The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 18, 1929, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

PAGE FOUR Fire fighters because of the nature of their duties, their | in this country under the federal grain standards act.| We have had several tales in the! ure on the beaches in the summer | reality of home work without pro-| feminist, was fined for illegal voting “ nt Saar The advantages anticipated from the existence of a uni- | news of late of peor people suddenly | and sues a man for it in the fall. | crastination and reminders. If your| ®t the election of 1872. sources: first, by insisting that phys- G : : he Bismar ck Tri bune Carlyle defincd man as the tool-making animal, but ; neal present-day scientists go farther to declare that tools ‘ t THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPaPER have made over if they have not made man. (Established 1873) Dr. Walter Hough, anthropologist of the national mu- ~ seum in Washington, is authority for the statement that Published by the Bismarck Tribune BC at al Bis- | primitive tools of stone, wood and bone were the first and phe Dakine Dostotfice at Bismarck | 4+ profound modifiers of man in many ways. Their George D. Mann .......... sated President and Publisner | use, requiring expenditure of force in new postures, ————<<- | made an impress on the human body, the curves of tie Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | human spine probably being due to work with tools. ‘ie | These primitive tools must have also had sOme effect on = Daily by carrier per year eran prim: s on ni e THE CHERRY SEASON brine to the United States and proc- Daily by mail, per year ‘in Bi the shape of the hands. Daily by mail, per year. ‘i Ripe, luscious cherries are among | essed in this country. Very little of (in state, outside Bismarck) Excavation and research have convinced scientists that cee - 2 the most tempting of all fruits. ‘They the original value of the fruit remains Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota .. man, in his development, stood still for a time after he f have been used by men for many t ae ie AGH atale: per year | had fashioned his first crude tools, then their use seemed > : thousands of years. The cherry tree Saeety Gy taal’ tn sate, Ghree years ter | to beget in him a new intelligence—at any rate new ideas groms wild in many parts of Europe, || personal questions on health and Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, ‘50 | —and he pushed on at a more rapid rate. i i ‘ ery pony week fedatlins to the —— him, care he (CUE RIS derbi ae tlhe “| ABritish anthropologist dates that rapid evolution from ‘ > F ancient Romans. It is related that Enclose a stamped addressed Member Audit Bureau of Circulation the discovery of agriculture—that is, the application of | " A when Lucullus returned in triumph |] envelope for reply. Assoc! B 4 to Rome after his victory over the alias at Ta aba Wese | tocls to the cultivation of the soil. It 1s probably not ¥ i Mithridates he carried back with him | more than 8,000 years ago that this began somewhere be- a cherry tree laden with fruit. The|&"d the combination of sugar, dyes eed sapere perl Sa dinphetion Eregiven the use | yond the Mediterranean and not more than 5.000 years \s\ ji py Fi cultivated cherries ave also and, Liavort ing cannot be considered fat otherwise credited In this newspaper and also the | #30 that western Europe learned to cultivate the ground - ei desta is ‘Switzerland. The principal acid found in cher- local news of spontancous origin publisheo herein. Al! | cven in the most primitive way, which was root culture. ‘ ‘The cherry season is short and ries is malic, in which they resemble tights of republication of all other matter herein all ‘The toolmaker who made his first tools of stone and everyone should make use of the cher- pon cee eae loguats, t Slo reserved. ___ | wood was remolding his own body and habits of life. Ma- NOW, 1F 1 COULD’ ony . |Z, LF) ties while they are abundant, While , Foreign Representative. | chinery. the modern tool of man, is working no less a EXCHANGE SOME OF THE MN, t when used by thmnneteee, they do not QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ; SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS | change in the mind and