The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 26, 1917, Page 2

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i ; BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE i YOUNG FARMER IES FISHING SPLENDID HOE Death of Hugo Tureck Blow to Anamoosc Community— | Scores Attend Funeral ‘Anathoose, N. D., July 26.—One ot} the largest funer r held in the village of Anwuno: was that of Hugo Tureck, a prominent and well-! , dat his home todo farmers who d four m Mr. Ture ailing for the last four years or more, but was al- ways able to be about his farm duties. Last vatdd the basement and built the con- crete basement walls for his large modern farm home and also the foun- dation for his large barn which taxed his health considerable. This year} he put forth the supreme effort by erecting and completing the buildings which are some of the largest and most modern, as well as stylish set of farm buildings in this part of the state, c! g not less than $10,000. The carpenters had just finished the work on the work on the interior of the house and all that was left was the finishing work for the painter: and interior decorating and the hous would have been ready for occupancy. But this was denied Mr. Tureck. He occnpied his elaborate home only when his body remained therein until it was taken to its final ng place. Mr. Tureck was only years old, yet he was the owner of one ox the best farms in this part of the state —_—_ NEWS OF NORTH DAKOTA AN of Anamoose.| , and the set of buildings just complet- ed is the, best in the state. He leaves ja widow and two sons, His untimely death is a shock to the entire com- munity. The funeral services were conduct- ed at the Catholic church in charge of Father Junker. Interment was made in the local cemetery of that church, \16 2-3 Population of Tappen Bearing Uncle Sam’s Arms LOO EEEE EE ‘ Tappen, N. D.,“July 26.~- & “With 16 2-3 per cent of its en- & tire population in the ~ of Uncle Sam, Tappen claim: eligibles a with Co. I, ‘Bis company in the Second. SPs ee eee eee $129,150 Estimated Value. of One Little Ol Poultice Crop McClusky, N. D., July 26.—Lin Arneson, who is_ flax-farming near McLaughlin, S. D., with his brother, James Arneson, and Charles Lang of Harvey, esti- mates that his 3150-acre patch will average 20 bushels to the acre, and that the 63,000 ibushel crop at $2.50 the bushel will bring the three partners $129,150. To market. the crop 1050 wagon- loads of 60 bushels each must be hauled to the railway. Arneson has eight binders ready to put /in the field behind four tractors and expects to begin harvesting soon. Summer Disorders Often Come From Impurities in the Blood Get in condition for perfect health. So many people drag through the summer season with that worn-down, tired-out feeling, that almost entirely unfits them for their daily tasks, without knowing just what the cause is, i It is just now that a few bottles of S. S. will prove its great worth, This great blood remedy is a wonderful purifier, and promptly cleanses the blood of all impurities, renewing the vitality that comes wit a restored appetite. It is absolutely without an equal as a tonic and system builder. S. S. S. has been on the market for more than fifty years, and is sold by druggists everywhere, who will tell ou that it is thoroughly reliable. Write to-day for important litera- ture, and free medical’ advice “from our medical director, .Addresg, Specific’ Co., Dept. J*’ Atlant We constantly have more calls for stenographers and bookkeepers than we can sup- ply. Send for particulars, and NORTHWEST SUIS. WHEN WIFE. WOULONT MAKEUP ACAI Bowman Man Whose Helpmeet Had Twice Married Him ° Wouldn’t Try Again «+ Bowman, N. D., July 26.—When his wife, whom he brought here from her home at Elizabethtown, N. C., on the strength of a wire falsely reporting the serious illness of her mother, de clined to consider+a_ reconciliation after several years’ separation, Phillip Smith committed suicide by firing a revolver bullet into his brain. Before taking his life, he wrote his wife a pathetic farewell note, which he tucked into a pocket of. her apron, hanging near where his body was found. Smith married Miss Hanson several years ago in Portland. Vater, convicted of forgery and sentenced to the penitentiary, his wife divorced him, but after his release remarried him, leaving him last March to attend normal school at Portland with a view to fitting herself for teaching. Minnewaukonite Who > Sought to Prevent Recruiting in Bad New Rockford, N.'D., July 26.— A Minnewaukan blacksmith who endeavored to interfere with John Flea, Co. B’s biggest guardsman, while the latter, was on recruit- ing service, was badly used by Uncle Sam’s defender and has been reported to United States Attorney M. A. Hildreth at Far- go. - Captain Wheeler of Co. B. has filed a formal charge against the Minnewaukan | pro-German, who is subject. to a maximum penalty of -20 years in federal prison for his attack upon a re- cruiting officer in uniform and his efforts to prevent enlistment in the United States army. ‘/MINOT PLAYERS STRIKE FOR PAY AND MANAGER PROVES REAL MAGICIAN Minot, N. D., July 26.—Minot came very near not having its recent game with Williston. At the eleventh hour six players went on a strike and re- fused to work until they received over- due salaries. Earlier in the week they had received checks, but had been un- able to cash them. This time they when you know what we have done for hundreds of others, you will attend. Write: @, M. LANGUM, Bismarck, (N, D, démanded real money, and the man- ager, rather than take chances with several hundred irate fans, marched the men to a bank just before closing tim Fad) doled;out the hard cash to th 3 cai} « Service. Cars of the Pullman Company are today operated over one hundred and thirty- seven railroads, aggregating 223,489 miles of track, and afford the means to reach with maximum comfort, safety and con- venience, every point of interest to the traveler. By securing Pullman accommodations, the traveler is further assured of safety, due to the strength of the car con-. struction, security of health, due to the scientific cleaning and sanitary methods employed, and the convenience resulting from the service of fifteen thousand efficient and experienced car employes. Accommodations may be purchased in advance; and, if for any reason passengers are unable to make the trip, the amount paid for the tickets will, upon application, be immediately’ ft refunded. Experienced representatives stationed at every principal point in the United.States are prepared at all times to provide special parties with private cars, containing dining room and kitchen, accommodating from eight to eighteen persons, in charge of a competent chef, porter and waiter, or, if desired, complete trains consisting of baggage-library, sleeping, dining and observation cars, : SLOPE WOULD SECEDE FROM STATE. SUNDAY SCHOOL ASSOCIATION \ |President Covell. of Inter-County Orginization Urges Withdrawal Bowman, N. D., July 2¢.—President Covell of. the Bowman and Slope Counties’ Sunday School ociation created something of a sensation when | in presenting his annual report at the j convention here he earnestly urged the withdrawal of all Sunday schools in the western part of the state from the North Dakota Sunday School asso- ciation and the organization of a new unit to be known as ihe Western North Dakota Sunday School associa- tion. President Covell charged that although thé association is paying for. county work, not a penny is being spent here. He also objected to the fact that the annual conventions are held in Fargo, Grand Forks, Bismarck, Minot and Devils Lake, and never in Slope or Bowman county towns. Res- olutions embodying his recommenda- tions were unanimously adopted at the close of the meeting. The only rea- son that the state Sunday school con- vention has rotated among the larger towns is that none other have accom- modations for the 1,200 to 1,500 dele- sions, State officers contend that an sffort has iveen made to be fair to every section of the state conventions in eyery district has y city with sufficient hotel and housing nolumodations to care for the crowds. EDWARDS TELLS OF NATIONAL EDUCATION ASSOCIATION MEET Jamestown, ‘N. D., July 26.—B. R. Edwards of the state department of education addressed the students of the summer school at Jamestown col- lege this week on the recent meeting of the National Educational associa- tion at Portland, Ore. He presented the chief features of the program, enu- merated the ideas emphasized and summarized the principal addresses. A visitor at the meeting could not fail, he said, to find that the control- ing idea of the meeting of this great association had to do with patriotism and with the holding for the youth of our land, all gains already attained. Another, conspicuous fact was, the large attendance of women at the as- sociation. Seyeral things contributed to. bring this, about. One is the strength of suffrage on the coast. He was convinced that the part played by women at the meeting in no way de- tracted from the force of the argu- ment in favor of ‘extension of her rights. FORTY PER GENT WHEAT OROP EXPERT ESTIMATE Minneapolis Elevator Man Agrees * With Secretary, Calderhead’s - Calculations D. D. MacMillan, of Minneapolis and A. B. Dickinson of Wahpeton, representing the Cargill Elevator Co., after driving over a third of the state between Wahpton and Bismarck, last’ night expressed concurrence in the opinion of Secretary J. H. Calderhead of the railway commission that North Dakota’s wheat crop will not exceed 40 percent of normal. The elevator men reported an unusual acreage of rye and barley, and saw some fields of wheat that were very good, but a |great many wheat fields will yield ,| practically nothing, cutting down the general average. VOTE STILL INCOMPLETE Three County , Auditors in First District, Not in With Their e Returns district have not yet officialy certi- fied to Secretary of State Hall re- turns from the recent special elec- tion. Little change from original re- ports is indicated in certificates on file, and .there is no question that gates who attend these annual ses-|, i Specials-Just Out! k | i per big patriotic hits of the day;~ splendid new renditions of the an- thems of our Nation; the songs and dances that everyone wants now are sure to’ be found on Columbia Records. : __ Here are the latést—and they are so: timely and.so good that you are sure to want them. “The Man Behind the Hammer”—Song ‘ Columbia Record A2271, 75¢ A song with a splendid, rousing march rhythm that’s a trumpet-call to the ‘man behind the hammer and the plow” to serve his country in the shops and in the fields. It’s a song with a tune that you can’t forget—a song so truly big it’s simply bound to be one of the real war-time songs of the Nation. And “Strike Up the Band,” on the other side, also sung by the fine big baritone of Del Sarto, is another song with a splendid march-time swing. “The Man Behind the Hammer” —Dance be : Columbia Record 45973, $1.25 A lively tune, a catchy melody—here'’s a one-step that ought to be the most popular dance of the evening, once you, play it! And there are bell passages and rattling “drum effects” thrown in for good measure that will tingle the tocs of every one-stepper! On the other side is “Hy-Sine,” Three county auditors in the First once for wt ‘You've heard batids and orch world’s greatest ensembles, the Ch , Star-Spangled Banner” and “America”! There’s a power, a thrilling grandeur about it, that will bring you to your feet with the first stirring measures. ‘The reverse has the “American Patrol,” also played by the Chicago Symphony, and it’s better than you ever heard it before!. You can’t beat the records with the “music-note” trade- mark! Hear these and the other fine patriotic records just put out by the Columbia Company, and prove it to yourself now, another one-step, with cocks crowing and other novel effects, “The Star Spangled Banner—America” Columbia Record 45977, $1.50 estras play it—now imagine one of the ago Symphony Orchestra, playing “The all! _. Don’t forget—you are in for a real treat if you ask your , dealer to play them today. New Columbia Records on sale the 20th of every month olumbia Those Healthy, Dirty Hands! There is something very t one who knows children, cleanness of a sick child’s hands, Mothers ought to realize that, and be downright glad when their children are well enough to get dirty enough to |require long session: with © stiff brushes and orange st nd two dif- ferent soapy waters before even think- ing about rinsing—New York Evening ut the John M. Baer, nonpartisan leaguer, received a clear majority. Sun, | Everybody looked at each other and wondered when they read that real trees of ponderous weight and great leafy limbs wére to be pulled up by the roots and brought across the’ seas and planted in California to make realism complete at the exposition. And people around New York who gc motoring and commuting and just visiting along the beautiful north too, for Mary Pickford built in the green meadows and along the water a real city of far away India, exact in architecture and size and peopled it with a cosmopolitan crowd | that was genuine. In making the scenes for “Less Than the Dust,” in which she is seen at the Auditorium tonight, Mary Pickford and Director John Em- erson .left nothing undone to make the big scenes replete with atmos- phere and effective realism. The wind- ing street “with its curious sloping roofs, its little bazaars and shops is a direct copy of a painting in the Bri- tish museum. Not only have the buildings been made real in every de- tail, but they were peopled with gen- uine natives, mort than a hundred shore of Long Island, have wondered | “Less Than Dust” Big Screen| Feature Shown at Auditorium Theatre Is Season’s Success real East Indian natives and eplenata| types being employed. No more ef- fective scene was ever placed before a@ camera. Hundreds of people from New York went out to see it and this and the other scenery and effects erected on the field near Whitestone became at once one of the real sights of the north shore. Across the road from the street scene there is an absolutely correct replica of an old temple. Every de- | tail of its facade and the interior were worked. out with the assistance of an old teacher of Semitic languages who has long been prominent in the Ori- ental section of Manhattan. Here | also is the sacred pool, another mas- tery detail. Still nearby are the ba called into action in the picting the rebellion. {rector Emerson had drill masters g: ting the men perfect in the skill cf soldiery and this was no easy matter. All over New York every available }man was being recruited to make up the full complement of the regiments called out for the Mexican frontier and those militiamen who made the playing of soldiers in the movies a nove. Yet in aot one thing detail of uniform overlooked. regular business were going away to | his shutters at ev the Rio Grande for some real work! equipping these tr and no stage director to tell them how | in accoutrement to pose and no camera man ¢! ‘ing | and insignia w “A Well Painted Bann. is a Sign of Th , ie DE peg nothing © 4” © will so add to the value, appear- (== Yj ance, and protection of your farm ean ai buildings as the judicious use of good | UPON HONOR WEATHER-PROOF BARN PAINT is made from’ high grade metallic pigments and mineral oxides, ground in pure linseed oil—a combination that can not be equalled for real durability and satisfaction. Made in two colors BRIGHT RED AND BROWN F, H. CARPENTER . LUMBER COMPANY H. E. SPOHN, Mer. Bismarck Yard em Pres | 4 J i he \ i? if i ‘ e ee a | | \i | | i » ‘| |: ai nS : > vite & ! ‘ie

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