The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 13, 1917, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ENESCO RMR APD A TENSES REIL EIGHT. FRIDAY, APRIL 19, 1017. + NO VACATION FOR EMPLOYES AT POSTOFFIGE Because of Emergency Which|} Confronts Nation All Leaves of Absence Canceled Employes of the postoffice here have been advised that owing to the emergency which now confronts the nation that the government finds it necessary to cancel all leaves of ab- sence except those granted to em- ployees with pay; those to employees on military duty, and those to em- ployees absent on account of sick- ness. All other employees, accord- ing to the order received here from the postmaster general, are directed to report to their respective posts of duty immediately. It has heretofore been the practice not only to grant employees leave of absence with pay ‘but qleave of absence without pay when the service would not be seri- ously impaired. WATCH YOUR STEP--THS 1S FAIDAY, 13TH): Watch your step tod This is Fri- day—Friday, the Thirteenth. If you bet on the Phillies this after- noon or played the “bulls” in the pit and Tost don’t blame yourself but at- tach all the grievance on the the week and the date. Over-scrupulous persons | awe on the approach of I thirteenth, and that ominous things are certain to bred Some are Known to even forego travel from one point to another, ing place in Bismarck toda organization of Compa mustered into federal o'clock this afternoon and so far big meetings are scheduled for to- night. What place the day will play in the jona] affairs of the nation or in the — field patches of the ropean arn s with the news d PAPER BARONS ARE INDICATED New York, April 13.—-Charged with controlling 55 per cent of the news print production of the country and using their power in restraint of trade in violation of the Sherman anti-trust. law, six paper manufac- turers aud a banker prominent in financing news print paper companies were indicted by the federal grand jury here today. Five of the manu- facturers constitute the executive committee of the news print paper manufacturers association, whose sec- retary, Geo. F. Steele, the indictment says, was not named as a defendant in view of the fact that he appeared as a witness before the grand ‘jury. The men Indicted are Geo. H. Mead, Philip T. Dodge, Edward Backus, George Chahoon, jr, Gi. H. P. Gould, Frank J. Sensen- brenner and Alexander Smith, a Chicago banker. INHERITANCE TAX CASE TO U. 8. SUPREME COURT The case of Howard Moody vs. El- ina Skarderud and the State Tax Commission, an inheritance tax ac- tion involving treaty relations be- tween the United States and ‘Norway, will go to the United States supreme court this morning. The supreme court on a writ of error, for which WHEN YOU ASK FOR s BUTTER 4 NORTHERN a petition was granted by the state supreme court today. The supreme court of North Dakota, in deciding this case last week, reversed the Cass county district court and held that the provision of the state laws assessing inheritances of fofeign heirs at 25 per cent, while resident heirs are required to pay but 1 1-2 per cent is valid. Application for a writ of error was made this morning y. Fowler, William C, Green yd Engerud, representing ho is executor of the Fargo estate of Martin Hagan, involved. Once a Captain; Now Enters U.S. Few events of importance ave tak-]) a Service a Private When FB. P. Wing of ‘Bismarck, for- mer guard at the state penitentiary and one time captain of Company A, saw the “boys” undergoing physical examination at the armory yesterday afternoon and the merchants of the city displaying Old Glory from their places of business, he recalled the days when he was at the head of his company and then his loyalty was put to a test. Ezra walked, into the barracks and Second Lieutenant A. 'H. Scharnows- ke swore him into the federal service from a “man on the reserve list” to a private. o————_ | GRAIN MARKETS ———— || MI POLIS, No. 1 Hard + 232% @235% 1 Northern. + 226% @229% COS ccoeitrone + 231% @234% Regular to ar + 226% to arr + 229%: Northern 220% @229% Wheat. 210% @ 222% Hard Mont. + 225% @228% Mont. Hard to Arr. 225% @226% Druum.... 225 @227 . 1 Durum Ch No, 1 Durum to Arr.. Dur. Choice to Ar : @230 Yellow Corn..... 137% @138% ’ Yellow Corn to arr 136% @137% Other grades --.......5 128 @137%' No. 4 Yellow Corn to arr 135% @136% White Mont ++ 11% @72% 65%@ 66% 65%@ 66% White Oats White Oats to arr White Oats. 654@ 66% a + 109 @127 I + 127 @137 Y - 183 @184 Rye to arr - 183 @184 Flax + 311 @318 Flax to + S11 @318 May . 