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ommo sash wean eenetenrat sreaneae + hegta by one cooperative organization, —— Provincial “pools. ~ ther the merger will be effect= ed in time to market this year's crop | VAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUND BOOK DEVOTED | TO NO. DAKOTA: Huldgh Winsted Moved | Charm of Prairies Of her genuine “love and admir- ation for the finest and best things in the land of the prairies,” as she speaks of it in connection with the dedication, Miss Huldah L. Win- sted’s second book of North D: ta verse, “America Makes Men,” sufficient evidence. a * 1 Sincerity and a happy gift of ap- preciating the little things as well as the outstanding ones, is express- ed in every poem in the volume. “America Makes men,” the title poem, thoroughly handling a big theme in marching rythm, is not so charming as “Pasque Flowers,” de- licate as its subject in cclor and | fancy. Although chiefly devoted to North Dakota, the book contains a poem or two on other themes, and one of these is perhaps the bestgbit of artistry in the book, portraying in eight bold lines a series of sharp- ly outlined pictures, “The De: % It has somewhat the impr ie treatment, which appears suit- able to what it attempts to por- nter scene in North Dakota,” s rather the same treatment, and is a successful characteriza- tion. Among the poems less serious “Nothing New Under the Sun” is a great deal more clever than its | title, and “‘Please Explain,” con- tains a little good natured sarcasm one hears expressed quite often. | “Sing of North Dakota,” modeled on the w. k. nursery rhyme, swings one right along in its jolly wake. “To Our Unknown Soldier,” and “The True American,” though sin-j} cere are full of platitudes, and are | unconvincing. “Spend and be | Spent,” and “Immigrants All,” are more up to the writers standard. ‘The. book is one of genera] inter- est to all North Dakota people. LABOR BODY FOR COOLIDGE Several Indorsements Re- ceived, Says Slemp Washington, Aug. 12.—The politi: atmosphere about the White Hous was brightened further by receipt of reports that labor organizations were joining in the Republican movement. Indorsement of the candidacy of | President Coolidge was received from the International _Longshoremen’s jation with headquarters in New na letter from James F. Ryan, vicepresident. not made public. Other similar writ- ten indorsements have been received from railroad organizations through-| out the country, particularly in the west, C. Bascom Slemp, secretary to} the president, said, since the execu- tive committee of the American Fed- eration of Labor had indorsed Sena- tor LaFollette, of Wisconsin, indepen- dent candidate. DOUBLE SLAYING INVESTIGATED Great Neck, L. L, Aug. 12.— Nassau county police, investigat- ing a double killing that occurred last. night in an automible near here, said that a letter found in the pockets of a man, one of the vic- tims, indicated he had killed his woman companion and then com- mitted suicide. ‘he man was Frank Fayard, a New. York chauffeur. He is alleg- ed to have shot Mrs. Clark Wood of Eon. Norfolk, Va., when she in- i that he marry "her after she ay ced her husband, accord- Hiei letter found by the cor- cee MINING MEN TO OPPOSE MELTING OF GOLD COINS Sacramento, Caly Aug. 12.—One of the major problems to come be- fore: the: 27th annual convention of thé-American Mining Congress, when it meets here Sept. 29 to Oct. 4, is| thé-huge loss the country is said to suffer every year through the de- struction: of gold coins, At’ present no law prohibits the melting down of gold coins and the usé-of such metal in the manufac- ture of jewelry and in the arts. Proponents ofa ban on such melt- ing’ ‘contend that five, ten and 20 dollar gold pieces, minted at the ex-| pi. pense of thé taxpayers, are thus re- moved from circulation afd from the.media of exchange, to be turned into” luxuries. ‘ Their opposition is taaed principally on the fact that gold’ has a fixed price, set by the’ government, unaffected by supply and¢demand, unlike other commodi- ties. ‘Aa anti dseicantipaday tor gold coins will be agitated at the -con- vention and the attitude of the en- tige “mining indystry will be sound- ed ont. the sentiment is favor- able? steps will be taken to have such a bill: presented in congress. Wh Wheat Growers ‘o Market - Cooperatively * aginnipeg) Man, dg. 12-—A wheat poet: metger which contemplates the marketing. of the ‘entire’ wheat crop af+Manitobs,‘Savkatehewan and Al- jing planned: The greater part ‘wheat €rdp of these” provinces peg ‘the pabt, been preeted by The-text was) } Fist Vessel ‘of Its Kind The U. Patoka, for dirigibles. ‘The with shop facilities to serve the gi maval ai A year ago, while on his “dirt farmer” one day at Hui school children, Elizabeth tive during his visit, the spot. ~e A is uncertain, but those behind the moveme: clare they will