The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 20, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO A.0.U.W. LODGE HEARSSPEAKER ON FRATERNITY lope For State of Normality and Happiness Declared 'To Rest in Them 15 ARE INITIATED Fraternal not only hold tore benefits for the member jut are an important factor in the oO” of the entire ation, Walter Fern of Fargo, of the grand lodge offices of the Ancient Order of nite? Workmen, told the members the order at 2 celebration last vight Mr. Fern said that there had been | ropping off in attendance of all [ye e count rothe war nd ren began to search for ey found it, he said, country of fraternalism of true fraternity of member of the A. O Donnybrook who was in a eric Only blood A meet held in the » Donnybrook, Workmen was olunteered when it was , to offer their Seven w ac . nd the blood transfusion aved the man’s life. He now is well nd hapr Donnybrook, he said Mr, Ferr this as one of the of the lodge. were accepted several night, of | men. ra new policy of | q t n are admitte t @mbership. The initiates were: | Mrs. Marie Derby, Miss Louise Scheb- | Miss Scheb Gertrude Miller elia Schebler, M .M 0. Robidou, Mrs Knott, Esther Peterson, Emma Toli- | ver, Leonard Skagen, Leo V. Peter-| on, Verne Peterson, Chas. McCarty, | } Patera, John Henlein { ‘TUT’ LICENSE I$ CANCELLED Egypt, Feb. Ca 20.—The Egyp- | ian government has eancelleg Count s narvon's license for exeava a- » tomb of Tut-Ankh-Amen tion Concrete in Place Of Gold Paving Grass Valley, Cal, Fe pite the tradition that © this mining town of the Sierra N da mount years, that ite} treets lite y were paved with wold, the populace, swept at last by the modern spirit, has caused thick ings of concrete to be laid over reputed gold » of golden paving had some MEN WATCH OUT! Colle THE By NEA-Service, Wellesley, Mass., verage college girl atter and ool LONG AND SHORT OF IT | Feb. The | is growing stronger each t taller, year in s But she lung | is losing some of her Leastwise, that is what statistics, just bulated by the Welles! College Department of Hygine, show. ge Girls Are Growing Fatter, Taller and Much Stronger Each Year t » a 0 1 ti te c t fi t ci AT WELLESLEY COLLEGE. the test final © fact that the latest physical me at the same time ag the ns. The girls probably were blowing their off fi most of their wind at T tall ones ere are more short girls 187 to 182 in the 1 group on which these based. girl ranges % feet with the defensible a bonus of $1,800,000,000.” Esch-Cummins act, THE BISMAR BONUS FIGHT FLARES ‘UP IN SENATE DEBATE! Senator Bruce of Maryland Severely Attacks Bonus As Gratuity Washington, Feb. 20—Phe senate a hand late yesterday in the onus stir-up. After listening to a pitated by a declaration of gait Perea aaah this district. to pr te cases for nq R al nislor Brsce, Demserabi Maryland, |Torin coneMenition of the wer: | other-game law vioutions iv Man | LO SERKYORFICE a: Mea iL lative dan tomorrow. ee Lote Toe Ge Ghaaine Reb chteges ||. “We chullenge thelmuthority of any “‘Spearing fish through the ice Cleveland, Ohio, Feb, 20. Blank | aaa once attributed to Colonel Thomas Mil. froup of Congressmen to dethrone|a violation of the game and f fon of candi PREVENTIVE forMEN) \ ler, alien property custodian, that the judgment or despoil the wisdom | laws of the state,” said Mr, Maurek. y candidates for ¢ AMEE || Grcetmere awe e 7 the treasury “juggled” its estimates | of their colleagues to render in- | “Good sportsmen ought to turn a tes to ithe Dem CATARET ae neatets of R | ean GE ttoaea: |valid the Constitutional right of a|the names of those said to have] tional Convention wi The investigation was proposed i resolution introduced by Senator Harrison, Democrat, Mississippi, and thout a record f the senate finance committee. Before Senator Bruce had time for breathing spell after his Rddress n the bonus, Senator Caraway, Jemocrat, Arkansas, had called him champion of the “Jack Dempseys f the war,” and a numbegrof others ere on their feet to take exception some of the remarks. Violated Cor On top of this Sens £ Arkansas, the Democratic leader, barged that Major General John F. Ryan had violated the quasi-con- | dential relations of “lawyer and | lient” by trying to use in. anti- nus work the organization built jence. uring his service as special counsel | whieh | i i senate committees nivestigated the Veterans Bureat. After Senator Bruce had expressed he opinion that the bonus was “in- in principle,” Senator “‘araway charged that the Maryland utor had evidenced no concern when the railroads sought and got “I remember,” said Mr. Caraway, that in his zeal to maintain the he switched his against a member of his own No man who has the proper can spirit will stand there and dcnounce the American soldier as a danger, Rehabilitation — The girl now |: while the shortest ts Is feet 41-5 inches tall Joniy 4 feet 10 inches, Slow In England Weighs 121.66 pounds. | The heavies' weighed 213 = Hagia Tie Genfclty! dt: 2108) UL jpounds when she came into col-|, Leeds, Feb. 20—The reason re- ers (about 4-5 of a gallon.) but she reduced it to 194|habilitation in this country is 0 Has a te muscle strength of! pounds at the end of the first year, | S!¢W, is that everyone both collective- 3 kilograms, about 600 pounds).|'The lightest weighed only 91 and individually spends’ more than irls, how do YOU compare} pounds on entering, but raised it to] t n afford. This statement was these figures? 98 pounds during the year. The|2de by Felix J. Blakemore recently year ago the average girl was | 9 ain over the whole class| i! an address to the Chamber of fect 3 Inches tall, weighed | Commeréé here. He said the Board M7 and 121 a strength of 240 kilo: lung capacity of about or his loss in lung capacity says Miss Mabel Cummings, head of the hygiene department, was due to trength is of than that of trongest girl in the al ui kilog + 1 is. The i shows Strength -of only 176 % kilograms, or 290 pounds. Tax Growth Makes Less Expenditure! | Paris, Feb. 20.~The French eco- | nomig situation is shown in a series | ot tables in Le Matin, furnished by | c 9,707,000,000 11 23,437 nes in 1919 to (es 000,000 francs in 19 mated) t N. P. Headquarters May Be Moved ¢ n of d Trade returns for 1923 n adverse bala of $1,060,570, showed ce against this coun- 000, indicating that while there had been a fall in .the alue of exports, the value of im- sorts had inereased and so depre ted the value of currency in for- ign countries causing a slight in- rease insthe cost of living. “How many people, he asked, “if hey could be detached from present udices and could see through the; es of 1918, would be able to recog- ‘ze or even reconcile the standard ; f living of pre-war days with that lemanded at the present time. The{ or Robinson, ARY CK TRIBUNE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1924 ho prepared to make some sacrifice and heard in Mandan tomorrow.| ocratic club from the office of State :eturn to a more humble and less os- There have been 181 seizures of] Chairman W. W, Durbin of Colum- LS tentatious method of living, the muskrat furs illegally shipped in the |)... easing the written consent of period necessary for the adjustment of the present e¢onomic difficulties {would be greatly extended. i GARNER PLAN: IS ASSAILED Washington, D. ¢ netion of the Democratic Caucus of state, he said, 200 FEDERALS REPORTED SLAIN Merida, Yucatan, (via via the Dallas News to the A. P.)— Feb. 20.—More than federals were killed and many re wounded and taken prisoners in a clash with the revolutionists at Curva de Muerpe former Governor James Cox for the use of his name for candidate for president and that of former Gov- ernor Campbell as a second choice for the presidential nomination. ROUP SpasmodicCroupis frequently relieved by one application of— 1 ICE FISHING MUST CEASE | Barney Maurek, Game War- den, Says it Will Injure | io Aroused by the jthe Lower Heuse in making the { : ney rates in the pending tax measure, 3 a uuu t \ Mue le tent bf -DamBERARy the AweviCad West of River Fishing in which the er were victorious | Bankers League, through its pres Oitilio Gonzales, publicity director for the de la Huerta organ i | pation dent, Cha bane ued a sti nembersh de B, Claiborne, today ement calling upon its and the public to repu- diate the actions of any p {cus, by demanding of Congress a no Reports that speared fish through the H River have aroused Barney Maurek, state-wide game warden, in __onr17 Males eC. announced here, COX WILLIN overeign to instruct his representa- i jtive in Congr the statement read. } “The Garner rates are no more of! ‘a test of Democracy than they are ja test of religion. Such procedure been spearing fish in,the Heart R ver. A “For the last few years the game nd fish board has been stocking the art River and some other streams t of the river and good fishing \H strikes down free institutions and gaat cy ug) altHOVeENINENE DY poles | resulted. The streams were Rigi. Gist GE a Gpoveenwiel by | Stocked on the under: ding that Wien cece Ae eee ment bY | the people would cooper to con-1 jthe neople. If this government is} conve them and. see the laws to maintain the confidence of the| ir. obeyed. If the n people, Congressmen must | Vigtated by spearing fish them on fundamental prin- and must realize that those y the taxes have an equity in cannot be abridg- the ice or other ways, and the peo- ple west of the river will not help enforce the law, the game and, fish board is likely to quit placing fry in the streams Maurek is prosecuting a case for iNegal shipment of muskrat furs, to Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. i If this Signature is NOT on the Box, it is NOT BROMO QUININE (There is no other “BROMO QUININE”) The Laxative and Tonic Effect of Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets is very beneficial to the system. The World’s most popular remedy for Colds, Grip and Influenza, ‘ Price 30 Cents When You Plan Your Ti T i color of truth, for gold in the forné theater, music hall and cinema make Emmanuel Evain, chairman of the| Grand Forks, Feb. 20—The Non- \ f small nuggets and particles cling- | iting Ske oe ihe Chanter | ‘ a far greater demand upon personal ing to quartz was found not infre-| oF Depati the ancl tables are | Divtisan League will open state expenditure than they did in 1913.| quently, This was due largely to] those of civil and. military gn headquarters in Grand F Food luxuries at every meal are more | the fact that from the earliest days| tures and receipts from tas shortly after the presidential prim-|Cemmon today than in pre-war days, | the streets were macadamized. with! ‘The former. shows a steady de-| aries in March, AG. Sorlie,, the|#nd it appears to be an undoubted efuse from the mine reduction) cyease from 1919, when the total was | league candidate for Governor, said | fact that individually and nationally e plants encircling the town, There 45,000,000 f to 1923, when] today, Until after the election the| ¥¢ are living Thove our income. besides, a certain amount of| the total was 100,000 franes. | league headquarters are to remain in| _, Mr. Blakemore asserted that unless ld in the soil under the streets. : i TAKES POSITION Fargo, Feb. 20.s-Miss Nell Keller| of Towa City, lowa, has assumed her | new duties at the North Dakota Ag- ricultural college as state clothing agent for the home demonstration d junior extension departments of the Extension division. s Keller is a graduate of Iowa} e: University, and has been en- | gaged in teaching home economies | in the high school at Castana, Iowa, | for the past ye ssumes the | duties formerly by Mi ¢ DeLong, who is now assistant ite supervisor of extension work | in connec- tion with the clothing projects for homemakers clubs and junior clubs. DEVILS LAKE GIRL IS APPEAR- ING ID Y. HIPPODROME ; Devils Lake, Feb. 20.—Miss Betty | McHugh, formerly of this city is} appearing at the New York Hippo- drome, the largest theatre in the United States, She is a member of the Albertina Pasch Ballet. Mi: MeHugh is well known here and has appeared in several performances in this BEDICATE NORMAL WING SOON. Minot, N. D., Feb. 20. —Formal dedication of th@ new west wing of the Minot normal is planned for March 21, when a program will be | given. j The entire personal of the state hoard: of administration will be pres- ent. Dr. A. G. Crane, former presi- [Receipts { s inered ed from | What, the World Is Doin: Bismarck. 1] sections of the community were CAS SEEN BY POPULAR cCMECHANICS CMAGAZINE Cycling on Snow and Ice EASONABLY shod with a tread such as that shown in the illustra- tion, the “bike” can be depended upon for winter sport, or ordinary uses over ice and snow. With ordinary tires, cycling is not only hard work, in win- ter, but precarious; with the tread de- scribed here, however, good traction is assured, and the runner makes the machine easily handled. The necessary materials are: twenty 1% by 3-in. back-flap hinges; seven- teen %¢-in. stove bolts, 2% in. long, and four 3 in. long; three strips of 26- gauge galvanized sheet steel, 2 by 30 in.; %4 lb, rivets and washers; a pair of light 3-in. strap hinges; a 3-in. T- hinge; a pair of 3-in. butt hinges; a % by 4%4-in. machine bolt; six No. 14 screws, 3 in. long; one 1-in, awning pulley ; 2 ft. of steel jack chain, No. 16, 54-in. Nak; one gcreen door spring, and a skate. For a 26-in. wheel, one less back flap hinge is used, nineteen by 2%4-in, bolts, and one 3-in. bolt. The twenty hinges are bent at each end at right angles, the lugs being 4% in. long and the counteraunk sides opposite the lugs. Beginning 4% in. the post in place. To fasten the post below the head, shape the 3-in. strap hinges to form a clip, screw to the post, and bolt behind the head. With a bit and keyhole saw, cut a %-in. slot, centered below the hub block, and ex- tending down 4 in. at the front but only 2 in. at the back. Cut the piece B of the runner, 2 by 3 in. long, and shape roughly a 3-in. side to fit the skate, placing the heel even with one end. If ‘it is a clamp skate, remove the clamp and either drill screw holes or secure with three 3-in. mending plates as cleats. With the shoe shaped and dry, lay it over the skate with the toe end of B even with the shoulder of the shoe, and locate the skate toe. This point is the i from the end of each galvanized strip, rivet the hinges to the strips, using four rivets to each hinge, and keeping them 2 in. apart. Equip two of the strips with seven hinges, and one with six, then connect each hinge to the next with the 2%4-in. bolts. Cut the strips with %-in. ends, center them over the rim of the wheel, and connect the end hinges with the 3-in. bolts, ‘Tighten up all bolts, then, with pliers and hammer, shape the sides of the atrips to grip the rim. _ From 1-in. ash, cut a runner shoe, 3 in. wide and 25 in. long. Cut down 12) in, at one end to ¥% in. or % in. thick and. taper the sides down to 2% in. wide, Steam the toe, or soak it in hot water, then bend it toshape. The fork post fits below the head and is 2 in. wide and 24 in. long (22 in. for a 26- in. wheel) ; the hub block is 2 in. thick, 5 in. long, and 3% in. wide, and is bored to take the machine bolt with limit of the cutout in the shoe for the blade—a slit centered from the heel of the shoe. Assemble the runner with the toe point of the akate set in about % in. from the shoe boitom—go that there will be no possibility ‘of “stubbing.” ‘At this end ‘there’ will be perhaps an inch space between B and the ‘shoe. Fit « wedge block here with’the heel of the shoe brought up to block B, and secure it with two 3-in. screws driven through B, through the wedge, and into the shoe, These must be counter- $s mitiutes, sunk 1 in, and a: wasligr of two used | tread if under each screw head. At the heel attach a 4-in. butt hinge, three screws into B and screw in each side of the shoe, then cut off any waste heel. At! the toe, rivet the 3-in.*T-hinge, as} shown. Assemble the gear tothe post i with a 3-in. butt hinge centered on to of the B-block. The 9-in. spring, pulley, and chain keep the runner “headed ap! for 2 easier steering, and safety when “jump- ing bumps.” Back of ‘the:post, secure |“ the pulley with a scretyeye set into the lower elige of the 2-if, opening. Cut the spring to length, and with another screweye, fasten one end, then connect up the chain, around the pulley, through the opening to the’ hinge on the toe of the shoe, With the runner off the pulley, the ‘tension should ‘be right. ‘After trying out this tread for a few tighten up any hinges on the necessary. ij nd, if the spring is pulled| down iin about 4 in.‘of the pring Drive for New Business Let US Figure on YOUR Printing Announcements The Bismarck: Tribune Company maintains one of the largest commer- cial printing establishments in the Northwest. It has machinery which will handle the small as well as the large job. Tribune experts without cost to you will aid in planning and writing up your campaign. Now is the time to stock up on LETTER HEADS ; ENVELOPES - CATALOGUES ~ and CIRCULARS FOR THE SPRING RUSH LTTE HERP Binding - Legal Blanks - Commercial Printing ‘The BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY Fourth & Thayer Streets. Phone 32. ‘ if I iff aul wT ce Hi Mn ab. HH i i ATT TTT IATTTTI ATVI '

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