The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 1, 1922, Page 2

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PAGE TWO : THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE —<—<—<—$ $ — —— — ______! BOYS’ COURT, STATE SCHOOL, IS SUCCESS Since It Has Been in Vogue, But Three Boys Have Run Away from School [Students in the State Training School learn of civic duties by an factual practice of them, according to #W. F. McClelland, head of the in- stitution. So successful has been the esystem of having the students guide themselves that when the student court was witlMdrawn for a time and tthe power of punishment vested in the officers of the school, the boys weg the first to appeal for its restor- yati le i The boys court is about the same Jin its working as any other court. It has the advantage of having all its limembers interested in the enforce- ?men of the few rules of the. home, a personal interest, in fact, according [to Mr. McClelland, who declared that fthe boys have discovered that the more fearlessly the court deals with’ ‘offenders, the better it is for all of the members of the school. {. In the dealings of the court, the | youths find out the reason for rules, }the metlod of administering rules, fwhich are'similar to the laws in the state, and, how individual responsi- bility is the factor making possible tthe combination of many pcople to- fgether intone community. By the } time the boy has‘been before the court ;a time or two or the same boy has been a member of the court, he has a very good idea of the functions of the law enforcing part of the state and feity government. That giving the boys of the un- \ derstanding of the Ypuths qt ‘the school has added to the-attfattive- ness of the school is shown by the ,fact that in the past”year but three boys have left the school and have not returned, while for the year pre- iceding more than twenty years in the absent class. . Mr. McClelland is a firm believer in keeping faith with the youngsters ‘find every: one connected with the school is held to a strigt accounta- bility for ‘all, promises made: The | boys carry this into their own life and their court and recently, when boy returned a day late from a vaca- tion, the court took from him a good position he had held as a punishmeny | for failing to keep his word and re- torn on the date he had promised to. i | t LOCAL- HOLSTEIN BREEDERS SELECT TRADE NAME | “Mandan Dairy” is the trade mark | name that has been reserved exclu- | sively for the use of John F. Loh- gtreter & Sons, of Mandan, as a pre- fix to the regular registration name for all Holstein animals raised on the Lohstreter Farm, and registered with the Holstein-Friesian Associa- tion of America, according to an of- i ficial announcement recently made i by Secretary F. L. Houghton, of ! Brattleboro, Vt. All registered animals carry be- sides a registry number a family name usually’ indicating the ances- | tral blood-lines. As a means of identifying the various breeding es- tablishments of the country trade 4 Mark names are reserved by the As- sociation for the exclusive use of breeders. Thus, an animal can al- ways be identified as to its ongnal birth-place. Every Holstein man in the United States knows that a, cow named Pabst Clover Blossom must come from the Pabst Stock Farm of Oconomowoc, Wis. In a like man- ner animgls carrying the prefix “Mandan Dairy” will in the future be recognized as coming from the Lohstreter herd of Mandan, Ny Dak. +110 STUDENTS ~ GET DIPLOMAS aminations; 33 Districts Represented One hundred and ten boys and girls in Burleigh county have been granted their eighth grade diplomas as a result of having successfully passed the state examination which was given by the County Supt. W. E. Parsons at the conclusion of their eighth grade. school work, June 30, p21. : Thirty-three school districts were represented by these students. The names of the school districts and students are as follows: District Name ‘of pupil. ACCEPTS $160 JOB. IN WYOMING BANK _A course at Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D., is a pass- porttoa situation anywhere. S.C. Sparks has become teller of ‘the Citizens National Bank, Casper, Wyo. at’ $160 a month. John Slaughter went to the Picket Trans- fer Co., Omaha, George Horner to the Ford Agency, at Culbertson, |” Mont. Some 700banks employ D. B.C. graduates. 