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PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE : GRAIN DEALERS' ARE AGAINST MERGER DEAL Country Elevator Association | Would Withhold Indorse- | ment at Present | Da er | Des Moines, July 29.-The N al Farmers rain Dealers tion in which 5,000 grain e refused to indorse the ganized in Marketing Chicago. Th comp association declared it would continue to withhold its in-| dorsement until the grain mergers | organization plans were modified to| provide that all stock must be held | by farmers elevator companies and | not by individuals | The resolution adopted at the | close of an all-day session to which | none but association members | a tew others were admitted w “We do not favor any terminal marketing proposition of any sort unless all stock in it is held and owned by farmers elevators compan ies and not by individuals nor do we favor the entering of any farm-| ers co-operative company into any terminal marketing venture | ators When A most unusual picture of three premiers of Three Premiers Get Together : , me rope taken at their first meeting. Left to right they until a sufficient number of other/are Premiers Theunis of Belgium, Herriot of France and MacDonald of England. This photograph was such companies have agreed to affil-|taken as the Huropean nations came to ) discuss the Dawes report. It is probably the most: im- iate with the venture to insure con-| portant diplomatic conte ce since the I Treat trol by the co-operative elevator | Wn companies; or until sufficient cap hee eee ‘ ital Was’ been subscribed ‘by such| fey heard, the sound) of an! explo companies to properly finance the|ien during the night but all: ignor venture. ed it, believing the noise to have Simultaneously the organization! heen caused by the. contracting of indorsed the plans and purposes of : i j $f numerous barrels piled in the yard the National Farmers Elevator Com-|""" ! A mission comppny now being yiro-| An envelope containing $4.85 in moted by the Farmers Elevator com-| silver was overlooked by the érack panies of Illinois and Iowa and|men and was found Tying on the commended it to all farmers eleva tor organizations tributary to the Chicago market. | Failure to recognize officially the | Chicago merger plan was predicted, according to John Gustafson, president of the association, upon | the contention that “Chicago grain/ m e telling the farmer what to, PAROLE YOUTHS. ~~ ATRED WING Trio Who Confessed Killing William Pellatt Released ‘ ihe | Red Wing, Minn, July 20—Jack| Lasley, 14 year old Minneapolis youth, who with his brother, Norris, and Harold Olson, {5 tyears old,! were sentenced to r@form schools for the murder of William Pellatt, Feb 9, 1923, was paroled from the Red Wing Training School on June 30,) last, it was learned last night. | ‘The three boys killed Pellatt when | ke interrupted them as they were} robbing his radio shop early on the night of Feb. Norris Lasley , 17 years old, and Harold Olson, companion of the Lasleys, all of whom were hig! schoo! heys, were sentenced to St. Cloud Reformatory for a term of from 7 to 30 years after’ pleading | floor by the md ers this morngnis Age of Alligators The Department of Agriculture | Bays that the age of an alligator can only be determined by ene who has had experience with these rep: tiles, Alligators grow very slowly, | and it is estimated that at fitteent years of age they are only two feet long; therefore, ya 12-footer may reasonably be presumed to he sev- enty-five years of The rate of growth v: with animals. in their wild state and those kept in captivity, and it is also) governed by the amount as well as the type of food givet More of ’Em “Ma, can't 1 have dumpling?” si “No, dear, : each of us; the cook counted noses.” i “Oh, dear! To wish she had count- ed ears,” said Etta.—Baltimore Sun. Almost Lost It “T was advised if 1 wished to be lucky,” remarked the “close” “to throw a penny over the br the first time the ning water. I did it, but the string hearly got entangled when 1 was pulling it up again.” Cheap at the Price “Bobby, if you're a good boy this afternoon while I'm guilty to third degree murder | (onpany TF charges. CAeeT GK Jack served 15 months at the | youre lw training school and was eligible to parole because of his good behavior, authorities at the reform school said tonight. The youth was released by the state board of control, under whose care he will be until he is given his “full release.” CARRINGTON | SAFE CRACKED Police and County Officials Scouring Country Carrington, N. D., July 29.