The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 20, 1927, Page 8

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fs \ tae te PAGE EIGHT | QUARTER INGH | OPRAIN FALLS x <=>] — —] i= >) wr [== = —] = — Precipitation Much Heavier at Other Points—Some Hail With Storm ck received ain from the storm i about 4:30 Sunday : and north o i much more H ording to re } ports of people who were caught in f the storm and reports nd at hail evere enough t to crops. outh damage however. 3 out rek were ve muddy th ry many who ani in getting pery highways. K Bismarek durin led .08 of an inch, bd inch for the 48 hours ending 1m. today. Other points report rainfall for the same period as follows: Ellendale .70; Fessenden 5; Dickinson .6 sot tineau Devils L: Dunn Center Grand prks James town 4 Minot yy poleon on 46. “Generally fair tonight and Tues- day, not much change in tempera- ( ture,” is today’s prediction. LIKE MEADOWS Danny MacFayden, Bespec-| tacled Youth, Is Making Baseball History Now BY BILLY EVANS Manager Bill Carrigan of Boston Red Sox believes he the | 1 Passed From ft | He made his first big start | against the great Walter Johnson | last fall and turned in a most cred-| Q) San : settheditne a ‘ h itable performance | School Ghiid at Pierre in (ye riety capeken aren pate dae 1 Bill. Carrig 1913 says he beli acs \ great. chance. | aerate ‘ like that of Lee Meadows. In many (Editor's ways the resemblance is quite strik-| third of a \ ing. | the histo Until Lee Meadows convinced the | baseball sharps that a pair of spec p th tacles was no handicap to a diam tment at the Uni ond performer, major league man rsity of North Dakota.) ugers laughed at the very idea of a *¥ bespectacled player having a chance nd Forks, June (P)—When , in fast compan Verendrye i the Meadows made his major league i ith the St. Louis short time he wa in the light of a curiosity t a big leaguer. How-jcoul ever, in a very short time he had im-|he pressed the opposing batters quite | min to the contrary. In his very first year he won 15 and lost 11 games with ouly a so-so club. At the close of the season he was a much talked about and photographed young man. That was 13 years ago and Mead- mou ows is still going strong as a mem- ber of the Pittsburgh Pirates. His first seven starts of the present sea- zon resulted in victories, giving him the premier position ‘among the/a major league twirlers. Many Enroll The success of Meadows made it possible for the bespectacled player to get a trial, at least. Following him came George Toporcer, an i fielder, who is in his seventh as a member of the St. Louis Card the Mis: tion: -| Afte the Cleveland Indians, MacFayden | ern came to the majors with no, profes- sional experience. The sandlots pre- down at least a dozen on strikes.) war Several of his performances now read more like fiction than reality. Was Tied Up Early As a rule, these rookie stars are picked up by some club other than their home city. MacFayden was the; exception, for the Boston Red Sox by the + grdinary size but well put up. He has a great fast ball.’ It is this one {asset that pleases Manager Carrigan + most. He believés his speed will prove the foundation of a successful career. _ Under the resourceful Bill Carri- in, a great catcher in his day, Mac- den is bettering his curve and learning a change of pace. He has shown such rapid improvement that his manager now has enough confi- dence in his ability to start him. Sioux Oil Company ~ Filling Stations Are “3 Now Open to Public + Opening of atractive gasoline stations in Bismarck and Mandan y-later part of last week ig! th x Oil company, @ recently incor- o local concern, was unusually ceopst sgt peed ba chaghd of ‘company. - numbers of mo- visited one or the other of ‘on the opening days, and ndants haut mer peaueny ly morn! unt at shah “*iaay was ope! day at the Manda fon and the Bismarck Station was seers Saturday. tog i this deci Fe. the & Of all the FI Betsy Gathered here in front of the building where the fi was made are Philadelphia school children who par VERE ‘MIDWEST IN SEARCH only a short journey to the See Bad Lands In 1742 he sent two of his sons to village of the Hidatsa on the souri river with careful instrue- s to how they were tom: Their journe: inals. Then came Carmen Hill, a|inx which they met various ‘bands pitcher, and strangely enough, he also |of hunters from tribes, the is with Pittsburgh. Late last fall|found an Indian c ho “ Danny MacFayden got his chance.|ing his warri Q h This spring, a southpaw by the|the Snake Indians living in th name of Tuber enrolled with the|Rocky Mountains to the far west. Philadelphia Nationals, The Ve Iry opined this Like George Uhle, pitching ace of |party and probably reached the Mountains. found a vill pared Uhle, while MacFayden is a/deserted and fearing that this meant ” product of the prep school fields. that their enemies int to fall As a high school pitcher, MacFay-|upon their own villages in the rear, den first gained fame because of his |the chief his rs back in strikeout feats. Seldom did he work|@ hurried retreat. The two explor- & game in which he failed’‘to set|ers were compelled to return east- treat were from their guides and were they gave eastward Indian village on the early tied him up in case he decided | North Platte. Here they met an "to play professional baseball. Indian who had been for a time a MacFayden is a right-hander of|slave among the Spanish in Mexico From the information obtained from ing area controlled by the Spanish | government and regularly visited by traders from their outpost at Santa geography of the region, they called souri. Their mistake was a natural Day celeb’ Ross ho in Phil delphia_ had exercises. "one, for doubtless the Indians | Lead Plate Buried By Men in th 713 Dug Up By Indians, | Father to n, Then Rediscovered By: souri village on the present site river jd re found out ni ed to cross the h the the nt: wa of the ns thought it ful trip the river through w er three months of travel, dur- AEUDUCUGUCGEEOUUUOEOEOSNOUCONGERUUOOUERDRCUOGEOEAUCOEREQEOOGESEOUUEIS Mn slopes of the present Bi: Here their war. party of the Snake Indians sUAUUCGOOUOECROGLOUROSODAONOROEOOOOOROUOONL d-and in the pani for sometime of the re- the Snake mounta until Indian, the two Verendryes | ided they had reached the trad-! Not being familiar with the river they had reached the Mis- Capital Funeral Parlors 216 Main Ave. Licensed Embalmer Phone Day or Night—22-W Jos. W. Tschamperiia Prop. NDRYE’S SONS VISITED MUCH OF FOR ‘WESTERN SEA’; irthplaces! @: 2 i the Public Free tions held throughout the land that at th the most appropriate loca! st American fl icipated in the told them it flowed into Their own name for the was the Manton river, Bury Plate h them a lead SPECIAL SALE _ TYPEWRITERS $30.00 Cash All Makes and Sizes—Rebuilt Free with every machine: New rubber roller; new ribbon, any color. de- cleaning brushes, oil can and bottle of oil; and one sired; rubber cover; 1 ving alt ) stamped with THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘FREIGHT RATES e, March 30, 1743. ht near the river they the lead ‘plate, covering it iwith a cairn of stones. This plate ,Was promptly dug up by the Indians ‘und after passing from chief to chief ‘it wax finally discovered. by some children, buried @ few inches under jthe surface of the ground on a hill jnear Pierre, South Dakota, in 1913. The Verendrye sons tell us-in their journal that, after leaving the Indians on the North Platte river, April 2, they journeyed back on the line of their outward march, first northwest and then northeast.’ They reached Fort LaReine, at the present |site of Portage LaPrairic, Manitoba, joo July 2, where their father was {waiting to hear the result of their |exploration, Lakeville, Minn., | Creamery Burns le, Minn. June 20,—()— ting shortly ‘after midnight virtually destroyed the creamery of the Lakeville Creamery company, cansing a loss.estimated at $60,000. The fire started™ on the second from an undetermined cause. loss is covered by insurance. DISCRIMINATE AGAINST N. D. Hendrjcks, at St. Paul Hear- ing, Asks I. C. C. to Re- move Discrimination St. Paul, June 20.—()—Declaring that North Dakota “long has been discriminated against by railroad freight rates, especially in favor of Minnesota and South Dakota,” FE. M. Hendricks, of the North Dakota board of railroad commissioners, to- day asked the Interstate Commerce Commission to remove this discrim- ination, At the first session here of the clasg rate revision hearing by the commission, Mr. Hendricks asked that the alleged discrimination be North Dakota points rather than by | Performed by means of thoroughly. Quickly, ‘too. Authorities now say to clean out transmission -| and differential every 2,500 miles. Then, by | “refilling the gear cases with Alemite Trans- mission Lubricant you will always enjoy easy, noiseless gear shifting, and freedom from rear- end repairs. MP While they last hox white typewriter paper, WALTER W. McMAHON 213 Broadway Minnesota Lake Shore For Sale I have recently purchased a mile of shore on Big Sand Lake, Lake Emma and Bottle Lake, four miles north of Dorset, Minnesota. These lakes are a part of the Man- trap Chain, celebrated for their bass and muskellunge fishing. They are a day’s.drive from Bismarck and’,,’ from Jamestown the road is gravel the entire distance: It is estimated that but 10% of the shore line in Minne- sota is suitable for summer homes, and this is rapidly being picked up. Prices are mounting, and in a few years it will be impossible to buy desirable locations. I aly now surveying this property in 75-foot lots, all heav- - ily timbered with pine, white birch, etc., and will be glad to hear from pecple who are looking for a summer home. My agent, Mr. Herbert D. Hurd, right on the prope have to offer. S.W. CORW Announcing a New Service that cuts repair bills Alemite Gear Flusher, which cleans the gear cases grease along with abrasive matter that causes destruction to gears. Ask for ¢ ALEMITE , Gear Flushing Service Dorset, Minn., will be rty at all times to show. you: what we a new invention, the Removes all, the old: ‘Bismarck, N. Dak. removed by a lowering of rates to[ eee. increasing the rates to and Seuth Dakota points. The {hearing which follows exten- sive tbstimony at Omah Kansas City, Fargo and Sioux City, is on a demand of railroads that class rates be increased in different localities. The increases sought range from 20 per cent to 100 per cent in western trunk line territory. The hearing Bere is expected to occupy 10 days or two weeks. Testi- mony and exhibits will be submitted to railroad commiasions and shippers and shippers’ associations of North Dakota, Nowe, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Wyoming and Kansas. With voluminous exhibits prepared by the traffic department of the North Dakota board of railroad com- Minnesota ag "MONDAY, JUNE 20, i927* ” missioners, Hendricks sought to show the alleged discrimination against North Dakota and cited many in- stances in which rates from Chicago than from Chicago to Minnesota and South Dakota points of the same distance. ‘ North Dakota testimony is ex- {pected to be concluded today. a page Coolidge May Hook Government's Fish Spearfish, S. D., June 20.—()}— Uncle Sam ‘has made it his business to see that trout hittin 2 does not become rélegated to the class einem, Onless the Gas Range hasa RED WHEEL it #¢ NOT a LORAIN Dear Mrs. Newiywed:— WE NOTICE by the paner that you willbe moving soon ' into your new home and we wish tor you every happiness in the new responsitilities of home-making. No doubt you will be interested in examining our line of RELIABLE Ranges with Lorain Red Waee! Self-resulating Ovens. . Reliable Gas Ranges are wonderful bal’=§3. - The Lorain Red Wheel automatically controls the, oven Fest at any required degree of temperature for any length of time. The Red ns to North Dakota points are higher.| 4 of buf-| Cloak Shop. falo hunting and ather vanished sports, R President Coolidge will have an op- jortunity to see how ‘effectively the nited States bureau of fisheries ?+ s its work of propagating game fi now that he, has come to this section for his vacation. ‘A trout hatchery is located here, with D. C. Booth as superintendent. More than 2,000,000 baby trout are contributed by this station every year to the gratification of anglers, and it is p@obable that fish reared under government care will become ensnared on the presidential hook. New Duvetine and velvet gypsy hats, $3.45.—Bismarck heel is conveniently located at the front of the oven. Reliable rounded splashers cdd ts cooking-top space. Handles of oven and broiler are of clean, eve concealec manifold Newest design: cocks with han Gas Ranges? Phone 727 les to match the Ked ’. Consolidated Utilities Co. cool, white porcelain. ipe and new-style i heel. ' New front- ‘, frame construction does away with cleaning difficulties. May we have the pleasure of showing you these Reliabie 504 Broadway timers’ Day. THURSDAY—Farmers’ innipeg Day. -. Sports : Old-fiiners Sports on July 4t MONDAY—Children’s Day and’ Old: : Monster Confederation. —_- Parade and Old-timers’ Sports, TUESDAY—Music Day and. T WEDNESDAY—Citizens’ Day... FRIDAY Americans’ Day— Four-days of. Horse Racing. ‘AllRoads Lead to Brandon hto July 8th Visit the "115 acres Building, Mines Day. *. IAL EXHIBITI You'll be thrilled at the host of New Features A . ,Field and Garden Crops, Dairy Prod- - ? ucts, Hi Machi and Automo- | ‘bile Display, hibit of Nat- ural Resources Beautiful New Forestry, icultw and Game. - is si Entertainment _The finest Programme ever offered The Australian National rect from\ Australia, ‘ ON of Exhibita— Livestock, Music =~ Band, Di:

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