The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE TWO ‘PAGE sIx THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE LEGION PLAY SOMETHING NEW icquinade Dancers Others Being Drilled Steadily and cthing decide rek thea the ext s to be m under the on, De presented at tl auspices of 11 and 1 hich Here curiosity hat is going rooms ¢ wa sound stopping, repe cour wl walked ix “Hn of the Wiss Maric fawcett of T sor y Civil War vet world’s mayor s com the bung ladies 7 the center of to beat B. Re ding before ort the Prod them step gers acing dew of or harlequinade dancer Ruth Rawlings, adrey Klien, Louise Among. the Flow, ‘About the sides of the pathcred groups of peop meniliprs of some were who choruses, talking whil stidying t as an air of bus- h pointed to nd or purpose. ed there until the end of the h little idea of what ult will be. Tam s 1 be dances a profusion of re s of the rong the funniest that din any production s to the r 1 cannot In my opinion it will be show.” libretto are I have A Tia Juana, lower C: which laid it waste ate thei a rendezvous for ‘some’ a, West am running the HOLOCAUST OF | , just under ‘i through the house members of the sporting element arge Papa Wa his numb le Mexican line, glowed res Tia Juana was OWN SONS ALMOST COULD ELECT HIM enougi to hi weett, almo ‘ng any election ‘in zi octogenarian, bdast: ‘© than 100,000 population and chai- THE FLAMES d ns| e the flames ce center and policies of great union between 20 ROTARIANS th tion and the war torn sections OF JAMESTOWN or turove throuzh a world court and GIVE KEY HERE aredness for any future (Continued from Page One.) the development of a most import- ant resource of the stat Rotarians expressed themselves as with the lignite operators in their not to protect thei but to stimulate ind he state and to fight of fair play for) Gra | Duemeland was the ing officer of the day who sha the honors of arranging the pro; with George Will. Attendance the club for the month was .04.97 percent. Guest in m alone addition to the James- town delegation were: L, B. Hanna, Stanley Washburn, Jas. J. Me- . Doyle, Fargo; THEO; L. Roy 0. F. Woodrich, own ind trial growth for the effiel Dickinson; polis. 1 spoke briefly pressed himself in full accord| yinn Major Washburn. He ed ity for divers not only for the Sarmer but rp industrial life in the te. ed attention to his m ernor in 1913 and 1915 that a business agent be North Dakota who co ital and advert wit all) He ca The First | MeLean county, has First Bottineau sas closed, according sources of the ore especially }the state banking the coal, clay and straw. He declar-| jad capital of $ ed that the finest clay in the world! g5.gq9 and depos! could be found here and that if all! *o\ sidered likely that the state pulled t er much could | willbe be done to ine: rosperity of |), y the state. se crpuiae, ta DREN EES Mr, Hanna co ure of the In State county, to inform: department. latent ‘re-| 000. dividend of thi to depositor d of the fail-| NAMOOSE RESIDENT e Credit Bank | pigin, North Dakota, h Dakota and|__gy » methods em- DIES is Decemb ployed by the off . tution, He said there should be the cooperation on the part of the | iness men and every agency to keep every bank functioning in the | state until the present situation was | safely passed. \ birthdays ted | an! Rawlings fitting | of the some were commemo: Brandes np -of Dr. and presented him with a gift. Mr. Bublitz, principal Bismarck High school threw sidelights upon the life and t of Roy Bonham and c¢ his remarks with a presentation of a must all be suitable memento of the o Dr. Rawlings gave a short on Rotary ethics as applied to th peace needs of the world Hair Nets So Fine Machines Can’t Make Them Owing to the fine texture of human hair and the shortness of the strands, a machine has been invented that ir nets, so they interesti per cent at the world’s supply of this article is produced in the native homes » advocating | of northern China, from where the hair | is first shipped to the United States to be dyed and made sanitary by “DIAPEPSIN” ENDS | chemical process. Ie is then retumed STOMACH MISERY. ‘ for knitting into nets. The strands are ‘tied end to end to form one long GAS, INDIGESTION | string. This is wound on a shutite which is worked round a bamboo stick or bodkin, The knots are fastened | similar to those in fish nets and ham- | mocks, and require skill created by | years of practice. One net an hour is | considered to be a good average for the ordinary worker. | tee Horses in Hospital Treated on Operating Table Injured horses and those needing medical