The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 24, 1920, Page 6

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIB : | \” WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24, 1920 JAYHAWKER niversity team,on the local field, in a . iam ‘AMERICA W H \ " test which will d i hich s , } z sr ARS fuatitution: holda ‘the advautaga,. ‘The ASPIRIN NS 0 Hy ORTH, $100: BO | TLE University of North Dakota, which is A (0 , foady playing the Marauerte untrersity f N ‘ if i d FOUGHT TY PH J Ni at Milwaukee, ear! = : z i At Milwaukee, earller In the season de-) Name Bayer” on Genuine ee RETURNING HOME: pa A More than 40 commissioned officers ' Dorland “Says Tanlac’ Went Pe 500 enlisted men, all of them vol- « Federal’ Relief Expedition’ to unteers, have been affiliated with the | Right Aten His: Troubles and - TRI-STATE CHAMP | GAMES ARE ON | "HIPPO VAUGHN IS STABBED IN SC. DAKOTA expedition from time to time, the or-| He Is Néw Enjoying Perfect Poland Has Organization | ganization consisting of about 200 men : Health ovine. X Sioax Falls, S$. D, Nov2t.—The Work All Accomplished {when the work began. During. thei f stay its members have been distribut-; “TI wouldn’t take i 2 a hundred dollars fed in all parts of Poland where there. a bottle’ for the good 'Tanlac has done was danger of the spread of typhus. me,” said. Joseph Dorland, 867 Mast- ;1920 hgh school footbell champion- ‘4 ee of Soutlr Dakota, lowa and-Ne-| Tekesno chances with substitutes! | Warsaw; Nov. 24—The ‘American braska will be decided i tomorrow.| Unless you see the name “Bayer”on typhus fever relief expedition to Po- Kenosha, Wis., Nov. 24——Jim (Hip- | when Sioux Falls and Mitchell, teums| packuge oon tablets you are not get- lund, the fifst organization of its kind ing Americans being: attached to the ern Ave.,'Minneapolis, Minn., an em- \ po) Vaughn a pitcher for the Chicago [gee In tele unas gate ____{ ting genuine Aspirin: prescribed by in the history of the United States Aiferene Polish sanitary. organiza. ployee.of the Twin City Rapid Transit ’ : cubs, s stabbed by his father-in-law | tivading . enemy «territory; Sioux | physicians. for. twenty-one years and ‘army, is preparing. to. leave soon for} a) company. 4 . was stabbed by his father-in-law | Falls high schoo! four weeks.ago de-| proved safe by. millions. ;‘Take As-! America, the. work. which the expedi+ . ee |) “Stomach trouble and rheumatism ; at midnight during an argument at the; | feated Sioux Ci'y by a decisiv> score; pirin only.as told in the Bayer packs tion organized. to.be carried on by the BANKERS WANT JOINT had been pulling me down: for four ‘ Vaughn home. He is in rious con- and ude possible tue acquisition. of | age for Colds, Headache, Neuralgia, ; Polish health. department. The expe: / ACTION WITH:B. OF: N. D.' years and at the rate I was losing the tristate football title by a South} Rheumatism, Earache, ‘loothache, ' dition came to Poland intending to re- n v Dakota hjgh schco! team for the first] Lumbago and for Pains Handy tin | main four months but its service rel earae. ean the aie nivenlate a ha 1917. Previously ; Sioux! poxes of twelve Bayer. Tablets of As-' extended on two occasions, the work (Continued from Page One). jHetle or no appetite and my stomacn ad wor over Contra: high of] pirin cost few cents, Druggists «also; haying been started in August, 1919. | into effect. gradually. He held Mat | j Was! sour mosy'of the time, D: woul See mp ila Palle Rieneh sell larger packages.. Aspirin. is the| In. recognition of their ‘services to'the Bayk of North Dakota and other | bloat up with gas som ing awful 5 chell and Sioux Malls high have} trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of | Poland in the campaign against typhus bankerS, but particularly. the’ people | and:at times fell like | y hokiny glean : ites for tha’ season, neither! Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.