The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 14, 1928, Page 4

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;. PAGEFOUR ~The Bismarck Tribune stead of giving him:s regular salary the church, at the end of the year, simply give him whatever surplus ba: An Independent Newspaper funds were left after all other bills were met. He was Bs ei THE oat SPAPER optimistic enough to believe that this: would work. As it happens, it has worked beautifully. The Rev. muplished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis’! Brooks still holds that pulpit and is getting along nicely. . D. “marek as second class mail matter. The church has never yet failed to live within its budg- D. Mann ..... «President and Publisher | et—something rather unusual, for any organization— George Weekly mail, in state, year ‘Weekly 4 ol in state, tures years for Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, ver oo ee oe Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republication of all news dispatches credited net otherwise does not even furnish any real protection to the person who has hidden it, for it is so likely to be lost or stolen 1.50] or burned up. beans. : * . People usually store money in this way because they pa tah J chicken, aspar: do not trust the banks and other financial institutions A gus, baked ground: beets, stu: which handle the funds of their depositors. Even under . 2 celery, Jello or Jell-well with a total lack of guarantee laws the bank is ordinarily a oy” Mh hw cg whipped sreu a. Rad a evececesnseseemey it or ited in this newspaper, and) 7. 4 itory f than is the old sock , Monday the local news of spontaneous origin published | °®‘er depository for money than is the old sock. + Breakfast — Coddled eggs, whole- rein. All rights of republication of all other mat-} One function of money is to make more money for f° wheat muffins, stewed tele herein are also reserved. its possessor. It was not meant to be hoarded, but to 5 een F ene aes Reeds eae Foreign Re; tatives be used to furnish the life-blood for the arteries of E > fi . Dinner—Vegetable steak, teamed G. LOGAN. PAYNE COMPANY trade. Money that is set at work makes money, not . \ EW YORK ‘ f q carrots, cooked celery, liflower Hien eee Fifth Ave. Bigg. TROIT only in a direct way for its owner, but indirectly for = sh N = salad, applewhi: ‘sadly : EK everybody. Industries live on capital, under our pres- = N CLL iene SLT ent social organization, which seems likely to persist tonne aaa come, Sey ES (Official City, State and County Newspaper) for some time to come. Laborers work when money Lur.eh—Steamed rice, cooked spin- works, and starvation would come to many if all the = a : ach, Avocado salad. money of the country were put under the carpet. And . Dinner—Tomato and celery soup, DEVINE SURVEYS STATE DESTINY 3 The facts developed by the recent survey of J. M.|the money itself would become worthless. paid AERGANE Mastoy Sea ne t Devine, state commissioner of immigration, as to the! Another bulwark of industry ts confidence. The i dessert. | trend of agricultural evolution in North Dakota, indi- | wheels of trade will not turn without the lubricant of : ZZ A Wednesday cate that this country is setting itself aright for an expanding future in farming. Step by step agricul- 5 y i Breakfast — Wholewheat muffins trust. The widespread spirit of suspicion that leads R cee with peanut butte: fi to the hoarding of money in the home is nét good for By ae ‘ i 3 ‘ i ph hited 4 " Lunch — Potato soup, cooked, let ture is going forward to greater attainments with | business, 2 ZA tuee, celery and ripe ate, , let every adjustment in methods and every introduction of | America needs to get its money out of the teapot b 3 : . Dinner — Roast veal, wholewheat “T new branches of production. and the oven and put it in the banks and the business See z : 2 3 dressing, buttered vegetables, (car- Two primary lines of activity are the paths of prog- ress by which agriculture in the state is moving into that greater empire of productivity. One is the selec- tion of the fittest in seed and in the purest