The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 6, 1917, Page 4

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1917. their imports as to preclude the be- a \ THE TRIBUNE lief that all they have bought within iar Batered at the Postottice, Flemarck, N.|the past three years has been for | ., a8 Secon jase latter. { | ISSUES SURES DAY OXCE eT SUNDAY home consumption. \ 5 BUBSCRTET JON RATES PAYABLE IN| The conviction will not down that x i Dally, by Set cones: {par they have acted as purchasing agents | i po BE »» $ .60/ for Germany. i Dakota sak To that extent these neutrals were y thre months *” 1,26|not neutral. They were assisrants k Daily. bY asi: cutee, of North ¢ o9|to Germany. They helped her cir- i Daly. OF ‘ca Gutsige cumvent the blockade. They sneaked : ‘Weekly, by mail, per yea ee to her products that were contrapand , Hi G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY of war. They made use of the war ie Special Foreign Representative - eee oe ~~ a. i NE neat Foretave: blag; CHICAGO, | PY piling up their war profits. Where is the first aid station ? F Marte ne aoe eae; MINN. | And that 1s where the new, exports Oe ria aie pees > I APOLIS, 810 ‘Lumber Exchange. council appointed by President Wil- vu se trouve le pos 2 : SHS ATES nD crrouigtion, |80n under the espionage bill will be Qo suh troov luh pust duh suhcoor! 4 (Established 1872) of enormous service to the cause of \ America and her allies against Ger- ; Se al _|many. Its first job will be to stop ij ar? —= = le mane ike Sea Do the field ambulances go that Lies : WEATHER REPORT = =) Les ambulances vont-elles gusque la‘, 9 i 6: aie Goan ey ve for 24 hours ending at noon July Lens means coal to the Allies; and Lays an$bdlan38ss0 von’ -tell jos-kuh-fa? Temperature at 7 a. m. 61 | Coal means life. Temperature at noon 18 =—_—_————— Highest yesterday . u CAN BE GENEROUS. i SAW Ont yesterday ; i What is your army corps? Lowest last night in Columbus, O., the blind mother ) Precipliation of a soldier with Pershing was De quel corps d’armee eles -vous ? brought before the city council for ? Forecast. begging in defiahce of a newly adopt- Duh kell cove darmay eb voo § 4, For North Dakota: Fair and rather|ed ordinance. : warm tonight and Saturday. S i Elind mothers of soldiers should ‘di i Sa Gt aoe tel qeemuiliad thes : Where did the Zeppelin fall? a Temperatures| The authorities should see that all OU est tombe. le Zeppelin x are ee such practices are st F b = - Williston 5A : einen : Oo ay ton’ba Iuh Zeppelin? Grand Forks « 57 Blind mothers of soldiers should = \ Pierre ... ae be well cared for by the community, c a <= arcane oe so they will not need to beg! A ? In these lessons the English phr ase appears in the first line, the ke Nalede 56 This is a problem America must } hy \ rench equivalent in the; second line, and the pronunciation in the third Chicago . 64 face at once. So far no adequate : { \ ; ‘ i Swift Current . 54 provision has been made for those WW = 2 : _ In the pronunciation key, straight lines over Kansas City . 68 the soldiers leave behind. \ litt i the letters, A and U, denote the long sound, as in San Francisco . 50 : “hAte” and “dUde”; curved lines over these letters ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Of course, in the new national ar- | : indicate the short sound, ‘as in “cAt” and “bUt’; 1S W. * my there will be few taken who have . ‘| ® two dots over the U’ indicate a sound somewhat é Meteorogolist. dependents, but there now are in ser- similar to the German “ue,” which Americans may > : vice many who have left dear ones aterm EAR dt sheen aes Naame ed 0665665644949 % 4% behind who must be cared for. =a EMH ae ' : 4 @ One kind of happiness is to *| America cannot afford to be other Mie Archiner| Cut out these lessons cme ponte shen ln your natepoot % know exactly at what point to 4 than justly generous with the moth- = YUL fa) a cess, airbases % be miserable—Ia. Rochefou- ¢} ors and wives and children of sol- now know just how a child feels! many years and have a world of faith © cauld. */diers. No soldier ought to have to] when he first experiments with using|in North Dakota in general and Em- Oooo OOO OO % FY) face death in France knowing ear his feet as a means of locomotion,”| mons in particular. 3 Z bs e declared Miss Crute after her first a ——_—_——_— ones are in poverty at home. That Census Shows 4,200,000 Automobiles in attempt. “You can take my word for LESSON IN PATRIOTISM. is not what this great democracy ‘ P it that skimming over the beautiful’ e on a pair of overgrown tennis rac- We learn today a lesson in patri-| Wants. Wi Id. 3 500 000 ft ] h U. S » quets ig not as easy as it looks. 4 otism and unselfishness from the doc-| Let us hope the case of this blind or 2 > sleate J oO em m * ef “The: Law of the. North,” released : tors. In at least one state (Ohio) the mother in Columbus will arouse the} When Alladin touched his lamp{be wondered at thit America leads| but accurate figures are unavailable through the Kleine-Edison-Selig-Fssa- Mlaska Has Successful Co-Oper- medical men have agreed to share|nation to making proper arrange- back in China centuries ago, palaces! in ownership of’ rotor vehicles, but! on account of the censorship. nee Service, 1s described es One’ of ative Marketing System. fees with doctors who go to the front.| ments for such cases. sprung from the ground at his com-| the figures of the N. A. M. show that} ~The wonder of the thing, however, the pee raat ae "Thus, {f Dr. Brown goes to the| Blind mothers of soldiers should ma le ttaeee &: alatoenoune wis ee Ameria” 16 "fir!.and} 1s not in mere numbers. —— : : es 3) pat a a:.y other nation. Never bet 8 7 Ye Enginee: ommissi front. and, Dr. Smith stays nome,|bé Kept from begging by abolishing] puilt, some two decades ago, the way| America owns 3,500,000.’ aurymo- quien auem celine The Paras oe ia dl wh someilctt date yee nal Maat enn Scar” Smith forwards to Brown half of any | the;meed, for begging. was paved for the most remarkabla| biles and ‘truck:, fivewsixths ‘ot the| paratively short time. me IN LINTON VICINITY volves. Fie 9, Gre} fees'he may get for treating Brown's AG © astern business the world has ever known. | world total,’a prevortion ‘of about one! Twenty years ago the automobile — aM and Buyer Tagether,..:.. patients in Brown's absence. : GideGe just! hiltirally ie slips With the motor. business still in| automobileto ev y 30'people, or one| was practically unknown, A few lit-|,, W-M. Pagel, Prosperons,,.,inton oe 5 : tis Gs te ia eae Ing | its infancy, there are more than| to every six fam’ ‘es, tle one cylinder cars, capable of trav.|{tmer who. come to Bismarck ‘with| Uncle Sam has made a trial of ® "¢ The medical’ profession is filled war now that the sand is off| 4,000,000 cars in use in the world,| ‘The majority ci the other sixth are| cling about as fast as a horse were! MTS: Pagel. to. meet. her ,wacle! and| co-operative ‘marketing system in the with traditions of heroic and unself-|the track. according -to a census taken recently | owned in Europ, most of them hav-| curiosities in seme cities then aunt, Mr, and Mrs,,A. J.Pearce,,com-| far northern teffitory, of Alaska, and ish action, but there is nothing that — hy. the, National Se en oan ing been commirdcered for war pur-| Now automobiles | go crorvivhere, [ne trom Harbor Springs, Mich., for] jt 18 said’ that It has proved’ a great human: goodness’ On such ‘a lafge| Theré"ts 10° more Independent writ-| Developed in America. it is not to} mobiles thamy:they. |have. registered, | civilization with hen Hae cee shape. Mr. Pagel drove in and found oe We fuss i pope deparynent “ scale. er todey than the Englishman, 'H. G. [Fir tami | a number of fields nearer. Bisma; the Alaskan engineering commission. » 'H. G. , ek. .| Wells. E Y hae ae ae SSS hich ati narck tAs ra: result,;it- ia;declared that the We have to thank the war for show. B ae aa ee he takes his pen $f} | spending a we2k, visiting her friend, { different stations, as well as to travel through Blgh windl-and eoatiqued ary farmers of Alaska have no difficulty ing up in the human race an im- ae e writes something that HEBRON NEWS | | Miss Marie Schweigert, of this city. | between camps. | : °"| weather. Mrs. Pagel. came up on the in marketing thelr produce, as mar- measurable amount of lofty idealism is ou a to thought, if not, to bitter U ; Mrs. Willig; Minhaels of New Sa-| These cars have made an enviable| ‘rain from Linton and surprised her| kets are’assured tn advance for every and willingness to sérve and sacri-| discussion: Just at present’ a novel em visited jen abegther, William En-| record for themselves in every way.|Telatives by, greeting them,at McKen- particle of food that can be raised. fice that ordinarily.,we-would not’sus-|0f,@48 is being issued in serial form R ‘ gelter, during the past week. They have been averaging about 21] le. Wan Seer tssikt care i At the beginning of the seasdn, there al } pect was there. | thls bound to provoke much argu- OVERLAND DELIVERY WAGONS miles to a gallon of gasoline and from| While discussing crops, itr, . Pagel] is ‘sent, to each farmer’ a ‘bink form, \ We hope many will follow where| ™&Xb/°" both sides of the Atlantic. t “ALEASE U. S, SOLDIERS 500 to 600 miles on a gallon of oil. recalled, incidentally, that, the night! containing a, I at, of guéstid s for him Bl coe gee erstiand: It. Will do ‘so especially in ‘England, k ppetncine tt “THE LAW OF THE NORTH.” |in ‘the S ENC ee ginonds! to answer., First, ba, ts asked for ae lee where, despite its essential democ- va Sarv's soldiers are ‘finding a Sally Crate, the charming ‘ vampire” | spite of this fact that 1915 anion. | In| description of his land, and, oF, & atate- S racy, the country still tains th ag Gm squad of ligt four. delivery wagons | of so many successful Edison photo-| the biggest d. 1 PS vas «| ment showing the acreage under cul- Why is a potato bug? War garden » retains e L a . of the express type mighty handy cars| plays, recently spent several d iggest on. record. There was a tivation. see pene gilded figurehead of kingship ana (Last Rites Held This Week for| to got about in between Fort Lliss | mastering the art of walking on shew | uerdariece was aoe, on Monday, but) “hen follows a long lst of products, where, despite religious tol and El Paso, Tex, ' . nee. woe Bons: lows a long, Net 9° Pi — lie casein ie! olerance,! Jacob Schmallenberger, Prom- Thé:varlous egaiaites of the 20tn shoes, in preparation for a series of The Pagels are both middle west-| both farm and stock, with blank spaces FUNNELS TO THE ENEMY. i established church still retains infantry, U. 8. arily,/use these pan a Sane in ane Law of the North,”| erners, Mrs. Pagel coming from Michi-| Where the farmer fills in his report on irks Gaarndaais balére “haerica Ga: s great power and privileges. inent Retired Farmer CAAY ciples SOREL botecae the an Ee leon “production, to be seen to- gan and he from Wisconsin. They| the crops he expects to raise. Here Ay fied iho ats inuat often have laugh For Wells is proclaiming in this a ismarck theatre. “I| have resided in Emmons county for| he states how much of the crop he 3A ei Hapland add Svanse. Sincecwe new piece of fiction that out of this| 28°? Schmallenberger, one of the will sell, when it will be ready for entered the war, they must often| will come an era of republics | est ae of this region, passed DOINGS OF T market, and how much he expects to A d an age of religion that will tran-|#¥@Y at Rochester, Minn., the cause H E get per pound, per bushel or per ton. have laughed at us. For in Holland, oe . yan i F S B m 4 i Denwark, Nerway, Swedea and Swit: scend the narrow confines of creed. | °f his death being heart trouble. Mr. ; D UF bd ry A ll an In addition, other questions are zerland they have had pertect fun.|_.Vcls tried to project himself into Schmallenberger retired from active EXIT, TOM DUFF ; asked. How far is your farm from Pp | space and view this, work on the farm about six years ago, water transportation? How far is it ,, nels through which our products have » our world, from A ike from the line of the government rail- * poured into Germany, rendering of no afar. In this frame of mind he is|™AKing/ wis residence, in this city. road? How far from the nearest town avail part of the Britigh sea plockade|°P“™8t Tather than pessimist. He since that time. “Vor number. of TOM, THROW. THAT CIGAR AWAY = 0 Ri . where, your produce, ¢an ‘be’ sold? fe | sees an end to ki ,_| years. he. had been" president :of the } NOW, GO RIGHT ALONG - You WiLL ere, Your, PI Moi fAM woh of German ports and discounting in a ings and thrones. ‘No ‘Merchants’ National bank.» He had V Want NOU "TO GO OVER AND FIND HER AVERY WTERESTING Boy, ,can you get your prodiice to part our newly declared hostility to| UOT Will @ few dynasts be able to| been under the care of a physielan SPEAK TO MRS, VANASTOR - Nou WOMAN AND HER ACQUINTANCE market?,,Have you any. prospect of the country of the kaiser. say whether the world shall be plung-| for some time and“about 10. days ago REMEMBER Yoy'VE MET HER. MEANS A LOT To US SocilALLY being able to market all. you can pro- Some of the things Germany need- ed into bloody war or remain in bless-| Went to Rochester in the hope of BEFORE Thi duce, if so, where? What are your ed most to keep it fi y need! ed peace. The peoples will take unto| Securing relief. Mrs. Schmallenberg- MS SocieTy crop ‘prospects this year? Will the ‘© keep it from starvation, tol themselves the power and the er was at his bedside when death oc- CHATTER - I'LL | crops‘in your vicinity be early or late? keep up its munitions supply and] ment govern-| curred. The deceased was a promi- GET ALL BAWLED| Are you in need of a road to enable clothe its troops, have been obtained i Z nent member of the ‘St. John’s Evan- bP- you to haul your produce to market; from this country. They have been In the same way, he has a vision|selical church. His loss is mourned ( if so, state how many miles of such secured through the neutral funnel of what is coming in the religious} bY his widow, two daughters, Mrs. road, and to what point it should be a nel8.! Feld. ‘There will Georgé:” Bratsel and Mrs. Ludvig , Even a casual study of not be'lesa’ belief in wo bullt? ] >) study of the exports] qoq but 4 H Rehm; ‘two"'sons, Fred and Albert, Ae : of this country to the neutrals close) jr. more. However, he ad'| and a host of friends. Corresponding information is asked , to Germany will reveal the facts ences the theory that the new beliet} Funeral services were heid Tues- | from merchants and dealers. . They { ( with startling clearness: in God will not allow itself to be con-| day at the German Evangelical church are sent lists of supplies, and \after Wor inalance Degmaricciniaie took fined by sects and creeds. It will be|°Y the pastor, Rev. A. Debus. Inter- the name ofsthe product they @l in 415,479 bi hels ‘00K! something bigger, something broader, ment! was: made:in: the church came, the quantity desired, the place’ and 15,47 ushels of our wheat and in something more. teleraut *! tery. An immense assemblage of ac-| » date of delivery, and the average price 1915 took 2,754,746—nearly seven ae rant, something] quaintances and friends: attended the now paid for goods delivered at th times as much. Holland took 14,832-| i, it thas of the spirit-ol:the Christ | fneral: store, : 000 in 1913 and in 1915 t ao teear in an anything we have known Sent ‘Th 992—more’ thai double. 5 took 31,551"! since Jesus ceased to preach in the RED CROSS AUXILIARY. eae ba Hoes kn Lakota 9 S Holy Land. ‘Last Tuesday afternoon a Red Cross market and the; denier, In 1913 Denmark took 108,515 bush-| Coming f auxiliary was organized in the Congre- knows be will have something to'sell. els of our rye. In 1916 she took eee rom a man who was once| gational church basement. More than 2? 2,047,562—nearly 20 times 8 an agnostic, coming from a|@ hundred memberships have been In 1913 Holland took eae man stirred to his deeps by the awful] Secured and $260 collected. paaileg ai atd gl world-tragedy of w PLES of brass in bars, plates and sheets. hanpy ie Saat he is an un- JOHNSON-HEGSETH. eel Smelter Production in 1916 Shows In- In 1916 it took 1,950,943—over 250] 45 x » message is sure} In the Norwegian Lutheran church — - crease of 39 per cent and Value Is times as much. je the theme of many an angry|at Beech Miss Volberg Hegseth be- How DoNov Do mrs, OF, ITs MR DUFF! Nearly Doubled. In 1913 Sweden took 9,080,914] "nurs came the bride of Dr. C. H. Johnson VANASTOR- Nice. |! DIDN'T REcocnize You = pounas GF One epee Ak ae poe But Wells will be happy. He wilt| Hebron. The happy couple are DAN - AND WHAT RS The smelter production of primary took 34,545,504—nearl: have stirred men to think and that now on their wedding tour and will A cote MITE copper in the United States in 1916 34,545, y four times be at home to their friends-in Hebron yas 1,928,000,000 after all is the greatest dut ji Doe ‘was 1,928,000, pounds, compared as much. ; uty of the| after Aug. 1. Mrs. E. T. Wilson, sis-|- You Have with 1,388,000,000: pounds in 1916, In, 1918 Switterland tox 9.600 wri oe ba cares more about prog- eet of the bride, Mr. W. H. Itrich and tacréaae of 39 per cent... The Stat yee" | ress of the worl . H. A. ve i Pounds of leather. In 1916 she took! own bani orld than the size of his the pa recimae were present at value of the output in 1916 at an aver- 1,553,936, and all other neutrals took Sour ee age price of 246 cents a*pound is similar large quantities. CHAUTAUQUA HERE. $474,288,000, compared with $242,900,- In 1913 Norway took $4,743 worth What the governor of South Caro-| The Menely chautauqua entertain- 000 for'1915, reports Uncle Sam's ge- ob miacelluncous chemicals 1g 1916 lina said to the governor of North|™ents held forth in Hebron this week, Ological survey. faucet! eaeusub eonie Carolina will be nothing to what Per.|2¥¥ 2 to 4- The total production of new refined | iy F shin, f —_— copper in 1916 was 2,259, The figures cited for the selected | j aa : say to the kaiser when he! Mr. and Mrs. Herman Funk have pounds, an increase of 725-000 000 individual countries are typical of all) ©” ‘Nat 04 scalawag. Fotirmed. from -Spting Grove, Minn pounds from the output in 1915, these neutrals. ‘ Allowi ———— where Mrs. Funk visited her parents ee BICYCLE ORDINANCE. for two months. : The apparent consumption of refined 5 were cut off from} (, pane R. Theiring, E. T. Wilson, Oscai ew copper: inthe, United | Btutes 10 ( ussian and Argentine wheat, from Aight ordinances prohibit the use of| Funk and Fred Braun left by auto 1916 was 1,429,755,266 pounds. In 4} ‘Russian’ leather, from German chem- aidewa i by cyclists. Those riding} Sunday for Miles City, Mont., where 1915 it was 1,043,461,982 pounds. If -y icals and from European brass and! Non-com ia a ith the sidewalks,| they took in the round-up. fo: he Teen (th200 pounds of Rew Fe: { copper supplies, allowing for the fact result in preeseatigH ty the ety: The Seno eyronelenatee fe is new fined copper ts. added, the, 594428.807 | i : tt of Hebron. He disposed of pounds of ‘secondary co) { that they, therefore, turned to Amer-| Police have orders to arrest’ an: eee premiere ry copper and cop- ” ‘ iB yone} his farm south of the city recentl: per in alloys produced dari ica to make up their defcit—there| “i2lating this ordinance. “land will make his home h Ms ee ng the : > here. year, it is found that a / still, remains so large an increase in rates a oy ge ee Sie ne Rowrey oF Stanton: re. tis pare Siewert ‘new toa ol Fs a x 2 : olicé:| turned to her home’ Thursday after “copper was available for domestic con i sumption, — _ j }

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