The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 3, 1924, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE TWO MANY VOTING _| IN ELECTION | » than 600 votes had been cast | » city school election by three ‘clock this afternoon. ote apparently the proposal ¢ 4 the city elec 1 board, for the The large | was oceasioned by | a number of women | 1 of a mother to | first time.| re he vo name: e of George atrice Mann, 1 eat 4 op. in CELEBRATES HIS BIRTHDAY | , dune 3. King ted his 59th 1 multitude Tom officials and other printed the cu tatulatory articles. Spanish Start Anti- | Kissing League | Londe ty cele felicitation The new wiving 4 of aper fomary con Kissing is going | Spaniard igainst the promiscu children, formed | decided to ex- | | ‘| | ki its eff uso, ha ind tos the kis: yomen they when weet or take leave of each other, HnOL the movement sent that much hygienic good has cen done by the restriction of the | seulation of children, and they ex wers the opinion that women gen rally will welcome a similar | measure, for, as they ar ost instances kissing nean triendship More Soft Wood Trees Are Now Being Planted The people of the United States consume twice as much seftwood | dumber as they du hardwood lum | ber, according to the New York | state college of forestry at Sy use university. The softwood: cut off more rapidly because better adaptability to man’s heeds and their lighter weight. The pines, hemlocks and spr float easily and this fe transportation to the mills. are hauled by bobsle flume or chute and floated to the beeches and birel The leaders of They sor sent by strewn or lake mills. Maples, s will very often sink, which sitates artificial Mheuns of tr ition such as | motortrucks, and railroads, | or exper fting. Even where such costly transport is required | for softwoods the prenter value of the product has made lumbering profitable. But with hardwood this ing is too expensive ex- are es- the demand is and good With a near market. The dwindling supply f softwood timber is making it more profitable to plant evergreen trees than ever before, says the college. Today Many hardwood forests and farm Woodlots are being converted to the more valuable softwoods, It often | pays lots to girdle un mere hardwood trees so the undergrowth of softwoods that have been artificially planted or naturally reseeded will not be re- tarded by the shade of their older hardwoods. By cutting the bark around the hardwood trees, thelr foliage will disappear and the trees will die, thus allowing enough light to fall upon the young softwoods to Rive’ them their natural rate of | growth. In the average forest such elimin: of hardwoods allows | the coniferous or softwood species | to take on additional volume of about one-fourth cord annually for twenty-five to thirty years, depend- ing upon their ag This increase in growth will offset the expense of girdling and keep the forest on f profitable basis. ' George M. eredith Ordered | All Manuscripts Burned George Meredith placed no value whatsoever on the manuscripts of | his novels. Once when he said so to Miss Nichol she answered teas- ingly that it was mock modesty on his part to say such a thing. 'T® this Meredith merely gave her an instruction: to make a bonfire of manuscripts at the end of the garden! “And he was set on it, too,” she told us. “But,” e pleaded, “can't I have some of them as keepsakes?” “Yes,” he “take She selected several of the pre- cious documents—single sheets on which he had written out his short poems. Miss Nichol led Mr. Brooks. and me down into the vegetable garden, and there, a black little heap of ashes, lay all that remained of manuscripts worth who knows How much!—From “Forty Years in My Bookshop,” by Walter 8. Spen- cer, 5 China has a mountain of alum 1900:feet high. Say: ‘‘Bayer’’- Insist! ForPain Headache « Neuralgia Rheumatism Lumbago Va Accept only a 2 Bayer package i THE BISMARCK TItMIBUNB TUESDAY, JUNE 38, 1924 ~ ° e e ° I Too Late To Classify ted. Suitable for two, Phone READ TRIBUNE WANT ADS. acation Fertls re Vanishing ; : es Eee f | FOR SALE Bs. {FIVE MA UNGALOW, | ;, Pin Sowinac nae 35 As Pleasure Seekers Observe [Five ROgM MODERN AUNGALOM:| poR SALE Sewing aching, wrt IS ORDERED Hi i; h S fe t P. ° |) $80 per month including 7% int.) jonseMori furniture. Phone 991R. A ealth and Safety Precautions |... won Fai wovers ye ; r Bungalow. Price $3,360.00. $1.000 | ,. e Tae Washington, June 3.