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

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MARCH‘, 1922 ee Relief: Fund Week March 7'to 11 eee KEL unable-to obtain even a decent burial — oh! the horror,of it all. - We cannot recall or aid those who have gone, but we can help the living. We can, by our timely help, give them.a chance to live, to get well. This appeal to you is endorsed by our nation’s leading men and women. President-Harding, Governor Nestos, Louis-Marshall, Juiius.Rosenwald, Dr. Boris D. Bogen and a host of others and children affected with ills due to starvation may be helped. would render aid? By your help this awful shadow of death can be removed, the w of laughter, the cry of tired, heart sore mothers turned to songs of hope and cheer. appéail to you to do what you can that men, women 1 ( e ® e e : Be ‘ Surely you will aid in this worthy cause Just bring this condition home to your own fireside. If your loved ones were hungry, sick, naked, dying for food, and you unable to supply the most meager help, would you make is nothing compared to the joy it will bring. Help is needed now. In aday or two leading busines men of Bismarck, North Dakota, and the-entire United States will inaugurate an active campaign to raise funds for these suffering men, women and children of East- ern Europe.. Every help you give, evey assistance you render means life to thesé, sufferers. ‘ ZONE 7 AMERICAN JEWISH RELIEF COMMITTEE FOR WAR SUFFERERS. P. R. FIELDS and H. J. DEUMELAND, Chairmen for City .of Bismarck HON. ALEX STERN, Fargo, ALEX ROSEN, Bismarck ARTHUR State Treasurer. County Chairman. not. welgome the ‘assistance of those who ailing of hungry children changed to peals The sacrifice you may SED - H Thousands and thousands of men, women and childven‘in Eastern Europe are in this condition becausé they are without means to help themselves. These thousands are your responsibility. Hundreds are dying daily {AAA Relief Fund Week March 7 to 11 ee . S. BOLSTER, Bismarck Treasurer. REMAINS OF AN ANCIENT PEOPLE ARE DISCOVERED Is “Post-Basket-Makers” Name Given The Newly Found People The NO PERMANENT DWELLING Cambridge, Mass. ‘March 3—(The Associated Press)—The discovery of the remains of an ancient people who once inhabited the American South- west ‘and were intermediate in devel- opment between the basket-makers, the earliest race known to have lived in this region, and the Pueblo Cliff- dwellers, whose remarkable stone villages along the Arizona cliffs have attracted wide public interest, has. been one of the results of exploita- tions made during the past year in the, Marsh Pass region of northeast- ern Arizona by the Peabody Museum of Harvard University. .The “Post- Basket-makers” is the name given the newly discovered people. The Harvard. expeditions to this gemi-desert region, over 100 miles from thep nearest railroad, were be- gun ings by-A.3V« Kidder, and Sam- uel J.) rnsey of thé~Peabody Mu- seum staff: and were later continued under the sole direction of Mr. Guern- sey. Prior to 1914 commercial collec- tors had found traces of the Basket- makers, ‘but facts about these earliest people of the region had never been secured by trained archaeologists un- til the Harvard expeditions began. These expeditions have not only con- tributed a mass of information con-, cerning the Basket makers but now show the existence of a, people who followed the -Basket-makers in ‘point of time but preceded the Cliff-dwellers. Had Stone Houses “Post-Basket-makers” — Te- The sembled the Basket-makers in many particulars but were clearly in a later stage of development. The Basket- makers had no permanent dwellings, whereas these later people had stone houses in caves and in the open. They also had pottery, crude in some re- spects but with the beginnings of dec- oration and some of it was fired. This is the earliest pottery known to ,have been made in the Southwest. Instead of burying their dead in caves, as did the Basket-makers, -they seem to have lived in the caves and to have conducted their burials in the ————S———— STOMACH MISERY, GAS, INDIGESTION, TAKE “DIAPEPSIN” | “Pape’s Diapepsin” is the quickest. surest relief for Indigestion, Gases, Flatulence, Heartburn, Sourness, Fer- mentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity. A few tablets give almost immediate stomach relief and shortly the stomach js-corrected so-you can eat favorite foods without fear. Large case costs only few cents at drug store. Millions helped