214% July + 208%.@208% September - 173 ‘Close 1:40 p. m. DULUTH May .. + 214% July . . 208% No. 1 Hard on trk. + 223% . 1 Northern on trk.. 218% @222% Northern on trk-. 214% @217% Northren on trk.- 206% @211% Mont. Hard on trk 218%! Mont. Hard to arr 218%: Spot Durum...... 227 Spot Druum... 222 Spot Durum to arr 222 No, 1 Durum. + 227 May - 227 July - + 224 Oats on trk 63% @ 66% Oats to arr 63% Rye on trk an @180 Barley on trk @137 Flax on trk and to arr.. 315 @317 May . . 315 July . 316 Close f ST. PAUL HOGS — Receipts, 4,600; steady. Range, $15.00@15.75; bulk, $15.50@ 60. CATTLE—Receipts, 2,900; killers, 10@25c lower for week; steers, $6.50 @12.25; cows-heifers, $6.00@10.50; calves, . 25c) higher, $6.00@12.00; stockers-feeders, 25@50c lower for week, $5.00@10.00. SHEEP—Receipts, 25; steady. Lambs, $8.00@14.50; wethers, $6.00@12.00; ewes, $5.50@11.25, CHICAGO, HOGS—Receipts, 20,000; weak, 10c under yesterday's average; bulk, $15.80@16.20; light, $15.35@16.15; mixed, $15.60@16.30; heavy, $15.60@ | 16.35; rough, $15.60@15.75; pigs, $11.75@14.60. CATTLE—Receipts, 2,000; native beef steers, $9.30@13.25; stockers- feeders, $7.30@10.00; _cows-heifers, $5.75@11.00; calves, $9.00@13.25. SHEEP—Receipts, 9,000; strong; wethers, $10.70@13.10; lambs, $12.00 FEDE! iL’ TIR Ragged Oo ‘Ls Tread / oS ying viens Tread Gir Os em Gaon | TOE EEE Equal to the best in quality and service, Federal Tires have a great advantage over all others in their Double-Cable-Base Construction. Four staunch steel cables built into the base of the Federal Tire hold it firmly to the rim under the severest driving strains, They do away at one stroke with the causes of most tire troubles. Equip your car with FEDERALS—the “Extra Service” deli will prove them the best tire investment you ever made, icicijall ay nscaal Car Supply Company @16.00. Traffih Official and social New York played a big part in the dedica- tion of the great tabernacle, April 1, in which Billy Sunday will conduct his great revival. It is Sunday’s first invasion of New York. The photograph at the tabernacle for dedication. Below are shown (left to right) John D. Rockefeller, jr. and Stephen Baker greeting Gov. Whitman on his arrival at the tabernacle. 3700 MILES OF HIGHWAY PLANNED BY SECRETARY BLISS FOR COMMISSION Thirty-seven hundred miles of tént- ative trunk line highway will ‘be shown on maps which State Engi- neer Bliss now has under course of preparation and which will be placed before every county board of commis- sioners at their May meeting. The maps will detai] 2,000 miles of prim. ary trunk line highways and 1,700 miles of connecting, secondary roads. The county commissions will be ask- ed to criticize the routes proposed, and their suggestions will be placed before the state highway commission when it convenes at the capitol. FIFTY MEMBERS CO. H MUSTERED INTO UNCLE SAM’S SREVICE—CO, A FUpisuine, U. 8. A., re- yom Jamestown and ymustered in to Fed- Fargo, where eral service’ fifty’ members of Co. H. i stationed at Jamestown, but . now equally divided between guard duty at the two points. Today Captain Ris- tine is mustering in Companies A and. F of Bismarck and Mandan _respec- tively, and tomorrow he will muster in the Dickinson company, which is on guard duty outside the state. SEEK TO RELEASE COAST VESSELS FOR WAR SERVICE Washington, April 13.—Plans for government use.of many coastwise vessels, on both the Atlantic and Pa- cific seaboard, and on the Great Lakes are under way among the rail- roads. Through the Council of National Defense, the government has request- ed the roads to permit the release of virtually all vessels in coastwise trade to the government. Many of the ships probably would be used in the transportation of supplies to the Allies, pending the construction of tis government's fleet of wooden ves- sels. W. J. Connors of Buffalo, New York, who controls thirty-five ves- sels on the Lakes, called at the White House today, to say that six vessels of his fleet will be available for ocean going traffic. the top shows the crowds entering ARR PRESS ASN | Some people say that Iam too much of a dream girl because I love stories, especially fairy stories, and when things turn out rather disappointing and “unstorylike” I like to fix then over so that everything ends up beau- tifully and the sad people “live happily ever after.””