The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 21, 1926, Page 2

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PAGE TWO TRANSIENTS | ROB MAN AFTER | SHOOTING HIM Victim Jumps Off Train at” Doyen and Taken to Devils Lake Hospital “Devils Lake, N. D., Sept, 21--(@) Five bullet wounds, one of’ which Pierced his right ivng, did not daunt | spirit of Pyraze Oker- | d, when twot m. up on top of ing him of $12, all t ad, Okerman is now i here, still atening him. hos; sood spirits “get” the n Will recover He told Sheriff D, J. Rutten that when the usked him to hold up Wk hands and hand over his cash, hi refussd, pon one of them sh him bullet taking effe in , other in the let are in to He lung the head he continu heidup men fin tok his money a ed to run along cars, while the Pally jumped held him He then top of the box ng continued and | off the train he had been shot, to the ho: I here, and She tten was notified but the holdup rfen could not -be found. ike shot in} sth shoulder blac rough notice ur. Railway Accidents | Few in Dakota, Says | *Government Official) own, N. D., Sept. Dakota has bee: from Iway secidents, Washington, D. ¢., field force of th ¢ Commerce Commission, erday. Mr. Patterson r ith Inspecto ame oth Here y Itere “in John W r under speci-! conditions, with the eventual She'll Pay Her Way, Thank 1 {and Clark hote ' {motor to Waterloo, Iowa, to attend ithe dairy show there and enter the ! H APPEAL TO C8TIZENS y h for a trip > rning it herself. Olive Leonard, daughter of a Seattle power magnate, and she 0 a week as a department store model se she can go abroad. 4 Wilson was named to have charge | lber Isize when he was brought in to [physician for examination, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | of Major McLaughlin, who came thto | the city with him. McLaughlin hes a! ‘contract for 400 head of the Indian| | cuyuses at from $4 to $5 a head, and! | the reservation is to be cleaned of this j stock. Most of the ponies were cri | ples or for some othet reason useless #8 horses, according to Mr. Magsing-{ ‘ham. z H ; Coming in Saturday night, the j ponies were held over night at the! ‘fair grounds and went out Sunday {afternoon by way of Sixth avenue j northwest and up the river to Sanger. | Many of these cayuses were direct tdeseendants of war ponies taken by | Sitting Bull to the battle of the Littic } Big Horn, - | IVE CHICKEN DINNER ;. Stanley Prideaux, Clarence Olson, {Peter Lockbeam, Fred Knoll, Paul ‘Bambury and Freeman Granum par- icipated in wild chicken dinner in the private ng room of the Lewis | Sunday night. “The | were secured by Olson, Lock- | jbeam and Knoll who gave the’ party | for the others. Mr. Prideaux of the | {Lewis and Clark was their honor juest, according to Mr.’ Knoll. — is LEAVE FOR EAST) 4 | Erwin and Ernest Klusman, New |Salem, members of the Morton county jeattle judging team, left’ for Fargo | yesterday to join Jerome Stowell, jFlasher, who left last night. The ;three boys, winners in county and {state dairy judging competition, will oh pores judging contests. An xppeal to citizens of Mandan | jand of Morton county to help in the Red Cross relief work was contained in a telegram received yesterday by William J. Gill, chairman of the Mor- Midland station. ton county chapter. Captain Robert jsmall power plant, of amassing the funds from Morton county. The money is to be used for | irelief work in Florida. WED AT LONG BEACH Announcements have bi receiv in the city of the marriage of Miss Walton to Harry M. M I Kei Long Beach, Cal. Sept. 1 jThe bride is a sister of Mrs. H. Russell and a daughter of Mrs. Mary ton, formerly of Dickinson, Miss ton has been residing at Long | th h for some tim | IS TRAMPLED iprize of ali as his g 18-year-old son of Mr. and|mer buddies are t: ix, was trampled by ajinterest in his ch: inday evening and sustained |“Manassa Mauler.” injury to his leg. ‘The mem-| “‘Tunney’s rise has rough wich |New fot nd ready se Village, the he: York, and trai 19 and 20, ier life of the places Woods. Devil Dogs” They saw ad swollen to twice its normal stent in the and GO TO MOTT ly one official Ruth Tipper and Miss Mary 'y Greb in | The Glasgow-London express didn’t step whe It went in the to the boxing championship of | A. E. Fy then enter prof nal in. the light heav; Now, with the big tuecular but it has been steady, con-! th impressive, y st few years. en knocked out and he hay lost decision, 1922 PAE SSE and cra through the ation. Nc injured, ctor of Gree of down- ed at the rougher Marine: of action changed with full-fledged hea fas | realm | The proud of j Gee fight his | in 5 point of his this future also punch. He deme personal | ble fgshion the “of the | knockouts of two Jontagonists as Tom Madden, men w' it with Dempsey are him | not been spec- | particul. He has nev that to} at’ Madison | seas, and ended in th ‘e it should at the Leeds ng buffers, demolishing one We knockout of TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1926 weight with such rapidity that it| soon will be too heavy for the chains | |that hold it to the boxes in call of- fices. The new volume contains 320,- (00 anmes and has it |weighs four and one-half P pou } ee | FAIR ENOUGH | Coklestone, Eng—Ten girl babies iho appeared on a nearby broadwalk jwere awarded ten prizes offered by leivie guthorities in an adult beauty contest. The contest drew no en- ‘tries because the rules stipulated jthat only those girls who ted no H powder or lipstick were eli- gible. \e EMENT FOR PUBLIC. N DISTRICT NO. 28 Dlished ina lance with pro- s 5 of Chant requiring all tr 3 it and tent of the monthy M tember in the amoupi cf the amount of hy deposito { Pank ‘or Depository .. K yakolin YY i 4 o publish aper in the names of depositors, y on deposit ani bend furnished by wovern- Treasurer funds of ilkinson, lor Custodian of ‘the pubii Linden School District igh County, Wing, 1 y "swear Basil Rowe, famous flier, won the Pennsylvania Aero, Club trophy with akota.| a stunt like th at the Philadeiph i rove | Sesquicentenni Flying perilou.!s Denes jhe made of 8 plane stand on its ‘head, tail, I SON, even its back, the Cross,C Pea Do you know why Soop at times act cross, cranky, irritable? Their feelings are warnings of faulty digestion, constipation, slageah liver, a kidney trouble or dis- rdered nerves. Thousands have found Lyko a miracle worker in toning up the nerves and vital organs, because it acts upon the whole system—the kidneys and the; liver as well as the digestive and nervous systems. If you are ailing, why suffer longer when this ha general tonic offers you relief? Get a Bottle of Lyko today and let it help you to regain your strength, and energy. This Coupon Brings’ 'LVKO MEDICINE CO., Kansas wi Sledge of ‘Mississippi ports. | | Coutd Not Eat — | Now Well City, Me. A Walter Schultz of San Pie! Subse- Franei registered a uick suceession ination ef wooden couches, will! Bo! be the most important legisla-| his department will recommend | the coming session, Mr. Patterson | ow to the; went to Mott yesterday Garden and along with it the [his opponent, visit some of Miss McCoy's frien an 175-pound title, which he| quently The relatives. They will be gone |luter regained from the same op-| dozen knockouts in | ponent. jover lesser opponent TAKES TRIP | TH y ‘um has gone to Devils co cays: Fer many Send trial bottle of Lyko, I enclose 10c to help pay postageand rs tried everything € earns mi [ Name. | Torn. 1 Druggist'’s Name. thon ab # a Kaock-out Victories these d. top- a r among the light heavies, Tunney it with friends. | She chiefly a defensive fighter, ! ROOK one di and In HONE London increased former resident! and still retains h re » of the bure Efiective Date of. State Mill Ruling Peatpon fective da regent Order declaring the state mill, and elevator at Grand Forks a te: i:aksmarket from October 1 to No-{ ober 1. Action was taken at the request of: trond companies interested in the] edings who asked that the com- nt rehearing and reargu- ment in the ¢: The railroads op the pro of the state: will and elevator association, nearly! ul) of which were granted. The decision placed the state mill! @ clovator on the same plane, with fevrard to intras tex, which the Deluth $ joy with re Fargo Prep School Athlete Enrolls at Northwestern School; Chicago, Sept. 21 Haas, versatile prep i ured from his hon . last Thursday, showe un et Evanston yesterday and enrolled (®)—Johnny school athlete ns “I Norihwestern university fresh- tl man, The youth, much sovght after as 4 hlete, did not comment on the r tort at the time of his disappearan: that zealous students of an institu- tion in another state virtually carried | him aways Minot Paving Case ‘ Reaches High Court ving in which The-Minot y are seeking to pre- EY ae sion from pro- of paving work, pealed today to the supreme court. Hearing has been set for September 28. The Ward county dis- et court denied a request for an netion. -GENESEO BAN Closing of the Gene of-Genesco, S: ne rived to CLOSED State Bb: 3 was deplet- sets. The d ut $10,000, had 09 and deposits of League Prexy :! Stanton Judge Is | Mandan News jfour sons and three daughters sur- Ivive her. ‘They are, John Keeley, Unable to Find Any | {*s!'o Haho: Mike Keel Trace of His Son: re lw 1¢ vy, Calpine Dolan, Hazen » ‘Hannover. N. D. and Mrs. Georg Her oldest son, 'Y din 1897, A sister an resides in Tacoma. ars have pressed that the h battle fields} “h Loy, son of) of M nton, ive | Cayuses ‘Find Lawns Much Easier to Walk on Than Paved Road Loy of Sta he was in California seeking an border served on the Me: ‘orth Dukota | with company F first} national guard, from Mandan, He re- enlisted in 1917 when the nef was mobilized for y He was transferred on first division and badly engagements of the mid s tse Tom 50 head of hogs on his nger, city pavements, the is about 25 years old. . 43 in number, degenerate de- nts of the horses of the Span- conquistadors, had a hard time Missouri Slope jor it when thelr’ unshod feet eae Pioneer Is Dead contact with the paving. The, lawns were more agreeable to tread on, according to C. F, j horse and cattle breeder of Mandan nd Prein, who saw them. That was t ny staid house- enue northwest sun ir front porches Sunday afternoon to shoo the quad- | ruveds out of their gras: | id the horses known where they were going, they would have had still more occasion to loiter by the way. They were headed for Sanger to be id made into feed for Mr. Me- Cann’s hogs. They were gathered Porcupine sub-age of the tanding Rock reservation through the efforts of Charles McLaughlin, of Major McLaughlin, who became us in connection with the killi Sitting Bull. He was assisted in the work by Ray Lyons, a grandson ernoon at her en. followin k down wh The fu health month inly me to Mandan in 18 We 1 hoarding house She moved to M where she h except for two yea ‘ since resided in Mandan and coma, { ried nd ‘THE PAPERS SAY By Knic manag ENGLISH CHANNEL 1S ‘ SWUM FOR THIRD TIME Wo | . IN LESS THAN A MONTH. % wut* Cnweertietttttt i T SEE TWENTY MORE PEOPLE JOST SWAM AW CHANNEL | \T'S GETTING So Ws NEWS DOESN'T MEAN ANYTHING » SWIMMER WHO HAS NEVER DONE 11 WILL BE Just a Poor. FASH. Massingham, | it at Grand Forks and “stop| ys in Winnipeg before re- |turning. { ‘ ae T. attended the state, of the North Dakota Fun- eral Directors association in James- town yesterday. i TO BE GONE A WEEK : | Hector Hanson has gone to Chi-' jeaxo to attend a mecting of rdhd- | masters: and -maintenance of way mii, \He be gone for about a’ week, SCOUT MEETING TONIGHT All Boy Scouts and boys interested in enrolling will meet at 7:50 to- night at the Elks hall. (GENE LEARNED BOXING GAME WITH MARINES: Fighting Was Compulsory | Part of Challenger’s Train- H ing With Devil Dogs New York, Sept. 21—The art of fisteuffing which has lifted the hand- some former Marine, Gene Tunney to the position of challenger for the world’s heavyweight title w: de- -|vetoped at intervals of military ser- viee when he wasn’t toting a musket. + Tunney learned the boxing game because it was a compulsory part of his training with the Marines und he acquired ‘such aptitude, especially after the armistice while he was in France with the A. E. F., that he was persuaded to try it as a means, of livelihood: ' Marines Back Him i Gene was born and ruised in the Seton saeStES TRIBUNE DISPLAY ADS Reach the Buyer! \4 Statistics show that of all the failures in the United States last yeer, eighty-five per cent did not advertise. The answer is obvious.. Every successful merchant and-manufacturer advertises. And that is one of the reasons for success. For loeal advértising The Tribune is the best medium. It goes into the homes of all classes—homes that constitute the buy- ers you wish to reaeh. Phone 32 For a Representative And He Will Give You Details,

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