthy every- one will be for eating plentifully of fresh fruit dishes and green vegetables,—nature’s blood puri- fying foods! 4 Waste and spoil prevented King’s Dehydration makes all these things possible by remov- ing the: original water content Free RecipeBook and Catalog ° Hl any workers have been freed for ries. { “In 1820, 87 per cent of all Ameri-| In 1910, only per cent our population, so engaged, raised nough for the whole group and a able surplus for export.” Th State of North Dakota t bank account, a report of Stat although some The crease in the efficiency of Americaiy ; rmers. ‘armer Entitled to Consideration, “Eyery consideration is due the fa r in his pi ent plight. He hi low, The total iy s| shown ‘by e report, whic! rding to |$ many funds of the state are now very jance in all funds as is as of Should your grocer not have his stock at this time, send direct to us for Catalog and valuable Free Recipe Book. Use Coupon Below KING’S FOOD PRODUCTS CO. Portland, Oregon, U.S. A. ~thisisthe old-fashioned way mussy, hand. roughening, time-taking and wasteful. ‘ from freshly gathered, cleaned, peeled, sliced products. The water—(80 to 90 per cent of the bulk)—is essential to fruit and vegetable growth, but is also responsible for later over-ripen- ing and.decay. King’s’ Dehydration ‘removes the water, atrests over-ripening and prevents decay. King’s De-~ hydrated Products will thus “keep” indefinitely, without re- frigeration or preserving. Fresh products, minus the water, become King’s Dehydrated fruits and vegetables; King’s Dehydrated fruits and vegetables, plus water, are fresh. That is the real marvel of King’s Dehydration; for by King’s patented method the wa- ter is’ removed without over- heating or cooking in so magical a way that the flavor, color and foxture of the product is hardly ~and ihis is the new way cook as though freshly gathered changed “a bit! It leaves the products in such a form that they readily reabsorb water and become, again, as the fresh, The great economy of time and labor and material So you grow fresh fruits and vegetables whea you want them in your own pantry, merely by adding water to King’s Dehy- drated Products. : That's ALL you do; just add water. No sorting, washing, peeling, slicing. Just re-fresh, and cook,—flavoring or season- ing in any way you like. No sugar or preservatives have been added previously to hojelessly change thee flavor of King’s. Thus the old-fashioned “ho: cooked” flavor is possible again No waste to pay for And mind you there’s no waste. You buy 100% food— pay for no peeling, cores, tad spot, or water, — just whole- some, delicious fresh food. SUITS & Your grocer will supply you Products now ready are listed below: ‘That means no marketing worry. Apples Prunes Loganberries Pears Recipe Book. Name Address__— Your Grocer’ Name_— Peaches Squash Apricots Stringless Beans Cherries Soup Vegetables Spinach Pumpkin Flour ae eee een COUPON Haman an ee KING'S FOOD PRODUCTS CO., Portland, Oregon Please send me your catalog, instructions for ordering King’s Dehydrated Fruits and Vegetables, and the Special cere ee creene eee eee ee eee oS ee 2a 's Address STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA HAS FAT ance of state auditor's warrant, 4 has a cre are 46 funds out. of are expended regula permanent school. funds, 14 sure of the institutions tax by the State Tr urer, and income funds and nine educational funds, to be handled In addition | Foley Kidney Pills for hand q eumatism, ney ant Cathartic Tab ing n which rly, 14 interest If you prefer sellin “Go! tur to. us for, full market. value || sin bt fundamental pro-| suffered dispropcrtionately.. When hee Bh. was, $2.397,712.57. ‘The [he is custodian of the workmen's comn- Tero Der clint and pate American agriculture «is! however, one takes a gig OBR: there fund. out of which most ex-|pensation fund which, on December tags. BPS bly found in the fact that meas-| are reasons for encouragement. In id, ig shown as rather |31, showed a balance of $1,008,821.69. i The Rinmarck Wide & Fur Co.” |/ ured by the production of grain, theja recent study on farm prices, Dr. Phere was $107,919.51] There is congiderable money in ye Dire Be Be of farm labortin the United! George Warren finds that, despite in this fu i ted to pay interest on the z | States reased 45 per cent in the) present ‘conditions, American farm|, Phe ibution of the various ate enterp including | auaveare rodi(ets have. had; a.hlehergpurch funds is shown as’ follow In Bank evator bond payment fund, De AHN thee netics that [OE North Dakota 107.01; certifi- hank bond payment fund, Mann, dean of the New York State} in ulture at attending farmers’ | it e univ told t the Ohio Si SAVE 50c A TON Order Your Coal Frora ef The New Salem, | x Lignite Coal Co. |” ‘Corner Front and Highth St.) CHAS. RIGLER, Manager. today. { “During that time the per-tfe production .of grains inc from) m. continued 5 to 19,788 n Mann. ‘From figure refully thered in New York State, it appears that ger cent more of farm products was pounds, COM SEG oe TON |farmers in 1017 than in 1865. ! DELIVERED ‘The fact that ig leaimeap tolte |grown so enormous. an increased efi ‘y of farm labor, p w sornell uni-! time, y here} the World War, the farmer was mak- ducts are | prosperity will not of itself make the ife of the rural community fully sat- produced per worker by New York, found in the process of achieving, on the part of people living in the coun- power since 1900 than before that While the increase is not great, showsthat-prior to the outbreak of] , terest paid on registered hai pending warrants, cates of deposi 8, $2,822.0; some financial progress. a More economical production “ine | ore profitable prices for farm pro- ssential, “but economic tor’s s an ssociate with ing. “Agricultural progress is to be personal otal area-of the m lang. y, in even greater amount and just- proportion, the highest planes of] Half t knowledge, pStates is ealth, health, soci:bility, $288,000.00; due from ate Highway Com issuance of with th larges $27,772.7: t paid on state bonds pending | nd righteousness, which we merican people have come to well-being. We can accept no lesser definition of progress. in country life than this.” estate bond p pond payment tund, $ it being $395,841.34 op according to the report. MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose field Ave., Ch name and receive in taining Foley pound for: coug! ago, Tl address cl United , colds and homebuilders’ 4 2,69 CUT THIS OUT—IT 1S WORTH ting } You will ackage con: and Tar Com. | yinent D adler ailments; lets, a Wholesome and ‘LTING pains in sid backache, ki and Foley) cathartic _for| day ~ nights, s, headaches THEATRE i Direction-Valleau Theater Company TONIGHT. VIVIAN MARTIN, in “PARDON MY FRENCH” Comedy 2. oe ve ve ee we oe We) oe ve we oe Soreenic Dance at Baker’s Hall every | Tuesday, Thursday and Satur- Best music and | floor in state. 10c a dance. Decem- / THOMAS M erou Matinee Dai BETTY COMPSON in JIONTT, RARPYMORE in. ETHEL-CLAYTON ‘in . Tomorrow aud Saturday JACK HOLT and LILA LEB in “AFTER THE SHOW”’ COMING EIGHAN i “BOOMERANG ily 2:30. .“THE LITTLE MINISTER” VY HITE AND UNMARRIED” RIL.” seveee WEALTH” Evenings 7:30 & 9,

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