breeding stock strains. The other is the trend to diversification on the farm. Tested seed has brought better grade of grains and increased yields, the one tending to obtain higher prices, as in the case of protein premiums, and the other to swell the total value of the grain crops. : ~ f R - cog: turni, cell of the land. If people will not trust the banks, let 2 35 wae taled, Mibeiek tice thi! them loan their money to Uncle Sam. Probably he will not go bankrupt; and if he does, the money will be of no use anyhow. Put your money at work, somewhere small piece of ham, applesauce. and somehow, and then go to work yourself in the rane fen Llben Pate Secprl cheerful confidence that most of your fellowmen are e Ou Fesect e l tD Aieat i a eRe i honest and will protect your interests. bearbeiten rooms, baked parsnips, tomato, spin- ‘Thursday Breakfast—French omelet, waffle, ai y i i it h-asparagus salad, dish of berries ‘ ROBBERY FOR EDUCATION asa 8 | New York the other day. We didn’t History in New York City the other |@¢ t of Dakot ij i (canned). Parebred animals embody the prospect of North Dakota) vAtiSad Hada ot Guide. Sonia of Giaiavace | BARBS |] see any mention of any of the Follies | day. Probably there is a special de- Friday again becoming a great livestock state on the small ry girls. partment for people who bet on ~ farm basis as the state once was in the old range and |Praiseworthy, and some are quite the reverse. a eee died wrestling matcher? Breaktfi crates nee Ne ae ranching days. Already splendid herds are being built} A 17-year-old student at Michigan State College] Mrs. Noah Beery, asking for a John B. Watson, psychologist, ‘toasted Shredde; eat Biscuit, Magma ‘ : ions, | divorce, charges that the film villain rents should apply the be-|.(Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) |baked apple. is awaiting sentence for robbing two gasoline stations. | ('v0™ villain at home, too, Now it! Ravinpietis theory to chlien'ty end) Robert Win old hunter}. Lunch— Celery soup, cucumber Arrested for the erimes, he explained that he had lost | wouldn't even be surprising to find|their horror of the dentist's chair. e, bh and olive sandwiches, ; ‘ ‘i fy b eect a " ly brought . the job by which he was working his way through col-|a clown who wasn’t always weeping A nickel used to do the work; maybe i sal recently Dinner—Minced fish in cucumber 5 A r . * A wn -pound bear, with a 20- ke inabh, ked lege. His father, a rural mail carrier, could not help | When off the stage, {he means to give the kid adime. | gauge shotgun, He killed the animal jelly, cooked spinach, cooked egg him. The boy had to have money. * # ad ee plant, sliced tomatoes on lettuce, with two gun-lengths when it came, “I was too proud to ask for help,” he said. Sixty peasants were executed in| Last June the Treasury Depart-| upon him in surprise while he wasfeeeWed-apricots. - : That kind of pride ‘inctly not an asset to any- i isti ment predicted a deficit of $94,000,- Saturday : Fe oaekt ra pane am cOre | con: Newscin December, 1€ comes| OOnine for wattridres, Breakfest—Oatmeal with milk or body. It may be embarrasing to ask someone to help | with the nefarious custom of paying | Up with a $37,000,000 surplus. Gosh,| The United States Bureau of Fish-|cream. you out of financial difficulties, but it is a wee bit | taxes. we hope they never predict a surplus. |eries now has 86 nurseries where pinata hia carrots and peas, better than going out and committing robbery. ets alsa 7,000,000,000 young fishes and eugs cod ed squash. . Famous pets were exhibited on| The Hall of Fishes was opened in| are sent out annually to stock the| Dinnet—Roast pork, cooked. tur- | Editorial Comment the roof of the Waldorf-Astoria in|the American Museum of Natural streams of the country. nips and tops, string beans, salad TO DUST RETURNETH (New York Times) From the earliest times the bodies of dead kinj up at various strategic locations as distributing sources to the small herd owner who joins stock raising with the activities of the plow and the reaper. These are the two chief lines of North Dakota farm- ing, unless