The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 30, 1924, Page 6

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able ter, sion of th neces All by t indus ble last state of $ enow savir Shad, havin Abol make ont this Th raise aboli durit comy made New and $400, ton time wint fund and loan, The fund 1922, augn E. Th of i pren ipe tists jant ie IN whet terie ¢ PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Sports| CUBS BEAT PITTSBURGH Vie Kenne Pitches Good Ball For National League Team Chicago, pitehed pretty Cubs yesterday burgh Pirates, the game, 5 son opportunely balls. Boston from Philadelph 5 to 4 adelphia v Inins’ hand ond inn him In long Brown pall for against and the Chic e| re off again today in the Motor Speedway. happens to be A. BE HURTS FATAL 10 VETERAN of annu nis three out of four Moss in a Barbe taking the game r of Phil eld, Me on the see replaged w Jo jth | ha Am | t took Louis on a to Detroit the St Detroit core was 13 used two pitchers used five. The cr 2 hours and 44 Louis pitchers gave hit one bats pitch and one contest fron played Ag The wo Crushed Under Hoofs ae Runaway Team co Valley City, D. May Crushed bencath the hoofs of a run away team and the Is of a load of hay, Bd y old son of Mr. and Mrs. Tim Ward, of this city, | fought off death, twhich he had | come face to fi with dow times battlefields of while serving with the 90th div during the World War, passed thirty-eight hours later lost his greatest battle of intern sustained on day Edward, in com John, had with hay | the farm Pet, | alighted G11 | the Ne wild N. SNe er in th ha tid whe on the St. Paul Louisvil! Indis | ov | tr th 4 jurie Nain MBI afternoon, Aad AO 400 Minn Toledo Columbu Milwaukee spot du H y with his bre two hay rack ing throu n Noxon, | y. The boy r loads to stop in ard for a few min Yfutes, Edward standing between th 514 | two id. One team wi directly )0 back of the other and, for some un 0} known reason, the back team started | 2} running. The unfortunate man fel-| lowed the leading team xs where he realized he |go or be crushed against the gate posts. Not realizing that the other s rushing down upon him and. be d © he could escape being hit, 1640 ‘horses trampled hint to the ground, |! 10 /the wagon passing over his body. | By Rushed into the Noxon home; {where he was. given first. aid, the A488 young man appex not to be i 375 | ing ous injuries. On y morning, however, it was evident he suffered internal in and the attending physician, Van Houten, done everything to ward of the ble dent. Edward ap It of the ed to be in great pain on Tu 7 yesterday of jot gr wh and were 1 yard of Ste hh wh York on farm lat Chicago Cin Brookly Bost ti Ls 17 16 17 16 1 n 16 WW 20 21 47 144 Loui Pittsburg s Philadelphia must one 0 r + th | ac m American League we 20 RO 20 Pet. New 5 Bo: De SI Loui Washington Chicago Cleveland Philadelphia York y oit 1 mi . 'ues- | W "p Results Yesterday rom {| National League Pittsburg 2; Chicago 5. Philadelphia 4; Bostor Brooklyn-New York, No others scheduled. dl inevi rain, and at 7 morning passed day o clock away Besides a wife and infant son sed to mourn dexth, two brothers together with his |SAYS U.S. MUST BE WILLING TO GIVE FOR PACT | (Continueg from page 1) | of the International Justice, with cer- tain conditions. The suggestion has y had my approval on I should not oppose ions, but any m : Jes which would not. prob: Morrison, former Iowa] the consent of the foothall and basket-| tions, would be imprac 1 to c If Must Have Broad View “Only one conclusion apy rs sible. We shall not promote rrow and short- the his un-| and one ents. American League St. Louis Detroit 13. All others, postopned, rain, | de. tin sister a leaves. ‘American Association Toledo at Columbus, rain, Louisville at Indianapolis, Milwauke: St. Paul JOWAN WILL COACH HERE James H State Colleg rain. Minne. G wi Morrison, who taught | it Cresco, Towa, and will | the local high paching the on both the football and ms in the Ames insti-} ording to school author- | He will take up his xt fall teach phy school in the ndivid-| ual, as it is for the support of our} union, is best sumed up in a single word—renuneiation. It is only by surrendering a certain amount of our liberty, only by taking on new duties and assuming new obligation we make that prog which we} characterize as civilization, It n like manner that citiz te can maintain our union and become partakers of glory at is the answer to herald of discontent, and to While MRS, MALLORY 3 ss Chiswick, the A. P.) ngland, Miss May remembered that our was organized to avoid and e war, and to promote and peace. It the leadir cteristic of our national hol e days of er) “It must be i | Republi fay. us secure, Not Courting Disaster “It is not tobe inferred that it! | would be anything less than courting | * | national disaster to leave our coun- j try barren of defense, Human na- ; ture is a very constant quality. While there is justification for hoping and believing that we are moving to- $5.25. | wards perfection, it would be idle and ae eae it traktor | absurd to assume that we have al- ers | ee tsaa a a EP iis | Teady reached it. We cannot disre- . Ames will be domestic disorders. ‘There oa ee lower. Best lights to puck-| have been and will be tendoncien of ft ae fs ray ae one nation to encroach on anotner. Fe eee eon atl’ (Active) /T believe in the maintenance of an | ee ae SD inels pe amlene. army and navy, not for aggression, “choice, light medium hogs. Bulk | but for defense, but I am opposed to reed’ light. butchers, $6.90. Lower | eVerY Kind of military aggrandize- oye pod ward to $6.75. Packing | ™ent and to all forms of competitive ee a $6.25. Best feeder | #fmanent. The ideal would be for paghge Reiterr round $000." | Rations to become parties to mutual itl sr veceipts 100. Steady. Best | Covenants limiting their military es- prince $16.00. Lightweight shorn’| tablishment and making it obvicus psig to $7.25. Heavy “shorn | that they are not maintained to men- er ace each other. This ideal should be Bar 7m wooled. omer $7.75 | to) voado practical’ as fast as possible, Not a Peril “While there are those who think we would be exposed. to peril by ad- hering to this court I am unable to attach great weight to their argu- ments. Whatever differences, what- ever perils exist for us in the world MARKET NEWS ST. PAUL Paul, receipts 700. General Quality plain. Top i Ik steers and year! VESTOCK May es $7.50 to ock $4.00 to $6.75, | $3.25. | 0. Fat she Canners and cutters $: Bologna bulls $4.50 to $4.60. | T a ° di of grizzly the most keen- species of all ‘bears. eo Ga The ec nal maddening how a pa r-Warnock § race to hang up a new motor racing record at the In-{ 8 driver lvoks to the crowd in the stands. The driver il come anyway whether we oppese| first year. This figure was submit- support the court. I am one of{ted to the Director of the Budget © who believe we would be safer | yesterday ted that the nd that we would be meeting our|cost of administration alone during | |COOPERATION IMPORTA) together, for the | for |M. | president, way, North PULL TOGETHER SPIRIT IS BIG NEED OF STATE Me ' . M. Goodsill of Northern Pacific Advocates North Dakota “Daily Half Dozen” North Dakota citizens must pull r own benefit and the benefit of their state, M. Goodsill, assistant to the vice- Northern Pacific the North Dakota Retail told for cooperative advertisin dio, letter inserts, envelope stickers, moving pictures and public meet- ings, Your Rotary, Commercial and other clubs can tuke lessons from pioneers,” he said. “Why don't you bring a few of the early settlers from your town | into one of your meetings some day to tell you the inspiring story of early days in this state. and the story of their own successes. Much | cun be Tearned from the past. We | owe morg than we can repuy to our pioneers. g with ra- Lions, Kiwanis, CITY'SFIRE FUND GAINS Will Receive $1,735.18 From ts yesterday. half-dozen” for follows: Opti- Enthusiasm, Com- He Dakotans as , Confidence n mon Sense, Hard Work and Cooper- Jation, Speaking on cooperation he cooperation more es Tax Distribution The State's auditor's office will distribute $40,820.96 to 334 fire de-| partments of state, from the fund created by a levy of two percent tax on foreign fire insurance companies, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1924 COUPLE CELE-| Rev.«J. F. L. Bohnhoff attended and VALLEY CITY BRATE; GOLDEN) WEDDING Valley City, May 30—Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thiel, Sr. celebrated their gold- en wedding anniversary Sunday at the farm home of their son Carl, Jr. Constipatio keep yours healthy with Kellogg Constipation undermines a child’s health. It saps his energy and makes him listless. It can lead to more than 40. | other serious diseases. Mothers should ake immediate steps to remove, safely and surely, the dangerous poisons from his system. Kellogg’s Bran—because it is ALL. bran—brings permanent relief. Noth- ing but ALL bran can be 100 per cent effective. That is why Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and krumbled, is uni- versally recommended by doctors, They know it brings results. jlf eaten regularly, Kellog; is’ guaranteed to give perm: lief in the most chronic cascs of consti- ation, or your grocer returns your Kellogg’s Bran acts on the ines: ctly as nature 8 and cleans and yuri Jt inakes them function reunited the couple. Mrs. Thiel is 71 and her husband 76. They were married in Germany and came to Byrnes county many years \ago tak- | ing up a homestead northeast of here {on the Sheyenne river. n is ruinous to children— regularly. It allows you to discon- tinue forever the use of harmful, habit-forming drugs and pills. Kellogg’s Bran, cooked and krum- bled, is a delightful surprise to the taste—partieularly if one has tried ordinary unpalatable brans. Kellogg’s Bran lias a delicious, crisp, nut-like flavor—an exclusive flavor. It is most enjoyable with milk or cream, sprin- kled over other cereals or cooked with hot cercals. Try it in bread, mufiins, griddlo cakes and other recipes given on every package. Havo your children cat it regularly. blespoonfuls daily—in chronic ises, with every meal. Kellogg ’s Bran is mado at Battlo Creek and sold at all groec It is served in indi s by the leadiWg hotels Ask for it at your restaurant, package clubs, du jand peace which appear to me to be! Adjusted th: not by our The motive what we think will pay, but we righ BONUS SERVICE New Departmeni Is Created the duties falling on the Vetera: justed servic ing the cash pi ee S127 Vete va| HERE'S WHERE MEMORIAL DAY EXPRUISES WERE HELD. BOTTOM: Mrs. John Tyler in Columbus, Ga., on April 26, 1866. ing, and the women went from Mrs. | states celebrate Tyler's home to Linwood Cemetery, in Columbus, where the original Me-| spring flowers are in bloom, better by supporting it andj the first year will total $1,188,000. king every possible of it. I) Approximately $8,000,000 will be cl confident that such action would | necded for cash payments, ke ter America, that ity G Hines stated that he ex- suld he productive of a higher and) pected to utilize the present organi- cron spirit and mere | zation of the Veterans Bureau in the } mplete national life lfield to the fullest extent possible in “It is t two thoughts of union) carrying out the provisions of the Compensation Act. He vised all veterans to keep in touch th their local postoffices and with i and now. All progress has sprung from it. Cooperation has displaced the prairie schooner by the steel train; it has laced the canoe by the ocean liner; it has displaced the scythe and the sickle by the reaper and binder; it has dis- pl the daily newspaper. The Northwest has been developed by cooperation and its future development depends upon the same kind of team work. Bi ness men cannot pull one way and farmers anothe nothing can be gained by ‘king and destro y other vital indus- rming, transportation, b working together, create pre t|perity and progre Under the head of advertising, many sugges be ma IT would like to urge all communities to issue, and have for sale, attractive picture postal card: which tourists, visitors and home people can mail out to the world. Today in North Dakota there are very few mailing cards of this kind, ich do the state justice, which really The to werk out, with the help of your) local photographers, ‘professional or | amateur, plus the application of a tandard or uniformity of use neral for our consid- Like all el they are et dent existe concrete ac pecially appropr ation of this day human experience ings white ve indepe ist reason of the nis nand women A Greater Country n thi the ich they em repose, office d privates” ming t, holding. the ot! ox-service org papers in order n exactly how to proceed in get- their claim taken care of. The ils of procedure have not us yet} Iheen roved, wooded eminence,| ‘The appointinent of Me ol of the coun-! ty we of the new fought, many of | th habilite high tank} a chief, This vacaney has a common |ed by the promotion of Mr. Hf. neveneration! Stirling, who had been aoyr ul people. e heroes of | ¢ of the Rehabilit her y lie with them and in eat place of pre-eminence lies onc! identit he was can be bs “Here erlooking y for w cooperative sof ons may ny com heen fill- Vv. executive ion Divis- v a unknown, save! of this Republic! IN BISMARCK its liberties might be David Grew, Writer of Many Western Stories, Visitor itutions, men th ©. ve can testify to those opinions words but by our actio ur cannot exist on the nuneiation of the he souls of | past. Public e, from the; tion of the humblest voter to the} ost cannot be m mere t hire and salar support ' institut‘ons | ust be inspi pre dominant than a conviction that their! to | country Mr. Goodsill also proposed plans | saa of highly sue Northwest, on hi Canad: Mrs. Mr. id Grew, author of a number} sful stories of the way to Northern is visiting with his sister, Ira C. Frendberg of Bismarck. ew’s best known story of the est, “Beyond Rope and is a book which ha phenomenal — succe: in ne d Holland ec United States and © a Wild Horse wi another * In most of the it been a tions be profitable. | ¢ our standards to} aust | ce, yige them to what we tliink of the es of the epted by the and in the cit- es of and New York it his just be epted for the senools . ‘supplementary reader, The Two Coyotes,” Mr, Grew's second story of the Northwest has just been published here and in Eu- lrope. This book like “Beyond Rope | * is a story of life on the ies. vild.” inion has PLAN IS TOLD == low:many chances of ire .in your home? By Director Hines ou don’t know. But there are a:great many shances—too many with which to gamble. Why not let the insurance company take the risk? Insurance costs but a very little and if fire comes, your policy may mean your = salvation. There is no better pro- tection than the sound indemnity of dependable fire insurance, Let this agency tell you about it. You will be un- der no obligation. Better insure in the Hartford Fire Insurance Company. creation of an Adjusted Con ive, with Major O, W. Grew who was brought up on is announced by the prairies of North Dakota loves Hines, director of the West as it really is and has made ns Bureau. it his aim to tell about it truthfully ndle all the’so as to destroy the ludicrous con- Bu-|ception that the easterners have a sult of the passing of | quired of it by reading the sensa- Compensation Act. It) tional, blood and thunder stories that rged with issuing the ad-|have had such a wide market in the certificates and mak-} past. He they think out E nents called for by! that all through the West, Dakota Act. not excepted, men live by raising ctor Hines has estimated that! cattle and stealing them from -cach 100,000 will be expended by the} other, doing so with the less ae- s Bureau under the Act the} companiment of war-like gun fire, in charge eneral Frank 1 United States The new Service will h. the justed ill be cha (Oem MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck, according to D.C. Poindexter, state uditor. The tax is returned to cit- ies in proportion to premium receipts from them. Payments will include Fargo $6,988.33; Grand Forks $2,547.- 33; Minot $2,144.33; Bismarck $1,- 735.18; Jamestown $1,472.88; Devils Lake $1,231.28; Valley City $865.22; Mandan $852.22, i The distribution is made each year | to organized fire departments, and is an aid in maintenance of the departments in many towns. Boil city water for the next three weeks. Dr. Stackhouse, City Health Officer. aaaSaSa—asa———aa——q—_————— CANDIDATE —for, Member of Board of Educa- tion at school election Tuesday, June 3rd. GEO, F. WILL “Thank You.” Donse BRoTner«: DEALERS SELL GOOD USED CARS The title of this ;ad- vertisement was origi- natedbyDodgeBrothers and giventotheirdealers as an irrevocable policy. We believe we are justi- fied in saying that we are living up to the doctrine in every parti- cular. Good Values for Today— FORD COUPE, 192:; production, with eX- cellent tires, and in per- fect condition. DODGE BROTHERS TOURING In_ excellent condition, and a bargain at our low price. FORD SEDAN, A very low price for this Closed Car. M. B. GILMAN cm. 212 MAIN STReET BISMARCK PHONG 808 “Kelly Springtield Tires.” TEXACO GAS - AND OIL | | POP: CEMETHRY AT COLUMBUS, GA., WHERE FIRST MEMORIAL | HOUSE WHERE FIRST MEMORIAL ASSOCIATION: WAS FORMED. * The nation-wide custom of setting | side one day in. the year for dec- | rating the graves of the soldier| lead originated among a little group | f women who met at the home of | morial Day exercises were ,held, The women pledged themselves to ob- serve the ceremony on the same date every year, and within a. few years the custom “had spread throughout the north and» south. Four southern states sttHrecog- nize April 26 as ‘Confederate Me- morial Day,’ while the morthern “Memorial Day’ ’on May 30 as the date when most: of the drop. The first Ladies’ Memorial Asso- | jiation was organized at this meet-| Make Every Road a Boulevard. Economy in every Most Miles Per Gallon. Standard Guarantee Greatest Mileage Freedom from: Puc- ture. Best on rutted roads. Increase breaking efficiency. Reduce cost of car upkeep. = Z Zenith Coaster { ROAD TESTED Free! Free! TO BOYS AND GIRLS who would like to own a Zenith Road- tested Coaster—the best coaster wagon in the world—we will send free of charge on receipt of your request, a dandy Ze- nith coaster cap, and also tell you how you can get a Zenith coaster for your very own. She Every Zenith has its own license plate. You can al- ways spot your wagon by its number. TEAR OFF and MAIL TODAY SURE MARSHALL-WELLS COMPANY Duluth, Minn. Please send me a Zenith Coaster Cap and tell me how ! can own a Zenith Coaster, Sale Household Furniture Saturday, May 31 at 2 P.M. One Block South of City Scales. One Majectic Range. One 38-Burner Oil Stove. Two Heating Stoves. One Ojl Heater. Two Beds, and One Sanitary Couch with Spring and Mattress. Three Dressers. Three Comodes. One Com- bination Writing Desk and Book Case. One Kight-Foot Extension Dining Room Table. Six Chairs. One 50 Ib. Ice Box. One 9x12 Rug. , SS AND MANY OTHER ARTICLES. SS ee MRS. W. E. SAVAGE OWNER ED KAFFER AUCTIONEER

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