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» . WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1926 ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ” ees ‘PAGE THREE defense counsel. The request start-| property rightfully their pan te Gas WARN e connbaaliy “Aver : ' “THE VANISHING RACE” GIVES STORY _M.E. MATTSON’S | 3 = ed an argument which proved the|own children, or to the mother of| Naturally I cannot pass by any chance ; tax be repealed? Mr. Johnstone's experience, har-|! }ithose children! When will that silly| to praise the all steel body. { $ Judge Interferes y ; : iH OF’ TRAGIC FATE OF THE IND! | Judge A. T. Cole, who is hearing the ais jTowing though it war, isa source ; ° , ; 5 of great satisfaction to Dodge Broth: °, ' ; : y fs ri 4 mpcne hae yids ease, had to break up the numerous Steel Body Saves 4 of grea ‘act ee perm. 5 aoe | clashes of the lawyers and order them lers dealers and owners everywhere, | first of a series. ‘ se I ma, P ine their d is proof that the safety built g trachoma, pyorrhea and thasé {nsidi- to confine their arguments to the! "| yp an y ; i Dr. Joseph K. Dixon, Leader | ous ils that follow civilization. There) IN PR RESS og NOTRE TEs When Car Turns Ove [Re Bode Brothers eat odie : " are the causes of a devastation of a e nN s i i 8 ¥ ii of Many Expeditions, Tells} people that fully justify Dr, Dixon's of counsel, Judge Cole ruled that no) | Dodge Brothers all stec! automobile | one and, one-half million of satisfied I\| ‘ title of his book, “The Vanishifig! : witnesses were to be excused by the| bodies are enthusiastically endorsed | owners,” adds . Gilman, Bis- | ny | Story of the Numerical Des} Race.” To combat’ the menacesf!| state without the consent of defense|by four happy. citizens | marek. “T! of body is equiva- |. cd r iH De ® i counsel. Arthur E. Selberg, another | Nebr., who unquestionably |Ient to free life insurance to every fense Counsel Claims 0) rire rein to be croserexamined [lives to. the til steel body of the | Occupant, and folly of expecting each dentist to care f; | Have Drawn Out Contra- | this afternoon. Dodge Borthers Sedan belonging to | confidence cans” —Indian’s Story of} for 40,000 patients is evident. | ‘ Mr. R. L. Johnstone, of the firm of| everywhere ha’ Refutes Inaccurate Statements —_| dictory Testimony yorrhea among the quarter million , cline of the “First Ameri-|Indians there are six dentists. The/ s }@—_—_—_ 9 Paxton and Gallagher, of Omaha, But continued and increasing demand for sy do 8 e it in s vn i this type - vl e Custer Fight Told. The statements recklessly made that i] TODAY Brean: conmaeane: cell 1b In iis OMn beatin ware Haneaee TOOeR Te the Indian population is | Y 7. 199 2 rears aa ie ; y — P e. ‘On September 7, 1924, three years ago, proves our contention that day as when Columbus arrived ; : ‘ ; ar i ; : fe pnwen ee anion : |panions and myself were traveling | motor purchasers are becomin (By P. A. Kinsley in the Philadelphia} proved by amp iat hg He fi telative to time and other points in (Continued from page one) over the road just outside Ardmore, | more discriminating, and are demand Record) ‘generations would know anything of Oooo wore unearthed by defence | of those that live in cities, even look | South Dakota. * Being somewhat he-|ing greater safety for themselves and whil ‘ the American Indian they must con-| eee the third dag of Martin B,/ at the sky, or remember that it is|hind schedule, we were ‘hitting it'|their families, holding Safety First ri ile no one will deplore the tre-} sult the pictures and the book a > saan a chee | CeeteT at about 43 miles an hour. The road|as the paramount factor in comfort. | mendous progress made by the White|ready made. And the future student} tson’s second trial on a second H oes had heen recently dragged and was jable motor riding.” F) ‘races on the American continents|and historian will find Dr. Dixons vol-| degree murder charge in Cass county a 2 h v 4 ‘ The bootleggers take their hun-| full of ruts, invisible, however, be- a ‘i since the sailor from Genoa first set|ume a storehouse of information’ ‘istrict court here today. 3 ch qui S oten ee pain . A WBBM, foot upon these shores, there is doubt-|about the Indian that is unexampled R. Sinkler, Minot aitorney who| dreds of millions. | Get rich quick cause of a covering of newly scraved | Qtrange Accident if less regret that the natives of these|in the literature on that subj | is defending Mattson, former janjtor | °¢ Fa take (a thousand millions igravel. Suddenly I noticed a high t 4 lands, the sborigines whom we call| Dr. Dixon deplores the neglect of | of the Grand Forks auditorium, made | ¢ver Jean f get! crown in the road. tapering off on) Shown By Records : the Indians, are rapidly disappear-|the psychology of the Indian. every effort to “tangle up?’ -state’s| "a practical politician of New York's | was narnering, we hit the hidden cute | * PF inc How the Wine 'tfan’ watch Once | ttl Sates undertand ih oul yf meses heh He" foo"themfor| yA iapn!taliean ot New Vaan | way hnpening, wet the hlden att at Fresno Hospital) ‘a. «were theirs. , the workings of his mind.; (Toss examination and, on a few oc- S Ste the Die Tébh ta te id LASS hd ER Rnd OLA d __: There is still left some tribal life,!The Indian found in the phenomena| ¢asions, succeeded. Bee may SoC uniis ares umnour wath My ca austere, Jebirae cam it is true, especially in those resewva-| ot che universe an answer vo his long-| |, Particularly on cross examining T. | es CALA bial leh dat ASR) Aa Fresno, Cal. March 34.-—-()-—A i@ tions, mainly in the West, which have} ings apd the high expression of every) E. Ruddy, former Grand Forks pa-| The farmer will make the old text} ~ Glass Nev iBrokes Parana eats rraeamaree = ‘ been ‘allotted to the descendants of| fervor of his soul. We cannot under-|‘rolman, was the defense counsel | peaq “Put not your faith in politic| “Our first task was naturally to | ospital records today. Here itis: the original owners of all this great| stand this, because “the Indian chased| Successful in drawing out what he|ltens or any child of man”. Last | extr Seen eS tearing |, George Krambian of Fresno was territory; but ag a nation we seem tothe ethereal, the weird, the sublime, | claimed was contradictory testimony | Pail in’ Nebraska, when corn was|our gratification at heing able to do | 4 highway between | f be too busy. with our own affairs to| the mysterious; chase the dollar.! when placed alongside the same wit-| worth 75 cents a bushel, farmers were | this, and, after taking stock of our | 3 f ; 3 elve much attention to the remnants | He “sett ds voice of nature; ve Sere ein aba dh told, “Don’t sell yeut vorn; hold it. injuries, and noticing that they were Hel) uy Blas es lad a . © of a former numercially strong peo-| listen for the cuckoo clock to com-jtrial for the death of 17-year-old | phe’ Republican party "planning | confined to minor bruises, we set| tire hounded on the railroad trac! s ny et aadiemckinsvili Mi ade sm Coumneh | wondertal tives fo" yo” tty et [about righting the neaan” Pievaee ‘ace, Ine the path ot an encom The hat should so harmonize with is a pleasure, then, to be remind- i i salant e — our. ent at sccing that not{ ead . , striking | i . boish Sc thai ete ate ome who are nat| Few have studied the Indians as Dr.| The, fiat ria. in Grand’ Forks) | tnnocent farmers in, Nebraska alone [ane ‘articie ofthe glans had_ een {he engine | The tire was thrown A the physical characteristics of the BP oblivious of 1 s i si » few hav : 1 convic- 0 b s 3 ! . ent da e WAS : “ ‘ ° . ' Upon those who hare supplanted dhers| sought to get at the inner self af the! tion and Jon ACRES TOR MRL | ee eee ee ieee a SVEeRINE A dential the, top corier of the ext ¢ him full in the chest, Kram-! wearer as to be inconspicuous in its and who can turn aside from their] Indian as has Dr. Dixon. The Indian ieee age aie hdd was cents instead of seventy-five cents at where we had first landed, Lae eant Mie el 1 " P iW own pressing affairs to gi ht | Was ed in his wigwam by Dr. nted by supreme court 0 shel. # % t bininc sts, Laughing for sheer joy | rig I. ° y Ce A Uny nalie sae Dixon, who gained hix confidence and | Novth Dakota, torether with a change STD Net e atu te ok wl gL ii i eC Ne AU ory complete propriety. The Dobbs country, a tragedy that involves riendship. Dr. Dixon sat with the| of venue. to Edgemont. There we soon found i i i i passing of the ol gacessote ot the Hau Petts Lal Bure this | morning's} - President Coolidge's father died Mewivare, andcwere déligited os ais: | DR. R. S. ENGE J. HH. is designed to accomplish this , sland from this earthly stage forever.| dreds of tepees, and there heard the 7 0} a3 a battle between | practically penniless. Just before} cover that the damage to the car was < G a That the Indian deserves a fate| Story of the Indian's boyhood, youth| Mr. Sinkler and J. B, Wineman and| he died he deeded to his son the farm|indeed as we had. noted. | sein desired perfection of dress by lend- better than that which scems to be}and manhood. At the suggestion of George R. s, the latter twolon which the President was born.| “ Thad driven my car Chiropractor : A If ° inevitably awaiting him in an early the leader of the expedition a council | state's nd assistant state's} Will the government undertake to T hesitate to tell Ing itself to the appropriate ma- tomorrow was a Sentiment that, in; of indian BIE SE Le torney, r y, ue collect tax on that gift from father you how im : ,tliousand railes 1 Consulation Free ni ul: ion of the in wh wi it spire © work which is epitomized} ley sig 3 . y 8|}to son? Probably not, as the value of | have added to this total since then, atic ma in a splendid volume, “The Vanish-| With a reproduction of the customs,| heard, Mr. Sinkler made uest | the farm is very smali. But how pre-|for fear of making you think | am | I Lyeas Blk. Bismarck, N \ P 10 wears I ing Race,” by Joseph Kassuth Dixon,| costumes, traditions of the ra that 1 witnesses introduced by the|posterous jis the suggestion that|telling a fish story, instead of a car id dimald | LL. D., published. by the Nationai| There much of the material used by state be kept on hand for reeall by| fathers should be taxed for giving |story. Suffice it to say that T have | American Indian Memorial Association] Dr. Dixon and hundred Pr ere obtained, all Philadelphia. The p: nt is| @raphs a priceless lega the third edition of a book which has] Will prove a. 4 heen acclaimed not only in this coun-| ture generations. iH, try but in Europe as an authoritative __ An Epic Farewell | and scholatly. presentation wf all| Dr. Dixon's final chapter is an epic, phases of the Indian problem in| @ ereat and solemn picture of the Americat:¢ fin enes of the Great Council, ! ‘A Council of the Braves wherein is celebrated “The Farewell 4g “The Vanishing Race” tells among| of the Chiefs.” This description of TE soother things, of the last great Indtan| the Indian passing down the trail ‘ council, whercin chiefs from nearly] te setting sun is worthy o all the s recounted the stories of| Place in the world’s literature. t their lives and retold many legends{ Marked by understanding of and s ‘ , «which comprised a great deal of In-| Pathy with a race that the world will i dian history and folklore, which might] Possess but few generations longer. + have been irretrievably lost had not History and Interpretation means been provided for their preser-| As a record of the real Indi vation. work of history and of interp Here, too, is the Indians’ story of| and as a tribute to a people that once the Custer fight in 1876, related by; Were masters of our continent, “The the four surviving Custer scouts,| Vanishing Race’ Dr. ‘ which tragedy Dr. Dixon terms Dixon knows h reddest chapter in the Indian w none can su the Western plains. Dr. Dixon ex-| statements. I tols General Custer’s daring andj facts, and the in which chivalry and his skil] as a warrior and|he writes make a unique in gives the Indians’ conclusions as to] that field of research. The character ‘ the cause of Custer’s failure and the}of the Indian has never been more i { part that Reno played in|clearly interpreted, and the hack- astrous drama, This isan im-]ground of the Indian never more Ps ane AUTOMOBILE TOP COVERINGS FOR Ford Touring .... 6.50 Chevrolet Touring .. 11.00 Dodge and Buick Glass Light—also Kozy Closures FASTER APPAREL] Furniture Upholstering portant contribution to the literature| graphically presented. . . on that widely discussed and long- Dr. Dixon taken thousands of Fi . 4 .. FY q puzzling episode. | pictures wf Ind Bismarck Furniture Much New Material and his ollee F In this third and revised edition of| value, which will increase in import- Company 4 \ his book, Dr. Dixon presents a great th the passing of the ye 219 Main Street BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Loring abi peered the world, containing 3,400 rooms When in : Chicago : Stop at the MORRISON HOTEL .an ‘deal of additional matter comprising | Dr. Dixon has lectured many times on 102 pages and many new illustrations,| the Indian question. He is writing a with an amplified preface in which] history of the American Indian in the he graphically outilnes the progress} world war, in which conflict more ’ of the research work conducted by|than 17,000 of the race were engaged. him. The volume contains 80 photo-| Dr. Dixon was in the war zone and gravures of Indian chiefs and Indian| took thousands of pictures of Indians life, taken by the author, comprising | who were in the service an extraordinary gallery of Indian which are of value to the stu-| Canada has one mile of railway to » the psychologist und the his-| every 220 persons. torian, ed Many Expeditions Dr. Dixon was the leader of 11 his- torical expeditions to the North American Indian “to perpetuate the life story of these First Americ a vanishing race. These expeditions were the concept of Rodman Wana- maker, who writes the preface to “The Vanishing Race” and explains the | Use Gas, the scientific fuel. purpose which led to the sending out Tallest in the World of ‘the expeditions, ' These purposes THEATRE dy 4 Stories High + were “to gather historic data and snake. plejupy records’ of the North | Closest in the city to offices, American Indians, of their manner: theatres, stores and rail- road stoms, thei 8 s, the — WEDNE! st Speci beye NEW STYLE SILHOUETTES which they live.” One result of Mr. Wanamaker's zeal in honoring the i : : A ope. eae the Indian Memortal in the harbor of| : Await the selection of women who appreciate individuality in dress Out of this grew the third expedition, . which brought about the “inns i e ‘ Webb Brothers are first'to present faithful replicas every, Aibrawitiaths Nations]: tndiany a>” ; uits of the most successful styles which were introduced ts and patriotic convenant between tee at recent Paris fashion openings. If you would be Brought About Indian Citizenship ‘ rai The vogue of the tailored a fashion leader, it will pay you well to shop with us. A versatile collection of i e various steps in g uit is emphasized in our rices are ly ; approved coat fashions, th $ Ss has ou P unusually moderate. a a . zenship expedition, I in every variation, from which movement was indorsed by Easter, and spring col- sli ightline, ) President Woodrow Wilson, many saad the slim, _ straightline, ‘eminent Americans and all the prin- N a lection. Tweéds and mix- Dresses tailored sports model to cipal newspapers, and which visited é the most elaborate and all the 189 tribes of Indians, involving tures for sports wear in is proof positive of its purity. riceraycomectincurie Rooms $2.50 up | malting are behind this"100% } all outside, each with pure Barley Male Syrup. Three bath, running ice water types—light, dark and hop-fla- vored, Packed in handy 24% Ib. and fervidor cans, sterilized and pasteurized. Sold By All Grocery Stores j total nq § 9, A original dress coats for eg taling alles by Ax hertiy on. Ainie andideuilesbreast- Unquestionably Bismarck’s Finest eran tetas ian ination pt Allegiance to the Govern: HOUR AN \ ed styles or the hairline Collection Tweed and novelty aperts many SON fe Fort Wadswort! levdy, ‘ Presenting Dresses so artistically designed as to fabrics for daytime and Wcamiker tepcdltion ats a Pilgrims | sa MELLAM MFO Spine: fOr: Area Weal: virtually become a part of the charm 6f those who street wear; Twills and iain ‘THE'MOTION PICTUME Grey, Tan and Brown wear them. Georgettes, Flat Crepes, Crepe De Charmeens, plain or fur inom the Indian as, he | JOHN GOLDEN: Ss! colors in typical O’Ros- Chine and Printed Crepes; tailored, with said teunmed fon ro oe yesterday, and:as he is today. j - it: A : simplicity or gracefully draped to improve the sil- sions, shown in Navy, > ree Ree pee naan et Rrinnw sen mannish styles for houette. Colors are Bois De Rose, Phantom Red, Black, Cocoa, Grey and "the efforts of propagandists to create jm f 5 Miss or Matron. They’re Palmetto Green, Channel Blue, Apricot, Mist Grey Tan shades. Ee arly [tie tee dlaneeeine <s. priced at and Fallow. . -|. Moderately priced at that Dr. Dixon's labors to preserve in, | “4 ey An early selection is most advisable among these, picture and text the exact data of |] one of a kind frocks, at y oii centages ge o $29.50 Moderate Prices ; $19 20 ioe on ‘ AND UP i cl ae As Dr. Dixon tells us, the one-win- . ‘ . Hi * the wee! the fle has supplanted the All the newest accessories, such as Chiffon or Service Silk Hosiery, Gloves, Ker- heen iene the India going Y chiefs, Jewelry Novelties, Neckwear, Silk Underwear, Corsets, etc., will be foun » , yeags since the firit expedition went . here in complete assortments. If it is new we have it. ee " forth, so many changes in the man- - 2s i ners and dress of the Indians have with taken place that it would he impossi- Walsh “appece’ In etwo. Vanishing MARE MOORE Ttace” “""l KATHRYN PERRY Truly a Vanishing Race Dr. Dixon notes the official state- ment that the decrease of Indian pop- Cheer Up! CLEANERS—DY ERS “See, Mamma, I have my new JUST RECEIVED . Peag sey egret Just in time for Easter selection; a large assortment of new Dresses in figured and plain Crepes, shown in all the, new shades of best jilly was spanked before he i 7 told why, ulation In the-Wolted States since the lity silks. Every on up-to-the-minute model. Make your ‘ i in. Ma’ ft the whi Sag ‘es quality silks. ry one an up- I. y And it caused a big lump in Ma's, Sent and the further stalement that! (a It’s the first year of mar- ‘ MMbeeelon MEME GE es as oi i es ee he Lian throat. in 1920 there were “in the Unite ‘ », States 270,000 persons of Indian blood.|/m "28e that’s the hardest +, a large proportion of whom have half|i,'—after that it’s a habit. or more of white blood.” i the same rerio Indians. DON’T MISS THIS! pe the Indian is not “a vanish- Comedy “For,” he cried, “Daddy's clothes looked better than new When they came from the clean- ers! You did say it, too.” Yes, Mamma had said it, and told ‘ the truth perhaps, for they were cleaned and here, TRUTH MERCHANDISE ing. rac: ‘ : ‘ . i ee . We'll do beat if try us. cance of the Ailing ta Taainy pope A Parisian Knight IN OF e'll do our you try us. ong which is disease. ays the author, “never knew anything about tuberculosis un- An adyenture of Van *hite man confined him in | ‘ i i i eee ane @ score of people live Bibber in Society. room. ‘is also menaced by]. \ ADVERTISING MERIT ON