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‘FOUR ' as Second Class Matter. ON (RATES PAYABLE Le Continued from page 2. Daily, by mail, one year in | not yet been found. THE TRIBUNE (NTED STATES NOT 10" (SUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY | Daily, by mail or carrier, | Strange men, detected near the bat- North Dakota ...... ...sse05 4-00) MILITIA WITHDRAWN. | meters — ENTER WAR CRIPPLED per month ... , $ .60/tery. The prowlers escaped and have Daily, by mail outside of (United Press.) North Dakota, one year ..... Bal San Antonio, Texas, March 24.—| Dally, by mall outside of | | 5g| The Mexican border is now clear of| North Dakota, three months. 3.60) 1) state troops. ‘Transportation offi- Daily, by mail in North Dakota ‘Weekly, by mail, per year . 1.60 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation HW STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Sam Houston today an- nounced the departure of the 44th Michigan Infantry, marking the de-| parture of the tinfantry doing pa-| trol on the border line. | TRAINING CAMPS. (United Press.) f cials at Fort (Batablished 1878) |one or two applications for dealers’ BISMARCK AILY TRIB —— ‘CAPITOL NOTES TO BECOME NATIONAL. | Permission has been granted the First State bank of Hazen by the state banking board to increase its capital from $15,000 to $25,000. It is |Beighle might. haye .gone right along with the mileage books for which the dear people paid in their pockets and have done all the traveling to Dickinson and © other — interesting points which they might choose to. . Some little facts which the. state auditing board apparently overlooked understood that the Hazen institution ;in this deal were that the question of intends to bec national bank, |Whether Messrs. Brown, age eee ee ete. Beighle, Muir and Totten are state of- SEEK DEALERS’ TAGS. EF. M. Walla, in charge of the auto-'agredply a matter for the highest mobile rej istration department at the !tribunal in the state to determine, secretary of state’s office, reports that and the state auditing board is not that tribunal; that this is an admin- istration of economy, bent on hus- banding the people’s dollars to such an extent that the governor couldn’t even squeeze qut $: to reimburse poor old Alfonso Bolley for the land LOCATES IN BISMARCK. the reform school grabbed. R. S. Enge, formerly a Stanton at- But, what's a matter of $225 be- torney and more recently engaged in|tween friends, when the sky’s limit, o— automobile license tags have been re- ceived, The tags have not yet ar- rived from the manufacturer, but are daily expected, . Washington, March 24.—The de- ent commanders at San Fran} cisco, Chicago, San Antonio and New! York a arranging for extensive | camp sites similar to that at Platts-| burg, , in which several million | dollars will be expended. GUARD BRIDGES, | (United Press.) H Portland, Ore, Maren 24.—Rail-| way bridges across the Columbia and | Willamette rivers are under military guards today. Adjutant General White | of the Oregon National Guard called out a company of Coast Guard Artil- jlery during the night. They were mobilized and placed on duty early today. Sa = sss | part LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. For the 24 hours ending at noon, March 24, 1917: Temperature at 7:00 a.m. . ‘Pemperature at noon . ‘Highest yesterday .. Lowest last night .. Precipitation ... Highest wind velo Forecast. | For North Dakota: ‘Partly cloudy | and cooler tonight and Sunday; fresh to strong west, shifting to northwest, winds. Temperature 1 | 2 ol | FIRE ON PROWLER. (United Press.) Calgary .. Chicago . Kansas City 42 | Moule, 3 | Pierre ... ae | guarding the powder maga St. Paul oe local navy yard did their first work Moorhead 30 today, when they fired on an uniden-} Winnipeg 2 tified’ man approaching a magazine.) St. Louis 42 He was not captured . Large quanti: | San Francisco 46 lties of powder and ammunition are} Helena .. 