The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 2, 1924, Page 6

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PAGE SIX Leavenworth were leading packers of Ra DPZOAK A NA CIRO oe cee THE ‘BISMARCK TR —o WEDNESDAY, APRIL 2, 1924" Under the plan as agreed upon each kt Peeposseasing “appearance and. ia 2 Te Milli Ye Old farmer will be: given- sufficient seed , DOHENY SELLS BRYN MAWR’S UNBEATEN BASKETBALL TEAM figent speaker and_will no doubt, be en ion Year farmer will be given euicgnt sted able to poll a strong vote in his E, B $5. 000 the fall the Commercial. club will county. it rings > gather the crop and ship it to Chaska a ee casas saps ats : lings wherever the most favor-~ ‘ha 2. ise ij y is URES ERE S: or Bi IN Little Charlotte: Lauise Quiglor is | see = able freight rates can be obtained. recuperating nicely from her recent vill cbeteerh tie SdRes tis ilness. of sugar beet production | sa ee a a | to the manpfacturers and save them ~ FARLY STAGES gets! the expense incident to preliminary Mr. Henry Rupp, who has~ been investigations. | “quite ill at the family home for two 0 ee months is reported on the way to FORMER MANDANITES Oil Magnate Left Home at 16,; complete recovery. Mri. OC. DE Vennmiakd heromisthar, ined S ino bxpedi- = : i i iv Mrs. Martin of Ollie, Mont., came to Joined Surveying Expedi- i Mi Hit gL Al cake SMahanaellaseevehith etd: hie Wicks dition in Kan Pe sce line, Dean” benehlaesenugal of friends for a few days. Mrs, Young 0 if town she has been _teac! ing. schoo! and Mrs. Martin were formerly Man- the past season . Miss Lenihan has end Mie ae Nar mide faceepted employment in the Baldwin jan residents, BEGAN MAKING MONEY postoffice during the summer ilies TRGIE SCRGOL. months. Miss Margaret Gypson, daughter , ‘ < B is ikea. Hering, of Mrs. George H. Wilson, a student WIDE S lee Ue ambeand, chance eotes nee io. WasHineton| at Carleton College, Northfield, Minn, Wee neni iulltions, ice, they - wbte: “eallede pe its arrived home Saturday to spend the Hae atinaic whe ney death of Mr. Myers’ sister, * : “ : usual spring vacation and to furth- gee POG at yuo ts & lbea- ce : ; er recuperate from injuries received ing figure in the Senate oil In- ee er ere outta coe cn Ae PaReeaeit bo) WEA "Borviee, ine’) a perfect attendance. the past month was in a hospital for ‘a considerable leh eal de ‘ ae al the first since school started. period ef time, — | BY FE, L. DOHENY ini The pupils of the eighth grade LICENSED TO WED puemewel gu igiy kote. 1 Nat have just completed their state ex- Two marriage licenses were issued Ieepornynorvesine cxpeditlon v amination with satisfactory results. | bby County Juthe! SHeW 1 eatin: was to leave Atchison, Kansas, for Leach and Ella Carrick of New trip into Indian Territory, nad 1 de ‘|. atv. and Mrs. J. J. Rue, who have alee © sid Algusl Ploeeher aia cided to join it, been living on a farm near Baldwin Uydia Kitzam of Hebron. My mother, of course, was disap- }have moved to Bismarck in which pointed, She h a " honlng ll freity they tee CRs FIFTY TO MEETING PR Teeupeiiauiy: winking of Me own | Se er aikerea’ ae GOT Bae Fifty ladies attended th® first AVeRtuRedKieyoulhjousun'e seem! to Retecc ase Suunany evening ino! meeting of the City Federation of MHRTny ole, UE my. broll i Fee vell party. The evening was | Women’s clubs held yesterday after- {me and said that 1 would b Waeicet am of Bryn Mawr has gone trough the season without a defeat being chalked againgt] soon, in social chat-and a nice lunch noon at the assembly room of the in a month. | The players are (back eft to right) Frances J New York; Caroline Remok, Chestnut Hill, Pas} which was furnished by the ladies Farmers State Bank building, when In my extra terms at high school, ly McAdoo, 1 Angeles, daughter of Win. G. MecAdo: (vont row, left to right) Germaine Leewitz.! vac cerved at the close of the even- plans were devgloped for the mect- Thad studied “plane surv and} Now York; Suvanne Leciwitz, eiptain; Mary Pollache, Cambridge, Mass. = @er@al ing ing of the clubs of the Seventh dis- I felt fairly well prepared to embark |” ca ee sae trict to be held here this summer. on my career, With §100 advanced | array afternoon the oceasion being| Wilton folks are interested in this] ° Julius eipas a a haus: ane meeting eer by hy ny father for expenses, I set out. her seventh birthd The afternoon | project and may move with their] and Wilton last week in the interests Mrs. R son, pres uae ts to conquer-~if not the world-—-ut News of Our a pe Haare playing games the families to the beet sugar country.