The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1926, Page 3

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rates MONDAY, MAY: 8, 1996. HERO AWARDS ANNOUNCED BY | CARNEGIE FUND Five of Those Recognized Lost Their Lives in Their | Heroic Deeds Pittsburgh, May 3—(#)—Five of the heroes recognized b; negie Hero Fund Commission at the spring meeting here Saturday, lost} their lives in the commission of heroic deeds.. Fifteen other acts of} heroism were eited, a bronze medal! being awarded in each case. The dependents of those who made the supreme sacrifice were ‘awarded pensions aggregating $3,840 a year,| while one was given $50 to be applied as the Commission sanctions. In ad- dition, $1,600 was appropriated for educational purposes and $11,000 for other worthy puropses, In all twenty cases bronze medals were awarded. The Dead Heroes Those who lost their lives were: Stanley C. Delanoy, 14, student, died attempting to save a girl from drown- ing at Grassy Point, N. Y., July 22, 1924. The medal went to his father, Delbert A. DeLanoy, 121 Shippen St., Weehawken, N. J Stuart Kieffer, 1212 Miller Street, N. Y., died in an attempt to rescue a man’ from drowning at Eaton, ‘. ¥., August 1 the medal and a month with $3 onal month- ly for a daughter, was awarded the widow. William John Crawfond, Box 65, East Jordan, Mich., died attempting to ‘ave a man from drowning at East Jordan, Mich. July 1924; medal and $65 a month, with monthly ad- ditional far cach of th children to tthe widow. F. Hale Bilston, Rural Route & iL, died attempting to save owning at Mason, Ill. 924; medal with $65 a month » monthly additional for each of } children ta the widow. | Robert W. Gibson, Mason, TIL, post-| master, died attempting to rescue al i man from drowning at Mason, IIl., Aug. 2, 1924; medal with $55 a month and $5 a month additional for each of five children to the widow. One woman reecived recog any births 100 years hene Billy Warhurst, 2, of Alameda, Cali He named) him “Sport” and took know whether they’d let him stay. fire and “Sport's” isfactory, saving lars in four year If you are running a plant, a fac- tory, or a newspaper, look around. A dollar saved is better than a dollar earned. There is no “overhead” on savings. m 36 million dol- Birth control advocates, not allow- ed to tell all they know through the mails, find comfort in the n&tional birth rate that has dropped, without So Now Billy Can Keep Him barking saved nine liv: | { , found a stray dog on tHe street. j him home, but his parents didn’t But that night the house caught . So Billy can keep him. | — — Hn | Auto Mechanic Dies | From Burns, Funeral) Was Held Saturday, ( rt, us | Hebron, } May 3--Ed. Diff: it Golden Valley, turday. Diffart seriously burned the first of the w while repairing an automobil | i birth control assistance, 30 per cent! the gasoline torch whic in 30 years. If the drop should con | exploded. throwing blazing gasoline | tinue at that there Idn't be} over him. He was taken to a hospital x , But nature ‘takes care of such She is Mrs. Helen Certeude Dickey things, and birth control advocates 1815 North Delmont Avenue, Spring- | is) es, but while the birth field, Ohio, dairy farmer. She was awarded a bronze medal for rescuing a farm hand from an enraged bull at Springfield, Jan. 19, 1922. Other Heroes The other heroes are: Eddie ( Mathews, 124 West Elm illsboro, Tex., saved a woman and child from being killed by a train | ‘at Hillsboro, October 28, 19 S. Elisworth Lewis, Upper cotia, Canada, farmer, saved & armer from drowning at Up- y, July 19, 1924. v "Wathen, Milford Sta- tion, Nova Scotia, Canada, saved a boy yom drowning ‘at Milford Station, | June 9, 1922. Jacob A. Kyser, Rural Route 2, Canastota, N. | from drowning at Sy Y., De- cember 5, 192 John J. Fogelman, 313 East 86th’ #treet, Brooklyn, N. Y., saved a girl,! a woman and a at Gloversy Leslie Wilt: Scotia, Canad Economy, | re, Hortonville, Nova ved a boy drowning at Avonport, N. S., July 19,)#reat 24. Calvin S. Orth, 525 Ontario avenu Renova, Pa., saved a boy from drown- ing at South Renova, Pa., December 2, 1924. Henry Niedenfuehr, 318-A West Maine Street, Belleville, Ill., saved a woman from drowning at New Athens, M., July 4, 1923. John T. Turlington, 2308 Harwood avenue, Rural Route 7, Richmond, Va., saved a child from being killed by an electric ear at Phoebus, Va., July 28, 21. 