one separates dairying, poultry raising and other forms of diversification from cattle, sheep and swine production which also have loosely been classed = with diversification, and regards them as a third de- ~~ partment of the state’s expanding agriculture. The interesting feature of the Devine survey is the revelation that North Dakota grain growing is seeing its primacy challenged, that diversification is creeping ;up on it in the totals of values. It means that the -. State will remain a great grain producing area—at present the second wheat state in the union—but also that with the rise of diversification the sources of its farm wealth will be multiplied. It has almost hap- ci ‘ have been objects vene: lany civ’ pened that they have been doubled, according to the) Mave,ewy oblate of ae and veneration. any ci Devine figures. With a total dollar value for'wheat in} earth should not be the lodgment of the mighty, and 1927 of $221,171,000 and of $209,195,000 in the present] great vaults have been erected where the bodies of. year, diversified products showed a total value of $172,-) Kings and queens should lie forevermore. Only among 776,000 in 1927 and of $195,330,000 this year. Thus the] jreZtermcr Peoples of antiquity, whose creed was that ’ r y ;_ | in death master and slave went fittingly to their Maker gap shrinks between the two varieties of agriculture in| in a garment of the dust, were rulers buried at one oo Hida tikes Rit the state. But ifs a race in which each group continues} in their six fegt of earth. i ee egg THIS HAS HAPPENED “Can't we go some place else?” | Mortimer bit her lip. The man gave an impression of = forward, for, while grain values fell this year, that was| Yet from the beginnings of history poets aiid fhilés PEN CARSTATRS whos be |JCtTY Plended. Pd rem she ‘said quickly: |trying to.resist but of being tas: ~ aril i TI ‘duction in| QPhers have been engaged in establishing the doctrine be “On Sunday? Not a chance. ‘you're missing something.’ cinated against his will. He. cast = an effect for lower prices for wheat. The production in| «dust thou art, to dust returneth,” and it is related of ring with Jerry sighed. A maid in a strip of printed | anxious glances about the table now ein bushels was greater. Had wheat commanded prices as/a great king that—as Abraham Lincoln was to do lon; Pen DAN HARVEY. pet attent®: | “I suppose I don’t need to change|cloth wound: round her came to|and then and Jerry heard him ad- high as last year, the story of the survey which Com-| afterwa bowed his head in humility when he re Showers her with atiention,""" |my dress to go to The Kraal,” she |take Jerry's.and Alester’s wraps. |monish the girl to “stop it.” Once ie laakiaar Devine ‘has hed to tell would hare been still| Shirley's lines if Un & gown. for « |said after a while. They followed Betty to the cur-|she heard him say: “Marian may ‘ ey 8 gd Mer to, Jerry | lester told her no. tained doorway. Alester held the|come in, Addie—you. know. she's more inspiring. As it is it reveals the state moving on Shortly they were driving| bamboo fringe up for her to pass| trailing us.” to that stabilized and diversified future already attained through high picket fence and up|through but she hung back and let| Addie laughed—the same uncon- by the states eastward in the course of their agricul- @ rutted road to a group of bark-| Jerry precede her. trolled, mirthless sound that Jerry tural evolution. covered buildings that spread out| “Addie’s eating fire again,” she|had noticed Betty listening to in ; “i aan , trom a central hall in the shape of|said under her breath, but Jerry |the hall. “* Commissioner Devine has performed a labor to in- @ star. caught the words. “Th *~ spire every North Dakotan with faith in the ultimate Alester drove around them until} She had no time to ponder the|#0meone remanked irritably. 8 There is no armour against fate. Death lays his icy hands on kings. Sceptre and crown must tumble down And in the dust be equal made With the poor crooked scythe and spade, getting on my nerves,” Now a once glittering procession of the monarchs ‘on his account, x destiny of the state by thus charting the trends of its st England and their consorts have bean taken from fluence to get her a vince In becouse tothe ena of ee Oe meenie: etoro abee * scene kt ca re el natiasnone, es i i i i - | their vaults in St. George’s chapel and laid in the royal ag re the sign olfa’ of scribable pandemonium. ean of ite dovelopreent_ Ie i in'ine with hs actvny [cemetery at Frogmere,* There Victoria and the Prine | [| ycecestea org durt, muah £0 (dor, aere‘he ped iis car and| "Asatte meth herenisa ant |Selehtened clot onthe faces ot the TE ere nace 3t is in line with his activity | Consort were buried, and the poet’s prophecy is, being ‘Dan acen Jerry and tells her ake is |led Jerry across a dirt-floored porch |a group of young men and women |™eu, the feverish light in the giris’ as commissioner of immigration. He himself needs| realized as the bodies of Edward Vil, two earlier trinming, Alenter to her feet but |to a heavy, barred door: » who were. plainly of Alester's and |¢¥es. It was easy to believe they the vision with which such figures are able ta imbue | Georges and the Sailor King, Victoria’s uncle, join them him. He has been putting unflagging faith and en- | in the lowly dust. In English earth, where lie millions It opened at his touch and Jerry |Betty’s sort. On the table was a|%ad been in this horrid place for ert? Atiantle tfound herself looking at a grisly-|large black pot and under it an | Hours. : ee i piacere ;- | of their subjects and contemporaries, the kings and taaken hin ingey ha veftting ne |faced attendant who stood at at-|artificial fire. The table was very| Betty sat down beside her and Posbiann Jointly into. the administration of the public! Guesns descend to obey the inexorable rule’ ef life nttond a mldnigkt party he wants |tention with a spear in his hand— |low—made from-rough boards iaid|Dut Jerry's thoughts into ‘words. “* post with which North Dakota has entrusted him.| and death. ve the chorus " la spear, she saw, that had been|on the floor. The guests squatted | “Nasty, isn’t it?” she sald unemo- .+ What he has found out as to prospects for the future of lint dipped in red. : on mat. seats. HHonalty, ip don’t. laa how they «= of Dakota farming can not fail but to increase his own THE BILLBO. NUISANCE She shrank back. from this sight eee si it. I came in just afew min- = and the zeal of every other booster for the state. (St. ne hea S and Alester put a hand on her arm. But it was not the table or those e before ereiaeriven.” 5 As commissioner of immigration, Devine has done| The billboard nuisance alon, public highways is re- let peruseume niece.” he warned shank 1% that attracted Jeerye swered.in Joyal "= hepa linea sg = iving i n- her, “unless you keep in mind that {attention. At:the end of the room | *Wered. ity Ree so 2 much to call the attention of settler prospects to the | ceiving inci ing attention. For many years the u 3 a whi a ‘Addie always. ‘spoils things, “+ opportunities which North Dakota holds out to the new. | #ightly signs which mar the landscape and deface the Negeri 2. DOORS: See | Snes es rule Semnected SHA Talay went pa ie ites oc anetiaa ‘~» comer if he be of the right mettle, and that has been the Hod be Saale crise aneaee ener been a Sayan 4 mer | “And spoll your appetite,” Jerry |entire width of the room, had been} boredom. But Jerry noticed that + type.of newcomer he has sought to enlist in the further i hundretls of millions of dollars every Rome fricnaan's mireduce Ber t© | aaded, shuddering. thrown open to afford a view of the Re es aye Pycg enea| « making and shaping of the commonwealth, e ining its roads and adding new improved NOW GO ON WITH THE stony | _ 22 see a nate of mes connie entertainment. fot left her smooth young cheeks. He has been a good in the right pl: highways to the system. The Minnesota Highway de- came through a distant door Alester led Jerry to a seat and as ee eeremns ene eooe Man: tn-the right place. partment alone account: venteen millions a) year, SSETER ARES someone had opened. “It’s like ®/she took it someone. extinguished eae ii = and the number of miles of paved and graded roads SUTHE KRAAL!” Jerry said {t/jungle madhouse,” Jerry thought.