The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 13, 1925, Page 6

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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1925 : 7? er " sing ick, Pa,| In the United States are some WINS TITLE Use of Anesthesia [ia a hobby wee coiled Hate anon Titerites qualified to vote. 5 Pa For Childbirth Told | match boxes. He now a coll A nch phonograph record that ra ‘ae ¢ halfbnck, Joh " By New York Doctor | : F | PAGE SIX THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. BISMARCK’S HIGH SCHOOL COACH - S a Do RE | i . His was erence, ran for drop kick for the blocked point tion of 90, manufactured in all will play 100 minutes has been in- ; of the world. vented in Germany. the nadian Gelf Crown at a Ottawa. the Paul, Oct, 1a--()—How a ye th ‘anesthesia was used in} {more than 4,000 cases at a New York {hospital and brought relief to more | than 98 per cent of the mothers was! told by Dr. James T. Gwathmey of | ‘New York city before the convention of the Interstate Post Graduate as. ; sembly of America, which prepared |for the second day of its meeting | here today. \ The anesthesia increases the time! during which no pain is felt for a period two and one half times longer than that of ether, and also reduces the toxic or poison tendency of the anesthetic which makes people ill after an operation, Dr. Gwathmey explained, | Diet For Anemia | Advocating proper diet as a cure n fell Ashley in the Doerr PIRATES NOW | third ran onned by the le man after doin Md running Few Passes ‘ \ was Only ard ither passi team by A used little! to passes! nd both were! Jia i nicely rd gains.) ff rk i completed two out of five s op dict a5 at f sliece | for anemia, Prof. Charles 8. William: | Talfback Crabtree Ellen- ‘son, professor of medicine at the he Aahies| i : oe University of Mlinois, declared the he Ashley/ great problem confronting the pro- on ee fession was to find some palatable as/nlse form of food with a high iron con- | tent. Egg yolk, he stated, was the | best food for the purpose.’ Spinach, | he continued, was also an excellent food, but, he added, “who wants eat spinach.” White bread, potato Do you eat iron. ; | : The meeting will continue until | Friday. 1 Swiss and Germans Know How to Farm, Bishop Wehrle Says M A letter to The Bismarck Tribune | from Vincent Wehrle, Bishop of Bis-' marek, who is now traveling in ope, gives his observations of farm ing conditions in Ger Switzerland. They follow August 28 we landed in Hamburg. |Two hours afterwards we speeded on a fast train towards southern! }Germany. The people of Germany and Switzerland are fond of having} some conversation on the train; it is, therefore, easy to get acquainted with the people and to secure in- formation on many subjects. My first questions were about the| consequences of the war and how the people at large bear them. It is evident that the middle class and the richer people whose wealth was in cash money suffered the most. Oppressed ih Those who owned some Is is productive suffered the least, fi- rancially at least, during the war. Now they are oppressed with taxes. At the present the tenth part of all income is collected by the govern-| ment as taxes; in factories this amount must be kept back from the payment of wages; the same is true! with other earners of bread. Farm- ers can not save their existence, un-; And then use it less they make their lands highly also, AFTER productiv and Productive EVERY MEAL, | % But the productiveness of the land,| if er every meal i Fi07 as a pleasant digestive aid, even of the poorest lands, puts al North Dakota man to shame. Everywhere it was harvest time Senators Will Pick Ruether or Ferguson to Oppose Kre- : y t : j Camntetes mer on Mound Today F et aces me, a h dangerous man team lots of tro other halfba Oct 13. (AP) Fright arm withstand Pittsbury rs bility that test h, hi be re day grand boned Senators For the dormant, bat the a last de hitt in r For Ashle: , Forrest, Sprat tler and Ke looms well. old -{ | y | man of the Washington Ellend-le Gibson itman - Witt! Griffin White Lawrence Robertson WW . Crabtree RH... Robertson FB Harris Qe. Pouser Gambling Nets Parisian 12,000.000 Francs a Year By MILTON BRONNER NEA Service Writer Y Thurn ‘ 7 t Lehr Pittsburgh Pirates, have aw: knoe! t ball ra ‘ort, With aroused there in Pirate strugyle ris, Wh to be ond ‘The the thie Next time you're tempted to “eat a bite” between meals—try WRIGLEY’S, Don’t overburden your stomach —don’t humor a false appetite! Let’ WRIGLEY’S stimulate a genuine hunger and get you ready for a good meal. well on their wa world baseball chanipie long predicted ting: slump he four sume reed thet of the fous the ing Tha force mous most written the whole world is the fa eign Legion which France in all desperate campaigns and ticularly Afri Re have been woven about 1 ¢ been told about