| feyer the Polish. government recently | might suffer, if the Bank ore Nortn j to. death. “I had rhet ; team having lost a-gime and between ’ awarded the Commemorative Cross to Dakota started. heavy. withdrawals; knees, and. sometimes. they dition at the city hospite BASEBALL FANS TALK ACTION AT NIGHT MEETING, A number of baseball fais seal the two elevers, all other conta | SS the following mem) i 7 "7 pers 0 ah i g vere over possibilities of the 192! season | [for the South’ Pakota title have, been for more than-a week owith large io), Ligutenant ara ot the oreanae j trom banks and banks were forced to | stiff I gould not. bend over at all. at a meeting at Franky’s, on Broad--| jeliminated, Uspeaunouue | Giichrist, of Cleveland, in. command; | oneclose: Gnetarneya/ |. “About two montis ago a friend , We are not-under half as much/of mine advised me to try Tanlac. | Karly in the season, Sioux Falls! 8! 3} ‘PI@i OU) Wy 1We|y- B eAeY IM) Major Lee R. Dunbar, Gloversvill N. 7 isted the BI fils and won over{ siowmnd Sujaten) waq{sed 30 29Ul ere ae DOL, DO aaa j obligation to thesenn fot North :Da- | Well, it-went right after my troubles Mt City, cumpions of that part|&q- paddworpuey yanoyy ‘01sa1eeN | xeon Willia P. Baker, New York Cily 0 as the Bank of North Dakota; and [ kept taking it and geting het- way, last night. A proposal was made | that a new baseball park be built east | of the city near the airphine hangar. | | u Information was conveyed to the of the-state. “yowod [1eqI@HSeq OU) O) P20d Gadtain Paul H. Streit, Marlin, Te: is to the stat,” said J. J. Nierling,. ter until now({ can’t tell tiore was meeting that the state 0 aban-| Regarding the strergth.of the op-) et \Apwoals Ol outs Jo wos ar ; Lieutenant Rabert C. ‘Snido, Texing of emesiow nae the Bank of North |anything at all the matter ws ti the. § posing teams. comparative. score fig-| SiH} [ooWos. Up SPenbs suosves ist] J ton, Va.; bieutenant Arthur Fox, Phil-' akota. Ww pe. reasonable there | 1 can eat anything set befure me and don the capitel ball pa e and use | | should be no-difficulty in the present | never ssuffer a bit afterwaits. The lures give Mitchell the advantage.|SUtdaje4 [B49A98 SUq SBUOUL IS: adelphia;, Lieutenant Harold L. K. Al-; the grornd for other purposes | i ue taf . s thee elevens have velop2t er- ‘Surpsoo | situation. The matter should be laid | rh i has dis: red crtirel: It was the opinion of the fans that | Both elevens have devetopsd power “syuouleouNOwYs Jjoy) 07 ibro, Waltham, Mass.; and. Lieutenant s ne rheumatism has disappeared crtirely plans for the 1921. sexson L be| ful scoring machines with the Soos’|-08.. ‘Yo0M B Jay TRHoVeUL Buys IS1IF} Alered WN. Bergmam Omaha; Neb (before the Bank of North Dakota as ‘and‘I’m as active as-I ever was, I’m i y loffensive machine beirg built aroun |¥O oul, ayUyep.ToaBYy you [ITM PUB : : 7 a business proposition and a business onger than I've been in ma iy.years, , , / jt i proposition, only.” + nd Vm convinced that: for ‘roubles John Nugeli, of Richaraton, brought ‘like miné Tanlac just can’t be beat.” laughter with’his suggestion that, the | Tanlac is sold in Bisme y Jos. farmers sell their wheat, for cash and | Breslow, in Dr‘ scot! by N. D. and Jos. that a park must ng completed, pla pedule {irawn up. ' started immediate he obtained, finance s obtained and as ‘Onarterback McDewell and Mitchell | 04 spenbs. wen} ,9ndy cavy. suorny depending on Full Scallin, a|-1SU) OA. e804} 9% satovoD “spenbs, four-letter. man. {4 eig greatest | —-— ‘Stiff Joints,,:;.. > | BASKETBALL MEN pair. of i} ville tion) half! gains, oN = Minn. U. Reunion hawker lovely madeine anv Sioux Falls*eantured the 1919 high ; Ss eM cle Mhedgo by buying March futures. He | H. Barrette, “in “Win it i 1 a ‘ ig by H.-P. Ho- Ends With Big Game ley team, last fal [es pool football onamplcnsy ay as.| PLAN SCHEDULE ore us es isaid that farmers are speculating inj man, aid in Strasburg by &tvasburg sees up to tite mar j feating ‘Mitche! Or0 nthe: THANKS: rE nF OSE Ba fax | holding’-wheat and’ that the reserve | Drug Co. Se cama 1 lgiving Day game: on: the local .tie:d.| (By ‘Assbdlated Press Smocthed Out By Out By Hamlin's | hanks won't lodn méney:to: encourage " (Advertisement) nts, faculty and alumni of the U | Conditions row are similar to those) New York, Nov. 24.