aunualy. Is justice blind? Yes, in Butte, Mont., where four sightless men preside over courts. Left to right, they are Police Magistrate Dan F. Shea, Justice Albert H. Wilkinson, Justice Dennis O’Neill and Justice ‘Louis A. Buckley. The sightless judges say they can detect a lie quicker than a man blessed with sight. of sight in no way interferes with the justices’ efficient discharge of their duties. open. Their more settled life is at- tributed to their success in’ agricul- ture. They grew corn of a primitive variety. “Skeletons found in the ccurse of the excavations show that both the Basket-makers and these successors had rather long skulls, whereas the Cliff-dwellers who followed them were round - headed :and always had the back of the skull artificially flattened by the hard /board head- rests of the cradles in which the ba- bies ‘were placed. The relationship of these various peoples is still a mat- ter of doubt. It is believed that the Post-Basket- makers discovered during the Harvard explorations were descendants of the Basket-makers, but whether. they in turn were ancestors of the Cliff-dwel- lers is not certain. It seems doubt- ful on account of the marked differ- ence in the shape of the head, even aside from artificial flattening. Were Owners of Dogs The Basket-makers had ‘dogs. Mummied remains of two were found during the Harvard explorations and are now on exhibition at the Peabody Museum, along with a quantity of. other objects illustrative of ‘Basket-' maker life. One ‘was a long-haired animal about the size of a small’col- lie, the other a smaller black and white dog redenibfing sonyewhat @ terrier, with a short shaggy coat, erect ears, and a Jong full-haired tail. These were clearly genuine dogs and not bred from coyotes -» other wild animals of the region. Many of the objects found in the dry caves of this region are in an ex- traordinary state of preservation on account of the dryness of the climate, despite their gréat age. Government Creates Philatelic Bureau Moscow, March 3.—Stamp collect- |ing is to be a government monopoly | in ‘Russia. |'sars has announced the creation of a special philatelic bureau which will | deal in stamps for the benefit of the State export fund. Argentina has 22 public holidays during the year. Arabs regard -whistling as impure and unlucky. The’ The ‘Council of Commis- | Ice Cream Makers To Meet at Minot , For 3-Day Session Members of the North Dakota Ice Cream Makers Association will meet at Minot March 7, in what is an- nounced as the first of the three days session of the North -Dakota: Dairy. men’s Association ‘meeting. Frank ‘0. Knerr of Fargo, will open the com- bined ‘session with his address as president of the Ice Cream Makers Association, to be followed ‘by O. A. Amundson of Jamestown with the re- port of the secretary. Other speakérs upon the day’s pro- gram will be Roy Brudgman of Grand SAYS HE DROVE TAYLOR SLAYER Harry M. Fields, held by “Detroit police, has told- authorities he drove the slayer of William D. Taylor, Los Angeles movie director, to the scene of the murder, potice say. .He also gave the name of the suppcsed slayer and other details of the crime, which Los Angeles police are checking up. Butte attorneys say lack | Forks, H. K. Geist of Grand Forks, and R. O. Baird cf Fargo, Mr. Baird being deputy food commissioner. Mr Bridgman will discuss “How the As- sociation Can Best Function So As to Be of Service to Its Members,” while Mr. Geist will present “The Associa- tion’s Code of Ethics and Its Pur- spose.” Mr. Baird, from his. position as an enforcement officer will discuss the use of Gelatins. In the ,program of ‘the ‘Dairymen’s Association which. follows the meet- ing ‘of ‘the ‘Ice’Cream Makers, Mr. J. Farrell, former Dairy-and Food Com- missioner of the state jof Minnesota, lias ‘been atided ‘to the ‘program to dis- cuss the problems of marketing. Mr. Farrell, both in his work at Minne- sota and since-that time has been Close to the ‘marketing problems of the dairymen, having been in Wash: ington for a time as a consultant on Northwest problems. . Dance every Tuesday, Thurs- day and Saturday evenings at 8:30 at The Coliseum, formerly Baker’s Hall, newly redecorated. 10c per dance. Dogs are being trained to recover lost golf balls. = There is nothing in the 3 world quite so nourish- ing orhelpfulas y san! Scott’s Emulsion for thin, anemic girls of “teen-age.” It is well-worth trying. Scott Bowne, Bloomficld.N.J. ——ALSO:MAKERS OF —— i ror INDIGESTION j QUILTY WORKS ~ OVER 56 YEARS IS PENSIONED Started in at 10 Years of Age) Packing Spikes For Cleve- land Rolling Mills:Co. WAS NEVER ONCE LATE Cleveland, Ohio, March 3—Bdward Quilty, who worked in Cleveland rolling mills béfore steel was made in America, before the-Bessemer con- fore the open hearth period, has just ‘been pensioned ‘by the American Steel & Wire Company, ‘United States Steel Corporation ‘branch, with the longest service record of-any of the 4,700 em- ployes ‘pensioned by the steel corpor- ation. His length of service includes 56 years, 4 months and 16 days and in all that time he was not once late to work, ‘his record shows. Mr. ‘Quilty started to work when he was 10 years of age, packing spikes for the old Cleveland Rolling Mills Company, later absorbed by the Amer- ican-Steel & ‘Wire ‘Company, which in turn was taken over by the United States Steel ‘Corporation. He began working when iron rails were ‘made by the “puddling” ‘process, verter had been introduced and ‘be-; strains, especially those Of the pop- mills oR ths days when they wore land the. feet and shoulders are at operated by hand. 2: } i C 5 5 ents Mr. Quilty joins the list of pene one in the school room, the student: ioned Cleveland employees of the | ave learned. J} §. Steel corporation subsidiaries | here, which numbered 270 and r London has two colored fish from ceived $67,540 in pensions in.1921, ac-| the Amazon, valued. at ,$100. cording to figures given out in the| rare annual report of the U. S. Steel and| Carnegie Pension Fund here. The total paid to all pensioned em- ployes throughout the country for 1921 was $947,879 to 3,677 retired em- ployes, bringing total disbursements for the ten years of, its existencé to a ey I Gained 16 Pounds and Am Brimfal Acoiigataea: Of New Life and ‘of Music Aids | Ener» Thanksto Minneapolis, “Minn., March 3.—In the belief that music accompanimen! aids ‘typewrtting students in gcquir- ing rhythmic and even performance, a phonograph has been ‘installed in the classroom cf \prospective typists at the Scuth high school here. Instructors declare the melodic says Thos. J. O’Don- nell, 156 State St., Rochester, N.Y. Tan- lac, by.its.action:on the digestive and assimila- tive organs, builds ‘up ular fox trot time, are most valuable . the entire system, - in putting morale and adding ginger to thevfingertips. “There is no doubt of the value of the musical accompaniment,” one of the instructors said. “We do not use it all the time, but the advanced pu- brings back the glow to your cheeks, the spring to your step and the glorious feeling of buoyant health to every pils get it as an aid to acquiring] fibre of your body... At all rythmic and even performance early . in the term. When they have begun good druggists. to write gmoothly. enough we discon- | [aii tinue the music.” , He ‘has seen, the growth: of rolling Your little one will love the “fruity” taste of “California Fig Syrup” even: it constipated, ‘bilious, irritable, fever- vish, or full of cold. A teaspoonful never/ fails to ‘cleanse the liver an? bowels. In a few hours you see for yourself ‘how thoroughly it works all the sour ‘bile, and undigested ‘food ‘out of the bowels and you have a well, Playful child again. ig | ie ia ee ———————————————————————————S For All Baking Requirements. Use Climax Flour contains a high percentage of “gluten. Necessarily a high priced flour on account of its high quality. For sale by all grocers. Russell-Miller Milling Co. = Bismarck, N. -D. ’ And it is the fingers only that dance _TYPEWRITERS MOTHER! OPEN CHILD'S BOWELS woiftlmmar, , WITH “CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP” Bismarck |: 3 ‘ Typewriter Co. Millions of mothers keep “California Bier Mo Fig Syrup” handy. They know a teaspoenful today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for genuine “California Fig Syrup” whicb has directions for babies and children of all ages printed on boitle. Mother! ‘You must say “California” or you may get. an imitation fig syrup: SAVE 50c A TON. Order Your Coal From The New Salem — Lignite Coal Co. (Corner Front and Eighth St.) CHAS. RIGLER, Manager. Phone 738. COAL $5.00 PER'TON - DELIVERED which is al ways uniform === in quality and Tailoring and Hat Works Dry Cleaning, Pressing, Re- @ if pairing, ‘Remodeling, Dyeing: fa | fof Ladies’ and Men’s Clothes. Prompt and courteous service. | Call For and Deliver. Phone 58 313 Broadway - Bistharck, N. D. We clean and reblock hats, 4 ¢

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