The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 16, 1926, Page 2

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ay uu i <4et&big coop made out of chicken wi PACE TWO. TAFT THANKS LAYMAN FOR 4S SERVICE ice to the Courts Brings Congratulations Chieago, I of th ten thanking a layman, unl the law and unknown to many vers, for his service to the court Jetter, made publi? Monday, was from William Howard Taft to, Charles F. Ruggles, Manistee, Mich., | and salt king, with large in? sts on the Pacific coast. hief justice congratulated Mr. son having made possible the business principle (P) A chief jus h writ- courts. ° Mr. Rug lauded by | Chief Justic y of the Chi Municipal Court, who sa individual has contributed mor x court reform in the last fifty 1 Mr. Ruggles. sudge Olson had rom Elihu Root sim ved a letter to that from . Ruggles founded the so- | elety and has financed it since its | inception in 1912 > Eliminate Delay society was to eliminate s of the law intaining the equality be tween the rich d the poor in the | t,” suid the Taft letter in ; ‘the greatest difficulty is the de! A rich man can stand the delay profits by it, but the poor man ways suffers “A judicial force of judges ought to be under the executive direction of somebody, so that the number of judges needed to meet the arrears of business at a particulay place should be under the control of one who knows what the need is. They have worked out this plan in the city of Chicago, where Chief Justice Olson, as chief justice of the Municipal court, assigns the judges of tl court to the work that is most press ing. In other words, we ought to ap- ply business principles to the use of our judicial force. “It is along these lines as I under- atand that the American Judicature Society is working, and I write to fe- licitate you on your having made this possible. You could do NO more im- portant work for the body social and politic than this. As one in the com- munity’ I write thank you.” Serves as Model doing directly many admi' things, wrote Elihu Root, ire Society has served ‘a Tor a vast amount of resi 1912, Mr. Ruggles employ steq editor, Herbert Harle tigate the courts of the c ‘Through Mr. Harley he discovered in Judy Olson a judge who kept boo! on his court. ed by the Ch ized the American Jud and asked Judge Olson to he Harley remained in Chicago as se tary of the society. Julius Rosenwald of Chicago h agreed to finance the Judicature ciety when Mr. Ruxle tion shall have been 200 CAGE SAD PLACE BUT IT | hausted. SAVES LIVES : Wild Animals Are Better Of in Cages Than When Run- ning at Large | BY CHARLES P. STEWART v ngton, Feb, 16—Thare’s some- thing pathetic in the sight of one of the big cats—a lion or a tiger, say— um, in the heart of the ¢ pacing his cage in a 200, to and fro,| to and fro, monotonously to and fro.! ZA yak, chewing his cud, is all Meht. A yak isn’t a very ‘dynamic animal anyway. But the real WILD animals different. It seems a shame to keep! them cooped up. Gosh! how they, ‘must wish they were prowling the jungle! And those noble eagles! Lookit ’em. The eagle! The emblem of our | freedom! Sitting on a dummy tree in out at the Smithsonian In Rock Creek park zqological What o sacrilege! rotest Issued © Well, there “that, some timeingo, felt ‘ane wa ae Naldn’t believe in holding: fe “cvitters in captivity. It. met and adopted resolutions to| that effect. It protested, in particu- lgr, against the imprisonment of ‘Ataoriean eagles—“the noble bird’ that has beea chosen to typify the, proud, free and lofty spirit-of Amer-| ear clease ‘em,” demanded the so- ciety. - What Would Happen e “And if we did ‘release “'em?”| queries Ned Hollister, for many) © years superintendent of that zoo of | the Smithsonian Ii ee ‘What would happen? “Wh Tamebody, we would fill those eagles se full «f shet instanter that ' . they wouldn't even do.to stuff and put on top of the bookcase, ister certainly came right back society. He has an article; about it in the | Smithsonian’s last re- ipert_on its activities. | “The hand of almost every man,” ‘ yayay Be apinet the eagle. Th J it. legal , protection in most. a some places bounties yn id for its destruction. it is ea) isMot protection eagles in zoos but for those a state. 3 di ae Ne ea iste No, according to Ne follister, den wae es sympathy on the ‘id ani: Fag in 2008. <; To be Fae Preave gi permitted end stay wild -, [ine bac 10, liberty jor to be shot, p Rededication of Birthplace of On the theatre at is a bronze rates the | front of 109 Cou tablet rth of son Ju m FE principle w est inventions in. the kind. ‘The building Hien con hot sur culn the phon cntence of » tablet first * 2G CTD, beng pleell on the building ¢ Ve fomion ephene pia CON Leste ido Peet TC tebe Hollister, to be ld anin serves oth man “When one consi Et is exactly wi objects valued lion dolla r tendants and about ¢ |are under arrest on charges are concerned in the theft. o ich led to one of the gr workshop of Ch nd the diseovery me m Bell on Mareh 1 the telephone "es provided di hee ley isoned or trapped by in the Y » odds in a 7 The “Carrel 100[CourtlStreet'B : Where'theé’ Telephone\Was Tablet Marking the e Telephone, Dec. 15,1925 3 '50N on THE RIGHT, Sherwin ch of Ameri Dr. Be Associ who h a moving picture rt street, Boston, which commemo- f the telephone. | 1 ine 2 that | Bell di Phor the 87. vered the | t- re of man- was then occupied | rh le by | njunction with his Watson, clive and was pr services in De e Se worked durii The men in those early di reproduced. ning sce of the first com- | poh What covered on t was the ight wa urking this his- unveiled by Dr, of sounds, but 1 speech, ty and. the and ‘Telegraph cat the widening situated cutting ding where the shorn. ml, however, New | workshe ing carried on days and holida duging the da where he was t man | mute might learn to ta ling to the | devices on which he ¥ 5, the | ai ‘monic telegraph niber 15,1 hy ted Thomas sooner or ders,” he points ow rapidly they ed and the crue! quest Songs striae Quaint wi is continually and that soquree—the half a mil- silent drama m Kean of Composi sons | for a we of being on a hunt f on of the musical tern play sent researchers for old songs of the Over- land stage and pony express. ThesOri pter, Telephone Pioneers is no longer alive, but his as A. Watson, the man irst sentence of speech nt over the telephone wires, is still ent at the dedica- mber. time he explained how he and Dr. Bell ¢ the summer of 1875. erude work benches used by both 's were also At that Experiments at Night Alexander Graham Bell di «al momentous June day y to transmit. speec! hy wines} He found the principle that sulted not alone in the transmission | ulso of all the delicate | tones and nuances which make up hu- i Bell had been experi- iting for some time in the electrical y of his experiments be- nights and on Satur- s, for he was busy t’ Boston university, aching his father’s sys- ‘tem of visible speech by which a eee 1 One of the at work was by means of which he faa hoped to send six or ese MOVIES BRING OUT OLD SONGS OF THE WEST of Overland Stage and Pony Express Used in Scores Hlogieal Hl 2 Hollywood, ¢ 16.--(P)- aes Search for the American folk song, MUSEUM ROBBED which has brought into relief the Sofia-The Ethnographical Mus - | Negro spiritual and songs of the fron- y, has been | tier, from an unex- robbed of coing, statuetton and other | pec commonly called score They SPEND HONEYMOON IN CLOUDS When Irl Beach trips, . sengers u) mooning doshas y airplane. got married he took his. wite is an a’ for short tri, flying from i town was easy, so the two are Rane: le lives in Arkansas City, Kas. Modern Telephone Born When Vibrating Spring 7 Suddenly Sticks During Experiment in-Garret TNSURANGE | ‘near Burnet. The shale lies close to ful + THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Be a Reereres inal Telephone Morse messages on 8. wire at the same time, without interference. One evening while resting from his struggles with the iced pia Bell turned to his helper and said: “Watson, I want to tell you of an- other idea I have, which I’ think will surprise’you.”” Vibrating Spring Sticks He then went on to explain that he believed it would be possible to talk by telegraph. “TI could make a cur- it without result until suddenly hehear.i. a shout from the adjoining room, follow-1 ing which Bell came in with's rush, | demanding, “What did you do then Don’t change anything. “Let me sec. f What ha bes eye was that when Watson snapped the spring the, circuit oe remained unbrokert while the strip eer steel, by its vibration nthe the pole of its magnet, was gener> ating what Bell had been striving for— a current of electricity that varied in intensity -precisely as the air was, varying in density within hearing | distance of the spring. \ Telephone Is Born Tt was at that moment that the speaking telephone was born. ‘I’ + | mechanism could not articulate, but | the full twang of the spring had come over the wire and Bell knew that if it could transmitall the complex vibrations of one sound, it could do the same for any sound and even for that of speech. Several hours were spent verifying the ‘discovery, repeating it with all the differently tuned springs, and before the two-men parted t! at night Bell had given directions for-making the first tleetzic speaking telephone. . telephone, the first ever made, was the forerunner of the more than 27,080, detec ene eles today. “ “If?” he said, rent. of electri ity vary in intensity, precisely as the air varies in density, during. the production of a sound, I' should: be able to‘transmit speech teisgee eitealige Ap Bell’s dream took on its. first of realization on the afternoon of 4 2, 1875. The two men were at work in the garret of the Williams building, ghee the they had fitted up a wire con- eet two rooms perhaps sixty feet rt" loo! out on Court. street. y ‘atson had cl of the transmitters, setting them s ghosting ‘one after the other, while ae Tetuning the re- ceiver springs one one, pressing them against his ear. When one of the transmitter springs stopped vibrating, Wateon plucked it to start it again, but itdailed-tostartt J He kept-on plucking were rewarded by ‘several quaint songs and also the music of the call played by express riders to"warn of their approach to a remount station. All Tell a Story Most of the songs of stage coach days have a rhythm that reminds one of the better known “Lone Prai-rie” of the cowboy. Virtually all of them have a story to tell. Such a one-is that of Joe Bowers who, the song tells, came to California to win a ke that he might marry a girl in Pike county, Missouri, only to return to find her the’ wife of a red-headed July 1. They estimate the probable , demand for the chemical in the Unit ed States at about 600,000 pounds a year. By-products, such as shellac paint, and disinfectant, are to be pro- duced. The chemical, compounded of sulfonated hydrocarbons, ‘thas sold as high as $80 a pound. | Hijackers Board " Schooner, Steal 1100 Cases Whiskey butcher. The song, with a lilt that es itself, opens: Luenenberg, N. S., Feb. 16—A)— “My name it is Joe Bower: Captain Arthur Whynot, master of 1 ‘have a brother, Ike, hooner Arthur J. Balfodr, I come from old Missouri, Come all the way from Pike. Tl tell you how I came thar And how I came to roam And leave/my poor old mammy So far away from home.” And so it runs through maffy stan- | 288. as just arrived here, relates a story of being boarded by hijackers off Rum Row, Eleven hundred cases of Scotch whiskey were pirated and the captain and his crew were held prisoners on their own ship for 19 days by armed buccaneers. Captain Whynot says the hijackers came alongside the Balfour in a ves- sel disguised as a United States coast guard cutter. ‘Phey overpowered the Nova Scotian crew and transferred the whiskey to the “cutter.” The +i- jackers left on board the Balfour | waited patiently for the return of | their companions who took the whis- | key away, and finally when they did ! Tn @ ’dobe shanty. not come back they sailed the Bal- | She wore a string of beads four.within a few hundreds yards of | And had feathers on her legs —.|the coast, took boats und rowed. to | And peddied beets and cucumbers | land. \ _And hard-boiled eggs. The poor milking qualities of Texas jcows is paid sarcastic tribute in an- | other song; while a fourth tells the; i dire end of George Edwards who fell {from the proud profession of stage \driver to that of “whacking bulls” on ;@ street car. | The melodies of these songs of the} Strain is Haunting Another tings in a tuneful, haunt- ing strain of a thrifty old Indian wo- {man of Albuquerque, known as old | Bobby Cox. Only one stanza is now | remembered: , “Old Botby Cox, Star-wano, come and antee, She lived ‘in Albuquerque Motor Car Buy Should Be Made From Good Dealer frontier of the day when spaces were On¥ Cir a man buss today is worth aon “whe, “Rut ask afy experienced’ motorist if primitive flare for music. [atid he wil tell" you to shop. for a ' Prehistoric Fish | good dealer and buy, whatever car he rel 1 Responsible For — | ity. sor: satistaction in ownership gravitating to the dealer. Operation and maintenance are the outstanding ——F). ed remains of prehistoric fish, from {fering mensure of responsibility ren- twhich is produced the strange chemi-| dered by car dealers to car owners. cal called ichthyol, are to supply Tex-|Actessibility of dependable, sensible, ; cient ocean bed, pushed to the surfa | by stage! aston, near Barnet in Bad Legs Can ‘Now . vest Texai een discovere} a} ‘Be Treated. at Home | sil fish oil used'in medicine, especial-| ly in ointments and in treatment of; eli treatrient wh ne, St pebeaneh | skin diseases, have given the patient up as ine: hg ble, must be somethii jwhere the industry flourished prior |ordinary, ne OME ssaty ‘An ichthyol corporation has been ‘known’ as Every form of bad legs succumbs to this power- Pe | notably wide and open, show thet the| What he pays for it,” says W. E. Lahr men who were men had a creditable|9f,the Lahr Motor Sales company. isells. | jog Maze and morelis the responsibil New Texas Industry i jtems in the cost-of automobile trans- alld, Tex., Feb, 16, Fossil-| portation. ‘These differ with the dif- as with an ultra-modern industry. i In what is believed