The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 28, 1926, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT 6000 INDIANS | BXPECTED AT. STADIUM FETE Hubert Work, Secretary of the Interior, to Deliver | Principal Address | Oct. 28.--P)—- of civilization by anishing Americans” create strange conflicts in tepee councils here as Haskell institute gridiron stars mingle with hundreds of In- dians from a score of tribes who are assembled to dedicate a huge stadium Saturday as a memorial to the ath- letic prowess of Red men. As the hour for the stadium cere-| monies nears, delegations of from 20| to 160 urrive to be welcomed with! “free beef” and a place for the squads | to pitch the family tepee. | sages, Cheyennes Co Creeks, Quapaws, Pueblos, and many other tribal delegations had established camps last night indie: ing upwards of 5,000 micht hear Hubert Work, secretary of the inter- jor, in the principal address Satur day. _ Feasts and Football Game A series of feasts has featured the, festivities for two days and promises! to be broken only by the demands of the children that the elders attend the football, game Saturday when Haskell meets Bucknell university of Lewisburg, | Arrival of the Ka’ wnees und | Kickapoos yesterda: the social problems as with such an sembly there is no common lang! The elders move about the conversing in 4 while the squaw: meaning beef. Fe fattened for the bar ue fires tomorrow in beeves. “Hiawatha” Presented entation of Longfellow's last night was the severe test for the elders in f the culled of tom-toms which cert er ng insisted on beating out- side the cist staged the drama. Led by Chief Two Calf, whose profile Buffalo nickel, the time threatened the traction, The children ‘however, andthe elders were escorted to seats near the stage t uiet- pears on t P Blackf chiefs were quieted the only laughter was obtain Hiawatha, casting — sto enemy, scored direct hit bers of t t backstage The program was less exacting day, leaving the Osages and Qua- paws to discuss their rich oil grants and the Blackfeets to arrange new dance contes' PUBLISHERS VULGARIZING © NEWSPAPERS : Reason Is Because Advertis- ers Prefer Size to Quali- ty in Circulation Chicago, Oct, 28—()—Publishers are vulgarizing their newspapers to Il more copies, because adver have come to prefer size to quality circulation, Bruce Bliven ‘of The New Republic charges in an article pub- lished today in The Christian Advo- cate, organ of the Methodist Episco- r, declares | . an article on “The Morals of the Newspaper,” features crim sex news, photographs of scantily clad young ladies and prize contests in order to sell itself to persons un-! | equipped by education to find inte est in an intelligent and well- anced presentation of public affairs. Good newspapers,” says Bliven, re growing better and bad ones are But in the race for rculation the good papers are being beaten, The bad papers are the ones which are growing, and the worse they ure the faster they grow.” The danger is, he believes, that the good newspapers will “modify and concede and conform, always in the direction of sensationalism, superfi- ciality and jazz.” “There are enough good people in the United States to bring it marked improvement in this tion ii t y me whether such thing is likely, I can only swer candidly, I doubt it very much.” Calling the’ newspaper the most important instrument in the shaping of public opinion, Bliven that the probably does not comprehend the ins and outs of 2 coal strike or of inte national problems. “But if democratic government is to endure,” he argues, “it ean be only by means of an intelligent and alert public opinion, one which, while it may not grasp the intricate economic problems behind such a sick industry as coal, knows whether it wants gov- ernment in behalf of the rich man or the poor, government which favors industry or agriculture or both, and will express these preferences at the ballot box. “Such a public opinion can be brought into being only by means of press. How is the newspaper pig that function in America to-. Vv “In my judgment very badly. Sev-' enty five years ago most newsps- pe pelle affairs a keen interest in «New Made