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cent more one and two-year-old heifers than at the end of 1927,” says thie bank survey. “The total number of these heifers was 602,000, about 23 per cent of the number THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER of dairy cows, which {s considerably in excess of the (Batablished 1873) nusaber needed for .replacements. This indicates that Jamarck , Bis-|dairymen expect either to continue building up the wom ny hg Ops at the pomotiioe af Baeacck quality of their herds by replacing older, low-producing class mai] matter. cows with better bred young stock or to increase the D. Mann ....0.0+se0e008 Presideat and Publisher size of their herds.” The Bismarck Tribune F ‘An Independent Newsprper j OFF FOR A HOLLOW TREE It is not hard to feel a good deal of sympathy for the Indian*polis gentleman who fled to live in a hollow tree because the radio in his own home was kept going nigh. ane. day. DRIED FRUITS —,_—‘[the flavor nevertheless quite palatable were portant |- | and nutritious. seat BE ie PAST UEREIG coterie | E.bellave toa eh. Claus Will obi when the public will demand and be i til dition to the food supply of many of the American Indians during the win- The man was 69 years old, and lived with his’ son's , : j D ter months and they practiced the family. When he made his exodus, he explained later, \ A drying of apples, berries and other he was driven to it by the fact that “a fellow can't get @ 1 4 fruits many years before the coming any sizep at all” with the radio going at all hours. The i E 44 . , 8 a Se Properly dried Police, who took him in on a vagrancy charge before : F : fruit you have noticed that its flavor they knew what it was all about, turned him over to oY 5 We, . : is richer than the fresh fruit, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| police magistrate, who finally induced him to return / ~ : der tebotiication of all paws diapatetos credited. Wo tt| home and make ene more efor: to aceilevate himself to Z | ! h Sie Le otherwise credited in this newspaper and also) 4 constant outpouring of song. 1 \ = Z of the fruits ship- | bread has been built up by the gen- news ablation of eke me bth Probably a good many of us, at one time or another, —== \ caval 224 aEEE PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ee : ‘ket in the cia state vined eral recognition of bey advantages. have felt a sneaking longing to make tracks for the tall x while partly green. The dried fruits do not contain as timber and find a suitable hollow tree. We don’t know nest food and flavoring ma-) much acid as the fresh fruits because Forcign Representatives of it luc reduced, much about the peace and quiet of the deep woods, except Pi Va last, ye a teu bears: pattece are cowie Carscontinn into pad @. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY by hearsay, but there are times when they look good to us. ) w Tipeness is reached, and fruit picked | the ripening process. The dried fruits NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. Our modern civilization is designed to appeal chiefly . ina ahha Bahan tial f° etree so etal for Amereasing CHICAGO D 7 to the eye and ear. There is an enormous amount of The drying of fruit is resorted the alkalinity ¢ of the body. Ritiad Tower Bldg. stuff to lock at, and an enormous amount of stuff to fe G Sometimes to save a crop when the (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) listen to, and these two phases of it generally take: up 6 market price for fresh fruit is low, but QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS so much of our spare time that we can’t exercise our E y- this is by no means the usual prac- (Friedreich's Ataxia) THE PIONEERS other faculties, ] NI i tice, because farmers have found that “ 4 certain varieties of figs and grapes es It is good to look backward as well as forward. Espe-| Usually this suits us fine. It is pleasant and it keeps ‘ on Q 4 fy \ a bein heir a Jarger amount ataxia. it should communities exercise this retrospect as they | us from worrying. But now and then a man—particu- a AV ‘ \ a i Sugar than others and are there- | When I asked this doctor about tt-he_ ? eFreic, The source always is important, and when it | Jarly if he be verging on the three-score and ten mark, / fore more suitable for drying and|told me to read up on it, but I have has to do with historical growth, the wake has its in- valusble lessons and admonitions by which, like the hay flavor, as this Indianapolis man was—is apt to get the feeling h ve @ richer flavor. been able to find very little agai it, The