The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1923, Page 4

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THE | BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, pier, N. D., as Second Class | tter. Comments reproduced in this | BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Publish ine spinon of he frioune, Whe | acct het ; pied atk aa { Bose gf ond To .|Paper eal : Fore ign Representatives } dire | Break Up Band 27th Year 0 a eee | mm | | Of Cattle Rustlers Publication eisrquctte Bldg: Kresge Bldg. = | Sioux Falls, S. D., Sept. 7—Pen-| Aneta, N. D., Sept. 7.—The Aneta PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH A e| m7 A s Fifth Ave. Bldg. | horrified at “intervals by { i f break- r 7 SCC 3c m people were killed. Col- | oh Z ttle “rustlers” | Publication with this week's issue. "The Perce Mos eeetaiees aan ae ADePOR reese an ot waltibsaa [Sua cuaee: spark i the eastern | The paper was establisheg in 1896 by e Ass 8 is exclusi ly Se I chused most of the For| | foothills of the Black Hills in recent | J. A. Pepper and J. M. Stewart, and republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not/twenty years the r ; il- | years, The operations of the rustlérs | has since been owned by a number otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- roads' have bsen co i have been so bold that ranchers of | of different publishers. S. Malmin lished herein. Pave Ween naeeeuled yr aaneeete| ‘the region had been intimidated and| 1s the present publisher. . . ‘ : . nati " ave bee ceeded by concrete | | tor weeks feared to give information bee TT Ty met All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are) structures or solid earth and stone | ‘to the authorities of their suspicions, Grain Yields Better miso reserved: embankments as the | weight | of See Oe et ete eet | Ria Wi E ted hit trains inereased. Wooden. coaches | ‘mation would be avenged by the an ere E.xpecte MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION ute been displaced by steel cars. | | “rustlers” by burning the ranchers’ penis P 5 5 roved im every Rilerwayse i u Stanley, N, D., Sept. 7—Yields ot SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, __ |fraved im evety passions wit. ot | Amos Smith ang a brother are-the | grain in this section are better than Daily by carrier, per year... é ° uveees ECDs ane MESS cere ra | {first alleged members’ of the band to| were expected, according 'to reports Y toe ae aii : rare events, : be arrested in the general round up i stanley 1 aie? Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) We rrracany (e-!) aut a new engine which des‘ro hick ‘How hus Been Mhatitited Under cone to Stanley from rural dis. Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00} human Iife has come into umén | |the personal direction of Sheriff |" yyrank Hatch, farmer just south ot Diily by mail, outside of North Dakota... on OO eee ae eee cemairare!| | Lockhart. Amos ‘Smith, before’ hi> | stanley, obtained a yield of 15 bush- Shige gee — | public ale 8 ee ity streets arrest on a cattle “rustling” charge, | o1, per hake, iu . 7 % are vg dangerous ag the railroads | ig said to have been in the courts 2 , THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER were forty or fifty The Be est RRECEOr ealida MaeaTNOT | eters, rom, the, NertHern portion (Established 1873) slaughter they cause is appalling Shinkey. ‘of the county are to the effect that BEST EXERCISE " cenraeetae ie an juce 9 (eet? k the swelling list of paviGie master ive eens Heel i The best exercise for fat women who want to reduce 18/deaths and injuries. Safe and|{ | Di In F 0 ernels, it is grading fairly well an i i i trie- | ¢: ver ergo daily haz- | h No, 1 wheat is reported from se » kite ‘oor, claims Mrs. Catherine H. Grie-|csreful drivers undergo daily haz-| | hes In Fargo] muc P scrubbing the kitchen floor, cla 2 Gs because of the bad judgment | | pists the northern part of the county. | bel, of N. J. State College for Agriculture. Maybe so, but it’s like telling the tired business man it would do him as much good to get a caddie job as to play golf. Wood chopping is about as fine exercise as there is. But there’s no danger of wood chopping becoming the national sport. : Fi look and listen,’-wito take sharp | in 1877 and bay been in this, country People, w yl rcise,’” wa c et away from | curves at high speed. who turnets | ie ae Veg he ef —Radi People, when they “exercise,” want to get away eaves gt HIE ero eee | cated at’ the Soax. Falls) Normal | _, Wahpeton, N. D., Sept, 7.