Fer I. ton bron ody, including Cand, ee minutes play! me av addition to. j stadium where an all Indian | cir ' triumphed, ‘yuise of truth, ‘confession: % Marie of Rumania, in the Philadelphia City Hail, displays the key to the cit: acular reception she received there aded the spe States Arfthassador to Spain to journalism to. Since newspa udvertisir nthe adver F cirealation. extra rate to have of ments culture, ant 4 articles tien. The in America 1 who ean buy an ive purchaser tiser’s w advert wealth or cireulation is is out to give fair it means including jon in the very thin dis * stor to the lovelorn s and the tiki 1 am not one who would supress crime news, sex stories, photographs or anything el ve the ne er should pres comple! ‘urate picture e world which we live. But I belie: these things should be given only the im- portance which they have in the life of the average man. “The enormot Moreov by doing so it when it does not omit enti y important news ernational developments, of domes: tic, political and i ings, the very news which the st needs if he is to exer- nehise intelligently or of such a paper will tell readers ‘t want any- thing else than what they get. But he never tries to find out. Instead of giving his much ‘good he gi n cover o he it up. Buffalo Barbecue Will Be Feature of Bison Homecoming Where the buff aths one time rail ries to the Red north, and where now stands the Bison f field, a buffalo barbecue be held on November 6 at 12:30 noon, For the special occasion of home- jing and the annual Bison round- the North Dakota Agricultural e, Fargo, the alumni associa- on has secured a 1,500-pound buf- falo steer, It is being shipped in from the western Rockies. The id of a buffalo barbecue for the foot- all and homecoming gala day is novel, rding to the genera hair- mia Thordarson, secretary of the student sociation, A roasting pit will be constructed end of the football gridiron P. F. Trowbridge and his trove th skill at 4 roasting art. The 0 meat is to be ser- ved in sandwiches with hot coffee. it is expected by those who are plan. ning the buffalo barbecue that hun. co up and alumi - concedes dreds of people will go out to the: verage newspaper reader football field just to taste this unique | feast. Special railroad rates of a fare and third have been announced by the Great Northern and Northern Pacific railroads, The rates are good from every station in North Dakota on the and Wadena, Minn., west to Fargo on both lines. kets are good beginning Nov. 5 on a return limit mid destination. The Bison football team plays the University of North Dakota on the day of the barbecue Accordion Contest Rules Announced Rules for the accordion contest to were published for gentlemen, be conducted by KFYR, the Hoskins- assumed on the part of their Meyer station at Bismarck, during the lers and reflected in their own corn show November 10, 11, 12 and 13 were today announced by the station. Seven rule: for the conte 1, All eligible. 2. Entries must be November 10, 1926, to KFYR and. con. t, as follows: p.m. of the day they wich. will be allottc before testants must present Pe ay ta pla; played on % a Think Sette of Si will be = The Freedom the | Ashurst, -|that the Cameron charges were hap-| P., and from Staples, Minn.,| Il trains with Saye been formulated accordions. players: are made before! lotted four time and an addi- tional two minutes after all have each Logos a ‘ prizes wi awarded: econd prize of of the C ty n; Mrs Freeland Kendri the Mayor. re Wednesday, November 17 operating heartily Officinis of the eners would st in this con- e that is much inte ronames to REED ORDERS FUNDS PROBE IN ARIZONA. |Senator McNary of Oregon. | Asked to Conduct Investiga- | \ “| tion Soon as Possible . is, Mo., vestigation of the ; ‘ Oct. 283—)—In senatorial the campaign ittee, Senator McNary, Republican, Ore- gon, now conducting an inquiry into! the campaign in his own state, was | asked to proceed to Arizona as’ soon | his present work is concluded. fenator Cameron, Republican, nom {inee for re-election in Arizona, jed for an inquiry, charging that $10/ 900 had been contributed by Copp>r and hydr tric power intere te use ist him in the | campaign. Other Telegrams Received After reading Senator Cameron jtelegram, Senator Reed placed into| the record a telegram from Senator! senate Democrat, Arizona nd ridiculous,” and. stating that there were evidences that large sums were being used in Senator Cameron's campaign. Still another telegram from W Barnum, Democratic national com teeman from Arizona, was placed in the record. This asked for an in- |vestigation of Cameron’s 1920 cam- paign charging the expenditure of im fears ago, Senator Reed rather astonishing, if Hlarge sums have been spent in pri marv elections, that the attention of the committee has nat been catlea {to it until this time. Of course it is Impossible for this committee at this late date to go into all pf the matters now being called to its attention.” ZUMBRUNN IS NAMED AS Ki LEGISLATIVE AGEN St. Louis, Oct. 23—)—William F. Jumbrunn, general counsel of the Ku lux Klan, was described here today before the senate campaign fund com- mittee by George W. Meyers of Marion, Ind,, as the leigslative agent of the Ku Klux Klan at Washinton. Meyers, a former member of the klan in the Hoosier states, testified that Zumbrunn looked after matters «fore congress in which the klan was | interested, including immigration re-| tion, abolishment of parochial schools and “the seating of United States senators.” Senator Reed, Democrat, Missou and chairman of the committee, d manded an explanation of the state-/ j ment about the seating of senators’ nd Myers said klan delegates to th Indiana Republican convention, ii i 4 endorsed Senator James Watson, ' publican, Indiana, for the vice presidency because of his efforts to t nator Mayfield, Democrat, Texa: Under Obligations to Watson “They told us Jim Watson had been active in seating Senator Mayfield, Me: added. hey said we are nder obligations to Jim Watson be- {canes he went down the line for the is Senator Mayfield a klans- Senator Reed asked. hat was the gen understand- er.” Mevers replied. Thewitness corroborated the testi- jony of former klanamen that Walter | F. Bossert, Indianapolis lawyer, was forced out-of office as Trdinnu grand dragon because he would not permit the hooded order of atate to “go down the line for Jim _ Disagrecing with R, B. Bradford of Crown Potat, Ind., who testified at | Kanga City, Meyers said tne wasn ineton conference of klan officials, which it was claimed Senator Watson attended, was held not to oust Bos sert, but to “get Charlie Orbison, an Indianapolis atiorney, pamog 8 COF- poration counsel of 2," Watson Not at. tin ere (left to right) Alexander P. Mooi , Wife of the Mayor of Phi | reti | the official depositary for monev when the deposits were made, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE of Brotherly Love to the cameramen. Thoge delphia, and tign funds committee after a recess ular line of inquiry pur- sued by Senator Reed, Democrat, Mis- souri, the chairman, touched upon a conference of high ‘klan officials at Washington last January, which it been claimed was attended by James tson, Republican nowinee nin Indiana. Walter F. Rossert of Indianapolis resigned as grand dragon of the In di ut this meeting and sev- er tnesses have testified that he rf cut because he would not ha Hoosier kian “go down the i Senator VW 1 been recalled for ques- ti the light of this new evi- den uced ut Ki Mond. and Se ned to question 3 vall of Ind and Mayor Her- bert Males ansville, whe are id to have been present at Wash- ington when Dr. Hiram W. Evans, nyerial wizard, forced Bossert to hafld in his resignation. REHEARING ON CLAIMS WORTH $66,000 ASKED ‘or John L. Du- i Attorney General’s Office Re- quests Rehearing By Guar- anty Fund Commission ing on claims totaling $65,- filed by the state tressure®, been asked of the state guaranty fund commission by the attorney gen; eral’s office. The claims were presented by the state tr on behalf of the state bondi id the stote taachere’ ind represent.money lost in closed banks. : The deposits in question were made by Obert Olson when he was state treasurer. The banks closed and the state was left to collect as Vest it could. Despite the fact that the Bank of North Dakota had been designated a: 1 state the then attorney general advise Olson that the deposits were legal. ims Once Rejected The guaranty fund commission, however, rejected the claims on th rround that the Bank of North Da. kota had been designated as the of- ficial depositary and the state treas- urer had no right to money in private banks. Records at the state treasurer's of- fice show that the teachers’ retire- ment fund lost $38,726.88 in 18 clos- ed banks and the bonding fund los $26,371.35 in nine closed banks. Othe: depobits made at that time in private banks still are there, the reeords sho’ Withdrawal has been deferred from time to time, it is said, because banks in which the deposits were made have represented that it would seriously inconvenience them if the state de- posits were to be withdrawn. Regan Woman Pleads 2 Automobile Tires Dora Lewis of Regan pleaded guilty , #! before Justice R. H. Crane this morn- ine to two charges of stealing auto- mobile tires. She was sentenced to pay of a fine of $20 and eosts and to serve 20 days in jail on each count.’ She is at present in the county j: in district court on « charge of grand larceny in connection with the alleged theft of poultry valued at about $250. Conviction on this charge carries a maximum pen- of five years in the tentiary. , former | place public, is TRIBUTE T0 ROOSEVELT Pioneer North Dakota Physi- cian Knew Him as a Ranch. ' er on Frontier | Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 28.—()— Radio fans who listened in on the North Dakota University broadcast- ing station last night heard Dr. V. H. Siicknew of Dickinson, pioneer Dakota physician, pay a touch- ing tribute to Theodore Roosevelt whom he knew when the former president was a rancher on the frontier. Describing the manner in which Roosevelt developed himself from a physically weak and timid bo; 'lion of courage and a leader of } public thought unequaled in his or tany succeeding generation, Dr. Stick- | ney averred that Roosevelt might | well be an inspiration to every Amer- jican citizen, | Despite the fact that Roosevelt ro: ‘0 heights of prominence un- touched by his fellow citizens, he {Was always intensely human and never lost the common touch, Dr. Stickney said. “Newspapers pub- lished not only the important but [the trivial things he sai Report- fers dogged his footsteps and camera- | men lay in wait for him. The pub- was eager for every word that fell from his lips. | “All this stuff he liked, he was Be human, and we love this trait in him, “In the early years of his man- hood Roosevelt lived in what is now jthe state of North Dakota as a ranchman. I think ‘he had just pass- | ed his twenty-fifth year when he first set foot on the soil of the old terri- tory, toa An Outstanding Figure “He was one of the outstanding figures in the early history of the ern part of the state, “All of us feel honored in the fact at part of his life was spent among that for a time he was one of us. he ing times—the rugged ronment—-the personal associn- tions--the opportunities for develop- ment in needed directions, were found within the limits of our state and were given him in abundance. This debt he recognized, and never missed an opportunity to express his ap- preciation of what lite out here va the frontier had done for him. in 1910 ; he saia thi in sufficiently express the tion I amuunder to your state, for it was here that I lived for a number of years in a ranch house in the cattle country, and I regard my experience during those years, when I lived and worked with my own fellow ranchmen on what was then the frontier, as the most im- portant educational asset of all my e.! “This he could well say, for it was out here that life in the open gave him his chance to fight back from frailty to perfect health. It was out here that the stressing times of frontier life and the companion: ship of strong, brave men gave him his chance to test his courage, clari- fy his vision, gave him the nanger's distance and — proportioi trained him in those keen perceptio that later on enabled him to judge men by the real qualities of man- hood, gave him the fine perception that enabled him in after life to see issues standing out clear-and untram- meled and to meet them with prompt, upshaken self-reliance. { Training Was Valuable “It is doubtful if without the training and experience gained in this austere environment he could have reached the place he holds in ‘ the records of a nation’s history. Baked much the state gave the’ | Great Examplar of Americanism; and ‘he in turn has given us, by precep: and example, the heritage of a life Woman So Nervous Can't | ~ Digest Food | “I wie,bothered with gas so bad that I thought 1 would choke. Food wouldn’t digest but stayed in big lumps. I was so nervous. helped till I heard of Adlerik , has done wonders for me.”. Mrs. | | Guilty to Stealing *‘setcue’aderixa acts upon wore F and lower bowe' tem a REAL cleansing, sons which sour, gassy nervousness, sleeplessness, headache lust ONE spvonful stops GAS, and relieves that full, bloated feeling so that you can eat better and sleep bet- ‘ter, Even if bowels move daily, Aa! lerika brings out much additional | poison which you never guessed was! |in your system and which may have; long caused trouble. No matter what you have tried for stomach and bowels, Adlerika will surprise you. In) Bismarck at Jos. Breslow | druggists.—Adv. 7 . lq { el "A Dandy All Purpose See them Has a Tray Made by Reed in our window. introduce them While They Last Special price to we DR. STICKNEY | | od OCTOBER, 28, 1926 wk THURSDAY, Two Days Left! At eight o’clock next Saturday evening, October 30th, SOMEONE will get \ LI LY FREE. a perfectly good rebuilt O' LAND car worth at least '$250.00—ABSO- HAVE YOU DROPPED. YOUR NAME IN THE BOX IN OUR REBUILT CAR SHOW ROOM? "You can obtain three chances on this car by: “Ist: and Inspecting our fine stock of rebuilt cars. : Inspecting our line of new Overlands and Willys- Knights, and taking one complete demonstration. 3rd: You place yourself under NO OBLIGATION about: — Our unequalled Garage and Service facili- t We just want you to know —The exceptional values we have in GUARANTEED rebuilt automobiles. ore Verformarice and quality built into Willys-Overland Fine Motor Cars. ~—And the equipment and facilities we have—under one roof—for caring ‘for YOUR car satisfactorily and economically. Get Your Ticket Before It’s Too Late nr Mo WILLYS-OVERLAND FINE MOTOR CARS: cleafly lived, a patriotism nobly maintained, a courage undaunted to the last. “The memory of Roosevelt is en- shrined in the hearts of the Amer- ican people. “He holds a place in history among the first of America’s illustrious dead. and he was the one gre: character whose life touched closely the history of our state. “ “Every item recounting his activi- ties when he lived among us should be held the choicest records annals of our Commonwealth, “Every acre of the rugged soil’ within the limits of the range on which his cattle grazed should be held a memorial to’ his name, .. “To thig -end. a movement is al- ready on foot to establish a “Nation- Po Livi} in, h + Badlands. ‘to be ledicated tq hin memory. “This laudable: cuterprise should Meet the hearty, approval. and nave the liberal of ‘every for- ward-looking ipdividyal ‘of the state. ‘Such a mel la)’ would keep us constantly remin ed of one. whose life pens a 8. B, LOVE CPR C: EXAMINATION FREE. Witinge: Gide: Phane 174 ™ ¥ L, Page re 3 Oe ‘ Candidate for Congress Opposing Tom Halt “A Square Deal for the Farmer Means Prosperity for All” J. \ tor Sales Co. Distributors was fully lived, and should furnish! to living youth, but to the youth of inspiration to achievement, not only| all the generations yet to come.” Better Kodak Finishing “YOU'LL NOFICE THE DIFFERENCE” HOSKINS - MEYER the} MONEY TO LOAN . Prey On Bismarck improved ies Property. payment privileges. PRICE OWENS ELTINGE BLOCK Bigger and Better Than Ever OLLE I SKRATTHULT AMERICA’S FOREMOST SWEDISH COMEDIAN And his popular Company of 9 People, Sing- ers, Daneers, Actors and. Musicians, will be at Patterson’s Hall, Bismarck, N. D. Opposite N. P. Depot “TUESDAY, NOV. 2 8:00 P. M. Tickets 75¢ Children 25¢ DANCE AFTER THE SHOW! THE CURTIS HOTEL. TENTH STREET AT FOURTH AVENUE MINNEAPOLIS, U. 8. A.“ Frank J. Johnson COUNTY AUDITOR BURLEIGH COUNTY

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