begin who! marketing operations at | 5 r. “Canada hes been a pioneer in ad- vaneing the inter by the adoption of i keting system,” statement declared. “The cooperative move- ment in the nation is more than 20 years old. P 'y product of Canadian farms is now marketed cooperatively coope prices at keting.” SALESMAN IS NEAR DEATH FROM CANDY Collapses in 1 Minot After Eat- ing Candy Sent Him Through Mail a minimum cost of mar- Minot, Aug. John A. Soaner, Minneapolis salesman for a shirt and collar company who last eve- ning was near death from poisoning which followed the eating ar nice ed candy mailed from Minneapolis was released from a local hospital | today. Mr. Soaner said he had no sus- picion regarding the perpetrator of the plot, and said that no one but and his employer knew y. The strychnine poison in the candy nearly caused his death. Mr. Soaner received the candy yesterday afternoon wrapped in or- dinary wrapping paper, the note en- closed saying: “I am sending you some home made candy. I hope you will enjoy it. H, A. H. A. H. A.” Mr. Soaner collapsed yesterday when obtaining a sale from a locai buyer. SEARCH MADE Minneapolis, Aug. 12.—Search for the perpetrator of the “poison candy plot” which caused the collapse and serious illness of George H. Soaner, Minneapolis salesman, at Minot, is being made. Investigation has revealed. that the candy was mailed here yester- day and Soaner was taken violently ill when he had eaten some of the candy. Postoffice inspectors have called in writing experts to determine whether the handwriting was that of a man or woman, he expression “‘bees’ knees” and “snakes’ hips” may be. hea! ‘d.-with frequency among the Indians of to- day. Patoka will thus serve as handled his last bundle of wheat h: Humphries unveiled the monument. nip tender, nt cruiser of the air. co W here he died, hocked wheat. (lowe ig the first vessel to be equipped with a mooring mast 1 floating base for the Shenandoah, It will be equipped Memorial to Harding in Kansas Wheat Field qurcrident Warren G. Harding turned nt d a monument (upper), paid for by contributions from right) then 11, recipient of a kiss from the chief execu- In the lower left Harding ig shown as a “dirt farmer” on spot where the late ‘president AUTO WASHING MACHINE, LATEST Here's Omaha, Neb. highwe freely by the motion of the a keen clean tip for tourists! It comes from E, G. Epeneter, As he sits at the wheel of his auto rambling along the s behind with the spare tire his linens are being splashed Epeneter is shown getting his daily wash ready. FARM HAND DIES IN SPILL Fargo, N. D, Aug. 12.—Charles Hegland, 28, single, farm ‘laborer, was instantly killed yesterday after- noon when the Ford he was driving turned over into the ditch one mile north of NiAsville, He was alone, at the time of the accident and there were no eye witne sto it. He was pinned under the seat of the car by the neck and wus dead when pass- ersby came along. sxamination of the body that the neck was broken. ’ was on his way home from Nielsvii to his place of employment five miles out. showed Every German Communist Has Been in Prison Berlin, Aug. 12.—Only two mem- bers of the present communist’ dele- gation in the Reichstag can be clas- sified as belonging to the intelli- gentsia. One of them is a lawyer, the other, Ruth Fischer, a univer- sity graduate. All the rest are plain workers, It: is also an. interesting fact, that there is not one member of the communist ’ delegation but has at some time or other been in s prison for political offenses. The metal workers claim 12, sevén are, office workers, five are miners, five carpenters, three masons, two railway workers, two transport workers, one a cook, and one is a professional masseur. Other trades represented in the communist delegation are printing, tobacco raising, shoe making and house painting Jamestown Man . Given Shower Jamestown, N, D. Aug, 12-—Rich- ard Peterson of Jamestown, who has aided Circle No. 13 of St. James Catholic church of this city’on many occasions, was given a shower "by the ladies of the circle last night. He received many wedding presents, including numerous kitchen utensils, with the injunction that he -make personal use of them after he is married, next Monday. EXECUTION AN ART Erkner, Prussia, Aug. 12.—Execu- ner Krautz, Who used to sleep with an ax under his pillow and said: he was unable to réest well with- out it, killed himself here recently. He hasbeen wandering about the villages of Prussia, teHing about the 125. personshe put to death. Ktautz regarded guillotining as an art and was always trying to perfect him- self in its practice, Women Subely Have Keen Sense of Money Values If the average woman were with- out a sense of money values, as charged by a budget expert, the \average American family would | have less money in the bank thaa it has, Elimineting the girl who lives at home and can spend her earnings for pretty -things, and whose extravagance is one of the manifestations of her youth, it would have been falrer to say the average hougewife, of America has a very keen qgppreciatien of the value of money and how hard it ts | for the busband to garn it. It is probably quite true shat women do uot budget their expenses; neither {did the great United States gov- | ernment until a few years ago. If | the budget expert would go into the | stores patronized hy the wives of wage earners and note with what care and anxiety the customers } spend their money and how anxious | they are to get full value, she might reyise, her Judgment a bit. With due respect to the paragraph- the women are shrewd buyers. The hardly gaved dollars which bulk so large in savings fund re- ports and bank deposits are where they are because the women of the country have put them there, often against the will of their husbands. ‘The average man {is a much swifter spender than a woman, and despite the Jokes of the paragraphers and comic artists, all women do not throw away money gn innumerable hats and gowns. ‘the budget ex- pert did less than justice to her own sex when she criticizéd their financial acumen. — Philadelphia Bulletin. Javanese Houses by No. Meane Things of Beauty The clay walls which surround a Balinese farm In Java are ‘us- ‘ually two of three meters high. Very often they rest upon a foun- dation of stones and are covered with a heavy* layer of bushes which are to protect them from destructive tropichl ‘rains.’ A door | in the wallis closed ‘at*night with wooden‘ or batiboo planks, the De- troit News states. © | The walls arovnd farms of | “poenggavas” or district mayors, {are usually built of more substan- tial materig!, “The same js true | of the homes of Balinese princes. | Yet while these latter houses may | be elaborately decorated they re- semble the more humble dwellings In that, they are exceedingly filth ‘The numerous members'of the fam ily—parents, brothers, _ sisters, nieces, nephews, married or unmar- ried—live in a single house. The pigs, dogs and goats found on every Balinese farm are kept in a separate hut. The loan huts are usually built upon wooden ele- vations and are exceedingly ugly and ungainly. On each farm one will also find bamboo baskets to house the fowls. | Words We Have Clipped comedian made a great hit by clip- ; ping famfllar words, and we still hear him imitated in colloquial con- versation, London Tit-Bits. says People say “impos” for impossible, “biz” for business and “pash” tor passion. But such clipped words are not degtined to appear in any diction- ary, and we must go back much farther in the history of words to find that when we say: “He led the van,” we mean the “vanguard”; when we speak of a pair of van horses, we mean “cerval when we retire to the “drawing room,” we ought to say the with-drawing Tqom; when we talk of a “hobby” me refer to riding a “hobby-horse” ; en we talk of “sport we mean; sport,” of “tending” we mean aetenaliig’® or a “cute” lawyer we mean acute, and of a “still” we mean a distillery. Joke on Archeologiste ‘Fossils of prehistoric animals which lived during the great Ice age are found in certain layers ot} blue clay in Tennessee. Man, it| hag been claimed, arrived on the scene thousands of years after these blue clay ‘deposits were made, Recently, however, geolo- gists working near the site of an old Indian earthwork found some of.this.same sort of blue clay. Un- dernegth this clay were bumap bones. The discovery was exciting =atlve geolpgical evidence seemed ‘to place the first Tennesseeans back with {ce age fossils. Then some a Joy in. the. party . discovered the Indians had eyidently oe ote thig clay from some distance and packed it down into flat layers resembling geological strata. Refuge in Silence bes Serubbs, whose hij phy. col- teh Imagination was well known er nelghborhood, was called as itriens” In a damage sult, he evidence “which you — will Bie, to the court shall be the truth, the whole truth and nothingybut the truth.” said. the clerk. ” quavered' Mrs. Scrubbs, ow 7 tors ighly frightened and yn- able to think’ of Ohe word of the story, mee bad Fegolved tq tell—a ste which she was the heroine, “Well” asked the judge, “what have you got to say about the! ORE judge,” she replied, “with the Mmitations I’ve just had put on me, I don’t think I've anything at all to say gn he oe Hi ao ‘The ler—Here' au cite VAD. You's re Pcie a Eve. didn’t have next, mit "“y “don't either. My wife never sticks Jong to one dealer.”—Louis- ville Courier-Journal. Robbers and ‘man-eating animals are two of the dangers India’s na- tive postmen have to face in lonely jungle districts, A few yeats’ ago a music-hall/ : oe Bishop Fen Naval airplanes have been placed at the disposal of Bishop Harry Roberts Carson of the Episcopal diocese of Haiti, so that he can fly from parish to parish in ful- filling his duties. IS YOUR WORK HARD? Many Bismarck Folks Have Found How to Make Work Easier. pe , What is so hard 3 with an aching back? Or sharp stabs of pain at every sudden twist or turn? There is no pence from that dull ache. No rest from the soreness, lame- ness and weakness. Many folks have found relief through Doan’s Pills. They are a stimulant diureti¢ to the kidneys. Bismarck people recommehid Doan’s, Mrs. Jack Kenyon, Ave. Bismarck, says: “I had an at- tack of kidney trouble. I-had puffy sacs underncath my eyes and pains in my back. It was hard for me to do my housework at times. My kid- neys acted irregularly, too. Three boxes of Doan's Pills cured me. glad to recommend knowing them to be a remedy wonderful merit, for the cure they made has lasted.” Price 60c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remed get Doan’s Pills—the same Mrs. Kenyon had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfrs. Buffalo, N. Y.—Adv. s a day's work 417 Mandan Matinee Every Day At 2:30 TONIGHT Tuesday and Wednesday CONSTANCE TALMADGE —in— “THE GOLDFISH” t’s a preacherino we a zip and a go— bubbling and spark- ling with fun and vi- vacity + Miss Con- stance in her best comedy. PATHE NEWS With fine pictures of American Athletes in ac- tion in the Olympic games. Hodge Podge “A Jumble in the Jungle’ THERE A DIFFERENCE AND. SATISFACTION For You In, Qur New 1925: Overcoats They embgdy conifort— style — durability—and everything that goes to- wards making up a good ? .. overgoat $32, ay ie $40 $59 Sess Yours Today. 7 ~ Klein's Toggery Fine Tailoring Dry Cleaning Nifty Furnishings TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1924 ¢ « NEW FRENCH FADS Paris, Aug. 12—The newest fads of the season at Deauville are: A fluffy wool dog tucked under the arm, thottos in/silver lettering on hats, and necklaces made of ivory chess men. The fashionable Nor- mandy resort again is at ting chief attention throughout Europe with the Olympic Games concluded. LAME DUCKS TE Sacramento, Calif., Aug. 12—Thou- sands of ducks—crippled by hunters -have formed a colony in the sloughs of Vitoria Islands, the State Fish and Game Association has announced. The cripples, un- able to stand the pace set by the able-bodied ducks, have united to obtain food by co-operative efforts. Evanston, TL, Aug. 1 crippled little 'Hildur Lim couldn't propel her wheel chair over three Righ spots of curbing between her home und school, the city coun- cil took immediate action to have the curbings‘ changed to inclines. Cook by Electricity. It is Clean. AY FEVER If you can’t “ge{away,” ea! the-attacks with— _VISK? CAPITO], Oe Ge oe TONIGHT (Tuesday) Pauline Frederick and Lou Tellegen ii “LET NOT MAN PUT ASUNDER” Pathe Comedy and “Fun from the Press” RUB leed Ye ORIENT Nowis the time togo. It’ 'seasy with Empresses from Vancou- ver reaching Japan in 10 day then China, and Manila.” Andit's pip salts You can’t find finer accommodations on any liner than on these Em- presses of the Pacific. And it costsnomore by these bigships. Further information from local steamship eae oF MW. TAIT 611-2d Ay F ‘stteapgts Mian: o JT SPANS THE This sketch was made from an actual photograph A windstorm that killed ten people The “blow” that tore this brick building apart killed ten, injured fifty and wrecked a half mil- lion dollars’ worth of property. A windstorm may strike anywhere, any time. Have you enough insurance? This agency of the Hart- ford Fire Insurance Com- ‘pany will see that you are protected against windstorm losses. Call, write or phone today. MURPHY How vareat ttt? 1 Who Knows ” D. BAKED 37 EMPLOYEES FROM ONE SCHOOL For the37thtimethe International Harvester Co. has secured office help from Dakota Business College, Fargo. Their latest employees are Misses Emma Arnason and Mabel Bergstrom. Miss Lillian Meiers, another‘ “Dakotan’’, has gone to the North Dakota Metal Culvert Co., N. P. Whiting to the Dodge Auto Co, at Fergus Falls, These weekly stories of pupils placed in good positions should tell you plainly what school to attend and recommend,’ *‘Follow the $uc- ce$$ful.”’ Fall term opensSer:. 1-8. Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 / Front St., Fargo. | \ CONSTANTLY IMPROVED BUT | No YEARLY MoDeLs Dopse BROTHERS Motor Cars M. BG. GILMAN Cao. 212 MAIN STREET BISMARCK PHONG 608 “Kelly-Springtield Tires.” EnjoyYourCar To the Fall The fear that financial ryin may result from injuring someone orsomeone’s prop- erty is always hanging over the motorist who is not in- sured against every motor- ing risk. Don’t let fear-of an accident™ dampen your spitting Enjoy yous car'tb the full. ATM AclZE The otiegeye tg Pien. cavers fre anew Fiske iy ihe deen five casential 3 of AutomobileInsurance— |. Liability, Bon ¢ (In- jee), Callisian, Fire and Thee Ask wa for rate. enry & Henry Insurance _BEANS _We Bake-0 Our Own ~~ Daily At FRANK’S PLACE 30012 Main St.