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LIONS OF BISMARCK ZONE MAKE BiG HIT AT DISTRICT MEET Hebron President to Be Sent to International to Recite Clubs Deeds Lions of the Bismarck zone were the hit of the district conference held at the Radisson hotel, Minneapolis, Friday, according to President W. A. Ayers, who got back from the meeting Sunday afternoon, accompanied by D. E. Shipley, zone governor. The reason for the Bismarek zone drawing so much water in the con- ference was die to the greater activity of the local club and those which it sponsored, 16 in all now, in the zone. The Hebron club scored the biggest hit of the meeting as 8. P. Rigler, its president, told of its municipal ac- complishment in putting over the water works and sewers at a cost of more than $100,000, after two disas- trous fires had failed to carry prior referendums for the improvements. Ben W. Ruffin There The conference was so impressed with the achievements of the Hebron club that it was voted to send Presi- dent Rigler to the international con- vention at Denver, to tell the Lions of the whole country what a small-town club was able to accomplish with hardly more than the will to do it as the motive power of the undertaking. Miesen Is Heading | Special Party Going | To Livestock Show; | A. R. Miesen, county agent, is jhandling the make-up of a party to go from here to the International Livestock, Grain and Hay show, at jthe Chicago stockyards. If he n | iget a sufficient number of farmers to | {make the trip, it will be possible to jget a special car. Anybody desiring | to accompany the party is welcome, | but should hand in his name at once | to Mr. Miesen. H ESKIMOS EASILY WIN GUM-CHE WING TITLE One Stick Lasts for Days and | Has Good Resale Market; | Hair Fortifies Tobacco | Chicago, Nov. 18.—(4)—QGum chew- ; ing on @ grand scale, the Chicago | Academy of Science has found, is one of the unsung achievements of Eski- | mos. | Not only is the Eskimo a constant jchewer of gum, but long distance | champion of the art, if it be such, as well. The academy has heard with amazement that one stick of gum will last an Eskimo days and days, and ; saad have a value on the resale mar- | et. Much gum data was obtained by the academy from Captain Charles _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 18. 1929 About 200 members, consisting of D. Brower, “white father’ of the deputy governors and club officials | Eskimos at Point Barrow, Alaska. attended the meeting. President| “While gum is considered a great Ayers said it was o busy session. He delieacy,” Capt. Brower said, “the went into the hotel at ‘m. and was| turnover in this commodity is not on the job until 10 t. large, as the natives go on chewing Ben W. Ruffin, past international| it days after the departure of the president from Richmond, Va., was] flavor. Fresh sticks are added oc- there and made a talk. He said|casionally, as the wealth of the “friendships and social intercourse |chewer permits, and in time the mean much in the lives of men, and| amount of gum in the mouth of one are great factors in creating under- | Eskimo is astounding. standing between nations.” “Personal| “It is also common for a native to contacts that are made in clubs like | sell his chew at the end of a few days this create friendships that last a|to a less wealthy acquaintance.’ lifetime.” Captain Brower, who is United He declared that to have true liber | States commissioner at Point Barrow ty one needed not only freedom but| as well as general storekeeper and tolerance. “There must be a respect | collector for the Chicago academy. for the rights and opinions of others, ; also remarked upon the popularity of and there must be personal integrity.| tobacco among the natives. The In fact, national safety depends as | tobacco, he explained, is strengthened much on this integrity as on battle- | by the addition of reindeer hair. ships and armies.” One hundred specimens of rare Winthrop Chamberlain, associate} birds have just been received from editer of The Journal, presided, and | Capt. Brower at the academy. introduced the district officers and — directors. iemar em, Clm Show UP Kansan’s Car Burns marck Lions were a a by the presence of Paul Boetmn, Het-| ast of City While tinger, state's attorney, and Dugald i Stewart, the mowinia tutuer, presi- They Are on N. D. Trip dents of the two new clubs last in- " stituted by the local club as sponsor,! A coupe in which Harry Niles and thus indicating a hearty recognition | ® brother, of Holton, Kansas, were of their club purpose and a go-getting | t’aveling from Bismarck, took fire spirit, Beach and Dickinson also had | @nd was burned, scven miles east of two representatives each, and Dr. L.| the city, Sunday mirning. Roland H. G. Smith was there from Mandan. | Crane, who was following the Kansas Bismarck stood highest in sponsor- | Car, noticed something was wrong by ships with its 15 clubs, that at Na-|the way it backfired under the trans- poleon still to be instituted by charter | mission. me es as the Niles presentation. ‘ .| brothers drove along. DMitchell, SD. insti’ | ‘Sand was thrown on the burning car, but the flames could not be checked. .| Dependents Can File Washable Crepe de Chine only $1.19 Yara We consider this the best silk value we've ever offered! It took time and tedious search- ing of the market to secure this value . . « but we found it! A heavy, weighted crepe de Chine for lingerie, slips and dresses . . . in ‘most every shade you'd want . . . 38 inches wide . . . and WASHABLE! June. They to have plenty of bath tubs and in other ways to the visi- lortable and The local representatives motored to Fargo and back, making the trip between Fargo and Minneapolis by train. Prague University Is Closed Due to Rioting Prague, Crecho-Slovakia, Nov. 18.— (P)—Serious rioting took Veterans Claims in | Disappearance Cases Attention of dependents of veter- | ans is called by the local Red Cross to the privilege of filing adjusted compensation claims in cases where the veteran has been missing for sev- en years or is likely to be missing that long. 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