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FRIDAY, DECEMBER | INDS whirling lke gtant: columns of smoke, winds that’ mow down trees and houses as @ scythe cuts Catastrophes While Not Greatest in Number,, Set Record in Magnitude and Fury ; a, ies a MAIN REET IN BEAROSTOWN YLLINONE AT"HIGH TIDE” rn TOWN 1S. STILL. GNDE R WATER the West Indies. dozen of these, 41 would be Clas: Nearly ® half ‘ordinary*yéar, | ‘ag major disasters of @ pretty s#rious ‘sort, HAVOC WROUGHT BY. SEVERAL WEEKS AF FLORIDA HURRICANE bie) REO CROSS NUTRITION STAFF WORKER, SHOWING FAMILY LIVING IN THE NT Clty or hg KEEP HEALT Date Nature of Disaster BAERS RED CROSS TENT CO! 0 CROSS IS HOUSING H Me Less PEOPLE ‘WHILE HOMES ARE BEING REBUILT Place Cross Persons by Rea wheat, angry rivers swol-| During October Red Cross: réliet FOOD IN HE Seon rin. LJ a | t len by rains—all the terrible forces | workers" were cafifg’ for disaster 13 Mine Getiosion Wilburton, Okla. ry) " of the unbridled ele ment s—fre,| victims in eight différent commitnt- Oe A i sha Serene, se tone % wind and flood—have concentrated | ties and more than 24,000 hoineless 28 Fire Rethlehem, Penn, 4 their fury for twelve months upon| families were under the care of the Noa es bch ag " : the North American Continent.| nation’s official relief agency. Se-| Here is a wire from George A. 4 Collapse of root New Britain, Conn. ry 10 Never in the history of the Ameri-| rious as all of these a‘sasters’ were, Parks, Governor of Alaska, tell- Excston, a can Red Cross has there been re-|they were overstiadowed ‘by’ the ing the story of the fires: Ber Am mb Ne a 2 2 corded a disaster period to compare| Florida catastrophe in newspaper “Two communities in Alaska Ingham, Utah with the year 1926, accounts, © * _ ABLOCK OF STORES. FORT LAUDERDALE, Fi were visited by disastrous fires Huey. ; <4 | ates Not perhaps in ‘the actual num-| A'Record List - DEMOLISHED BY HURRICANE SEPTEMBER 18,1926 this year, the Indian village Greenville, Miss. 8 87 ber of catastrophes, but inthe} 4 complete list of disastere in Kako, where twenty-two homes: Newport, Ark. ry magnitude and fury of those visited| which the Red Cross rendered:aid| ‘The storm shifted next to the)in Florida alone, and the task of] $ Were dostrofed, leaving one hun- OU Glty, Penn. 5 ‘ upon the United States, has thelin the United States and iistlar|istands off the’coast: the West In-| rehabilitation {s not yet completed.| }dred persons homeloss, anothor Beaumont,’ Texoa. a 1 year set its record. Nearly sixty| possessions during the’ calendar| dies, Santo Domingo, the Bahamas, It is not easy to rebuild and repair] }<t Douglas, where eighty-tive asi ett 8 disasters have occurred in this| year is shown im the table. Bimini Island, creating serious|homes for 20,000 families, the ap-| {homes were destroyed, leaving Matuatan: Porte Ries % rs a country during the last twelve) As indieated in the table, disas-|havoc. With its strength now fully! proximate number in need of Red| {one hundred seventy-five home- « months and seventeen fofelgn| ters during the fret months of tNe|marshalled, it struck Southern| Cross aid! less. Immediate relief was afford- ey { countries suffered disasters seri! year were so-called minor disas-|Floridat Lashing, twisting back| In Florida, rellet work has been| {ed by the local chapters of the ous enough to call for help from|ters, During the first week injover the water, it next concen-| carried on with admirable swift-| {Red Cross and a representative § peitiern Ok i ee 2 n the American Red Cross. August the Red'Cross made the an-| trated upon the Island of Cuba, In|ness and effictency, according to of the local Red Cross was pres- Hempstead, Long Island 2 1 Approximately 700 persons have! nouncement that for the first time|its wake—the wreckage of ships|reports from Henry M. Baker, Na-| }ent in each place in charge of re- Montrose, Pa. 6 died 86m deen killed in the United States,|in many yeare’a fiscal year had|upon the sand, splintered hou: tional Director of Disaster Rellef.