The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 25, 1917, Page 3

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a, ——ROVERNOR HAS a, Saas = FRIDAY, MAY 25, 1917. ‘i BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE BANKERS’ LIST D PICK FROM Nine Names Submitted by North Dakota State Associations —Three to Be Chosen DICKINSON MAN AMONG NOMINEES SUBMITTED O. S. Hanson, Grand Forks; J. J. Nierling, Jamestown; B, J: Schroegge, Williston; M. iR. Porter, Minot; J. G- McClintock, Rugby; I. ic. Hansen, Fargo; W. iL. Richards, Dickinson; C: R. Green, Cavalier, and W. 3°. Hanks, Powers Lake, form a list of nine rep- resentative state bankers submitted by the North Dakota Bankers’ asso- ciation to Governor Frazier today as candidates for members of North Da- kota’s first depositors’ guaranty fund commission. From this list of nine ft is: the governor's duty to select three, ‘who’ with himself as chairman, and State Examiner. J. R. Waters, shall constitute the board of five pre- scribed by the depositors’ guaranty. fund act passed’ by the Fifteenth gen- eral assembly. | “V8 Members Qualifications. One of the. three members whom the governor is to name shall be ap. pointed for one year, another for two ~ years, and a third for three years.! not later than’ July 15,’ fifteen days following the taking effect of the act, gud each® commissioner will’ be re- quired to give the state a ‘surety company bond for $10,000, except the member who is elected _ treasurer, whose bond will be $25,000... The commission will meet quarterly, on the second Tuesday, of January, April, July and October, or oftener if re- quired, and will have the administra- tion of the depositor's guaranty fund to be created through regular annual assessments of one-twentieth of one per cent of the average daily deposits and special assessments as often as the same shall be fotnd necessary. BIG STRKE. AMONG ~ WOMEN WORKERS en workers spread today and has jmet with considerable success. Furriers, lace makers, embroiderers, milliners, water-proofers and feather workers are, out. Employes ¢f department stores today reached an agreement with their managements regarding Saturday half holiday and increased pay. Minister of War . Voices Fear of Losing Armenia —_ Petrograd, May 25.—Minister of War. Kerensky speaking at Helsing- fors before starting on his tour of the front, referred to the military situation in Asia Minor, of which the Fach succeeding annual appointment | oficial news agency quotes. him as will be for a period of three years. Each member shal} have had at least five years’ experiénce in the manage- ment of some bank or banks located in North Dakota. The nomination of a slate of nine from which the gov- ,.ernor is to make his selection was an obligation conferred on ttie“North Dakota Bankers’ association by the Yegislature, which=-providea that “all nominees must be members of the association. Fourteen names were iballoted on ‘by the bankers, and the votes were canvassed at the North- east Bankers’ association meeting held in Grand Forks this week, when the nine high men were selected. : To File Bonds. The appointive members of the commission ~are required to qualify ‘Shirts ale to Measure IKLEIN _ Tailor and Cleaner. - COOKIES OUR SATURDAY SPECIAL Seotch, Oatmeal, Fruit Sugar, Cocoanut, Cali- fornia Raisin, Ginger and Currant, Cookies, Tarts and Fig Bars. Bohemian and Krust Bread Pure Butter The Sanitary Bakery Cor. Fifth’ and Broadway OPazy AoCcrOrEAC saying: “Phere is danger, not only of losing Caucasus.” { a SE a A ee | CAPITOL NOTES o— HERE FROM GARRISON.— Tilden \Eberson, instructor, in the Carson public schools, was a capitol visitor today. see AUDITING BOARD MEETS,— The state board of auditors held a Paris, May 25-—The strike of wom- | ‘Armenia,’ but possibly part of the} WAN CLINIC ~ ONE OF BEST IN ~ STATES HISTORY |Miss Helen Sullivan Tells ‘of Suc- | cessful Baby-Week Program | Conducated | Miss Helen ~Sullivan, assistant state superintendent of public {n~ | struction, is home from Bowman, fill- ‘ed with. enthusiasm over the baby, | week clinic held there, which she ‘re gards as the most successful in the {history of the state, particularly. |when the comparatively small popu-| | jation of the progressive southwest- Three hundred people, young and ‘old, registered for treatment; 210 were examined by physicians and ad- j Vice given; 50 cases of defective ‘vi- j sion were examined and treated; 50 babies were examined and 35 were prescribed for; six were operated on for adenoids and tonsils. Professional men who attended and assisted in the work were: Dr. Schere, Fargo; Dr. Hempstead, Miles City, Mont.; Dr. Raber, Buffalo, S. D.; Dr. Eubank, Rhame; Dr. Strefbling, Amidon; Dr. Mizener, Eowman; Dr. Théegs, D. D. S., Bowman, and Dr. Whittemore, Bowman. ‘Nurses in at- tendance were: “Mesdames Copeland and McPharlane, Bowman; _ Streib- ling, Amidon; Coleman, Reeder, and Loofbourrow, Rhame. Several...practical demonstrations were given in bathing, clothing and feeding babies, and lectures were giv- jen by Drs. Scherer, Raber and Miz- |ener, Professor Bold and Miss Sulll- ivan. The clinics were in charge of the Bowman county board of health, (Dr. A. A. Whittemore, secretary; H. O. Saxvik, superintendent of schools, and T. B. Torkelson, states attorney. ae Ph OY EW | 5h tg | At Wing Today.—County Superin- |tendent W.,E. Parsons is in Wing to- |day, attending to school matters. ; _ War Veteran Mi—Stephen Welch of {Second street, Civif war veteran, is !ill in the St. Alexius hospital. Mr. ern North Dakota city is consideret,,| . session in the governor's chambers | Welch is one of the best known resi- today, considering routine matters. | dents of the city. se © | pti ey | Going Fine—The sale of lots in the FARGO SCHOOL APPROVED.— new Lincoln Park addition, which The office of state superintendent | Rain Coats and} of public instruction has approved plans for a fine new Fifth ward school building in Fargo. x a 8 MUCH IMPROVED.— N. A. Mason of Wimbledon, secre: tary ‘ito Governor Frazier, is sitting up today in a local hospital, for the first time since his operation for ap: 'pendicitis, about a week ago. ee i . FINE NEW SCHOOL.— Plans have been received and ap- proved by the state superintenden: of public instruction for a fine wew school building of Bergen. It ts ‘of '| the four-room consolidated type. ee CONSOLIDATION MEETING.— Miss Helen Sullivan, assistant state superintendent of public instruction, will go-to Emerson.on ‘Monday to at- tend a ‘meeting called for that even: ing, to discuss school consolidation. Miss Lois Vail, county superintend- ent, will also attend the meeting et & DEUPTY BACK ON JOB.— Frank Wilder resumed his duiies as deputy secretary of state today, after having -been confined to his home for several days by a rupture?’ vein tn one of his eyes. The optic is still in bad condition, but is slow ly improving and no permanent de- fect is feared. se 8 OFFERS NAMES.— Secretary of State Hall is in re jceipt of a kind offer from a private detective agency in Fargo to supply names, addresses, descriptions, photo- graphs and other little bits of infor- mation, with place and date, relative to Fargoites who are violating the automobile registration law by driv- ing cars minus tags. SATURDAY SPECIALS Fancy Hawaiian Pinapple, 2 1-2 pound cans, regular 25¢ seller, special for Saturday This price is below wholesale cost. The sugar market has declined. . We can take care of our trade with a limited amount. 9 1-2 pounds for $1.00 or per cwt. ............ Euieapaenant hegre meine $10.25 Standard Tomatoes, 2 1-2 pound cans Farm House Queen Olives, packed in full quart jars, regular 40c.seller, special for Saturday Clicuquot Ginger Ale, special price SOAP SPECIAL. Take advantage of this special for Satur-- day. 10 bars White Soap, 40c. Crystal White or Bob White. This price is below wholesale but we can take care of our trade with a limited amount at this price. Crisco, 3-pound can, for Saturday only Kellogs Corn Flakes have advanced so as to make it a 15c sel- ler instead of 10c. But we are fortified with a stock at the old.price, therefore we can take care of our trade at 10c FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Cauliflower, String Beans, Head Lettuce, Leaf Lettuce, Onions, Celery, Tomatoes, Asparagus, Radishes, Rhubarb, Cucumbers, Strawberries, Apples, Oranges, Grape Fruit, Lemons. _ PURE HIGH TEST SWEET CREAM Brown & Geiermann Quality Grocers 53—PHONES—S6 Guality Grocers 114 Fifth St. }opened Monday, is going well, and | many fine acre tracts have been dis- posed of to Bismarck citizens, A ma- | Jority of these villa-sized lots will be immediately planted to garden stuffs. | Kitty Not at Home—Kitty Wein- ;gard King is not keeping house at {her home on South Eighth street. jare legion, is homeless because of {an injunction clamped down on her property, which States Attorney (Mc- Curdy claims has been used for im- Proper purposes. | Out for School Director —Richard | Penwarden, clerk of the board of edu- cation, has received two additional names as candidates for school direc- tor to fill the vacancy of G. C. Wach- ter and H. W. Richholt, whose terins expire in June. E. H. Howell of the | Finch Lumber company has filed his | application along with Marcus A. Ed- \herg. Joseph Schneider of south of the tracks, is the other candidate. County School Notes—Superintend- ‘ent W. E. Parsons is busy these days attending the closing of the county schools. He is in Wing today attend- ing the graduating exercises of the grammar school. ‘Saturday ae will go ; to Lein to participate in the graduat- ing exercises of the eighth grade. | Next week he will attend the dedica- | tion of the McKenzie scnool and the | graduating exercises at the McKen- zie and Driscoll schools. Dr. W. J. Hutcheson of the McCave ciurch will participate in the dedication exer- \cises. Last Wednesday Supt. Par- } sons attended the picnic of the north | Menoken school. NOTICE OF: SCHOOL ELECTION, (Special District—Annual ‘Election.) Notice is hereby given that on the first Tuesday in June, being June ith, A. D. 1917, an annual election will be held at Will school in the special school district of Bismarck No. 1, |county of Burleigh, state of Nortl} ; Dakota, for the purpose of electing | the following members of the board of education: Two members to serye for a term of three years for the city of Bis- marck. The polls will be opened at 9 o’clock a. m. and closed at 4 o'clock p. m. of that day. Dated at Bismarck this 2ist day of May, A. D. 1917. By order of the board of education. ~ FREE RELAND-AND TH E EXCLUDED COUNT IES t | One of, the. biggést benefits of having a Grafonola in the home is the editeational value it has on your boys and girls in giving them an opportunity of learning good musie, recitations ete., and correct interpretation for same,/ $15 to $350 ON EASY TERMS OWAN’S Drug Store 123 Fourth St, Phone ‘102 AD LOST WHEN FREIGHTER SKS New York, May The. British freighter Feltria of 4 tons was £ Alas! the love of women! it is known ‘To he a lovely and a fearful thing; For all of thet hat die Is thrown, And if ‘tis sno more to bring fo them but mockcries of the past alone. The majority of men believe that ost women look forward to matri- mony as the solu- tion of their life: happiness or un- happiness, But, let me tell you, there are quite as By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY ee There's ‘another class of women wha | Hughes. will not wed—those who think tha every man who crosse: not quite good enongh, They are look ing for a prince or a millionaire, and their path is} Shakespeare's advice, “Sell when you) can, for youth and beauty’s fleeting.” Some women are restrained from marrying becausé of the load which; they are carrying on their shoulders, | {sunk May 5 off the Irish coast. The | captain and 52 of the crew, including | two Americans, are reported missing. ; Reports were also received of the , Sinking by a submarine of the British steamship Cornticld, 2,804 tons, with | the loss of three of her crew, one of them an American seaman. Too Much Beer—Too much has proven the undoing of Jack Jack was picked up by Big t! Chief Chris Martineson, charged with | supplying the amber fluid which made local party boisterous. Then Jack was haled “ before Justice of the Peace Beer for a preliminary hearing. beer i di) are of the kind who will not tké@} and the Beer combination fesulted in Hughes’ being bound over to the next term of district court to answer to a charge of bootlegging. | Arthur and Jennie—Arthur Wil- Mams and Jennie Force, colored citi- fearing that a husband would not cur |zens, are guests of Sheriff French, jac caereeae | by Police Magistrate Bleckreid. yes- {terday, and, being unable to furnish, $500 bail, went to jail. Jennie, who, ;as she expresses it, “aggravates” be» tween Minot and Billings when she is on her regular run, but who left Minot while the leaving was. good, is held in bail of the same amount as a material witness. Jennie says she saw ‘Mr. Williams relieve a Bismarck man of his pocketbook a night or two ago. Oranges, Sunkist, small but juicy and sweet, 2 DOZEN ‘FOR 25c Fancy Leaf and Head Lettuce Green Onions and Radishes Kitty, whose little tilts with the law] many wonten Who | ty relieve them from the support of} women won't wed are many. Not a few of those who ne well-to-do Took upon would- be suitors as for- ness that she had refused an exemplary H young man because she feared her ats; tractions would fade early, as did her} mother’s, When her beauty went, she} would not be able to attract him long: | ¥ er, Another girl refused a fine young} tune hunters, heartless creatures who | yon for the reason that he had two | are not on love intent, but are only con- young sisters of whom he was very) | cerned in finding out how-much a wo fond. “He would think as much of! an is worth, Though a man does fall} inom as he did of me,” she confided, | in lovs with such 9 one, she is not in-}uppat would make my life miserable! cline to give lis honesty of purpose | shut) never marry unless it be a maa | the benefit of the doubt. who has no living relative. I could be Other women fall in love with ne’er- reasonably sure of such # man’s uns| do-wells, but are wise enough not tO} givided heart.” She is still single, Her marry. They solace themselves with) jgeq! man is not likely to materializa courting over a long period of years. | ese women are happy in thelr own | During that time, affection merges into} yay, no doubt. Marriage does not luce friendship. But they do not realize | them, that. = SS Labor the Greatest Blessing in Life (Copyright, 1916) By REV. JENKIN LLOYD JONES }!// Work is not the consequence of sin, but the triumph of man. Laboi) instead of: being a curse is the profoundest blessing in life. ‘Human labor then is no commodity, a thing to be bought and sol¢ like cotton or corn. Back of the hand is the directing brain, behind the sweat. are human longings, the love of human hearts, and the thirst ol | human minds. Capital, the exploiter of labor, is but the labor of yester-| day It. is canned industry. \ The unholiest:combination the world has ever known is the selfist combination of the toil of yesterday, dehumanized under the name o! capital, against the throbbing, thrilling toil of today, the uncauned wealtt held in solution in the sweat of today. Peace between labor and capital will come only in a larger combine a higher fraternity, that will recognize the common interests between the RICHARD PENWARDEN, Clerk. section man with his pick and the president with his pencil and hi | “Ready Reckoner” of percentages. | AUTO 18 RIGGED UP TO PULL GANG PLOW plow and pave the for wheat This auto is a new kind of tractor used by an ingenio on the regular tired w ‘and goes joy riding. ious Minnesota farmer to hitch up his gang seeding. On Sunday he removes the spiked tractor wheels, puts BROWN & pending the district court’s hearing sould ue wed | aged parents or helpless younger broth-! of a charge of robbery fromthe per-| ASparagus, per pound the best man ever { ors and ‘Thus they go unwed-; son which has heen preferred against ds‘ ; i - | ; erred against | Asparagus, 2 pounds a stepped in shoe} qed, mar to duty. the former. Arthur was bound over Pin Be 4 ie toes, 2 Teather as those} vast numbers of women refuse £000 | amen eee aney di cn omatoes, 35c who are ansious offers of marriage, for reasons that are | pounds or seen inser to a p 4, heart) judicrous, if they were not so pitiful, | N. B. C. Ginger Snaps in , mates, The red! absurd would be a better word for it | barrels, each ....-..... ++ 25a why some One pretty girl told me in all serious | ' Both Phones | PHONE ell 120 3rd Street Our Last Delivery Saturdays leaves at.5 o'clock sharp. Week days at 4:45 ae “The SATISFACTION STORE” Groceries and Meats The McConkey Commercial Co. 510 Broadway —_- Phone 209 An Excellent Grade Of Clothes For Working Men “™ Woe are now stocking up on an extra quality of Men’s plain clothes snited for hard, constant wear; clothes that look well and give service: for reasonable money, For two years we have been thinking of adding this line and last January our stockholders advised that we put the line in at once but prices were high and we did not-rush into giving the order, : ‘But examination proved that there was every reason to expect an advance in prices before fall and no good reasons for a decline, so we ordered the goods and now they are arriv- ing and we are ready to serve our customers with an exeellent quality of Men’s wear at our usual ‘close margin. profit. Come and see what we have to offer and then decide whether it is wise to buy or not. The McConkey Commercial Co. 510 Broadway — Phone 209 TRADE SATURDAY where money can be saved. MEAT DEPARTMENT Fresh Dressed Chickens and Ducks. Milwaukee Saus- age of afl kinds. Calfs Liver. FOR CASH—SATURDAY ONLY F 2 Cans Standard Corn 25c 2 Cans Best Salmon . .45¢ 2 Cans Standard Peas .25c¢ 2 1-2 Ib. Cans Canned Kraut .. KUPITZ CO. QUALITY _ SERVICE SANITARY Fourth Street

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