1 etiward V. Coleman, 335 Ashton. street, Hazlewood, Pittsburgh, saved two children from being killed by a train at Etna, Pa., March 6, 1925. Samuel M. Fowler, Westcliffe, Col- orado, helped to save a mine worker from suffocating at Bonanza, Colo., Aug. 14, 1923. liam W. Smith, Rural Route 1, Levy, Arkansas, helped in the rescue at Bonanza, Colo., with Fowler. William A. Davidson, Orient Mine, Mineral Hot Springs, Colorado, took part in the réscue at Bonanza with Fowler and Smith. : Thomas C. Ritson, Jr., Edna Mine No. 1, Adamsburg, Pa., 14, school boy, saved two girls from drowning at Adamsburg, July 13, 1925. \ (Continued from page one. worked hard, and the public wi pathize with ‘him in this difficul: But, as has been stated here, in- vestment in newspaper stock, is dan- gerous. is good, it is not for sale. If it isn’t good, you don’t want to buy it. Bonds on an established, profitable ‘newspaper are sound. Don't buy steci : Starting a n x is “a business for itself” that ‘requires peculiar ability. Many a rich man has found that money alone will not make a newspaper go. Jay, Gould was glad to sell his New York® World to Joseph Pulitzer. asap { Many things can stif be learned in modern industry. Ask Henry Ford ‘about ‘that. By adding two cents to the cost of material in a certain automobile part he cut down labor, increased speed, reduced the tetal cost of the part by 40 per cent, saving $1,200 a day. That isn’t much to Ford, but every little bit helps. : He did better with a now process ‘for making artificial leather. That saved him $12,000 a day. His improved methods of treating steel with heat, were even more sat- PILES DISAPPEAR “Please let me tel? you,” says Pet- ‘erson, “that for instant relief from ‘the migery of blind, bleeding or itch- ing piles, there is ncthing so good as Peterson's Ointmen:, as thousands thave testified. Best for od sores and titehing skin. All druggists, 60 cents. e| which do not pass away }. rate diminishes among the upper classes, it continues as great as ever among lower and less fit classes.” Don’t worry about that, either. The best mother is the woman who wants children, not the lady whose ‘husband has the biggest bank account, or the most familiar with “Shakespeare and the musical glas: Boy Scout Movement Is Instrument For Good Says Coolidge (Continued from page one.) the world can not fail to justify th belief that wherever these pow of evil may be located, however great may be their apparent extent, tie are not realities, and somewhere th is developing an even greater powe x of good by which they will be over- We need a greater f: in the from, Strength of right,living, We nced a of right faith, in the pow w eousn: are the Plant Alfalfa on Ground Free From “Alfalfa should not be planted on ground which has quack dodder if the grower expects to pro- duce marketable seed,” advises 0. Agricultural college. “The North ‘ota seed law prohibits 'the sale of any Kind of seed for planting pur- poses which contains seeds of quack- 4rass, dodder, sow thistle or Can- ada thistle,” he states, “It is possible to remove most of the seeds of quackgrass from alfalfa seed, but even with the best care a few seeds are likely to remain. If only a few such seeds are present, some samples may not contain them. If seed is sold on this sort of a sample, the withdrawal of the@sced may still be demanded if later ex- aminations show that such illegal seeds are present. “Seeds containing illegal weed seeds cannot be certified for plant- ing purposes. The production of su- perior seed require;—eare similar to that necessary for the production of superior animals, Seed of uncertain | pedigree planted upon weedy ground cannot be expected to produce a crop which will be in demand for seed purposes.” “Takes to Golf TAKEICHI HARADA Famous Japanese tennis