| }liefwork. National Headquarters Okmulgee, Okla, ry 15 125 and hundreds injured. The list of} ended on June 80 without the oc-|the dead, the injured, the homeless. ; The total number of cases regis-| } responded with funds sufficient le Flo Co. Okla, 8 18 the homeless soars into thousands| currence of a major disaster. Yet|Four hundred workers were needed | tered was 22,338, and of this num-| {to meet all requirements and 7 Na 6 rT] 23 and millions of dollars have been| even as the boast was being made, ber 12,126 cases, more than one-| 3 shortly thereafter a representa- Col expended by the Red Cross in its|/storms were ‘secretly gathering Geor; H. D of half, had been closed on December) } tive of the National Organiza- arpa ea ‘ 20 at efforts to bind up the wounds of/force above the waters of the Ca- Goversor ae =e enero 7 with awards to cover the jobs of| {tion was in Douglas and as- ‘orrington, Wyoming 18 18 those who were hurt, to care for|ribbean Sea in preparation for al ; Utah. says: rebuilding and repair aggregating| } sumed complete charge of work. Miller Co., Ark. 1 160 the destitute, repair and rebulld| mighty attack upon this continent. “Permit me to express my} | $1,001,253.00. The remaining cases| {Because of the immediate re- Take Denmark, N. J. 16 rr } ‘g houses, replant orchards, and es-| Late in August the furious winds | } deep gratitude for the very suc-} | will be closed by January 31. sponse of your Organization, sient omage 3 several 4 tablish trust funds for widows and|were unleashed. Storm digna’ cessful relief work which the Workers Stl! Busy there was no suffering and the oe i orphans, were hoisted along the South At-| American Red Cross performed In the floodéd aren centering | confidence Alaskans have in the Ree Rade island ‘4 7 Many Disasters lantic and Gulf Cotsts and one or| 3t the time of the Bingham snow§ | . ound Beardstown, Mlinojs, a large| $ American Red Cross is best Hhadyaide, “Onto 23 1 Two months, September and Oc-|two vessels vanished mysteriously | {stide last «pring. The American part of the countryside is still un-|} shown by the willing co-opera- Southern | Louisiana 23 8228 tober, witnessed an unparalleled|from the ocean's face, Ships went| Red Cross responded promptly$ | gor water with little promise of its) $tion they have given your rep- Jacksonville, M. soee , i outburst of Nature’s wrath. During| homing to near-by’ harbors. New| sand effictently in meeting the} | eceding soon. Consequently work-| }resentatives and their response Faster Kansas sh aes a that period occurred the Florida|Orleans trembled, and, on August| $call for help which was elicited} | ors are stil! busy in the area and/ }to annual Roll Call. Your assist- . . pu 9 hurricane, the worst disaster in the|27, the gathering storm spent its| $by the worst snow slide disaster} | much of the work {6 still in the|}ance is appreciated.” on, annals of Red Cross Disaster Relief|first force in Terrebone Parish,| $in the history of Utah. The Red} | omergency relief stage. The Red sun os since the San Francisco earthquake| Louisiana, fortunately — skippi: Cross not only met the emer-} | Gross is at work now in the follow-| . and fire; the Illinois River Valley | over the Crescent City with its great| gency situation of the first few) |ing disaster-stricken communities: | ua!s aided and from Governors of Toot RARUE IAG Pron test AIS 209 flood, the Ka flood, the lowalievees stacking the waters high|}days when many were made} | princeton, Indiana, scene of Fran-|States in which disasters have oc- noch Bartlesville, Okla. 1,800¢ flood; two fires #n Alaska which de-|above the houses. . Twenty-two| $homeless, when families were} | ciseg mine explosion; Southwest-/ curred, attest that the work of the een es us - stroyed whole villages; floods in| were killed in Houma, crops were|}broken and more than @ score | orn tornado area, covering sections|Red Cross is appreciated. Ly al- typhoon and Flood Philippine Isis roe rete by Chunee Oklahoma, a tornado in Sandusky,| destroyed and buildings ruthlessly | 30f lives taken, but they carried} |i, arkansas, Tennessee, Louisiana, | most every instance, State and city oa ‘Ma, Miss, ‘Tenn, Ark, 4% Nath Appropriation ; demolished. Four hundred home-| $0" through the equally trying} | Atabama and. Missouri; in Florida / officials have co-operated actiyely re Mo tne ke 2 a50° sicrctive as the Florida storm; ajless femilles turned to the Red }days of reconstruction. and in the Philippines. with the organization, giving it eR Peeve ae 3 fiood in Mexico, ard hurricanes in! Cross for aid. ‘ Appreciative notes from individ-| complete charge of the situation. proximate C7 anata : - a in firsts 41@43; ordinary firsts 39@41; SO. ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK jucted ho bulk at 12.000 12.50,' recently; early top on weighty aver- % | , j refrigerator ay #; refriz-| South Paul, Dec, 31—(P)—The | chaiee 12.75 or better, ages over 250) pounds 11.803 bulk de-| erator firsts S! ut T " Bulk of the buteher and bacon hogs! sirable hogs 151 oO pounds H GRAIN | VINANCIAL Cheese unchanged: cattle, macket, ot Sy. Paul Thursday itge, with some narted @ULGh. tow loals welghiy butchers | | | WS none | was a mostly steady to strong affair, lg hippers ut 11.30, tight | and medium to good light hogs 11.65 LIVESTOCK i NE’ ———- | with vealers ruling 25 to 50 cents, ‘eee BK ie oat ete reeks | it anna fy 3 os 8 rate | ie areictscnnisec nig cc tee FINANCIAL aay taage the weekly review of the Jority of the feeding pis at 118," | eavywelght hogs 1 b0@1L 90: > —— — : Un States department of agricul ns stopped at 12.85, with 11.50@11,90;— light 11.45@ i ; ‘ . ‘ture, Values in the hog division | to 1, Low 4 5@11.90; pack- the session were 1% down for May,] REVIEW ‘were on the downward trend and! x 8.00@ 10.00, pigs 11.156@ half cent lower for July. December ~ | etosea 10 to 15 cents lower, while fat | si und nan ae aa ; ‘ @25 cents. s sold at 6.00@6. ¢ 2,000; receipts small, barely 1 broke 1% in symapthy with wheat. SAL MAesltainin i yeur with ,, igat, queers anil 3 rae geil igs af | most killing classes; few louds of fed May barley eased half a cent. Scat- the general average of pr sion dala reaching 9.00, others 8.90, with | CHIC. AGO HAV is yang POEL COMB Bb OUE| do tered fonutry selling sent May flax- to record high levels. The past week|the bulk salable at 7.00 to ell oceipis aM cat mn tutod steers lang am 8 —_— seed ff cont from yesterday has been one of irregularity in both | 800 low grades downward te oath | € ane eat t0 Cash wheat offerings were light and good milling quality was sere Demand for good to choice springs was very brisk and premiums were firm, Urdinary 10 poor wuerte 5 were draggy. Winter wheat was ‘Thursd b he stock Spcculatcrs For the Advance Still in Ccatrel of Price Mcvement at Close markets, due to the usual widespread! oat cutters year-end shifging and closing out of! weights 4.25. Etabun ar ites -igrade bulls ‘sold at 5.75@6.50, good ‘ heavies 7.00, Feeders and. stockers dencies predominated, Toile (nds, aloes | at 3.75@4.00, Most of the medium Market Turns Downward When Indications Point to Large World Shipments ha Sheep 12,000; slow; lambs. 0} steady, have been few signs of weaknes ea Si : — Di to t it Stiff money $ ere regarded < os . Chicane, fies, aaetaPieae liom oe ee ee CPO anae (eHIBBEA io ine! Another Angle of the Year’s Upset in Sport unusually sudden collate in bie price of December wheat to place today just’ xt the ¢1 at Corn was steady Oats were ster Rye was anit ahd eusy. heavy month-end demand for funds, and the usual “window dressin banks to make the ‘ket for the greater part of ¢) ‘were still in control of the statements, as! 1 traders who were short of wheat | higher. to an end, although their suprenacy uthe week's news had a ‘earish! z AT ) to fill December contracts lifted was questioned for a time this morn- i¢€ D. RIGAT— HE wes ¢ rents quotations for December at one y Ing by bear traders, who succeeded /" "Ty, declining trend of s!eeci_pro- , EXACTLY POISONED, BUT eae Gor p fime as high’ as 1.3914 o bushel, muvsEaroL, RANGE |in temporarily unsettling the generat quction and the further falling off : HE RAN INTO SOME j but in the end the ruling price Open High Lew cl ene pn gentes, maiorety watlin* freight carloadings, comp: BAD MEDICINE AND ENOUGH CLOTHES, Fi ' ranged from 1.32 to 1.45. men Close) mamey from six to five and halt and/ With the same Period fash yes, ve A LOY OF STRAIGHT ANYHOW. f af 1.39. 1.39% 1.38% 1.29% | thence to five per cent. | eertiatien fA the Ridial’ we tthe! POKES WHEN. HE Chicago, Dee. 31—A)—December , 140% ,140% 180% L0G | The carly reaction followed un op- | Statistics in tl 7, we ae e i delivery of wheat went begging at 139% 118i 1384 148% [ening slump in, Baldwin, which was| Zonciusive’o fenetaly reroriel fe 5 the last todey, and showed a drop! Rye— : ©" \osed on what . specul: Wall wards She toe dt the arcok’ the! of a3 much as ‘65 cents a bughel In| iyee, 4 90 “| street construed asx tic “reftaal of the ‘Mexiean AP eriuee| } some cases. Previously “month-end} Muy 94% 94% 93% 94 | forcenst of next year's business by) +t grant an extension’ of time on the / adjustment of accounts’ has tiehten-| Oats— |Bresident, Vanclain, Early losses | eer ae aye Which go into} i\{ ed tip the December price at times to) Dee, 44% | were stantially reduced, or wiped | ctpict there the first of the year, a considerable premium over May,| “May AT AT 6% 48 [out and ‘converted into cains'by the | Sigg hod d depressing effect in some. but the scarcit: was only transient, Flax— Inte’ buying movems Ys uations f dente Father “heavy! aid the market as a whole averaged) Dec, 213 | Malawan tained tee points rom Midatlon’ of: atueke“of compantes' lower.. Indications of large world] May 2.19% 2iy's 219 2.19% Jiiow level hefore the end of the| Dau Mexican prope shinments of wheat had a bearish Borley— ‘ind hotr and commercial saithrits | With lciding winkeye a ACbudineset effect, and so too did unlooked for! Dec, 68 = 68% 68) = 68, | “B” snapped back seven points, with | nen coming forth with statements i Santana in quotations at Liver-} May 69% 60% 69 69% Pas aay rite anal Fi other leading | nat fundamental. conditions were| 1) *GWheat closed unsettled % cant to| ° : “ain Matas & Bouthern| sound) and neatly half a milion dol 6% cents net lower, cori! % cent to! CHICAGO GRAIL: Hoga, ‘ed the advance in the rail*| interest and Yépayment of principal + 1% cents down, oats unchanged to 'n{ rifhcaga,, Dee jec. $1—)—Cash wheat | ‘oup, Which was: reported to! yi the next MONth, overators 1dr { shade off, and provisions wnchanged | N d'1.32%; No. 1 hard 142%@| Have attracted ‘a lar“ volume of in-| Vie agvance conducted their ‘opera-| to 20 cents up, 1.43 stment buying: Despite the dis) tions with confidence. Advices at hand among wheat adele ‘Corn No, 3 mixed 684 ;No. 2 yel-| appointment. ¢ er in the a in investi i dnnilade, what ers today told of. heavier deliveries: low 74: ar by the rejetion of the original wont fo some Of the High reade} than expected at Liverpool, and said| , Oats No.’ 2 white Viselv; No. | “Nickel meérgef ” pint, Wall! 2 in with the revival of strength “in ( the Argentine “ movement’ of new) 3 white 454 @47. reet looks for’ sdefinite develop-| Atchingh being accompanied be. the Hi whent is now under way. Liberal|. Rye. y bo in the consolidation field next| Atehisen Being accompanied rr ine JIB % shipments from Australia were also| Barie sy Gesclivcien meee el th. f reported, Tadehy. 6,00@3.75. "Pool ii Bpatenily reap that a] ©! a : | ‘According to. current reports, Ar-| lover 132.50, lon of the rai being | gentina has put afloat 834,000 paeh- Lard 12.20. se fn tie Sonne ‘of rican MIN: GRAIN ! cls of wheat tole week, principally| Ribs 1426, 1’ woul find Minoo PO 4 Wheat { new crop grain from the Bas Bellies 17.26. N je mark at, wore’ a receipts ears. compared to holiday’ " provinces. Latest | figuras: on the up’ a number of: tpecalte . nen Cah "No. 1 northern 1,408 | ! wheat yield in’ Aust ive: the bstantial i were een byl 35 Mi idask northern ‘spring; production. as 10SHI0080 burke]. FARGO et | ich ace tt “taper Lad @145%; Rood a 1 oh compared with 107,500,000 bushels|. rgO, Dec. 17 Ex choice 1.42% pie pray 9 tase ye 16) 13 $00 ‘pound Sse 1.6: | gaol 2 va oe aa ff : ae } " f EAT MARKET DE DRAGGy rs ads | bog RS hha sa : ran eis; ‘alle Poe Te ARAFFIC was | ( eb Y ; ae % ¢y Bn ioe AMM@LAG ne Selea, ot isi oe cn ete, | 4 r rake foday, |Prleen had auly feeble ‘7 ; 7 ts bs { © COE oN vatlies from the low point up to the heavy ewes. ull ewes , {] Ind heif hour, Lows up to Inte in Ose, ‘bucks 3. % er; receipts 4,508 ca: ae Wye s—= | > > \) Se : N i ) 7 ening weak to 26 cents lower thin Fhpreduys bulk wooled lambs 12.2i 13,00; choi asking around 11.60 for fed clipped | lambs; culls steady to wenk; 9.00@; | 9.505 held high | work for us { WORTHY of the n | FOR Ri WORK AT Bone ‘PAGE THIRTEEN ice medium weight 13: fat ewes early 6.00@6.25; best 3 focus lamow’ searer: vady; two doubles common to med- m feeding ling yearlings wethers Log “DULUTH RANGE >= > Duluth, Dec. 31—() Open High Low Close 1.38% 1.35% ot “96 2.1243, My BAT Durum-- 1.35% 1.35% 1.34%, 6 N6%% U6 unehan, Bran CuICAGO POULTRY Dec, 31--UP)—Poultry : receipts five cars; fowls ings 20@25; turkeys 36; sters 18; ducks 20@30; geese 20 FARGO BUTTER » D, Dec. 3t--()~-But- ww cream 50; packing Too Late To Clusify IF YOU ARE A MAN ne and not afraid to work, I'll bet you $50 that you can’t 30 days and carn less than $200. Think I’m bluffing? Then answer this ad and show me up. Opening for Manag The “Wonder Box” sells on sight. TOM WALKER PITTSBURGH, P, tion index ed if she has a nip ally, according to ricultural teachers. ntly made showed that the hens given wing moderately laid more nue wi Dt $200 n° week more—sell film advertising to 50 lines of business. Ji of highly paid 2 opportunity for real produ inter ted in earning Monarch Films, loo, Towa, LIGHTNING Inc., Water- strange battery pound. Charges discharged bat ies instantly. Eliminates — old method entirely, Gallon free to Batteries $6.20. + Paul, Minn, ar from owner of farm or unin ed land for sale, 0. K. Hawley, Baldwin, FOR RENT--Comfortable goed home, in Phone 1163-W. 1 sleeping room, 316 Third street. Warm nicely furnished Close in. FOR RENT apartment. after Thayer 1 Lo: A man’s gold w with the name “Da On one cad of the gold piece. Finder to Tribune office, HOME COOKED meals and n rooms at Dunraven. Rf Call at s from postoffice ror kK i —Large modern tra warm and convenient. postoffice and G. P. Hotel, 208 Rosser street. Phon FOR RENT. -S' ern home. ( Phon se ion any time Apply 715 1-R after 11:00 itch on chain, ide of cust chain is a kindly ee street, room, ex- Near Call at 0 We n mod- Hat G11 Sixth street, T—A large front bedroom, suitable for two persons, within walking distance of Capitol und town, 514 Sixth street. Phone ’ LIGHTED, city heated. Single or connected light house- keeping rooms. College building. Telephone 183. FOR RENT. Furnished room for ladies, 405 Fifth — str 836-W. WOMEN-—Make low aprons, terials cut, inst Experience — wi Henry Manufa Avenue. New York ¢ ey sewing bunga- ing scart No cway stamp. Li Lynn, Mass. SALPSMEN side li ticuiars Inc, 191, territory mmission, any Augusta Company, 335-341 Fourth Ave., New York. FOR RENT-—Six room furnished house, close to, school. Call at 413 Raymond. Phone 942- FOR RENT—Pleasant front bedroom for two men in modern home. Very reasonable. Phone 812-M or call at 120 Ave. B. SALESMAN—To sell popular priced ribbons to retailers and Mf id line commission basis; drawiny count after proving ability. 347, Catasauqua, Pa, WANTED—Farmer or Farmer's son or man to travel in country. Stendy work, good profits. McCONNON & GU,, Dept, C252, Winona, Minn. WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Call 440-M. WOMEN-—Make money sewing bung- alow aprons, children’s dresses. Fae 9 ‘ace Box terial cut, instructions furnish Experience unnecessary. ° Wi Henry Manufacturing Co., 104 Fifth Avenue, ‘New ‘York city. FORK RENT—One large light h mae 105; Hot Keeping room with closet ant facing street. Fully fotnigh and ‘Cold water. Clean afd” com- fortable, Phone 812-J or call at ron eats! street. One fumed oak dining ble very Ba ‘Can "Be aan ‘at 1300 WANED-—A seco! fH hana i stove ss ih, For site ANT! eral housews ret ti ENT.“ ‘Two room: t housekee; rae ian ge ‘ nished. “Al ot ‘a