32 stored in the magazine, | Williston § pach abet | ORRIS W. ROBER' START FOR EAST. Meteorologist. (United Press.) | Chieago, March 24.—The first con-| eee cere ee ee eee ex x «| tingent of the 2,500 naval recruits at, © WWe-anust qnekecour own pub | the eat Lakes naval training sta-j ‘ , ition started for “somewhere in the} * lic opinion, to buoy us up in *) east” today. There were 200 in the * every loftier aspiration.—Adler. * unit. Within two weeks, nother 800 eee ee ee eee ee ee ee * Will follow, for distribution among, | the Atlantic fleet ships. NOT SHED IN VAIN. 'FAULTY BOMBS __ | Russia without a czar! | SPOIL PLOTS It’s one of the signs of the times. —— Thirty years ago a famous French| New York, Enea emtne aaedl| statesman said that the social prob- see tnetain John Klelst te be placed | Jem is a fad, upon which serious-) on allied food ships saved hundreds | minded statesmen should waste no} of vessels from destruction, Detective | time. Barch testified at the trial of the six! Today, no serious-minded man will|@lleged bomb plotters. The bombs | 4 were taken aboard many vessels, but! question the fact that the social prob- not being properly made, failed to ex- | lem is the most important that con-/ plode. Hundreds, Barch said, were| fronts. us, jfound in the holds of vessels after | And this awakening has come none | they: bad reached France. arch said too soon, for already the horizon is ee a een hed rorked ‘continu | dark with clouds of social unrest,| oysiy to get evidence for over a year! which may either distil into blessed and a half. | showers or break upon us in a storm i of fury. z 0 | For long years the people fought! | GRAIN MARKETS | for religious democracy—and they | 0. \ eon \ MIN MS unis ; No. 1 Hard » 206% @207 Then for 400 years they shed their No. 1 Northern * 197% @201-% | blood upon many a battlefield as they/ No, 1 Northern Choice .. 204% @206% | struggled for political democracy—/|Regular to arr . ; eed | and they con § Choice to arr » 204 eal Toda: uate a ting the battle|Ne: 2 Northern . 193% @201%6 | SE ENEY” Are, DEANE tno) OATES INo, 8 Wheat. | 18544 @195% for industrial democracy—and no hu-|No! 2 Mont. Hard » 198% @200% | man power can stop their onward!No, 2 Mont. Hard to arr. 197% | march, and ‘no divine power will! No. 1 Durum anes : a | And the three are one—it’s the fight Ne: i puruw A o o09 | for demotracy which the people have No. 2 Durum - 196 @207 been making for centuries. No. 3 Yellow Corn ...... 116 @117_ | In different periods it has taken on No. 3 yellow Conn to arr ue a tC 5 i sag {Other Grades Cron ..... @116 different forms and some countries No. 4 Yellow Corn . 414145 | 67%@ 68% 61% @ 62%) 60%W 61% 60%@ 62%) have been more backward than oth- ers—among them Russia. But the sweep toward freedom has been irresistible. The victory in Rus- No. 2 White Mont. . io. 3 White Oats . No. 3 White Oats to No. 4 White Oats .. |Lisbon; J. A. |Dickinson and all over the stat the practice of chiropractic, has locat-| and the inherent right of the right ed in Bismarck, where he will engage | people to do what they demnition in the latter profession. Mr. Enge’s | please is not to be denied. family has accompanied him to the — Capital City, where he has establish- ed his home. GERMANY SAYS eee MORE BACK TAXES. State Auditor Karl R. Kositzky, who is earning his salary with a ven- geance, yesterday received a check from Armour & Co., for $235.98; from the Fruit Growers’ Express for $29.30; from the Petroleum Products company for $15.50, and trom the J. I. Case company for $13.70, ¢ back taxes on private car lin have been running for five years, ve ° Asserts Tanker Was in Barred DISSOLUTION ORDERED. 5 The commissioner of insurance has Zone; Officials Say It Was been advised that the dissolution of i i the Northern Fire & ‘Marine Insur- Not | ance company at Grand Forks has 2 Sra é steee United Press.) been ordered by the district court, on Hf i 5 tee es petition of the Insurance commission. | , Perlin. emern eco Sard There seems to be some question a8 the ginki iy America s fe Bi to the receiver to be named. ne eok; the tank: «glyamer Pear Healdton by a geman submarine as an overt act. ‘The NEW CORPORATIONS. lAmerican steamer I Yebterd: new corporations were: | will aggravate Ame Lansford Co-operative Co., Lansford, sure on President Wilson,” one paper} JL D, OK , T. Larson, F. M, Hard- declared, “and the entente press will er, A. G, Adams, John L. Davies, $40,-/undoubtedly assert that it, was an| 000 capital; Arts and Crafts Shop, overt act, but by construing this as Fargo, @. (M. Perkins, Aubrey Law-'a reason for war would prove that rence, ‘Mary Schlanser, capital $10,-!America is wilfully seeking such an| 000; State Game Protective associa- occasion. It was unnecessary that tion, Mandan, Joseph Crosthwaite and the Healdton should have been in the C. EF. Edquist, Mandan; C. 0. HeSkle, submarine barred zone. She could Larson, Bismarck; !have just as well taken to the lane) Frank Ray, Dickinson; Luther P. used by the Holland-American steam- | Dawson, Devils Lake; Dr. J. R. Pence, ‘ers, which is out of the barred zone. Minot; ‘Aneta Supply Co., Aneta, W. ee oe A. Peterson, Arne Luckason, E. G. WAS IN SAFETY ZONE | According to sto: told by surviv-j Larson, capital $25,000. rae capital aes ors the Healdton was actually within; TO EXTRADITE STRONG. Governor Frazier yesterday issued | to Sheriff F. N. Hartung of Stark | county extradition papers drawn on| | the governor of Wisconsin, for Arthur | Strong, wanted at Dickinson for an ° | 1 j i | alleged statutory offense, in which a Red and Inflamed. 15-year-old girl was the victim. The Stark county sheriff left last night for La Crosse, W where Strong's pres- ence was reported by George J. Brown, an ex-sheriff of Stark. States Attorney H. A. Burgeson came over from Dickinson to asi with the pre liminaries, 'y baby. girl had a breaking out on PRESENTED NEW BOARD appeared in the iurm of blisters, and the skin was very red (Continued from page one) ‘isons and inflamed, It itched capital to receive the comm aad irritated her so badly that she was very fretful, and would scratch her face till it which Governor Frazicr took it upon was covered with blood, himself to supply without approval It Became so bad I had from the senate. “But,” a member of the state audit- ing board advised this morning, ‘they expect to do a lot of traveling, to to keep mittens on her hands all the time, and her face was disfigured. “T tried medicines without success. ThenI Procired Cuticura Soapand Oint- Se * | ment, and they very soon healed her. Then, too, the governor didn't seem | Herface is nowwithoutscar orblemish,* to regard it necessary for the state 4 S, =e: eae oe (Signed) Mrs. D. A. Stanger, Box 244, to pay the traveling expenses of the | Blue Mound, Ill., Oct. 8, 1916. board of regents when he vetoed an Fy cee * pose in| the general appropriation | and keep them clear by using Cuticura bills. But the warrants approved by | Soap for every-day toilet purposes and : Barley beeeees 101 @119 |} e auditing board, of ich sia—even though it may not be per-|Ghoice Barie | 119 @128 He state aud yee poard, of which | touches of Ointment as needed. Pas a oes . 162 @163 eB a viser mber, ar fail address post-card: ‘‘Cuticur: ae promoters =i one of the first He? ; 987% @295% |these warrants against the funds of| Dept. R, Boston? Sold everunere ruits of the war. Flax to ai "986% @293%4 |the state board of regents. And no = Age-long aspirations of the people| yay "18934 record of the transaction appears on | — — = in other lands will be realized during | July 182% ee oeanae mace athe Geese Wa 3 3 a Jeents, a re ne “Dread the’ perlody of ereconstruction to <fol- Sepiemer m. id made by the auditing board, and it} ELOCUTION low the war. lose 1:47 p. m. is barely possible that had the state) - . The war will be a terrible price to jtreasurer been a good fellow it might Expression and Dramatic pay even for all this, But it has al-|May 189% jnot have been neces y to give ie Art in all its branches. 