fruit may be either sun-dried |I will appreciate any information you that life is slipping away without being really tasted. in warm localities or dried in de-|can give me.” : A y hydrating plants especially built for] Answer: This is a hereditary disease helm of a ship, to steer the forward progress. ‘ For we realize, down deep, that there ought to be a E > rpose. cases. Burleigh county pioneers and their descendants took | little bit more of life than a mere collection of surface E hed vegui bleh: boty af the tte api coed) MEL Catt ee fuch an appraisal of the life of their community in the | impressions. Nature, as Thoreau remarked, has pro- N _ 4 Z fruit, such as prunes, are dipped in}ing them to be smaller than usual. annual meeting, Monday evening, They looked back | vided man with an admirable cushion, wheréon he imay meme tre tem ee hectic days when the French half-breeds came down from the Red river in their carts, fur traders hiked and boated in from the north, miners came trekking in from the Black Hills and Montana in the west, veterans of the Blue came out on the Ohio and north with gray Johnnies from the south on the Missouri sidewheelers, then Custer therefore quite a nutritious food.|that a fasting and dietii e the -..dst of blaring, man-made noise and hectic activity. | armfuls of flowers, attended Princess | stunts was to enter a jewelry store, t Se fost rer | They are relished by children and are | might prove helpful as thre anean It dawns on # man slowly, when he has leisure and | Martha of Sweden when she became | hand in hand, whilst Harry bashfully ae i ae aes y not | Very desirable as @ means of satisfy. | somewhat resembles hereditary jet to make himsel! ti ice: the bride of Crown Prince Olaf of |confessed that he and the little | Was Jelly pri 2 wore at ing thetr craving for sweets. Dried |chorea, and 1 have hed cevecct see a cd f receptive to voices that the hum Norway. And all over the world | woman were celebrating their’ tenth Severing, dee ee wi ; Siam, a: figs, dates, raisins, and prunes are | of this latter trouble which Feed of daily life can drown out. , bridesmaids in blue or pink or yellow | or twentieth or something wedding | all! pera aco le ine) |Known and used’ throughout the|to this method of treatment a eac Perhaps a hollow tree would be too cramped and |or white are walking down the aisle | anniversary, and asking to see brace-| (Copyright, , e, Inc.) tment 4 ed gry agin of the} The walk is swaying and irregular, = . Nae 5 K fruit or soften the sI so that | resembling that of a drunken person. on the hardships and perils endured by the first sets | sit aid look up at the stars, and out of star gazing and S ( the moisture will evaporate. This lye|In maki tlers of Dakota, Time has converted these into romance, | similar idle pastimes there is apt to come a wisdom and : Sm FU}, 4 4 solution does not injure the fruit be the action is cranseriiea mang’ the and present prosperity and comfort in the former wilder- | a --ace that are beyond price, [RF cause it is carefully removed by rins- | hand sometimes moves. around the ob- } ness to which the men and women of the 70’s and 80’s/ ‘This wisdom and. Peace grow out of the discovery that . 5 Ject and then pounces upon it. There 4 came to convert into civilization, gave the recessional | the world is infinitely more mysterious, infinitely more i ft anes hora Filton ue cd pid ik of the years a glamour as out of a story book. beautiful, infinitely more terrifying than is ordinarily system necessary sugar for its endo- | wife with a vote who casts ‘tas her | small amount of sulphurous acid to|{s slow or explosive the expression is = The settling of the West, in whatever part it be re-| dreamed. It is not a blind machine, nor is it a heedless, Ghe “rrThis school teachering system may |band couldnt persuede here chy | the, fruit and while it gives Keeping |dull, but the mentel meaeerhe neces: 7 f viewed, was an epic that stands out not only in the last | self-sustaining bit of cosmic ingenuity in which petti- lie ‘aoehtin spoke, ut Guth all Ove, ought to vote differently. qualities, I believe it is a bad prac- | maintained in the early part of the i century when it took place, but in the history of all|ness and sameness are dominant. It is a thing of ins * * % therefore ronan gt, tandpoint and | disease. ‘The patient may walk on the t century wi ” mea aiid ~ o teh 6 c: therefore recommend the unsulphured | outer side of the feet, This disease ’ time, ‘The men and the women who came to the Red and | finite depths and infinite vistas, and we, stumping about DARBY AND JOAN