habits of humanity today. With- ay wh fj ‘ Z iF, 2 combine well with many foods, and e ow 7 oar“ hava di (Incorporated) cut it man could not have progressed to his present high LIETING Power, OF i therefore have the reputation of caus- oe atlon—W. 1 a a have al - Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. and complex state of civilization. “WWE ONE FOR THE: ee We we a eect our instructions, but I do not get rid CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | During the hot weather it is a good | ¥ q gel —___—--— -—- — | sii « Seat aieka . plan to make a meal of cherries alone, Catakn Wk (sterner ust ae (Official City, State and County Newspaper) TEACHING YOUNG TO THINK { « |. ]and as much as a pound ve ead oad me a feel like a tne.” le. One of the nation's foremost educators finds in the col- nes SSA Oe een ial aitly milk, cepecially if| Answer—If you do not know what WELCOME GUESTS leges and universities of the world the only homes of lib- f - the Cherries "are eauwed aba tse tailk | 22 causing your pain, I advise you to State firemen's conventions have had a tendency to} erty, and that if intolerance is permitted to invade the i ‘S ‘ sipped slowly in between. This qual- jl as loctor and have a diag- = a ‘is may prevent the de = turn a bit prosaic in recent years, compared with their | precincts of the schools “then, indeed, we — be pre- f a= 3 N a we Chath em emery eae OF Pol a ok im ashe “he e develop: spectacularity in the roaring 80's and 90's. pared to enter upon a new and dismal dark age.’ People, but it should be borne in mind “Teakettle” Tea ‘This transformation has been due in part to the evolu- | While the first assertion is too ambiguously broad to that even a small amount of bread Ke Question—w. G. H. asks: “What tion in apparatus. The change from the horse-drawn era | mcan very much of anything or so ambiguously broad as } oN tied bi arty Be bo would you suggest to drink in place of to the modern motorized fire truck has tended to reduce | to have lost any meaning one chooses to put into it, one ' toot o ecuetion. tied ik, 1 iota and I think ’ the element of humen glamour and to mechanize the | cannot help but agree with his conclusion that the world, ° Cherry fasts, using no other foods "Anioer-subeitute some “teaket- t whole atmosphere of fire fighting. | for its own good, must keep intolerance out of the insti- a | for a few days, are especially valu- | ¢)_» tea. This is made by adding a | tutions of higher learning. J E i able in pimples, whiteheads and other | sman amount of cream to a cup of Firemen now meet very much like a service club. They . 3 q J ‘ = —_ skin eruptions. Of course, enemas | not water. It makes a pleasing warm discuss their activities as a business or profession. The] Intolerance can find no more fertile soil than the mind ~ = : should be used at the same time Just | geine, and will not make you nervous, old melodramatic stunts, as truck races, ladder raising | of youth deliberately prejudiced under the skillful direc- ¥ Z- Sy 5 = as FO Se in eee sei cade ‘Alenia and loeé ‘Transfaslens and stream-throwing contests, have been dropped grad- | tion of mature minds. The duty of any school is to edu- b "i 4 in the United States, France| Question—Clara J. writes: “I am ually from the repertoire of the convention, just as the | cate, not to mold opinion. That school serves society best | and Japan. anemic and my doctor wants to give prancing steeds which drew the old steamer or the hose | Which teaches its students to think for themselves. It is ident Curtis had lived in official ’ ‘The fruit is ordinarily eaten in a| me blood transfusions. What do you reel of former days have been eliminated from the com-|® lamentable fact that the graduate bodies of most Breeton for hl as ay Hacttd teri Bribie ae @ large beak Maar toting Maced cl Gd © bre fe - M pany equipments. schools indicate that either the schools are not very suc- ite: ‘other. It was no transplant iecnalior oumntity Maree mae into] most helpful after a loss of blood But here in Bismarck some of the old trimmings of | C®5sful In this particular or the percentage of humans BACKLESS SUITS jams, Maraschino cherries and cherry ee If you have former eonvention days have been retained. At night the | WMo can be taught to think is alarmingly