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PAGE TWO The Bismarck Tribune Au Jadependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, ismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann.. President and Publishes Subeccption Kates Payable i: Advance Daily by carrier, per year ... Daily by mail, per year, (in Bi Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)... Daily by muil, outside of North Dako! : Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press Fhe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to > $he use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin gublished herein, All rights of republication of ai’ other matter herein are also reserveu. nee ‘te and County Newspaper) pital Needed «© Islands need, morc” than anything gicat natural resources. is nt will provide better regul. n of labor for th rinking of the work the new capital will provic These two things would do more to iands commercially and economically program yet devised. This is vi of Major neral Frank MelIn- pureau of insul fairs of the _ wh» has just completed a survey cf island conditions and his conclusions are attested ll those who have followed the Philippine situa- the i tually the opi! tyre, chief of war department, tion at all closely in the past few years. Granted, then, that inflow of outside capital ired, can it be obtained? Easily, very easily Ip It hy, then, is it not being invested in the P! pine Islands? The at ver is simplicity itself. is because the political future of the islands is so uncertain t an investment ef ce Jerable money in the islands, looking to a long term development, uld be ne sary, would be a risk too great to dy pn by any sane pi Until, then, the po- lit’ ftuation in the Philippine Islands is adjusted yo that capital may feel safe, the development of the territory will be a hit or miss preposition in which but little real progress will be recorded, | The difficulty is me one of independence, the same old bugbeas that has puzzled this country and the ands eves since they have had interests in com- n, As things fuck wow independence is quite out | * the question at the present time. But even that | will not satisfy capi Some definite term of 's must be ide in which there will be ne ritation for independence, time for independence come had the benefit of the invest- tal. D haw’s Reaction rye v's reaction to the i ding te him e for literature is i fs cesting, With a wave of the hand he flirts vide the award of ,000 which accompanies the tself and thus creates a quandary in which rs of the According to the rules of the fund the ¢a nd the honor are indivisible, whether te withdraw the honor from Mr. Ww or to find some loophole whereby the $35,000 may be used for the advancement of literature. Mr. refusal of the ney. Shaw was consistent in his writer of today. His grasp of the fundamentals is br and sure. He | depth cf feeling and a y of thought and ression, a diversity of terests, that once proclaims him of the very highest calibr The reading public did not need the Nebel award, he has but fulfilled what his ' readers would have gambled he would do. i This he f He i is always what is plain t> be seen, but doing the unexpected, as the ordinary man would not even think cf doing. He is brusk, vigorous and withal very delightful. He i Pock’s bad boy, delighting in stirring up arumpus. Now, in his own words, he hopes that | there will be a “complete discussion in the press? &s to the propriety of giving money prizes for lit- erature, He hopes it will be a good di Ye has given the topic a wonderful start and pla | { in the controversial stage at the outset. Shaw has a bvilliant mind, a s 4 and a keen mind—and he is a ¢: are to know whether he i. not? And then, again, who car His fun is too genuine to quarr nic besides. How hing at us or if he is or not? with, Dry Enforcement Our effort at enforcing the dry regime on the Great Lakes is likely to cause severe friction with Canada, if we may judge by the recent discussion on the avowed intention of the United States: to institute a rum navy on those ers. Under the plan there uld be a flotilla of torpedo boat royers and other armored and armed craft main- ined cn the lukes, : It may be pointed out that for this to be done it will be necessary for the Rush- be amended or anaulled, This famous treaty for 117 years has prevented international border “incidents” ‘and has helped the United States and Canada to maintain the most friendly, neighborly relations, ‘Why distur) such an admirable state of affairs? Is, then, this matter of dry enforcement the most t:,4)portant thing in the world? Can we not manage iin such a way that our enforcement can be carried on 1n our own territory? If the shores are adequately patrolled, why would it be necessary to scout. the * waters? The liquor must be landed and that is the t-me to frustrate such an operation. If the estab- ~- Hshment cf a dry navy in the Great Lakes is going o to. iba tp feeling in Canada against the United = Stetes the experiment will not be worth the cost. : he Sesquicentennial The worst failure in the history of world fai the sesquiventennial at Philadelphia, has closed it, doors after @ very few months of exhibition time, The: big show cost the city of Philadelphia about $22,000,000 and individual contributors about: $3,- 000,000 more. In the ¢ime that the exposition was ly 4,500,000 persons paid admission to seo “was enly about one-third of the tota! that would view the exhibit; * opened Many months.late, with ted. Many states wn their exhibits went on, the re As it stands ‘today Nobel fund find themselves | Now they do, He is undoubtedly the most practical great! mpathetic mind | got treaty to) » one bacillus, while it is really another that is {there has been a tremendous waste of time und! money with little beneficial result, | It will be hard, of course, to state exactly where | the retnorsibility for this monumental failure lies, but it 1. very easy ty point out one Jarge contrib- uting factor and that was the large amount of free publicity the exposition sought to obtain in the! daily newspapers. | paid staff maintained by the expositi nization to grind out reams of fre the exposition which wa: nt to editors is “news.” For a while ‘editors were generous apd ran the stuff, but when A large and highly tising fe the count over they s that of all the millions being spent for legitim advertising in the advertising columns | of the nes " n these editors decided, and justly so, that ng not worth paying for was not worth having, and consequently the etposition publicity found the wastebasket as a final resting place. If the failure cf the —sesquicentennial | teaches no other lesson, let it teach the gospel far! and wide that you get what you pay for and legiti- mate advertising and not free space is the proper medium for publicity. Larger Exports Development of our export business should cause much gratification wherever it is noted. The fig- for the period of July 1, 1926, to Nev. 13, 1926, | show that 121,083,000 bushels of grain were ex-| ported from the United States, while in the corre- | sponding period of last year the total was but 78,- 78,000 bushels, a clear gain of some 42,000,000 | bushels. Of this year's total, wheat represented | the principal item. Barley was next in importance, with corn, oats and rye trailing in the order named. | These figures show a very gratifying growth. | The export business cf the United States must gr2w | if we are to continue te maintain our enormous production, mewhere we must find markets be- | yond the confi of our own country and this | search for international mar! cannst but help promote international friendship and cooperaticn. ures Laugh, Laugh, Laugh! January is to be known as Laugh Month! that one off, if you can, | January, month of coal bills, income tax blanks, | Christmas shopping bills, is to be known as Laugh Month! January, month of slippery sidewalks—and lame | limbs caused from depositing the human frame up- | cn idewalks—is to be titled Laugh Month! January, month of howling gales, of stinging | sl , of flu and la grippe and bronchitis and pneu- monia and laryngitis and plain sniffling colds, is to be called Laugh Month! Now it’s one thing for the Motion Picture Pro- ducers and Distributors cf America to say that it , and it’s another thing for the human insects to laugh! If they can and do, it speaks well for the hardi- hood of a courageous race! Laugh | Editorial Comment Clean Up Roadsides (Minnesota Highway News) contained in a circular letter issued recently by D. W. Freeman of Eveleth, acting for several land jowners and estates. He states all the land owners have agreed to cooperate in keeping all signs | | off the territery. ‘ “We have had lots of trouble with commercial advertisers whu have nailed metal signs on the poor little struggling trees, but the worst offenders have | been those running for cffice and their too enthusi- jastic supporters,” says the circular, “Large rocks been painted, trees and stumps crucified and, plastered with the names and faces of the distin- | guished men whose ‘many friends’ have just simply compelled them to run for office. All that is of course educational, but the trouble is that nobody makes any effort tc remove any of the above men- tioned ornam: after election is over.” The circular calls on the candidates to “clean up |the muss” and offers to give them the names of commercial firms who “will probably be glad for a small sum to scrap your signs and pictures while they are removing their own signs. Yiou see we can compel them to be good, while with youit is a matter cnly of common decency and good will,” A state law prohibits placing signs on the high- way right-cf-way, but nothing except a determined | effort by property owners will prevent placing signs on private property. The Eveleth group | apparently has “started something.” | petits) “The Common Cold” | (New York Times) | In England, too, the medical faculty is put on its | {defense for having no quick and certain cure for | the commen cold. It is a complaint so universal | ‘and disagreeable that everybody is asking for a} | Preventive or a remedy. But the doctars, at least | ‘when they are frank, admit that they do not know{ |cither. This is virtually the confession of Professor | | Leonard Hill, a high British authority upon ‘colds | | and catarr in a lecture recently given at Gresham Jollege. The great trouble is that the infecting bacillus jmay well be named Legion, as there are su many of him. That is one difficulty about the inoculation | eure. You may have exactly the right serum for : doing the mischief. Hence it happens that inoculaticn | scmetimes appears to be highly efficacious, but more | |eften fails sadly. : | | Professor Hill came out strongly on the side of prevention, ‘The thing to do is to fortify your body | impregnably in defense against the invader, Once | ihe breaks through ycur lines at any point, how- |ever, you are lost, and then there is nothing to do but let your affliction “run its course.” There. are various measures of relief, dut apparently only time and nature can effect. the cure, We all know the things that. we are told we ought to do when we have a bad cold, but we also know how impossible it is for most of us b> do them. Keeping your feet warm, your head cool, or making i sure always (2 breathe clean air, pure air, having @ wholescme diet, and taking outdoor exercise would be all very well if one had not to keep on working and living in ordinary conditions. If the comnion cold Were more acutely , probably its victims would more wisely surrender to. it, and perhaps the doctors, would find out, scmething better to do about it. As it is, it seems destined to go on as one of the little miseries of tite which we complain abcut, get rid of. _but.can do little or nothing 2) tin sir,” she n ag SAINT 2S gazed room as if proud of the had se important an eight clock the last of the other servants left the house. E body but im had been give the evening off. Ex- cept Sam Horne, the chauffeur, sir He was to call for the br -" “AML right, Mary. W Horne tell in the hous “No, wasn't anybody but me, Mr. Cluny, [ wa the only one that wasn’t allowed to go to the wedding, sir. He wanted “Well, sir," Mary Kearney about the the coro: his gavel \ way he like it, Then I waited aro il he came up, to see if there nything else 1 could do for him. d there wasn’t. “While I was'if the pantry, put’ de. "ll let Sam t. | He wasn't gat the front door ie snowing pretty hard and the wind the had come. oung lad; me to be here to let Mr, Hathaway was’ struck all of a heap, in -- Mr, Robert Hathaway — his! beeause the young lady was the bi nephew, who was coming for him to| herself, Miss Cherry Lane, and take him to the church at eight fort five. And he wanted me to be here after the wedding, in ¢ messages and visitors came. I didn’t think there would be any visitors myself, | seeing as how everybody was going | to the Randolph reception after the | wedding, and Mr. Cluny was then ¢ ing straight to the train, without com- | ing home—" “You're digre: Mary,” the| coroner smiled “Stick to} the story of what you know happen- | see. ‘the coroner inquired, “Oh, yes, sir.” She’s been at house a lot since her and Mr. Cl has been engaged. to me, called me ‘Mary,’ sir. How do you ge — odded sulkily, as away the tray dnt ‘things, there wa was blowing, so 1 didn’t open the doo wide, but I did look out, to see how was the last person I expected to “You know Miss Lane ‘well enough | | to be certain of her identification?” And she spoke I said. ou do, Miss Cherry? Ain’t a be late to the wedding?’ “What did Miss Lane say, Mary?” "She didn’t answer my question, A reckle: | wreckless: driver, seldom is a with| When there's a bill there's a pay rned| _ Don’t shoot tigers until you can ‘the | S¢¢ their tonsils, says a professor. | ang But is it worth ‘while, professor? was He Pig hunting great sport says Kermit Roosevelt. The boys bag quite a few in this coun- | ty, too, Would you think Chi x0 a good | place to have one's face lifted? hard to understand bunk rob- How do they ever pass up ap lineries? rido ght, 1926, A Service, Inc.) <6 ight, . Service, Inc. Old Masters “A the juny My little Son, who thoughtful eyes And moved and spoke in quiet grown- up wise, Having n disob look’d = from law the seventh time m, and dismi. words and y With hard inkiss’d, ed in this house after eight o’clock| sir. She pushed past me into the His Mother, who was patient, being yesterday evening.” hall, and said, real breathless, ‘I’ve dead, hat’s what I’m trying to de,! got to see Mr. Cluny, Mary right | Then, fearing lest his grief should sir,” Mary earnestly answered indig-| now. Where is he?” I told her he| hinder sleep, nantly “But I nave to explain) was dressing in his bedroom, and I visited his bed, x“ things, don’t 12 Well, sir, Mrs.| wouldn't want to be disturbed in| But found him slumbering évep, Barnes—she’s the housekeeper—and | that condition, sir, and told her I’dj With darken'’d eyelids, and their Minnie Cassidy, the housemaid, and | call him on the house phone. But lashes yet Bunny Smith, the cook, and the out-| she ran past me up the stairs, quick | From his late sobbing wet. side man, that’s Tony Salvatore, a! as lightning. I neeped out of the| And I, with moan, wop, he is, all left in the servants’) door I was still holding open a little} Kissing away his tears, left others car at about eight o'clock. . “Mr, Cluny was in the library, go- ing over some papers, when I took | him a whisky-and-soda at ten minutes ways and | saw—” she paused, as dramatic effect. past eight. It looked like passports} TOMORROW: What Mary Kear-| A box ot counters and a red-vein'd and railroad tickets to me. He had| ney heard as she cavesd: at Stone, this drink and talked to me a few; Mr. Cluny’s bedroom door. A piece of glass abraded by the! minutes about my vacation. I was) (Copyright, 1 NEA Service, {ne.) beach, , going to have three months on half ail And six or seven shells, pay while he was in Europe—and then he said he was going upstairs to dress. He told me to go ahead of him and draw his bath. I went up| of stealing): Now, if I were to to his room on the second floor and! my hand in someone's pocket saw his wedding clothes laid out on! take money, what would I be? the bed, everything ready for him to| Little boy: Pl put on, his wife.—Life. PROPER, TOO. Later develop- ments reveale: the fact that fre t m. LooK IN THE WHAT) 1s Lo : DICTIONARY. "APHASIA £ man was a vic! WOMGN Never SUFFER WITH. hasia, (a-fa . Loss or Aphasia. (oie power of speech. ALONG tS THE WORD “APHORISM"”, wich MGANS “Go on, Mary. What did you see?” Teacher (talking on the wickedness case, miss, you'd be IT’S SOMETHING for of my own; For, on a table beside ead, He had put, within his reach, drawn his A bottle with blucbells, And two French copper coins ranged there with careful art, To comfort his sad heart. So when that night I prayed ‘To God, I wept, and said: Ah, when at lust we lie, with tranced breath, Not vexing Thee in death, And Thou remomberest of what toys We made our joys, How weakly understood ‘Thy great commanded good, ‘Then, fatherly not less Than’ I whom Thou hast molded from put and le clay, Thou'lt leave Thy wrath, and xay, “I will be sorry for their childish- ness.” \ --Coventry Patmore; The Toys. 1 IN NEW YORK 1 New York, Dec, 27.—Of such fabries as these was the Manhattan of OU, Henry: Just three doors from my third- floor-back works as janitor. A university graduate, he soon found that cs- theties did not bring bread. From time té ‘time he sells poems to so- called “highbrow” publications, He gets $5 or thereabouts... By stoking the furnace. sweeping out the hallways jepartment house he gets his rent and a modest income, he has ure hours, and then, in his soot- blackened overalls, he writes his sonnets and hig songs. and of an Just one block down the’ street there lives a man ‘considered by many as eccentric. He lives alone, ubout six flights up, and there for many years he has: worked upoi drawings of those wild and primitive horses thut once Joped the desert wastes. In the course of time-he will have reconstructed, in complete ana- tomical detail for the American Museum, such an-animal and, in o sense, this will have been his” life every available hole to creep out at nightfall and. among the cans that line the side- the end of day. There is 8 suggestion of those grisly draw- ings of specters of starvation in these nightly prowlers. M - ‘Recently complaints were heard ip the néighborhood that someone was removing the..lids ah cans, The garbage men.po! a promising’ young poct | work. valued at $13,141,000 in: 1925 esti- This man is very fond of cats. In| mated to corns $15,015, this summer he. buys cheap canned fish | year. wild hay cut in North Da- by the case and is the hungry lust year “was ed at $8,- cuts of the neighborhood. Winter | i 6 catimutod value this year is a precarious sesson for the cats | is $7,771,000. °° 09. 3 ~ of New York. ey disappear into|. The 1926 fall sewn winter rye acres inted out | ae that the foraging cats would litter ithe street wi eb | A watch was set and, just about sundown, they caught “the “old horse man” going ubout taking the |tops off garbage cans. He had no intention of letting his “alley friends” go hungry in winter, ? Then, in a prosperous corner rocery, operated by # portly Greek, pretty daughter has waited on! |me during the last year or mo: Into this store come all the thinkers” of the celebrated “Green- | wich Village.” I have seen her tal! ing with them time and again. Young artists would order bills of goods and tell her of paintings just ‘sold. She has seen at least five years of the “modern” li: The other morning she was smil- ing quizzically when I came in. | | “pm_ going to be married soon,” i she told me when I asked her what | her secret might be. free! careens United |The condition and jported as good up lof snow, it has b | with snow for near! | Radio's | vOr, f 70) night followed by a fa gram at.8 o'clock, Male and string quart featured at 7 and 8 tl KMOX (280.2) St. Loui: For 1. radio fans th u apo! Paul, at 1 from WSUI (48: p.m. WRHM, Minneapolis, has banjo® at 9 p. m.; WDGY, Minneapolis, o fers a musical at 10, and the Sky- pal ), Toma City, atl “Some young poet?” 1 asked, looking about at the prosperous| store. | “You I don’t know who it i mean you hw T asked. » you see my father has | picked him out. Of course you don't understand, | but we still do things | that way. ‘We still marry the man| j selected by our parent: think | it’s really the best way after all/ Bae | I walked met} away. So this was) | Greenwich Village, land of “free | love” and what have you! | GILBERT SWAN. | a | | FLASHES OF LiFE i New York—Thomas F. Manville,! Jr. heir to millions, thinks his wife | is “a wonderful kid,” but he and she | 1 temperamentally, and ads month, She retary. was once his father's land is tonsy in New| ing expe- San Francisco Among. i isited by the Sti jdition, men let their hair. grow; | women keep theirs short. Children | stop smoking when they reach ma-| | turity. | New Yotk—An |with nerve, stam | be safe of a hard red-blooded man ind gereqse will | the opinion! er for an hour with| William, | wn price, In four bouts at! this season he has es-| aped without a mark. His oppon-| nts were so hacked that the doctors de them quit. Bonn, - Idest son of the former ¢ is quite a di the univer: 1, CROP ‘REPORT * pase ———#| | Th #5 farm value of the prin-| { | cip i crops produced | during the 1926 175,-| 438,000 a d | from the Newman, Federal | r North Dakota.) ith decreases re- | n of $56,863,000 contribute the most ed total valuation of} crops of the state. All yt hay and buckwheat | {show decreases trom last ys Al-! though all hay production decreased | 32 per cent the increase in price re- ceived this year over that of a year ago more than affects the smaller production and the value of the crop this year is $1,514,000 greater than a year ago. Prices on most of the other crops show a slight gain over those of a year ago, but production has decreased in every instance and poor yields the past season is the| |principal factor accounting for the! | decrease in total valuation. The 1 season was one of ex- tremes marked by an unusually | early and mid season drought an unusually wet and unfavorable ha vest season, A late spring retarded seed bed preparation, « greater! amount of which was necessitated by below average amount of fall plow- ing completed in 1924, so that a large per cent of flax, corn and other; jcrops got off to a late start. A drought which began in the early season and continued through mid | season until after rye harvest was j the pri pal factor in the ronal |poor yields, the unusually large abandonment at harvest and the pres- ent below average feed supplies. . > Corn and flax and late potatoes were later than usual and benefited imost from rains whieh broke the drought about the middle of August. These crops were caught by unusua' ly hard frosts the latter part of September. Unfavorable | weather conditions lowered jity of wheat, flax An unusually larg corn crop was used for f Summing up, the 1926 se: an unfavorable season but there has been no acute distress occasioned over any extended area, North Da- kota farmers are going into the win- ter with an unusually large amount of plowing finished. Pastures were short during midseason, but the fall rains benefited them greatly. Stock | sales have been unusually heavy and the feed supply may be sufficient to carry the remaining livestoct: if the | winter does not prove too severe. The North Dakota corn crop, | valued at $13,649,000 in 1925, d |ereased 10 per cent in v: nt being $1 spring wheat crop for at $90,252,000 compared with $147, 215,000 a year ago. The oats crop in North Dakota is cstimated to be worth $11,355,009 comnzred to $17,- 161,000 a year ago. The barley crop decreased in value from $16,757,000 in 1925 to $9,683,000 in 1926.’ North Dakota rye ,is valued at $6,780,000 this year compared to $10,315,000 a year ago. i The buckwheat crop though small in North Dakota shows a Inrge in- crease in valuation, due both to in- creased production which almost doubled and better prices this year than last. value: of the crop thly season was $10: compared with $43,000 a year Fh in Nort Dakota’ declinied in value $8,461,000. The éstimated val- uation in 1926 was $1: com- The White potato crop; for the state decreased. from $11, last year to 24,000 this year. Tame ha: age for North Dakota’ is.the same planned last August and ve per cent or 61,000 acres more than the acl planted in the fall of 1088, The ember acreage survey ind! popes lg the is ses 606 i 0 winter rye geres com- pared. with 1,222,000 acres planted a Fal ‘ting conditions and th were fair | Kolb {to life -| sparkling comedy, pared ‘with $21,461,000 1 year ugo.| | e Frye came up to a fair stand.|,éhe rocket Frolic is on WAMD, Minncapo! Ww a dance pryeram at 10:10. —_——__________—__-+ Representative Thomas S. Butler chairman of the house naval af: rommittee at West Chester, Pa,, s: he will fight for adequate national defense; says a new navy will cost $100,000,000. Conservative optimistm is, keynote of 1927 forecast by leading’ banker and business men of nation American Federation lent, predicts prosperity. iam Labor presid Tris Speaker le Washington to place baseball s efore federal department of justice San Francisco club owners ask t! Leonard be barred from Pacific Coast League, Merlhorn wins Santa Clara. valley open golf tourney; shatters courge record, ¢—_—______________., | ATHOUGHT | oo —> For ye are like whited sepulchers, which indeed appear beautiful outward, but are within full of dead men's bones.—Matt, unto Beauty vanishes; virtue is lasting. the. | Justajingle | | ages ° To know they had a baby, all You had to de was call. "Cause every time you did you'd ‘ing on the wall. | At The Movies nd Jaurchter—there plenty of cach in “The Unknown Idier,” the big war dra: which ll be shown at the Capitol Theatre today Monday and Tuesday. This is a picture that every man, woman and child in America should see. “The Unknown Soldier” is more than a mere motion picture. It is a permanent post-war document of glorious cinematic interpretation—a lasting tribute to a national debt. It will be remembered by long after the other war pictures have been forgotte Re te with human i: climaxes, and thr: a sympathetic appeal to all types of patriots. The leading roles are ad- mirably portrayed by Charles Em- mett Mack, Mary De La Motte, Henry B. W. hel Wales. Don't miss thi. ELTINGE THEATRE “Twinkletoes” is the intriguin: title of Colleen Moore's latest screen play now being shown at the Eltinge for Monday, Tuesday and Wednes- day. Jt was adapted from Thomas Burke's famous tale of the Lime- house district of London, and the combination of star, story and set- ting make “Twinkletoes” one of the most promising entertainment offer: ings that has shown here in many meons, Kenneth Ii well, ston, arlan, Gladys Warner Oland, Julanne Tully Marshall, John and Brock- h PI a 0 Lucian Littlefield bring other famous characters of the Burke story, They portray Limchouse folks, ieturesque characters from that ndon maritime slum where all races and kinds of humans meet around $= the — wharves, dingy shops and » and sin plots are born in the ‘narrow, mys- ious streets bordering the water- fron The story is freely sprinkled with but a powerful continually haunts ~the lovable Jittle heroine; the powers of the Limehbuse denizens gather cto destroy her—and keep the spectator tense with emotion, TELLTAL! Which is menuce h Master: he Sabbuth Day m tle Girl: J don't know, Ps aster: H, when does your mother go to church? Little girl: When she has a new dress,—Faun, Vienna, NOT Russell, rookie Red Sox pitcher, had the ‘rather unique distinetion of not scoring # single run during the 1926 American League cam- paign, Russell was in 37 games, going to bat 21 times. He made four ,hits. Ps Cae le Ra ae