—Radical ‘ei ga 8 tion pec " Li i changes in the acreage of various work. MAE ChE. Peon Reakar aun NG |school and Luther Seminary at St. e ple in. th or seats. ; d AN | Paul. He was ordained 12 years age | TOPS with the trend decidedly toward ¢ rive when’ mnger ae ic inf us and has served. most of the time ix. | 8Teater diversification and a conse- to get our phys- | Ry are making poads and sireets| North Dakota. He was. unmarried | quent firmer stabilization of farming | After all, it’s a good thing for us to try * ical exercise in the form of play. Exercise helps the muscles and internal organs, but play makes the nerves relax, which is just as important as developing the! muscles. There isn’t much relaxation of tense nerves when we com- bine hard work with our exercise. fs The average person who “needs exercise” usually is the vietim of nerves rather than of physical inactivity. This can be proved by going to bed and staying a week, thereby getting rest and nerve relaxation that will do many of us as| , much good as a whole season of golf. 4 It’s-a mistake to start a campaign of strenuous exerc’se unless we’re prepared to get more hours of sleep than we’ve heen used to. Sleep does us more goog than all the pills, serums and other forms of “dope” ever devised... .-.... see : Me person who feels “all ran. down”. should, start duting the day, for about 20 min- stream the full height of the body. When lying down, gray- Exercise cemes third. Combine it with play, to relax the nerves, There'll be plenty of time to scrub the floors and do other physical labor later. * ; ; Finally, the thing that is wrecking the nerves of the American people is needless rush—hurry at breakneck speed | and without any special destination. We have to speed up| at our work but it’s time to slow down and “take things easy” when the bell rings and we quit our jobs until tomorrow. | ty pared with 41 back in 1870. But, by 1950, people will have | g life span of 70 years, predicts Dr. George Martin Kober of Georgetown University Medical School. ‘ His prediction, of course, is based on a supposition that le will increasingly, live more sensibly and correctly. | peo! e hope so. But Doc certainly is an optimist. Four hundred years ago the average length of human + life was somewhere between 18 and 20 years. And it was only 25 years, as late as 1800. A gain of about five years in- two centuries. ‘There has been a gain of 31 years in the average life | span since 1800. gReople live longest in. New Zealand, averaging 60 years at'death. In India the average age of death is before 25... These “average” figures, however, are arrived at by add- | hind legs. “THE BISMARCK. TRIBUNE | : | EDITORIAL REVIEW In former years the cou ffle regulations have been im-} in the aggregate, and so far No reg- | ulations, ¢ y or state. have been) ana speeding of pe “ple who ought never to be permitted to contre’ a cteering wheel or car engine. The | fools and joyriders revel in speed to the danger of all on the road. Drivers wha look in one direction while golmg another, who cross railroad tracks without stopping to bighly dangerous for all who must travel or cross them. States and cities have 4 prob- Jen; which grows in gravity every > INSSS Cay in the proner regulation, of au- | tomobile traffic. Ninety per cent of the drivers are safety-first peo- ple But the other ten per cent. it that is the rieht- figure; are the slaughterers of the innocent. How control them is the problem. | ntnally cur highways must be | de as safe as the railways, ond | by. similar methods of selection |LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT and elimination among those \per- | TO ALICE HAMILTON. mitted to guide vehicles, unde" | DEAR LITTLE SISTER: rigid but simnle rules of the road.