|the lights, Only the glow from the |*¢ \T does ‘eating fire’ mean? pa THE HOMECOMING STUDENTS built every year in the United States is close to 30,000. precisely as Alester had an-| lester was leading the wax to-|potfire filled the room. Beyond, Jerry asked before she was bl When the boys and girls come home for the holidays | The object of this enormous outlay is not only to pro- ticipated. He chuckled. ward a curtained opening at the tnd | where the show was on, there was|conscious that the words had j mote commerce but also to open the beauties of natural - 5 ; of the hall. “They lean hard on/s dim, greenish light supposed to|formed in her mifd. To her sur- Som schools apd selene, heed are an object of much scenery to all. who may Pen see. When the roads ‘But that's a notorious place!” !tne wind instruments,” he said. Scan Nee ee filtering |prise Betty explained. adoration from admiring relatives. Many of the home | have been built, and the public attempts to take ad- Jerry exclaimed, puzzled at the) “Wind instruments?” Jerry re- through jungle verdure. “Oh, it’s just an expression we folks are worrying for fear they are studying too hard, tage of them, at ‘every band the eye is affronted amusement he was showing. peated, thinking of delicate flute! ne music had changed now. The |have for trouble seekers,” she said cae army ny ‘tet of the hogs ht ahs > a “Ms ene ham a anne | fF ToNTe en He" Aloe aa coe nagar etd fo mm, te ra tedeenty "ache en excite alarm. . now seems to be yielding to serious protest, and several agreed. “But it’s also the hottest | atester replied, never having trou-|° tomtom, the unvarying note of Tt was # vague explanation, but Judging by their new slang, their more self-confident | states have already taken some timid steps in the fashfon of the younger crowd at|bied to inform himself that the|® beaten gong, the shrill clash 3 Jerry was further enlightened a tow Poise, their increased sophistication, they have learned a | restriction. the moment. They've got a show|primitive notes like those of the|°7mbals, the strange sound o| . . ttrac- great deal. Some of the parents may feel they have| The American Association of State Highway Offi- that. lifts you off your chair.” trombone that came to his ear were | ™Usical bones. Tilputes lates WAER Very a z r “ F Jerry’s hands clas) in| tive young women with a wild-eyed . Iearned to much. cials at their recent convention in Chicago adopted = “I didn’t think respectable people | Produced by a sackbut and that the snctnecloua tease os: agree young man in her wake entered the resolution calling attention to this defacement of the tuba, the ocarina, the hautboy, Too! Not so much is heard of the courses they have stud- countryside. The association resolved that “in the in- go there,” Jetry ventured, wonder- | bassoon and bomberdon all added forward and watched the scene be- m. : Z - ied, which one would think from their conversation, was he promotion of scenic beauty we ing if there was any possible way |their tones to the wondrous synco- | Fe her acne pitts em fe sian ane & very minor element. That does not mean that they tates which have not already done of getting out of it. pation that had brought fame to| Dark figures emerged from a Baye d feathers—the business Ber eet Ries acess taal eork 1t weld be tedivgs t2 | all advertising signs from the highways and fe ‘ » Ales: |The Kraal. penton Saree: An 0 setnared round |’ fons Oy iJ reel vores: 3 woul ous fF | vicinity thereof by legislation prohibiting such adver- 'T knew you'd be shocked,” Ales- eee © huge pot like the smaller one she|of removing Cleve. The wild-eyed tising within distance of at least 500 feet of the rights ter admitted, “You're so funny, but GOMBONE appeared at the open- had seen on the table near her. |Young man tagged along, obviously of way of all highways.” you needn’t worry. The Magnolia |) ing A jeweled hand moved the| Z¢Y Joined others that had come/ Upset over his role of escort to ® fe bri it An interesting