—Two important | speculative purposes. ‘The suggestion | 2 dents, fac iu ty ene. 8 umn OF ne an u lof, last: year and followers of high changes in the rules: ofthe intercol: of Nuggli has been foliowed by. sons i versity of Minnesota, brought the t rood | 8¢2001 football» enticipate. bo. thrill | yne 8. 0f/the intercol-| — Soreness and_ stiffness resulting Pees rare RRR eee ; an celebration of “Better Minnesota” ; {the helm this year.~ Ar- the-élevens meet in, the all im- [iceiae terre rules were announc-| from unaccustomed use ‘of muscles Nhe stars rec eing saa pei ying | \ week to a climax today, Homecoming ; the wr Losbors dlower) is | portant contest tommorrow. led tod ay. i or. too much exercise, such as ten- Io i as - ee ee eat Lint te THE NEED i a ' The first will permit a player who| nis,,baseball, golf, hand-ball, etc. | OPUO0! n tures, é Z| i | there is an increase in price during! @ } Pack in1917, Sioux Falls high,.by) A monster parade in the morning | sidered one of the most i has been taken out of the game to! - give way, quickly to the soothing e ster para generats in the Val} e ing. Si fe, ons er.8 \ | the annual Freshman-Sophomore souf- | ae eee TLevaliog. it [Mefeating Sioux City, champions ¢n| be sent. back later provided he hos| effect of Hamlin’s Wizard Oil. ge | the winter thoy wi) gel he veneti:| §.When your doctor. Po fle and the | Fe ney an esti teains, paved its. way. to. a{"ot committed four personal. fotls | /penetrates fast,/drives out the sore- | An’ if the price drops they tose the | 9 “decides that you need. . ball g lon Coach “Phoe" Allen oe jirtstate championship tilt with’ Cen-| Which“automatically disqualifies, him, nse, and limbers up stiff, aching | margin. The suggestion of Nuggll | ; \ ities, which wer : ea ltral-hign school of Omaha, but . the} for the entire game. The second, pro- id muscles. Cahn | was not discussed. | Hl on Wedn ooo | Nehraka: eleven was far. superior| Vides thot after-a “held” ball beneath ration to’ have tn the! depends | RKEY: } { 900 $ mu sont ‘ resident Lotus D. Coffman, and former president William{and in the game played here, Sioux|the basket the ball will be brought, chest tor first ald and: when ‘the daclor “TURKEYS ’ \ | Watts Folwell, Cyrus Northrop. and! Falls was decisively defeated out 16 feet ‘and tossed up, may, bec ter amar, 1 is an absolute | Don’t sell your Turkeys below | | you may rest assured ( Be soneasieeanes the eal inites Burton, took part. in pee é baraua one iieren otto an corer sae | their value. See Northern ee that he ‘kndws that it ES edetebeeetobele Hs | the celebritic —————— ; i : [nscleite saa. parnga,|CARLETON.ONLY | _" MARKETS 1] “assests Sen ete ae ee aeeare pag tap, fl fill the nded beter Winter FULTS F xavors J. E. Meyers and L. C. neds: | fenerous alee posed wich constipation | Ket prices. We always pay top| § than anything el: : son, of Minneapolis, and St. Paul, re-|—* : | or nick neadeche try, Hamiina: Wisara ; prices based on market. North-| @ <0 « np thing else. 5 i - . ver in ot . dent Coffman, in TEAM TO PLAY) Chicago, Nov. 24—Acute fresh weak" | _pitis ot druggists for’ 30. @ Pink | ern Produce-Cos, Bismarck, N: D- i | Ee slit pi eield B ee ms i" spectively, and Pr | the revieyil g stand, the Homecoming ine&s developed, in the wheat market parade passed through the downtown St.' Paul, ‘Minn., Nov. 24.—-Footbal! today. It was said Philadelphia mer- section of this ctiy. Members Of the| harnesses have been hung up-by- all R. 0. T.C., 1,300 strong, the rooters| the Minnesota conference’ colleges| Chants had on hand 300,000 barrels | club,. ma: hed’ while the faculty, stu-| with the exception of Carleton which| of flour for which there was no de dent organizations, fraternities and! closes its season tomorrow,,.and’ the) mand. Opening prices which ranged | and Overcoats = $30.00 i i 0 ~ sororities had floats. 4S abbreviated “basketball clothing is $75 00 Shortly after noon, the “freshies” being brought out. frond to 4 8:4: conte loner were: fol [iss ‘ ° - &| had their annual tilt with the “sophs,”| “With the exception ef the Hamline lowed by sharp additional’ breaks. — | All wool and good fit guar- $j after which all settled themselves for| tive, the prospects of the several; The close was unsettled 7% to 9| auteed, or money. back the football battle. The Rooters ¢lub| teams in the conference are of tie cents ne tlower. y ‘was prepared to give demonstrations| “dark horse” variety. Hamline is during the halves of the game. virtually assured’ of the same men CHIEAGO 0 LIVESTOCK: ‘ Chicago, Nov. 24.—Caltle receipts, Free! Extra pants with each Suit ‘KRALL, The Tailor. EET , | who-'were tied for jthe state. title 0000 Native ‘best ‘ate Poca jeq). | With Carleton last year. “Kobs and| e steers, North Dakota Aggies Kratz at forward, Gainey and Burns | cents higher. Battle with Hamline | at guards, and Ernest Hanson, vie Hog. receipts, 23,000. Ten. to 15 is expected to enter. Hamline next, tents lower. St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 24.—ThesNorth! term, was fast year’s center. Shee preceipts, 14,000. Steady. \ Dakota Agricultural, college foothall| At St. Olaf and St. John’s the bas- ae team today is battling the Hamline] ketball men have been’ working out $1008 CHICAGO: CASH GRAIN Chicago, Nov. 24.—Wheat No. 2 red,| ~ \ = Wheat No. 2.hard, $1.68 To $1.70. Corn No. 2 mixed, $1.7018. Corn No, 2 yellow, 76c to. 7c. Oats No. 2 white, 4814c. aC a package : Rye No. 2, $1.50. a Before. the War (Furnished- by Russell-Miller Co:) ) \ la a ; : Bismarck, Nov. 24. $1.38 ( “4 a package No. 1 dark northern 1.36 ssetenrsereeetiorererecteresees 1.29 1.19 1.64 1.59 115 MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Nov. 24.— Barley, 55c-|- i : l to 80c, ! { A i Rye Np. 2, $1.39% to $1.40. t Bran, $82.00 to $33.00. ‘ wid Wheat receipts 495 cars compared « < hing back the “friendly: glass’ ‘Purity, ood-value and satisfaction in every boitle with 304 cars a year ago. < Cash No> 1 northern, $1.52% to $1.55%; ec. $1.47%; March $1.50%. \ ° Corn ,No. 3 yellow, 68c to. 70c. Oats No. 3 white, 41%c to 41%c. Flax No. 1, $1.96 to $1.97. t MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR’ Minneapolis; Nov. /24.—Flour un- changed to 40 cents higher. Family € a package ; TTT T Known everywhere - Buy it ¢ patent, $8.80 fo $9.00 a barrel, in 98- 7 ‘ t xs. Shipments, 68,- foe > j by the case for your home. Mee te ey i — y SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK | South St. Paul, Nov. 24.—Hog re- cepits, 21,000. About 60 cents. lower. |_ -tavor asts . Range, $8.75, to $9.30. Bulk, $9.20 to $9.30. \ Good pigs, $9.00 to $9.25. : |. Cattle receipts, 7,500. Mostly 25¢ (0) es the Price! higher. Common and medium steers, 8: 00 to $8.00. \ Cows and heifers, $4.25 to $6. 50. Veal calves, mostly 50 cents lower, top, $11.50. | Good and choice. stockers and feed- ers, strong to 25 cents higher. Sheep receipts, 1,500. Steady.. No choice lambs. Bulk, few to.good,|) ~ \ at /$9.75. Top ewes, $4.00. MISS TWITCHELL’S 2 _ FUNERAL TODAY ANHEUSER-BUSCH St. Louis : aioe \ : Pa : ‘Fargo, N. D., Nov. 24. Funeral Usitors cordially invited. | services Were held> this attarnoon at 7 a the Presbyterian church at (Mapleton \ fo inspect oue~ plant. for Miss Gail Twichell; daughter of s Mr. 4nd Mrs. Treadwell Twichell of a5 Mapldton, who died Sunday evening at’ a Vocal hospital. ‘Miss Twichell hat ‘been ill about six weeks with’ an, scess caused by injury to her sping suffered in a fall several years \ago. Death: resulted ‘after an» operation on Saturday morning. Miisg Twichell was a graduate of ‘Fargo high school and was known to a.host of persons in Fargo and, Cass i county. She was 27 years old. ‘Sur- { in MOAT ae ET ean ee Vangie viving her are her parents, two sis- sn snl TEES gM ra Viringy Ber: 2am ee parehts, oO 2H j is attending school at Smith college, | i" Gamble Robinson Fruit Co 0. Northampton, Mass., and Miss Mary Priscilla, at home, and a_ brother, it =, Distaibutors, Bismarck.” Daniel Twichell. The body will be al | the Wasem chapel from 10 a. m. to 12 noon.today, r ae a =

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