—Police and county officials are scouring the vicinity for trace of cracksmen who blew open the safe of the Stan- | dard Oil company and escaped with | more than $100 in currency, at 2 a. m. yesterday. The men blew open the outer door with nitro-glycerine and pried open the inner door and deposit boxes containing the cash. This robbery makes the second early morning at- tempt at the local station recently, the safe having’ been chiseled open on the morning of May 18. Several people in the neighbor- hood of the oil station reported that A TEST OF YEARS Is the Experience of This Bismarck Resident Are you miserable with an aching back? Feel tired, nervous and run down? Do you have daily headaches, dizzy spells and annoying urinary disorders? Then why not take the advice of a Bismarck resident who suffered as you do and found last- ing relief by using Doan’s Pills—a stimulent diuretic to-the kidneys? Here is a Bismarck case that the years haven't ¢hanged.” Why not _profit by it? Mrs. H. Steinmetz, 113 Second St. says: “I used a couple of boxes of Doan’s Pills, from the Lenhart Drug Co.,.and they cured me of a severe dull aching through the small of my back. I had been annoyed for some time with a lameness and sore- ness through my loins and a tired and languid feeling and got no re- fief’ until I used Dosn’s Pills. 1 baven’t had backache snd my kid- neys have been healthy since.” NINE YEARS LATER, Mrs. Stein- metz said: “The cure Doan’s Pills ade for me is permanent.” Boston Evening Transcript. ain crossed run: | MALLING CHIMNEY KILLS FOUR | | | Death dropped out of the sky in the form of this huge-chimney from the oof of the Charlevoix Building, Detroit. Four persons were killed and ack crushedé'two automobiles | three were injured when the top of the | | in the stre 11 - YEAR - OLD FARMERETTE RUNS 25 - ACRE FARM DOING ALL THE hay-wagon and does the mitking. CHORES — AND MAKES IT PAY! i ? re GLB Vivian Brown, 11-year-old school girl of Rye Beach, N. H., has very little time for play this summer, She is managing a 25-acre farm and doing much 6f the farm work. As the pictures show, she drives the In’ fact, ale milk s six cows a‘day, no small task in itself. She also = We at aM dealers. Foster-Milburn }heips with the harvesting and does other chores. 8 ‘he‘is Rh the farm pay. .In winter she goes'to Go., ‘Mfrs, Buffalo, N. ¥. +; Adv. school at Portsmouth and will be in the eighth grade gext year’, Do Away With Mosquito and Malaria Vanishes | It 4g estimated that the deaths annually from malaria number | some two millions, and this figure | may probably be multiplied by two , | or three hundred if we would arrive at the totaf’ number of people in | the world affected by the com: | pluint. Malaria is mainly a disease of | the tropics, and is caused by a mi- nute parasite in the blood. The parasite in one malaria patient may number anything from one hundred to a thousand millions, In many cases there are more para- sites than there are peuple on the earth, and far ages it was believed that marshes and malaria were in some way connected. | Sir Ronald Ross discovered that: | it was not the marsh, but the mos- quito which bred in the marsh which was the originator of the disease, and he declares that the parasite of malaria is, to the mosquito which carries It, as a dime would be to a hippopotamus! When a disease-carrying mosquito | bites, it injects a saliva in which are the malaria parasites. These | latory system and so throughout; The cure for malaria is qujnine, but the prevention of malaria is the destruction of the mosquito in which it breeds. Pigs Make Faithful Guardians of Sheep In this country one seldom says anything kind about pigs. , Yet they are highly esteemed in other parts of the world, says London Answers. In the Apennines they are used to guard sheep. One man in each village acts as shepherd to the com- munity, and is allowed a sheep pig! to assist him when the animals are, out at pasture. The man’s task ts an easy ‘one—he' may amuse: him- | self by playing the flute or he may even sleep for a few hours while the pig faithfully guards the flock. In the ,evening the same _ trust-* ; Worthy guardian sedulousty singles out the sheep belonging to. this house or that, and never makes a mistake, « Where truffles grow pigs are used to find and root them up. If care-| fully trained a pig will keep for his master all the truffles he up- roots. In Ireland, of course, the pig's merits have -always been recog- nized. There he is the “gintleman’ that pays the rint.” Schools in Early Days The first schools were started In the early’ history of mankind. Schools were first held out of doors and the teaching was. cohducted orally, similar to.the Hindu Brah- man schools, Among the’ Hebrews the laws were expounded by oral teaching from. the porches of the temples. ‘The anfount. of. instruc- tion greatly increased from the mere oral teaching of the law until it involved letters and arithmetic. Among the’ Spartans the education was almost entirely along new lines. Elementary scliools became com- mon after the Christian eta and in'64 A. D. they were made obliga- tory. ‘In Athens neurly all of the schools were _ priv: ing, arithmetic, geography and drawing. In early Rome. the schools taught reading and writ- ing and sometimes