The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 29, 1919, Page 2

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SIX BONN A RENE LN 6 we een bene Y 1 . ia ae na ankien he BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE” WEDNESDAY, OCT, 29, 1919. } the car started to cross the track. The to Burleigh county with his brother sc foe engineer could not see the machine. nnd parents, After living in the county The engine hit the motor just as it was ral years, the parents of the de- in the center of the track.” “ised returned to their home in Towa, Other \witn es were Dr. Quain, Dr,'accompanied by one other son and 5 OF DEAD MAN N C, E, Stackhouse, Dr, F. R. Smyth, Dr. four daughters, i La’ Rose, Grant Williams,of Fargo, The brothers married sisters, Frank Northern Pacific conductor; ‘Theodore marrying Miss Ellen Eldridge about |Strand, Fargo, brakeman; DeWitt Wood, Jamestown, engineer; Ralph A. 1910 and James marrying Miss Cora Hldrldge about 1913. The former have Lane, Glencoe farmer who knew the three hildren, one of whom is a three |dead brofhers a few minut vefore they were killed weeks’-old ba Mrs. James Teachout and who was followine the ill-fated | has twin girl bout four years old. The brothers were active in affairs ;machine by less than a half-mile when t.ound Glencoe and Stewartsdale and it was struck, and Robert Phelps, dep- Were prominently identified with the uty sheriff, ‘|Presbyterian church at the latter place, Unconscious to the last, with his (ne of their nearest neighbors, in K! faithful wife by his side, James Henry Speaking of the men today, said: “They Y\Teachout, prominent farmer residi ere the best neighbors in the-county,” killed while attempting to ¢ near Glencoe, died last night at 9 and thiy brief “but comprehensive Northern Pacific railroad S| o'clock from a probable fracture at the Culogy is echoed by all’-who knew the about one-half mile east of Apple Creek) pase of the brain, the second victim hrot station by being struck by Northern | of the Northern Pacitie accident at| Pacilic train No, 3.” “Dead Man's Cur near the Apple ‘This is the verdict of the coroner's station. His brother, Frank ° jury after hearing the testimony in am ‘Teachout, with whom he was ine deaths of the two Glencoe farmer-| riding when thei automobile was of the i brothers at the inquest this afternoon. |struck by the train yesterday shortly Q ‘The jury was composed of A. P. Len- jatter noon, died instantly from at ing toward Bismarck, with the hurt, Raymond Bergeson and R. B. jiroken neck, feurtains (on their car all up, they Fonham, Jndge William Casselman | ‘The final details of the dual funeral reached the crossing one-half mile cast acted as coroner, jwill not be made until the arrival of of Apple Creek and undoubtedly sa The most important testimony of-|the dead brothers’ parents and s ter Northern Pacific train No. 4 on the sid- fered was that given by J. J. Barton|from Shenendoah, Ts who are e niting for No. 3,-also bound for of Jamestown, fireman on the engine Bismarck Thurs- k, to pass. At the place where that struck the automobile which killed nt plans are to the accident occurred, the road is in Frank Teachout: outright and mortally nd burial at Glen- vety poor condition and. driv com- injured his brother James, rtsdale Friday afternoon ment on tht fact that it is necessary to 9 MAN SAW CAR deyote considerable. attention tg driv- Barton said: “I saw the automo- hout was born Septem- ing the car at this point. hile, all enclosed with eurtains, com- | ber 2.1883, and was 36 ytars old when! Just before reaching the erossing, the {ng down the road alongside the track, |he died. He was born and raised at frain is hidden from view of the road The engine’s whistle was blown and the Shenandoah Ta., and came to this state by a cut and this fact, coupled with bell rung. We were going about 4g} with his parents about 1906 and set- the fact that the storm curtains were miles an hour, The automobile was|'ed near Glencoe, where the brothers Wy and not only cut out their view, but nd had spoken to them James Henry Teachout Passes Away Last Night Still Unconscious “James Henry Teachout and % Abraham ‘Teachout were a ACCOUNTS OF ACCIDENT ounts of the accident differ and much as there were no eye wit- ps, excepting pethaps the engineer ted locomotive, the truth dent will never be known, Ac lday. Howe hold the ser A WALK ULSTER DEVELOPED OVER LIBERAL LINES AND HAVING THE’ HY-LINE COPYRIGHTED SHOULDERS PUT : FORWARD AS CORRECT BY FASHION PARK. ‘IT IS A DOUBLE BREASTED MODEL LAID OUT TO MEE? THE NEEDS OF \ THE BACK HAS A.HALF going slowly, So slowly in fact that cwned or coutrolled considerable lan man walking alongside of it could have , ~ BORN IN IOWA also prevented the sound of the on- jreshing train from being heard, might have been the reason why the Teach- THE ACTIVE MAN OF AFFAIRS. BELT AND THE POCKETS ARE EASY OF ACCESS AND WELL kept pace with the car, T yelled to | James achout was horn September the engineer to stop the train just as} 26. 1889, af Shenandoah, Ta., and came © t brothers did not see or hear No. 8 proach, It is also thought probable they were watching No, 4 on the siding and confused it with the other rain, PLACED. IJTISQUARTER LINED WITHSER VICEABLE SILK. } READY-TO-PUT-ON : \ CUSTOM SERVICE WITHOU E. THE-ANNOYANCE OF A TRY-ON™ ee reese eeeeerereeeneneerneeeeseered IN REAR SEAT Those who were on the train and ielped._ extricate the bodies from tHe ne, which had been ¢ar- a considerable distance on the vilot of the engine, state that James achout’s body was found in the rear wf the automobile, while close friends “f the dead brothers say they always ode together on the front — seat. hether James Teachout was trying to ‘imb-out of the car through the rear or not because of a stalled motor and veeause his brother, who was driving. as Unable to stop the machine on the iced road, is not known. i RAIL COMMISSION i The Man; a style book for Autumn, is ready tor you. SETTLES SCRAP OF ‘ ; = ; . ( THE TWO EDWARDS) ‘ The dignity and power of the rail-| were invoked recently ow between Ed Hughes and hes didn’t like s handled .in “My blood is red—red as theirs”, he cried a8 +0» he faced the inevitable, the world-old barrier which separates race and caste and creed. TAILORED AT FASHION PARK FASHION PARK ° | J “(Rochester New York HAYAKAWA IN——— “The Man Beneath” Can a man’s service to humanity, a service which elevates him to the pinnacle of a high profession, which wins for :him the recognition of the world’s greatest scholars, rey move the ban of blood? Can the man whose face is red, or brown, or black demand equal social privileges in a white man’s land? These absorbing questions are splen- didly treated in this latest of Sessue Hayakawa’s screen dramas, a picturization of Edmund Mitchell’s famous ook. ORPHEUM THEATRE Tonight Only Admission—10c and 20c EUGSURSERDEROOOUOAUAUEREUUGUOUEONONEQOUQUOOVOQUGUOCUEOHQUQUOESOCUEUOUOUOSOOOCSSOCSUOQNURERUDSOUUSUEEENTS WEZARE, Sessue Hayakawa Haworth-Mutual Star. 1 Patterson had declined to do some- or other that Ed Hughes asked} m to. Ed Hughes threatened to shut cff the heat from Ed Patterson’s dance hall if Ed Patterson didn’t do what Eid Hughes asked him to. Ed Patter- sep didn’t and Ed Hughes did, and then Ed Patterson appealed to the rail- yay commission, advising that a shin- dig was scheduled for his hall that evening and that if the usual high tem- perature did not prevail there would be much grief and suffering ahd moral anguish, The railway commission put its mos* expensive and experienced engineers on the job and they devoted four hours to hearing the plaints of the two Eds Rosen’s Clothing Shop }yf Main Street McKenzie Hotel Block HUUOOLEGUUUADOOOSUQUGSESDOQUCUOUOOCURUERNLOROGOCRNAUCUROROOACCROGOOHOGNOUUONOOuCNOgCONauonoguaucosooNcNt advisédthe commission that’ both the WITH ROAN & STRAUSS Eds were wrong, but that Ed Patter-} FE. H. Mann; son of former Railway son's dance would be a frigid fizzle if Commissioner W.. H. Mann of New Ed Hughes didn’t provide heat for Ed| Salem, has taken a position as office Fatterson’s, dance hall, so the commis-| manager and auditor with the medical sion instructed Ed Hughes to turn on! firm of Roan, Strauss & Fisher. Mr. the heat; -and.