| I have been intending to write to | Comtmin'y children and young girls; you for the last few days but after will not then be permitted to ad-/ one has been ill quite a time things, venture with cars, nor will fools| get at sixes ang sevens if you are the af adult age be, able to obtain per-|one who has beg running the mits which put. the public in peril. | house. The growth’ ‘of: automobile use| There is so much I want to s ‘to there is no present need of legis-| what a wonderful time you are hav- which #6 required: to m@ke atreets other girls and we had two old maja | certain rooms for fear we would see the nudes, And here you are, over in Paris, going anywhere you: please. .Al- though you haven't told mo I have a hunch that you have been pleased to go to Montmartre and all through the Latin Quarter with only a very lone- ly young man to pilot you and Bet- tie around. Alice, dear, I note what you say about Karl’s being more intellectual ADVENTURE OF |) THE-TWINS - . By Olive Roberts ‘Barton One day Nancy and Nick and Mister Gallop, the cowboy fairy, were riding across the prairie just Suddenly they heard a “Chk! “Oh, look” cried? Nancy, almost falling off Snow in her excitement.) “What's that?” “That's Penny Prairie Dog,” an swered Mister Gallop, looking down av the funny little creature sitting straight uy like a.kangaroo on. his Every time he barked he jerked his” tail”which” made him look like a wound-up toy. “He's Leeping watch outside - his house, went on Mister Gallop. “When he makes that noise he’s etelling hi family that strangers are coming though I do not assent to any of your contentions, yet if they were all true I would probably be loving Jack just the same. One thing you haven't learneg yet little: sister, which is probably be- cause you have never been in love: When you do fall in love you will un: derstand people do not love: other people because they are intellectual; ‘because they are brilliant; because they are handsome or because they are even kind. You just fall in love. to explain that we couldn’t go into ; ‘and .igiesyneragics and the thrill Sometimes I think the old phil- osophic idea of Empedocles, of “nat- utal, love,” by which he means those sympathies which attract a stone to the earth and make| rivers flow tc the sea,,can be applied to men and women, ;Two people just naturally gravitate} to each other. It is a chemical affinity — the thing that makes oxygen attract hydrogen. Yousmay go on and on for along sdeks nig] unite with some chemical epough-to overcome certain tavughts dies. . ~ All at once two people meet. Every force within one seeks and unites with .the similar force in the other. At last you know lpve, ‘ ‘These two persons need not even be of the same tastes, They may dletike each other very much, still they will be what people generally call “in love with each other.” It is a queer sort of feeling, my I had not met Jack I would never have known the love I felt for Karl was not the real Iove, the great love that now fills my life. I would prob- ably have married Karl. As it was, the moment I sew Jack I was’taken directly off my feet. And now “that I have my little home. my husband’and my’ baby, I am afraid it is all'too good to be true, Honest- ly, Alice, I wake up in the middle Pot the'night my heart going pitapat, and I seem to be-waiting for some- thing td enter into my Eden and lay That’s all, my dear. and to look out.” : “Well, we won't hurt him,” said) Nick. “Look, there are a lot of prairie-dog houses and each one has a prairie-dog on top> They've come EVERETT TRUE out to see what is the matter.” “Yes, and be careful that your “Tp dane i, MR: TRUE, it waste. happy. * A Brooklyn baby who swallowed a toy auto will recover. your flivver outside, The eclipse due Sept. 10 ts not the Firpo-Dempsey fight. a’ fish off New Jersey, where booze come a plasterer, A gentle, loving Los Angeles crea- ture wants to drink: iodine: if-they won't hang. her husband, Pennsylvania max from jail three times, this, is easy try it 01 has nce, I have been and am so Please tie escaped Ig you think Fat men hold a convention Portland, Me. all are not landlords, died a Rgraral death. Cops think a San Pedro (Calif;) oil incendiary. tank fire found oil-soaked Ww: May te, Chinese typhoon! are almost as The funny thing is have dangerous as American bootleg. Furs and fur coats will be about and one crying three, arguments spell higher this fall, A senator is being sued for thirty cents, expecting to make him feel like that amount. long ‘ago. antique prices, Antiques are things made long, We are just about out of FRIDAY, nington county authorities have made | puildings during the night. Williston Pastor Fargo, Sept. 7.