| of his candidacy as state senator of Sitio eee ie dite ease vest. i dof ch ce birthday repa vate ce dred people the | Bur! county. bau ; Us: Bae fis soon disappointed, Neighbors oN ‘e ay erg Zap auitaiet have, phe: MACEMBCguier si ; : chief speaker on the subject “Beauty soon disap) a. us served, Li a a : ‘ bbaks iy Travel was siow, By the time |@————— Pus fields in Montana according to] Oscar Catter and family who have Spots in North Dakota.’ reached Atchison, the expedition had WILTON Miss Lorene ‘Heston entertained! George Coles who has recently re-| been running the Ineah hotel during : — been gone three weeks! Ludwig Ceminski ha tol jast Thursday evening at her home| turned from that territory, Most of | the past (six months Have returned : : Seco HOME FROM MICHIGAN {have had many disappointments) Scranton where he will operate a) in honor of Miss Nama Holmgren these folks will assist in tending the to their farm a short distanee from | tay Aa Macking= pol, thy Anppcin Atnseum’ of Natura! Histor). er adie baer aa Be ue ie ee neamenl” He eee Rte Eee a eee be ane it ‘The fe \ HE firsttransaction in.dino-, The eggs are seven or elght ins | turned this morning from Grand WA RUN ALAS le cediydign tej {Doe Bue ca Fe aeten said to hereeeRaCoURTTGTeou Sheltion- arrived Sunday | saur's eggs since primitive!ches long. have the hard, pebbiy | Rapids, Mich. where they have been PUMMMMEE TER Le hesiucveul Wit ay looted atatees ctaueleananen I elttst ners ante earupesnte [fpr (his Kind’ ots pORREaRApuIIGEn s housekeeper on the farm man'traded in the produce surface of an ordinary es, end | spending the winter at the home of home. Bu 16 1d wha opened a bakery, restaurant and lune ul gifts were showered upon the] for this kind o and ali signs $ . ebeeeces Eurtig Wear a eo [RIG an brothers had said. So just to show} counter in the build-| bride to be. The rooms were nicely | point to a bountiful crop of sugar rv son Ted § [oe hte ues) Lae ina copeiba cd baa Twenty-four. of thei: eir son George Dams! Neen dainy minteintt(e es ae is | historic. eggs has just brought | were found buried. tn the sand of MENEACOn, e ; i aa es | $5,000 in the open market—the the Gobi desert in Mongolia. Col- 5 See hale cadia A Gira aaa ESC COTTE aa ee ak Fae was Nowe | hzheat Sones ever poid tor any gate University, the esses new| Don’t Neglect a Cold Re ee Gane ree DeRVTEne Marana social chat a de cious }to the L Healing cian ese. The ‘announcement comes| home, was founded in.1819 in hons.| Mothers, don’t let colds get under The next day was July 4, 1872, 1 hom rar Wilton. 3 luncheon adding: muc to the er noon, Mra: . Gray was a from Roy Chapman Androws, lead-|or of William Colgate, ono of the | way. at the hot coi ey eetn wasn't much of a holiday for me, employed in the Wing tele} ment of the uftai The, fe ALE HOSEREES shipeltieie pate beat odition that leading businbss men of the early | Mutctienn tice OF, Sailer until T picked up a newspaper and | phone exchange : Mesdames CB. — : | found the eggs, and the purchaser|century and a ploncer of the 9085 | Musterole is a pure, white cintiaeut, read in it a notie of a New ngland , . Thompson, C. A. ite mg Joseph Bonoznu president of the | $s Austen Colgate, who bought the, and perfume industry. His fro made with oil of mustard. It draws publishing ‘house advertising for) Miss Ruth Per nd the Misses | 27th district of the United Miners | ewe on behalf of Colgate University.