arithmetic. Famous Old Church This year sees the three hundred and sixty-fourth anniversary of the demolition of the magnificent Chureh of St. John at Perth, the restoration of which is now contem- plated. This is without doubt one of the most interesting churches in Scot- land, says the Weekly Edinburgh Scotsman. Tradition ascribes its foundation to the Picts, but, who- ever founded it, it is one of the earliest stone churches built in the country; and, in the Twelfth and Thirteenth centuries, as evidenced both by ancient documents and by the surviving remnants of the edi- fice of that time, it was magnifi- cent and extensive. The monk of Dunfermline, to’ whom it was granted, allowed it to fall into dis- repair—a state of affairs which Robert the Bruce set about rem- edying, but the restoratioa was stayed by his death. ’ Meaning of “Dickens” “Dickens” is an -tnterjectional expression signifying astonishment, impatience and Irritation. It is usually used with words of interro- gation such as what, where, how and why. The name has nething' to do with Charles Dickens. It was used by Shakespeare over two centuries before Dickens was born. In “Merry Wives of Windsor” Mrs, | Page says: “I cannot tell what the dickens his name is my husband! had him of.” “Dickens” is be-! Heved to be a euphemisin of deuce or devil, which have the same ini-’ tial letter.—Pathfinder Magazine. Say “Bayer’’- Insist! For Pain’ Headache Neuralgia’ Rheumatism Lumbago. Colds > Accent only .a SO sae package whichcontains proven directions Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also of 24 and 100—Druggiste Aspirin {s the: trade mark of Bayer Mana. facture of Mowesceticacidester of Balicyliecié ee are carried into the human circu- |: the body. i TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1924 the country. “Mail Pouch” has. for- gotten his real name.'g The queer title was pinned on him years ago when he swapped pieces of carving for free rides on mail: trains. ers’ elevators in the grain-growing states. DOESN’T KNOW HIS NAME Gave the Game Away | Among the side shows there wi a collection of “freaks”—arml wonders, living skeletons, fat wo en and so forth, cording to a story told by Charles B. Cochran. About the best draw of the lot was the bearded lady. One day the reg- ular attendant who collected the admission money was temporarily absent, his place being taken by i a little girl. A gentleman who had I been deeply interested in this par- ticular freak of nature remarked casually to the child as he was passing out:. “I suppose, my dear. that the lady inside is your mother?* | “Oh, no, sir!” the little girl re- plied, momentarily taken off her | guard by the unexpected query. “She's my dad!” EmpireExhibitionrans The weather is usually in. And eieny are going abroad t! avons) iter the early summer rus! Book your passage now st the you prefer to; ey For farther wom Woptreal end Cuebec te tcaroute-toslocal H. M. TAIT, 611. Minneapolin, Mi Canadian Pacific (tT SANS THE WORLO Shicago is the largest consumer ‘of imported peanuts in this coun- i ee $ jtry. There are more than 5000 farm- “Mail Pouch” is the name he goes by and he hails jfrom just any college town. His business is carv- ing watch charms, pipes and other things out of Colorado shale. He sells his wares to college students and. has visited every college in A STRONG BANK WILLING TO SERVE CHECK UP ON THE STOCK SALESMAN The “blue sky” stock salesman’s business is to sell stock—not to help you find the best possible place to invest your money. The American people are still losing millions of dollars a month by accepting without question the statements of strangers who feed elements requires, promise huge returns on their money. vere! pal eld | If an investment is really good, it will stand cateppnatialieesiye close investigation. Before you hand over alge cals your money, ask us to get the reg! facts about the investment for you! K NO. DAKOTA BISMARCK, P. C. Remington, President. 3 J. A. Geaham, Vice President and Cashier. QO. M. Schmierer, Assistant Cashier. }} tng Raven Try B fer break || “fast tomorrow, Easy wisdom! a donegnenienn \ Here’s a simple rule for learning about everything moderng All you need do is turn a few illustrated pages and run your eye over entertaining reading. You glean all the facts you must cope with daily. How to dress correctly, furnish your home, prepare and serve food, maintain health ,recognize the best in musie, literature, art; enjoy ingenuities that make life easy and pleasant. Intimate news in advertisements touch »\ every modern phase. Their friendly chats interest, assist.- As sharer in modern com- forts, you can’t afford to miss them. Since you buy‘anyway, why not buy the best? posed You'll find advertisements a generoys : help. They are authorities about everything that touches your daily life. : \ 1 YOU, CAN DEPEND ON ADVERTISED ‘ GOODS—A SOUND REASON FOR READING ADVERTISEMENTS :