—Rev, Martin Skon- hovd, pastor , of, three Lutheran churches north of, Williston, diel in a Fargo, fospitel<Mongday and fun- \'eral servides were héld today at Wil- liston. Dr, I. D. Yivisaker of Fargo will preach the funeral sermon. Rev. Skonhovd was born in Norway and has no immediate relatives here, | He had been ill gince last spring. Instantly Killed aged 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. E, a. Comstock, near here, was instantly killed by lightning in a recent storm. The boy had just placed some tubs ! during a heavy rain and had picked up an iron rod which he was using to chase chickens into. a coop when lightning struck the barn and switch- ed to the iron,bar he carried. His mother saw hini fall just as he had turned and. smiled at her as she stood in the window of the home. his) has been too rapid for the proper! you, dear, that I don’t know where | Anyway, ypu cannot give any. better Fargo, Sept. 7.—P. A. Lee, secre- suildi i “ 4 -|regu'étions of motor travel; andj to begin. — i slate | FEASONs 4.) 41 Baby fell into a Wisconsin river Cemetery Budget tary of the North Dakota Farmers building-up campaign by getting plenty of ‘sleep. ‘Also by’ re 1 to begin. I wonder if you appreciate SON 10 4 ghd say tnavell: planolbaby,-a0te s Grain. Dealers association, has left lying. down several times lation by heavy penalties for mis-| ing, practically doing just what you| time. People may ghink they love | bathing beauty. by ear fora tour of North Dakota, utes at a time, to rest the overworked heart. Remembek: conduct, and, backed by. public alee Headly doing Suri septa Ree Hsonie imi, @hink Spore love eee ecncmrey AeA te be gone. feria days or two weeks. 4 : t, cmp i at i i i i Fourteenimen were unable to lan: a . 2 To - le on the tour, he will visit man, when we're standing -up. the,heatt has to pump the blood| sentiment, comparable with’ that) abroag I went with: a whole lof orjBtcause sdme, chemical, force in you ‘ourteen'men were Pie reitgenierd mailer La WC Gestalt eaay + yet wy 5 ond highway: travel.—Chi- vot | 4 is thrown averbor ganization thereby gaining first hand ity helps—the blood flows parallel with the ground, like aoe abn a Comeleres, ; eel teachers ae ket alyieh free Ripngther, you mis: chink vou es weeking meeting of the city commis- | knowledge of operations of the vari- water through horizontal pipes. ie irniai in2es See a avek audi came tank GaLiEhEe Ie uit you soon find out in| Just as boys are rushing off to col- | sion, Only one change was asked in | ous.units of the association. The second big need is fresh air and lots of it, ; ipa ears a da | LS og ude is force aS lege un Oregon professor quits to be the budget figures as previously pub-| The itinerary of his trip will in- cemetery board. amount to $4,000, Cornerstone Of in TO LIVE LONG Chk! Chk!” half-way between a bark |*7d having more heart andy oeg are SiS ne nae aa im me | eet sere a un ae | ueaiayg CoBReslatbatgelm oka eety Rental cuney AZ amnles i seutligest of Tite average American now lives to the age of 56, com- | and a squeak. wondered why I’ loved Jack. Al’| substitutes. It is very probable if ere nee e a Totes, hes Bas monies of laying the cornerstone of | Valley City, Mr. Lee is in the River- afternoon. watercress was oxygen and therefore very beneficia to the human system. Hello Girls to _ Supply Weather \ Northwest News By Lightning Brisbane, N, D,, Sept. 7. — Orlin, ‘beneath eaves spouts of the house Increase Asked} on its first reading at the regular ished, the request coming from the The budget allowed $2,300 for the coming year and the council was asked to increase the Army Hospital Laid St. Cloud, Minn,, Sept. 7.