\Ed Patterson whistled | Mann plans to make his home here per- again, manently, and he will be joined in the The commisston then issued the fol-| ncar futhre by Mrs; Mann, now, in Vir- and to looking over the heating pipes |lowing order: - sinia, % . in the Patterson buildings and bills} The commission being of the opin- . payable and accounts receivable and|fon that: steam Heat service may be condtnsations, condemnations and so]improved_and the efficiency thereof in- forth, and at the end of that time they |creased, it is therefore Ordered: 1. That the return pipe carrying the condensate from the main leads in.the distribution system of all central steam heat plants shall. be low- Smith Hearing Today Seaman A. Smith, former sheriff of Golden Valley county,.Governor Fra- zier’s special investigator in the lat- ter’s-effort to remove the sheriff and state’s attorney of Golden Valley UEMGDUUUNEDOOEAUCOOSOOOSOUUEOOOOCQOEORUUESQESERUE UUREUOEOUOROCUCORODOROROOEAO The Victrola satisfies your love of music | The love of Music is born in every one of us, and we natu- rally come to love the kind of music we hear the most. In this day of the Victrola it is easy for every one to hear the world’s best music—and not only to hear it, but to under- stand and enjoy it, for this wonder instrument gives to you a thorough appreciation of the masterworks of music. It unfolds to you all the beau- ties of the world’s greatest musical ef than the said live steam leads and shall provide a:sufficient grade in the pipe. return ag to permit the conden- sate an easy flow to the trap. Ordered: 2. That the return pipe from: the junctiof point with the live steam main shall be carried by the stortest accessible and practicable dis- tance from. an engineering and heat- ing standpoint to the trap and meter. Ordered: ..3, That the return. pipe’ Jor carrying condensate shal) not be connected at: any point or place in the pipe. with gny, valves or pipes of any character Whatsoever nor shall there be any breaks in return lead carrying condensate, This order applies generally and ‘spe- cifically fo all. future :steam heat con- struction on the. part of..all public utilities furnishing this service and all consumers who may: install such sery- ice piping for their. own use ag well as all existing installations at the time of this order;-~ It requires that such corrections aS may be necessary to sat- isfy ‘and acquire full compliance with this order be made not Jater than De- cember first, * By order of the commission at Bis- oS county, and the Townley choice for warden of the state prison, will be given his preliminary hearing before Justice E. H.: Howell this afternoon on a charge preferred by Attorney General Langer to the effect that Smith, gcting as transportation offi- cer for North Dakota, procured the signature of Harry x Dunbar, state transportation agent, to a fraudulent docuntent. . The. attorney general al- leges that Smith secured a blank re- ceipt from 2 Slope taxi man for service costing $15 and that he kited the re- ceipt, to $25 and procured Dunbar’s signature to .a voucher’ for that amount. Smith is defended by Simp- son of Dickinson, while Assistant At- torney General E. B. Cox is represent- ing the state. : ‘Phone 75—City Fuel Co., for Medora Coal. Don’t forget JOHNSONS for Hosiery. fi Pepereeee nS nit TUESDAY, NOV. 4th at my farni six miles north of Bismarck, I will sell at Public Auction, to the highest* bidder, the: following personal property: ~ aot : EA PA a . 