The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 16, 1917, Page 3

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° ‘ i lk f IV ! | i) we ff li pea : x a v4 e A , a yh ‘ ~-FINE EXHIBIT ARBANGED WEDNESDAY, MAY 16, 1917 COUNTIESMUST SUPPORT TASMNE PATIENTS: “OWE THE STATE $47.00 A day of reckoning is at hand for counties which have been foisting in- sane patients on the state. There is due the state for patients maintained at the Jamestown hospital” by the state $47,000, The counties which Owe this amount. will bé checked up and called upon fo stand and deliver. Some counties have evaded their re- sponsibilities for three or four years, and the state has borne the burden. As a result, the funds appropriated for the maintenance of patients justly chargeable to the state are being de- pleted. An emergency session of the state auditing board and the. board of con- trol is being held this afternoon. The state auditor has. served natice that the state will no ‘longer pay for the care of patients who should be main- tained by the counties from which) they were committed, and some solu- tion is being: sought in today’s ses- sion for this vexing problem, AT SCHOOL BUILONG When the school exhibit opens at the high school building Friday after- noon at 3 o’ciock, patrons of the school will be privileged to view a fine collection of hand made furniture in. the manual training department. The collection will consist of library tables, kitcnen cabinets, book cases, and wardrobes. They are built from pak and are highly polished. The handiwork is splendid and, could well adorn any home in the city. ‘ iM sc-Harriet> Spillane; ‘3 has~divided her class“Tnto two and the-various groups will: dis- play exhibits showing. the nutritive valuations of the various foods, house- hold budgets, articles of food best to prepare a meal, lunch and box meals for one person Yor one, day. The girls will also exhibit their recipe cabinets and dietary books, The girls from grades six and seven will display a number of garments which they have made during the year, as will the high school girls. Girls of the eighth grade will serve .wafers and tea during the hours for the ex- hibit, from 3 to 6. The’ chemical department will ‘dis- ‘play ‘a number! of experiments, Tais depariment;iban; just. completed the manufagture of sdap for the use of the school. ‘Supt. Martin furnished the soap stock and the class made the finished product. The commercial department will be represented in a contest with the y.the domestic sciance-dapartment. EADY. GIRL FARMER % ; 0. GROW SPUDS She is a member of the Woodcraft Potato club of the Rosemary school at Greenwich, ‘Conn., and on her way to hoe her plot’ of potato hills. All girls in the clu) wear the costume Here shown. contest will be held in the local high school and tests will Be between the advance@ and first classes ‘in ‘short: hand and typewriting. Instructors of the Bismarck business college will be the judges. a -.In the fifth and. sixth grades hand- some exhibits have been prepared by the pupils, Sampies of written work together with many subjects in draw: ing will be shown. ‘Water color sub- jects will feature the fifth grade and charcoal the sixth, Miss Dora Larson of the sixth grade is also displaying drawings done in crayons, which is most meritorious, One picture shows, a Hopi Indian on a white burro and finished in crayon. It-was sketched on the blackboard from a magazine and shows considerable merit. All patrons and friends of the schools are cordially invited to the exhibit. But No One Is Perfect. “A perfect. wife never npgs,” says @ writer. in,an exchange. “That's true, And a perfect husbaad never, gives cause for nagging.—Buaitimore Star, I will close,out my spring stock of Mandan school Saturday, May 26. The millinery cheap at 512 B, Fifth St. Mrs. J. P. Heltemes. school, cle the Si neat 0 FAMERICA'S HOME SHOE POLISH Agood motto starting or pleasure: “Each day. “learn how easy you can keep. your shoes neat and You find thrifty, everywhere with their shoes well polished. SumouA, being made of wax and oils is good for leather. The oil softens and preserves. work an by use of nov” people No. 1 hard... - 286 ~ HONOR MARTYRS. FOR REW re Si AT BURAL Russian rvolution, persons shot He outlined the work accomplished to increase the acreage and production, and he said results already show increases in He reiterated a state- ment made at the recent public wel- ‘No, 1 northern . +e. 271 @281 , ‘No. 1 northern, choice.. 291 @286 No, 2 northern . » 261 @286 (No. 3 wheat... . 241 @261 ‘No. 2 hard Mont . . 276 @281 No. 3 yellow corn...... 156 @163 No. 3 yellow corntoarr 154 @156 Corn, other grades .... 140 @157 |No, 4 yellow corntoarr 153 @154 | No. 2 white Mont....... 71 @ 72 . 8 white oats .. - 67 @, 69 No, 3 white oats to arr. 66 @ 68 No. 4 white.oats ....... 66 @ 68% Barley ....... 112 @144 Barley, choice 144 @150 Rye. ... 1... + 224 @226 | | Rye to arr 224 @226 Flax + 826 @331 {Plax to arr 323. @328 | May . 280 {July . 24 i | September 182 ‘Close 1:39 p. m. | DULUTH. i May wee 280 { July 6 | | No. 1 aard on trk . %, No. 1 northern on trk.. 280 No. 2 northern on trk.. 275 ‘No. 3 northern on trk.. 255 @2e5 | No. 1 northern to arr.. 280 No, 1 spot durum . 5 { ot . Nee Bapol dara oe 8 a2 | ane Four pain bib 3 beamed 45 coffins, were filled with No. 1 spot dumm to arr bodies of: , n rv f May as 7 wen 218 down by the czar's troops during the uprising. Men prominent July . 236 in. the new; government took part inthe burial services to honor Oats, on trk.. 4 ,87% 69%) the dead.and vast crowd attendeds t vara pegs Rye on trk £225. @230 : : ’ Barley on trk . - 100 @150 : = Flax on trk and to . ue Pl Mi d Dr. Selvig in his address. May : aad f July + 328 le ed a e Sosunrree ae ‘Fo r F oO d Minnesota. ober. + 816 j i . Close ae ) oO Conservation Crookston, Minn.—Pleas for . war food ‘conservation and increased pro- "HOGS—Receipts, duction were made in the address of lower. Range, $15 »|Dr. B,'L Selvig ‘and Dr. E. Dana Du- $15.70 to $15.80. rand}, of thé University of Minnesota, ATTLE—Recefpts, 1800, -Killers,/at the fourteenth annual conventiion 2.50; cows calves, stockers of the. eighth congressional group of Minnesota bankers association held in Crookston. today. 0 to $10.00.; “In my opinion the Red River crop Market,| production will easily be increased -|; with faverable weather and crop con- ditions; by ten. per cent,” declared strong. Steers, $6.50 to $ and. heifers, $7.50 to $10 steady, at $5.50 to $13 and feeders, strong, at. $! SHEEP—Receipts, 2 strong. Lambs, $9.00 to $14 ers, $9.00 to $12.75; ewes, fare associatioin meeting here that the increased..grain production alone would bring $4,000,000 to' farmers in! the eleven counties in his section of the state. Dr; Durand of the depart- ment of Rural Economics of the. uni- versity of Minnesota continued in the same trend. INJURED IN FLYING BOAT iNewport News, Va., May 16.—Ted Hequembourg, instructor,. and Lawr- ence Curtis of Boston, a atudent, were injured today when a flying boat in which IHequembourg was giving Cur- tis a lesson, fell about fifty feet at JOHN CORT Presents THE NY CASINO THEATRE MUSICAL COMEDY = BOde “73 Phx Dddemitih § Tebiided and tderpbed lay ; Cosmo Hamiltan and Derotly Donnelly, MW, BOE IED Ethier : and Milton Schwarswald - Original Casino Theatre Cast; Direct From the Casino Theatre, N. Effervescing with Sparkling Tunes and. Trippling Melodies Prices, $2, $1.50, $1 and 50c. Seat Sale, Finney'’s Drug Store Friday. (., Sharp—Curtain Will Ring Up at—Sharp, 8:00 P. M. The Most Fascinating Chorus F.ver Lured Frony Broadway DELAY. AGTION OW ARNY BILL Washington, May 16—The army bill Was again sent back to the con- ference by the house with instruc- tions to include an amendment for a graduated increase in the pay for privates during the war, beginning June 1, The appeal of Chairman Dent of the military committee for “God’s sake let us have a law before the house does another summersault,”” was disregarded by a vote of 199 to 176. ‘Fifteen Per Cent Of Grain on Farms St. Paul, Minn., May 16.—About 15 per cent of the grain in /Minnesota lis still on the farm, while the per- centage is 10 per cent in North Da- kota and 15 per cent in Montana, ac- cording to reports brought back today by O. P. Jacobson, a state railroad and warehouse commissioner, return- ing from a business trip in the north- ern part of the state. He said the estimates were collected by a travel- ing grain buyer, who made a careful investigation. - $12.50. = CHICAGO. HOGS—Receipts, 25,000. Market, unsettled. (Bulk, $16:00 to $16.30; | light $15.15 to $16.25; mixed, $15.65 to $16.40; heavy, $ to $16.40; rough, $15.65 to $15.80; pigs, $10.50 to $14.50. CATTLE—Receipts, 18,000. Market, steady. (Native beef steers, $9.50 to $13.70; stockers and feeders $7.60 to| $10.40; cows and heifers, $6.65 to $11.70; calves, $9.75 to $14.25, SHEDP—Receipts, 10,000. strong. Wethers $12.35 to lambs, $15.10 to $19.65. TEUTON FORCES YTHORM FROM SLAY (Continued from page one) hitherto had been regarded as im- pregnable, but notwithstanding. this the Italian infantry advanced and still continues to advance. Valuable posi- tions have been won and, prisoners are flowing into our concentration camps.” CAPTURE: 3,375 PRISONERS. Rome, May. 16.—The war, office an- nounced today that. “as a result of the offensive begun yesterday. the Italians thus far have captured 3,375 prisoners, a mountain battery and 30 machine guns,” : TRACTOR TRAIN HAULING GOLDEN GRAIN IN BARNES Valley City, ‘NOD. May 15.—O;sP. Enerson is utilizing a kerosene, en- gine and a tractor train 6f, five ‘wa- gons for the marketing of ‘his wheat. He brought in 500 nushels from his south farm, and. he still has 1,500 bushels at his Foster county farm, all | of which ig worth around $3 per bushel. ‘Market, | $15.15; ALLIES IN GRIM PUSH OF HINDENBURG LINE The wax gives the brilliant lasting shine and sheds moisture. BLACK WHITE TAN GET A SiinocA Home SET It makes the home care of your shoes easy. Ask Nearest | the French are trying to break FRANCE While-the English are keeping up their push against the Germans, he- fore Lens and Douai, in spite of the recapture of Fresnoy by the Germans, through the Hindenburg line at La ;Fere and,Laon... Map shows thé two ‘points of attack, where fighting is most fierce. 3 A Tire for Every Need of Price and Use— ‘Nobby’ — ‘Chain’ ‘Royal Cord’ Used’ ‘Piain’ Twenty that vast number. Only service could give to United States Tires their universal popularity and tremendous sales, —super-service which m age cost, —highest anti-skid efficiency from dll four anti- skids, ‘ The man who uses United States Tires knows ' and he has told what States Tires through vast sales increases, \ —that United States Tires are the tires of super- service. United States Tires Are Good Tires - Tires in 1917 United States Tires stand out unmistakably among —supreme resiliency and elasticity. Million eans to you lowest mile- he knows about United d States Tubes and Tire Accessories Have All the Sterling Worth and Wear that Make United States Tires Supreme.

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