| was founded in 1806, Out congestion, relieves soreness, docs nti pelos onthe: Tee Je UCL TE, sue ene _ Holmgren, Laubach | yer of the district board spent part . ep raernire | ae 4 sh | Mustard plaster in a gentler way, with- for they were he Life and}a nurses training schoc nroute land Wheeler of the lo faculty. Seltheanartiw da Wilton “confers 4} | Hanson, tsa $44,910; = et ae ge new Mandan high Bu CBnate. ge ay, ches of Daniel O'Connell,” “Irish {to the Mill City Missy H visit- cakes Biwith/oldeal’ 2pertehaler setehe }and plumbing, Frank Grambs, | school project. * Eepereaad ar tually ton euleaneeetsssies, Wit and Humor,” “Book of Advice ed with relatives in Bismarck over] Mrs, Ceila Hefta and family have [Serta Wain Gaal Guerre? ae Bismarck, $8,983.00; electric wiring, OUT fea ae een nll reernes: Ee ce ih Sproles BL iti HaRGse GEES garding the new seale of wages and| Work Soon ‘to Begin on State] riectrie Construction Co, Grand] TO TRY OU To Mothers: Musteroleisnow omeeebaee sur (nO: aaelgninen © Fs eee ee aetue other business matters pertaining to aoe Forks, $1,375, the total being $55,- made in milder form for , got it, and cleaned it up in six weeks A C. Wilde wa Hed to HE abeth 5 ant | (be aig teers Building at Mandan - Batis SUGAR BEETS Lakin Shute ota, Eat tinie MEG 4 his ech Waldo had beat 1 vein aS ‘ikon for tthe ‘ Sp ioe ane —— ; It is the policy of the board, A - Ask for Children’s Musterole, ; to every Irish family Dan AH Geta MGnelIRERevarTiL wae kes ie ti edlome Tab abeuiiaen old) Celaelaewecieee Mr. and Mrs. QO. R. Vold of Regan} Arter paring bids to bring the| Chairman R. B. Murphy announced,| The directors of the Mandan Com- < & 65c in jars & tubes;hospital size, $3. MMPS Te cana cdateur ae Gh Nee Tanbeh CE in lace: attenill nee aid MSaiGS oe AK OOERV te tao were umong the callers in the Lig-| total cost within the legislative to let no contracts in excess of thet mercial club decided to. experiment ; VD OR a ae (ee during her sickness.| will be proprietor of a ladies millin-| Bite city the past week.” Mrs. Vold| appropsiation: of $60,000. thé. state| legislative appropriation, a practice| with the growing of sugar-beets this eee cvaionmaeiiel Margaret Theis was taken de eeddystoave hop. Miss|“ho has recently returned from an| board of administration has let com | which was general a few years ago| year. At a meeting the ecretary AGG LES abe avalos avdcontly! son. medical Peat ered her connec-| extended visit with relati tracts for, building the new boys'| when snpropriations fell a little short] was instructed to work with the eee ene reat ean) er (aeahiCmants. (he: lieue ele Aa i OABiaFiEH AEN EM WILE OMU SURI EEOE A tle will return to the wes dormitory at the state training of building the Kind of building, de-| County. Agent in getting eight or rely baal quite il fdnqse months. position she has held for the past few da: school at Mandan, it was announced | sired. ten farmers to try out one fourt Padered ciangen tt Is—and ight year | Ruilding. will: begin: soon, of an acre of sugar beets, The seed ab reaan chengellstiele Tint es ’ naduaagaed d Hanson, successful! is to be bought on the recommenda- aa Mr. and Mrs. William Kulackowski acts were awarded ag follow: Redlinger and Hanson, in a a for the books, 1 got} have returned home from Bismarck] H. A. Muchler genial proprictor end mare On col ere Reena lt General construction, Redlinger: and | contractors,‘ now are working on the| tion of the state agricyltural college. | 2ETTER, THAN.A MUSTARD PLASTER: hile waiting for the books, 1 g er aise tink Soret Se papa « the spring vacation period a a job with the city surveyor of A’ Me iN ey im a ms eevee HA ‘ h ne jthe W oy hotel an wine we ou | he me of her parents, Rev. and Mrs. ; ' [ Dee perating from shock anc s visitors in the ecen Aes Loo A ison. He had a la Pee LE anaes injuilon Guaeeined dns gal autor |Get MCKIE METRE TC eal s Headen accom. OOOO CNN BREE et ei uaicemaly jiee aad lawobile cecldene while thay wore oil trem: the, Mapaleehasunioy she Glee Tub on its | smu annua The weather was extreme jo* and terete ue Enaar Ae Mr| } reais uot ee | eee recent visit to our city. Horace and the work was bh 1, Most of the » rah an i | i at ; a ; i ate nee caine son of ook after his large Harvey Headen also visited with re 5 ey LA ai ‘who nator becning a[the head and shoulders and Mrs.