230 have become bank officers, 40 of them women. This tells you what school to attend. “Follow the Succe$$ful.’? School year begins in June. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front St., Fargo, N. D. me. 2 Charges of polygamy, grand lar- ceny and conspiracy are said to be on file in a number of eastern cities against Donald D. Stewart, former ‘Ptesbyterian minister, and social re- ‘former. When arrested in Los An- geles, Stewart and Mrs. Ethel Turner Osbaldeston Stewart said to be his second wife, were planning to open a sanitarium, according to detectives, Stewart has occupied pulpits in Pat- erson, N. J., Saunderson, Tex., and Chico, Cal., and was at one time sec- retary of the prohibition forces in California. ees Apple Creek—Sheldon Field. Arena—John Catalano, Wanda Pehl, Walter Boelter, Cora Boel- ter, Albert Eide. Aurora—John Sattler, Helen Haas, ‘Frances Crow. Baldwin—Gertrude Fricke, Doro- thy Kocher, Ralph Frickle, Dag- mer Albertson, Maxine Erstrom, Viola Strandemo, Gladys Rupp, Clark Monroe. Boyd—Marcus Trembley, Margaret McMurrich, Lawrence ‘Doppler, Irving Funston, Leo Doppler, \Vernon King, Helen. Baker. Burnt Creek—Raymond Lenihan, Grace Klawitter, Erma Kla- witer. Canfield—Joseph Wold, . Cook. Christiania — Florence Tollefson, George Sedivec, Marietta Clark. Clear Lake < Marvel Brendon, Githa Kluksdahl. Crofte—Clarence Falkenstein, Ar- thur Frickle. Cromwell—Emma Coleman. Driscoll—Aletha Johnson, Ernest Meland, Esther Tierney, Cor- delia Jordan, Frances Sherman, Hénry Hagen. Ecklund—Alfred Vollan, -Levi An- derson, Ira Christensen Florence Lake—Arnold Eid, And- rew Nieters, Marcella Nieters. Frances. — Tena Harms, Henry Gierke, Anton Fischer, Cedric Craig. Ghylin — Hannah Tosseth, Davis. Harriet—Anna Warkentin, Iowa (including Regan) — Hazel Rhipes, Ralph Langford, Oliver Knudson, Olive. Parmenter, Os- car Hagstrom, Chester Rhines, Margaret Hollingsworth, Alice Fishman, Dale Langford. Long Lake (Moffit)—Carol Kruse, Arline _Asselstine, Dorothy Smith. Lyman—Nina Waiste, Sylvia Ka- vonius, Iva Mack, Sylvia Ekholm, Severi Gylden. ‘Linden (including Wing) — Ella Kf aD SHAVING (SOAP CREAM). CREAM for ‘that Stubborn Stubble ° You L be surprised and delighted how much eas- jer it is to shave with McK & R Shaving Cream, Softens the beard, lathers freely in either hard or cold water. It cannot smart or dry on the face because it is absolutely free from caustic alkali or other irritant, Kathryn Paul Your face feels fresh and cool and clean after a shave with McK & R Shaving Cream. It’s also fine for washing the face arid hands, for shampooing. and general toilet purposes, _ Joe Breslow Bismarck, N. D. Distributor McK & R Health Helps Mueller, Elbert Hubbell, Aili Eugene Pihalaja, Doris Hill, Piepkorn, Clayton Ferry, Weber, Emil Pollack. Manning—Ellen Crawford, Vernon McLean, Grace Woodworth. McKenzie—Seamen Gibson, liam Wilton. Menoken — Cheridah Jacobson, Rhetta Gilbert, Orpha Agnew, Albert Ely, Kenneth Agnew. Pleasant View — Winnie Malone, + John Halvorson. Riverview—Milan Sanders. Sibley—Beatrice Roth. Sterling — Esther Lang, Lauretta Gosney, Ethel Gosney, Lillian ‘Hall. Telfer—Josephine Gioxannoni. Thelma — Bessie Morton, Leonard Pederson. Trygg¢—Hugo Nelson, Aili Niemi, Mildred Skoglund, Gladys Rue, Genevieve Rue, * White—Marion, Lewis, Rex Fog- erty. Wilson—Beth Walker. Kose wil- ‘ Potatocs retain most of their food value when steamed; when pre- pared the usual way 30 per cent of their value is tost. ITERS ~All, Makes sold and rented Bismarck Typewriter Co. Binmarek, TYPEWR Francis Jaszkowiak Well Driller, Dealer in Wind Mills, Gasoline Enginés, Cotton Wood Lumber, Hard Wood Lumber. All kinds of Stove and Fire wood. Call or Write. 