Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘THE BISMARCK_ TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1929 i Governor Is U: Inable To Fill Engagements Due to Back Trouble Rejecting canceling those previously made is one of the principal items of business t the office of Governor George F. Shafer these days. His of! icial position has resulted in mumber of invitations. in his term the governor ac- many as possible. the governor's physician de- cided it wasn’t worth while to be a governor's physician unless he could give the orders. He told the gover- at home on account of Iment which has bothered hima in recent weeks. The g jor said the pain in his k was a silent echo of the doc- p 2 : No Superintendent or Principal {as s admonition. Mrs, Shafer joined | the doctor and the twinges in the to Lean On, Says Alma | gubernatorial back in the campaign. Jensen of Dickinson Smal! Community Instructor Is Governed by Acquaintance With Its Families MORE RELIANCE REQUIRED} H schoolroom clean, Miss Jensen said. j | One of the fundamental differences f jbetween the work of the city and if ‘country teacher is the fact that the must be a art of it, whereas the city school teacher frequently has no so- ry |parents, the speaker said. Sho addcd |that the ability to best lead and serve jrural people depends largely on abil- jity to understand their ways of think- \dices. The rural teacher must be self-re- ments, Miss Jensen ‘uid, wher {city teacher has other teachers, s at hand to aid her in 3 the problems that oc Jensen said, should give for rural courses in which the general ) BY LIVING latter li in her community and SHAPE cial contacts with her pupils or their ‘ing and appreciation of their preju- Nant and must make her own judp- superintendent and per- day to day. The norma! ser 3 and wise man- preg 4 Seed Show the governor will make | At Minot Is Offering engagements until his $1,050 in Cash Awards teachers can really be suece ful in| rural schools they must know and | The Northwest € Crop Improvement understand the rural chil in his own association has added a cash award environment. ace . Jensen, of the | oF $59 to prizes that already approx!- of the fact that his back pains him, his general the governor said, Minot, N. D., Ni Ta Before! frequently ‘health is good N. D. Smallpox Cases eo atettale “it {mate $1,000 for exhibits in the North | Increase Over 1928 ‘ociation here, |Daket State Seed Grain and Potat>| — eee Be which will be held in Mino:,) Marked increase in the number of _[February, 10, to 15, 1990. ‘The prix lipox cases in North Dakota was sin which the Work’ which the crop improvement organ ed, today, by the state health in a one-room rural! ization is offering is for the best sam. artment. For the first 10 months from that of the city | ne of seed wheat in the show | year 240 cases were reported as Miss Jensen said)" Other organizations in th 210 cases for all of 1927 and of a teach school diffe school normal s speaking invitations and | | frequently manifests itself in later | years by causing kidney and heart | jeral Communists today were arrested diseases. Isaac Vennevick, 66, Native of Trondhjem, Here 15 Years, Dies Isaac Vennevick, 66. a native of Norway who had been in this country since 1903, died Wednesday morning. here. For 15 years he had been making his home with Mr. and Mrs, G. G. Beithon. Vennevick was born in Narvick, Trondjhem, Norway, June 21, 1863. After coming to this country he lived some years in Minnesota, then came to Bismarck. He leaves a sister in Funeral services will be held at the Webb chapel at 10 o'clock Friday morning, with Rev. O. 8. Rindah! con- ducting them. There will be special music, and the interment will be in Fairview cemetery. Lignite Shipments Increase Sharply Sharp increase in the volume of lignite coal shipments was recorded during the five-week period from September 15 to October 19 as com- pared with a similar period in 1928, according to report filed with the Lies railroad board by North Dakota ines. This year interstate shipments to- taled 17,439 tons and interstate ship- Norway and a cousin at Henning, | j Minn. STEELE WOMAN DIES Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret | Sent were held at Steele, Wednesday. COMMUNISTS ARRESTED Athens, Greece, Nov. 7.