—Prom- inent representatives of war veter- ans’ associations were in St. Cloud the new $1,2500,000 Tenth district army hospital which took mee that The next week it: would be brought back to the: lecture room, the cover removed, and & light placed near the opening with the result that a deaf- ening explosion occurred. This prov- ed, according to the professor, that composed of pure Reports to English SEPTEMBER 7, 1923 Panorama, local newspaper, complet- fields have been threshed that went as high as 20 bushels per acre. While most of the wheat is small Reports coming from the Sanish country state that some wheat 1» yielding as high as 17 bushels per acre, Diversification Is Seen In Richland Co. operations in this section has mark- ed agriculture in Richland county during the past year, aceording to a report issued by R. C. Dynes, the county agricultural agent, Approximately 154,000 acres or wheat were planted in Richland coun- ty in 1922 against 127,000 acres of the same grain in 1923, the report shows, miking a total reduction of 27,000 acres or 20 per cent in wheat. This reduced acreage was planted to oats, barley clover, corn and flax. In addition, the report says there has been a substantial incraase ‘n :he number of hogs, cows and beef cat- tlé on farms in this section, Tour Is Made Of Elevators In State clude Stanley, Minot, Williston, Grenora and several other towns in the vicinity of these. Farmer Narrowly Escapes Death Valley City, Sept. 7.—C. J. Lee, prominent farmer and business man of Valley City and Fargo, was seri- ously. injureq when his car was hit by a Soo line train on a crossing side hospital here and it is feared the may have internal as well as ex- ternal injur' just about to become American citi- zens. Crowned heads, ambassadors, fa- mous generale, prime ministers and presidents come by the score to lay wreaths on the sarcophagus of the martyréd president. And men and 1] women from more humble walks of life come too. “Many times a year the foreign born coal miner comes to Springfield from neighboring towns to take out his first citizenship papers,” said Mr. Fay, ~“and he is the most reverent visitor of all. I like to tell men like that about the martyred president.” There has never been any disor- } ing up and striking an average of all deaths, including babies. | pny doesn't step into one. of the f an cs Wonder if the Italian who swam| London, Sept. 7—Pity the poor| der at the tomb within the memory | The gain has been mostly in cutting down the death rate big holes they use for front doors.” 1 CAN'T FIN MY PIPES. FET | oder scraper of che present custadian, verpbody warned Mister Gallop. “Let Blackie and Snow go slowly or they'll trip and throw you off.” Suddenly there was a queer rat- tling noise almost under their fect and in less time than it would take n star to fall—the three ponies started off as though they had been shot out of a gun. DID You Sew iT F urms eating spaghetti? supposed to be able to tell people what the weather will be like, In this, their newest duty, perhaps they will receive a sigh or two of sympathy from the operators of switchboards in America who for many years bore the suffering of having subscribers ring up to ask “What.time is it please? My clock ‘has stopped.” among children, especially babies. This has raised the aver- age.. It is doubtful whether there are any more people living to “a ripe old age” than formerly. Or even as many, for that ential,” he said. “I have never had to ask a visitor to remove his hat.” Germans Study Solar Eclipse One of the books we would like to see written is “How to Be Happy Though a Reformer.” ‘The gain bas been made largely in cradle years. As*re- gardsindividuals who reach maturity, they seem to die at abou! t.the game average age as in former generations. Place a few. auto tags end to end. Read left to right, It {s how many marks for a dollar. Fs A “Whoa!” shouted Nick, _ pulling posta N. e ai Mexico City, Sept. 7—A party of a : cays, | hard on his reins, ; The California report that a movie | wich outs Ail the: eaeet nciti*e:| German scientists, headed by Prof. + As far back as 1908, experts estimated that three million | | "Stop!" yelled Nancy, tugging star and her husband are close.| Great Britain, arranged with the Air| 1: Ludendorff, director of the Pots- Anieficans were constantly on the’sick-list, and that 42 out wih all her sone AS RS friends is probably untrue. | Ministry to supply each exchange ae Observatory and brother of the j ni ‘ister Gallop, ie » cowboy with daily. forecasts of the weather ‘ield marshal, were the first of the of every 100 of these illnesses were preventable cases. Sim- ‘Gla¥ situation today. ‘When people succumb to preventable diseases, they gen- .erally are victims of their own carelessness. This careless- ness in many cases results from underestimating their per- foreign savants to arrive in Mexico to observe the solar eclipse on Sept. 10, After being welcomed by repre- sentatives of the government and in- specting the national observatory at Tacubaya, the party left for Yer- patty What a pity shoes shined, as noses: do, fairy, tried so hard to stop his pony that he stood straight up in his stir- rups. But not one of the three stopped until they were half a mile away. “Wh-what was wrong?” .. panted in its vicinity. The first month this information was available to subscri- bers 10,172 persons called up to find ‘out if it was going to rain. Of course it. usually swas, the. way. of British weather being a wet one. In London don't stay Several make: “ making autos as funny as they can, but can’t get jokes started about. them. a» alue in cold dollars and.cents. i Naney. ‘ eee ee ist wuer ined bafiis, Durango, where'they ‘will in- i pinstance, take a man with an income of $3000'a year.) |, "That was Rip, Rattler” awa No female imosquito lives more| Fridays and Saturdays. This was tax.|stall their instruments, Naw, $3000 is 6 per cent interest on an investment of $50,000, | Mister: Gallop. eg wan! Latter than one winter, thank, heaven, en to mean that the only time people| 1m the party is Prof. R, Schorr, di- Fenny Prairie Dog. We'd better go back and see if, we can help him— Penny, I mean.” H Pretty soon whom ‘should they meet but Penny himself:and his wite rector of the Hamburg Observatory, who, at the outbreak of the world ‘war, was with Professor Ludendorff in the Crimea on the same mission that finds them in Mexico. © They «| really care about climate over here is when they are set for an outing. The rest of the time they cannot be bothered, let the fogs fall where they may. $3000-a-year man had an auto or. any other machine) "$60,000 he would insure it against every possibility of and he would’ care for it as if it were a priceless ine a radio bug neglecting a $50,- A fall may prove fatal to flies, Watercress Is Rich T DONT NEED te SES rl! (AS AND, FOR FURTHER FARTICUCARS, TREY CXAMINGE THS Magis T You can imagi end children, | not'lookin, ‘ n. You can } i ga bitl : i forced Li THE . RANCS Besides it is. cheaper not to care.| Were forced to abandon all their in- eeiving station if he owned it. . . ios nectactal “2S. aa pai Gag In Food Values} tne Post ottice is not giving away | struments, according to Schorr, and On the other hand, the $3000-a-year man often neglects & Hon) dl you get away?” asl pr tips on the weather for the’mere fun | flee to Germany to avoid internment. ie . Portsmouth, Eng,,- Sept. 7.—Ws- of it. Those who get such informa- tion from “Central” ‘must pay tvo- pence, the cost of a regular city cnil. ‘Hardly -cnyore troubles. to ring up and find out the time.’ Mayhe min- utes do not mean/ so much in, this Several months ago the professors travelled to Odessa and managed to retrieve the outfit, which is. now be- ing sent to Yerbaniz for use in ob- serving the coming eclipse. is-$50,000 body as if it were an old bit of junk. “We have a secret back door,” squealed Penny with a shake of his tail. “When Mister, Rattler came in the front door we went out the back i your-body a square deal. Treat it with the consider- care that its high value deserves. tercress as a side dish for lunch is well known in most households, but few. people eating it were dware that it contained all. the ecaentia Avie i ; (To Be Continued) i f -going land as in the supposed! ‘NOTIC! DECREASED PRODUCTION : (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) |- vitamines, until this fact was stated | easy-going land as in pposedly NOTICE! of. our country this year be 750 aaitign E Sie eee < tana woeas MH center Be Se Ses ortity Fi eh B ciy water, of the ravages of the boll weevil an Pe Thought: | the tecsuble and id et the | Citizens Revere, . Bartlett, Jr.» He's president of the hurts.: Greeks regarded it as food for th mind, while today it was regarded int ‘for the body,. favorite experiment , Lewes, explo- TYPEWRITERS ce Lincoln’s ‘Memory ‘Springfield, Ill, Sept, ™—Of the thonsarids “of pilgrims’ who: annually isit, the tomb of Abraham Lincoln, he most enthusiastic and most we! me, according to H.W. Fay, ¢u: the immigrants’ wi Many | iB it. the afflictions of the| the Lord dell

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