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_ SUGGESTS CAR ‘PUGILIST DIES ‘ Beatrice Johnstone of Grand Forks, "ALP. & A. Mi Work in F.C. de- See OR eS eR PAGE SIX LOAD SELLING Feb, ‘Geneva, ‘Min ing the butter county by selling the whole output of the-county in carload lots was suggest- ed here ivy L. E, Potier, president of the Minnesota Farm Bureau Federa- tion in an address before farmers. 5.—Centraliz- IN PHILADELPHIA Philatlelphia, Feb, 3. ation ago, was announced today. In Feb. 1886, he fought Jack Dempsey in New York. A bet of $2,500 a side and purse of $1,000 and 20 rounds, after lost DEFENSE ‘CLOSES s ‘Hamilton, Alabama, | defense closed today in the « ‘Sargent Robert Lancas nevional guarsma ticipation in a miner at Jasper ease will go to the j BLAKEMORE IN Fé spac HOSPITAL: | Blake- | it is expected the, y by evening. if —Robert Be John's hos- s have not s condition at pital. Attending My diagnosed his. ¢ GET CHICAGO | BANK. BANDITS Chicago, Feb. 5.--Police announce today that two men now under arr had’ been positively identified as par- , ticipating in the $6 9 hold-up ot “the Kenwood Trust and Savings bank last Tuesday, HARVARD AND : YALE TO MEET ~The Harvard Philadelphia, Feb. and Yale hockey teams meet on the ice tonight on which is expected to be one of the hardest fought inter-collegi- ate games. Each team will consist of seven men instead of six as vard plays only the Windsor system% CONVICT BURAR IN MILWAUKEE Milwaukee, Feb. 5.—E. Burar, cafe owner ;} convicted of attempting to ‘bribe Henry Strass, department of justice agent, was sentenced to two dustry of Freeborn} -—dohn J Fog-; arty, a middleweighi pugilist a gener-' N ALA. CASE; GOING UP FO STANFORD WHITE. AND MADISON SQUARE GARDEN Athletes to Invade Old Haunts] of Stanford White * (NX. E, A. Special.) New York, Feb. 5.—Shade of Stan- ford White! Intruders are coming to his old haunts—the roof of historic Madison Square Garden. New York’s lovers of prize fights and athletics will soon train there. years and six months imprisonment, and a fine of $10,000, in federal court here today. KANSAS MINERS IN WALK OUT Pittsburg, Kan, Feb. 5.—The first strike of Kansas coal’ miners called’ officially by the district board of the union is in effect today. Two hundred were called out by Alexander Howard, president of Kansas union. >—_—________——-@ |, CITY NEWS Here From Moffit. Fred Argast of Moifit spent a few. days in Bismarck this week. Rugby Edueator Here. Superintendent I. P. Simley of Rus- by sitv schools, is in town over the ‘week end. From. Williston, 4 Dr. H. French, dean of the Schoo! of Medicine of the state university, is in town seeing the session. FROM GARRISON Mr, and M W. H. Robinson of Garrison were in town a few days this week, Student Recoverine. Miss Beulah Severtson, high school student, who has been seriot iL of tonsilitis recover- ing sOmewhat. | St. Tho Caller, A prominent visitor in town from St. Thomas early in the week ,was Harrison Garnett, onc of the success- ful farmers of Pembina county. reported ‘Hanna is has many friends in Bismarck who are glad to . welcome her to her former home. Potato Man Here. George Hoople, of Hoople, North} @ Dakota, is in tow) for a short time. Mr. Hoople is spécially interested ‘in the potato industry for North Dako- ta. ini Former Pastor Here, Rev. A. L. Shute, former pastor of McCame ‘Methodist church in Bis- marck, is looking after the Near East Relief fund over the state, and is spending a short time in Bismarck. pity Returned from Michigan Mr. and Mrs. Allen have just return- ed from a trip to Michigan and other eastern points. While away they paid their son Kenneth a visit at Ann Ar- bor University where he is attending college. From Fargo. Fargo was well represented in Bis- marck yesterday, many of whom weve Shriners. Among the visitors were H. W. Lindquist, B. F. Spaulding, Charles Wapley, L. W. Thomas, A. Paulsrud, A. Hegge, A. B. Hansen, H. F. Horner, W. D. Gillespie, H. B. Carlstrom,:F. E. Erickson, Charles L. Boardman; S. Osmonson, A. O. Kelson. Teachers Board Here. The Teachers’ Retiring Fund Board, consisting of County Superintendent Miss Fannie Amidon, of Valley City, and City Superintendent P. S. Berg of Dickinson, are in session in Bis- marck ‘today. On the board State Treasurer John Steen and State Su- perintendent Minnie’ Nielson are ex- officio members. Regular Meeting Lodge No. 5 gree, Monday, Feb, 7th. ” “| way' up in the towered 6 WORLD'S SMALLES wortd’s smallest. pony, her owners claim, cus. She's about the size of a dog, The old garden is undergoing a big change. In a short time it will house the biggest gymnasium in the world. A tennis court is being built on the spot where Stanford White, famed architect who planned the garden, was killed by Harry Thaw, 15 years ago, for attentions to Evelyn Nesbit haw, Health Restorer. It’s high up on the roof with New York’s skyline of steel towers stretch- ing away ’to all four sides. in future Gotham’s tired business men will seek Dack their health there. The big gym will be under the di- rection of “Philadelphia Jack” 0’- Brien., He calls it his “health restor- ing plant.” it will contain’ all sorts of athletic to get R EXERCISE ‘ JACK OBRIEN ‘RECORDS WORLD'S QUAKES eu i ; i 4m a cave un t am cauipment: Everything will be On a Georgetown ane sity i thie gt arge é a at nd Tenni strument which records earthquakes leuwliean ead from any point in the world. Rev. - The roof gives ‘em plenty of room. Besides a six-lap mile running track there'll be tennis courts and a golf course on the roof. A swimming pool 285 by 120 feet) j will be built’ in the amphitheater, where the kings of the fight ripg battled in the years gone by. The high tower where White once had his quarters is being stripped ot} its trappings. v auth tub, Workmen find the old tow eycombed with @ net work of stair and sec se secret pa vention of White building the garden installed himself lf, ‘treat. The roof gym is 100 fect above the | pavements, It’s New York's first outdoor gym Scenes of midnight revels w 1 destroyed health will be turned into place that will restore health. It’s the vogue for New York's fem- ine elite to be athletic now. Prunes ‘are served to the inmates of Sing Sing prison on an average. of twelve a week and 10,000 are used for one. mea It is.the ‘habit of bees to place their honey: in. the- coolest place in the hive and the young insects in the warmest. F. is one of tl experts on ‘quakes. located underground so it will be sub- States will $18,000 less compensation from the Government annually than’ Woodrow Wil , will | Bureau Offici i must return nearly. one feurth df this! in inceme tax. " PONY. director of the station, world’s most famous The station is A. Tondo ject to no outsid2 influen Harding to Pay $18,000 5—Warren G. Feb. | Harding as President of the United: Washington receive something like son has received. The Treasury pay Mr. Harding the same mount that it pays Mr. Wilse—87B. . 60 annually—but Internal Revenue ay thac Mr. cara President Wilson was exempted rom the income tax under a Supreme Court ruling because he came into of- | fice before the enactment of the 1918 revenue laws, under which taXes ‘were | sought to be imposed on the \salaries of the President and of ' Federal Judges. Revenue .Bureaw officials say -that|" Mr. Harding, of course will be allow. ed the usual exemption .of $2,000 a year for a’ married man and may claim certain business. exemptions. Placing his exemption at $2,000 year- ly, however, they’ figure his normal income tax at $5,480 and his surtax at | $12,940, a total of $18,420. More’ than 49,000 marriages were performed in California last: year. F resources braneb: of the. Department, ‘placed their total worth this year: at |, their sentences. of London,:is the She -hefongs to a, cir- oy THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE IS FOUND! @tOW OF CINDER PATH CALLS EBY PHANTOM. HERD Traditions Abeut, Wild Buffalo in Northern Canada Proved to Be True. Rdmonton, Canada.—The |phantom herd of the North has been’ found. For years a tradition of a great herd of buffalo somewhere in the Macken- zie river basin has lingered among the fur posts. Indians told of sighting it blackening the wild pastures of re- mote valleys. No white men had seen it. But trappers had chanced upon Its trampled trails and ten years ago two mighty bulls that had straggled far from their fellows. were. killed. F. H. Kitto, engineer of the natural of the Interior, who has returned from, five months of explorations in the Mackenzie country,” téports that ~he saw the herd}:and ‘estimates tt at. 1,- 000 head. — He received reports,“ he says, from Indians that another herd equally as large exists farther north. Canada has. tle ‘largest bison herd in the world in the National park at Wainwright. January 1 it numbered With the exception of 90 anl-' that still Ive in untamed free- dom in the northern fastnesses of Yel- lowstone park the ‘Mackenzle river herds are the. only wild buffalo left ner of the country—plans to. quit! bus-} on the continent. BELGIAN FLOUR MILL Olympic team. EARL EBY N Philadelphia—Earh Eby is coming back to the cinder path~ The Penn half-miler—premier:, run- | tness and re-enter schcol. Eby was th ebest: half-miler in the fants when he was, skimming ‘the ‘ cinders @ year ago at Penn, ‘He was a member of the U. 8. Ke pulled a tendop| to. while abrcad’ and did not measure up to his high standard. Returning home he went into busines. { It is believed that Boy will sperid part of his time in assisting Coach (Lawson Robertson this: spring. Robertson, coac of Penn hletes for\many years, isn’t entirely satis- fied with his present birth. He lives in -Brocklyn. It’s possible he'll shi to some schoql nearer ‘New York next yest: Americans who. are used. tq. having. = théir bread left at the-door-each morn- ing; or, if they are: still old-fashioned’ enough to bake their own. loaves, can at @ moment's: notice secure -any; amoutit of flour they desire:at the co: ner grocery, do not ‘realize that.in som parts of the world flour is still a dtfi cult article to secure at a.moment’ notice and that primitive methods are still, used in grinding ‘tt. | The Belgian flour mill shown in the picture has been in ice. since 1735. ; a RPO SPURTE TIS CROPS SHRINK $5,000,000,000 ' Some Products Break Yield ‘Record, but Valuation Drops, Says Agricul- tural Depart: Washington, D. O—Shrinkage of values of the country’s:farm crops ha: almost $5,000,000,000 less than last year, although the 1920 harvest was one of the most abundant in fhe na-! tion’s histery, with half a dozen crops breaking records. The important farm. crops, which compose, about 90 per cent of. the value of all farm crops, were yalued this year at: $9,148,519,- 000 by the Department. of Agriculture in its final estimates. \ Last year these crops. were. valucd at $14,087,995,000. Acreage devoted to the important, crops ,also . decreased, the total being 351,062,408. this year, as compared with 356; 162, 112. last year. The final outcome of the 1920 wheat harvest, winter and spring combined, is now estimated at 789,878,000 bush- els,’ compared with SESH bush. els In 1919, : While the corn cropiig. a: record one 67,000. bushels—its' value: this $1,662,000,000 Jess’ than: last year’s erop, which was:smaller by 374, Nn bushels, is Value is placed 000, yooseroessoooocooess. Ship Swallows Eel; Ferry Se Service: Stops Portsmouth, A—The; good ship Alice Howard swallowed an eel recently and ferry’ sérv- Iee. between Kittery,” Me... and _this city was stopped: until its throat could be cleared: All:ma- rine- doctors: of the port were called: into” consultation. before the trouble was dingnosed as digestive and traced, to the in- jector. There it was found the pipes were clogged. Fires were drawn and a large eel was found coiled In the feed tank. Their Word ‘as Good-as Their Bond, Frankfort, Ky.—When-+ Albert — Bil- lard of Menifee county and Dillard Sparks. and Stort Horton of Estil county were sentenced to. three months in jaf! at the federal term of court in session here. in. September, they explained that there. was no. on at home to gather. in theecrops and asked parole until their.work could he completed.» They . were -Teleased ¢ on their word Of honor to report at the December .verm. * All were on-hand when the court. cpened:. and, began Johnson's Candy—20 per cent discount at Breslow’s - Drug Store. H ee Coming “In. Old’ Kentucky” The picture.that has broken all records. Nor all the states in in, the Union, | only California and Oregon have ng Sabbath laws whatever, nor has the District of Columbia: | It was not until April, New York state baseball, motion picture ahows: and fishing. There were 2200 chaplains in the United States: army ‘during the World tle,” "| by President Johnson in 1866.. 1919, that legalized Sunday. is said to. have been used first You frequently hear it said in some such way as this:. . “What I object to, and where I think too many news- papers. avoid their responsibility is printing opinions as news; for then they take away from the public, that must - depend upon the newspaper for the major part of its in- formation, the basis for founding that independent opinion without which the best progress is impossible.” Its views are of secondary importance, but news is e the chief commodity which the reader buys. 1 TIME CLOCKS © BEGIN TO RING By Albert Apple Unemployment is decreasing and business conditions are improving is the core of the weekly review. by R, G. Dun & Co. which ferrets out ; credit information for business, men. In Detroit 23,000 automobile worx- ers again are’ ringing-in the time clock, Trumbell Steel Co,, which was on half time for several months re ports its 34 millg running full-blast. Jadge Gary sees “continued, if slow, improvement inthe comparatively: near future.” ‘Cuaranty Trust Lo. of New York queries big business men all over the country and finds an “opinion that the United States has now definite- Ty. entered upon its return to normal conditions.” A. building boom, - which will bring a rush,of work to the railroads, is. predicted by Samuel wi, Vauelain, president of Baldwin Locomotive Works. ‘Dow Service says spring building will start 35 per cent normal and reach 60 per cent In May or June. ‘Export Trade Livens Our exports are being ‘stimulated by continued rise in foreign exchange. i In last few days the value of Cand- dian dollar in American money pass: t ed 90 cents and British exchange rose to 33 cents higher than a year ago. lies have, definitely fixed amount of German indemnity. This, treasury | officials say, will stabilize conditions throughout the world and increase purchasing power of countries. we sell \ Federal Keserve Board has ap- proved articles of incorporation of the $100,000,C00 organization that will fmance exports under the Edge act. ‘| dustrial stocks climbed from average What Money's Doing Pennsylvania Railroad. selis $60,000,-| . 00 of gofd bonds, Gobbled quickly. (Means. other heavy rail financing in| ; ‘neer future. Big buying, by railroads vrould recuperate steel industry. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadel- phia queries 100 big banks Easier money and credit within next six months are predicted by 84. Liberty Bonds in January advanced average of three pojnts, 25 leading in- of 58.40 to 65 and 25 leading railroads from 66.48 to 67.48. ‘Farmers’ Out\ook Better ‘Grain ig moving to market at smart- er clip than since-October. As farm- ers sell, their buying power, retyrns. ‘Will stimulate retail and mail order | sales. Wheat expats from the United 2,192,042 bushels same week a, year of Agriculture estimate for January! 1, 1920, shows 21,109,000 horses and} 495,000 mules on farms, or an in-| crease of 1. (00 mules. in the Jast decade. sides this we exported, during the nine 763 horses and 376,836 mules, The rise} in’ prices for good draft horses and| mules, in than 21,000,000 horses and almost 5,- * 000,000 mules on farms, indicates how |. agricultural and transportation needs / SATURDAY, FEB. 5, 1921 NAVY'S SMALLEST—This is the Hornet, the smallest fighting ship in he U.S. navy. It’s a torpedo boat. Two men operate it, a captain and an engineer. winter maneuvers in Panama waters, and if\it proves its value the navy will get. more. . f It is with the fleet at INCREASE OF DRA DRAFT HORSES Larger Nuniber' on’ Fare on Farms Shows How Agricultural and Transportation Needs Are Growing, The United States census for 1910 revealed 19,833,000 horses and 4,210,- mules on farms. The Department 6,000 horses and 785,- Be years. ending; June +30, 1919, °1,149,- ite of the existence of-more| War. are growing. Se States and Canada last week in Jan- Sees The slogan “swing around the cir-| uary totaled 8,834,279 bushels against Chilean mountain consists of al- most a solid mass of high-grade iron ago. ‘ ore, A newspaper’s first function is to, print the news. ‘The Tribune’s policy is to-carry. the news to the people every evening without fear or favor in local, state and a UNUDUOOVANOOUENOUUANAUDA:HEAHDGUNAUSEUANGGAOOTTOUUOUDGUHENOLDEEDOOEAOGOCEOEGOUDEONQDUNAOECNNDOUUOONOGUOUANIUUANDUONDOUUOUEENGUOGUOUbONUUUENUUOEUCOOOOqOOGNULONSAOUEGOOUEUAODEUERODULOPAOUUE OHH un esuennnn nan : : " = READERS ENTITLED TO BOTH SIDES OF ANY QUESTION ELSE PROGRESS BY INDEPENDENT THOUGHT IS IMPOSSIBLE Pe > TTT national affairs.. | _YP HAS NO POLITICAL AMBITIONS TO SERVE. “Te Is THE SERVANT OF NO ‘VESTED INTER. Ade cpei'r0 BE INDEPENDENT IN THE - HANDLING or NEWS, HEWING TO THE LINE AND LETTING THE: CHIPS FALL WHERE THEY MAY. an) | ‘you want to buy news rather than propaganda— join the ever:increasing circle of Tribune readers. Z North ‘Dakota's ‘oldest newspaper. ‘Not a élass organ, but dedicated to’the best Las of Bismarck, North Dakota and the nation. ey SATS SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier in Bismarck, per month... 5 By Mail in Bismarck, per month...... ’ By Mail outside City Limits and i in state at large, a year . $5. 0 Outside North Dakota, per year...... $6.00 OVOCUSTENODECUNGQUUUUECQOUOGUUECENNAUCEOCOQEOUUETREDEOUQOGOOUUUOUNEALEHOHU EA GUOTUIURGLIDUUEONOCOUEERENOOLUONEOCOURENOOCUEUCCENOOUOUUUEREEEEOODEUOCCEOOOOUTO CURE EAEED ERED UEOUOUU ALE