low. The entire nation is now debating j | brandy. ibd wisioup penn a ee erie . " h Dakota will have} 1 for any purpose—such as the effort to mold a na- what style bathing suits may be worn " erry seeds, swallo y. : visiting fire hosts from all over North Dal rise ti rabies “ithaca we its i on the beaches in propriety this sum- do no harm, but the nut-like center | upon the advice which I can give you BY their wonted strect dance and Dutch lunch, and, through | “onal character in academic life—the world permits in- mer. What is one beach’s delight should never be caten because of the the kindness of the American LaFrance company, some- | tolerance or any of its variants, such as class spirit, the seems to be another's poison. New EXPECTING TOO LITTLE danger of hydrocyanic acid (a most he old ratus stunts will be possible in the rule of wealth or political prejudice, to dictate the course| Babe Ruth's health has troubled} York city bathers can't wear backless (By Alice Judson Peale) poisonous substance) being present. t N thing of the old apparatus stui of learning, there can be but one effect. That will be| fandom for many a year as sports| or semi-backless bathing suits, while] Our babies are so dear to us that| Cherries are best in their fresh rid demonstration of the latest type of truck in throwing pets lew 2 aud is ad ‘ te the| Wtiter after writer has inveighed| at Long Beach they may wear them | unconsciously we try to prolong their | state, but the dried cherries, and water. Thus a remnant of the old spectacularity is sal-|'0 destroy rather than to enliven and perpetuate the | against the Bambino’s custom of eat-| with impunity but may not kiss even | babyhood. We love the sense of com- | cherries canned without sugar are al- ' vaged to adorn the convention as a fircmen’s convention | *Pirit of liberty. ing six hot dogs before a game and their husbands on the beaches. Coney | Plete possession which comes with the | so wholesome. The Maraschino cherry adi "bh adorned Freedom of thought and speech are foundation stones | gulping down as many bottles of pop. | Island can't wear bare-backs, either, ; utter dependence of our children upon | is prepared by bleaching in a salt so- | en upon which have been built the national structure of this | BUt the Babe has always kept a-going. | nor can Coney Island surf dippers ap- | us. lution, rinsing thoroughly, and then j It is probable that the various departments of North ic Now report has it that he may be| pear in white suits. ‘We are apt to expect too little of | saturating with glucose. The remain- Dakota individually today are at their peak of effective- vec out for the season because of his} Nothing so graphically illustrates | them in their early years. Then when | ing pulp is then dyed red with coal hn th uch modern fire- health, the complete folly of censorship in-|they no longer are children, we are | tar dyes, flavored with almond oil or hess, equipped as they are with so m' There are periodicals that wi!l enable you to keep up| It may be remembered that Babe/ all other realms—the theater, movies, | bitterly disappointed because they'| artificial Maraschino flavoring, and fighting apparatus. However, in checking up on their re- | | everything except expenses. is was married not so long ago. And] books—as this. One censor’s okay is | Seem to us irresponsible, incompetent | preserved in alcohol. The Mara- ports through the town and city auditors, State Fire ss his bride is quoted as saying that “he | another's red flag. And who knows? | and lacking in judgment in the man- | schino cherries are often shipped in| swer you personally. Marshal H. L. Reade is led to deplore certain conditions i ae arees has no business playing.” Which will agement of their lives. $ 2 dinisidirahsoss Modern life is such that one-half the world is too busy; let the Babe in for a goodly number | @——$__—__, Here are some of the rough gauges FS Me ~~ , whioh he feels are a departure from wise administra! to find out how the other half lives. of wise cracks, of course. But there BARBS by which you can get some notion of | 7 lal iy me of the fire fighting structure of the state. He holds that is the sancr Bea ra Legh ral “fespiee'lalg eae at three a4 oo ” ie + | it was a mistake to allow a decrease in steam and gas after