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r AGE TWELVE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE . $400,000 POWER PLANT ERECTED THIS SUMMER AT WASHBURN WILL . INDIAN VOTE PROVIDE ELECTRICITY FOR MANY TOWNS IN CENTRAL NORTH DAKOTA FIGTRES AT ~ ALASKA POLLS | | | > | Eskimos and Indians ‘Com. | Wins Many Co: own’ wei will have-a‘carryi pounds, It. will camera suspended handles ‘then to rise to a height. prises About 50 Per Cent cally. of Populaticn | \ | | —P)—The charge literate Indians | j been marshalled to rule | i white population of ‘Alaska enteted é H | Into the campaign for election of the : | > territory's representative in congress. é $ | Londen. - , Oct. target of the uttack against the In: TE, Mead dian voters. He is opposed by Thom. | jas A. Marquam, Fairbanks lawyer, | "i L {running on an’ independent ticket.|D- C..Crimmine of Hazelton appears above with some of the many - SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1926 rn Show Prive)! | ~ © [stich tie Siete" eek ores, the wings automatically fold, an the camera. is;earried back by its sight ‘to be rel ‘A “balloon: camera” also is bein developed for. some battle scene. gas, bag twenty feet in circumference operated by two men, being held by - - § hg a on. action for a scant tifty feet of film, grinding automati- |, Dan A. Sutherland, republican, of f : ‘ writers go-not like the film versions Juneau, the incumbent, has been the |™ 3 oer of their stories any better than many ower of eighty in a cradle and released on ‘signal of 100 feet, shoot- British _ Authors Kick. at ‘Stories’ Film Versions 27.—)—British the accredited au- which the British : < it jh | Frank A. Boyle of Junea ithdrew; prizes which he won at the 1925 state éorn.show. Hb. won the liberties | {from the race after receiving the! corn cultivator at his right, the silver loving cup at his left, | with his original scenari democratic nomination, and asked that) the set of dishes on the ‘table in front of him, the fur | priced’ sepeaito was called “The. Pil- | {his adherents vote for Marquam. | collared overcoat he is wearing, and a large num- [epee ng aon: - : Aw Marquam is generally supported by! ber of ribbons representing prizes on hircbl en! declared. “This film ftecalled o'rone | Kidd@r STAT sew republican federal office holders, who _. entice: ance of Mayfair and Limehou i 7 nw age Bu aw. bt O.$ 6 pT 2 iF . ares fo pepieeiaad betra la 1 BREE : PB id bathe “ Per HE 1“ : a never ~ “i scenario gett “i py + as, ry is constituents by al it e- fishing monopoly and to charging that * cause wasn’t: any romance at all. j ; : Sele ; ports of unrestrained vice in the ter.| federal office holders have conspired| Maite Camera’ Shoots | i'never swe foor ot thie him whe oan ritory, voiced in congress, to go un- avainst him. He opposed renomina-| it was being’ made and was amazed answered, ig | tion of Alaskan officials who were n-| Scenes at Long Range we Lread was a ‘Limehouse = The Kidder sta f the Otter Tail Power C 26, ve Fas ‘ . 5 aaa Only in the first judici: i volved in the vice charges. ‘ in.it. I never het The Kidder station of the Otter Tail Power Co., built 1926, at Washburn, N. D., by Seims, Helmers & Schaffner, Inc., St. Paul. Erected at a Se leat s judicial district, valiad th ANe eles SARTEGS uel ae eee EE her ot heard of total cost of approximately $400,000, containing a n condensing plant with 4,000 H. P. capacity. View of the plant from the alae ns voted to any| Party lines have been forgotten many | “kite camera” operated by the pulj-| Version-of the story, so I suppose the west with river in right back ground and sub-station at left. et past elections.’ times in recent election ape ing power of 100:foot centi; +t} Dre for the tied Pha respon- " i 1 : rhea silken cer be A i teat din : i . . i yf The who have voted supported seekin, ction to the territorial leg-} bamboo and er’ kite hes b sible for Imed version.” (Cuts foaned to the Tribune ly ean best be likened to an endless belt./ the river so that it ean be utilized in] transisitted over the many miles of Sutherland vintuslly toa meee seer | ee clection to the territorial leg. | bam! succeasully: forthe finnt-taee Dorothy Gish is the featured: play- Tho new Washburn plant of the end. Air for combustion purposes is| Ue bolle Witte ee id that the In-| rosition or support of Sutherland as in making motion pictute long shots! er, which: ‘the London press hus Otter Tail comp: vax pur into! forced up through the fuel bed as it, 2?¢ supplied so that there will always| pany has built, fn treen handed together by a/ their ehief tse ; tation! 2% ttaer movements at Camp Stanley,! received: unfavorably. 4 i vape| De . ase Oo: a y. The Y ‘or political purposes. e territory’s only representation! near here. i iy lected Mi w Fol Gael A ed ta oa ene UREN lea Tae evita [Tee bin Fenn ne We CENT TERmG RE Tner bidder pees OE With the Eskimos of the northern|in congress. ig the one delegate, Who) ‘The ‘camera, wound up with. a . ‘THEY DO task of the Mis satire atte edi gtehet tad LEG gh A a a mower plant nay, Started oF rant of the territory, the Indians com: / Hy. speak "dl has no vote. j spring, is set and released at a height| “Married men should wear some- midst of the North Dakota jijnitc, pidly or slowly. The plant is of the! two Westinghouse xtéam turbints,| olteinierk alibhet hout 50 per cent of the popu- 4 rer preter ‘of worn feet, Beipging Sway all the thing CO hase plainly that they fields. It is an i ation for © latest and most modern design and the! each having 2,000 H.-P. capacity.! Paul, From 100 to men have heen He Charges Conspira ey ital 3 Fees Bich 3 ang EHOW a height Of 1,000: feed. ‘The ting to are be 4 led, ‘ says a critic. They large plant, for it is n y to have burning the fuel is heated to! These turbines run at 3,600 revolu « continuous!y on the erec Pre commonest are Smith, Jones, A leh D ect. le camera! generally do by wearing a suit of fuel and large quantities of pxiimutely 360 degrees before it! tions per 1 The steam, after! tion of the plant and the installa A modern steam condensing plant :e-|is delivered to the furnace, The! leaving the turbines, is condensed and! tion of the machinery. It was impos = quires from 600 to 700 tons of water| sible to find facilities in a town the Sa memoria ees SER MEER RIT ta ices nme for every ton of fuel whicb is burned, | size of Washburn for so many mer and the combination of coal and wats and the power company felt it neces at one point makes the location ¢ | sary to establish a camp at the site ceptional. f the power house. Offices. slecp- he plant consists of a three-stor ng quarters, hall, kitchen, * brick and concrete building. The | store houses ade the site of boiler room contains two Badenian | the work a small city, At the beginning of the work a schedule was made out, showing what pro- gress should be made daily in carry- ing forward the work to final comple- tion so that it would all he completed on the first day of October. The Power company has built ap- proximately 400 miles of transmission line this year to connect various * plant, a di ; towns with the new plant at Wash- Coal coming in from this side k ‘ Hi burn ce of the power will be dumped into a tr: com The building of from there it soes th this plant is bringing to a practical crusher and is then con conclusion the dreams that many neo- conveyors to the o ple in North Dakota have had of coal bunker located utilizing the vast lignite beds of coal The lignite is then sp in that state. The heat from the overhead bunker to lar z i fF : lignite will be turned into steam and ty where the coal is weighed before | Showing one of the two Badenhausen water tube boilers, which are now] the steam will be turned into elec- Z sen water tube boilers, each botier capable of generating ‘steam for a 2,000 H. P. output. Two Harrington traveling grate stokers are locate under the boilers utilized f burning the coal in an ner. The lignite will be han tirely by machinery, A. spur = from the vi itlis delivered to cach boiler. enclosed with brie! They are two stories high and each have a trical energy and the energy will Screenings Used generating capacity of 2,000 H. P. The boilers are the latest travel over the many transmission en delivered to the boil and most modern designed for burning lignite coal. lines and distribution systems into the homes of thousands of North Da- eat contained in the blue gas) returned to the boilers to be gene-|kota people. A big industry will be d is ord-/ rated into steam and used over again.| established in the state, utilizing re and! ‘The pumps for supplying water to| home products and it is anticipated of the plant.) the condensers and boilers are locat-| that before long the whole state will a pressure ofj ed in the basement. These pumps|be covered by transmission lines and The ash from the boil-| will pump more water in a day than, the farmers will also receive electric form of sere fourths inch in with the very fine siftin the crushing of the coal. This lignite is then fed on the traveling chain grate, the fuel bed proximate ly six inches thick. The grate is 10) er d into a hopper beneath | is used by a city of 8,000 population. | serviee. : % 2 feet wide and 15 fect long and as this! the er stoker and from there is} The switchboard and oil cireuit| The Otter Tail Power company is fuel bed travels from the front to the| « A by uicing process to a well bfeakers are: located in a separate| now the largest operator of electric Tear, a distance of 15 feet, the coal! where the eg and sh being thor- | ¢ upartment.and are carefully guard~) property in North Dakota and plans + is ignited and burned. By the time! oughly mixed, are punted out dn the! ed so that fone but the operators] for next year are already being laid it reaches the end of the grates it! dump. cun come in contact with them. to take on about 25 additional towns, has been completely burned to ash Water Is Evaporated A sub and the ash is then dumped into the) The water in the Missouri riv ash hopper and the chain returns to! very muddy and it is necessar; start operation over