| This story really did turn out that way, and it seems to me that the real story is just as nice as the dream story of mine. In our church there was a woman of about twenty-seven years of.age who was the leader of our young people’s choir, Although she was twenty-seven she seemed quite young to us, and: we called her Miss Winifred. I think she is just about the nicest person in the world and I used to wonder why every man in our town wasn’t just crazy about her and why they didn’t all break their hearts and be bachelors forever because she wouldn’t marry them. One day I found out. about it. (2 mean'I found out why she never mar- ried ‘them, not why!'they weren't all bachelors.) It was because, years ago, when she was eighteen years old, she loved a young doctor whom she had known all through her highschool course. People say.'that they were en- gaged and that he finally broke the engagement, after she had grown to love him and had made so many happy plans for the future with him. Of course she thought then that he was the nicest man in the world, but he wasn’t, and when she found out that he had never loved her but had been false all those years it seemed as though she must have built a tight wall around her heart to keep it safe. 1 guess she thought all men were just about alike and that they would treat a girl’s heart as a mere plaything to The Outbursts of Everett True PORE YOU CLEAVE Tt WISH You WouLcD LEAVE SOME CHANGE HERE. L WANT To Go SHOPPING. By Condo THO TMS Money! Money! Money? I've Got MY HAND IN MY POCKET ALC Yes, THAT'S THE TROUBLE — You NEVER TAKE YOUR HAND OUT OF YOUR POCKET he” cast “aside when they had fired of it. And so for years she had devoted all her time in unselfishly doing good. for others and consequently in making everyone love her more than ever, Now this was the time my dreams came in. Sometimes when the sermons seemed pretty long and it seemed to me rather uninteresting, I used to play that she was a beautiful princess, such as one often reads about, whom a wicked ogre had confined In a tower so high and so strong that no one could find an entrance, though all who came near could hear a beautiful sil- very voice floating down to them. And everyone who chanced tq hegr. this mel- ody fell immediately..ang,xlolently in love. with her and:..wag, seized with the desire to. rescue, her, and, win the. heart of. the maiden who sang thus sweetly, " Then I would always find one prince out of all.the world who because of hie brave, pure life could overcome and conquer all, sorts of difficulties, fight his way to her tower, obtain the key of some secret door, and so “live happily ever. after.” , Finally one day, when j,bad about exhausted this subject,ang, was look: ing around for somebedy .else who would be interesting to meke a story ‘out of, the preacher intreduced a bishop who was to speak at special meetings during the following week. He was a very interesting bishop in- deed, so Interesting that I forgot to think up another story. That Sunday I thought Miss Winl- fred looked lovelier and sang more beautifully than ever before. Every- one likes to hear Miss Winifred sing because she seems to put her whole self into her songs and every word means such a lot more when sung by her than by anyone else. I guess the bishop agreed with me, because that week was not the last time we saw him. He kept coming again every once in a while. One day he left our town for the last time, but he did not leave alone. You see he had discovered the secret key. But there is just one little sad thing about this really truly dream story of mine, and that is me. We have a new. choir leader now. After all I cannot be so awfully sad, be- cause I have had a letter from Miss Winifred saying that I must come and visit her soon and that although her home is not a palace of gold, silver, precious stones or even marble or ma- hogany, yet she thinks it is a nice one, and she says the bishop is the dearest man that ever lived and that she is the happiest person that ever lived. Somehow I have a feeling which is not at all like a dream or a fairy story, but is a very certain feeling that they will “live happily ever after.”—Chicago Tribune. Enduring Achievement. “George Washington neyer told & le.” “No; unless that statement is one And if it is, it’s a wonder!” ye. Some Feat! “All the while the sashier was burm (ng the candle at both ends.” “And keeping it dark? Well, 3 de dare.”