The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, June 24, 1919, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    mm mm mm a-mmm
All I
NORTH
PLATTE,
NEB.
ACES
E2SSE333H.T
i23JUl
T H
iiiwm.i-iLU.iJ iuu-lumu-u u-Lui-iii lil. i iLiinwiinMrrawimininKirTTTi'TwrrnTii m rTv-"'-H"''"v''' .r,.r.l-7TrTrr-.,r y.,.. l..nr,,i.rrT.rr.tr x f ( l
R
ACES, 1
AMONG WHO ARE KING RHILEY, H. S. BRINKER, GLEN BREED AND H. S. ROLLER'
FOUR OF THE LEADING DRIVERS OF THIS PART OF THE COUNTRY.
Fastest
inrt
Track
W
stern Nebraska.
RESERVED SEATS NOW ON SALE AT REXALL DRUG STORE.
RACES START 1:30 P. N. GOV'T TIME.
LINCOLN COUNTY AGRICULTURAL
D. BIRGE, Secy.
CiETY.
lit A li HAItK, Editor itud Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION IIATES:
One fear by Mull, I advanco. .$1.75
Ono Year by Carrier, In advance, $2.00
Entored at tho North Platto, Nebraska
Poetofflco as Socond Class Manor.
TUESDAY, JUNE 24th, 101D.
Recruiting Offlcera In Town.
A naval rucrultlug pirty In chargo
of officer w. II. Ilolnstniaii, arrived
yesterday and will romain this wock
with an offlco In tho fcdoral building.
Boys between tho ages of 17 and 18
and men between 18 and 35. who are
full citizens of tho United StatoB and
of sound mental and physical condi
tion, good moral character and who
tiro able to read and write the Eng
HhIi language, can visit the recruiting
party's headquarters In tho fcdoral
building and soo the chlof petty offl-
cor in charge,
Tho term of onlistmcut is for four
years, oxcopt in tho ensos of boys bo-
owcon tho ages of 17 and 18, who must
obtain their parents' or guardian's
consent, and who will servo until tho
day beforo reaching tholr 21st birth
day. Men over 18 yoarB of age do
not requiro consont of tho their par
.onts but tho navy department prefers
that young men discuss tho mnttor
with their parents.
Tho minimum pay is $32.60 per
month for apprentice soamon and
landsmen, and men with trades and
previous servico men, may onllst at
high ratings with baso pay reaching
as high as $99,00. Tho navy Is tho
groatest school on earth and over 55
trades aro employed.
Less Killed nnd Injured
. Since tho organization of tho Sato
ty Movement, under tho railroad ad
ministration In the Contral-Wostorn
Region, tho number of accidents have
'decreased appreciably. During tno
tthroo months, of Jnuuary, February
tind March, 1919, there woro 90 less
employes killed and 1115 loss injured
than In tho threo name months in 1918
Is thoro any wonder that tho employee
nnd tho management aro vitally inter
ested In such a movement when tho
results aro so satisfactory?
::o::
More Men Employed
Tho supply of labor in both car and
locomotlvo departments in tho Con
tral-Wostorn Region for tho month of
May was ample to meet all roqulro
monts. There was a total of 83,182
men employed in both departments
during tho month ns compared with
77,538 for tho month of Mny, I9IS.
, ::o;:
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Blalock ro
turned this morning from a visit to
Colorado points.
Mrs. Ferguson left this morning for
fen extended visit In tho eastern part
Tornado In Minnesota.
Evansvlllo, Minn., June 23. Forty
sovon persons aro known to bo dead,
1G0 aro Injured and in emergency hos
pitals, and proporty valued at $G,000,
000 is destroyed as a result of the tor
nado which swept through Fergus
Falls late yesterday afternoon. Relief
work Is under way with plenty of
doctors and nurses on hand. There is
a possibility that tho death list may
roach GO when tho ruins of the Grand
Hotel havo been thoroughly searched,
as It Is known many bodies are still
beneath tho pile. The greatost loss
of llfo took place at tho Grand Hotel,
a thrco-story building. Thlrty-flvo
persons aro bolloved to havo boon
killed when tho building was smashed
by tho twister. More than 50 guests
woro in tho building.
::o::
More Battleships Sunk.
Tho German warships which wero
not surrendered to tho allies and
which havo been anchored olt Kiel,
Wllholmshnvon nnd other points,
havo boon sunk by German sailors
manning them, acordlng to a report
received at Weimar from" a reliable
authority.
According to tho roports there woro
twolvo Gorman war vessels, ' besides
destroyers, which woro in Gorman
waters, not having been turned over
to tho ontonto under tho armistice
provisions.
::o::
wantd Woman to work on ranch.
Good wages. Mrs. Anna F. Hansen,
Phono 790FJU. 47-2
Gasoline to Be Mined.
The latest estimates of tho United
States geological survey show that If
gasoline continues to bo used up at
the present rote, all the petroleum
Holds now In' use will bo oxhnusted be
fore 1050. Where, then, will the fu
ture supply of gasoline come from?
Billions of dollars are Involved in the
question. The probable answer la that
"mined" gasoline will be used.
Colorado, Utah and other Western
and middle Western states contain ex
tensive oll-benrlng deposits of bitumin
ous shale. Crude oil can be extracted
from them and this can bo distilled
further to obtain gasollnei
It Is estimated that enough gasoline
could bo produced In this way to equal
many times the amount obtnlned from
all present-day fields.
Discouraging Art.
"Why do you spend your days and
nights on these pictures?" asked the
wlfo of tho struggling nrtlst. "You
don't get enough for them to pny you
for the paint you use."
"I know, my dear," he answers;
"but think I Itembrandt and others
painted pictures and sold them for
trifles, and they are now the master
pieces of the world and bring millions j
of dollars! I am not painting for us.
I am painting for our descendants."
"Humph I" Is the discouraging reply.
"You don't make enough for us to 'af
ford to raise any descendants." Sr.
Louis Globe-Democrat.
Mrs. Louis Peterson will return
this afternoon from a visit in Cheyenne.
A Muddled MouJIk.
Mr. Tower, former American arabas
sador to Russia, told this story of a
typical moujlk entering a railroad sta
tion and Inquiring when a certain
train would leave. He received the in
formation nnd departed.
A little Inter, however, he was back
again, asking the same question.
"Why," exclaimed the agent, "I told
you that only a minute togo."
"You did truly," the moujlk an
swered, "but It Isn't myself that wants
to know this time, It's my mat out
side." Boston Transcript,
I
NOTICE!
That the Electric Shop has moved to 510 Locust St. in
the General Hospital Bid. The Quality Shop in everything
electrical, Century Fans and Motors. My lighting fixtures
have not arrived, hut expect them every day. It will pay
you to wait and see them. If you want good workmanship
good material and a good joh go to
THE ELECTRIC SHOP OR PHONE S17.
RES. PHONE RED 246.
FOR SALE!
, A Few Grade
Hereford Bulls.
C. V. Turpie, North Platte.
Strategy.
"Mnklng friends la all very well, but
a man should be careful about the kind
of friends he makes," remarked Mr.
Gadspur.
"My sentiments exactly," said Mr.
Dubwalte. "Whenever a newcomer
moves Into my neighborhood and'looks
as if be might want to borrow my gar
den tools three or four days n week I
find out what his political views are
and take the opposing side." Birming
ham Age-Ih:ciill'
Master LaVerno Elliott returned
Sunday from a week's visit with rela
tives at Trumble and Hastings.
MARION DAVIES
IN
"GETTING MARY MARRIED"
A high class comedy of youth
and aristocracy.
It's a very eflicient and satis
factory method of courting by
substitute providing the substi
tute is the right man.
Learn how it can be done at the
Crystal Theatre
Tonight & Tomorrow
10c and 25c.
Use your coupons.
WROTE OF LIFE AT HARVARD
Author Now Forgotten Conceded to
Have Been the First to Depict
Undergraduate Days.
Harvard graduates, the world over,
have long believed that the earliest
pictorial record of undergraduate life
at the oldest college In the United
States was made when F. G. Attwood
drew his pictures of college life for
tho first volume of the Harvard Lam
poon. The Lampoon was the fore
runner of humorous Journalism to
America; Attwood became a famous
humorist; and his "Manners & Cus
toms of ye Harvard Studente" was es
tablished as a classic. The discovery
qf a time-stained book In a New Eng
land farmhouse reveals an earlier
draftsman, whose "College Scenes"
antedate "Ye Harvard Studente" by
about a quarter of a century, but were
soon generally forgotten. Of N. Hay
ward, the artist, no record remains
but the bare fact that he was then in
college. The discoverer, however, hnd
a rare afternoon when he found the
volume In a dusty chest, where It had
been packed away with a lot of con
temporary textbooks and nn old Har
vard diploma. Christian Science Monitor.
The New Hotel Palace and Cafe
Is now Open tor the Accommodation of the Public.
While a few of our fixtures are still lacking wo aro ablo to take care of tho public both
as to rooms and dining room and lunch counter service. AH rooms aro equipped with
running hot and cold water and a number of tho rooms haveprivate baths attached.
All rooms aro neatly and attractively furnished, thus giving to our patrons Che mnxi
mum of comfort. In our dining room and at tho lunch counter tho best tho market af
fords is served, and throughout our servico is second to none.
Upon tho arrival and installation of the delayed fixtures wo will have a public
opening an will be pleased to show tho public one of the best appointed hotels and
cafes in the state.
RICHI UGAI, Owner.
HUGH Y. VADA, General Manager. W. S, CHENEY, Assistant Manager
'of tho state.
-mAmmi m hi i u0rWmmimmimAi mmmmmvt
1 w trm
m