A” dispai Mire. Fectotics ‘hee | fruits. The sulphured fruit also has|is usually considered incurable, but - p% the Missouri and the prairies of Dakota were participants | bravely on the tiny patch with which we are familiar, ae ee oe were, Scape onea a Epetitaeedllte a Righty. ee flavor that is not|some beneficial results can be ob- 4 ith the thrill of adventure | are integral of it. Lost soul: : respectively, an . r more prese! the unsulphured. tained through muscle re-education Ls in & mighty drama filled wi ai — is we may be, but ALLENE SUMNER, than 30 years they preyed upon so- | smoking a pipe while taking a stroll. | "rhe ‘dried fruits ‘are much more | by training the patient to perform 14 and played on the stage of empire. nevertheless there are nobility and high destiny in us. a. “~~~ | ciety in their pose as devoted husband | (Not an advertisement.) concentrated than the fresh and are | complicated muscular feats. I believe { George F. Will portrayed the man’s picture of those} ‘That is the sort of realization that doesn’t come in| Bridesmaids in.blue,. carrying huge!and wife. One of their favorite 4 & t t world. However, there are a number |be glad to send you instructions if . hare: a place for a city dweller, But at least it would| With hundreds ‘and ‘thousands of jlets or rings or something. of other fruits which are less known | you will write again, enclosing a large . : R } and other commanders with infantry and cavalry arrived | give him a chance to hear things that city noises drown border ee ee cee a eniere erie: ee 4 ‘t cord ea aerate ee eaena eet atareneed aris aoe 4 to establish Fort Abraham Lincoln, with traders and real} out, The Indianapolis man’s idea wasn’t as bad as it|as whipped cream from a cherry-! After buying their simple little pur- In this country we use considerable | Question: D. M. K. writes: “On my i merchants and saloon men and dance hall women at might have been, stone cocktail. But these girls, too,!chase, usually at a special rate be- quantities of dried peaches, apri-| right foot I have six toes. This sixth i" their heels. It was a well-limned picture Mr. Will drew have ath pretties a blue eer Anse stds dick ~“ set gee ma cots, pears, apples, nectarines and | toe gives me a lot of bother. I can't ; fon, carrying bouquets of roses and | after leaving shop, the cler! . | currants, but it wear | of the days when Bismarck was founded, claims were | r+ costs more money to live, but not more labor. valley Rises ver oes do princesses | would generally find several thou- Setherothog Tae toe, foot, aniteutieeen. =a hare i jumped, byffalo hides were shipped by the tons, shacks .. .| and queens. sand dollars worth of jewelry missing. cherries, persimmons, mangoes, ba- | What would you advise?” 3 : went up and all was excitement and that restless move-| One fault of social ambition is that it makes trades- * * * |So Harry and Hattie have been gen- nanas and a, number of other fruits.| Answer: The best policy may be | ment ineldent to founding » prospective metropolis, the | men wait: too long for their money. ANY BETTER? posi Weg appre pape pd agp es on Safa In some cases, as in the banana, the | to have the extra toe removed bya offenders. They rather laugh at the By ALICE JUDSON PEALE : eT ae roe ime and place wher | sentence, remarking that they'll be in| The sled which coasted down so| Ving produces @ distinct change of | competent surgeon. Ak Js @ Good Idea to kiss the children good night, if | hot wear the colors and fabrics and | ‘he same prison. The Darby and Joan |many hills this winter les rorgotter|aupplies. ‘The degree of carefuiness |its size, where girls fear so little to you don’t mind waiting up for them. POLGeratheiearue iy coaine eteanie an te een oe aoe pO ted te Caan Fier el get coking after |be out alone at late hours, I have ES) ie e nm again 2 ; eat girls of high estate. big leo teh found to be real. ice skates, new @nd shining at Christ- Eiritinecetie le feel safer ons New York vert Great progress generally is reported, but’ no one so eee (eprint ering with s* & mas, are pr cuatlabing yr pts ‘ous concerns of his life. o'clock in the morning than they do a dard o: “RAZZBE 's1” corner of e Cl ie : E: far os ee seen nine high school lads in’a one-| veraings like those of princesses is as scnate ERENT Be Sanne Jowner of these things has turned his in most other cities at 11 in the eve- future great port of the Northwest rivers, Mrs, Fred L, Conklin drew another picture—the do- mestic side, the pioneering hardships and efforts of the + .levoted women to’ create home in the wide open spaces. » - It was. more