—A favorable | _ July, August and one tHpolgeeee La casi CRY anal MONERIV CRAY RONE,| FOR BENT nen ove ul bung- | yeport was ordered tday bythe Sen- Beptember are the SRE ORCA Teele. O90 anterent alow and bath, Extra bed room| ate committee on audit and control months when mo: : Si pane dake ea “W lof a resolution authorizing investi- scople — pla inal diseases. Good | . Phone 188, (pale i Zing, Fee hate eee food, fresh air and [ANDREW MILLER — RIVERVIEW faetiins Phone (138) Investor | gating by a special committee of the | tions, and they are good water are| Home. Price $6,500.00, Brick con-| ~ bocce Ue el operations of the federal farm loan | not only the most three prime re- | <truction, hot water heat, south} ,op SALE Gas range. Very reason- } board. healthful months quisites of any va- front, garage, able 6-3-tf. ————____—_ | th tHe year, but cation, Fresh air | a ree . , oo RELIEF FOR | tHey2 ate: | tHe is usually taken for | A. S. BOLSTER RESIDENCE, Price! oR RENT Front room and gard | months which for granted. but one { $6,000. Best location in city, im-| 411 gth St. 6-3-1W GERMANS, PLAN | Velen Nae cannot be too care- | mediate possession, garage. al Te t | ive shown the fut in assuring | = FOR RE irable office rooms | Washington, June 3.—Two resolu- | greatest. decline in himself that the | FIVE ROOM MODERN BU? over anty Bank. In-| tions. proposing appropriations — by | mortality. Every- resort selected has , Price $4,700.00. $700 quire at Bank. : 6-2-3t | the Ameri goverment for German | one wants to die a dependably pure | ance monthly payments. close in. | ge Sane svat relief were received today by the happy iste diay ae ey Ee Sie ROG ONGAnOW.. nae WANTED—Practical nurse. Refer-| Senate foreign relations committee, | wants to die while he SIX N b LOW, BAS ences re d. Call at 116 P | enjoying a vac supply is every- Front, garage. Price $5,800.00, $800 | Rae pe eat f tion ortunately thing that it ought | sh, $50 per month including 7% | AONE Wes to be. Health de- | jjtere | FOR RENT | as perilor partments 7) 7 Nave —— | mediate possession. Hedden = es, b. A ‘ used tot done good work in | pp, SCHIPFER BEAUTIFUL RESI-| Estate Agency. . | If it’s Variety in shirts the exercise of a improving the | (once. Price $12,600.00. A neat palpi ies | combined with exclusive- itin EDRRTHOUEHE standards of milk} j\,,c at a real barpai 4 | a: ithote K } home at a real bargain price. | i ness of style and correct- and prudence the dealers’ and it | - | RIDER FAILS | 8 lurking dang- ought to be an | WEDDEN REAL ESTATE AGENCY | ° fs ness of price that you are ers can usually be Sls eee fee Webb Block Saal a Phone 0 ON POSTAL BILL looking for, there’s a avoided. : hae Bat see Hedden for City Service | Thess 2 place where you can ob- Summer drown- re ey | 2 DHA GURSSEAs NET Ea ings are not as rive; on the Va") WANTED to buy boys bicycle in| Washington, June 3.—An _unsue- am these. Namely—2 yood condition. Phone 101 | cessful attempt was made today by -1t| Democratic leaders to instruct. con- KLEIN ln . eh Hise wi ee bel eu ry bal wo TOGGERY OR Large, nicely furnish- | accept the Bora ndment design- tt nae | wal with board in modern| ed to give publicity to campaign cleaning Dyeing. aumerous as formerly, in spite of |paying claims at the rate of nine, the fact that more persons are ex-|deaths by drowning daily. Last posed to risk. The increased|July the average was almost two} tmowledge of swimming, the im- | les ntal drowning is still | proved methods of rescue work and ation peril, but most | 1 more general understanding of }deaths from this cause are pre-| tesuscitation method: probably ntable ones and the exercise of iccounts for the decline. Back+/extreme care on the part of both! hn 1914, the mortality tables of the swimmers and non-swimmers can- Metropolitan Life Insurance Com-| not be too strongly urged. | pany show that ten out of every) The cement of better san-| 100,000 of {ts industrial polic ury regulations at summer re- | holders met death by drowning. | sorts, particularly as they relate to| Last year it ran less than seven. the water supply and to the dis-| {n July, 1921, the company was) posal of wastes, has tended to r and Telegraph Company, From FARGO MAN IS memorial fund to which Mrs. Vail Was a generous contributor awards GIVEN MED AI, arc made each y to telephone M cmployees who have rendered heroic ze and noteworthy public service. Mr. Hannah was in Jamestown on business and had just crossed a bridge over the James river when he heard the child's scream, followed Dashing back to small into the river and n. He y wad- deep, Awarded Vail Medal Courage in Rescue For by 2 heavy splash. the bridge, he found that a boy had fallen being swept down stres off his overcoat, quick ed into the stream, shoulde: Fargo, June 3. superintendent of for the Com- plant orthwestern Bell Telephone ny in the North Dakota Division, | lunged Tor the boy just as he was has been awarded a bronze medal] being carried by, caught him by the for his initiati id courage in| hair and towea him to the shore, rescuing a small be in the James rive: November 14, 1923. The Vail Medal Plan, under which | the award was made, is a memoriol | to the late Theodore il, pioneer from drowning | whe at Jamestown on | of water, in a ha him home. Twenty-seven years ago June 1, Mr. Hannah started his work for the After wrapping the boy coat, Mr. Hannah brought [climbs to the top of the tube. the boy’s lungs were cleared ; cation diet. It is largely because some people are willing to take & chance in summer and drink water from polluted sources, or! milk from dairies where cleanliness is not rigidly maintained, that vaca- tion time is usually followed by a sad aftermath of typhoid ‘fever cases in the early fall months. Sunstroke and heat prostrations are summer perils rather than va- cation dangers. Vacationists can usually play safe by playing a little less strenuously when the mercury Omaha. There he made a steady ad- vancement, servir lineman, local wire chief, district wire chief, “dis- trict plant superintendent, and final- ly became division superintendent of plant in July, 1913. In 1920, he came to Fargo in his present position. Six other bronze medals were awarded by the Theodore N,_ Vail Committee of Award of the North- western Bell Telephone Company { which met at Omaha, Nebr., recently. —— MONK ADOPTS HOGS Repu Kas., June 3—Jock, a diminutive monkey, has been a regu- lar inhabitant of a pigsty on the farm ‘of W. H. McClure, near here, ‘for three years. In that time numerous families of pigs have grown to hog- nood under Jock’s guiding care and have become expert “saddle hogs,” gwith the monkey as chief jockey, Cook by Electricity. president of the American Telephone Northwestern Bell Campany at What the World As Seen by Popular Mechanics Magazine Golf Charts Teach Strokes and Standing Positions To check the game of experienced rolfers or to teach beginners, a set of six charts, printed with directions ferred to. He says that what are usually spoken of as radio waves are undoubtedly particles smaller than an electron that are sent flying by an lectric current. These particles, it is umed, bump into each other, thu: transmitting energy which is picked up as sound in the receiver? When a stream of radiant energy or particles strikes the antenna, it sets up a very weak current, which is transformed into sound or air waves in the*receiv- ing set. The development of this theory, says Mr, Pfanstiehl, has been very id and startling, and further in- vestigation of the nature of these par- ticles may explain the mechanism of direct communication and telepathy between minds. Also, through the new principle, wireless transmission of vision may become an accomplished fact, -—* * Serviceable Dandelion Hook Occasionally the breaking off of a lobe of a hoe renders it unfit for fur- ther use and it is then usually thrown away. However, a serviceable tool for the purpose of removing dan- delions can easily be made from it. The shank of the broken hoe is straightened in line with the handle, and the blade is cut and ind illustrations showing correct standing positions, grips and strokes, ind other fine points, has been de- vised. With them, one may read a lesson in golf technique and follow it at the same time. Printed on heavy paper, the charts are to be placed on the floor. Standing over them with club in hand, the player