The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 27, 1924, Page 6

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rges vyweight just five days ah Gibbons of St. Paul yester- Takes To Road Work After, With his international contest with PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE |Stars With Americans in Riotous Rugby Win Or OPENING GAME “HERE TONIGHT Commercial Baseball League Fo.Open Its Schedule opening Rasebal The mercial the of game Com 1 Le uled for pnight Ye © the Bismarck baseball par The ‘Transportation tean Brother ng conte the lows 21 ¢; Robertson, 1b; Sor! 0 Thime b; Osborne, ps Wyei kala, 2b ef; Cervinski, If Cragwell, rf Rose i nas, 2h; Eri m, F Ke ; Byerly, Ib; Hendricks, 1 ¢; Ritchie, ef; Brainerd The Atle ’ nd Brother team is compose players from — the Bank of North Dakota building BOSTON SOX BEAT INDIANS g states, is now on a swing, DEMOCRATS “ONEHOPE, THE ~ PROGRESSIVES. And the Progressives One | Hope Seems to be the Democrats i ARRY B. HUNT A Service Writer Washington, May’ 27.—“The one | hope for Democrats this year is to be Progressives, | “And the one hope for s is to be Democrats!” | Thus Cari Vrooman, Progressive Democrat, economist, dirt farmer and former sistant secretary of | agriculture, sums up the — political | prospects for this year of all cle- ments outside the Republican party, Vrooman, who has jast completed | ;a tour of middle west ticultural | through the south preaching his doctrine of Democratic Progressive coulition, | which he declares is the only meth- od by which either Democrats or Progressives can hope for success this y Progies- “There are between six and eight | million farmers and their wives who will follow any reasonable hope ‘for ministratfon that wiJl pull agri ure out of its present difficul- Vrooman says. “Neither the performances, _ poli- nor promises of the Republican GETTING READY FOR BONUS PAYMENT} TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1924 JACKLEY I$ 77, | Kansas an City ‘Man Gives ‘} Tanlac Credit For Part | It Has Played. “When a man at seventy-seven can jent ss I do, sleep as I do and feel as well as I do, he certainly has |something to be thankful for and, as for me, I place the credit for | my good health where it belongs, ' squarely on the Tanlac treatment, ed Phillip H. dick- ¢ veteran and former y passenger agent for the Chi- jeago Northern Railway, residing at j2848 E. Seventh St, Kansas City Baek in 1922, following an oper- ation, my stréngth ‘was absolutely goné; I had no appetite, and my stomarch, which had troubled me for a long time, almost failed me completely. I was in an awful .con- dition—could scarcely eat or digest anything—and there's no doubt what- ever but that. Tanlac saved my life. “In a few weeks, I was like a new man, eatikg everything, and never feeling a’ totich of stomach troulte. Since then, I have used Tanlac oc- a tonic and I don't feel twenty years. I could a better medicine than Whité, the permanent Irish represen- tative here, has informed thg secre- tariat that the Dublin government BUT 3 IN EXCELLENT HBALTR ‘anlac is for s ll good drug- f Accept no substitute, Over 40 million bottles sold, Take Tanlae Vegetable Pills, —Adv. portion of Japan, feeding the elec- trical services of Tokio and also sup- plying power for the Tokaido railway GEORGE. DIXON party sdtlety them'"They ieteied . has officially approved the treaty | which connects the capital with Osa- re ee p : to Republicun promises and voted | = * | for the suppression of the-traffic in| ka and Kobe, and which is to be Remain in for First Place’ By NEA Servier ap}; fF Republican policies four yedts) . General Frank T., Hines, director of the Veterang Bureau. and Col-| obscene publications. Be clectrified within the next five years. With the Yankees ee Ais ceulcunlerniy sete [hele made up large and their troubles have grown|onel C. A. Penington, chief tf the insurance division, who will super-| Ruchdi Bey, the Turkish minister wale relia L elses of collegial Coming ab cey iieovensasd urprise in defeating | worse, not. better. intend the issuing of millions in honus certificates ds the result of tlie] at Berne, also has notified the : Every One Helps the < team in the recent Olympic mateh, a match which| “Unies the Deioeratic party |Woilus bill passage. Belowsglris in the ii iling section of the Veterang| that he has been authorized to sign) sHr—My father gives me a book Chicago, May 27. The fast-flying “ bani eee tt ul Hs a nal ay end i ule {| depts a platform definitely present-{ Buren who wil! get-the applications when théy begin to pour in. tris convention jn Lennlt of as -| every birthday! Boston Red Sox, who have reversed | hostility Dison, Who eained ATCAmericnn fare ae c meriith ling a program designed to assist ag- | eer : 5 Turkey ne hee apres HE—Indeed! You must have the usual position of the Beantown | team f xan, who gained J in Tame u ticulture to its feet again, and vom-| Commissioner of Insurance of {hig ters, and quite a number are mem-| gue membership as soon as the gneat | quite a library!—Klods Hans (Co. and are ghting © first | or thew wiford University team in California Snategeint gressive Progressive’ in | Stitt, and you are further not dj) hers of leading English families, powers have completed their? ratifi penhagen). HEP AY pan i a Se Sees t Waa: hat any policy holder or stockholder] Among the men are young demo-| cation of the Lausanne treaty. BP teen hee aioe | boxer to don the gloves-toda 5 + by Ellsworth Augustus, a] Whom the farmer and his wife have | of The at Northern Life], fri v sitions | ain Saat on ite tort, IBV. | tes Geoteeg sia inthe Bhaie andcl nd Brookline ; faith, then these millions of, voters Insurance Company may appear be- Cee rer nen ann onicone One northern hardwood tree of any ART Ce Ty ire cect leice! Lielt exereists, with one a) Pago. Augustus drove to| Will follow La Follette into any inde- id coniitisaion’ at the tin ecurers, entertainers, | dancing) Japan TO Have variety, 21 inehes in diameter five Sox are in tie with the Yanke be : 3 ‘ ; e1 . ay Psiiaers and cinema operators. . it feet above the ground, will yield a 3 MOSHE wovieuutelilleedHl Shige 1s (wie ds of the ninth green,| pendent or third party movement he | and may he heard with a ground, y' Bese res Fesreniesenatrnte |C¥ BHC) mre nie wT Seminrise | ieriny vara of hes nal area eee SE eG a da Giant Power Plant) (i or voc. eatured with a home run with igeae ih: “y bball soared st one “ s res’ ertai re-insurance. H HY POEs teh . week, it Was announced. | during the tournament the second This result, certain to follow the e 64 i etn Peed a iakde i their! Carpentier went fishing this after-| shot to this green 4 full mashie | selection of any reactionary or con-| shag ecterreaed Fine cages is RebIeRENGNTIS oil - noon, but ithout luck bl to Augustu. vn this occasion | servative Democrat, would of course rating plant, to cos‘ 123,000, , wil Ditroit series, winning X t aba . financial backer of | it’ was a mere mashie-niblick flick. {mean defeat this year of*all Pro- bscene Books be completed on the Shinano river, DR. R. S. ENGE held Detroit to five enguasitdit Femur enneeentiett| jgressive prospects It might give a f L in the mountainous district 100 miles parsed fon took an easy 1 as 2G a aed Pe a ate UsesiGasolne | Progressive balance of power in the gene’, May 26.—The Irish Free| northwest of Tokio, according to an Chiropractor yas hie poe a e pine fteme : rei bunk to absate the public that thé| eon 2 z | next Congress, of course, and might Breer BY ies elected at mene sznuunesment by the department of Consultation Free ‘ictorious a pitching duel w Finan cialbendio@hiine Gn Sonate art Fire: | neawetherciock: f ident T oO e League of Nations last} railways. 5 Ven Gilder, Philadelphia beating |? HE ne ua ee ' To Start Fire; | ahaivice afeaidentsiiey Concags” Septethber, has just ratified its first] This plant is to furnish power for || Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. eu eRe Lassie tose (to lneine Apnedraniee (oe Giblioné and Badly Burned) “rhe tinat result of this last sit-| {cague convention. Michael Me-} distribution over all the east-central only game played from Cincinnati, | Ca®pentier | —— | uation no one can foresee. It would! \ ; = : ate Hanukysthae Gaban 3 — | ee NEOLA Adotph, | Create, ® situation with the gravest | rs a eset ouikiine ats nay, ce ,, Washburn, N. D., May 27.—Adolph,! opportunities for corruption, graft : faa ti pitching staff, Is 457-Yard Drive ees ‘ avin p the river and the frustration of the public's ‘ :h 2 |} whose stead to he i ” ' bf 4 pi = Longest in Golf?) shee homestes [desires” Be: In ordet that the general public ¥- aT. fi ‘ burned about } The danger to the fight of Pro- i i i i i ! BASEBALL Wo 3 BER Praatenes rate Pr ey ieee eel ar may visualize gasoline prices in A | Once in a While a Prodigious ft h Sen ACUI RaNGH GE REPRE tru perspecti the Standard Oil > a eae : Re S Bo Be |for the nomination of a Progressive SS d =" dart American Assi | Hit Is Recorded But Even) in to sct fire to the brash, ndidate and the adoption of a Pro-| 2 le ve, the Minneapolis Toledo Colum! Milw. National League Wi le New York 20 14 Chicag a 15 Brooklyn 17 15 Cincinnati erat 6 St. Louis 15 17 Boston 13 15 Pittsburg 16 18 Philadelphia 10°18 American Li a 6 Mew York ......... 19 11 Boston 9 11 St. Louis 16 14 Detroit . 1% «(16 Washington 14°17 13° 16 42°17 Philadelphia 11 19 Results Yesterday National League Cincinnati 3; St. Louis 4. game.) (first | Cincinnati-St. Louis, second game | ! called, rain. No others scheduled, lv 5 . been the richer, the mis ri La | q . *, St. Lovinsis Philadeianin 2 Ing tre ecole ebooks) shows isolated places probably received Chicago 2: 1 ‘ ee | B.C. Bliss of England drove a arother piece of two for his comfort, | pcago 2,7 Washington | bail yards at Herne Bay ‘ 4 : | 7 ; | ba yards erne Bay, ‘and it is to them that most of the] pelt ee erk 8. jland, in 1913. The cirsum cut put goes at no expense, It| Cleveland 9; Boston 10. Jare not set forth. It may be p erves another purpose, the insti- 1 eee sumed, however, that the fairway] tute points out, that of demonstrat merrean eseociation | sloped and was hard besides ing to the native the value of thrift. Kansas City 2; St. Paul 1. | And this distance is said to h ee Columbus at Louisville, no gime,| heen bettered by an American, onc today’s scheduled game played in| geott Seamme!! of Trenton, N. J, SHIP MAKES TRIP double header yesterd who is eredited with driving the! Lake Hurst, N. May 27.+-Al- Toledo 0; Indianapolis 9, {ninth green at Hot Spri Va.,{ though a storm ri caused Milwaukee 12; Minneapolis 8. | with one blasi, a march of rds.| postponement of the mooring ‘mast | Scammell atu had e |test, which was to have been gfven GIBBONS HOLDS DOWN TODAY : Hard Workout Yesterday Michigan City, Ind, May 27.— Carpentier, French. light | awa afternoon engaged in the workout of his three weeks ining program while his opponent next Saturday's match loafed be- * Manager Descamps_ believes charge is too near the proper ide. 8 ’ ‘Gibbons, working in his outdoor ing pitched in a grove of trees en miles from here on the shores ke Michigan, went the equiva- of 12 rounds. He boxed 9 is with 4-spring mates and but knocked out Benny Henry, | 60 pounder of Toledo, Ohio, who | Was on the verze of falling to the invas’when Gibbons grabbed him | iid held him in his arms until. nis | E cleared. took: road work today. imps refu: to ‘permit his stif- > Mr Reimers thought with the with 1 good time rush in the fire burn- wind blowin: to burn 300 Yards | hottow the ing good he toc pan of gasouine What is the record drive for di j to throw on es, In doing tance in golf? You read ‘this however, i understood that gunners who habi {he feli over a stump as he st 300-yard drives, bat you se back from the blaze and the min the act. A number of {contents of the contests were held in the ji which im t winter with n pro: including Havers, the burned British champion, competing, and inj | could be extin- no case did the winning shot meas- | ¢ Reimers did in ure anthing like 20 possible. By t held | keeping wits about him t © inj flames were soon put out, but it is cham-| ¥ f he had lost his head and | pionship an, | y Vurning people less than 2 [do sometime would ‘have been t sp’ a driving comfeti-| burned to de However, the acci- which din the British] dent was 4 » one and a close championship at ‘Troon the win-| call for Mr. Reimers stroke, roll considered, | f yeards. ‘ages | longest teur driver, competed } Furniture Made nd had the best carry yards. Hagen defending champion the From Boxes ¢, was fifth on the list with a carry of 248. So it may be seen that [es even the stars do not make a daily | » ged phek- practice of lining out 300 yer ings boxes tin containers, usual- [a problem in disposal for the ive been oc 81] fa ire worked: into substantal } where golf balls | y of furniture and household } considerably far-| ies in the missionary manual ds. Just what 1S] training department of Moody Bible and probably | inctitute here. of contro] Where the municipal dump would Th wind wa the farway was baked, dition in his f the giant d ast night, the mailer and non-rigid ship, the J-1, successfully completed a flight to Philadelphia returning by. way of Trenton. BLACK GOLD WINS YELLOW GOLD _ a down-hill poke. The longest shot this winter ever nined at close, personal range xclting. Anish of tie Kentucky Derby with three horses dastjing past the finish post and Black Gold, the game little colt from a western s:able, coming'in for first maney—a purse of $52,775. Black Gold is he outside horse, wearing the white noseband: .Finiching second, and on the rail was Ohilhowee, while only. the withers of Beau’ Butter,. third, can be seen. jc BY A. H. FREDERICK | ere: platform, according to Vroo-} sin Francisco, May Old Sol man, lies in the influence of 2 power-| may be turn.ng ihe w aerine ful bi-partisan group which seeks! dustry one of these da. to force its type of candidate and{ latform on both parties and then; has invented thice machines obtain. can sit back complacently and ‘let) ing their power from the suns ra {Dems and Republicans fight it out,| which, he says, w Magcel Moreau, San jSecure in the knowledge that no mat-; Produce a temperature of 15,000 ter which side loses it wins. degrees Fahrenheit. “This group,” Vrooman says,}_ Furnish power so long as the sun, “which has its representatives shines. |the Democratic well 3s inj ‘the Republic: in terms of, |interests, not of parties. And the| interests of this bi-partisan combine re not the interests of the gveat |mass of American men and women. Generate electricity and store it in stotage batteries. Moreau has his three machines completed and in operati r are nicely balanced mirrors and 1 In his heat machine he has s | Vrooman, incidentally, may break|ditmonds bubble and disappear in linto the limelight at the New York} 8#sedus form. Carbon, which is {convention if the seeds of the dov-| "uid at 610 degrees, has melted with | |trine he is now sowing in the south,|2 fraction of the power his heat P ; chine’ developed. He b land which he already has planted in|" ned. the mid-west, sprout before June 24.) cM double the 15,000 de | He is a convicing: speaker, widely tr: | plieatiogy yy device Wadi |veled and informed, with the knack | P'Wic0n Jo! his’ principles. of knowing just how to put his proj Wile Moreau has. many problems pnen re [te work out, he foresees the time eens cat aes beenee under) wen power plants operated by’ the re i r sun’s ray$ will be establis in dis- He is a dirt farmer, actively ian-| tine, Phi feet aging 4300 acres of corr. and wheat| sirffsh power to entire groups of land in Illinois and Jowa. As he btates. say: know what’ the farmer is against. When he loses lose money.” He'is a writer of note on econo-| |mie subjects, a graduate of Har- vard and Oxford, Some have whis- jpered his name’ as a dark horsc for | vice presidential candidate, va it! Many Apply For Jobs to Steamship Londoh, Ma; very springtime the wanderlust scizes a certain num- ber of men and women and they ap- | ply for jobs on trans-Atlantic liners, Rut.this year the restless ones are floodng the st@amship companies in greater numbers than usual with ap- plications for berths in any capacity. Many of the women applying have NOTICE To the policy holders and stock- holders of the Great Northern Life \Insurance Company, and to whom it may concern: You are hereby notifled that The ireat Northern Life Insurance Company, of Grand Forks, North Dakota, a corporation organized un- der the laws of the State of North Dakota, engaged in the life insur- ance business under the laws of | such State, has filed with the Com missioner pf Insurance of the State | of North Dakota, a petition praying | |for an order to be issted by the | |Commissioner as provided for under the provisions of Section 4891, Com- {piled Laws of North Dakota, ior 1913, authorizing the consolidation of said The Great,Northern Life Insurance Company with and the transfer of all of the assets of said The Great Northern Life Insurance Company, ‘to the Occidental Life In- surance Company, a corporation or- ganized under the laws of the State of California, with its principal of- fice at the city of Los State of California s The Great Northern Life Insuran {Company, has presented the {Commissioner of Insurance of the State of North Dakota, contract set- | ting forth the terms and condi i of such proposed consolidation, providing for re-insurante by said Qecidental Life Insurance Company of the life insurance poli- cies issued by The Great Northern | Life Insurance Company, whet stich | re-insurance may he desired, by the | holders of such policies and | You are further notified that the | H graduated in ools of domestic who haye studied under good imas- | Lift Off-No 17th day of June, 1924, at 10 o'clock A.M. at the office of the C sioher of Insurance of the North Dakota, in the Sta in ithe city of Bism State of North Dakota, has been fixed time and place for the hearing of , said petition before a commission consisting of the Governor of the! State of North Dakota; or in the Doesn't Wurt one bit! Drop; lit “Freezone” on an aching corn, linstantly’ that corn stops hurting \:ton sHo#tly you lift it right off with ngerg.. sk Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents,’ suf- event of his inability to act, some | ficient tp remove every hard carn, competent person resident of the Soft, ij oF cotn between the toes, State, to be appointed by the Goy-'and the foot calluses, without: soré: ernor, the Attorney General and ness or irritation, a gen- | further ap- | | university degrees, others have’ been | economy, many are instrumentalists iy st Pain! { | | i Company (Indiana) is endeavor- . ing, in its advertising, to draw just comparisons with other staple and essential products. ' At today’s prices, if gasoline were sold by the pound, thé price at oun service stations would be about a 3/4c per pound. Compare this with sugar at 10ca pound; bread or milk at 8c per 4 poynd; butter at 45c and cheese : . at 60c per pound, and it is appar- ent at once that gasoline prices are low — especially so when the service rendered by gasoline is considered. The Standard Oil Company (Indi- ana) states, that with few ex- bat! ceptions, no other manufactured ; gp! Mg sold at as low a price : as gasoline. This low price is maintained de- spite the hazards attending the production of gasoline, and the vast amount of capital required to ; provide, distribution facilities ade- quate to supply you with gasoline, when and where you waitt it. : The Standard Oil Company (Indi- : ana), through intensified organiza- tion and unceasing initiative, has" been a potent factor'in the main- tenance of low gasoline prices, This Company endeavors to ° bolize that Jspericae spirit of ye namic leadership, which combines * business initiative with scientific |. skill for service to the pak million : people of the Middle West. This .Comprehensive service eriables the ! man in modest circumstances to Operate his’ automobile at a fuel .cost which he easily can afford. ; tieral Office: Standard Oil Building 910’ South Michigan Avenue, Chicago . Fare!

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