attention receive careful treatment from doctors in‘an animal Instantly! Stomach « corrected! You never feel the slightest distress f indigestion or a sour, acid, ga Diapepsin.” reaches the stomach flatulence, heartburn, The moment all sourns gases, paly guarantee each package to corre digestion at once, End your stor trouble for few cents. y) Parents ow Y Scott's 2, > EMULSION 7, \ . | hospital maintained by an eastern ¢ity. Everything the sick beast needs to repair his health, from fresh air to surgical operation, can be provided at the “rest farm.” When broken bones or wounds are to be treated, the horse is strapped to an operating table while the veterinary performs his work. After the operation the table roe dag ge Eager wi tient” is it alaced on his feet ic toa ail Chit ] |the death of presid-| > of; *| brass box whieh Thanksgiving evening occurred! Mrs. J. H. been nm hermorrhage o Mantz and an cide brother came in the eighties t rth Dakota and homesteaded 1 where she has resid She was September tz 0 moose, An Sth, were held Finds Man’s Ashes In Urn Purchased From Dealer In England Dee. he ago as part of a mise lection of article tonished to find scription indicating that it contained the ashes of a man d Al 0 Knowles who was cremated in Phila delphia in 1898. Ingleby, Eng., a dealer v an urn with BANK CLOSES. St. Paul, Dee The ate bank of Aiexandria is mor banks., he bank, which was capi imating $200,000, of this insti. | Sree What the World Is Doing: CAS SEEN BY POPULAR cMECHANICS cMAGAZINE Electricity from Windmill Takes Place of Coal To generate electricity cheaply without using coal, because of a fuel scarcity and its consequent high cost, a European inventor has built a wind- mill that charges storage batteries. It is operating so suctessfully he is mak- ing eleven moré. Mounted on a tower about 50 feet in height are big propellers that generate 40 horsepower in a moderate breeze and 70 in a strong wind, In a roundhouse on the ground, connected with the top by a shaft, are the generator and batteries. eee Radio Receiver Held on Ear Without Head Bridles _ Fitting over the ear, a radio receiver is being made in Europe that does away with head bridles. It allows greater freedom vf movement, yet is not uncomfortable, since its light weight is evenly distributed. As the ear is entirely inclosed in the device, with a cushion of air’between it and the diaphragm, external noises are shut out, music and voices sound more natural, and the wearer can hear more distinctly. Sets of two are also be- ing turned out ) ee *_ @Estimates place the total number of newspapers published in the world at 36 thousand. suffering | nd ried to 1900 this 5.—Opening a bought a year incous col- n in- Jexandria closed z, it was announced by lA. J. Veigel, state superintendent of 1 ized at $30,000, had deposits approx- f | uf | MEETING OF f : 0 Chi s {called for Tuesday, December 11, 11 o'clock in Chicago, Johnson announced today. i aiso will hold a andis for the ajor stitution. The board of directors league will meet Monday, Dec, 10: RIFLE BANK _ -Two unmasked {men today held up two clerks in the nia avenue branch of the City Savings Bank and Trfst company land stole money from the cash draw- er said to approximate $10,000. FORD COUPE i] Dayton, 0., Dee. 5. Theft of the Ford coupe of Eu- gene Wachter was reported to the Earth’s Age Is “Set” at Two or Three Billion Years After long investigation, scientists have announced that the earth has been in about its present state for two or three billion years. Geological measurements previously made were all lost in a maze of time before they had traced the history of the planets beyond 100,000,000 years. The pres- ent discovery rests on the rate by which radio-active substances change form. These materials are not per- manent, but in time turn into lead. eee Exhaust Gas Cook Stove for the Tourist When equipped with a stove of the kind shown, the tourist does not have to worry about fuel for his stove, as his gasoline is also his fuel supply. The whole eppamuny Consiste of pipe and fittings arranged so that iit can*be connected to the exhaust pipe of an aytomobile, The ‘stove’ is made f séveral short lengths of pipe cotine¢ied together by returm:elbows to fori a hot plate, A cutout val’é ia inserted in the exhaust pip 80 that the stove edn j tached andl beret oe It is, uf necessary to ‘pi the floorboards to p latter. When dA ig not in-use it is removed.