—()—Sev- for distributing manifestoes urging | | workmen to celebrate the soviet an- | She died Monday, leaving a husband niversary tonight. jana several children. Bayer Aspirin next time you've a headache, or other annoying pain. Note how quickly and completely your suffering from neuralgia, neuritis, or similar nagging pains subsides. And if it’s genuine Aspirin, with the package and cach tablet marked Bayer, it’s safe, Bayer Aspirin is always the same. Never depresses the heart. teachers f can better prepare’ which are interested in the succ work in rural schools bY/the seed show have signified inten- ‘approaching the matter from a rural {tion to give prizes or cash award 3 cases in 1928. ments 241,723 tons, a total of 259,- Dr. J. D. Jungman, department | 162 tons. In 1928 shipments for the epidems ologist, said incidence of the | same period were 23.019 tons inter- FUEL Beulah Lignite Montana Bear Creek Lehigh Briquettes Cotton Wood Pine Slab Wood Birch and Oak Blocks Phone 62 Wachter Transfer Co. J. F. Griffin, state agent Biomerck, N. Dak. in North Dakota is high as| state and 167,162 tons intrastate, a ed with states of similar pop- | total of 190,181 tons. nd urged vaccination as a anes KING TO HEAR ‘ROSE MARIE’ London, Nov. 7.—()—For the first time since the beginning of his illness, a year ago, King George is going to the theatre tonight. His majesty has selected the American play “Rose/ Marie,” at the Drury Lane theatre. | angle. Observatio ing method: |Sponsors of the show are expectin: und practice of teach~|ndditional awards to exceed $300, ould be given in rural} schools and with rural children, Miss Jensen said, in order that the teach- er may become familiar with methods | of handling problems which she w encounter later on Rural teachers should have a course | terment was made in Ec fn rural school management and ship, learn before they begin to teach how} to manage noon luncheons, play at | = recess time and how to keep her| BAYER ASPIRIN Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaccticacidester of Salicylicacid LUNDBERG SERVICES HE Funeral ser for John Lundbe aged retired =m hant of Re jwere held at the family residence ‘| there at 1 o'clock. this afternoon. In- lund town- Chickenpox in unvaccinated adults hould be regarded as smallpox as 1 by the state health laws, Dr. He pointed out that not be of immedi- disease may quences but that it serious co} Youth Has Found The Way! AN ANCIENT PREJUDICE HAS BEEN REMOVED AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE has cultivated the fertile field of opportunity and invites everyone to roam in search of desired pursuits. Nothing remains of that ancient prejudice which bound the apprentice, without choice, to his career. est last Wig cipitation tot " X.D,, cloudy ex, fain Be cloudy 169 Thesoinge mo seank tele take Re Cnen. ou can depend upon them under all tonight and Frida in temperature, | upper Missixsip the state of weather prev: Rocky ys throughout the state sondition, but many side Formula 5 An entire season’s supply filling of Foads are p Hiver stage at 7 a.m. 14 feet; 24- hour change, drop of .1 foot, ORRIS W. ROBERTS, eteorologist. WEATHER | Devils Lake— costs less than one other preparations... Absoku tely harmless. Approv- ed posnd we alc car rane one radiator “toasting did it” — Gone is that ancient prejudice against against cigarettes— Progress nae mus when we removed harmful corn ACRIBS (pungent irri- F : tants) from the tobaccos. 20c refund for re= turn of can. EARS ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of | modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, Properly aged and skillfully blended—“It’s Toasted.” © “TOASTING,” the most modern removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are ent in manufactured in the old-fashioned Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING” — LUCKY STRIKE’S extra secret process—removes harmful cor- rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and Coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient. preju- te liar 4 “It’s toas Sed No Throat Irritation-No Cough. mt marauyin spre natn TRIO Bere ety sre Dance Cover or Seeley mis oer 0 puree never of that 8, © ae, The American Tobacco Co. irs. The Chapel Funeral The chapel funeral is the vogue in all cities of any size. Our facilities are up-to-the-minute in every way and with our new chapel; ours is the latest word in funeral service. We can ac- P commodate a large audi- ence; also adapt the seating to smaller groups with special “tectiities for the comfort and privacy of the fam- re » Guaranteed 31 Years‘ : For Cold Weather Driving. 50% more winter: power. 23% active material. Rubber insulated. sl gag od ell 13 Light Each. Price Mba iag ag Fer these exact, expert regulation of such high tempera- tures removes impurities. More than a slogan.