campaign is being w: for the te them and piled wood he-|raiding wife. room are suspended for a brief respite, they should elimination of fillsenute ian iy eoeed in New Rooms are private and no one will |curtain aside, Jerry saw a flushed. kick their heels up in the air, arid seek to forget such neath the pot, from which issued| No one protested Cleve’s depar- York, particularly on Long Island. Alert communities see you.” girl in 9 simple silk dress standing |e sii smoke like steam. " ture. Jerry was sure she heard a forbidding facts as lessons and examinations. have awakened to the benefits, both esthetic and com- “I was thinking of Miss Mort!- ee er eres wet Jerry saw, with a horror she|sigh of rellef trom Betty, and im- In spite of all the holiday doings, there should be mereial, i> be derived from a paliey of Breer the mer,” Jerry replied, “If she’s the |) 9” papas that a society girl [ould not meee ~ gl | mediately there ae & bering ome good heart to heart auty of their environs, ven, 8 eden creat @ girl, bound han it toy be Seis with the folky isan hs ‘adopted ordinances to restrict the billboards, and Kind of. girl your mother kes /should be gowned so inconspic- and foot, to the edge of the fire, teach Alesiat tat aed out ‘and The day will come soon when in their consciousness should think she would be too nice|uously, She had learned from apere. more are contemplating similar action. ° where they threw her to the ground |she saw with disgust that Addie of their own independence and necessity for self-re-| The hideo 8 along the American highway sys- to go to The Kraal.” Evelyn that smart women never | na lett her to groan and shriek| was left with her head buried in they will. feel they must make their own de- ae an sos sf beats and safety. “Oh, Betty likes to go slum- better 5 fatal ay aia while they cast imaselres ine, & her arms on the table, sobbing power home luence Iso m convenience of mof ” + » lester, ritable frenzy of leapi i bby a fot Shem will Publicly placed guides and confusing ee Mine’. Alpmee Oe he, f eee re gesture eae Thay al detract t! bid . ae in a singing voice as she came for- , Thomas Chief of the Buren of Public “Well, I don't,” Jerry sald em-|yra'te mest Jerry, ing, bending, groveling gestures, “I suppose she thinks she’ made this final flight | Roads in the United States Department of Agriculture, | [Jf Phatically. “I know how the other |" “'vq heard about you,” she sald. |rrurmn the wide doors were closed; | "Ai the ead of eedae te ree those who love them. ig half lives and I don’t believe in|“Alester's impossibly boastful of T tui that’ the lights went up and Jerry |tured to suggest that they ought to iy wl etic commercializing misfortune to .at- pnd aged) sequaintances, but! wag oy tothe members of |start for New York. Alester unex- “they ” party. Dectedly = and so detract tg tape who go to The|™# the opportunity bara & | the Bieseays Accustomed Kreal aren't the victims of misfor |” fi commercial. aps / tune,” Alester replied. majestic cliff, marring a “They are, or they wouldn't he|! obscuring = ‘particula , there, It's a misfortune not to sense of their utter in- know better. ie ti eee ; ALESTER laughed. “Well, yon} just wait until you've a little over the misfortune of hav- ed to eat the fried and se z. EFe EEE iE Haltway. back:she saw him pause in a desperate | suddenly and stand transfixed, bis attention—to | eyes on one of the tables that occu- it seemed to Jerry, who | pied the corners of the hall. ATo Be Continued) ; : and the minister’s optimism has been justified by the Fi Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ieatilta’ ~ Daily by carrier, per year . s mail, per year, (in Bismarck) 20 SERENA ee “ rr = P mail, per year, TRUSTING THE BANKS x Dr. MeGoy’s menus suggested for|of chopped cucurabers and raw cab- ‘state outside ck) sees isges' PP = ne Dakota, Money in old socks or under the rag carpet is one * ee bins beginning Sunday, Decem- bage, cabpe sia Cucumber Jetty: oN of the most useless things in the world. Such money ‘ i is ple 2 5 fatale af Mised i +, Rev. P. J. Collop of Indianapolis Cook two cupfuls