it, fig- been distorted. is popularly supposed to con- ain only foreigners, desperate fel- lows all, and many of them having a they 7 di chapters in their lives which v to hide. And, singularly enough, the bulk a of the troops are supnosed to be WINNER OVER jermans, who for various reasons their. own country and seek Ashley's Fighting — Spirit Metnnis Led the 1 ae a Melnnis, it might well be them in their desperate the man who had playe: lins, Barry and him it was s of the Athle ed ina him gain Statly, trom fought that last t eknow le MeKechn in beside Cot P: ji pma itivletic rek thi H. BE. Collins, came to Bism: cessfully hoot . Collins » had suc past two igh D. coach of smarek wite r, Collins was at the honor by defe Stirling Fraser in the finals over the Ottawa club course. MacKenzie is a Toronto gi also holder of several dor provincial titles. ning. pi ed his series. been not us Sorlie Names Chairmen For , Golden Rule Day Five hundred community chairmen | today Governor! yet carry y vales of western Pennsylvania. | Twenty-four hours ago conquest for; ei MeKechnie appeared to be Ki ble. Now it is pitted on victory nault, Cana Marine he bout wa imapossi every t unity, | i pped featherweigh of veterans ley football » to a stand-| and again| Ellendale| Ash a victory over th when a little chany If the Urbana, 1 heay » will 1 hs stling ty A MeMuilen, Univer- n 1922 E Pirates co attack mood they at-} © esterday’s = victory mt may Well be imayined | series of 1h Jim tinue in the against team, shley pig-] Ka nt of} nev the| been n, world ec- the da a EXPE neal oses,] § he Johns rest, re Lee Me capped somew up as follow per cent temp British another. A veil is drawn over their n, “he harvested by hand, there er has lost. men, 14 per cent Germans ner cent other nationalities. Briti ; when we traveled through Germany; ! discipline in the barracks and valor in the northern parts the harvest of n the field of battle, as | - Governor letter to hardly any place where farm fuera with ‘the 500 chairmen, states thet his ac- chinery as we have it in North Da- a he goes ce under the flag of her bit- t foe. As a matter of cold I In the main most. of these men have had trotdles of some kind or other. ne s =i 2 Scme have been distinguished men Ccunteracts Ellendale’s in their day. Hence the French of-] MaHaidnatche ae ee ficers in charge of the legion never} hand th adatom. Excess Weight ask questions. grain, wheat, oats and barley, in thi = | southern parts at least of the sec- Andre Citroen, famous Freneh] “This army of community directors ond crop of hay. to king, used to be known as the] will promote the observance of In-| Nearly everywhere the farms, or | plunger par excellence at fashion- al Golden Rule Sunday,’ at least the meadows and fields of xble Deauville in France. falls on December 6 this year, grain were, according to North Da- ;, But this year he has te having been set at the an- Kota ideas, ridiculously small; \lipsed by another Par ; ¥ ONE OLD-TIME TILTS e of his old. 0 tion is in harmony with the appeal ko'a could be used to an advantage.| cam play as calmly as of President Coolidge, who is urging All the farming. population was seen| fj that) goes to his offi that Golden Rule Sunday be observed out in the fields and meadows; wo-} woof) day's work, in every home in America. jmen and boys were. in the mornings | In fact, it is his work. And they! 65 Countries Endorse Project ;and noons, seen bicycling out to whisper that the income from his) Last year nations endorsed the their lands, with the hay-fork or -...y,| business of bucking the Casino is] effort. "This r 65 countries have hand rake on their shoulders. How fought! 12,000,000 frances per annum, ' Browns BUSH HURLED his iy bated breath to the Casino to a business man to conduct the Joe Bush time game the Yankee former tea four solid smacks o J And they never did and | hurled of for, the oth pd of leis: t is fit atest. performance | of his life Kremer vs, dtuther er Ray K ly , is the the sixth battle guscn | youth yet 2 past four $ p ley team on the reign Legion is made and Coveles ut i ice AT fl or does one legionary question] 4. ive, apothens anit Rule conference in of the fields and meadows have to! joined in the ‘project to encircle the every bit of ground is utilize: opposed to him will be either Washington lefthander, Dutch Ruet er, or Alex Ferguson again, Kueth- | er, without doubt one of baseball's | best portsiders when working: prop-! erly, has been held back b r the Pirates’ love for — lefth: boxmen. Late in yesterday's Pi conguest Stanley Harris tried achary, the portsider who won two | games from the Giants last year, and the greeting i double frum the bat of* young ight and a single from the bat of wiich counted a ran turning to the of course, will gi an additional confidence rain intervenes, the zreat contain ano’ wd, thirs- | ty for Senator four-d Stay of the te: hington has | been a long and dreary wait for the faithful fans. Both teams arr after midnight and dy to their quar throughout yes put the paulin at Forb kept the in- ner territory dry and it is pianned to go on with the contest unless | there is something bordering a down-| pour. The Lineup For Today Washington: Rice, centerfied; e; Goslin, base; i ate Tom ed here shortly lef , first Peckinpaugh, shortstop Severeid, catcher; Bluege, third base; | Ferguson, pitcher. Pittsburg! Carey, center field; field; Ba t, left fiel Wright, short base; ‘Smith, op; Me-| catcher; Kremer, pitcher. Umpires At plate, Owens (A); McCormick ( second oriarity (A); third Berlenbach Gets | Technical K. O. | Over King Solomon New York, Oct. 13.—(#)—Paul Ber-| lenbach, light heavyweight champion | of the world, logms as a threat to the heavyweights. i munch in his left hand, he battered | ing Solomon, the Panama heavy-| into defeat at the Polo n unceasing at-| a's stomach, ribs | and head through eight rounds and) B1 seconds of the 9th, brought vic- | tory for Berlenbach in the form of a} technical knockout. | The referee halted the contest) when Solomon was unable to defend | himself. Berlenbach declares he is, ready for uny of the heavies now.| Berlenbach weighed 172 pounds, Sol-| omon 191 1 i ‘The semi-finals of 10 rounds found | Celmars substituting for Johnny, ‘Dundee, retired featherweight cham-| pion, in_a draw with Babe Herman, San Franeisco. Dundee failed to igh in at the boxing commission. Bis wife and an attorney said he fwas seriously ill with pneumonia. wundee was ‘in a financial. wrangle th promotors of the show al Lb ‘another ten rounder, Sid Terris WHITE SOX TA TI what make one-fifth of the crop. Every World Series Has Its Hero, Someone Who Climbs the Festive Heights Through Some Startling Perfermance or Other, neck and Johnson Have Stood Out As Leading Lights. v KE REM e500 ma big difference on ina bs hington club, © prod Tnited Sta the edge inj a y led with its} A party of newsp: ne half ended | iqathered together ession af the| Club of London. ey and Ash g end runs. lendale A “If you tell iy interesting.” If ha ristie a injured f “Oh, but we wou! that!” said one of t men. “We 1 ked too and, 3 about off to es apple | ¢ 1 the pind ptain Fo eyaurd Ti would,” said In the Last Five Classics Coveleskie, Hoyt, Who'll Be 1925 HEROES BYART CARLSON LL world series have their heroes, + Along old balldom’s fickle trail; With autumn’s dew they come anew Clamoring for the inside rail. ERE and there some bzilliant hurling, Perchanze a timely hit or two— A dazzling play may save the day And start the hero ballyhes. t Wt well recall Charles “Babe” Adams, Old Matty, Baker, Coombs and Rohe; And all the rest who reached the crest Tn classies of the long ago. LL REMISE the wre Coveeskie, al Herb Pennock, Groh and little Hoyt; Johnzon, yes, we must confess : « Eacti leaped to fame through some exploit. Nw who will this time climb the heights, Where bygone heroes roam the lea; Who'll be the chap to bridge the gap In this year’s hectic jamboree? R someone, apnea in the play, There waits the old hip-hip hooray! The A Ashley} telling the Britons w ‘Americans is lovely, that is only p: very big feet and prove it by picture—that’s news.” aper in men were the Press t was new that you say she Id never print he Fleet street the American Groh, Pen- Hero? world with the spirit of the Golden vice chairmen in the United States are: S. Parkes Cad- man, Frank 0. Lowden, Felix War- burg, Jas. G. Harbord, Mrs, Perey V. Pennybacker and Mrs. LeRoy Springs. Representative members of the in- ternational committee in charge of observance this year are: Viscount Cecil of England Dr. Fridjof Nan- sen of Norway, E. K. Venizelos of Greege, Prince Carl of Sweden,| Georges Clemenceau of France and: Paul Hymans of Belgium. Jardine Approves Trade Board Action Predicting that similar steps would soon be taken by all contract mar- kets in the’ United States, W. M. Jardine, secretary of agriculture, to- day expressed unqualified approval of the action of the Chicago Board of Trade in adopting, bv a large ma- jority, the recommendations recent: ly made by the members’ prograi committee. - He characterized the ac- tion as “one of the most progres: sive steps ever taken by the board.’ The recommendations —_ adopted provide for setting up a committee on business conduct and for giving the board of directors power to lim- it daily fluctuations in the market prices of grain during emergency periods. Everyone Benefited “I have always vigorously ‘advo. cated that prices be kept in line with actual economic conditions,” com- mented’ Secretary Jardine. “Any step in this direction is of benefit not only to farmers but to legitimate business interests everywhere. “With efficient administration of the plans adopted by the Chicago Board of Trade, which I have every every little straw or hay and what pain is taken to save and Hay from getting wet. Indeed, the German people and, also the Swiss. know how to work and how to earn their bread by the sweat of the brow. Farming A Science Farming in Germany and Switzer- land has been developed to a real science, not of how to make life easy, but how to get the fullest re- turn from every piece of land. I could not help comparing farm- ing in North Dakota with farming in those countries. I wish that for | at least one year the moneys spent for, and at, the Agricultural Col- lege of the state could ‘be used for sending a hundred intelligent farm- er boys to Germany to work there on farms and to learn the methods of the people there. I am sure it would for the whole future, improve our North Dakota farming condi- ions, BEACH COMBING PAYS Manchester, Eng.—A beach comber | here has made close to $50 in two lays. To be successful as a comb- er, he says, one must be constantiv on the alert, for a valuable jewel or piece of clothing washed up on the beach may be swept back in the wa- ter by the next wave that comes. Never in your life have you known anything to compare with the complete HAPPI- NESS of the wonderful “Ground Gripper” shoe. Sold exetatvely by Alex Rosen & reason to believe will occur, wild fluctuations due to manipulation should be eliminated. Competent.: public-spirited “men willing to ace cept appointment on the new busi- ness conduct committee will be able to perform in this way a real service to farming, industry, and commerce. Brings Confidence ' “The adoption of this far-reaching plan makes it possible for the De- partment of Agriculture’ to” cooper- ate effectively with the Chicago Board of Trade. as I pointed out in urging the acceptance of the plan. The ends contemplated by the Graih Futures Act can be most fully reach- ed through means of this kind., Laws are most effectual when met by sen- sible, sound cooperation on the part of everybody concerned. I congratu- late the Chicago. Board of Trade on its adberente ‘to this -principle. “Not the least important effect of the ation ‘taken will’ be the estab-! lishment of public confidence in the inarkghy the benefits, of whfeh are obvious.” Secretary Jardine has noted with interest,and approval, he stated, the adoption of a similar. plan Oy the Minneapelig. Chamber of Commerce, and the agitation in favor of like systems on other exchanges. He anticipates universal acceptance of! plans of this character by contract markets in the United States. ROI-TAN cd cigar youll like “The Favorite Son’s fa- smoke—ROLTAN FAVoRIT, self” (2 On Lake Facing the Park 16 acres for your enjoyment ONE THOUSAND large, sunlit, outside rooms...each with an unobstructed view of the Lake. A 16-acre privately owned estaie...affording every recreation or quiet seclusion. In the exclusive University of Chicago yo Michigan... residential district...facing East End Park...adjacent to Washington and Jackson Parks. Wide verandas, shade trees, spacious lawns ualed by no other hotel in Chicago, Ten min- utes from the shopping, theatre and business center of thecity via Illinois Central Suburban trains that sweep se along the Lake. 350 trains dajly. Rates at the Chicago Beach Hotel are ex- tremely reasonable. Frous $4.50 to $10.00 per day . . . $31.50 to $56.00 per week. Dining roomsand dining porch overlook Lake Michi- gan. Food is perfectly prepared and served either ala carte or at moderate table d’hote prices. Club breakfasts, 4oc to"75¢.. » luncheons, 65¢ to $1.09 . . . dinners, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00. Bathing .-- Boating... Golf. ‘A host of outdoor eports right here on oer own private grounds. “A quarter mile of white sand beach for awim- ting, bathing, boating. 3 clay tennis couzts. An 8-hole putting green. A!l the South Side S————— country clubs and the Jackson Park PE golf course are nearby. Outdoor danc- ing in our own open-air dance pavilion. Always lots of good company, good wholesome entertainment, An ideal ion spot for you and your family. vacation Write today for 16-page & Booklet . J A 1Gpage booklet that tells all about “Chicago Hotel”. . .and beautifully illustrates all the Srrictone soe Fooms, grounds, surroundings... will be sent you free of e. Write fcr a copy. Tell us the name of the Railroad B on which you come to Chicago. We will send you, with our illustrated booklet, exact directions'ao that you can be at the Hotel 15 minutes after ya leis your train. Or telephone Hyde Park gooo and we will send a conveyance to meet you, € your reservations now for a wonderful summer. When you read the Chicago Peach Hotel booklet you will know why thishotelisknown as “Chicago'sGreatest Hotel | cago Beach Hotel a icago’s Greatest Hotel” Hyde Park Boylevard) - + + on the Lake CHICAGO A. G. PULVER, V. P..and Gen. Mgr. Tennis

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