stoker! ion is located immediate-| Otter Tail Power company service is, ly adjacent to the power plant for| has meant lower rates and better liv- to/ receiving the current at the voltage| ing conditions for those enjoying its aporate the raw water taken from| generated and stepping it up to be| service. %, [toothpick box. ‘The tin goxes are! in blankets"; men.use them to clean i {dumped into the paper boxes which | their pipes; they have been used, in led, hare seale cked in cases, holding| sume backwoods resorts, as counters, ol ANNUALLY AND USED THE WORLD OVER rcs ae ‘The whole manufacturing process * automatic “And her mean husband thinks The little, pointed sticks are used in! she is extravagant!” _., Wausau, Wis., Oct, 0.) Tooth-j cach other until they acquire the! By Heweve they may be.) satiny finish that is characteristic of yy ways und many places. Florists: “Why?” are holding their place in the mouths | the American toothpick. ons of them in makin; _ insii i of the people, and they are one of the! er,” by violent ag’ nd floral de: rectaue| “Just because she insists on aries, “few manufactured products that are, straightens the picks into tin boxes| ants and home kitchens use them to! Fid nogram stamped on his dog the same the world over. irty billion, the season product of d indust e ‘od i “the United States, Hb, SU¢uuancnnensusnncosnsnuonnncennvessceneey toothpick manu. estimate: F The modern American smade of white birch, pointed, and the world’s eame into the market about F years ago, he explained Succeeded Gold Ones “Prior to that time,” he said, “there was the gold plated, everlasting tooth | . “pick of grandfather's day, part of his personal equipment the key to his watch; a | ad the very insanitary quill p iter that, the rouEt, unsat y rs made in Japan. . . 2, he bulk of the world’s supp While in the City for the toothpicks is produced in six. prin (cBipal factories in t United 5.) rr ' “four of them are in Maine, in. the Corn Show visit the cities of Guilford, Dixfield, Phil = | the exact size of the comme 1! hold together “veal birds” and “pigs! biscuits.”—Progressive Grocer. “MUM LL inn Start te A Car of Custom and Beauty. at a One-Profit Price! fe ‘Here is a car that says, “Watch me!” and radiator—symbol of Studebaker. stamina ; more than makes good—the Studebaker and speed—té its: Srecetul rear bumpers, .” Standard Sjx Custom Sedan. It is acarof every line of its. long, ‘low-swung~ stéél custom quality throughout, z : i th a car that takes the. eye - with its” beauty, stirs the Pulse .with its: power, and : > with. E Eeedty oft dhotias een %. ~ shows. the deft toaeh Og > - ~"one in Cloquet, Minnesot. a ~ Toothpicks are not a by-product of SShome other industry, but many other _ commercial articles are by-products of Estoothpicks. The toothpick takes the e ° e choicest part of u white birch log, and what is left is converted into othe e ings. Made in Winter +2 The manufacturing process is car -ried on only in the cold months of “the year. The ideal season for mak- Ang toothpicks is said by manufactu “ers te be from December 1 to Apr Somethi " 2 e je reason is that in cold weath- t=er the sap in the log remains frozer mething appropriate to ‘As soon as warm weather sets in th gap begins to stir and stains. the take home for every member “woods a tobueco brown, : . To the toothpick manufacturer a e A . “i Storhise birch log is composed of three of the family, or for a friend. ; “spares the pocketisook with ; the bark, which goes for fuel its economy! the “white, sap. which is the ] Seonomy* 4 a ids e log for toothpicks, and the “re ” Studebaker: prot eart,” which is made up into the by- 2 + Only Stu r One : ee pointments—Chase mohair i " facilities could achieve such * 4 upholstery, ' broadlace tritt, PB The er, whieh ig anvwhere trom, bites Could pcblasongich P ; Batlr Anish hardware efoot bolts, which sre’ shuved their beauty and endow it with | +, factory, tmeluding dise | © qu ine. tion of a custom creation, _ cylindrical form. Next the such stamina and silk ‘| wheels, '4-whéei brakes and ee ce Pte foe pe rons there The Big Department Store smooth power at the Stude- °| ho-dratt ‘ ventilating wind. | eee pista : re ghaen Ag ic esata Where You Expect More For Your baker erie. shield (exclusively’ Spude |.-'the world, ‘ad well as the ‘These strips are wound onto a spool : - From the silvered figure of || baker). ; < most beautiful car at ‘its ook dike a big bolt of sibbon, The Money—and Get It. ‘ Atalanta poised above its 5 * price, - See it today. ea e toothpick “chopper,” a small, but ‘ : eas wad ws atrong machine that runs li 500 revolutions per min- cee | , ||. Bismarck Motor Co.: 3 there are usually twelve or of these machines in a bat- a Up to this point the picks drip- ‘ f . : ae si : wet, a blower carries them , ‘ ‘ drying machine, 2 huge, steel ARNT AI a ttn and has centered his attack} Taylor, D: Wilson, Walker and weighs seven pounds and is carried the year before last thi: he characterizes a salmont Mor ‘up by a butterfly contrivance with| next-—-Londen Opinion, Sr