of diced cucum. * Dr. McCoy will gladly answer -Persona] questions on health a oe eet = ire of ' Enclose i stamped adi envelope for reply. bers in sufficient water until tender, and stir in one envelope of gelatine which has been soaked in cold water and dissolved over hot water. Re- move cucumbers from fire and run through a colander or coarse sieve. If quantity does not equal three cup- fuls add boiling water. Next, mix in two cupfuls of cooked minced fish, a half cupful of chopped. pars- ley, and a medium size tomato cut into small pieces. Pour into mold and place on ice. Serve in slices garnished with parsley. Sufficient for ‘six portiot QUESTIONS *AND_ANSWERS Swelling on Neck Question: L. G, asks: “Will you kindly. tell me what is the jeause of a swelling on my neck on the right side just below the ear? V T have had it for about a month now A ‘imes there is a sharp pain - I had one four years ago in the same place and had it for about a year and then it opened and yellow pus came from it.” Answer: I would advise you to have a physician examine the swell- ing on your neck as it is undoubted- ly a local condition from the infec- tion of inflammation of one of the lymphatic glands. "The length of time you ‘have had this trouble would indicate that it is not a boil or carbuncle, Face Lifting j Question: Mrs. J. .K. writes: “Please give me your opinion about face lifting. Is it a serious opera- tion? Answer: Face lifting is danger-,, ous, both in the operation itself and often in the distressing after-results, when the face is twisted into un- lovely shapes. I could not even ad- vise an actress to have this opera- § tion performed. Do Nerves Rebuild After Killed by Poison? Question: N. .O. N. writes: Kindly let me- know if it is true that nature does not rebuild nerve cells once destroyed? Also, if the fol- lowing poisons consumed or inhaled often but in small doses will destroy the nervous system or injure it be- yond repair: Alcohol, nicotine, phos- gen and chlorine.” Answer: Some cells are com- pletely destroyed through injury and never rebuild, but with the ordinary | changes taking place in the body the cells are rebuilt'as fast as they are . a destroyed. Wood alcohol destroys cp cells, often causing blindness, but grain alcohol is a stimulant and does not cause poisoning except when used in éxcess, Nicotine is a-vio- lent poison but only small amounts are taken in through chewing tobac- co’ and smoking. Phosgen and chlorine are poisonous in large quantities. % ye | Our Yesterdays l FORTY YEARS AGO A delegation of Bismarck men have gone to Jamestown to attend @ convention which is a preliminary . step toward a constitutional con- vention. Among those who are at- tending are M. H. Jewell, John A. Rhea, Captain I. P. Baker, F. V. Barnes, Judge ce, Mayor Bent- , ley and Col. William Thompson. B. L, Crosby has returned to Bis. marck and will be in charge of t! bridge construction work at th river, - C. J. Hubbard of Cromwell is vis iting friends in the city. . Jacob Dietrich has returned fromj 7) Wisconsin where he has been worke id ing for the past year. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO A. C. Hinkley installed a new foo} warmer in his hack, Patsy Gillis has gone to his home in Stillwater for the holidays. i is a vi rin the city, Attorney E. S, Allen and J. Phil- brick have returned from a trip to Hunters Hot Springs, Montana. A TEN.YEARS AGO -_S. A. Olsness, insurance commis. sioner, is recovering in a local hos- pital from an attack of influenza, , Lieut. H. S. Markam, chaplain of the Second North Dakota regiment, spoke at the auditorium, Mrs, S. Christenson, 79, who re- sides 16 miles southwest of ‘Mane dan, saw her first movie on her irthday. Rev. ‘Burdette Lawson Mi Minneapolis is’ visitin, in the sites ———<—$_—— date in. 1715—Howe ordered -100 wooden houses a, Boston torn dows (4 and 1619—Alabama’ admitted to thé 4 mion, 1860—About half-the senators and representatives from eight southern states: advocated es tablishment of C nfederacy| official beginning of the elf bellion,

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