—Boston Transcript, TOO LATE TO CUISSIY FOR SALE—Pute-bred White Roc! eggs for hatching; , 15 eggs. Mrs. Jas. 743k, ‘ WANTED—Woman cook; at Hotel. - y We are ready to serve you. CUSTOM TAILORING Our designer has just returned from the cities bring- ing the attest ideas to our customers. A wonderful selec- tion of woolens, foreign and domestic patterns. Our enlarged departinent is evidence of our success. “Value, Quality and Variety’’ S. E. BERGESON & SON MUCH IN LITTLE Swans keep water completely free of weeds, There are 3,000,000 Jews in the United States. The Oklahoma-Kansas field leads in the production of oil. Toronto is to have street names painted on the corner lamps. Fire dooms 30 structures every hour; 720 structures every day. British soldiers at the front are writing 5,000,000 letters a: week. A woman has been appointed assistant attorney general of Colorado. It is estimated that in 12 years Boston has lost $3,049,244 in poll taxes. Alabama ranks first among the Southern states as a producer of minerals, LIKE DANCING 7 “You have never suffered from finan cial reverses?” “No, Finance ts like dancing. Whe the market turns. around: and goe the other way, you must reverse wit! it” 3 Beautiful South American Tree. By far the most beautiful of the trees of Uruguay, South America, is the mimosa. This tree iv an ever green, and grows to a height of about forty feet. Even when not in flower it (s very handsome, on account of its dark green fernlike leaves and gray- green truok. The flowers are like lit- tle balls of golden-yellow pollen, and they have a sweet scent. They cover the branches of the tree from top to bottom, and at a distance one would almost say the whole thing was. made of gold, or had been transplanted from fairyland, ICITATION HEARING PROOF OF WILL. State of ‘North Dakota, County of Burleigh, ss. In County Court, Before Hon H. C. Bradley, Judge. In the Matter of the Estate of Celia Harvey, Deceased. Rose ‘Bair, Petitioner, vs. M. J. Hiltner, St. Mary’s Catholic Church of Bismarck, 'North Dakota, -: John Murphy, James W, Murphy; Margaret Murphy Kingsley and ‘Mary Murphy Lent, Respondents. The State of ‘North Dakota, To the\ above named respondents and all persons interested in the Estate of Celia ‘Harvey, deceased: You, and each of you are hereby Notified that ‘Rose Bair, the Petition- er herein, has filed in the Court a document in writing, purporting to be the Last Will and Testament of Celia Harvey, late of the Township of Burnt Creek, in the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota, de- ceased, with her petition, praying for@ the admission to probate of said doc- ument as the last Will and Testa- ment of said deceased, and for the is- suance to her of letters testamentary thereon, and that the said petition and the proofs of said purported .Will and Testament will be heard and duly considered by this Court on Monday, the 21st day of May, A. D. 1917, at ten o'clock in the forenoon of: that day, at the court rooms of this Court, in the County. Court Hlouse, in the City of (Bismarck, County of Bur- leigh and ‘State of North Dakota; and You, and each of you, are hereby cited to be and appear before this ‘Court at said time and place and an- swer said petition and show cause, if any there be, why the prayer of said petition should not be granted. By the Court. (Seal) H. C. BRADLEY, Judge of County Courts. f, Newton, Dullam & Young, Atlorneys for ‘Petitioner. IN SUPREME COURT. Arguments were heard in supreme court this morning on the case of Nathan A. Rhodes versus the First ‘National bank of Carrington and G. S. ‘Newberg, in which the plaintiff charges malicious prosecution. Van Horn Grill Room Every evening from 6 P. M. to 1 P. M. starting Sunday night Don't Miss Hearing MISS LILLIAN MAASS The girl with the pleas- ing personality in her latest songs, and MR. CHAS. CARLOS at the piano es but not in quailty. cally. all our lines. goods and honest values, The Same Standard of quality as heretofore is maintained at this store. Prevailing conditions have forced a change in pric- We believe our customers want the same grades of merchandise that we have always aimed to give them and they know that unusual conditions, scarcity of materials and the high cost of labor have made it im- possible for the manufacturer to produce goods at former figures, and that we, naturally, must ‘‘pay the price’’ and in turn must ask a higher price on practi- ‘We will continue to carry well known brands, ed with the maker's name (proof of a ‘‘ standard”’) which is your assurance of and the same high grade service as heretofore. Our reputation will always be a guarantee of reliable =| ROSE =| CLOTHING ation N’S SHOP” Rat ane a

Other pages from this issue: