The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 23, 1926, Page 8

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FIRST PHOTOS OF UTAH DISASTER! | é Geveral young stars, who |body ‘buys a cat the whole commu-|after he gets a car than he did be- i? trials, show | nity benefits, The man who owns and | fore. So | o fhe inong them is Tol-| drives a car ie @ better workman, mer-| “Conservative folks used to, look H = 7 E : " 2 mY, ” gon, wilte first baseman; | chant, professional man, ‘ighbor, | upon a poor man who bought a car as ‘ | F i Oa “ q : 2 ¢ Jeanes, who is back in the big show | friend, and citizen than the man who|an unmitigated wastret.. Now. the | : : Seger. 4 3 for @ second trial; Buddy Myer, who | does not. acquisition of a car is an exhibition * : a Ae “, hopes to take Peckinpaugh’s job with} “Any man makes mere - moncy,|of good sense, progress ‘and echieve- d 3 * % Meee LG Washington, and Leroy Jones, who| spends more money and has more fun | ment.” ‘ D 2 . also. will get a trial with the Sene- \ ACT IS ASK FUND FOR SON An in all, however, the prominent Modified Prohibition System, players in the Gouthern League the Legalizing Wine and Beer, AN HONEST DEAL There is basis for real pride in the fact that customers seldom ask us to guarantee our Used Cars. It indicates that our efforts to build up public confidence were well directed. Our reputa- tionis ample assurance of honest deals and honest values.. M.3.GILMAN CO. BROADWAY AT SECUND SF, Prone prominent per 4 selected by the conference, The committee was appointed after num- ers, including members of congress and men, and women wel known in business and club life the clergy, condemned — prohi under the Volstead law a reaper st season were men whose names Bey and His Mother, Mrs.) have been familiar to the fan for go- fe Bet 23 oR Is Wanted Ldiabat eect DOLLAR IS AT s Ws New York, Poh, 23—()—James A.|” \Stiflman, banker, now in Paris with - s wife, has established a substan-|* his eight-year-old son, whose mother ix Mrs, Florence H. Leeds. 83 the banker, admitted today that the the facts” co fund had been establised last Novem- { prohibition amendment, w:! z up = : held. Mz. Sullivan declined to con-' Daughter of Jamestown Col- vn a : d to cor 7 firm or deny that the fund was for | with a principal of $150,000 upon his jcoming of age. Mrs. Leeds also will | Standards There Establishment of the fund was vol- |” untary on Mr. Stillman’s part, Mr.| Jamestown, ry 1 f legal action by Mrs. Leeds. | in interior China es well as else- | "tn the divorce proceedings bro where, aerortine % letter received Broussard, ; 3 |man charged that he was the father! Representative, ; ; . d a 3 a of Mrs. Leeds’ two children, one of; ing on 10 or 20 years. Florence Leeds, Adequate- tial trust fund for Jay Ward Leeds, William M. Sullivan, attorney for INLAND CHINA t night. by her. The exact figures were with- area | $20,000 a year, until the boy is 21| lege Dean Writes of Money {be taken care of adequately. Sullivan said, ‘There were no threats | The American dots: 2 premium Senators jby Mr. Stillman in 1922, Mrs. ‘here by F. at dgee Sa eeea wid, — Benedict | whom died. and, form ; i Copyright, 1926, by NEA Service, Inc.| Mr. Stillman lost his suit, and a James Dunc Oa oO. Workmen struggled day and night to rescue the injured and bring up the bodies of the dead after |referee upheld Mrs, Stillman’s con- president of the A. ; re always a letter re- 3 ee Lt Vie Site ce of ae: ion as to what we shou! erate Dupont, Wilmington Del ran avalanche buried the town cf Bingham, Utah. Bedies cf some of the victims, however, may have to |tentions regarding Mrs. Leeds. upont, ington Del; end laborers. The stap is 7: posed ta be copper cash, but BRL Washington: ‘anklin, Wash. remain under the now that m until spring. ge ington, Dr. Julius wild, Bal RECORDS SHOW —- in oan ch of oe Cra yh affect prices, ou; nol ly. year sge dollars were 1, 0 to 1,300 cesh, ordinarily, 1,400 cash to the dolla: sidered bigh. timore: Archibald Hopkins, Wa Py rade, dollars are 2400 cash, more or IN SOUTHLAND, ss. Yesterdsy was the first time —— BISMAaAREK ton; Rupert Hughes, the no’ J, M. P. Murphy, New York S. Priest; St. Loui c Rockmann, Boston; Ch New York; Wm. M.S dD Donee BAoTHeRs Deaens Set Goon Usen Cans Augustus Thomas, Ne Townley, New York, and KR. VP. Wood, Philadelp Beer R pt Read The conference, after hearing at afternoon and night sessions repeat demancs rewriting of the bition laws, luded after the recerpl was they have been down to 2,300. “A day laborer used to get 200 cash ‘a day, and now he receives 400. Prices of meat, vegetables, etc., have risen, but not that much. The price Of rice has scarcely risen at all (good crops end no way of getitng it out), loth end other things from ‘outsid | Wilbur Good, Big League Star Dozen Years Back, Led in Hitting $10,000.00 PER ACRE You can earn that much and more in.an industry that is recom- mended and erjdorsed by the Agricultural Department of the-U. 8. ‘ 7; are paid for on a dollar basis. The oe < ne 23.