all, a wife who ,“knows it oul imself. ive he shoul ¥ a rn ines, in motor trucks, in chemical and gas engincs, isn’t so bad for a man. Save your topcoats and furs, boys} Put on his clothes and manage all = if ieee id i is Editorial Comment ze * and girls. July is coming. but the more remote buttons and the f w ‘And in feet of hose maintained. He finds solace in a re- NO PITY HERE! sek tying of his shoe laces. os as star 2A lc ta tas jorted decrease in population, in the towns served, that A seine with see nar - aupe ‘The less some people have on their fe as he ae eet himself be so, and he infers defective figures in the re- Port by her own hands, found her-| minds, the more they seem to want roug! morning routine, know aay likewise have produced this sstaalig retrogres- A MARKETING HANDICAP self worth about $125,000 because she| to talk it off. where he left his school books, and WOMAN VOTER FINED p : «St. Paul Dispatch) spent a dollar for a lucky ticket in ee get himself off in time for school. At| , On June 18, 1873, Susan Brownell) “VOTO noe that the control of sion in equipment. Since 1917 wheat and other grains have been marketed | the recent British Derby. | Sometimes a girl cuts a pretty fig-|12 he ought to face the unpleasant Se ee Te dias isk ae through two | 1 risks and frequent performance of life-saving feats natur- | ror, grain grading system have not materialized. On the| finding themselves rich and being | child does not do these thii it is a| For several years some of the lead: ical conditions must be made safe, ally connote heroism. Those wio actually achieve the | contrary, so sar as producers of grain are concerned. the | most unhappy about it, ein the Inst few years cows have sign that you have expected too Uttie | ing suffragists were convinced wo- peer, decree heroic confer the glamour of their own deeds to the whole | present grades have proved themselves actually detri-] But one wastes few tears over Mrs. | done their bit for farm relief by im- {of him. men were enfranchised under the life anes bo. bead reengy ss ns Saea clan. Asa class of that character and as sturdy North | mental. Kathleen McGrath of Dublin, mother ! proving in milk-producing qualities} Don’t baby your growing boy or fourteenth amendment—under the a, me oro phernerniy ' = Farmers have not received prices to which they are en-| of four. It’s one thing to yearn for! 15 per cent. But of course you can't | girl. Don't assume for him the re-| Provision that “no state shall make a ging os Dakotans inbued with the spirit of material protection | titled for the quality of their wheat or other grain. Ex-| the simple life for self; it's another {compare congress to & cow. sponsibilities which more and more) Of enforce any law which shail} tonal Safety Council. for the homes and industries of their state, Bismarck | porters of American wheat and rye have found them-| thing to rejoice because money can x * * he should be assuming for himself.| bridge the privileges or immunities “The ra s* * . ' welcomes its State Firemen's association. It is glad to| selves so handicapped in foreign markets by the com-| give everything to the kids. One way to dry up a city is to hold Don't let him lean on you when he of citizens of the United States. ts “wed pay in fo st neal i Plexity and confusion of federal grades that they are| Whether the kids in question will| a convention there. ought to be standing on his own feet.| In 1872, Miss Anthony determined have the convention here. It hopes the guests will have Let him learn to meet his obligations | to make a test and with a number of “s* River Waterways corporation pays » ‘ A gitl teacher in Nebraska is driv- | by experiencing some of the results of | Other women registered in Rochester, none. Relieve the railroads of taxes more and more obliged to ship through Canadian ports | be as well off as if raised in poverty ® good time while here and that eventually they will | and under Canadian grades. Almost the sole gainers are | is another question sure to be asked. come back to hold another convention when the new/ the traders who are able to buy grain for-less than it is} But here's wagering that no kid was! ing a wheat truck during the sum- | failing to do so. N.Y. In November, she cast her vote. | 2nd they will be able to reduce rates community building shall be an actuality. worth because the federal grades do not reflect the true|ever harmed ees food and| mer. This. is merely a warning to| Expect your child to be his age. Re- | She was arrested. On June 18 of the | 8 oe ito ie ona aes the amount » & —_———- + value for milling purposes. clothes and warmth and education. j tourists driving through Nebraska. | member that the little daily duties| following year she was fined $100, a “colleen wit as thus far = O. P.'B. Jacobson, chairman of the Minnesota railroad see Geli AR SES. cst which seem so trivial and which, be- | fine which she at once refused to pay pesca veager| monstration that waterway THE EVOLUTION OF GODS and warehouse commission, has written clearly and con- SHE DOESN'T SIT cause you are so much more efficient, | and which was never exacted. ee eoanoemical. *—George W. ‘The isolated tribes of the mountains of Thibet consider | Vincingly in Sunday’s Pioneer Press of the need for] The president’ of France, Gaston RADIO PLAYS DOCTOR you are tempted to perform for him,| Miss Anthony was born in Sout pisegcal Pi eae anaes Her‘ort Hoover a kind of god. amendment of the federal grading act. The fault is not | Doumergue, is a bachelor, we hear, | Ottawa—A dramatic story of how] are the means by which his character Adams, Mass., -the daughter » pinsion oe ne ity. aa me with the principle of federal control over grain standards. | with an aged sister who could grace j wi t in| {8 largely formed. Hold your child| Quaker. She taught ‘They have corrupted his name into “Koovera,” which is! The grading system prevailing in Minnesota which was | the presidential palace as hostess, but ithe | pave eeteg Pad gman oP ‘ainowt to the level of self-reliance of which 5 cyrorkeaaed ee iieten mie epee. In some femece ane tee Dorr ag fea pcre who lives in her sonras Ile peasant and “ Poisoned wound was recently| You know he is easily capable. of their huts there are faded newspaper photographs iy. no question ng village. Which makes president |told by radio authorities here, * PRS regan eanpieasy Fi of the American president, mounted over little family al- |! the possible confusion of separate state jurisdiction. | sound like an eminently sensible and | Hudson, wireless operator at Hope's TRYING AGAIN sexes; and trom the Civil war devoted “That confidence is the secret of success at golf is a self-evident propo- sition, Some persons set out in life ; with confidence; others acquire con- he entirel ‘women's -| fidence through experience. Of the To do so is impractical and unnecessary. considerate fellow. The mere fact| Advance, was visited by an injured; Mount Pleasant, Ark.—The victim af ney, stand cine’ classes tars to receive daily ceremonies of reverence. The fault with the federal grades essentially is that | that his own life changed from the|fur trader. He Picea Ottawa | of several destructive floods in late frage mi an ae Bia ee ne ee And, as if one American god were not enough, the | they are too rigid and too complicated. They are too| peasant village till he was acclimated i and the operator there secured medi-j years ‘and more recently wil out}, Another attempt was made to ob- ‘Thibetans have also elevated Henry Ford to their pan- | rigid to permit a just grading of the farmer's grain ac-|to the figurative throne of France|cal advice and radioed it back to|by @ tornado in April, the of| tain the vote for women under the | on & solider basis."—Sir Ernest Hol- derness. (Golf Illustrated.) 4 theon. Ford ranks much lower than Hoover, but is| fing to its quality, and doce not automaticaly mean that bis Hudson who treated the trader. | Guiow is rebuilding. "‘The present Lomssnesnn-noneaconent Be mer Pe BN Revertheless considered a very potent kind of semi- sees 1s coamaes on Sie tae WAY in geamiena” site is 200 yards from the old loca “We have not attained to genuine . and that she could be happier or ef-; An American excavator at work|tion and new position is on self-government because of the a divinity. fectively grace his home. in Helsingfors, Finland, is the first| higher ground to avoid floods. Vol- ‘attempts to obtain the vote by the of @ large part of the od ‘These rather odd bits of information are brought out : The famous Mrs. Gann case is dif-]one to be used in construction work|unteers are building about 10 houses [ete yeh nero tomate to. teks’ the oumie eae ticipate.”