| qheiuabe rents (duninestberciubienyisie famous horseman: and the other was | Kulackowski suffered from a nervous| John Reur and Louis Wagner have| i" Ww". ae ‘ f I, for although I was small and | Shock. | coturned fram a short business trip} tes. William Wright Jolley and! weighed only 125 pounds, work and Rug GuRG ER; | to South Dakota points. daughter Nana of Fairbanks, lov | play in Fond du Lae had made me Viet KS ay emia ak na Mr. and Mrs. Pred Miller have re-| #£¢ Spending some time visiting with! hardy. Baie jade ha ene ae THE aRRGACHCEE DS Ge CHECITEREE IEE ec Leo relatives. M Jolley was | Cite t California the boys expect to visit | Q y idly fading into a memory. HifDE 7A ASRRGRU LOR She vane es : Julius Meyer, well known farmer : olin: wore seareo. Leould find.nuno | (Ne Seaueia National Vark in Tulare) W, Theat, awin Ralls, Talos! yesident of the Baldwin district was & . Atchison, so L drifted on to Leay- | COUNts lin this digtrict Wein to inteec| here last week in the interests. of ea? enworth. Its fame had been flashed] i411, puin poavite wan host Ine Ww ae pe e Ui = eet candidacy for state senator from | ° Pee / ue Ca aad Hi Rite is e to a number of her school friends | Mn in Idaho, A__numbe Hunlaighjcouuly;. Myo: Mouse shay a ‘Ua Cc the day, » 1 reported to their plant and b—trimming the sides of x to fourteen hundred day would go down the chute t the long table at which I f hog mals and p worked, The quarters [ had to handle weighed, from 69 to 60 pounds cach. ‘The work wasn’t much to my liking. But I stuck to it, for it was a job—| and a job was my main concern in life then, Vor my labor T got $1a day, But one day Matt Ryan, the big bess, came by, looked at the small, under- sized boy at the table, and wanted to know what he was doing the “Pa doing all right,” 1 told him. But he thought I could do better elsewhere; so he gave me a commis- sion to go out on the street and buy the hogs from the farme they came into town. I knew most of them, after my experience as book agent, and I had little difficulty get- ting 50 to 75 hogs a day. But business conditions became bad. It was the winter of 1873—the year of the great panic, and intense frost out in Ka 3 ple burned corn instead of coal, it was so much cheaper. | General Depression To add to the general depression came the Russian epizootic influenza, which attacked all horses, and kill ed many. Oxen were used to pull] the street cars. ‘Then came the great slaughter of buffalo, which helped bring on their extingtions Ryan, with his usual en- terprise,*arranged for the purchase of 2000. buffalo hams. Thesetwere expensive, and my em- ployers wanted to realize everything, they possibly could, So they gave me a new job. They smade me sell the spare parts and scrips, I stood behind a counter, in part) of theirestablishment, and became a} retail butcher—specializing in spare ribs of buffalo and pork tenderloin! Business was good. But it was not} the business I liked, for it was not to survey the sides of hams that I had left home. So I decided to jack myself oui of it; or else 1 might be shunted into} a butcher's rut for the rest of my life. - | sea during the Worms that Dance on Waves Are Puzzle to Science Millions of tiny worms that “dance” in the moonlight on the surface of the egg-hatching season, and transform the waves into the ap- pearance of vermicelli soup, have been observed off Samoa, the Antilles, and the coast of France. They appear at the first and last quarters of the moon and in the months of May, September, October, and November only. They are so small that it is estimated that more than 1,000,000 occupy the space within the radius of a small latitern, eee Police Learn Eyelid Talking to Balk the Criminal Detectives in Canada are being taught a cede by means of which they can communicate with one another by dropping, raising or other movements of the and also how to “talk” | secretly by means of finger touches, by twisting of a