is able to get the proper grip and’ position and execute the stroke in correct form. The diagrams afford a constant check and means of comparison for accuracy Tn the opinion of Carl Pfanstiehl, a Chicago radio engineer, the wave theory of radio will soon be exploded contains proven directions “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets ‘les of 24 and 100—Druggiste dinar heneanell| completely, and the radiant-energy theory take its place in explaining radio phenomena. Mr. Pfanstiehl is ; of the opinion that there is no such thing as “ether” as commonly re- oe & in German chemical factories. in every detail: filed to the| Can the Skin See, Is Query A ak shape shown, a] ‘That human skin has powers of A pea notch| vision which to & great extent” have 6; being cut in the end an to 8) been lost through years of neglect, i: New Tie Radio Is | sharp eutting edge. One of the points| the theory of a French scientist. A is cut to form a pulling hook, the| series of experiments conducted by throat of which is, of course, dull. A him are said’to support this belief tool of this kind is very handy, as it) The sensitivity of the skin and utider- can be used to cut the dandelions dt} lying tissue with its intricate net of their stems or pull them out entirely.|nerves is well known, but no on¢ Doing It is Cheaper. Portable Garret Step In bungalows where limited space does not pérmit built-in garret steps, a “folding” stepladder of the kind shown'in the drawing has been found very convenient. It is made of 1 by 5- in. lumber, the risers being set be- tween the sides at such an angle that they are perfectly horizontal when the ladder is pulled away from the wall. top of the ladder are ysed to hold it on the two vertical guide rods, which are permanently attached to the wall; this arrangement allows the ladder to be raised and lowered to the positions indicated. A.couple of casters’ pro- vided on the feet of the ladder faciti- tate the work of pulling it out‘from | the wall and pushing it back again. a * & ° \ heretofore has supposed them to bt @Shoes of aluminum with wooden| capable of picking up light, waves ir soles are now being used by workmen | a manner comparable with the proces of seeing. Large ¢loset, well ventila- contribut ions, To The Ladies We have gone to a great expense to secure the MR. ARTHUR A. WINTERS The World - Famous Food Expert and the Highest Paid Baker Expert in the World FOR 2 DAYS THIS WEEK Of Bismarck | services of We have gone to this expense in order that our own experts may be bene- fited by his scientific knowledge and enable us to give our patrons even bet- ter and more delicious pastries than we have produced in the past. CAKES BAKED FROM MR. WINTERS’ RECIPES, MANY OF WHICH HAVE COST HIM $1,000 TO PERFECT ~ —WILL BE—— on Exhibition and Sale in Our Bakery We have the exclusive right to the use of Mr. Winters’ recipes and cakes baked from them will be sold exclusively by us. i We invite you to visit our bakery and inspect and try some of these deli- cious cakes, many of which are entirely new and superior in quality, yet are sold at reasonable prices. Some of His Specials on Sale PRINCE OF WALES LAYERS MONTE CARLO LAYERS WHITE ANGEL CREAM FOOD This Week will be ‘DEVIL’S FOOD CREAM LAYERS GOLDEN ANGEL CREAM FOOD WONDER COFFEE CAKES MOCHA CREAM LAYER It always has been and always will _ be the aim of the Barker Bakery to give its patrons the very best ob- tainable. Mr. Winters’ fame is international in his profession, giving lessohs to teachers and professors in the best schools of America and Europe. He baked for the Prince of Wales dur- ing his visit to Canada. Mr. Win- tefs was a “dollar a year man” dur- ing the war, working out sugarless formulas for the conservation of food, and he has spent a fortune in perfecting his 16,000 recipes. We have been fortunate in securing the exclusive right to produce Mr. Win- ters’ delicious bakery creations, formulas for which have been worked out by our bakers under his direction: Demonstration for the Public Thursday Thursday, from 8 to 4 P. M., a special demonstration will be held at our Bakery. Mr. Winters will demonstrate for the ladies of Bismarek. AT OUR BAKERY, 370 4 P.M. THURSDAY, JUNE 5. Barker Baking & Candy Co.

Other pages from this issue: