The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 15, 1917, Page 4

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q THE TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. 'D., as Second Class Matter. ISSUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY BUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANC! E by mail or carrier, per Daily, MOMh voeseseeceseevsoees ++ $ 60 Daily, by mail, one year in North Dakota ......s.seeecerecere seveeee 4.00 Daily, by mail in North Dakota, three month: 1.25 Daily, by mail outsid Dakota, one year 6.00 Daily, by mail outside Dakota, three months ‘Weekly, by mail, per year.. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Special Foreign Representative YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHICAGO, Nilvrquette’ Bldg.; BOSTON, & Winter 8t.; DETROIT, Kresge Bldg.; MINNE- APOLIS, 810 ‘Lumber JExchange. —Merber Audit Bureau of Circulation HE STATE'S OL 1.50 1.50 3 OLDEST (Established 1872)_ ———= WEATHER REPORT a for 24 hours ending at noone June 15: Temperature at 7 a. m. sees 82 Temperature at noon. v6) Highest yesterday . 70 Lowest yesterday .. » 41 Lowest last night.. ~ 44 Precipitation .... None Highest wind velocity. .16-E Forecast. For North Dakota: Fair tonight and Saturday; warmer tonight; fresh southerly winds. ‘Lowest Temperatures Fargo ...---+ a Saleh a8 36 ‘Williston. . 50 . Grand Forks ........+.6. 34 ‘Pierre .. 46 St. Paul 42 Winnipeg .... 3 (Helena . 50 Chicago 46 Swift Current . 44 Kansas City . 52 ‘San Francisco . 46 ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorogolist. §. B. 77 IN ACTION. North Dakota fuel consumers who next winter find they must pay 25 cents more the ton for native lignite coal will discover one more reason for appreciating the entrance of Townley and fellow socialists into North Dakota politics. North Dakota's prototype of Min- nesota’s Cashman distance tariff act was introduced and sponsored by Senator Nelson ‘of Richland county. Senator Nelson, an estimable gentle- man in many ways, is slightly deaf.’ He failed to hear the warnings sound- ed first by the Tribune and finally by the entire independent press of the state against Bill 77. One Lindquist of Fairmount, whom ‘we may expect to ultimately receive a due reward from Czar Townley, possessed the Lorelei voice which lured attention from the breakers be- yond. * The bill’ passed the senate, because the senate had not paid very much attention to,a measure introduced by Senator Nelson, whom it had learn- ed to confide in. But that very moment the senate began. to have regrets, and before the next legislative day was due to begin in the house President Town- Jey's henchman had advised him that the senate was awake, and the ukase went forth: “Pass S. B. 77, regard- less,” and the house did that which, just thirty minutes before the hour upon which it was due to convene, and at which hour it received a mes- sage from the senate asking that “77” ‘be returned. The Tribune was variously branded as a.fabricator and worse’ when it contended during the discussion of “77" that this bill would deprive the state of all the advantages it had ever. gained jin favorable rates for lig- nite coal. It is not the intent of the Tribune now ‘to gloat over the pre- dicament of league friends and others who favored this ridiculous measure. The situation is altogether too sert- ous. The Tribune would cite its Tesders to railway managers’ state- ments quoted in the news columns of this issue, to the effect that Town- ley's “N. P.” distance tariff measure will increase the cost of every ton of! lignite burned by every citizen who buys his coal from west of the river next winter. ADMITS FAILURE. Dr. Ladd and the state railroad commission are finding it difficult to put into operation the grain inspec- tion bill fathered by the Nonpartisan league. This bill creates a political machine, in addition to taxing the farmers some $500,000 a year for a worthless inspection—an inspection the state has no authority to enforce at terminal markets. A. C. Townley is unable to put through his scheme to tax the farm- ers by. this indirect method. for the Purpose of securing funds for state owned utilities. Failing in House Bill 44, leaders conceived a plan to » make the grain inspection create a fund for Governor Frazier and his socialist master to indulge in their utopian schemes. “We will attempt to place only the most important features of the act in effect at present,” Dr. Ladd is quot- ed as saying in Townley's organ. The president of the Agricultural college states that other features of the act will be investigated with a view to asking the next legislature to correct ‘glaring defects. North Dakota farmers can get tittle eo no relief from-any of the evils Sowa eet eR ae ty aa cen ~) when he says: until congress passes a uniform and| equitable system of federal inspec- tion. Townley and his henchmen know this, but anything to ring a few more dollars from the North Dakota farm- ers. MERELY HYPOTHETICAL. Herbert Hoover lets Herbert Gas- ton, editor of the Nonpartisan Daily down easy for the fake interview, “| set forth a series of hypothet- ical plans.” The article sent from Washington under Mr. Gaston’s signature treat- ed the hypothetical side of the inter- view very lightly. Mr. Hoover informs Mr. Gaston that no definite plan for handling the grain business has heen decided up- on. All, then, that Mr. Gaston wired from Washington was airy persifiage. It was as the Tribune and other state papers surmised. IMPORTANCE OF AEROPLANE. The news from Washington, as well ‘as from the battle front in Belgium and France, tells us of the importance of the aeroplane in the future of the great war. The romance of air flying is fast becoming a grim and expens- ive romance. The British and French commis- sioners' impressed upon American of- ficials the importance of air craft in military operation. The ° advisory board of the council of national de- fense has heen investigating the pos- sibilities of airplane construction in this ne on a tremendous scale, but what form the. advisory council recommendation will take is not yet known. It is pretty certain, however, that the idea is fast crystallizing in- Watchful Ree ee wate Waitin th: PERE g! te to unanimous sentiment that this = Have we though, as firmly grasped the truth that all evil, all that men fear, is just as surely nothing at all? The evil is simply a negative, being in itself nothing. ‘Tis but the ab- sence of that development we call good. ‘ Hence it has been said, “Resist not evil,” and wisely, for who would waste his time fighting a negative, a phantom? But also it has been said, “Over- come evi] with good.” Wow! what a fight you can afford to put up for the positive, for devel- opment, for progress. country can become militarily effect- ive in the war soonest by concentrat- ing energies along the lines of air- plane construction and the training of aviators. There are hundreds of available plants that could be transformed in- to factories for building airplanes. The automobile industry is one of the most highly organized in the coun- try. While at first we could not build airplanes up to the standard demand- ed for the battle line, we would after some experience build machines as ef- ficient as any, other nation can build. In the meantime we could turn out great quantities of machines for train- ing flyers ‘in ‘this country, who, after a few weeks’ intensive training, in CITATION: HEARING PETITION TO ESTABLISH RIGHT OF HEIRSHIP TO REAL PROPERTY. France, would be ready for their grim work, State of North Dakota, county of Burleigh; in county court; before It helps us to realize this business of war and ‘the fact that every na- tional and individual, energy must be bent toward winning it when we are told by those who are in closest touch with events that it will cost from five hundred, millions to a billion dollars to: meet, the aviation situation as it should be met during the next twelve months. WE CONGRATULATE RUSSELL. The socialist party of New York has ousted Charles Edward Russell, the immediate reason being that he did not resign from the. mission te Russia when asked to do so by party officials. Hon, H. C. Bradley, judge. In the matter of the estate of Fred- erick Peterson, deceased. Ernest T. Peterson, known as. Ernest T. Wallinder, petitioner. vs. Emma Peterson, Frederick ©. Peterson, Lydia Wahlstrom, and all other per- sons unknown claiming any estate or interest in or lien or incum- brance upon the property described in the petition or against the estate of said deceased, respondents. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Respondents and All Other Persons Unknown Claiming Any Estate or Interest in or Lien or Encumbrance Upon the Property Described in the Petition or Against the Estate of ‘Said Deceased: You are hereby notified that Ernest ‘any, why said. petition, should not be T. Peterson, known as Ernest T. Wal- linder, has filéd’in above mentioned court his duly verified petition pray- ing for a-decree establishing the right of succession to the east half of the southeast quarter of section 9, town- ship 139 north, of range 79 west of the 5th principal meridian, of which real property. Frederick Peterson, late of Chisago county, state of Minne- sota, died seized, and asking that the respondents indicated above as “per- sons unknown” -be decreed to have no right, claim or interest in or to said real estate,-or claim against the estate of said deceased.. That the-7th day of July,.1917, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, at, the court room of this court, at the court house in Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, has been set by order of this court as the time and place of. hearing. said. petition, and. you, are hereby cited, then and there to appear, and show cause, if granted. Dated the 31st day of May, 1917. H.C, BRADLEY, Judge of the’ County Court. Let service of ‘above citation be made by publication according to law in The Bismarck Tribune. ‘ H.C. BRADLEY, 6-1-8-15-3t Judge, pads The Easily Satisfled. i Indeed it does take all kinds of peo- ple to make a world, or even this gar- den: spot of it: for that matter, and occasionally in our daily walk we run across a person of the type who feels that he has not lived in vain when re- ferred to in the paper as a prominent society man,—Ohio State Journal. GROUCHERS , Who is it that are the Hinderers and Obstructors of the. Race— Thieves? No, Anarchists? No. Idlers? No. Grafters? No, Who thea? Just these—the Men and Women with a Grouch. Be too Busy for a Grouch, For the Fellow with the Grouch is the Fellow with a glass . of Poison.in his hand who: will pour it down your throat if:you let him. But you will Escapé him if you will only— Be too Busy for a Grouch: A Grouch never helped’ any- thing or anybody. And it never failed to do Harm. The Pig Man with a Grouch becomes at once a Little Man. .The Little Man without a.Grouch immediately becomes .a Big Man. . © Be too Busy, for.a ‘Grouch. - Suppose thé Grouch. does ir- ritate you, suppose he does try to get*you off your Guard, sup- pose he does try to make you “Look Cheap,” ‘suppose he does. attempt to “Get your Goat.” Look him in the eye. Then knock him into smithereens with a 60 h. p, City Bred Smile—and Pass On to your Work and your busi- ness, Be too Busy for a Grouch, We congratulate Russell on his good judgment—and in view of the eircumstances, we congratulate him for being out of the company of per- scns whose political judgment has been so un-American and suicidal. The socialist party has given one more exhibition of proGermanism— one more; for this is in addition to many other counts, It is to be noted that this action against Russell comes at a’ time when ke is in Russia on a governmext mis- sion to a sister republic. Whether the conscious purpose of. this action at this time is to embar- rass Russell and the American gov- ernment, cannot be proved—but that its effect is such is without ques- tion. Anti-patriotic is the word for this action. It is a matter for satisfaction on Russell's part that these men no long: ! er wish to call him one of them, but such action taken just now is of a piece with all of the other handinalt én work for the kaiser that has been done in America. egg FEARING THE DARK. Are you afraid of the dark? Sure you are. Everybody is, more or less. Primitive man used to get all excited when the sun went down and he stuck around in his cave, pray- ing to the something or othef that even savages feel above them and beneath them. And when the sun arose again old primitive man swung his club over his shoulder and ven- tured forth, declaring he was afraid neither of the light nor the dark nor any something or other that ever was. Children fear the dark; in a way they're primitive men. And so do we all, when our thoughts go wabbling, fear the black of night. But with most of us this fear is rec- ognized as the survival of an out- grown ignorance. We banish it from us because we have come to realize that the dark is nothing at all. .Wé have come to know that it's simply a@ negative, being in truth but the ab- Leafs AP Lidte SUTSGs! Dis Kris Sif. OLD "4 Goins FS OLD PLUG ToDAN | #1 OR. KN THE polit) AM Seéine Tacs AS t Live! MY DOINGS OF THE DUFFS. ‘ WE HOPE NO SPY OVERHEARD THIS To RIDE } REALLY CLASSMATE, ENLISTED WILBUR AND IN AN at UNIFORM By Allman NES, BUT DonT LET ITOUT. You SEE, THE IDEA IS TO spring IT on THE GERMANS ALONG ABOUT, SEPTEMBER- By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS. ion: adoPvnerens, it is deemed necessary of Bismarck, North Dakota, that sidewalks be cons! Bismarck: as herein specified; ‘Therefore, be: it RESOLUTION e ~ Commissioner Kirk introduces the following esolved, that sidewalks FRIDAY, JUNE 15,1917. resolution and moves its mission of the City by the City Ctructed in the: City of ordered to be constructed and extended to ry in the city, of Bis- adjoining the following marek, and the City Auditor 16 very ipytiaw. of the action of the