2 July .. & eas SBS transaction so much unwarrante Mrs. T. B. Mikkelso: 622 ways been so. Four thousand battles|\0*) ‘Hird on trk . 194% (publicity, and Messrs. Brown and Ver-|I 34 “gt. Phon My were fought to win freedom of speech,!\y' 1 Northern on trk .. 193% jmilya, and Muir, and Totten and - one -: and blood ran like water. 2 Northern on trk .. 187% @189% Vicarious sacrifice—that is, the giv- . 3 Northern on trk .. 1814 @18! ing up of life for the g 2 e . 1 Northern to arr 4 wis the law of the universe in every|No. 2 Mont. Hard on trk 193% kingdom—mineral, vegetable and an-|No- 2 Mont. Hard to arr 108% ; . 1 Spot Durum . - 200 imal. . 2 Spot Durum - 195 @197 It is the supreme law of the spirit-|No. 1 Durum to arr .... 198 ual world, for the natural law that|May .- : ie governs elsewhere, also controls here. au on trk ", 58% @ 6156 And so—back of the abdication of|Qatg to arr .. wee 58% the czar is the sacrifice of blood.| Rye on trk and to arr 160 @162 Russian moujiks, whose fearful de-|Barley on trk He @126 gradation has been so graphically told nae on trkvand to ae a by Gorky, the Russian story writer, July Be ” 299% and university students, and delicate] High May . 192% but splendidly heroic women, and|Low .- 189% masterful men—all have contributed their share in weakening the hold of soulless tyranny which has so long swayed in Russia. But their reward has come. Not one drop of blood has been shed in vain, when one thinks of the blessings that will come to all the oppressed in Russia—and not to them only but to the peoples of all the world. WHY DO THEY? A Newcastle, Ind., dispatch about that tornado says that “women and children ran through the streets cry- ing and wringing their hands and men shouting and cursing.” Close CATTLE MARKETS Hl ' ST. PAUL. HOGS—Receipts, 2700. steady. Range, $14.00 to $14. $14.40 to $14.50. |" CATTLE—Receipts, 650. Killers, steady for the week. Steers, $5.50 to Market, >; bulk, $i cows and heifers, $6.00 to $9.0! calves, steady, -at 00 to $13.25; stockers and feeders, steady 3 and strongest for the week, at $4.00 to $8.50. SHEEP—Receipts, none. Market steady. Lambs. $8.00 to $14.25; weth- ers, $6.00 to $11.00; ewes, $5.50 to | $11.25. Will some psychologist tell us why,; at such times, men get out and cuss their loudest? Cursing is naturally an outburst of rage, rather than of} i fear. Curses at such times are as in-| $14.60; pigs, $10.50 to $14.00. appropriate as applause at a funeral./ © CaTTLE—Recipts, 800. Wak. Na- But we leave it to the psychologists. | tiv beef steers, $9.20 to $12.65; west- ¥! -|ern steers, not quoted; stockers and ‘The Lady Next Door believes in the| feeders, $7.00 to $10.00; calves $5.60 literac: aliens. “Ane {to $10.75. Lie ie sire a sal SHPEP—Receipts, 3,000. Market, ipl acres cater | steady. -Wothers,. $11.20." to $12.65; ‘of tiem “bring: lambs, $12.75 to $15.25. ‘CHICAGO. HOGS—Receipts, 14,000. _ Strong. Bulk, $14.85 to $15.05; light, $14.20 to $15.00; mixed, $14.50 to $15.19; heavy, $14.45 to $15. rough, $14.45 to 45H. P. Six, $1070 The Buick Valve-in-Head Six sells today from one to two hundred dollars under any other. car in its class. In spite of this the finish and material is equal to any two thous- and dollar car. We invite comparison, 45 H. P. Valve-in-Head Motor. Delco Starting and Lighting system. 115 inch Wheelbase. Genuine Leather Uholstery. Spiral Bevel Drive, Full Floating Rear Axle. Vacuum Feed. i 34 x 4 Tires Mileage 16 to 18 per gallon. 12 Months Guarantee. 