The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1929, Page 4

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ALTE ILI I ME aE - THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE resigned the presidency of Congress there. The Articles of Confederation which preceded the present constitu- tion Were adopted in York. Later the first coal-burn- ing locomotives in the United States was built there and for years ran on the Baltimore & Ohio tracks through Maryland. York has contributed one noted astronomer to that science and had a native son in President Arthur's cabinet—from Iowa. . ‘The people who settled York had among them wonder- modem nti peasy ote own 1 as te modern industrial supremacy of the wwn. It has the | largest wall-paper plant in the world, the largest refriger- “a *| ator machinery plant, the iargest artificial tooth manu- io ee factory, great silk mills, turbine shops that likewise are Mee +2 : 2 S Even if you are suffering from some the largest in the country and have supplied the works Py es % ‘ these symptoms, you should take that make electric power for the Montana Power com- x pany along the Missouri over in Montana. There are safe works, chain plants that keep the autos of the world from skidding, agricultural machinery establishments . years by mail, outside of North Dekota. j Pee reer Audie Barcau of Gircaisilon’”” ' |eovering acres, and all this is but a part of York's prom- | inence and eminence in manufacturing. Member of The Associated Press York is more deserving of tributes than the spooky Ped Associated onli a tee As aegh 9 to tad mit notoriety that it is receiving now because three hair- republication hews credited brained individuals are alleged to have slain a fourth Seen eae eee ed te ene cin published herein | mentally on their own caliber. ‘There will be réaction produce hi ddite of tepiblication of all other matter herein | from the hysterical calumniation later and the old town oe avo ‘are also reserved. on the Codorus will regain its ancient colonial luster, because you i It is a pleasure to acknowledge that now and to say of dan- Foreign Representatives York that which it deserves to have said of it. ever to G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY stop i . 5 uo Fifth Ave: Bids. | eTROTT A HOUDINI NEEDED result in a OS Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg | Months have passed since the death of Harry Houdini eventually. eat - without furnishing to the world a worthy successor, and , (Official City, ane Dotebamell one ventures a guesss that many more months will pass Mitel yes PROTECT THE SHEEP Mian the void created by his untimely death will be feeling. If the By all means the sheep industry of the state should be protected from dogs. Predatory animals preying on sheep, such as coyotes, Teceive short shrift when a rifle or poison can deal with their case. Dogs are a bit different. They are a good friend of man and sentiment based on home ties ac- cords them the privileges of a civilized brute. Men as @ rule are always loath to deal harshly with these good if ae i There is not a would-be fakir or mediumistic fraud in the Western World who did not breathe more easily with the passing of Houdini. As a magician he was unique in the whole long line of celebrities of tha: description— going far back into the history of the black arts—because there was nothing of the charlatan about him. He chose to use his peculiar powers to enlighten the human mind and not further darken it in superstition. Houdini asserted for the most apparently inexplicable tricks and supernatural performances a natural or scientific explanation and would prove it by duplicating any of them himself. No prison locks or bars could be found strong and complicated enough to hold him, no bonds and fetters that could hold him prisoner, no brick wall that he might not pass through, no airtight chest under water that he could not live in for an unaccount- able time. And he was so great a despair to the devotees of spiritualistic phenomena that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle once wrote him in effect that his proofs of the natural in these things ‘were only proofs of his own supernatural powers. And Houdini did not originate in the Orient, the a ge g jut aye g i E ge g & E H g prototype. He forfeits human sympathy and protection. So does his owner. Where the master of a dog is in- ag ao A g i j white sauce and cooked with vege- tables. ‘There are dozens of ways of Che using it. HI D E But be sure to allow a child plain milk to drink, either with his meals, &y Ohne Aoberts Barton or Paonia or at bed hee " It should always be sipped—never : y ve Roberts Barloa gulped, and never served very cold. ©NRS by NBA Service,Ine. [it should be sweet and clean and ALLENE SUMNER, I in the same as it does in the case of the coyote and it ‘used to be when wolves abounded. » ~The remedy in the killing of sheep by dogs is simple. Make the owner of the dog pay. This is the law in other _ states where sheep are a factor in agricultural develop- _ tment. This can also be done by licensing all dogs and . paying the sheep owner out of the license fund for losses Caused by dogs. Killings on a large scale, however, A Z i that of water it - returns. . might show tive. The license fund might jhome of the occult. He was just a plain American-bern . kept covered. not be cheng seal boy whose father was a clergyman in the west. Are your children getting enough ie Prabelaess noe if condensed milk a Barnes and Grant counties are taking steps to obtain| Were there more Houdinis and more of the sort of ed-|"™2’ suse i¢ they are not, in time | sion Gunaratey or pene eaeery, + A loss of voice which can _ legislation on this matter. With the growing importance » Of sheep in diversified agriculture, the legislature should Tealize that some such provision of law as asked ought to be accorded. There is no more sense in tolerating killing of sheep by dogs than there is to let coyotes wreak de- § struction and loss on them. | A HISTORICAL TOWN MALIGNED ucation and enlightenment disseminated by him there would be less superstition in the United States and less preying upon the ignorant by the exploiters of this super- stition. Houdiniism was a potent antedote for voodooism and allied isms. be cured by drinking water is doubt- through contraction of the caused by but—make every effort to get fresh milk first, particularly for drinking. geez 71 i Hi i is date in AMERICAN HIST ORY AMERICA LEADS IN STUDENTS About 850,000 students are enrolled in the colleges and universities of the United States, as compared with 65,000 & | A good deal of amazement has been expended on the the JANUARY 12 | “witch” murder for which one man has been sentenced|in'England, 53,000. in France and 123,000 in Germany. 1797—Birthday of John Hancock. to life, imprisonment at York, Pa. Reading the sensa-|Even taking into consideration the disparity in popula- not mean that pe wre ot|1774—Newport, R. I, outlawed all ; distress in your abdomen’ Answer: Uncooked or raw certi- tional accounts in metropolitan papers, to the effect|tion, it is apparent that a far greater proportion of Amer- boggein tbe put into cooked who bought or sold tea. fied milk is the most wholesome, but | that the belief “- witchcraft alleged to have been at t::>|icans set out to obtain higher education. Consequently, milk does not lose |1909—Tennessee enacted prohibition. x “cia = Hero tse pant pec anar rep bottom of the murder was not an isolated instance of |the institutions of higher learning on this side of the ES aipeapate Caspian te ILADY'S JEWELS. warmed and poured over vegetables medieval superstition persisting, but that the entirc|Atlantic are overcrowded and student bodies hetero- ug : ‘5 bs ai Hs ge fortify the Panama Canal. ———_— [BARBS 1 ———— An Ohio bank teller embezzled $11,000 which he said was spent for |“good liquor.” He must have bought 8 pint. 3. gz i é county where the crime w-3 commit::d is permeated ‘With this sort of voodooism, 1: is no wonder that the re- + action is one of amazement. Is ~~" *» amazing if all th- sensat'-~-! stories were | tee that are be:ng given printed circulation to the @erogation of a historical and progressive community which is the third manufacturing city in the state of Pennsylvania. The conditions are not, however, what geneous, presenting a situation which has been a matter of genuine concern to educators for severa] ‘years, If all young men and women entering college were students in the strict sense of the word the situation could: be clarified, for existing facilities :f put to full use would suffice for a far greater number of students than. are enrolled even now. The “wasters” require more in- struction and utilize more equipment than the serious scholar. i | Gbagt does not exist there, whatever amount of evidence} The: tremendous cellege and university ‘enrollment ex- but = : ‘ve is offered—out of encyclopedia articles on witchcraft | Plains the increasing number of student suicides and stu-| toast or cereal or crackers, spread a |heard it under their motor hoods. ‘ad voodooism, perverted into alleged widespread exist-|dent crimes. Where so much human material is in-| little butter on first. Never waste an oe ee |e of rare hous on mrsticiam, thn pyle and ro-|voved part of ts bound to be tnferr. And even) moe of sam, 1 | Women, ar soar clued, te ' egucianism in the York community. Few of the descrip- | where the process of elimination operates efficiently and buy skim milk cheaply and disliked, too. ruthlessly, as it does in the overcrowded college, seme ts in the children’s food tion and for the benefit of society, the schools must turn: aye i : : i i ui E i A Z » s i | & 3 § ¥ eee We haven't seen Fi if Ee ; E ate I g i i 2 I Ee il ie F i H i Fi i Eg Sage, z" ae g Sgz i 22 cil ‘| E : H TO PRESERVE NIAGARA It is encouraging to read that degrees ": | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service; Inc.) But I ‘wouldn't give a little child Se epee " ee, Senta etna GONNA TRY IT ON HER Mr ma see ma in my new vila All who Milk can be served on stewed |and see me in my new wi fruit. ged have seen it are speechless with ad- Milk can be cooked in a cereal or | miration. served.on it, or both. It can be used| Mr. Henpeck: Delighted! Er— in puddings, soups, “gravies,” cus-|may I bring my wife as well?—Pass- Sire | OUR BOARDING HOUSE | Ai $f : m Do You KNow (1S HALE PAST Se ~TsH.-TUsH Davip, AHREE MASOR 2 ~ SUPPOSING SIR ANTHONY, You ok Me “THAT AMAZON, OF YoURS IS Ba wero THE OBSERVATORN Hy : i FE pisce ef i . At certain points the falls have been eroding the rocks '- 130 fast that the entire contour of the cataract threatened to change. Goat Island, in midstream, was in danger of being left high and dry, with the American falls disap- pearing altogether. ‘Now submerged weirs and jetties are to be built above the falls to deflect the flow of water so that the falls can be perpetuated as they are now. It is good news for cit- izens of both nations. i ge i i K East-- i i | Gass ace bois WAITING UP To SOUND “TAPS on) f AS A SPECIAL GUEST OF VouR of the Pennsyl "US FOR CHECKING IA AT-THis fB # i i HOUR ! + OM MCGUIRE WAS “TELLING ME ABouT TH’ lame HE teu b's eaiceted tote at Satin’ NG Wretl-ou g~ ANY I” QALY ceded many: year ¢ i ~ L PHENOMENA OF aipoeriad yal olla HO log aaderaiaal OTHER EXPERIENCE HE-HADLIKE)Y’ Aun SUprteR DURING A tT WAS IM A “TRAIN WRECK, /'| meteoric BOMBARDMENT !. “UM, “HAT 1S, 1\F SHE AND SCIEMTIFIC EVENIIG STUDVING “Te RARE fa 2. ils a5 Boge gil iene a H 3 41 E i Hi | e ? li i ye 1 5 a az eh 1 ff i a “it E i g z I | Bs3 ile Fi f iy : I fe on them. fi db ©

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