to be an A... | particular shale from which’ ichthyol | \js extracted, This substance is a for: | ly relieves bad legs withdut staying in bed when doct The halk of the world’s kuyaly phe Vpavoreingy the satieat ny peciliste i viously came from Austrian peela to the World war, = This new treatment is =" “Corporation Formed Fay Emerald Oil. organized and has | acres rating oil. v Varicose ulcers ~~ Yiee cost maintenance necessities is | | department by F. | of. its operation, |earried by the dep: thas Ween three per cent or + Jated “It is undéniably true that almost | TUESDAY, ~ MURDERED . the thing the wise niotorist looks sii ede ‘ns "FUND SHOWS ‘A SURPLUS Assets of State Fund Ate! $833,004.31 — Surplus Totals $688,033.78 Assets of the state 9 insurance fund ‘totaled a0: on December 31, 1925, an audit of Burchard, Grand Forks, shows. { During fhe six and one-half years) the audit shows, $398,325.01 thas beon paid out in fire | and tornado, losses, Liabilities of the fund shows, total ‘only $145 06 @ surplus of $688,033.78. Assets of the fund are liste cash on pane $587,605. premiums receivable. — $119,812.0 bills receivable, interest on warrants, $3 crued’ interest on credit $6,095. furniture and ~ fixtures, $ prepaid reinsurance, $83,- | 428.26, Operating Cost 3 Per'Cent | the report | During the entire period of its’ \ or existance, the report ehgws, the de- Mis s Ania M. Norwood partment had a gross income of $1,- (Ma.) girl whose legless, headless 460,604.64 a torso was found near Media. ‘The 58 as found in “a cin of bushes placed with old-line companies. or, 0" untry estate of Saniuel J. 188 per cent of the total premium | Henderson, Philadelphin lawyer. received. The operating coet for the ~ \ department during its existence ans been $44,002 % three per cent of the gross income. The net income heen $743,666. or 50.9 per cent of the gross income. The report lists all of the risks tment, data on cases in. which risks \have been re- insured. data on all cases in which losses have been paid and other i formation concerning its operetign. Commenting on the results of the enterprise, waich was launched with- out an appropriation and depended on premiums to meet r port said: “The cost of operation hi is not possible to sati I1agents and insurance companies and. the} amount of profit to local agents is, in many cases, hardly enough to off. set the expense and time devoted to a eampaign to get state business. Scores of times, during the progress of this audit, we observed the t'me of the manager ppienstieel from half an hour to half a or more by some persistent innonees agent or friends of an agent, seeking addi- tional insurance. These citizens must be ‘heard even though the busine of the department must stand still while the parley continues. Under the heading of recommenda- tions Burchard suggests that the less than one third permitted % terms of the law of 1919 creating the fund. The operating cost of old legislature require the department to line companies is per cent cr ap- the role of an insura proximately that figure. 7 ich it in fact now i: Has Preferred Risks and placeall its reinsurance in the “However, it must %e understood Same manner and at a3 great a sav- that this is = statement of fa Bea sible instead of placing Y compar: jous companies as has been The state fund cas th the custom of the department. He a monopoly of a ¢ timate: that adoption of this prin- which it has takep by fi ciple would have saved the state and without expense, practically or more that twice the fund. It does n> adverti of operating the state supports nd agents, pays no taxe: and tornado fund for that year and hag the further advantage of Should Go All the Way dealing in a class of risks involving (If the state is :fo conduct t slight ‘moral hasaré business it seems to me t et if a comparison Bs be-| should go th way and prac tween the expenses of ihe depart-| all the ¢ ment art c'd-line com? n parable items of ¢ parison indicates a v handiing of ‘the state i ness. “State insurance tage, nomcly. that the the state and its sions is always fully co amply protected whereas not always been the ca where th ft to the haphazard atten’ ion of pu who were not compe for geaetaily,” said Bur- ake a smal! loca) insur. advan- jm ind tk _of| ferent fr bdiv'- | which the pnd | surance has | j m cher form: this jtion in mind we must conclude that that method is “best, which fulfills routine matte of thin eort. “It in (4a urpose adequately, and at the well known that losses have ocgurred| least expense possible. 1 feel that to political subdivisions because of |my recommendation is fyndamental- lapsed policies and no insurance and | ly nd end it has in its favor the many more losses might ‘have oc-| established ‘actice among old-line curred in this way had there been | com more fires.” he am of the opinion that lega Policy Causes Scramble | the fire and tornado fund could do Commenting on the poli of re-|its ‘business on the same basis as an insuring parts of certain risks with|old line company but I know that old line companies the report said: |any insurance commissioner who “The department has pursued a po!-| would take this step before 1} icy of distribution of reinsurance | rected to do so by the legislature that has permitted local insurance | would i courting political | cruci- agents in almost every community of | fixion fiom the interests he would the state to handle a portion of the | thus antagon state business. While this method s cust : ‘to many insuarnce agents POWERS LAKE BANK CLOSED cee 7 Failure of the state bank of Pow- who heretofore never secured any state business, it has, at the same|ers Lake was announced today by the time, resulted in a general scramble | state bank examiner. was ‘capi- for this line of ‘business with its | talized at $25,000, had a surpl of attendant effort to exert ‘political ; $5,006 and deposits of $144,000. Pow- pull’ and all sorts of ‘influence. Itlers Lake is in Burke county, Serie. emir tod saichying y and together with: vari- the, surface so that the overburden | cose veins disappear. Swollen and of earth may be removed with steam'| painful legs ares reduced and inflam- shovels. Where unex the shale ion and irri“:tion become thi: istic, having the appearance tes ft. ste past. ‘Thousands can testify \asphalt. On the surface it resemb! benefit the: have receli roek. : o@ ufferer shbul bottle of The company expects tee nacre to |. Moone’s' Emerald Olt ‘a ae about 20,000 tong of shale, base pote Se, face: All good ton will about. 126. pounds be -sdre ichthyol.” The officials expect or but you: whe senuine at all copie plant. to Teach 1,000. poundaaa day by ales J cs ‘ \ ’ Ce AO AA A RRO RELEASE. OIE LELOTEE EL LITER SIS SESAME nse | conferences in ay ing di- FEBRUARY 16, 1926 .,| Adventists of State Contribute Heavily Jamestown, N. D., Feb. 16.—The North Dakota Conference of Seventh- day Adventists; Meyer is president, contributed $34 639.90 for the advancement. of fo mission enterprises during. 1925, according to’ 2 repo! ist received from Professor J. w, treasure of .the Foreign Mission Board Washington, D. C, The total amount given in the Northern Union Confer- ence, which includes North and South Dakota, Minnesota and Towa in its territory, was $204,614.33, a per capita, for every week of the year of slight: ly more than 42 cent: Becauge of the liberality of the ad- jherents of the chureh in this. sec of the country, in cooperating toward the advancement of the church abroad, it is possible to carry forward the program which. the Mission Board has outlined without the slightest re- trenchment. There are twelve unioh North America, and these contributed $2,488,587.50. The other lceal conferences that are ineluded in the Union eontributed {us follows: South Dakota $42,191.34, (Or 2 per capil cents per week for the year, this being the largest weekly amount given by any of the local conferences. Plunkett ed for more than an hour to xtart his coupe. then lifted the ‘hood and’ found ihat someone had | stolew the motor. Don’t nies seeing “What Happened to Jcnes” with Reginald Denny at the Capitol Pheatre starting ‘tomorrow. TO TULSA BY FORD GETS FINE JOB His Ford car son in Tulsa and his training at Da- kota Business College, I argo, land- ed him in an excell “t position with the Oki homa Stecl Castings Co. there. **Dakotans”’ win good posi- tions far and wide because of super- ior training, receiving actual ‘‘ex. perience’? in fully equipped offices six days a week. (Copyrighted—un- obtainable elsewhere). Recently placed: Genevieve Sullivan, with Agricultural College; W. H. Han- son, with MidlandContineytalR. R. “Follow the Succe$$ful’’—next Write F. L. Watkins, 36 Front St., Fargo. Old Fears Gone! Once a woman of her age had to be careful, Today, she eate anything she wants—and breathes freely 1 No sourness, or bad breath Chew a Stuart tabl and you need ne ing di hor offense to otlers. A little alkaline is ull your stomach needs! ) _ Full Box FREE! Every druggist has Stuart’s tablets, 25e and GOc. Or, a full box free if you write the F. A. Stuart Company, Dept, Marshall, Mich. oe a metal box of Stuart's for the pocket—and {Keep it filled! Hearty eat rd smokers— iuigh livers—find Stuart's a booh and T'S STUART. DYSPEPSIA RT'S DR, R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Consulation Free Lucas Blk. Bismarck, N. D. OLDSMOBILE SALES AND SERVICE DAKOTA AUTO ~ SALES CO. 219 Malu St. Phone 428 to Foreign Missions’ of which Rev. H.*

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