—Ponce de Leén | Mexican doller is used and American Government, by Presidents of leading agricultural’ colleges, and by got off his course when he |gold exchange brin: premium of hard headed imen.** This has nothing to do with stocks or bonds or Florida real estate or schemes of any kind. You can earn $50,000 or more per year on your farm here in North Dakota and your success is Guaranteed. Unless ycu are able to control $4,000 or mora do not answer. Replies from idle curiosity seekers are ‘not wanted. If you can honestly convince us that you are able to meet this requirement of $4,000 we will explain this wonderful opportunity. It is the farmer's redemption. Write 3. R. CALHOUN Gardner Hotel, Fargo, North Dakota at : : 3 5 % : : : Bian. & : landed in Florida in his search for|76 cents on the di pn ee Te aa 3 a ss = a ae | a et) ial et aries youth, eer National chairman ean socl : instead the should have struck the ton tailed. to, receive, from the | coast of the Atlantic several hundred Everybody Should department of justice a ruling we 16-5 ‘miles north of St. Augustine and then muested as to the legality of making t struck due west, me indnitey: wri Boost Motor Car it public. i ¢ : : ¥ oe would have brought him to Atlant, Mr. Hill, who was toastmaster, ad | me : a : Keeping on with his wanderings in Sales, Says Lahr vised the ‘delegates that if any ’ . : : : land and turning thence southward them feared that by taking hone 3 to the Gulf, he might have found still |. “Every new motorist means a bet- copy of the receipt he would | more fountains in which a bath would |ter town,” says W. E. Lahr of the gz the law, then “the se guarantee youth and vigor. Lahr Motor Sales Co. “Whenever any- The Leading Hitter aving printed a For instance, the playing averages mented grape juic of the Southern League, recently is- beer formula, Mr. sued, show that the leading hitter of ey Washington w \the league in 1925 was J. Wilbur h : / = man--he made Good. He was so full of energy and HAT. the cost of living has increased in the ‘ i ont “3 : | Verve that he played in no less than : © pars i 2 ection. eae er tear Consresemen ‘ 163 games and hatied for 879 with ast ‘twelve is beyond question. TORT LOZenE the -Atlanta team, whereby ‘he beat sitiami : ‘ " known as one othe ' ‘ perl gperec pra fest AGA Pare It.y be illeminatiog and: interesting to re as well represented in) pe a Copyright, 1926, by NEA Service, Inc. | venerable adjunet of baseba'l, J. Car- view the: facts. and reduce them to terms of Bias ts members This photograph shows how the mining town of Bingham, Utah, looked after thousands of tons of | lisle Smith, who had led the league i gasoline... % i Se coctat now and earth slid down from the mountainside, burying houses and men alike in a smother of wreck- | in hitting the year before. Good was ag ss age that cost upwards of seventy lives. !a big leaguer 15 years back. jpase.our. case on:statistics ished by pacity Senator ME ‘ : Le es i dand- then, turning over. to the Fy thom f t of in the iver, tots, MUSCLE SHOALS, THAT TAXED THE ~~~: pitching records of the Southern, who spirit of the rapids just now is pe-'do we find listed in the 10 most ef- ath te aver- half of modified pro various orial col-| ing freed she will scatter fective pitchers? They are led by grateful fs n mankind. The Vegan Gregg, 40-year-old exponent of ng said the onists INDIANS’ BRAWN, IDEAL OF AN [iiss s/s 2: te eS meen = = “Rube” Robinson, who is even clder,! os rhe Explorer’ land. then comes ‘Hugh Bedient, who | ‘We use 1913—the last year of normal, pre- ’ Rack aa ee sears oR an old Was. @ seasoned star when Boston war prices—as.a basis for comparison with the ack about 13 $ ago an ol = e 5 ¢ i sit Toritemporance EXPLORER S$ DREAM 130 YEARS AGO explorer by the name of William paged iniareneee series in 1912, or} latter. part of 1925. toa | Shs, SOE eT on ett Pitchers ners ia au ‘ | MWe eelect'milk 2s a typical staple commodity | (Eitor’s Note Congress. is dueah, Ky About half way in this] ™ immense and | And, in the first yim Bagby and : and Chicago as a.representative city of the ing wut the ie ies ot tiWanite ourse ab the toe of ‘the sheffield that of Guy Morton, and Jim Scott,. : ? : Shoal ernment | ; rie curve, the river makes its principal | ® : 4 nt pi so far t r y power \ investment of , . plunge from the level of the hills to aphaee ati ‘erlaiian a ees 9(4, How shall this huge power: plant,| the lowlands, It drops 134 feet in is were op- bout. the time the American: a capable of nearly 1,000,000 horsepow-| 37 mile he again in: 10 eos = declaring iteuanjenigs er, be administered? By the fede Rich Minera = of the Pan- i 5 Pescenmentt< Or by Widntn capitak| CATNIn atLeeRC Re Coat anclTooa Ae the “latter! But the vets do not carry off all under a long lease? And to | river is M Shoals, It’ is almost | © ath at nine uses shall the plant be put? The: int the center of a quadrangle cor-| a to much, because boats could get, Tribune publishes he neving on Memphis, Birmingham,| by the rapids only when high water of a series of three stories | Chattanooga and Nashville, It has| flushed the canals, |» ! — Britt, written afte open waterway to the Gulf of Mexi-| , Realization of the sites value for, Rey : tag of condit t Muscle § i Covad ligne inc ibel boa exi- | waterpower came about 20-years ago, Washington Senaiors’ Star articles tell of the romantic | the Meiaetanineeal oelnaakne Aciny., suelgecta mnie 3 - suppey. in ° building this gigantic set of harness fought over rerentedle in the | 190% and boom development began to Backstop Has a Most Re- (On the Tennescce river, of the yereat! Civil Wate utd, Wetene tate oot, {82 | smoulder. ( jengineering problems conquered, and| federal ity. idetach uid a big|""Wartime emergency brought ac: le e roble maquered, and} federal cavalry a i 4 1 ag markable Record \thkows some light on. the. present | pursuit, oc Forrest which franc tha| tion. Munition factories needed ni- ° ° ‘status of the project.) y at the,shoals and carpeted the | ttic acid for explosives. President, eye at, Clark Grittien! BY GEORGE BRITT stream with horseshoes pulled off on | Wilson ended a ‘deadlock as to the/ ar probably was misquoted, or misun- i a ndent) rocky bottom. site by deciding in September, 1917, Herstood, when he was made to say in, Washi i e Shoals once’ was simply| Upon, Muscle Shoals. Work deasted ae / a newspaper dispatch that he would il : e barrier to navigation and a nui- |" the big dam which was to pro-| Local People Urged to Use| aoe ey eieDathe coming season, Shoals to the rapids of the Terinessee | sance. Today it fs one of the fairest | duce waterpower, | It was Fealized) "yj Measures to Com- | SOs aie Pale eae river because it took a lot of muscle} of prizes for hydro-electric power | that this would be a five-year pro- worens \ Mae ine peed of the Washipgton |t push a canoe upstream at that) exploitation and the promise of mar- ject, however, and two nitrate fac-| bat Further Spread of Deep club meant, doubtless, was that Ruel , Point. i ; velous industrial prosperi tories were built to operate by steam) . Grippy Colds. Wouldn't be called on to wear him- : Well they: lah porapl ay a There was an Indian legend that power unt ae nrgre sleet. gen-| ° . . od on to le every being a tough pull, for they h the rapids, bound by the] ¢tators should take ap the burden. NTA malt ant paccninags practically every ‘thrusting their’ paddles ag was a beautiful Waterspite.| This was the beginning of the PNEUMONIA CHIEF Havor Ruel is far from the afflictions | torrent which at flood stuge ; Some day, said the medicine man, | teat Work on which the government DANGER : of age that beset men like Peckin- manta aca a million horsepower. | magician in human form would | #88 x send fag Soe btomeo ae NF c : he Tennessee river, forth his wand and the sweet | the nitrate plants an h Oo”) Gri 7 paugh, and others, on, the Washing | ge" Anpatuchian stretch forth his wand and the sweet | MG Tieng dlectric generating equip. | Grippe Attacks Weaken Body's Re- | ton eee duch steady eateh-| Knoxville, swings south in hrall, to join her. lover in the air,! ment. Its immediate object was to} sistance to Germs of Pneumonia oats (Pa lege ae eady Ain, [Shoe curye into Alabama and n Propagandists of Muscle Shoals de.) turn out munitions. One of the) —-All Colds Should be Treated ing as has been imposed upon Him. again to empty into the Ohio al Pa-| velopment will agree loudly that the| Plants produced its first nitrate two Promptly. confound the dope, wherein he is x months of uncertainty, during which | ual ; ‘ 4 ein h Y i 4 y prevalent there this winter. The notable an’ exception as is DISCUSS PROTECTION FOR OSAGES (| Wentcared that the way to usivane (Giteaton ls felts eomacal toraoraee Ruel hardly will reach the record Vocl |the works was to manufacture fer-|out the States. In some sections Gamay Schalk for durabilit fl * : er. Now opinion has shifted un-|these colds are called “influenza,” Mertion work, but \ : til it seems clear that the | signifi- pbut the majority of health officers Shoat Rear at sehany catcher: in !ecance of Mustle Shoals is tremend-{report that they are mach milder modern-day baseball. ously and almost entirely in the|than the original epidemic and re-| nee ‘Always a. Hard’ Worker realm gf hy; ro-ele rie powe semble more closely the old-fashioned Te was a glutton for work befo: aahey, ila Dae le ‘grippe. They are usually accom: |; he got into the major league cire The "WATeOr ne, Humbe oot cai in \aeaad Dy 8 Readadhe ox Eke. teal oe and” he never has spared hims he world,: today is virtually over the body, “running of the nose,” ete. Four generators began gr sneezing and frequently by gastric’ g out electricity last fall, produc- | and intestinal complications such @s' ing about 120,000 horsepower, whiclf"hiccoughs, nausea. diarrhea, ete. is being distributed temporarily by| Colds are too often neglected until the Alabama Power Company, Four | they have lowered -the vitality. suf. other generators, ‘to bring the total | ficiently to permit the lurking ge Pa ca we fae capacity | whieh cause pneumonia, bronchitis io se power, wi com- ; ‘body. became a Yankee. He caught 81 ot Gea tia Seine, ; and Pee CEL me st body i Chan games that year as a recruit, caught q T ire full. ae Caane 82 the next year and then started a) ’ ; he ehtire full-power capiicity of | “ The only safe plan is to attack a ‘li the shoals is estimated at 000 to| cold right at the beginning. A» hot: durability record. i 800,000. horsepower, At the lowe?t} foot bath, a lanaien a sweat and a In 1921, having been traded to Bos- | jJow-waler stage. it is ‘not expected to| etmerous ‘application of. Vicks: Vapo- ton, he edught 118 games for the Ted | drop below 160,000 horsepower. Rab at bedtime over throat and. chest Sox; handled 116 in 1922 and then, This’ power, [eis crtiated, can ve will often break up w cold avernight, bit, be produced by e government at.a| Fo; 8 is es umazed the erities by the way, slight, 3 f Beet aly Aa ciate: pee itisatt tee i Saen, afiae eae is enplled as is his build, by the ease hich | - $ S i hour. It can be delivered to manu- s, thyme and. turpentine, re- | he handled Walter Johnso : : : : ft and individual customers is vapors by the body heat, £ for 5 cents~per kilowatt hour, . This inhaled directly into the infected is comparison with the.. prevailing At the ti 5it| ] since. As a youngster from ‘the St. Lonis lots he went to Memphis in; 916 and caught 105 games in that | ate; the next year he caught 133; | whieh were about ull Memphis played. | He went into service in the war | period of 1918, and then in 1919 he | he went to Washington, where he| speed. | He caught 136 games for Washing- | n in 1923; in 1924 he helped the mators to a pennant by catching all sorts of pitching in 147 games. ! Last year he caught 126 games for/| the two-time champions of the Amer- “fean Teague. © rate throughout the south of from 7 to 20 cents per kilowatt hour! ‘This great power can be used to ease in, the burdens of. 15,000,000 people,; It is an obstinate cold indeed’ that: seattered within @ radius of 600:miles | oan resist this direct, double action. Vapor Steam rawing out” the. soreness pene eal. “ ‘ lust how to go about this distri- bution ‘is what is perplexing Con-| stopp gress right now. z sie! ” juoted Bench him now for Tate or Sever- ‘eid or any other bnekstop? Griff aoe have been misquoted or having an are, ‘Ruel won’t reach 30-mark in Bocrdl Febrasty. 20 of thie year.|Mujor General W. Lillic, otherwise known as “Pawnee Bill,” old time ‘and as Kpelle nec and former partner of the famous Buffalo: Bill, discusses bition as = zouple of | with r Chief Bacon Rind cf the Osage Indians means of protect- ing the Indians against depredations by lawless whites, Will K. } , le, rich Osage cattle a ewan Lag bet re lniietes doy, ie ia ao bag i es be} q ways bas been known as one best of the Osage Indians,...He stands for complete justice: { : the Osage situation.

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