cigar, fingering of a mus- tache and twiddling fingers behind the back. This is being done so that they jcan transfer their thoughts when in jie presence of criminals or prisoners. It is declared that communication with | the eyelids can be as tapid as the ordi- nary man typewrites, eee Finally I found a way out. (in his next article Doheny will tell on | how he. again went westward.) (Hawaii is reported ‘to have more than twice as many motor gars and rick# as there'are in the whole of CAS SEEN BY POPULAR CMECHANICS cMAGAZINB What the World Is Doing Alarm Clock Feeds Poultry and Turns on Lights Poultry can be supplied, with grain automatically at desired time from a feeder operated by an-alarm clock. The apparatus scatters the ma- terial in proper amounts over a 20- foot space, insuring the fowls sufficient exercise in gi tachment, electr hering it. A switch at- can also be made to turn ights on and off without in- ing withthe feeding mechanism. he device can be hung to the ceiling of a coop or placed over a yard, and is designed to do away with much of the care required from attendants. It is claimed that it can be filled and set for work in a few minutes. * * & Wire Hook to Thread Needte Saves Time, Aids Eyes To save time in threading a needle, a’device has been patented in Europe recently that perfgrins the operation quickly, even in poor light. A slight pressure of the fingers pushes a hooked wire through the eye of a needle that has first been placed on top of # small spring. Then the strand is put on the hook, which can be done by an un- steady hand, and as the grip is released the wire passes out of the needle eye, carrying the thread with it shane the hole, e+ Removing Water from Mortar When mixing concrete it oftenoc- curs that too much water is added, making the mixture too thin to work properly, Of course, more saud cement can be added, but this is not always desirable, as it increases the quantity of concrete, and this may not be necessary. A good method o' removing the exeess of water is to! place a few common bricks in the mixture for a few minutes, and it. will be found that the bricks absorb so much of the water that the mixture, soon becomes workable. A common brick, when thoroughly dry, will ab- sorb about a pint of water, ‘8 Cure for Grabbing Cluteh on Light Cars ‘To overcome the grabbing tendency of a clutch ona light car, a driver in- stalled an additional pedal plate, at- tached to the regular pedal by means of four bolts and coil springs, the bolfs fitting loosely in,holes drilled for them and the springs keeping the plates separated. The bolts used sre % in. in diameter and 2% in. long, They are slipped through holes drilled. in the lower plate agd reamed out that the bolts can slip in and out easily when the pedal is un- eran der pressure. The auxiliary plate, being the same shape and : size as the regular plate, is drilled ahd tapped to receive the screw ends of the bolts. Before assembling, 2-in. open coil springs, made of No. 10 by wire, are placed over the bolts, witch are then screwed into the thread : holes in the auxiliary plate until project just a trifle; the ends are then hammered over to keep the bolt, from unscrewing. Pressure applied on the pedal causes the clutch to take hold gradually, and all grabbing is elimi- nated. » eee ee of; the: silk used: in the e8 is.said to be artil[ciah v mieten sie opsmcaioros Minut TF ey ig: In the few minutes fequired to run your eye ovcr these advertising columns, you may learn of something that will serve your convenience for years. Rather valuable few minutes! “ You aren’t spending time when you are reading ad- yertisements. “You aresaving both time and. money. Each day advertisers help you to compare values and prices.. They tell you where you can secure Ane best and most serviceable at lowest cost. Advertised. goods; are more dependable than goods unadvertised. They must be exactly as claimed. They can't, afford-to:be otherwise. ; . Make a daily habit of reading the advertisements. It T ee | rt — + 6

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