‘ A. L. CALLED ‘The annual meet- the American League has been at President The lea- 12, the day set te Commissioner joint meeting of the The meeting of December |to Bismarck next Tuesday night for Johnson said, was necessary so as to conform to the league’s eon- | of the OF $10,600 IS STOLEN local police ‘today. ‘The car was taken last night from in.tront of the Wachter Transfer company’s office. ‘CAN COCHRAN TRIM HOPPE? | | Is | again? | ‘The great billiard champion is young Welker Cochran in a off for the 18.2 balk line cham- pionship at Chicago, Dec. 17, 1%, 19. In the recent championship pro- per, of the country competing, Hoppe and Cochran finished in a tie for the topmost laurels. Hoppe has held the title continu- lously since 1912 with the exception of u brief lapse in 1921 when he re- linquished the throne to Young Jake Schaefer. Cochran is probably the most dan- gerous aspirant to Hoppe’s crown at t. His record is noteworthy. 1 he compiled the 18.2 record {run at 384, In the recent tourna- ment he trimmed both/Hoppe und Schaefer, With an average of 311-4 he defeat- | jed Hoppe, 500 to $30. Against Sch- acfer he averaged 62 1-2 and scored 500 while the champion of 1921 was collecting 54. , The thing that kept Cochran from | winning the title outright was his ! unexpected defeat at the cue of Ha- | genlocher. This match was played jin the afternoon following Cochran’s | j win over Hoppe the night before. | \Cochran said he was so worked up) j over his defeat of Hoppe that sleep| j would not come to ‘him and against Hagenlocher he was unusually ner- vous. Willie Hoppe to be dethroned | \to} with all the leading cue wizards | LOCAL BOWLERS TAKE MEASURE | OF MANDAN FIVE: Bismarck pin smashers won their t inter-city matth of the season ; Mandan last night. An all-star | Bismarck team met an all-star Man- | dan, the locals tuking two out ‘of | three games. The score: | | 15a} | Ronco ... ua) ‘obi econ 2 | Totals . L, Schneider L, Henzler .... M. Schneider . Hedrix Totals . Louis Hu leader, s Bismarck’s cheer The Mandan team is coming | a return series, and hopes to turn she tables: MURDER CASES- ARE ORPHANED Two Courts Decline Jurisdic- tion, Prosecutor Is Dis- qualified District court, which opened here yesterday, has three “orphan” mur- der cases on the criminal calendar. They are against Ennis Walter Tay- lor, Ira J. Stark and George Jeffrey | jointly, on a charge of murdering | M. K. Bowen, a Golden Valley zanch- er. ‘A.fourth man, Bert Offiey, declar- ed by officials to have been the prin- cipal in the case, was tried for mur- ider before a jury at Hettinger and acquitted. Subsequently the cases iwert transferred to Burleigh county and Judge Nuessle, then district i judge, deglined to assume jurisdic- |tion. However, the papers remained {here and the cases went on the | court-calendar, An effort was made |to have the cases transferred back to Adams county, and the court also | declined jurisdiction, because they had been transferred to Burleigh county, according to Attorney-Gener- al George Shafer. Bowen, a rancher, was killed dur- ing an altercation. Politics was brought into the case during the | height of the Nonpartisan League and Governor Frazier named a spec: ial assistant attorney-general. L, A. Simpson of Dickinson, who prosecut- ed Offley under appointment by Gov. Frazier, “has retired from the case. S. L, Nuchbls, also named by the state, said today he was out of the | case. ‘P. B. Garberg is the third at- torney listed for the state. Attorney-General Shafer, asked concerning the case, said that his ad- ministration had not been concerned with ‘the case, but because the state’s attorney of Golden Valley county is | disqualified, some action probably | will be taken, | | Read Tribune Want Ads. — \For Raw Sore Throat) At the first sign of a raw, sore | entoat rub om a little Musterole with | your It goes right to the get with a gentle » draws out Gladys Ingle, known aviatrix, happy unless she’s up in the air. Here she is | climbing along the rafters of a Los | Angeles skyscraper. Stunts like this do not stump her at all. part of her daily program. internationally HUNTING cr Milnor, Chas, Cohen, prominent clothing maa of Milnor, was accidentally shot and killed while participating in the an-j nual Milnor midnight rabbit drive at} 1:15 a. m. Sunday, GOES TO PEN Frieda Denton is only 13, Yet she must serve 15 years in the Womap's Reformatory at Cedar Rapids, ‘Ia. She forgeries. And the judge said tne law did not permit him to be any more lenient, despite her youth. TORD MAYOR afhand He. grea uring # tae Ae as Tits wife. They are | w.| was convicted of a string of | WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1923 Beautiful Selection of Gifts That He Will Appreciate. SILK LOUNGING ROBES WOOL BATH ROBES SILK OR WOOL HOSIERY WARM DRIVING GLOVES EXCLUSIVE DRESS GLOVES SEAL CAPS FUR COLLARS PURE SILK NECKWEAR SILK KNITTED NECKWEAR STERLING BUCKLES STERLING BELTOGRAMS ebtees SILK OR WOOL SCARFS Gifts from this store are recognized as Quality Gifts. S.€.BERGESON & SON Tailoring. LIGNITE BOOST | i © DEFENDED | Abnormally Low | St. Paul, Dec. 5—Present freight jrates on lignite coal shipped from North Dakota are abnormally low and should be increased in justice to shippers’ of other commodities, said a statement issued here today west railroads. The statement, Which was signed by the Great Northern, Northern Pa- cific ‘and the Soo Tine was in reply to arguments made by represerita- tives of the lignite mining industry in their application to the Interstate ;| Commerce ‘Commission for suspen- sion “of rates proposed on lines in this territory. The commission has suspended the proposed increase until April. The railroads content that the pres- ent low rates are based on charges established in 1918. The statement says that the rates are “actuaily and relatively lower than the rates charged -for the transportation of coal in: other states.” [ AT THE MOVIES MOVIES / "THE ELTINGE Owen’ “Moore, “Leutrice Joy aut Robert Edeson will-be seen today\and tomorrow,’ Wednesday and "Thursday at the Eltinge theatre in “The Silent Partner,” a Paramount picture. The story of the play appeared in the Saturday Evening Post. “The Silent Partner” for the most part is drama, though lightened by comedy touches. The theme is a powerful one-the right of a wife to have something to say regarding Her husband’s business activities—to as- sure a certain income for the family, instead of taking chances on specula- tion. CAPITOL Can one ¢lope without knowing it? Before you answer you'd better visit the Capitol ‘theatre tomorrow jwhen, Tom Mix im “Mile-A-Minute Romeo” opens for a three day run. Obstacle number one-is met when the lady in question refuses to ac- j‘company him to the rendezvous W RNING: | Railroad Claims Rates on Coal! under the signature of three North- } not getting the genuine Bayer Aspi by mitlions and prescribed ‘by. physicians 23, years’ for. Colds “ Headache © ‘Neuralgia Lumbago. : ~ : ae aie hottie boxes les of 24 and 100—Druggists. Genin “Bayer Aspirin” = candy stores, Dry cleaning. | wncre the expectant lover awaits her, Obstacle number two: offers an- hee jolt when the kind lady emits a howl at being forced on Mix’s horse, Obstacle number three im- proves things when, as a result of obstacle number two, the girl's fath- er is aroused and starts in pursu Obstacle number four rises ‘n tural like’ when the lover who awaits becomes suspicious and — double- crosses Mix. Obstacle number five happens to be more violent than the rest. CHILEAN RISES AS PUGILIST New York, Dec, 5—South Amer- ica has sent forth another pugilistic conquerer, who in his class may rival the meteoric rise of Luis Angell Fir- po in -heavyweight ran The new- eomer is Luis Vic 1a, Chilean lightweight and erstwhile tombstone cutter who since arriving in the United States in September has knocked out three opponents in rapid succession. He is slated for his big- gest and perhaps decisive test so far on Dec. 14 at Madison Square Gar- den, where he will battle Johnny Shugrue of Waterbury, Conn., in’ a 12-round match. Tex Rickard, promoter, believes the Chilean is the most promising contender of Benny Leonard’s - title now in sight. RAIL BUILDER DIES Toronto, Dec. 5.—Sir William Mac- Kenzie, leading Canadian financier and railroad ‘builder, died today af- fer a long illness. Hé was 74 years old. Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—Two warm furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Two blocks east and one block north of " St. Alexius Hospital. $28.00. Phone 872. 12-5-2t FOR SABE—Baby buggy and child’s bed. Phone 603R. 808 Rosser St. 12-5-tf ‘BIDS SHOW WIDE RANGE Dickinson, Dec. 5.—Bids for ‘the completion ‘of the new high -school building at Marmarth when opened last week by the board of education showed a wide range of estimates. | But three conttactors submitted bids which varied from $12,037 to $17,130. The ‘letting of contracts was deferred by the board until the architects can go over the plans again, SAY “BAYER” when saan Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you’are in proved safe Rheumatism ° “Bayer’ er’? -4 e ba rere aan ns. + of 12° tablets 4s never “old in ts or cafes. ‘Go'to Drugstere NE Lip tla Gath ot ayer Wuuntatan ot Moneetenoamner of aetna

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