City said property, in the mann Commission: iy eS Location Southeast corner Northeast corner Southeast corner Northeast corner Southwest corner Southeast corner . Northeast corner - Northwest corner Southeast corner Northeast corner Southwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast coftner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner, Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner / Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest. corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast vorner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Northwest corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner - Northwest corner Southeast corner Northeast cornet ‘Northwest corne! Southeast . corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Southeast corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast, corner, Northeast ‘corner Southwest: corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Northeast corner Northwest ‘corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest: corner Southeast; corner Southwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast, corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Northeast corner Northeast corner Southeast corner Southeast corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest’ corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast. corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner . Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Northeast corner Northwest corner Southeast ‘corner Southwest corner Northeast . corner Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest. corner Northeast .corner Northwest corner Southeast ‘corner Southwest: corner Northeast. corner ‘Northwest; corner Southeast. corner Southwest .corner Northeast corner. Northwest corner Southeast corner Southwest corner Oe aed foreveverey © so mt Don we Hs GOES EDEO EO me OMIT AI AI Sh Ome hee NOR ts to t ee to BO ee ee te ~ - Dei eee 2 ~ 2 roy mertetad ‘ ret ” ‘ ante in an acne ae ee CON UHH CORON HO ee owed 2 to Northeast ;corner Northwest | corner Southeast “corner Southwest’ corner Northeast corner ner s ct Southwest’ corner ed-in accordance with the and-not .Jater.than the bt hen bs re a to ‘be constructed ereby order B with The ‘statutes in such case made LINK GETS GOOD JOB Veteran Dakota Newspaper Man *° Elevated to New Post wd. T. Lincolu, secretary of the re , Minn. Commercial club, “Ling” to his hundreds of friends in North Dakota and other parts of the Northwest, was chosen secretary of the Northern: Minnesota Development 8! tion at a meeting of that or- nization in. Virginia, Minn. {t is through a -rather queer coincidence that “Link” succeeds George D. Mc- Carthy, formerly of the Duluth Her- | wh ed ‘this post to succeed Wockwalhen editor ald, more recently *assistant secretary. f;,the Duluth Commercial club, and the it 5S tO at CED rt Doh haa aa ee MES EONS T NSAI MADR AIOE he DOO ORONO TIED Ta Ge BS 3 a Nahe POO C8 RO ES Ta OR pt 3 te rt OAT ES Ad OED NI AD TPES 38 BO BD A pat et Tat OO ED BS DD AS AITO * aaaition Bloek original Plat / 18 ; ia 4 40 . Williams’ Survey A Original Plat 16 Williams’ Survey. Original Plat Williams’ Survey N. P.. Second 29 aeons Hi 42° Original Plat 40 38 N. P. Second N. 'P. Second Original Plat 39° oN. P. Second. b4 : “ 64 McKenzie &: Coffin . 55 ON. P. Second Original Plat: 70 : 39 N. P. Second 63 ycKensie & Coffin Original Plot 13.) Northern ‘Pacific N. P. Second Northern Pacific ffin, iy M Original Plat Northern Pacific = 24 f rm meces wee re eotommnocem nor: F 61 McKensie & Coffin ry = ws “90 My Original: Plat 16 Northera Pacific 11 Northern Pacific Original Plat ry tt 16 Northern Pacific . Y turther Resolved, And the said sidewalks must be construct- ‘And be it furth Maen Ha harry Y day of. July, 1917,. by. the date herein set forth, then ssid sidewalks are by the. SIE Comers eter in accordance nces new in: force and effect and should said sidewalks and provided. (Signed) “€/L. BURTON, City Auditor. paperdom in Hancock, Mich. not a great many years ago. Link, who had had previous experience in Wis- consin, Michigan, Minnesota ‘and North Dakota, fell into McCarthy's berth on the Evening Copper Journal of Hancock, the principal evening Bewspaper in the upper peninsula of Michigan. Lincotn and McCarthy de- serted newspaper work for commer- cial club and development associa- tion activities at about the same time. Both have an unlimited number of friends in the northwestern states, who will hail their progress with genuine joy. 1GRY Chews od Justice is ‘That way.be why so;many people want to! whleper 6o Rep.

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