4 27 ———_ HEAD OF HORSES ———— 27 ‘ Thirteen work'hot'ses, 3 to 10 years old; one gelding, coming 3 years old; ten colts, coming 2 years old ; three spring colts. FARMING MACHINERY One McCormick header, one McCormick mower, one hay ; rake, one Van Brunt 10-ft. single disc drill, one 24-ft. steel “ ) harrow, one disc corn cultivator, one:8-ft. double disc, one - potato planter, one potato digger, one flax reaper, one Mc- Cormick grain binder, 8-ft., new; one corn planter, one feed grinder, one 14-in. John Deere gang plow, one cream separa- tor, one 4-horse gas engine, one ‘spring wagon, two ‘sets bob-sleighs, four wide tire wagons, one low. farm truck, two | hay racks, two header boxes; one 12-25. Avery tractor and 4 Shorten plow, five sets of work-harness;' five 50-gallon ‘oil tanks. Le pad : PAs Kem piane. woos eam compositions, through their superb marek, North Dakota, this 27th day of : oss : 5 , . A lire etober, 1919, s 4 4 ” y : interpretations by Caruso, Farrar, ut “KILLIOY: : 65 —_—— HEAD OF CATTLE 65 SRAL Secretary. BLK: . fs ‘ » iy Be ahs 5 Gluck, McCormack, Melba, Ruffo, A eee PH Thirty cows; twelve pels: conditig 2 years old i fiye steers, A Bay at min: ears old; eighteen sj ‘ ‘i Schumann-Heink, Tetrazzini, and OEE aie iinees Constipation, veri coming 2 y ‘ighteen pring calves. : : H , Biliousness ent Soe z i other famous singers; by , Elman iota ain § , persian oa eR 15 Head Registered Cattle Ricisler Kaba Pa deseo if UNCLE SAM WILL ACT wah eae Right cows, 3 to 5 years old; three spring bull calves; one peg 3 ’ (Continued from Page One) scent nannies “iE spring heifer calf; two 1-year-old bull calves; one 3-year-old , i i is suffici ge 28 to tically | “Nothi the joy dut of life horthorn, bull. 5 i Powell, Zimbalist, and other noted See ae Pander er iienaed ach disordered iver oF, Foatt he y ca ‘ i ‘ ° ° ‘ e 4 ’t stay 3 instrumentalists; by Sousa’s Band, Sia grote Sires ee | act Ae” Sa cay | § —— RECISTERED DUROC BROOD Sows —— 8 9, “The d f the mi Heemove the liver. and bowel poison Fight Registered Duroc brood - Regi: D z Pryor s Band, Vessella’s Band, are pee eib is: eal cere, Tin which ts Keeping Your ved Raed Boat 1 faa old; eight, Registered Duroc Ee a titan i ; i ave ition te if tongue coated, vour J i iy pee f : Victor Herbert’s Orche: stra, an d pee Ney tine oiieet Upek ae ae wy phe ake ach sour. Why “Hot qnend One nenere ENG, five ey mostly Rhode Istand Reds. y ‘ « soeated by. certain elements, in our na-| 2 few.cents for a ‘box of Cascarets y tons prairie hay; fifty tons corn fodder. ‘ other celebrated musical organiza- ton, The position of the miners has} nd enjoy. the nicest, gentlest ee Rn Se ere x % ane ss ; i ~ been dictated by.the elements of pnysi-| tive-cathartic. you ever. experienced?) Sale Begins at 10:A.M. Sharp—————F ree Lunch at Noon ' tions.. ‘Victrola KVL, electric, 2 eal necessity which are.involved, and | Cascarets never ripe, sicken Oe in : Pee meyst Hes ; \ ae : InXVielecric, we al nok be detbre from our pro Saga ee ane Dace cee wie Mt eeepc ae hase cash sums 6f $10 and over, one = i . * cy false. issues whic! ‘ saive * “years e e pape H .The Victrola opens to you a new and ever-increasing vista fe injected santo The sialon by te pairs Nourse gan none shes ent aft tor ie Bake at et cent interest; H 1 % Paps pha Cyne Men 1 coal ‘ators. or the, interests wl =——$$—$————— “ : : a nine San as elevating as it is entertaining, and com- hae bea sx opston our demand —— = CET ; etely satisfies your longi i ion. ‘es demonstrated. hy their war i rches' oe ENH R Owne pletely satisfies y ging for musical recreation. frog We hate ates rile thelr rley’s Orchestra A. P, LEN] AI T, Owner Americaniem..,We; are. proud of the “Playing the ‘Latest ‘Dance. 3. . We ce e ; H O Ss K ] N S traditions and democratic institutions Hite—Any Size Orchestra 318 J. M. THOM N,. JOHN A. GRAHAM, & , of. our country; we have given our ds ‘urnish dessies Bidiign de’. ro ‘ : : Victrola Department hee es ee NS ee aed ri ee ‘ ictro e eparime nate prmere erentee

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