The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 23, 1921, Page 4

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MEALS WITHOUT BATH ARE BEST “SAYS LOCAL MAN Narrowly Escapes Drowning At’ Swimming Pool Just After « | Eating Heavy Meal here is one bather who uses the swimming pool who will testify loud- ly to a belief that one should not go in swimming immediately after eat-' ing a heavy meat. A iocal man, after eating a lfeavy meal last evening,; went to the pool and, being a good swimmer, went in with a dive. He immediately suffered cramps and wa rescued with some difficulty. It re quired a litle time for him to fully) recover, The man then left the pool. | Hlis name was not learned by attend- | ants. Although there have been severai arrow e: pes at the pool, attendants | a hopeful of getting through the first season for the pool without fatal- ities. Many people, attendants stated toes, take foolish chan “People who cannot swim. or who! can swim but little, should not ven- ture beyond, their depth -even though using tire tubes as supports or hang- ing on to the side wall of the pool,” said one attendant., “One does not know when the tube may burst or slip off, or when one’s grip on the side wall ledge may loosen. The most. import- st rule for beginners should be to take no chances.” RIFLE TEAM 10 LEAVETHURSDAY National Guard Men To Go To Camp Perry, Ohio, Matches i The North Dakota National Guard | rifle team. which will enter the na-} tional shoot at Camp Perry, Ohio, will! Jeave St. Paul in a body Thursday night for Camp Perry, Major Harold Sorenson, of the attorney general's of-| fice, said today. | The national shoot lasts from Au- gust 27 to September 22. All men{ will travel in olive drab uniform and! take two pairs of extra khaki breech es for work on the range, one extr olive drab shirt, service hat, cartridge | beit without bayonet, rifle, gun-sling, rain coat and personal accessories. The members of the North Dakota} team are: Adjutant General G. A, Fraser, Major Harold Sorenson, Cap-| tain L. R. Baird, Lieutenants Williain | W. Jeffrey, Alvin Fetckert, John H.! Yule, Sergts. Melvin C. Olson, Lyal! P. St. John, Franklin Patten, Calvi: H. Smith, Corporal Glen E. Moe, Hu bert F. Jaynes, Joseph W. Privates Olaf Hagen, John Aughney. Major Sorenson will be team captain, and L. R. Baird is designated team} Tucker, | i MRS. MALLORY TAKES TENNIS TITLE AGAIN, Forest Hills, Aug. 23.—For the fifth | time in a period of seven years, Mrs.'she ever mar Molla Bjurstedt Mallory, a native of | Norway, now a resident of New York so handsome! ‘And such souiful eyes!” city, won: the- national woman's sin-/ gles championship Saturday when she defeated Miss Mary K. Browne of possible to turther Santa Monica, Cal., 4-6, 6-4, 6-2. ! Mrs. Mallory played one of the best! matches. of her career.’ In the formerjshe has won worldwide. fame title holder, who is now 38 years old, signer and actress, Mrs.. Mallory faced. an opponent too dangerous to be trifled with at any stage of the.game. Miss Browne, as-a) court strategist,. tactician and master door? of a large repetoire of strokes, is al-| most unequaled. Yet, the Norge wo-/ pen better if she had ke; man, after losing the first set of four;never to marry any man.” games, responded to the cheering, and} by. an unequaled display of almost | been better bestowed—on some woman mannish driving and steadiness, car-| who could hav ried on to victory in the next two sets. Inj ured Rancher Sets Fire To Building To Signal Distress: Alexander, N..D., Aug. 23.—Suffer- ing agonies from a broken shoulder, | WILL GERALDINE | |By Newspaper Enterpri: Door, suggests'a scenario with which Geraldine | could pack the movies. jcould be. jis the one that’s most talked about— and they're talking: everywhere ‘about B jthe separation of the ‘grand coach by Adjutant General Fraser. | singer and the actor who co-starred, {loved and were married in. the movies, lof it!” ey surprise is that she let‘ him sue rst.’ jdelights of an ideal home.” jartists wed?" ‘of a baseball player, who won world- wide celebri and beauty, jtral figure on the stage in a real i tragedy, ip Sarah Bernhardt first revealed to the “THE LOCKED DOOR” The Farrar-Tellegen residence in that Geraldine her husband, New York, the door Farrar locked against UNLOCK DOOR? Her Master Movie! ——as they used to be. NO | Yale, Princeton, Vassar and Smitli will not exceed fifty in 100 years from now.” He proceeded to compare the results of a similar canvass among New York, Aug., 23.—\"The Locked : cated that in a like period the orig Farrar and Lou Tellegen least a handred times The title is from real life; the reel How They Kank The movie that gets over biggest duced ‘some figures’ of his own from the Harvard records. He said: “Mr. Ricker’s asertion would seem at first reading to give the impression that college students have on the average less than one child apiece. This is not so among the: Harvard graduates at any rate.. Among the classes 1881-90 at Harvard, the ‘last ten classes whose statistics are avall- able and may be considered. fairly complete, the average number of men per class was 248, of whom 183 mar- yopera Talking—like this: “Geraldine locked him out! Think oy and why shouldn't she? The rst. “Humph! The only surprise is that ried him!” ‘l think he was perfectly lovely— “Handsome is as handsome does!” “Really! Whv, she did eying of 2.05 children per married graduate, or 1.55 children per capita for the ic iife."| whole class. The Yale figures for though! the same period are similar. “The s al birthrate among Harvard graduates she longed for the] declined during the past half century. The decline however, was less sharp “Then why did she lack the door?” | in the clas between 1870 and 1890 “Well why shouldnt she lock the} than it had been previously; and a situation which is disquieting at best. seems this to. be showing a gradual tendency to right itself.” “He wanted perfect dom “Not more than she. Even ‘Twould have pt her vows “Poor » Geraldine. “Poor Lou, ‘His luve might have No Figures Ava‘lzble, No figures on the sunject are avail- able from Wellesley College but Pres- ident Ellen S, Pendleton gives. it her} impression that as far ag th alumnae ‘of Wellesley ar COrney e understood,” you expect “But what can when “What c: you’ Why do they?” Wait for Next Reel i So Geraldine Farrar, the daughter ber of children per marriage have in- creased rather than decreased as th years have Sone by. “Some tweni or more years ago,” said Miss Pendle: ton, “The Association of Colleglatc Alumnai gathered quite elaborate statistics comparing the health, num- ber of marriages and number of chil- through her divine voice 39 finds herself the cen- S And Lou Tellegen, half Greek. half utch, whose exotic form the divine _| Store, » eyes of the, people. Lou Tellegen, and Lou and Geraldine | illiterate foreigners and said it indi-| inal thousand would be multiplied ai} Frederick L. Allen, secretary of the | Harvard University Corporation pro- | ried and had 372 children, aw average | the number of marriages and the mum- : that the figures regarding them are ‘not available: untit they have been | many. years out, of college. ‘ACCUSE FATHER | Connecticut ’Man Is, \ With “Atrocious Crimes “Two: of His Sons. Fired. Buliding | in Which Three o,.. Were 1 Sleeping and: Shot Them Dewn | as They Filed. ¥ ec ALE 4a! Middletown, .Conn.—Lodged dn, in Middlesex cdunty, Conn.,.49:8 short; stolid German, who, if all that; is sald about him is. true, orceven, half: Is likely never again to.regain his:tree- Emil -Schucte s:the former. ruler | of Shailery ttle settlement. of 200° souls. “He conducted :the. general. He was: farwer; coustable, Ja ‘the settlement. He wag and, is dom, neering in mapper and was,.8 stera }chatacter, of whom the people:steed | in awe.” For years,he was regarded the tetror of the community and lord- ‘ed tt over others with proud disdain. Rhings, ‘had. prospered withahm,.aod withy gigeod. Husiness and .a comfort- ubl6: suff: laid; away in the bank, he p took’ on “great: {mportance in his own ‘opinion sand; for that matter~tn the Idol Has. Fallen. Bat .the idol: has : fallen, from. its | pedestal.« Schutte lies in jail on the | charge sof: ‘assault with intent to kill, | committed against his wife, and as ; the result of investigations now being | conductef: by aufhorities he:may have | also to answer. within very few days | for a series of atroclous murders, | One of Schutte's weaknesses was.an inordinate passion for.. money. Be- ; cause she would not deed aver to him | certain’ property she poséessed,. the | wife was driven from her heme by | the enraged and avaricious hisband, ; Who chased her into the woods, firing | revolver ‘bullefs at her-as she fed. Mrs. Scliutte was compelled’ to swear out a -Watrant for his, arrest. The ! moment the old. man Was in jail, peo | ple began to talk and the authorities | to act upon ‘their intimations and sug- | bs | gestions) fi pear The resiit ‘1s that ‘Schutte <is_ac- cused by -his twelve-year-old son, Au- | gustine, with the mur hand, “killed, ’it 1s bell | money, “aiid ‘ia charg 2 H heir { | \ | Firi at Her as She Filed, re ofrit, | | dom, if he is:not, condemned to,death, | pe numbers are sometimes given the ) people trust to memory instead of directory. Fx i poor lo mumble the numbers they call, or : y that the operator misunderstands, figures in leg wanted, 13-84 is called. Then, too, while telephone operators strive for accuracy, they sometimes make mistakes, just as any. @ther ‘person would in working with an intricate machine such as a telephone switchboard. ‘ “NORTH DAKOTA INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE C0. 18 thoughtlessly transpose the ' For example: When 13-48 is : | They. were rivals for pitching, honors “jin. the old. days. BASEBALL STAR PASS SHIPPING OF NINBTIBS BOARD MEASURE SERS CHANGES ae Washington, Aug. 23.—The shipping New York, Aug. 23.—Amos Rusie, an IN ROW BOAT board deficiency appropriatiop _ bill carrying $48,500,000 for use By the idol of .baseball fans more than 20 years ago,-sat on the sidelines at ‘the ae veepi .| board this year and with the elimina- ee leon tion of all restrictions as to what sal- be on the look-out for a lone man inj ®tY might be paid officers and, coun- @ rowboat, was sent by wireless trou | sel was passed today by the senate. Polo Grounds during a recent game] between.the Yankees and White Sox, mmarvelling-in Babe Ruth whom he de- clared to be the greatest figure in here today following receipt of re- LEMKE DENIES baseball. Ports that Robert T. Harrison, of Spo- : HE’LL RESIGN “It’s been 19 years since I sav: a kane, Wash,, had been blown out into the lake by a squall last Saturday while fishing from a rowboat near A : Isle Royale on the north shore of Lake Fargo, Aug. 23.—William Lemke, ” attorney general of North Dakota, to- major: leegue ‘game, Ruste remaskod day denied public reports that he wiil “The game surely has taken long resign. strides. Back in my day we had some heavy hitters, but none of them could Superior, about 180 miles: from this port. hold a See to Rub. jupetee to} Marmarth, N. D.,” Aug. 23—Actual| Wagner, Lajoie and Ed Delehanty.” | issuance of a writ by District Judge Ae Back in the nineties, when Rusie ap-| Thomas H. Pugh, ordering City Au | I have been a victim of Hay peared at the Polo Grounds the cheers} tor Eckholm of. Marmarth to certity; Fever for the past five years and and the shouting were all for him.|as sufficient petitions filed with him|could: find no relief, until this The Hoosier Cyclone, they called him| providing for a recall election on cer-| year, when I got Mr. Robertson’s for he ‘was considered the greatest| tain city officials of Marmarth, includ- My eyes were so bad and } righthanded hurler in the game. He| ing Eckholm, will be stayed for,15)cUre. My eye tinually and f dropped from the game in 1902 after] days to enable Eckholm, defendant injI was sneezing continually al trying vainly for two years to over-| the action, to perfect his appeal. Re-| could not do my work. After the : come the handicap of an injured arm.| quest for the stay was made by the| first application I felt one hun- When. Rusie left the game he re-| defendant. dred per cent better and after turned to his home in Muncie, Ind.,j \Eckholm, who holds both the office using it a few days more was and later went to Seattle, Wash.,| of city auditor and police magist ig Tleved where he worked as a laborer. He is| Of Marmarth, asserted the petitions completely relieved. : past the 50.mark in y d-his hair} filed with him were insufficient in not wine Se ios | rite x 425 Mandan, N. D. oppose Tommy Gibbons here Labor Day in a 10-round bout, it was an- nouced today. LONE MAN OUT IN SUPERIOR \ RECALL IN COURTS. HAY FEVER ig gray. He sat unnoticedby ‘players| Properly stating addresses of signers, and’ fans alike, for he was unknowa| And in not sufficiently setting forth to them. grounds of complaint against officials Then Kid. Gleason, the old manager by whom the proposed recall election of the White Sox, recognized... him. | '8 directed. H.-M. Pfenning, Notary Public. He Lost 65 Pounds—She Got Thinner; Both Look Much Better! Te ts decidedly beneficial to reduce weight when one is over rout. ctease is usually followed by great benefit to vital organs, heslth and often produces a remarkable improve- ‘I'm. sure Glad to see you Amos,” smiled Gleason, “seems'| ° like old times to see you around.” The famous, old. twirler returned the Breeting and they walked to the White Sox dugout arm-H-arm.| Although Rusie has not witnessed a |" |. burned ‘their bedies:in-the home. And [three otter death is’ suspected, may ‘be. lald up lag hin, the: most vatro¢lius crime gel against: Sehutte:| the “mur- joph Balas, wife and elght- major league game for so many years he said he had kept up with the game through the newspapers. Rusie said-he didn’t approve of putt- ing a curb on the.styles of itching. “Give them a chance,to deve! ment.in appearance; especially when Korein Tabules are taken according to the simple directions. ty Geo. C. Reynolds, President of the Royal Fellowship, said he 4 pounds this way in four months! Mrs. M. Lieroyer pounds and that she looks and feels much younger. Alice B. Canode also used Korein and lost what she wished—20 pounds—in less than three weeks. three - broken: ribs. a badly. crushed | arm and twisted hip. received; when} American public, stands outside—“The his horse stumbled and fell:upon him,! Locked Door.” tortured by. thirst and :famished by. Will Geraldine ever unbolt the door hunger, Scott Gore, well known ranch-|t0_ him—the door . she locked and man of McKenzie county, spent three| barred atter their final parting at his days and three nights in the Bad| Le Beach | fishing Shack, following Lands, before help. summoned by .the|* paanetaes aoa smoke and blaze of an old shack whica | ecnest real Wilt he fired, arrived. D Gere los not remeniver show. tine RACE SUICIDE nding his Horse down a hillside, The) ~AMONG, COLLEGE. | STUDENTS PROBED animal is believed to have stumbled) Statistics G and fallen upon him, and also to have; aed ut ine rendered uncon- athered Present Dis- quieting View of Future, Say Experts dren per marriage of college woinen'| with similar statistics of their sisters |.. who did not go to college or their! cousins nearest their age. These ,sta- | tistics showed that there was very slight difference between the, two classes, but. such difference as there’ ‘as, was in favor of the college-bred women, and as I have said while we have not recent figures my impression; 's that there are more marriages and) more children per marriage in these { later years. ; , “No one denies that college women marry later in life than non-college women and consequently any statts-| tics that are made up on the basis of; ; Women not more than five years out ot college would give an entirely wrong impression. I suspect that:the same thing would be true of college} men.” bj-in. December, |my time we: -were..not,..perinitted to en mnie by | Soil the ball, and there..were no freak lius Schutte, | deliveries,,-We-had to depend on speed who :fled from: hemexefter the crime |20d fast breaking- curves and we h: aud entiatedcin she inavy-in hopes of |®, reat: advantage :.over,,.the. batte | torgettinig the. shooking.xcene he wit-| The ee psa pasate ode, how. dan a cold December night. ever. The Hveller: ball and carbing 0 ara pitchers,are’ the reasons. This can : e be carried.too far. -;. Sa ‘Hungarian :who;}.: “The crowds-are: greater, today tha: name, He jived jatimay time:.. Baseball ia now a. great {n'a villley back of |Rational: institution. -The-White Sox e. On December. 11, }8caadal bas not hurt; the game much. judge Landis has offset that black were ready ta; teas ON Y AON € ed SS wo father:handed hinj-aj gun and carried one himgelf. Outside the door Schutte picked up ‘a can‘.ofckerasene and: a |; bag of ‘shavings.;; Arrived. close by the “Ball shaek, the sfather ‘ordered. Julius | to take up a) position .25. feet from; the. Finds Une And so the story goes from one to another about Korein and the easy directions—a seemingly end chain re reductions in weight with wonderful improvement in health, figure and alertness of body. and mind. It’s the absolutely safe, easy, scientific method of self treatment. The pictures give idea. Korein book mailed free, in plain wrapper with many testimo- tals, Write to Korein Co., NL-28 Station X, New York, N. Y. Or, you can obtain Korein Tabules in this city at good druggists, including 5,, J. Breslow and Burt Finney’s Pharmacies. Pet off--Fas on! on-Fat off. 1, Joseph Ball: was had. Anglicizedy ina LTING THEATRE Direction Valleau Theaters Company TONIGHT Recovering consciousness Gore} looked and called vainly for help, fin-| ally dragging himself, after a day and a half of agonizing effort, to an oid} abandoned shack. With a rattle-snake, | & RAN ena ants i, A “be -'| Boston, Aug. Ts. race silicide in- a rat and other vermin for companys) creasing among ‘college graduates? he kept vigil until morning when he Maurice Ricker of the United States set fire to the building, staking this) panic Health Service save iat tie ag his last card to bring help. and quotes statisti Some college ‘Ind, Aug, 2 York _he: ‘South ‘Bend, O'Dowd, New. Run of Averages, An article for the Smith Alumnae | Quarterly and based on The Quinquer- nial Catalogue of 1915 is offered as/| door and=siioot»:anyone: who might It did, Joe Wood, another rancher, a A gi leave : the building. #:>Then. with the: Orsters CHS i saw the blaze and zescued Gore. | Presidents are inclined to doubt the| the latest available information re-| kerosene.ean ant. the: shavings: the ‘times pens PAULINE FREDERICK in Gore will recover. conclusions . drawn by the Health| garding the graduates of Smith Col-| old manSstartedfres/’at each:end of 1 88 pacts, WE ee s Ch Gee a emeldigang. think ae figures} lege and their children. This gave the shack and when the terrified in-| “I suffered for 1@:years with stom- MADAME x b DELAYS VISIT. Sive al wrong’ Impression, ers say| the average number of children:'for| mates rushed . out. shéf them down, | ach trouble-and doctored away a lot . = ee Paris, Aug, 23.—Mademoselle Cecile hat from lack of statistics of thelr} each of the total number of alumnac| One by. wone he BYE ar badies with. | at. money before. found # medicine Kinograms.............++-.055+ Topics of the Day t 7 of. Sorel, of the Comedie Francaise, is not OW" they ‘are not prepared to dis-| (5,962, with the class of 1915 omitted) that: a real benefit:to me. Since in’ thé shack, ‘piled ‘them oneon the te x ane : cuss the subject. They admit that Mr.] as .56. The avera : n’ Ri es went f r fonderful y L @il, the: glass covering a, caricature. of | they present a disquieting view of the ed "79 to '85 was 2.15. This decreased Pana dae Satie i a ileonteele, ‘more real doy of living than I had in Marguerite Clark in...... “SCRAMBLED WIVES” i i her on view in a picture show, thas | are ey ene reac with later classes until the average |.” igre: 4 Fast Ups een! 10: years pefore-”*. It -is a simple, — beon misunderstood. She merely ex-| the National Educational, Association | ors euch, Marriage from 1879 up to| Schutte audi Joss Ball 28. +i | tharmless “preperation. that,, removes COMING : pressed to an-interviewer how great- | jn poe sea eacational Association | 1915 was only 1.34. ‘The compiler,| ‘Three :other deaths: are now-.belng the catarrhal ‘mucus from :the intes- PRISCILLA DEAN in.. bs ‘REPUTATION’ |in Des Moines, Ia. Mr. Ricker was ly she desired to go to America. to) quoted as follo “Investigation by “interprete Moliere before the univer-| the federal public health service over sities ang, gelepraty, with Americans|a iperiod of years indicates that the| ny ddif',pay, to. our grand| progeny. of one thousand graduates} eos ® soaker us. from such institutions “SOWING THE WIND” “JIM, THE. PENMAN” :_ “BOYS WILL BE BOWS) JTW" “GODLESS MEN” < Florence Homer Snow, of the clas3| investigated, oné of: them at Teast’ a of 1904 suggests that if the “figures| seem small, arguments -for. the -de- fense include the facts thatthe young- est classes are the largest, and-that as Harvard,|many college women marry late so ANITA STEWART in. LIONEL BARRYMORE in WILL ROGERS in. ALL START CAST in. Matinee Daily at 2:30 plain murders (.. > tion.:.which. causes. practically all ‘| stomch, liver. and -intestinal ailments, including appendieitis.. One dose will. of quill pens, kings and ; queens had sole right to the use“of} convince or mouey refunded. Jeagle quills, Sale at all Druggists. tinal tract and/allays the inflamma- “Pov

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