The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 23, 1925, Page 8

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DAD ore PAGE EIGHT ; _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE - ——— , a se os + i ee es | lites’ heaven and their belief in af to the U.} her sister from Montana, to attend + [reward for good living in the hore. | Ae M. SATHER C. T., and to the Lloyd Spetz Post| the funeral. , yd Spi \ ran | after, DIES SUDDENLY | of ‘the American Legion. He served ean eae 1 | The “happy hunting ground” is y|in the A, E, F. for twenty-three : WHITE MAN’S MISCONCEPTIONS, oe aes, aunts read” 38] ON SATURDAY | 188 Sigh attn te | WELL CATA A DIA A C WORK interpretations. The long prevalent | peepee was in Frances MEETING OF belief of the white man in heaven] Arthur M. Sather years old,| The body will lie in state from Fal § yS IN N RESE R H i ER 4 place where he would enjoy all'| traveling salesman for the Missouri| 10 A. M. to 1 P, M. Wednesday at the COUNTY SUPTS. | ~ ~~~ the things that he lacked’ on ear! a Valley Grocery Company of Mandun,| Bismarck Masonic Temple, the Ma- tet i il ‘ feweene who lived to be 112 years ojd. — gold, fine ase and comfort—dif- died suddenly as a result of heart] sons conducting the funeral service Minot, N. D., March State Su- wus Chief Sailing-Home-Once-in-a-! And these tog » turn had come, fers little in its essence from the In- ‘failure on Saturday night at 11 at 2:30 p. m., with the Lloyd Spetz] perintendent of Education, Minnie J. While Gives Reasons For |‘? th ol chief from his ancestops,!dian’s conception of a land of plen-| o'clock in his apartment at the| Post furnishing a military escort and! vi.4.5n, will soon call a meeting of Declares Production Shou'd Fle ives iveasons BOF} 5 that. th be traced back ty. For him an abundance of game| Lewis and Clark Hotel in Mandan.| firing squad at the grave. He will] \'®!S°™ Faves cia i ng ; ee ‘ 5 oh the ots ; Bio ih zood. i y be ty superintendents in this sec-| ¥. i ans plong to through the generations long ye-, is the highest good, During the afternoon he had had a d at St. Mary's cemetery be-j coun Attract Attention of Bhinkang Indidns Belong 10) even? columbus’ reached” (adel © Mri Swat!) HB) eheateae wettest |inijmbar\(er! teetniextristed and tthe brother Leonard, who died] tion to discuss plans for a summer Farmers and Mechants One of Israels Lost Tribes res. see: ish, curiously enough learned} pain suffered subsequently is be-| here in 1921. z _. | school to be held at Minot Normal, al sa a ants ss ‘ "i : eae) THe Creat according to this} SWedish before he picked up the: lieved to have caused the heart at-} The deceased came with his family} according to George A. McFarland, widen —No Profanity in Indians ie tore, mould of a man| American tonque. This, he explains, ' tack. to Bismarck from Lanesboro, Minn.| president of the normal school. The J, M. Devine, commissioner of im- | fate He Nt ir Ele ee . jeft Was due to the presence of many) He is survived by his widow, form-| in 1906; and was married on August] summer school, he said, will begin Tongue, He Dec'ares a t him in the fire, but He left : fee aided ‘an uitdves gue, ares the mould in too long’ and it was|SWedes on the reservation where he| erly Miss Alma Glans of Valley City,| 14, 1923 to Miss Alma Juanita Glans,| June 15, and continue twelve weeks Re hed sie Gey _—_— Liluck when le removed it°from the | Stew 8p, LePointe Indian Agency; brother, Walter Sather of Bis-|a graduate nurse of the Bismarck] until September 4. The term is to TOReDe gece wuuuscry, ob tite sta : : \cifine. This was the father of all the) it Wisconsin, Educated at St. Paul’s| marck, and two sisters, Mrs. Theo.| Hospital. be divided into two sections of six clyh luncheon today at the Few ow peoples realize the a cy. Then He made another| College with graduate work later at! Quamrud of Bismarck, and Mrs. C. A.|_ Mrs. C. A. Baker will come from| weeks each for the convenience of hotel. beauty and mysticism, the pictorial) jyguid, but did not leave this in the| Northland College in Ashland, Wis-| Baker of Spokane, Washington. Spokane, and Mrs. Sather's mother,| teachers who may not attend the full sugar production should at- | and expressive quality ne Indian | fj) enough, which produced talk in, he was for some, time asso-| Mr. Sather belonged to the Blue] Mrs. L, Glans, from Tioga, N. D. and] term or “quarte tract attention of the busine jon,” snid the i Smart 1 white man. Finally the rd with Dr, Murie, Indian’ spe-| eR anid of this, sects Be eas ‘the tng] Great Spirit, profited from ‘his pre cialist of the Smithsonian Institute, | Mr. Devine would bring 1 ‘ Bae au yidue Tallies ali IGE eHee Mtpa TR TCECATENY WOT yr. Smart was | and much needed industry, and ve a | dians, speaking be Methodist cunt in the fire just long enough,| #22 #t one time Government inter-| source of dependable production and | pistrict Conference n which! which resulted in the pertect redfocy preter in the House and Senate In- WILLYS-~- OVERLAND FINE adjourned Til Frid a envee anes ine ;dian Committees in Washington. othe consumption is increasing: {ny seuss ies religion has in it] Me is now | em nee in _Fessarch ; - pera nily tab) fe tte Increase in || he: religious life of the truly Ca Mew Sinare, related, [Work among the fifty-four Indian gilt, He we consumed | their customs, ancient rites oe tiles Trani sbire teeta] Uelbes tered over the United | er a . oui lie eahty: | ceremonies were sto go through. The developing A, yal: ; ee Esti the} ee coupe 102) ninety One | recitali by, thie Ini is aiinilurs topee) Ferien of the Tndianay wieumee| eet bre Preuucing Tees than | gals miginlier ol Chippewa tribe wilite aa) Cee petra Ae Oe cea mene we consume, In 1923 we consumed | of Wisconsin Alyonquin stock, An- i ing with the Sioux around} 5,781,000 tons, while we produced | other y ; eieanttoniten Ae nd in South Dakota, collect. | but uu Del ie therefore im old, old men of symbol of — perfection, | lies along with other data, ‘ , : initiation ously enough is alse the < Sg : ugar beets can he grown suceess- ; 0 aN = ‘ully on all our lower-level land Burd waif vhite en's synibol of per! TATRTEEN KILLED, | without igation or fertilization. 3 THT] Nal MMUTRRARHUSNithey: doBlemarcic end’ | The Indians call themselves “an-| MANY INJURED IN| Mandan, and lying directly the stood between the con jshinanbag,” or “spontaneous | | ie vilization of the white man said Mr Northern Pacific Railroad, ar | mart, to indi ¢ dapted) voth as to tonnage | “99 the primitive imperial) gin, the creation of man by the production and a high sugar | Indians that have lived here for Spirit. “This you see,” he continued, content. | White people do not realize “is very much similar to the Israe- a eld last year, per | Port of Indian customs cere- lite belief.” sown ons, and the aver- | Monies; that every single uct of the; The red men too always believe © per ton was $9, One field , Td man carries with it some cere-| they are the chosen people; that they | ind Forks last year pro- | ™Monial or religious significance Ware nd nected mb yaineir mani toatkor duced 14 tons per acre. I think it | n illustration Mr. Smart cited! spirit, to be taught this “mide” re- would be safe to say that an aver. | the popular conception that white) ligion, as it is called. The children| nge crop sown in this section and on | ™CN have of the Indian's being a lazy | of Israel were also , spoken of as land suitable would average any- | ¢resture. That conception, he ex-) God's chosen people, where between $45 and per acre s all wrong, and is due} These, with many other data, Mr. lgious| Smart said, lead him to believe in ind the'the particular theory of the origin r among In-|of the Indian race which links tthe red th one of the lost “One of the special benefits in su- | largely to production is that it rests the | significance oil, cleans up all noxious weeds and | distinct division of la when followed by a crop of wheat, | di man up ¥ a was | sion of two ‘outhern ng the d nd serious inju lent occurred here. TRAIN COLLISION Franklin, L fog which enveloped a stop responsible for a head-on colli- | ARGUMENTS OPEN | IN TEAPOT DOME! ANNULMENT SUIT. 2 March -A heavy signal ail trains on the ie early yesterday, th of thirteen rye or oats greatly iner the s her! tribes of Israel. | bushel production of these crops, by child,” he continued, mother} “It is within the realm of possibi-, Cheyenne, Wyo., March 23.—(By | reason of the fact that it conserves Carth nourishes her ¢ » the lit he thinks, “that one of the| the A. P.)—Addressing the courtwac- | moisture and increases soil fertili rich grain, the trees, etc So any- | lost tribes may have wandered from, cording to schedule, attorneys in the } “The method pursued by sugar re-) thing pertain the section of which was the| Teapot Dome lease annulment ‘su in inducing loc: r beet production is ities to su- | pout as fol- ‘ough Mon- n continent befor separat- mers would be asked to sign , : ed by the Bering St up to plant a certain number of ii Hike Roe Cols hel fonturesior dienludinvaremnot acres on the basis of a ten to twenty | cut the tree is is believed, acre planting, or more if the farmer must collect and ti sted, though their eyes and or owner of the land desired. the man gathers the stripped bark! cheekbones appear simi It has sugar refine organization and makes the canoe, for the tree! been found, he that the purest to furnish the labor for th va- has already been killed and is inani-| type of Indian has a decidedly H tion and harvesting of the crop. mate; therefore, the woman can no| braic of features, as to lips. | Mexicans are generally employed to longer work with it. ‘That the man| . position of the eyes, and | do this work. The task of blo minst do | eof the nose, i | out, thinning the plants, weeding and) “The Indian Hel between the Indian | hoeing the crop is both tedious and ing-Ho ap ei t| esome, one man, as a rule, being the on}: | form.” Mr. Smart pointed out | able to take care of about 7 acres. | no The Indian never| the religion of the Israelites’ “The farmer would furnish the the name of God, or the € so very striking. The Indian's Kitch- plant the crop and haul it to Spirit, in vain. If he must 0 endowed e vent | imanito or Great Spirit i The cult | ‘ market. ing, pulling and a wrath he must have recourse] with all the attributes and powers popping the Het mould ues cous by s to English or some other| of the Israclite’s Jehovah. Both be Ba Peer) ummisned by the sagen | lieve in their Creator's omnipotence | refin enough signed up to) A very curious Indian legend is| and omniscience.” make ten thousand acres the refin-{ told of th ers would build origin of the races, re-| The “road of souls”, he continued, started on the last lap of the case | today with the idea in view: of hav-/| Vin submitted to Federal | Tuc ke Kennedy by tomor- | row. sche greed to by at-| | torneys last night called for the ar- ernment attorney. is carried out the case, will be,com- pleted before the court by Tuesday night. ment Georg counsel and Owen J.. Roberts, Gov-| A vote for Harry. Thomp-| json April 7 means a vote for| of Atl ernment counsel to occupy one and Pomerene of Gov- J. W. Lacey -of | il submit the Tomorrow: the| hours will be; ittleton | defense | ¢ of If this schédule! : sugar plant at the! jated Mr, Smart, who gathered most| and the beautiful faith of the In. point most easily accessible to the) of his rich fund of Indian lore from) dians in this. belief form striking| lower taxes, efficiency and aoe eet creaRe. a first clase | the lips of his grandfather, Bede-| points of similarity with the Israe-| economy in City: Gevernment.| business proposition from every | ~~ ee, SoS Las nt, and once under headway | “ ‘a very important eit es . to the city, county and section I C d S . H nian “They are now building a 1,000, t a crs teat acer | oO UVonduct services rere ss st Grand Forks, wi ho will he | completed in time’ to” tuke care of | this year’s crop.” | “Mr. Devine illustrated his talk | | with photographs, showing beet fields, from the stage of planting | to the final stage of sacked sugar, | also pictures of grain fields sown | on the exhausted land, by years of | grain production, and the same | fields seeded to grain following «| year of beet production, in each case | the fields showing 4 clean and a] much heavier stand of grain.” a | Tourist Expert To Speak Tonight | Harry N. Burhans, head of the| tourist bureau in Denver, Colo., will deliver an address at the open for- um of the Association of Commerce to be held tonight in the Grand Pa- | hotel. Dinner will be served at | 6:45 and the address will follow. | Mr. Burhans is one of the out-| standing tourist publicity men in| the United States and it is expected | a large crowd will attend tne meet- | ing. is Jack Runyan, candidate for ; city commissioner, asks the) support of the voters at the| City Election April 7 upon the pledge of lower taxes and ef- ficiency and economy in the city government. INDIGESTION, GAS, STOMACH MISERY Chew a few Pleasant’ Tablets’ Instant Stomach Relief! “The moment | “Pape’s Diapepsin” veaches the stomach all distress goes. Lumps of indigestion, gases, heartburn, sourn fullness, flatu- l, Ignes, palpitation, vanish. Ease your stomach now! Cofrect igestion and acidity for a few cents. ists sell millions of packages. COLONEL J.C. ADDIE Colonel J. C. Addie of Chicago; one of’ States, will conduct evangelistic services i MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1925 ~ Peopie everywhere are talking about the beauty of the fine new Willys-Knight; of its great performance; of its remark- .able new prices. Besides having the inherent advantage of actually improvi Knight is the only car in the United States that is equippe 212 main the leaders of the Salvation ‘Aimy in the United Bismarek, March 25-80. Y eee ames _ AN HONEST DEAL They say it’s well to. look before you leap. We have barred leaping altogether. Our Used Cars are selected and overhauled with all the deliberation necessary . to insure an honest deal . for every customer, M. B. GILMAN Co. BISMARCK PHoNe® sos Donee Bromers Dearers Seit Gaon Usen Cars with use, Willys- with the famous Lan- chester Balancer. This famous invention Chat New WILLYS-KNIGHT with an Engine Youll Never Wear Out Lahr Motor Sales i. streer “i JET RIBONE ‘WANT Ans’ MINOT BANKER >* GRANTED DELAY IN FRAUD CASE Minot, N. D., Mar. 23.—Adjourn- ment is to be taken late today, prob- ably until April 6, of the hearing be- fore United States Commissioner Hopkins, involving an attempt to extradite Jourgen Olson, Minot bank- er, to Wisconsin, to face charges of using the mails to defraud, to en- able preparation of a transcript of the testimony already introduced. Alex Rosen, candidate for city commissioner, your supvort on a platform of decreased taxes, efficiency and economy in city govern- ment. MOTOR CARS | Anew sedan5200 lower in price.. Unequaled performance. Unequaled economy. . A new name for smoothness...... gives Willys-Knight complete freedom from vibration at all engine speeds! It is a common thing for Willys-Knight owners to drive 50,000 miles and more without 3s) nding a dollar for engine re- pairs. Willys-Knight is today the center of interest in the automobile industry— riding a great wave of nationwide popu- larity. Make me an offer on the following described N. Y, of the N. W. % of Section 15, Town- ship 137, Range 78, containing approximately 80 acres, This piece of land is within 16 miles of Bis- marck and the only reason I consider selling is because I wish to invest the nearer home. money in property MRS. M. A. KENNERLY, Kennerly Bldg., Palatka, Florida, NOTICE TO AUTOMOBILE OWNERS. We are open for business. We have a _ new building at 711-8rd St., where we can do First Class Auto Finishing. Come in and get our prices before letting your contracts. j We Also Do Signs, Paperhanging, Artistic Decor- ating, House Painting, ete. ee Call on us for Dates and Prices at. 711-8rd St. FIEL & NICHOLS solicitsy oi

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