star, who ‘has taken to golf as a means of recrea- tion between tournaments. Here h depicted on the links of the Ashevill (N. C.) Country club. y say hi swings a mean stick, desipte being game. comparatively new at Have your used mattress. made over like new at the Bis- marck Mattress & Renovating }Co. Phone 605... ° °° | attempt realities if All Noxious Weeds | grass or) § A. Stevens, seed analyst, North Da-, ‘| days and éf any skinny man or woman and given all possible medieal atten-| tion but his burns were so serious that he died Wednesday evening. Payment Stopped on Draft Engberg Hartld Hopton, manager of the state bonding fund, tcday was try- ing to collect a draft of $1,250 on a South Dakota bank, given him by E. E. Engberg, former treasurer of Divide ccunty; charged with de-; faleations totaling more thant $15,000. ngberg stopped payment on the | draft when the full amount, of the shcrtaze ‘certained. He ex- lained that since the shortage was: so large it was us for him to to pay and that his father might as well keep the Money loaned him for that pur- pose. ' “Hello There” Given Final Presentation 12 Tho an wo-art Hello There,” given | of abcut 200’ people under t nices of the Ladies’ Auxil jthe U. C. 4 i nat the citv auditorium twday evening before a fair- udience, The last perform. | s equally as good as that of evening, and the catchy nd clever dance numbers brought much applause from the! audience. The play was directed | by members of the Zura Produc tion company BSE AU Ds SDSS IS SSO | Last Minute |! News Bulletins 4 Jamestown, N. D., May 3—(2) | —J. C. Lester, farmer of west of Edmunds who was badly. burned in saving his family and livestock from the prairie fire which razed there two weeks ago, is reported today as getting along very nice- ly at Trinity hospital here, where | he was brought by the Stutsman county Red Cross the last of the week, -@! > Jamestown, N. D., May 3.—(?) —Bli Clow, laborer, was severely cut on the face Saturday after- noon when a storm window which he was helping remove from the second story of the Bolinger building fell on him. Five | stitches were necessary to cluse | the wound, Wilkes Barre, Pa. May 3—(AP) —Between 20 and 30 persons were injured, six seriously, today when | the ceiling of the Savory Theatre, ‘a motion picture house, collapsed. It was feared one of the ipjured, Andrew Dielinski, 14. years old, | may die. A Candidate For : Secretary-of State Grand Forks, N. D., May-3—(®)— H. 0. Rice, railway conductor of Grand Forks. has announced himself as a candidate for the Farmer-Labor party nomination for secretary of state of North Dakota, SKINNY MEN GLAD Doctors and good pharmacists know that Cod Liver Oi] is full of vitamines that make flesh, create appetite,| builds up the power to resist discase and puts good solid. flesh on skinny men and women, But it’s horrible tasting stuff and every day fewer people ape taking it, for, doctors are prescribing and people are fast learning that they can get better results with McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Compound Tablets, which Cowan’s conatry, re having a tremendous de- mai . One woman gained 10 pounds in 22 }are in a hospital here suffering from | wound ‘the injured v | pickaxe ‘handle. siding near Rang’ i Gave Bonding Fund) :*« ‘of ' Drug Store andjdruggists all over the|. DEVILS LAKE NEGRO COLONY HAS A BATTLE Two Are in Hospital With Bul- let Wounds—Five Ne: , groes Under Arrest D., May 3—(AP)— + @ man and a woman, Devils Lake, Two negro bullet wounds, and five other negroes are under arrest as the resutt of dis turbances in the negro’ section on the fe of the city last night. Harvey Busby has « bullet in her right leg and Walter Brown was shot through the left arm, has a broken knee and a bad seulp wound. Harvey Busby, husband of man, is in the county jail charged with shooting Brown and with beating him over the body with a Brown will face.a charge of assault with a dangerous apon when he recovers from - juries, since Mrs. Busby charges that he shot her during what appears to have been a drunken melee, according ‘to the