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e BANDITS THREATEN WITH MACHINE GUN . ASTHEY ROBBANK Robbers Take $4,000 Loot From | Cherokee, Ia., Bank; On- ‘ fookers Wounded Cherokee, Iowa, July 19.—(@—/ Robbers armed with a machine gun | robbed the First National bank of | about $4,000 at noon today and | escaped in a large car, driving east- ‘ward. A traveling man named Herff and an unidentified man were shot and slightly wounded. As the five robbers escaped in their car in which one of them waited, they fired @ fusillade of bullets down the street. One of them had remained on the corner a half block from the bank while the holdup was in Progress, and he shot at State Sena- tor Lew McDonald, who rushed across the street seeking help as all persons ‘were ordered to cover. BISMARCK WILL BID FOR LEGION IN 1934 Committee From Association of Commerce to Back Up Spetz Post Invitation Bismarck will bid for the 1921 American Legion convention of the state. To assist Lloyd Spetz post in pre- senting the desire of the city at the Minot encampment next week the As- sociation of Commerce will send a cratic committee to the Ward county city with reasons that, in their opin- ion, should sway the decision of the veterans in favor of the capital city for next year's gathering. W. 8. Ayers, head of the Lions and of the association entertainment com- mittee, will be one of the association directors who will be with the delega- tion. Fred Peterson, another director, also will be in the party. The per- sonnel of the delegation has not yet been definitely determined, as not all of the committee to whom the matter has been delegated are crtain that they will be able to go to Minot. Those ‘who can go expect to leave here Mon- day afternoon. ‘The committee will take along a feaflet featuring the points of interest in the makeup of Bismarck. Pictures of the leading buildings of the city illustrate the arguments of the bid for the encampment, and, in the sum- ming up, it is recapitulated that Bis- marck is: The capital of North Dakota and one of its largest commercial centers. Located on the Missouri river. 6, 5ix miles from Mandan, “Where the ‘West Begins,” reached by a $1,500,000 vehicular bridge across the Missouri. A primary butter, egg and poultry market. It shipped $3,000,000 worth of these products in 1928. The largest jobbing center between and. Spokanc. Growing rapidly—250 new homes will be built in Bismarck this year. Fourteen churches and a fine sys- tem of public and parochial schools. A distributing center for seeds and farm equipment. It ships seed corn to all neighboring states and Canada. In the center of a diversified farm- jog area. ne cleanest city in North Dakota, with fine shade trees and well kept homes. A friendly city where the decd speaks louder than the word. HONOR 20 PIONEERS WHO DIRECTED FAIR Langdon, N. D., July 19.—(®)— Twenty men who directed the destin- jes of the Cavalier Count: Fair as- sociation during pionecr days today were honore: by the present officers. This Woman Does a New York July 15.—“Modern wom- en are trying to do too much. No- body can be successful in a profession or business, run a home in eddition and still have time and cuergy left for friends, reading, music and other necessities of a larger life.” | ‘This 1s the opinion of a distin- Suished visitor to America, Dr. An- tonina Kazimiroff, the oniy woman dentist in Shanghai, China, a Rus- sian who fled St. Petersburg when the Bolsheviks overthrew the Czar. “A fine old Chinese servant who speaks Russian gives me my leisure by managing everything in our home,” Dr. Kazimiroff said, generously. “Our little Shanghai establishment runs like a Russian menage and is ‘home’ to many Shanghai Russians who, like myself, suffer nostalgia at times. I have my work and my play and my life is full without keeping house too.” An Unhurricd Careerist Dr. Kazimiroff has the repose of a Woman with a well-ordered life. Metic- ulously groomed and dressed with ad- mirable taste in smart French clothes, she is a charming exponent of a less hurried existence than most Amer- ican careerists know. She is in Amer- ica to do intensive study for a few montbs on advanced dentistry. From here she will go to London, Berlin and Vienna for similar research work and back next year to her Shanghai clientele. In fact, there are none of the ear- | marks of a pioneer careerist about her. Yet, when she left her home in Viadivostock to study medicine in St. Petersburg 20 odd years ago, she was the only girl in her classes and when | graduated, the only woman dentist there. “When we finished school in Vladi- vostock. the idea of women going into | professions was in the air,” she ex-* Plained. “I went with three other girl friends on that long trans-Siber- ian trip clear across Russia to reach college. We felt such adventurers! I deliberately chose dentistry because no women were in the field and I felt I had a better chance to succeed.” Her choice proved excellent. After Post-graduate work in Berlin, Dr. Kazimiroff was made Assistant Pro- fessor of Dentistry at Petrograd uni- versity which position she held, in ad- dition to private practice, when the revolution broke. “All of my family escaped un- harmed.” Her face clouded as she recalled those strenuous times 10 years ago. “In fact, we have a regu- lar settlement of Russian relatives and friends in Shanghai today.” Chinese, both men and women, are numbered among Dr. Kazimiroff's patients, She is tremendously inter- ested in Chinese children’s teeth be- cause preventive dental work is just beginning in Shanghai. “One of my most interesting patients is a very old, to her,” Dr. Kazimiroff smiled. “She will never appear in the daytime so I must go at night. It is a social visit, with much etiquct extended and observed before I set up my machin- ery and begin work on her teeth. Chinese Women Domestic “The Chinese are a fascinating high-caste Chinese lady who never) goes out of her home so I must ¢0} people, greatly aroused now with their new social and economic ideas. Washington, July 19.—(#)—Charles J. Rhoades, new commissioner of In- dian afairs, is charged with the gi- gantic task of putting 350,000 red men “on their feet.” It is the aim of Szc- retary Wilbur to take them out of government care and make them self supporting. Not since Franklin K. Lane was secretary of the interior has there been such a drastic change in admin- istration attitude toward the Indians. They were given free rein at that time and many, by unwise business moves, went into bankruptcy. With the new commissioner on the job, the work of getting the Indian out in the world and “on his own” will be pushed. Much has already been accom-, plished in that direction. Last year the Indians of the 200 tribes scat- tered over the country earned $1,267,- A park entrance to the fair grounds was dedicated in honor of the early officials. Only nine living members of the original group participated in the ceremony. honoring the memory of dead officials were given by Louis Rose, chairman of the board of coun- ty . commissioners; 8. J. A. Boyd, Langdon; Prof. J. H. Sheppard and Dr. Don McMahan, both of the North Dakota agricultural college. QUEER FISH TALE Evansville, Ind—The Ohio river recently yielded to two local anglers ® fish that has never been seen around here before and which ob- servers have failed to classify. It was about 20 inches long, with two. feet and gills on the outside. Its gills are moss-like affairs, worn like chin whiskers. It uses its fect to swim. “700 LATE TO CLASSIFY USED CARS 1926 Ford Coupe. Two 1925 Ford Touring cars. 1635 Ford Truck. WE are reducing our used car stock, terms. : STEEN-MARMON CO. 116 Second Street, Bismarck, N. D. is, 42 Eng. Ene.; id New Series orts; Americ: i ke. dininistratrix, ori Dakota. Your present Janurance Palicy cap he settled wife or sinurhecr monthly, Do you know aout thin? fee ERIC A. THORBERG 1 District Manager, © ‘The Mutual Life insurance Com- , Das of New York. 816 by the sale of blankets, baskets, beads, wood carvings, paintings and Russian Business Filling Teeth for Chinese in Shanghai But I think it will be a very long time before Chinese women will take pro- fessions earnestly. They have no scientific background. Literature, Philosophy and sociology are giving them intellectual freedom. It will take several generations before they have any idea of real economic free- dom.” There is real antipathy in China to women entering professions, accord- ing to Dr. Kazimiroff. This was never so in Russia. “All are ‘people’ in Russia,” she observed. “Being a woman doctor, engineer, or any other professional ‘was never a matter to fuss about. 1 am amused at how Americun women in tusiness and professions capitalize the fact of their sex.’ A rounded life, wich concentrated work and leisure to play. is Dr. ka- zimiroff's prescription for success. Her office closes daily for two hours while she has “tiffin.” ‘Tennis, motor- ing, walking and swimming have reg- ular places on her program. Reading several heurs daily is there, too. “A career is to be enjoyed, not just made a success,” she smiled in a quiet way. “I am fascinated by my work, can never read enough about it or see enough new work in my line. But I think I would get verv one-sided if I did not have my leisure too. New Indian Commissioner Has Hopes Of Putting Red Men ‘On Their Feet’ other arts and industries. To enlarge the market for Indian handiwork further a trade mark de- sign to be registered in the patent office is being considered. It would suggest the craftsmanship of the In- dian and would be attached to all articles they make. Pre-vocational industrial instruc- tion is being given in the Indian schools and the younger gencration of Indians now growing up will be fitted to earn their way. The instruc- tion includes farming, carpentry, blacksmithing, engineering, masonry, painting, and harness repairing for the boys, and home training, cooking, sewing, laundering and poultry rais- ing for the girls. Graduates of agricultural colleges are superintending the farming ac- tivities of the Indians. The Coolidge dam now under construction in Ari- zona at a cost of $5,650,000 will supply adequate irrigation for the Pima Indians. ENJOY this good-to-eat bran cereal that helps you fight 1899, P.C0.. Ine. constipation! BRAN FLAKES WITH OTHER PARTS OF WHEAT THE BISMARCK TRIRUNE. FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1929 S00 SHEEP SPECIA HERE THIS EVENING Public Invited to Se on Depot Tracks; Has the World's Wisest Goat The Soo Line sheep special will be here at 7:30 this evening, and will show its display at the Soo depot until 10:30 p.m. ‘The sheep special is ‘one of the big- gest undertakings staged so far by the Soo Line as an incentive to pro- gressive farming in North Dakota. It is stressing the element of sheep and wool in the diversification program of the state farming interests. Aboard the cars of the special are types of sheep to illustrate what breeds and types should be uscd in stocking the farms with bands. Also the kind that are not suitable or Profitable. Lectures are delivered by experts at each stop, among these talkers being E. F. Johnson, general livestock agent of the line, 8. J. Sanders, livestock agent for the road, and Harry McNutt, agricultural agent out of the Bismarck offices of the line. A mystifying feature of the special is “Soo Line Sam,” the “wisest goat in the world.” Sam tells fortunes while you wait. So far the journey of the special over the state has been a triumphal tour. About 15,000 persons have greet- ed the train at the towns along the route. This week the cars have shown at Foreman, Cogswell, Lidgerwood, Merricourt, Oakes, Lehr, Wishek, Fre- donia, Napoleon and Braddock, from which latter point the train is com- ing to Bismarck. The week will be concluded with exhibitions at Wash- burn and Wilton Saturday. The public is invited to visit and in- spect the train this evening at the Soo station tracks here. County Agent A. R. Miesen will be with the party on arrival here today. Display | Converse Returns Here to Work for Tax Commissioner C. C. Converse, former state tax commissioner during the administra- tion of Governor R. A. Nestos, ar- rived in Bismarck yesterday to take up the duties of income tax deputy in the office of the tax commissioner, it is announced by Iver Acker, tax commissioner. Since serving as tax commissioner, Mr. Converse has een connected with the Federal Land Bank, St. Paul, and has practiced law. {PEOPLE'S FORUM | OPPOSES CIGARETTES Editor of the Bismarck Tribune: tors of our great dailies awakened to the fact that the physical and moral well being of our youth is being tre- mendously affected with the damning curse of the cigarette? It is a stand- ing reflection of the management of every large daily newspaper to cater to the tobacco business by putting large flaring cigarette advertisements on their pages; and as if that were not enough, associate woman with a large per cent of these ads. Cannot you from your years of experience and general information see that it is bad taste, to say the least, to compel your readers to see these, what I think I am correct in calling, immoral advertisements, every day, mostly? And the children in the home who will look through the paper because of the comic strips, etc., will come face to face with this iniquitous psychology in favor of the general use of the cursed cigarette? Have the editors of our large dailies no conscientious scruples that would favor the best readers of their papers, that they would say, “no” to any such advertise- ment agents, and make it a clear cut statement, that you are publishing your paper for the best well being of your readers, making and keeping it a clean paper that need not bring a Is it not about time that the edi- | | blush to any parent to have her chil- | dren scan the pages? I feel most | deeply in this matter, and it is not a matter of dollars and cents but a matter of clean and sturdy young manhood and womanhood that should | be the first concern of large dailies. There are many readers of the Trib- une, who feel just as I feel, and re- Peatedly I have felt the greatest pos- } sible indignation when looking | through the Tribune to have to look ; Upon nudity that had no legal or so- cial right in the columns; and what | 4s to the same effect to have to look upon women on, or in, sometimes a {cigarette ad each day, just as if it | was gentle lady like to use the dirty cursed cigarette. This feeling is not a matter of a sudden outburst on my part, but has repeatedly been felt as ; from time to time I have been com- Ppelled to see. these unsightly adver- tisments in your otherwise valuable per. If this business is not going to call for the better judgment on the part | of the publishers of the great dailies, ; Sooner or later there will come out a | daily that will be edited by one or all of the religious denominations, which will be clean from the front page to the last sentence on the back. The time is coming when a large fraction of the better thinking people and readers of the dailics will revolt against what is a just reason for such revolt, and the sooner, the better, unless the publishers of our great dailies will consider their just deserts as readers of such papers. Yours respectively, EV. F. W. GRESS, Steele, N. D. Youth Is Captured After Bank Robbery Within half an hour after he held up the Securities State Bank of Sand- stone, 23 miles north of here, Lee Eastman, 17, Milaca, was lodged in the county jail today. He confessed to M. B. Hurley, Pine county attor- ney, saying he “needed the money to help out my folks.” Ze, A WAS IW WEE WRIT Red Owl brings you the nationally known brands of Pure foods—the brands you like because they represent honest value—highest quality—at prices that are con- sistently low, Sweet Corn Bricelyn Crosby Minnesota Extra Quality ‘Heinz “The Flakes with Popcorn Flavor” Van Camp’s Hominy or Red Kidney Beans, can 10@ Folger’s Coffee A Blend of Central America’s Finest Coffee Vacuum pack. 2 Ivory Flakes a Pure Soap in Flake Form QUEEN OLIVES Imperial Crown Quality pack, 16 oz. jar 35¢ “wii porttienge WA: Puritan MaltExtract Highest Quality Mele Boyd Mason Jar Caps Doz. pks- 24C Red Ow! Lipped JarRings | Lava Soap ™,“;” ‘bar 9e Crystal White The Billion Bubble Laundry Soap 4 pkss. 25¢ Preserves “Temtor” Pure Whole Strawbeiry Ka 4. ter 950 Two Stores to Serve You Store No. 1, 302 Main can §9c ORANGES, Frais Trade at your nearest Red Ow! Store No. 2, AN aS ai) TOILET SOAPS Paimolive, Lux or Jap Rose G@ bars 49e@ Bleaching Liquid BANANAS, Fancy Yellow, 2 Ibs. .. .25¢ 7 Rice Flakes 2 pkgs. 25¢ Pine City, Minn., July 19.—(%)—j| large pkg. 22¢ A bottle 23 bars 36€ Fancy Sunkist, 1 doz. . .29¢ 506 Broadway DEPENDABLE! HERE can be’ no better malt | at any price. You | can besure of that, HAMM = Saint Paul y ALT HAMM BREWING CO. BRANCH Phone 62 BISMARCK, NO. DAK. 209 Fifth st, montis | GUSSNER’S | nox'no| MARKETS ROAST. he... 19c uw BEEF moss: 19c ur SPRING CHICKENS ........:.. 35¢ - 38¢ ; VEAL ROAST +. 4% VEAL STEW 3 - Cash and Carry Specials - 3 P. and G. SOAP, 7 for . Creamery Butter ...... 40¢ Sugar, 10 Ibs. bag . (Meat Dept. Only) PEANUT BUTTER, 2D tino rsesseerre FOC ORANGES, Manimroth "= ...cueose. 0s OR eacecss Voy taney. 2for..... SOC tareKeloge......LLe B ” Sen 19c ina rowner .......27C 4 CALUMET BAK- ‘Se cans WATERMELONS on ice, whole, Ib. 31/c MAMMOTH PEACHES, can veseen 4S CREME OIL 5 c EMPRESS COFFEE SALE and Free Iced Tea Tumbler Deal Serving Empress Coffee Free All Day i 5 Lb. Empress 3 Lb. Empress 6 Tumblers Free 3 Tumblers Free Per Lb. - 55 Per Lb. - 56¢ 1 Lb. Empress 1 Tumbler Free Per Lb. - 57c¢ Since 1883 LOGAN'S “We Thank You” Raspberries Watermelons Plums __ Peaches Tomatoes New Peas Wax Beans Carrots Turnips Rhubarb Celery Lettuce Green Peppers Cabbage Home Grown Potatoes Mandan Phone 106 Bismarck Phone 1060 Cantaloupes Bing Cherries Cucumbers Beets Saturday Specials Hunt's Supreme Mammoth Peaches, large can only .. U-Serve-It Grapefruit, No. 2 can ... Creme Oil Soap, 4 bars .. Kellogg’s Corn Flakes, large package . Jello, 3 for .. Spiced Jelly Drops Very fine, 1 lb. boxes ... Sacaa 29¢ Peanut Crunch, 1 lb. box aires 39e Lydia Darrah Chocolates, the pound .. + 70¢ Meat Department SPRING CHICKENS STEWING CHICKENS Beef - Pork - Veal - Lamb (Government Inspected) What does the U. S. stamp of approval on meats mean to you? COLD MEATS An exceptionally fine assortment. Battle Creek Foods A short road to health! All Phones 211 ; 118 Third Street DELIVERIES — Bite - 10:80 - - - 2:80 - 4:30 * p. m. Fifty-one Years on Commencing Monday continuing during the summer months we will close’our | store at 6:15 o’elock on week nights with the Saar celpscaticn and Wo keen tes tesa our we ¥ appreciate it.