1 Corwin Motor. Co. Bismarck, N. D. Vermilya, | ficials, entitled to a drag on the pub-; jlic-pyrse strings, is still in abeyance, | sinking of the} dton possibly | n press pres-| Irritated | Badly. CuticuraHealed. | ) | Kun 2 RT Bil | UME | i Sensible Six Sensible because of its power. The valve-in-head motor de- livers full 41 h.p. at 2500 r.p.m. —one h.p. for every 53 pounds of car weight. There is plenty of power for hardest pulling — more actual power and more proportion- ate power than any other car of its size. i Inquire about this feature at our show- rooms or from any driver of a Sensible Six. Dakota Motor Co. Bismarck | ug | il _ made by Germany. United Press dis- patches from London yesterday quot- ed survivors as saying that they ex- pected Germany to make such denial that the Healdton was not in the safe- ty zone, but all the crew are positive \they were in the lane, in which ships are supposed to be immune from at- acks. the safety pass of the barred “zone | DICKINSON AUTO : CLUB IS ACTIVE (Special to The Tribune) Dickinson, N. D., March 24.—The Dickinson Automobile club is making extensive preparations for spring and summer work. A committee consist- ing of James Soules, Alfred White and W. R. Everett has been appointed to meet with the county commissioners at the next. meeting regarding the ap- pointing of an assistant road super- visor of highways. The club ‘has a jmembership of 160. F. W. Turner, president of the club, hopes to bring the membership up ti 500.at an early date. You will find more of the leading people of North Dakota registered at the Radisson than at any other hotel in the Twin Cities. low a price. duction. price of $1,350. power. Only a builder of:long experience and with a yearly output of thou- sands could produce this car at so Only thus can quality of materials and of manufacturing be combined with economy of pro- Because .Chalmers does this is the reason why this Chalmers 7-passenger Touring Car has no competition at anywhere near its Touring Car, 7-passenger. . . Touring Car, S-passenger. . . . Touring Sedan, 7-passenger . . . Corner Main and Seventh Sts. Chalmers 7-Passenger Touring Car Price $1350 Detroit Full Value for Every Dollar In this Chalmers, 7-Passenger Touring Car Scan the list of other 7-passenger cars for the equal of this Quality Chalmers. You will not find it. Only in this Chalmers are combined so many real values. You may pay $300 to $500 more and find nothing better. indestructible, They shift easily, without clashing, and properly. used are practically of dry-plate, disc clutch is far in ad- vance of other designs. Chalmers rear axle is the same as used in ex- pensive foreign and American cars. It is silent, efficient, economical. A Big Beautiful Body Big—122 inch wheelbase. Beau- ~ ees The Chalmers type TURDAY, MAROH--24, 1917. : These Prove Quality Claims Chalmers claims a motor of unex- ampled smoothness, «of unusual Prove it by. examining Chalmers Lynite’ pistons, 1/3° the weight of the usual cast iron. These give smoothness, less strain on bearings, admit of higher power. Compare‘the Chalmers crankshaft with others. It is one-piece, specie! steel, drop-forged, balanced in mo- tion to a fraction of an ounce. See the Chalmers Transmission Gears are crucible nickel steel, case-hardened and heat-treated. tiful—because graceful in form, hand-finished in Chalmers shops, upholstered in genuine pebble-grain leather, with new Scotch “fluted’” finish. Auxiliary folding seats, Pan- tasote top, curtains open with the doors, fasteners are the “lift the dot” pattern. Compare Quality— and Price Think how great the difference between this quality Chalmers and other cars. Realize what unusual value is here offered. You will go much higher in price before you will find any other to please you so well. And all these claims we submit for your decision. Come—try the car. Investigate. Then only can you decide. : + $1350 1250 1850 “(AU orices & 0, b. Detroit.) Missouri Valley Motor Co. Distributor Phone 234 ©