—Dr. Henry Moore Bates, dean of the Universit; 4 ly of Michigan if Our Yesterdays ] i ? by Prof. Nicholas Roerich, New York artist, who has just eer ela-| ferent. This half-sister of Vice-Pres- lin that city. a day. The i returned from a five-year trip into the obscure regions ‘ e OUR BOARDING HOUSE ‘back of the Himalayas, ‘They bring a smile to the faces of American readers, naturally enough. The thought of the brisk, efficient Mr. through American ports nearly all was Cat ‘Hoover and the nervously-active Mr. Ford seated in com- | adian wheat and was sold under Canadian grade. Very see “Discoveries from the geological strata and the ancient cities and cem- By Ahern FORTY YEARS AGO eteries of the Orient reveal a new and Mrs. E, A. Williams and childre: placent somnolence on flower-bedecked altars to receive little American wheat is exported from American ports Z ~EGAD, M'DEAR, ~~IN CASE —~ lol BEQUEATH AND WILL who have been in the east for more Tete Panorama of advapeing hu- i one ag pe jane is Be- Tene Taide ene ae eee epee ANYTHING SHOULD BEFALL ME ME YouR OLD PLUG HAT, we ano sone, heen ten ae man visibly emerges from the geo- cldedly not the kind of thought one can entertain with a | acter as Canadian train’ . WHILE I AM AWAY, IT WANT SomE JUNGLE SPEARS AND Rae ae m logical ages and, after several hun- Miss Jessamine Slaughter, who is to | dred years, rises from pure- straight face. . ‘This situation results from the stupid refusal of Amer- B you © PUT THis DocuMENT SHIELDS, —~ AN oLp TRUNK, represent North Dakota in the Fourth Granger, left this morning for Gull Lake, Sask., where they will visit. ‘Yet, after all, these Thibetan tribes are only doing what | 1 to “give its customers the kind of a package they Z Raber ee Oe d * the whole race was accustomed to do a relatively short | *@"t.” an error which other classes of exporters have be- WW A SAFE PLACE, FOR YOUR PACKED WITH MEDICINE © Z of July parade, has arrived trom | rotherly Pg a ne a Ta the early days of civilization ho stood out fal gaging osm a oni sia ste in i Fey tateeten f gal - ig arr mea ame” ae df . c man who m i : - RRS cena : Oey. or | it 16 were made easier for foreign ries to “Age B will, BE QUEATHING TINPAt Dears bl nes Lawyers and doctors of the city will senubtin tive states have passed laws t markets, AND LEAVING ALL MY QR ! cross" bats in a ball game tomorrow | Sting that physical education must rghit combined wih Chle furs So seles te fas PERSONAL PossESsioNS ‘ww THenE 1S NoTHING rennin ns iiiaaataassascxcc that most of the gods they mention were originally nu- | qualty |The federal grades are based ‘on Various factors OF VALUE 6 You Jun SERIOUS wit HAPPEN alia M. Plerea and William ‘racy, _ <p ongellg- oa lle TEE POT ae re vas I NAME You AS To You, TR Rooney, in the oy, ene eversl AY) Fy ApPER FANNY SAYS: ' were within the requirements on any é@he of these numerous SoLE BeNEFic: ARY wae UNLESS You ty —_ 50. U. 8. PAT. OFF, i have pretty well got over that now. At least no- | tests, it must be reduced to a lower grade, and this despite f LONDON TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO a { the fact that the trivial deficiency may reduce the real oF MY ESsraTe / SLIP OFF A Mrs. Capt. Prescott left on the a yalue of the grain not at all. ‘The inspectors are permit- j 5 LAMP- Posy AN Hit’ Y North Coast limited to visit her home . Af ho has a load of wi ' YeUR HEAD oN , Beas ‘When you stop to think about it, though, we do pretty every raepect ¢ save that re iey /Pragisnd Les Hon. John Satterlund has been ap- much the same thing. the . . i oS pointed one of the ; assistants to the ‘We don’t deify our great men; instead we let their zy iy / Y Hubican charoution and lenres teas) Z for Chicago. Mrs, H. H, Hammend hes been vis- iting her’ sister, Mrs. ‘George Me. ‘ot Velva. falso, men whose lives prove that the race | s capabilities, We don't deify these men ‘we reflect that the qualities that they too. We let them represent the whole race Hogue, Linton, was a vis- Dr. R. R. itor in the city today. Wheh you step in path of a Victor | splashi ha Bole. < Ing auto, it’s all the Mrs. .E. Hi. Howell and son end her mother, Mrs. .

Other pages from this issue: