The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 5, 1925, Page 6

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Benny j | “DEMONS” TAKE HARD GAME ON LOCAL FLOOR cond Overtime Game of the Y 25 to u Tn the second ove uyear Bismarek Satu the fast Belfie nt 2 ne vPhe t five ttl up to oheld zou het the Mirst q pl0 to 1 in 4 tsecond hal le stwo route favor ‘heir up to 6 ‘hile the Demons were held in the third quarter. At the the fourth quarter the Belf in making them from ffloor and had amon the short end m then on With Hall a foul was s wh The f Bi s via marck elfield by Quint | over th e Bismarck fa 14 to 10 aw affair ted at cig lon Belfield f the ball n Imarck, The goal w the count Harry D. time out while s Only Going 126.9 Mil ening of the racing 2s Author of Whe “Getting the Breaks” Term Griffith, for Davis. iks he mean h the windy take every ad and the game went into tra period, ound! the hoop once in the overtime| theless he was consider period | “Who is makir y Belfield appeared to feel the effects | cracks on your bench?” hree day trip and tired ra-! rie. n proved to be main} one of hile Capt. Shepard and Ben-| sure der on the defe Olso things, « and Register proved most : the offen Scroggins started late! Biding his time, Guthrie w in the game and didn’t get going un- 1 the ne play was mark much ragged | “S$ vu b ed passing ially in the second and) rie, “you better it third quarters. und save the wast The Demons do not play at home for your ‘spit ¢ tin until the 22nd of January, If you do your Wwhen they play Wahpeton here. Twill prob Lineuy jyou to Mr. Jo! BH. S. Belfield | livery letter.’ Lobach I Even then Covie~ didn't get th Olson I drift ef the conversatior He key Han 1 Stoudt | chewing his cud of toh nd look Registe c P. McCabe} hrie tu hep Render Lofthouse Scroggins Brown BOWLERS LOOK TO JAMESTOWN": for Coveleskic Mid - Northwest Tourney To) been chix Be Held There Sbon H. Doering G J. MeCabe Determann Herb Docring, Ne Dy bowling Jamestown, north Jan, 5.—Mid- tournament | &¢ Jamestown Jan. west terest among of the} northwest and from al! indications | the tourney is going to be a huge | red su 1 Grand Forks, Bismarck, jt h t an and several South t rkota towns expecte eam Grand Forks will teams, Fargo will s Mandan will Hive man team, Valiey ( | RADIO SUPPLIED fered four te: while Aberdc and St. Paul © expected to have lat Jeast one team her Jamestown will have t the tournament and other tow the state to register teams nex AGGIES BEAT OREGON TEAM | % With e and quintet smal ex over are an be- of at wa the kota wildering North I overran h company National Guard here night and won 54 to 9. The showed one of the smoothest orking basketball! —machir as ever come to Portland. that }-=The sale of Pitcher Stanley Cove- leskie to the Washington club r joke some of the Cleveland playe f@hee put over at his expense. | <Coveleskie. is a quiet chap. His le longest words are yes and no. fme Cleveland players insist he has £ on the bench for days without itlering a word. j He generally selects an out-of-the- spot in the dugout, puts in a big of tobacco aftd is set for the hen brusque Bill Guthrie, who irs no man, broke into the Ameri- ma League as umpire, several Cleve- 1d players decidedsto have a little with him. i When Bill was busy calling bails land strikes, some player'from a point ‘vantage would take his judgment task. 3 . Just breaking in. Bill found it dif- ieult enough to judge balls and tikes without looking in the airec-| aft tainment as part of th rental. Lower, u tenna Tenants in one of New York's new kind of concert from a different station, building, from which lines run to each needs is a loud speaker, which can he sockets according to the concert wanted, averse to see if he couldn't head off the trouble that he kmew was imminent. ins was about 20 feet from se whe hrie noticed him. nh the me: Yunke¢ clubhous nrie, in a most , yelled, “And by s well take anne Ly, bat Hu boy al 1 reférrin gins, of cour: creat- I regard him as the Witt, you might ng with les an Hour! season on the Curver City (Calif) entually won, catching up with Ralph De Palma, while Jonny had his boat open to just 126.9 miles an hour on ——————S | News of Our | Neighbors ls iets CLEAR LAKE ss Cataryne Spike who is teach- | fet the break,"| Miss Cataryne Spike w shout to his base-| ing in the southeastern part of the | d them from| st spent a couple days of her t| Mrs. Harold Hargrave. p Mrs. Frank vian spent the weekend as the guest: on used by Gristith {ot Mr. and Mrs. George Shaffer of : Steele. runners, it has as ee Ok Sper vor |. Miss Daisy | Dodds the iret man’ 1 ever | Giviatae Owivh: Wer Dawson,, returning on Mrs. Albert Christensen and 1 Myrtle, spent Friday with Mrs. L. Oison and Miss Nora. n visiting with her sister, Mrs. ental home on Sunday, the holidays visiting ther and sisters Christmas vacation as the guest of | affer and Miss Vi- Miss Ruby Brenden who has been Gran- ville Selland returned to her par-' Allen Van Vleet spent several of could reach her the blaze was controllable and only some of clothing could be saved. nesday afternoon with Mrs. Olson. L, tained at New Year's and Mrs. Dick Begeman. dinner, { Mr. and Mrs. New Year's Eve and Mrs. Albert ¢ M istiansen, Mrs. Adolph Hanson daughter, Mildred are s era thome. and Mr. and Mrs. George Shaffer ai fers at the home of Mr, Harold Hargrave. and M Mr. and Mrs, John Beyer and 1 tle son, Bobby, autoed to Bismar on Tuesday and consulted a doct for their little son. turned home on ty Nelson home and also Granville Selland home. at Mr. and Mrs. (partook New Year's dinner with M jjene Mrs. Christ Selland, Mr. and Mrs. Faunce Luyben an meeey POISON GAS, WAR TERROR, sf a boon to farmers. the chinch bug, by the Kansas State Agricultural college find this the most effective method for killing off this pest. than ever before. | stopped the truction. tically complete control was possible. Cover Ground ‘plugged into any one of four Upper photo shows the gets. nt plugging in, ‘ north. By easy. stages he travels either overland or along the const during the month of March to the| iaieteiempiehanuiaiensuecademammummnitmtne Mrs. Harold Hargrave spent Wed- Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Brenden enter- t the home of Mr. little | ending sev- | days at the Christ Schoon/| i Ruben Stromberg were Sunday call- Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Nelson re- Wednesday, after | spending a week visiting at the Hen- | the Granville Selland family autoed to Bismarck on Wed- FARM AID Manhattan, Kas., Jan, 5.—Péison | gas, the kind that killed and maimed soldiers during the war, is, proving It is ridding their grain fields of Experiments conducted last season Last summer especially, the chinch bug was more numerous in Kansas Yet poison gas insect’s march of des- With barriers of creosote on the ground, it is reported, prac- un- her B. Mr.! nd | rs. it~ ‘ck or MAP SHOWING THR PATH OF THE TOTAL ECLIPSE. INSET, PHOTO OF A TOTAL ECLIPSE SHOWING THE MYSTDRIOUS CORONA OF THE SUN, STRETCHING OUT FROM BEYOND THE MOON'S DISK. : New York, Jan. 5.—-On the inorn-| ing of Saturday, Jan. 24, New York's millions will stop in their rush to work long enough to look into a dark- ened sky and watch the moon shut out the sun! . At the same time other millions will form a broad band of gaping sky-gazers stretching like an are from northern Minnesota to lower New England. Within this band, about 100 miles wide, a total eclipse of the sun will be visible. Beyond it the eclipse may be observed in partial form. ~ An eclipse occurs whenever ~ the moon, in its revolution about the earth once a month, happens to come between the sun and the earth. Then 1 | the moon’s shadow falls on the earth | and, within the belt crossed by it, there is a total eclipse. On either side of this path a partial eclipse may be seen. A partial eclipse occurs almost every year in any one locality. But it’s the total eclipse that’s a spec- tacle. r It occurs only once in a lifetime, over any one district. Scientists rr. glare shooting out on all sides into the mysterious heavens beyond. | This is the corona of the sun which! scientists have been trying to study for the light it may throw on the constitution of the sun and of mat- ter itself. The whole phenomenon will last about two hours. The total eclijge itself will last only from one to two minutes, and will be seen in New York between 9:10 and 9:15 in the morning. It is its formation and its decline that last about an hour each. The parks are being recognized, id the report, as ideal winter p! grounds, with exceptional facilities for skiing, snowshoeing and tobog- | ganing. Revenues from natiorfal parks and monuments last year totaled $663,886, more than $150,000 more than for the | previous year. Travel to them in- creased considerably over the 1923 record-breaking visiting lists in spite of adverse conditions such as quar- antines and forest fires. An urgent need for extending the boundaries of several of the national parks was emphasized, particularly that of the Yellowstone southward to include the Teton Mountains and the ea which is the breeding ground for the Yellowstone moose; that of Crater Lake park northward to in- clude the scenie Diamond Lake re- gion, and that of Sequoia park to in- clude Mount Whitney and some of the Kings River country, i id NATIONAL PARKS IN’ TO VARIED W Washington, Jan, 5-—Growing po- y of the country’s national , and their use for winter sports as well as for summer vacation visits, are combining to make the parks self- supporting, it was pointed out in the annual report today of the National Park Service. ITE \ TER SPORTS ocean and bay to gulf, you just can’t help but tip your Rat to this erent, big bird that Natdre has provided with. brains to match its size, X32 TRIBUNE WANT ADS BRINGS RESULTS, . by by BB's A WE Ye Swe Ne 9 AWAY SWE WA NW Wwe Yor Yo Yaa |enr QUT YOUR SMOKED SPECS; ECLIPSE IS COMING JAN. 24 After hatching out in wheat and await it with strong telescopes and Witt stopp: Paul Paslay a Bismarck vis- | oats and greatly diminishing the | C@™eras, to study its movement, its smile broke ee one titor over Friday and Saturday. yield among these crops, the bugs cll, and the accompanying pheno- J v ine ot Sas 7 left high a a, i | Viola Hargrave spent Wed- | tere Try niet ind. dry: sauta es | This timo, ail/alang the belt of she nesday evening until the following | Cyber gichie, total eclipse, astronomers will have admitted the) Sunday at Steele, a guest of Mrs. Experimenters report the ground| their instruments poised against the mm was neing and un-| George Shaffer. literally covered with these pests| Sky: They will be ready when, as J usual that he could offer nothing in t re seeking new sources of food supply the sun rises in northern Minnesota, | rebuttal. Mr. and Mrs. 0. Soniihad“as iar iand icreosdte inde wera taqai the smoonta shadow willibe (obiersad i —— [their guests on Sunday, Mr. and Pee apo in its entirety. Thence, at the ter- : down and at intervals of about 16] i”! ence alt M Alden Nelson and little daugh- feet, calcium cyanide flakes were set | tific speed of 200 miles an hour, the vill Nut Cracker ee Ruth, ‘ Mee ange ML citar down. These flakes, when coming| Shadow will be seen rushing south- ig | 0 and Mivs, Henry Nelson. into contact with the moisture of tne }eestward across Lake, ., Superior, * round or air, form the deadly hy.|Morthern Michigan and’ Wisconsin, spe Jaghegny ads chats] Several tated Othe sirallbOx are ieaeyaiica Sas; Oca testen ease ce g | EakehHareTncutheenOneeonenen we cin remember when |S?reading around the neighborhood nvas\enileavauciasie & u of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jer- fine Jof Driscoll and several families are hae eal ieee Digeree erectseiy sey and Connecticut, the center line Boga ik der ara a. E : Z 4 - i cea oe 99: ees Junder quarantine {es it had endangered the soldiers. | PASSing seaward directly over Mon-| SAY **BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Jundes was seen wearing Mrs. George Erickson, teacher of No Passage tank Paint at the extremity of Long dt monocle in Paris.| te, Oe iP eeeaes eer ea vo |) Stopped by the odor of the tar or| [Sland. aa 5 set oe “ ‘ A See Tye tuft they sell overs “hristania school 1s sponding Hic |creosote, they. would craw! ‘slong shade wilt oumated, States. the} Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are BENE SS Oia bis bazrleriuntl then got to the ie it will leave the earth at sunset in| NOt getiing the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe i} . - | 2 s - 113 3 a agiel _ icia ears an | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Shaffer had] their end. Sante” wastes to the. west of by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for ole TENG ATS LOS) |e ener co mtn nym GR GH TET Mr.| So that the wind should not blow Neha iseliae os eae ‘i 2 not there to split} Mrs. Albert Christiansen andj the gas away, post holes were made AA hekeclipae) nae epopeenvedsalong is plain the judge rtle and Mr, and Mrs, Har- | at rod intervals and the flakes drop-| this 100-mile band, first as the moon Colds Headache p a . 'ped into them. The bugs crawled| M0ves slowly across the face of the . bs into these by the thousands, after} SU™ then as it shuts out the sun 5 1 fallen for an aet- Tom Olson, departed on | having been turned aside by the bar- enerelysaand| lastly as the moon Pain - Neuralgia ore than he for Albert Lea, Minn., where | riers. oral : : We re i erie Smoked glasses are needed to ob- y_ Gibbons. she will remain with her sister. A check-up of the invasion in Kan- i 7 i Pal : . | Sas showed that-666 of these insects ERS ag Qnbaaee a pee Toothache Lumbago avo Nurmi] Adolph Hanson and sons, Palmer| passed over a two-inch line every | But ise mae 45 No wonder] ang Arthur arrived én Monday and ,eecond! faa the) naked eves giten) Saxt Neuritis Rheumatism ~! t unybody to runfare visiting among old friends, | On a 600-foot strip between a| for @ minute or two, it will com- ; | wheat field and a corn field, 15,000,- aie ae cubecsualignt, the ! ‘ ‘ Albert Christiansen was a busi-| 000 bugs tried to pass within a per- eager yO m22OU%s he | Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. ur's colts failed ller at the county seat over|iod of four days. atterglow. wail eppenr along, the: ae ony aver packanel eS P e last 2. Tuesday and Wednesday. | note tee eteee-ronditions, the ereo-| Rorion and around the black disk | Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablete—Alko bottles of 24 and 100—Druggiste, young blades we |Sote barriers and poison gas checked| f the moon will appear a bright} aspirin is tho trad> toa: of Bayer Manufacturo of Monoaceticacidester of Salicyllcacit t by on the old) A group of jolly makers were out the chineh bug at every turn, r on Tuesday evening, — representing | ees : EL 5 cee aac rari ck race,” calling at the L. B.| CANADIANS ROING WELL ENE AO RUNTNOTAAE Win > : fer and B. F. Pas SELLING CANNED FRUITS ||— WITH APARTMENT They were well masked! Winnipeg, Jan. 5.--Canada has F u time of ‘guessing before | increased its exports of canned fruit they were known, jand vegetables nearly four times | Jin ‘volume since 1922, according to and Mrs, M. A. Lein gave aja bulletin issued by the federal de. stmas party at their home on!partment of agriculture. Shipments Sunday evening for their son, Til-jin 1924 have totaled 16,605,115! ", who is attending school at‘ pounds, valued at $1,193,450, com. Fargo and their daughter, Clara, who | pared with 4,475,397 pounds,’ worth lis employed at Stecie. A large crowd | $821,625, two years ago. | being present and a very nice time; The United States was the princi | being had by all present. \pal buyer of Canadian canned. goods s [this year, taking about 50 percent Mrs. Sophie Gunderson had the cf the export, the remainder going misfortune of having her home des-|to the United Kingdom, Franeo ‘and troyed by fire on Wednesday morn-|Cuba. Total investment in canuine ing. | The fire originated from an! plants in the Dominion was’$11/600. overheated stove, and before. help!000. 9, THERE’S NOTHING DUMB ABOUT. HIM. peli i A Wild Goose, Unpratected by Law, Uses His Bean and Escapes Hot Lead of Hunters i BY MORRIS ACKERMAN flashets of Newfoundland, Labrador, h Noted Fish and Game Authority Hilden, Bay and Baffin Island. Pr aes iainie n the spring he is protected in The wild Canada Boose is heading | the United States and in Canada. In for his winter home again, Newfoundland, Labrador and Baffin Where has he been since you saw] Island he knows not protection, oth- ze him winging north last March? What] ¢t than his own wisdom. ’ ia e When he gets in the.north country Bessa ane sre ares hese ner inthe geile: at a bestiining at reople nad hace essen bY, the mating season, he is easily “toll- q i. : more people and known by less than | od” by the native goose hustse, ing to sell, or a spare room to any 0: our migrating waterfowl, In early June h: olts. t 7 . o ot Hy y Hunted hard from Currituck to Ma:| time the Labeadarive aed Nemtora |e rent, or that you have a service to offer; or that you wish to buy & Be ema ianipes to New Iberia,| ander finds him eusy proy. Old birds, A SOME Used article at a bargain. the Canada honker survives. eggs or goslings are merely matters f fe k _ Surely the age-worn saying of “thd of choice and weather conditions. lg ‘ é a \ . : : 4 i sath who ait Guan |e i thew teats tof DINK What it would cost, you to cail personally or hire an agent flight from Okucoke ter Ungavalt'” | Mat and wife the goose and gender|{iq tO Visit each of these homes even once in a week or month, flight from Okracoke to Ungava, will. probably make a hundred round ||™ - : ae i The Canada goose ranks next in| trips to the land of floating ice cach i 4 § ‘ ; " f size to the wild swan. Unlike the| year over a hundred-year period, || ay swan he is not protected by law.| bringing south each fall their broed ||P THE TRIBUNE WANT ADS MAK THIS TRIP DAILY. Yet he flies high and lights wisely,| of three or four. . iS ‘3 2 if I do not believe one goose falls to] Their ‘flight is infallible, their F the lot of one hunter in a hundred] sense of direction unefring, their! | / of those who gun each fall for -mi-| flesh most palatable. We know where| |i - Sy ne s grating waterfowl, K they leave ftom and where they will ‘ if the goose were not the wisest| come back -to. ba blige i i ‘ p apartment houses get radio enter-! bird that flies he would not hold his} We know when. “they go and when AND ASK FOR TH WAN' AD DEPT, s Four setg each tuning in a diffefent| own and increase his kind as he is they will return, but when you think “Sf 4 form a central station in the | doing today. of the bristling gums from’ acean to apartment, All the tenant| His nesting grounds are in the far

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