police. Mrs. Ada Morton, colored, from the fray with an in and has been jailed for vag Others arrested’ following the. fii are William Johnson, Walter Harri son, James Green and Georgia Green, the latter's daughter, all colored, All are charged with Georgia Green $15 to City Magistrate D. G. Duel when she pleaded guilty to the charge against her. 9 KILLED WHEN TRAIN STRIKES AN AUTOMOBILE and Mrs. Fred Kriede- man, Rangley, Victims— 7 Children Survive Minot, N, D. Mrs. Fred (2) —Mr. and farmers re- miles south- cast of Mingt, were instantly killed the automo- y were riding was it Northern train No, ig in Rangley. Seven May 3. Kried children su Musical Program Tomorrow Night at City Auditorium A variety of musical entertainment. will be furnished at the city auditor- ium tomorrow night when’ the high ‘hool s organizations, Rich- holt schoo! pupils and dancing pupil Mr . W. Henderson will tal rt in the program, I rise at 8:15 o'clock. nment is free d the public ttend. holt school, cf High school girls’ glee on’s pupils 's for the pag- ngs,” will be: arion Devit of Liberty. .Alpha Icenoggle kee Doodle. .Vivian Coghlan rl Svanen -Ralph Rand Luella Harding yron Benser Indian Music America ... Hail, Columbi: Battle Hymn of the sel Suxvik. Virginia Reel—Dorothy Rigler, Don. id Lewis, Maxine Pickles, Melv ‘Thorsen, Gladys Hanson, Paul Mi hollan, Ichen, Edward Church, y “Shuren, Richard Elofson, Elaine Riggs,’ Norman Agre. : - The program of, dancing is as fol- lows: Debutante of Tomorrow—Dorothy Sigurdson, Lois Riggs, Frances Frahm andy Alice Knowles. Clown Dahee-—Mary Ellen Hofiman, Peggy Skeels, Odessa Schipfer, Carol Schipfer, Mary Mahlman, ' Peggy Homan, Harriet Rosen and Margaret Mundy. Daisy Dance-—-Lois Riggs and Fran- jces Frahm. Columbine—Helen Sholwater, Ern- estine Dobler, Beverly Snyder and Elizabeth Ann’ LaRose. Trumpet Dance—Denice Dickinson and Dorothy Doyle. ° | Temperatures and 1 | Road Conditions | a '&. (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) Bismarck—Clear, 30; roads good. St. Cloud—Clear, 30; roads good. MP AENY, cloudy, 32; roads ood. : Mankato—Partly cloudy, 45; roads good. : Fargo—Clear, 24; roads good. Hibbing-——Clear, 25; roads good. Jamestown—Clear, 38; roads good. Grand Forks—Clear, 32; roads good. Mandan—Partly cloudy, 34; roads good. > Duluth—Clear, 32; roads good. Rochester—Cléar, 8; roads poor to impassable. Winona—-Cloudy, 38; roads fair. Ton Late To Classify FOR RENT--One nicely furnished room for one or two, Phone 3463 or call at 408 Tenth St. FOR RENT—-3 unfurnished rooms newly painted and cleaned. Also baby sulky for sale. Phone 1175R. TYPEWRITER-—Good standard key- doard, $10.00, Call Tuesday eve- ning.’ 615 Sixth Street after 7 p. m,_ Phone 619M. WAITER WANTED at Clifford's Cafe.. ‘ FOR RENT—Clean, modern sleeping room and also be used for light) housekeeping if. desired. Close in. ‘Call ‘at 15 Thayer Sh FOR SALE—Porch swing; oak library table; ki tables; ‘dining table; and dresser; complete bed. 619, Second St. ” can't put on 5 pounds in 30 days, your droggist is authorized to refund the. sats Be se cents. + vee ;| shown by the statistics which Orto Republic—Rus-| games have tbeen scheduled, two more oak extension] k, the sidelines stated that the practice was the best early season workout seen here in several years. Baseball | Additional Sports n here if 4 prospec ul “¢| rf i} all is urged to attend the next ‘PENITENTIARY | |i:53%32 ~ARINERECORD : Won 17 Games and Lost 5 Last Year--Team Batting | Average Is. 425 | and catchers are ti needed, so there will be enough in reserve to take care of all emergenci PRISON TEAM seball teams which come to Ris. | marck to play its star baseball team | should bring ple: f pitchers -tiat | is if pail ime averages | ‘The team always has the advantage of playing ‘on the home grounds, in! fact it has; never played anywhere | else, for the simple reason that it i [tthe team of the state penitentiary, jevery: member of which is a convict. It is, managed by Clarence Orton, | 8 lifer, who trains his men just as faithfully as any big league manayer Every summer afternoon when th Fourth Straight Victory of This Season The prison All Stars fourth straight game when they de: feated Mercer yesterday by a score of 9 ing inficjde on made a dash for a linedrive and re- keeps on. ‘his club's performance red the side in the fourt Last year it won 17 games and fost | stop Jackson made seveya five. The year before that it won! assists and put-outs 19 ‘and lost: three. To date this} Mercer made a try in the seven year it has won three and lost none. and every. victory was by an impres-| hy Raugust, and scored thre sive re. Jamestown was beaten the made four mor hit 14 to 7, Solen 23 to 2 and Washburn eighth and ninth, but only 26 to 10 once after two out in the ninth Last y T box score: .{took four hits, including « home run ar the team scored 220 runs to its opponents 94, stole 140 bases All Stars to the opponents 39, had a fielding ABRH POA K percentage of .960 and «macked the | Rile sat ie eas ae opel 0 pill for the i ‘average of 4: Orion ressive team batting! MeG This year, Manager ‘aid, he has a better club th: . rf. | Jackson, i 1 last y. : \Gasink, p. . 2 1 Jimmie Riley, third baseman and} Garver, If. 1 0 l-off man, hits at a 500 clip, fields! Peoples, 1b. 0 Q nd has a throwing arm’ wi s outs of chances which many third sackers would fail to get to finet base in time. He is 28 years] old. | Kelley, 2b. 0... Fairbanks, cf. Totals Jackson, at shortstop, is 29 ¥ RH POA E ‘old and has played with various] Hirsch, s: o2120 mn somi-pro clubs. He bats! Prigys, p o1reoo 18 and fields .986. 12 Crh Oa Peoples, at second base, is 37 years, ee ae Se old but the fastest man on the club ae ae Hee, and the hub of a neat double-play ae eee combination. which thas checked off 111200 z oie et LC. ars old, has had less than most of the other players but has the height and Krug, If. Totals... reach necessary to a good first base-| 4}) Pr 00200 9 man and takes a mean cut at the! Mercer -000000301-4 ball, hitting well up with the leaders.” Summary: Two-base hits, Kellev, The Outfield In the outfield the club has Long Garver and Tommy McGrill. Longre, in center, is 39 years old but still tronger. Garver, in left, is Home run, Raugust 1. Left u MeGrill verted; in his speed and Neads the team has been con-| elder because of| hitting ability. in stolen ba: baseball s 3 29, former scmi-pro star, s the catching and a substantial mount of heavy hitting. Men who steal es on him must have lots of specd, Orton said. Good Pitching Staff For pitchers Orton has Roy G: a southpaw who has played pro ball in North Dakota and Southern Minnesota. In ‘this games to date he has looked ood, Orton said, sat ranks as the first-string ‘hurler. Robinson, another left hander, the relief man. Other si include Sperry, one time player- ager and a good utility man, i Fairbanks, a speedy outer gardener. And the team batting average is .42! The season, which opened Ap: will continue into Septembs ink, are practically centain and are in sight. Teams alrea uled to meet the Penitentiary club, which plays under the name of the rove All Stars, are. Mercer. Harvey, Bismarck White Sox, Turtle Lake, Robinson, Drake, Jamestown, Wash-! | Ne r bs burn and the St. Paul of State Superintendent of Public Pacific railroad team. Games -| Instruction for North Dakcta and uled with McVille and Williston are] solicit your support and vote at the tentative. primaries, June 30. . First Baseball JOHN F. BJORLIE. Practice Brings Out Much Talent! xiv. Bjoriie is a native North Da- jkotan, He completed his common ‘school work in the rural schools of iNolson Ccunty. After graduation from high school he obtained his Bachelor of Arts degree from St. Olaf College and has done graduate !work at the University of Minne sota and at the University of Chi- cage. He is a member of Phi Delta Kappa, a national eflucational honor seciety. He has taught in - rural, graded, and high schools, hax served as principal of graded schools, and has been city superin- ;tendent at Page, Glen Ullin, Me- | Ville, and Lakota. Mr. Bjorlie is and has been for the past two years the State High School In- ; Spector and has the respect and | confidence cf the school pecple. Iam a candidate icr the position Nineteen potential members of the Bismarck baseball team turned out for the initial practice of the season at the ball park yesterday afternoon and fans who watched the work from Women’s _Daintiness Under |the most trying hygienic icap now assured. NEW way offers true protection | USED SODA FOUNTAIN! Fountain manufacturer has the following for sale in this territery — used soda fountain, 10-foot bar, IGHT frocks, sheerest gowns . wear them now any day, time, anywhere, without a moment's doubt or fear! m The uncertainty and insecurity of; the old-time “sanitary pad” has been ended. Most women now use “KOTEX” 10-gallon cream capacity, ++. @ new and remarkable way. 10 pumps, 6 fruits, 3 draft Five times as absorbent as ordi-|| arms, 1 basin 2 drains. nary catton pads- . Price $125. Deodorizes, thus ending ALL dan- ger of offending. Y Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. No embasr-| ssment. 1d OTHER BARGAINS Bargains on other foun- tains at $150 to $500, Easy terms if desired. Tell us * Obtainable at all drug and depart- your wants and we will i ing | md full —infe tion. SET ER Vor ee fone ware|| Quick action for beat bar: hesitancy. . gains. Pits ald oniy - few, Se? pate: vas, oe Zina o foe 4 thiee to youriaas: As Address District ; ce Manager KOTEX Box 614 No laundry —diicard (they stead, Bismarck, N. D. ais " ‘ 8! che ed any jdate for a place on the team plenty ' of opportunity to display his ability. re fe che 5 BEATS MERCER | Penitentiary All Stars Take’ PAGE THREE on bases--All Stars 5, Mercer 7.| 100 yard dash—first Diehl,” Bis- Beses on balls, off Priggs, 1. Struck | marck; second MeGetti- out Gasink 8, by Priggs 5, by|« Hits off Gasink 9, off! ; Priggs 7, off Sprout 9. Winning pit- | throw-first Bender, Bis- Gasink, losing pitheer, Sprout. feet, 7 inches; second Grey, u and Bauer. 3 LOCAL TRACK Umpires Cay first Brown, . 19 seconds; second MeCart ‘kK; third, Landers, Bismarck. Pole vault—first Sooras, Valley City; second Spriggs, Bivmarek, Hi jump-- first Sooras, Valley Ci feet 44 inches; seco’ Bismarck; third Bisrflarek, und VALLEY CITY = Rismarck High School Ath-| Rrown, Valley first Dich, 3 second jump-—first Birchell, City fect 11% inche: © cchell, Valley City; letes Have Six Point Mar- k nage rd dash first MeCarthy, Bis- gin in Dual Meet cond Davis, Bismarek; third ley City. 1 The h school track Nt and m won the meet at Valiey Bivnarck; Gust: Vetere | City Saturday on in competi- abla tion with the high school track team ismarck; third, Va pisieten se mene throw. “first. Lars i won their] cinder track which was compar total Valley City's : second, Valley . Bismarck, The events were run off on a new : ively jhe re of tneveek’ BIGHT POSTPONED The winners of the various events » held the | | competing team to one hit up to the! follow: : {fective Training seventh, including the outstanding ) low hur That this training effective is| play of Centerfielder Fairbanks who ‘ first 36 feet 11 inches; second M Bismarck, third Bender, Bi ¢ put- finitely postpo of Vogel, it w i this morning, H what a boy she makes in this colorful, fast- moving, roman- tic comedy! Dashing _ spirits —gorgeous fun —you'll hail His Royal Shyness as greatest of screen come- diennes! CAPITOL THEATRE Commencing Tonight, Monday, May 3rd ADULTS 35c, CHILDREN 15c ‘ANTONIO MORENG Scemario by Agnes Christine Johnston from the novel by George Barr McCutcheon Directed by SIDNEY FRANKLIN with CREIGHTON HALE and ROY D’ARCY SIMONOIIL INSTRUCTORS IN HIGH SCHOOLS AND GRADES TAKE A SUMMER SCHOOL COURSE AT THE NORTH DAKOTA AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE, FARGO, JUNE 15-JULY 23, 1926 You will hear a series cf lectures and round table discussions on recent develcpments in educational psychology and addresses by prominent speakers. In all courses credit will be given toward ccllege degrees. Ideal location and delightful vacation features. , FOR CATALOG ADDRESS REGISTRAR STATE COLLEGE STATION, FARGO

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