intimate picture, with social contacts and heart ties and full of personal experiences, some humor- ous, some quite grim with Indian peril and farming set- AP UM cE RR CA mea hard to handle as the hardship of be- Huddlestone, is another of these ever _ thoughts to marbles, tops, and base- e ning. The reason is that they gener- AEE IE siento ep ac cae tng denied luxurious standards. perpetual Books wilieh sak tit ente| Ball | IN-NEW YORK Ir apeyantel company. ‘That is, the litt!s prairie schoolhouse and the first recording 85} About the time girl is passing through the sour- that all women can be beautiful and |. Next winter, of course, he will scorn | ©. ing and plenty of help to call upon, news of the doings in the Burleigh colony, pickle age a boy begins to harbor the conviction that TRY COUGH DROPS charming if they but know the tricks, } his papered ayer sna ee ‘NewYork, April 4—An alr of |if need be. 5 There should ‘be ‘more such papers, such reviews and | he is @ woman hater. Tf you as a parent are wondering | To which one who is not beautiful /and require as hich has dis- |rOoding melancholy creeps into these GILBERT SWAN. » sketches of those bygone days, so that the story of {f your little Willie or Fanny should! and only rarely charming can only! the place of the one wi Gay affairs which tradition has asso-| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) b . ey ‘good ol ” be : be given piano or violin or saxophone ) ™urmur, “Razzberries!” Beauty and ; @ppeared. Clated with the theater-like old ball- Le i ° Bismarck and Burleigh and the old days” may lessons, you may be interested in | charm can no more be made if Provi-| | This is an opportune time to teach | med Min ‘Waldorf, Cc handed down to coming generations, to con over their Editori al C learning that some school music in- | dence didn't give it to start with than | him a Jesson in the care of his ~~ Those who gather know that this FT Te Le Yasc:aating tales of the beginning of North Dakota. ; omment structor has just. discovered that pu- | @ Pug nose can be made inte a Roman | sessions, Next Saturday before is “farewell”. . . that never again will Zt : * pils who play with wind instruments | by just willing it so!” Firat pe Angad ey sagas the old walls echo with their merri- a. 7 :;-} are much less susceptible to colds aa igs br 9) sh terest . ment.and song... that soon L2 1 MERON ee ead a and other allménts than those ‘who | @————--\—- = this morning and put them away on |fteiey ‘will be laid waste, and there ‘gi ms ibe big? The cat is evolutinizing! As usual in such processes | Play string ones. And yet advising || BARBS | suggest that the cellar would be u| Will be only sentimental legends. Rig pat eating Caen gee a pesladace| Ree slow and it may be a long time before | that a child be taught to play the t» proper place to hang his snow shovel. ; ‘ansaid i os had the gift of imagination, To these he added courage | :anuy will grow into a menace to mankind and need to | flute so that he won't have BS RADY: ee ue et ae population. is | and that after the runners of his sled| 1 found this note of sadness even OUR FLAG } a and loyalty to his country's welfare, in addition to an|be suppressed. The change thus far has been observed me a ee layed the fiddle seems afflicted with defective vision, accord- | have been greased, it snould be hung |in the annual jinx of the Dutch On April 4, 1818, Congress enactec hoy ability to’ identify. himself with the people among whom | only in city. cats, the rural variety having apparently |'@ eae ing to statistics, Either the man who | up next to. the shovel. pee ortega gare} ies the law which fixed for all the i x he was sent. suffered marie the Lean thats SR ee ee compiled those figures never has sen Tais Bind ‘ot carenulness, dass sae who's wi design of the flag of the ited oe banker abroad,| banged the city creature's nature. Bi POOR TEACHER a traffic jam or he is an incurable | impressing. o1 c ly be- | world. 8. a As a successful Ohio before he went J open iands where there are trees aplenty o climb and Here's another school teacher in | optimist. j cause it is a practical economy but| It is a club unique among clubs. It|”"THe law rectified an error which.a i de he had attested his business acumen, His stay in Paris} bushes and other ready retreats into which to scurry | not water.” Miss Rese Goldacm pub — "| because it represents a decent respect short-sighted Congress had enacted = mien: oe French, foreign office: and, in. tect, tha} in ee ior, Haars. Mi cat “Das Trae amon ps astiapl tepsbet otirenh ambeu.ae|, swan remembers the ail teablieed toe nee oe have cost work and | bers dp 1 atter the: eae ot Voxe { - governme: France imidity, S ed with inefficient lays when the villian in the drama Q 1b mont ent inion, 4 ore al Sn aah eee par? | dog. ut in closely ‘bullt cities and environed by un-| oonduct ws cming. s. teacher bs. | waseunposed to be wicked? : Since to children toys are theif occasions | rnis 1795 act provided that a stri fled to Bordeaux in the first German rush on the French conduct unbecoming a. te PPX in ing prot Ipe ct scalable walls, the cat has been more and more at the | cause one of her pupils was killed hy . most cherished possessions it is with | stands should be added for each of these Eig” capital, were evidence of his courage. merey of sudden attack. Finding no ready refuge in}an automobile when Permitted to} Now that the former president has | these that we.should begin to teach states, and for 23 years the national More so than any American ambassador to Paris, he | which to lurk and to calm its palpitating heart, the cat | cross the street for candy at recess. | gone into the writing game, he ought | thriftiness. The child will see the A 8 ensign had 15 stripes. ‘was able to mingle with the French in that sympathetic | through natufe’s way of adjusting such injustices, has|” And like as not if “teacher” hadn’t | to tell everybody how it feels tobe | point of taking good care of his play- | Manha It was a 15-stripe flag which waved turned back upon its own resources and instead of vain itted her to get the candy, she'd | m: a little money. things long before he is ready to ap- over Ft. spirit that brought him their respect and admiration. permitted her to g e candy, she'd | making y. B attempts at flight, pussy has mustered courage, has probably have been sued by the juve- preciate the importance of being He handled American affairs, as they touched France, gn the Uitishing Gate ene a superior ceed bat nije’s parents for denying said child’s| Mussolini asks what is the use of a | careful with his clothes or his school ‘i ‘That hig merits were appreciated at home is proved feat. With success of this method, the cat’s timidity has passed, and if the evolution continues the rampant - , “a panes Mill be turning the tables and go to dog-chasing | OUR BO. ARDING HOUSE By Afrern yp ya Goldberg, his 75 years made it imperative to retire—which intent BONS OF ETERN ITy ee death then ratified. In addition, he received trom Presi- | yy eORsOn. TSAUBEE % . dent Wilson a letter commending him for his services the Neer Ra ane ee a ee “lot's Dor’ You ‘et Paris during the first year of the World war, until rey be tiie ad meerctn, Pegole to find shat of. We SAID 2 we YourLe relieved by Ambassador Sharpe, the Wilson appointee. may sure many phrases o} go “ME Herrick began life in Ohio as a poor boy and the sub- | ,yamiliar. Quotations” of the future. And one Ze EXTERMINATE Mi MIT A MOTH-BALL? © «NOW Don" GET SNARLY, KID, OR ILL SMEAR SOME MUSTARD ON You, AN? LAY You INSIDE OF A BUN f= THIS WAS ALL IN FuN 9g HERE/_-- Here //. crear ‘CAESAR! ~~ ? ~You HAVE . ae 1S DER : character that snimated his conduct and aspirations, | library of the infirmary which VELL, Dor’s A ‘PROFESSOR ._ le served eleven years at Paris and in that time took | Hall of Montclair, N. J., built at Dartmouth college in VuRsy INSULT I UP TLL How) z ee : DoRK IN A imek with wich. American dtndccoata memory of their son, a boy who gave up his life in 1917. HAF GoT YET! aux SINCE You'RE $I "FIGHTING : plomats as Charlemagne | yar, Coolidge presented a book to this library, and in y .* Your TeeTH, VL HAVE ¥ Tower, Alanson B. Houghton, David Jayne Hill, Henry | this volume he wrote: AN? ALL. KIDDING 7 RAGE [—~ White, Jacob Gould Schurman, These were not such} To Edward K. Hall: ‘ + ghowy ambessadors, but they were men who were able In recollection of his son and my son, who have 2° (to achieve solid results at the courts to which they were the privilege by the grace of God to be boys through To PUT You BACH ON A LEASH J mee Now Go UP_A LADDER ASIDE, You - BIG LARD-TUB, w I'M 2) aocredited, as a result of which all of them served under -: : + QALVIN-COOLIDGE. ‘GONNA LAM INTO YouR HAT, wm < LeT us Ne ¢ ever presidents ¢ sod in various s pss asthe importance utrne, Kind. of faith that: underlies this fpistammatic |. You RIGHT TH? PARTY is ouvert/ THis RUFFIAN / People. Is there one of them that will not be thrilled by American international relations, So brief and poi: 2d expression of the hope of millions of the living kinsmen of the boys of eternity? Oe te ear ee aeNG RESULTS "AMERICA’S MUSIC CENTER ae ee itt il a