421, 12th St, Bismarck | make it, TOWN IS WHAT YOU MAKE IT, SAYS ‘PEP’ MAN Knock Your Town and You Are Knocking Yourself, He Tells Audience WHAT BISMARCK NEEDS The town you live in is what you If you knock the town you are knocking yourself. ; This is what Howard J. Wisehaupt, “the pep man,” told a large audience of local people in the Rialto theater last night closing “Better Business Week.” He talked upon Bismarck and upon community advertising. Mr. Wischaupt, found much to praise in which Bismarck had done, with her newly paved streets, new bridge and active community organ- izations. He found ¢vidences that there are slackers in the town, who do not visualize what Bismarck ma) be visualizing it, do not attempt to reach the goal. ‘ Bismarck needs a new capital and a new court house, he declared. They ought to be in keeping with the pro- ECZEMA IN RASH CUTICURA HEALS All Over Baby's Hand and Face, Scratched Night, and Day. % “My little boy was terribly troubled ith eczema when about a year old. It broke out ina rash, and hescratched night and day until the blood would ) come. It was all over his 3 hand and face, and itched AX so he could net sleep. No. “Hearing* of Cuticura a Soap and Ointment wegot them, and after using two boxes of Cuticura Ointment with the Cutic Soap he was completely heale (Signed) Mr. John Peterson, Box 49, Humbird, Wis., June 2, 1920.6 Use Cuticura for every-day toilet | . Bathe with Soap, soothe, with Ointment, dust with Talcum, Our Prices Have been reduced since las fall. Cleaning, Pressing, Dye- ing—done quick and right. Hats Cleaned and Blocked. « All work guaranteed. We Call For and. Deliver. ‘Eagle Tailoring and Hat Works. Phone 58 ° Opposite Postoffice Underwood Typewriter Co. Standard and Portable. Sold. Rented. Repaired. Bismarck, N. D. _ Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON: WHICH WE ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS OB With our new McClintock Burglar Alarm System which we recently installed, keep your Liberty Bonds and other valuables as well as to do your general. banking business. . First National Bank, Bismarck, N.-D VPULIS.MEINN TLINTOCK C our bank is a safe place to GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW. Safety First. gressive spirit abroad’ in the com- munity. « While various foreign countries may be acknowledged leaders in some particular lines of endeavor America excels in but one thing, so far as he can determine, Mr. Wiséhaupt said. That is in nerve, “America excels in doing the thing that can’t be done bgcause she don’t know it can’t be done and goes aheaa and does it)” he said. Don’t Be Afraid, He Says. The man who Goes things, the man who visualizes a big thing, is usual- ly called a fool until, he does it, Mr. Wischaupt said. The inventor of Eskimo Pie, he declared, tried for nine years to sell the idea of selling chocolate coated ice-cream. The ice cream men would have nothing to do with it. An Omaha man took up the proposition. In four months they made a million dollars. Don’t be afraid of criticism, he told his hearers. Go ‘straight ahead—if you are a failure there are some peo- ple who will say they always knew you would be and if you succeed the same, people will say, “I always knew he’d be a success.” “A man is never.a failure-until. he admits it himself,” declared Mr. Wise- haupt. Urges Co-operation, Ho urged co-operation among mer- chants. They must co-operate he said, or the mail order houses will take their business. He attacked the scandal monger and declared tha: “one of God’s own children” was one who had nerve enough to talk back to and shut up the whisperer of lies and half-truths, . Mr. Wisehaupt was. heartily ap- plauded at the conclusion of his talks, He will remain in Bisniarck until Sunday. On Sufday he will talk to prisoners at the penitentiary. Mr. Wisehaupt declared that the re- aurmatories are full of undevelopet geniuses. Mr. Wischaupt told the hearers he was. interested in the Gummer case last fall when he was in Minnesota and his opinion was asked, “I do not care to discuss it,” h. said. “But don’t be surprised if someday some one on his death bed somewhere doesn’t make a confession to clear up. this mystery.” gain EH) EAS Canada possesses nearly half the water power of the world. - WALTER Health CAMP’S Builders ’ Get your weight to normal. . We now carry these in our Victrola Department. COME IN AND HEARTHEM. | = HOSKINS-MEYER How much France supreme. press of Peking ai Germany. The state of trade re countries, Who gets the dollar How to make caller particular distinction students. many advertisements. Just which school , . ‘Tis.a. Mark of “Diatinction to Be a Reader. of jj The Literary Digest FOR GOQD HOME TAILORING Also Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing done‘by workmen who know how. NICHOLS, THE TAILOR damage, and how much Germany has paid. Why labor thinks the Supreme Court is too How. China’s civil chaos is explained by the About the new. revolution that is hatching in clothing, corn flakes. How to make moisture-proof matches. What a honeycomb coil is. ‘ a g * EASTERN NORTHERI#=" Get July. 1st Num Phone 396 On July {000,000 Will Know— Why Uncle Sam, whois hunting down boot- leggers, is himself called “the biggest boot- legger in the. world.” The provisions of thie new Irish. Constitution. Why the big fellows, are paying less taxes and the little fellows more taxes. has paid to repair war nd Shanghai. vival in various European you pay for bread, shoes, s wind your clock. in shaping the characters of their In this issue of THE LITERARY DIGEST there are of good schools, to select is a matter for the care- ful consideration of the parent or guardian and we sug- gest that heads ‘of families and prospective students read our school announcements carefully. oN FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous NEW Standard PRIVATE SCHOOLS. aun In every section of the United States specialists in education have established schools that are entitled to ber, on Sale Today—At All News-dealers—10 Cénts Physicians in Spain are expected| In 54 human beings out of 100 to attend the poorer classes‘free of|the left leg is stronger than the charge. right. New Through Pullman Service _ Chicago to Bismarck and Mandan o : Double Daily Service: Leaving Chicago Union \ Station, Burlington Rowte at 10:10 a. m.—North, Coast Limited, No. 1. \ (Solid Train.) Arrive Bismarck 11:39.a. m.; i Mandan, 11:55:a. m. 6:30 p. m.—Pacific Express, No. 3. (Through Pullmans.) Arrive Bismarck 10:26 p. m.; Mandan, 10:50 p.:m; zt Important | Change in Train Time Effective July 2 Train No. 3 The Pacific Express, will leave Bismarck * . at 10:34 p. m. and Mandan at 10:00 p. m. (Mountain Time), one hour and«42 A minutes earlier than formerly. , u Restful Lounge Cars Have Been Added toTrains 3 and 4 , Northern Pacific Railway | D. T. OWENS & €O. Room 1, Eltinge Block. Money to loan on imprgved city property. Houses and lots for sale in all parts of city. We can sell you that house and lot and loan you the money to help you pay for it. WE WILL WRITE YOUR INSURANCE FOR YOU. List your property with us for sale. Farm Lands. Rentals. Before Buying See D. T. OWENS & CO. Readers | Whether a preacher should tell his people all he thinks about the Bible. : About the strange artistic sense of children. If the downfall of Europe is impending. How to care for a storage battery. About the Vatican’s victory in Russia. If marriage is being ridiculed to death. The story of Horatio Bottomley, sentenced to penal servitude in. England for raising and misusing patriotic funds. : The answers to Edison’s new series of ques- tions. - How it sky. | The two main things needed to stop the epi- 7 demic of. automobile-accidents. : What effect the city lav has had on the sav- - ings banks. That wholesalers are s!:owing a tendency to advance prices again. feels to tour 7,500 miles through the WESTERN - THR LITERARY DIGEST is prepared to make sug- gestions to parents and the School Advisory Department will be glad to answer letters. The requests must give name and address of parent or guardian; sex and age k of child to be pla 3 d; approximate price to be expended for board and tuition; locality, and size of schcol de- sired. ae < Yor years we have suggested early application to the schools. It is difficult to find the ideal school during the last weeks preceding the opening of a new session, Dictionary), NEW YORK ‘ SATURDAY, JULY 1, 1922 ° ” ega Ca Suit “ndge agalit Morto: the su hail v premé action tion i The jenit i is un |.ment ag Warra Deliev of th be no Mr. « ‘suit | who ] ter ar | Att Berve ‘peare ‘pared for { Gene thé c the Wa fount + \parti: state tativ and / electi In of Te Unde at. “man }-urer, son ‘or T Ww _state ‘bent, Nonp fices. Mis pend 52 of folloy 2,207 2,52: Poin Steen 2,075 Chur Fo noon Tem] Tem] High High Fo bonis chan Fo and tem]

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