The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1926, Page 7

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FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1926 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Aiee uncertainty about their satisfaction Albert Rappaport, who doffs the | vented Miss Misgen from becoming » ¢ - || with the car after they get acquainted robes ax inging priest of Judah, | nun. ‘AN INDIAN with it. | has been larger | Sought for Screen 2 “For the seller of a used car sells rk and San .| Louise Loring, daughter of his reputation with it, and the reput-| | a « peni | Wealthy manufacturer of Providence, able denter is as anxivus about own: | i i of Temple | R. 1, is the third newconrer. She has (By Major H. M. Creel, Berlin 4 , er satisfaction as the buyer himself, | | A : el ume te (been preparing at home and abroad e Maryland.) ‘This has Seb ce ve pu att i Amer y , o with the ars for APS lise ab a used automobile and establishe : mpany wz her operatic debut five ALL INDIAN RESERVATIONS } guarantee of satistaction that c. 1 Another Wisconsin girl, Miss Flory | she returned home for concerts and Sioux Falls, S. D., June 16.—(#) given with any car.” | Fence Miszen, horn at Prescott, the has attracted cousiderable attention i} Pres Mica ao mee ae, iene | -_ ughter of a country store keeper, | by driving Ke own car from poi shop to the Sioux Indians follows in the footsteps of Mme. Luel | to point to fil r engagemen tsfr believes “that the. tooner, the WOMEN RANK Two Native Born Sopranos 1. a yin yee teat Mine: uel uetlane ration is abolished and the . 1, y ng in publi y choir of been soug! red and white races are amal- | and Jewish Cantor Join Chi- ene Paul, Mint, rupley: picture: grow gamated the better it will be for | r mother makes her home, i roles. tne Indian. few fi given there. aR Reade eS Dy The Rt. Rev. Hugh Latimer | ther d she was only Burleson, missionary bishop of | Kelis % te old, the girl h PIONEER DIES South Dakota of the Episcopal | biel sais t most of he: ; Steele—William F, Clark, pioneer church, speaks from a back- | teresting Aw tat St. Clara's ¢ of Excelsior township, died last Mon ground ‘of thirty years’ residence noun Wis. and la dav afternoon at his home following and work among the Indians. Civie nt, Dubuque, lowa. an illness of four weeks. Funeral “t do not mean amalgamation | sopranos. wi Jewish! musical itions were so strong that} services were held Wednesday after- i cantor who jo it was the one circumstance that pr Approximately 2,800 Women Lawyers in United States noon, YOURSELF In predicting that thirty. y . . at Present Time : { : would bring the absorption of the . a eo ’ = K Indian’ by civilization, Bishop 10—()—-From the| fq ; : ‘ : : 4 et sas HELP TO HEA Chicago. Sept. MAJOR H. M. CREEL. time of Deborah, judge of the Israel- | Burleson said he spoke only for the ieux | Tadla Different whose feminine palm tree de- : i conditions, he may exist i y 3 ns guided affairs in the carl ) among the Indians of other [jo as the Chippewas ene Physical: | Gays of Palestine, women have figu : staten. Sloux 1s Against Work ed in the courts of the world, but Few Indians today live accord- “The old full blood Sioux Indian | Not until recently have their numbers ing to native customs, he added. H attracted notice. shop Burleson does not believe | 18, esinst work, and hus not In the legal field American women there are exceptions, | have been keeping step with their) e industrial, agricultural and _ scienti: mers here are some of | industrial, agricultural and, scientific that they should have a college education, for they do not need it, “Vocational schools serve the only seventy-five in the United States. “If this reservation is a criterion | ' through interma: but the i absorption of the Indian popu- lation in the cities, towns an country of the - white jan's world,” the bishop explaine: parpose well,” the missionary is with Indians wand This number increased to 1,010 ald, explaining that most of the ng. from South’ Dakota. to” Montane | 1900. ; Indians turn to farming or stock | and Canada, neglecting their work,; At the presetn time there are ap- raising. haying and farming, but giv ‘| proximately 2,800 women lawyers yy Concerning recent criticism of | their ponies, dancing, camping throughout the country, Chicago q the governmental conduct of In- | vether, running off with each other's | having more 100. 4 N dian affairs, Bishop Burleson as- | Wives, requesting milk cows becau. Ohio Woman Leads F serted that the government | they think that perhaps their request Ohio has the honor i . * would take a little more counsel | Would be granted, when they only {Woman in the highest judicial posi : : beiecarae from people who know the In- | want them for eating at their various tion yet acégrded one of her s 3 ] tin ea s dian and less from politicians we | Sieasure gatherings, then no doubt! Judge Florence E. Allen, of the | wid would come out better. the meeting of the Great Council + In th ate Cleve: | : ’ — involve similar re-|!and claims atte’ . ' . ical . a : " fe The abové clipping brought to my Mie er eee cake jpal judgeship held by Miss Mary D. | (hls a beh throbbing dizzily with pain. or with fresh or preserved fruit. Sprinkle mind the conditions as [ have seen| “The allotments of the Indians are | Grossman. | lack spots danced impishly before her over other cereals or cook with hot cereals, sivas raving) A Woman defender of women is| Ee ‘ fe Orda Mexico. kind of labor. The Indan to succeed | United States attorney general, whose | f : vi vt eart acre nad her vigor gone? recipes given on every package. If eaten + Agency a Menace must meet with the issues of life in| prosecutions of ey elation . at thief of life had stolen her health and regularly, Kellogg's ALL-BRAN is gwar- weres menace totus unvancemine ana deeretics aber andcateontencis: the | While practicing law in Los Angeles me, ee These questions are daily asked anteed to bring permanent relief or the a 7 7 civilization of almost the entire In-| husbandly conduct of his land must She appeared in 2,000 cases as a public A : . racic: | ns of women. The answer is— grocer returns your money. dian tribes, fender of her sex, having been ad- | When diving, a girl may slip into the water straight and smooth like a| Constipation, B . The Wiin ket) Clinpewa reser: mitted to the California bur in 1915.| jnife, or she may flop.in with her extremities waving and splashing— : je carefull Only ALL-BRAN brings ration originally enolled 082 mem. | emp ¢ is deci - k good AMZEE Home-Maker | iust as she prefers, Here are samples of each method, snapped side | re came tip ated pee bind pre reste: Be mete Kellogg's ALL- ers 0! at branch of Minnesota} 1 r in , vs " AEne | by side at the Y. W. C. A. camp at Martha's Vineyard, Mass. Below, f ; hi ronstipation. Use B part-bran product is onl: - f es Pilate be ft who has also attained success in the | bY 8! V ‘ : a u be e i ; : Pp 'y par. Ghiprewas the Clapp oc alleed al civtaaten inter ge wate mori Cathrine Waugy | tio of the cami bent swimmers ltt right, Howe flythen of Wine] Kellogg's ALL-BRAN regularly every day. tially effective-mavbe not at al Kellogg's te becotnorputent tu foe ind white brother with none of the better Cullock, first woman justice of the| throp, Mass., Eleanor Mullins ew York, and Jean Shepherd o! two tablespoonfuls daily—in chronic _ is the original and only 100% ALL-BRAN. * is they could diopose of th ideas of life. t ay = Hil eed and for! Somerville, Mass, cases, with every meal—and you will know Doctors recommend it. All grocers sell it. covered with white and Norway pine] “There ure enough councils now so (Oty, years, © Prather atte ur freedom from this dread disease which you B k: day. ; at will, which they did. The act was| far us the good of the nation is con-| Chicago. She ts the mother of four hauel Hf uy a package today. Note how much in favor of the large lumber jnter-| cerned, too many pleasure meetings | ¢hildren, all unwersity kraduates and| E N never thought possible. better you'll feel in a week. Served in | cats. Scientists and doctors wete em-| and conditions that lead to diversion | ia, of her th ocala ieee You'll like Kellogg's ALL-BRAN. Its leading restaurants. joy ass upon their blood and| from supporting life, zy Lee i | , iF 3 t " a of de laewe onl wy gle Full Blood Will Be Curiosity sof women Minois| delightful nutty flavor makes it good as Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek, Michigan only about 84 were found to be full] “ initia ie slothut attorneys: gancralsartaeaiat: | ! acereal. Serve with milk cr cream alone sd cmiad Cesar’. They cola tate st taking his ant, United States attorney and tw _ ; - lend foe 2 sone and toda are seat i te pecalal tial gyihicioe cities x coheed w hington, Se 0—The ori | The samo dimensions of the cham 8 tered all over the United States from as the Go . ak, enate chan per, 113 fect by 80 feet, would be Chicago to ‘Seattle, doing far better| most assuredly trying to do, to ele-/ Winter Wheat Is lace 1850, rill ¢ sincd Wab-a Huibicicels or ead axa whole than they did in idleness| vate and christ or chation, a ions to provide outel tre. form, within. coved’ calling, on their reservation. ‘ The Nez ebbing directs of oo regis eet * | 0, are better off than their white | eatherin, ; Ww q i ~* Fe. neighbors on the reservation and per | plication to Living as. N| in the title of Civeuine 38 watten| haps just as competent as u whole| dogs, holding an¢ 1 and, . ene : tertettete icin oon alteisn thal ierthesindian y haved ee es request th ALL-BRAN New York Indians are almost en-|has reached t | North Dakota. Agricultural, college, | : m the mechanical |« Uirely ‘under the supers He the] trail, saben tae ethereal b, inter wheat is not widely grown | ¥ tt provide proper The original ALL-BRAN—ready-to-cat with the federal government. prevent| properly revere and preserve ID ous one ee Coll HART onan : i i allocation of their lands and their| tory of their people, yet it mu <2 odin dbaiigh teeseyide | ‘ vould be 1 i === becoming full fledged citizens. Many| recognize. the fact that the Indian Aver peeriers cin \ of them are engineers on local rail-| must take up the white man’s trail. eh penanalh y the ar-| oe [ts have good farms and yet come| “I do not think it out of plac Tal ihn tavoretic’ Semen oe } to receive some 30 cents] attach herewith a photograph of the} SO0NS ON) in lttOrte ee the he capitol. H inen yearly and are other-| great painting by | eee ee um Wihber ae is estimated at $450,000, exclusive of | senators, would by a Pala wise hampered by a loose agency ro whic errors eye vege ae systen marble promenade around the entire <*T {inspected them threc. years ago.| the present time, and to one who has egies 1 ROR peer Seer eee pe edo Originally there were five nation known the Indian from ¢ da e pony : the (all sadcanely : Move Chamber seta seinid bo built these Indians but tliey are six ‘in or, oly et eli a Spring are favorable to the successf This would mark the third cha 1 mies 1 ¥ fee Pre thought and rave fears ax| towing of winter wheat. Growers th te assembly room 5 ot rt The Beotleg Menace for sa Le who have been most successful dur-| tl D a would be The great | segs is to get the it 4 ing the last few years hi sow rst occupied t Indian away from his nomadic life, E ntl the wheat in tall, clean grain stub-|Chamber now used by t the south side of the buil assemblages in camps, dancing, idle- ble.” Court. Gallery space would be ness and now the menace of bootleg- In fact many have adopted] lesser counc He can only At Cass Lake, Minn.,' his individual effort, leading an pected, Indians complain-| industrious and frugal li ci 1 ea e Under the plan, the senate chamber, the half cirele, with the north side eer rica epaety would be moved forward to the north left free. The press gallery, now oc- wall of the senate wing, and the ar-jcupying all of the north side, would | chitects report that no material struc-! be moved over to the northeast cor- ed that they knew of Indians making haere Ions, tural changes would be needed tv|ner where three rooms would be fitted +> leoholie “drinks ‘and burying it it! Norge Robinson jChippewas Making _ [esrry out the aesign..the work would! up. " New committe rooms would be j sranden keen in the ground and other Stand Bef be: confined to the’ tearing out of constructed also on the gallery floor : ! Indians digging it up. Thad Speciall Crusoes Populate | Last Stan OLE | partitions ‘and ‘the relacation “ot gui, between the corridors and the south | Ulficer buyd go over the White T . t I . Se * | wall. Earth reservation and he seized elev- South Sea Island; ouris' hvasion —— on ¥ en stills, and shortly afterwards a L H — swarms of mosquitos lurking in and! sessed of almost magic virtues as 0 i] bright half breed told me that 24 had] | |. Danbury, Wis., Sept. 10.—()--The] around the lakes and swamps. | preventive against infectious diseases | 1 started in their place. San Pedro, Calif., Sept. 10—()— last and final attack of their an-! Of late years tourists and summ, held to be mainly responsible for} E While in charge of Fort Totten) Barred by immigration quotas from! cient enemies, the white people,| resorters have been buying the like! its ever growing vogue. | school and Indian Agency I was told] the United States, 21 Norwegian Ro- | threatens to overwhelm a valiant | frontage and land along the St, Croix| | The home of citrus fruit is southern | by the Commissioner of Indian Af-| binson Crusces, supplied with ready! handful of Chippewa Indians, named} River, and “The Lost Band” is becom-| Asia, from the lower pi fairs that the Sioux nation, consist-| cut houses, » radio and boilers for “The Lost Band” which has hunted| ing restricted to less desituble camp-| China to the slopes of the I of 26 different bands with| reducing whale and seal oil, have! »nd fished on the hevdwaters of the) ing grounds. Where once they were | Moun , Some 6,000 years ago ing of some different dialects, had petitioned him| subdued the Ecuadorean isle of Santa st, Croix river, for half a century or A to authorize a greater Sioux Council] Maria of the Galapagos group, 600 jore, waar and asked my opinion, I submit be-j miles west of Ecuador in the if’ Their hunting grounds are being low my answer, which I think very} The immigrants, followed by their usurped by peaceful tourists and shows ‘the real condition} familics on a succeeding. shi have! summer resorters from | free to roam the forests and plains, travelers brought the “first golden of all parts of the territory, they are, apples” from India to Nippur in| no longer welcome in many of the’ Lower Mesopot a and toward the settled portions. | 6th century, the Jews retur At a Victory celebration in 1919,; the Babylonian captivity To the man whose kindly tolerance and sympathy se, ns and what should be] built up a trade in dried codfish and) Wisconsin and Nebraska, and the In-| chiefs of the tribe petitioned the late| them to Palestine Premises: oils, aided by the government of dians numbering 250 adults and their | Gov E “lL. Philipp for a| Jaffa oranges are graded and puck- have put thousands back on ‘oad happiness # Should Re Denied Eeuador, which waived export duties children are practically without | reservation of their own. ‘The sov- ed by hand, according to the six of k the r to the advisability of creat-| ‘Natural springs furnish water and "°R¥io. their refusal a half century | {enened’ ao diet Mien ned took seine sie preferred in the market is the ND she was but one of hun- ‘6 aac t Council of the Dakota| cooling brectes from the mountains ago to settle on the shores of Court] steps to furnish them with lands,| box containing 144 oranges. arada ache hate dae tae Ge me o Ot sex morals being emper the trop’ | Oreilles, with several other tribes,| The project was never completed, rer i create tis a startling ques- it senting d = ear FBO {which had been allotted land on the} however, and the band is bo. | Seen | same: lddecrétsshe would tion—but a question that has organization of tied c Used Car Situation | lake, the band wandered Eheeagh ne coming pressed for hunting grounds, gema——m-ersmmnn--soenmmeoreres, not tell her mother—or perhaps ora heretofore existed unasked in | gountey, arou ¢ t ire practically unable to 1. ‘her husband—but in the confes- i i sirable, but if the problem . . Croix river hunting and fishing] up agriculture, having no permanent e A confes the minds of all intelligent men Solved ‘alang-enational Clarified For Buyer for a living. Having a strong tribal | Wade ne Be Permane t ! sional of the Judge's chambers she 99 and women; and it Page more the ony = | organization and distinct traditi i revealed all. Her story and the CVOIE™” startling than the evidence that “It is pretty well recognized now | these Chippewas asked for a rese: + “The claims of the various people! that the place where one buys a used tion of their own, apart from other of the tribe are varied, they have! car has everything to do with the | tribes. Being refused this, they a been placed in the hands of compe-| satisfaction of the owner” sxy~ W | propriated the whole region for t'! tent attorneys, and therefore, the) & Lahr of the Lahr Motor Sules use. Their wandering habits caus final disposition of tl ef claims | company. the name “The Lost Band” to be would involve discence ‘ime was when people thought tached to them. a whole as pertaining to the whole! that they could outsmart the junk jo 2 Welcome Sioux Nation. man and they bought used cars much Since the Civil war, they have been “The election of delegati like men used to trade horses. To- | moving around the territory which on involve. lecal action and di day they go to a reputable dealer carly maps was named “Moskeecto Palestine Oranges | Stories of scores of others—men as Judge Lind offers in hi 4 Women | well as women—are now being re- By aie of Pane ae = file: Believed By Some . | told for socteey’ 4 Revol 4 | f ety’s good by Judge Ben The Moral .” to Halt Disease in Ten |B. Lindsey in the Mee EES Jt rnin, at 10-002 have di | tinirecet Jude Ben B, Lindsey sais! delicious taste and unique fragrunce- ffl have discarded old hy- ff! ioe. ° Y the Judge's arti- he Jaffe orang tare ponutar in’ ff gienic methods for this |f lished in any mag- Judge of the Family Court of Denver Clef And consid- not beneficial to these people. and buy whatever they like with noiCountry” because of the uease] Europe but the belief that it is pos- azine. Re: i pages of the san bh d with r an Rew way —true protec: zine, asoning e8 of t! : are now too eh cngrossed : jy basta as pais iemene Mae enc ge Uy : ay " | from the stories of real life told him in rt ime and read irst article in another i ds like t: ou! magazi the first ai in day after day, Judge Lindsey has reached cer- astonishi ics i ‘ ‘ { ‘ 3 onishing serics in which th ionally - tain conclusions, and now he boldly asks: “Is fi oe oe e terns lly | “t propery Wbat gaat on Toda tale ON THE MANVILLE BATTLEFIELD | fairs, ° 7 , : q ments often resulting in their homes “ ” : .: i ia : . we robbed, stock neglected and : id-time “sauitary pad* bad to wo! h l p . ls peg A Pree - es a 2 pt piag Sd Mrs. Philip Lydig Revea variably resort to their local dances! |: f : E a employ it. You wear sheerest frocks | ° in onder to, collect moner to defray ae: Li sas without a second thought, any time, crets Oo New York Society vaplous “off the reservation mect-| -gumel . ‘ BA anywhere. You meet every day un-| ings.” These local dances are man-| ‘2am Fatt? handicapped. LMOST since gitihood, beautifulMrs.Philip Lydig, the other by Judge Lindsey—Th ” aged selaly by Fangs cs eo, ke . meg “It is called “KOTEX” ... five} & Lydig hes been an unquestioned leader cf Red Book Ma bine Peyote, 4 "4 intoxicants of the various characters pe. ¢ ov 9 | times as absorbent as the ordinary Wes New York's ultra-smart society. Now for urates ite new plan of adding the drama clr tibte at thexe dnaces with » AEE > : 5 é cotton pad! firat time Mre. Lydig proceeds to turn the of Fact to the drama of Fiction—which great assiduity, all of which tends 5 J ‘ peat, A Thorowshly ‘deedorises . . . thes Spot-light on that society—telling in great detail latter is expressed by Rupert Hughes in to lessen the interest of the Indians; ° P ‘ : why she finds it i “ 4 farwaing nea lowers ps pg ea ending ALL fear of offending. pidicads she Poiliag rae Sora he ptacper ee rose fy Carta Mrs. Philip Lydig | took voltae oad ti re : j . ‘ Y Discards as easily as a piece of | after story of tragedies heretofore never Publicly novelists and stors-writers: Ruth Com- —the firvt wife ef the tissue. No laundry. No em- disclosed. If chronicles of the real lives of the fort Mitchell, James Francis D. he t D. Si 5 wyer, late WE, D. Stokes, a prominently fashionable—heretofore known only Struthers Buit, Samuel Merwin, New Yerbvocialiead. You ask for it without hesitancy ; © those on the inside of that group—are of in- Leroy Scott, Thyra Samter Winslow, (7 /0r Sears, and de simply by saying “KOTEX,” at any | ‘#fest to you, then You must read Mrs. Lydig’s Robert Benchiey, Wm. H. Osbor : | revealing article, “Marriage Without Love.” In Arthur K. Aki id Michael J. ),ctether Ng or department store. Costs | these two remarkable setles—the one by Mrs Phillipe. ee ee follow ral: sapal taatinet of the

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