The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 3, 1917, Page 3

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rau “(y FRIDAY A RIDAN MOGUBRS OVE oS OP SR a a)” IRR DAILY ROBO 3, 1917. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE thie point, advises:friends that-he:has been ordered ‘to move at once from Fort Snelling to a point somewhere in North Carolina. TO.NORTH CAROLINA—"" Sore Capt. A. A. Jones of the United States quartermaster reserve, former- ly chief dispatcher for the Soo line at a we sur day Night “‘PATTERSON’S HALL O’CONNOR’S ORCHESTRA Fresh Fruits and Vegetables As Usual We are ‘well stocked with the usual seasonable fruits and vegetables which are on the market at this season of the year. Later we hope to have peaches, pears, etc., for the canning season. | Our soap sale has been good but still continued, Sales of seasonable dry goods and wash goods very sat- isfactory. The McConkey Commercial Co. 910. rosie Phone 209 }charge ‘is advisable. EXEMPTION. BOARDS - HAVE POWER 10 RULE ON SLAGKER GROOMS | Provost Marshal General Crowder Says Question Is Left to Members’ Discretion Whether a man’s recent marriage entitles him to exemption under the draft law is a question for each loca} jboard to determine at its own dis; cretion, Proyost Marshal General Crowder advises the adjutant gener- al's office in a wire received this morning. The provost marshal says in part: “Concerning — recent ' marriages, selective service law does not require discharges in all cases of technical legal dependency, but only discharges where in view of dependency a dis- Local boards may wa@ll'hold that a marriage hastily consummated recently and’ espe: ly one consummated by a person after he has been called to present himself for examination to determine his fit- (}ness for military services’ does not create a status of dependency in which it is advisable to grant a dis- charge. “It is to be expected that: local H/boards will exercise this full discre- tion in cases where they are convinced that unscrupulous persons have thus violated the principles of the selec- tive service law in the hope or es- caping a duty that is rightly theirs one else.” ALLIES HOLD POSITION ON FLESH LIE (Continuea from: page one) ment, already have regained part of the ground lost when the Germans penetrated the front line trenches and infantry hill to the east of Monchy le Preux last night. STATE OF SEIGE London, Aug. 3.—A state of seige has been declared in the whole Greek department at Attica, including Ath- ens to the Exchange Telegraph Co. um HANGING (8 DENOUNCED (Continued from Page One) murderers of Little. Attorney Gener- al Ford announced his determination to run down the murderers and said last night that the state of Montana would offer a large reward for the apprehension of the criminals. GETS APPEALS. Helena, Mont., Aug. 3.—A request from the Montana state Metal Trades council for an investigation into the hanging of Frank Little at Butte on Wednesday, and a similar one from “the citizens of Index, Washington,” were:received today by Governor S. V. Stewart. C. O. Edwards signed the pry de from the Metal Trades coun- hich read as follows: “We respectfully request and urge a speedy investigation of the lynching of Frank H. Little in this city this morning, and believe it to be to the best interest of organized labor and the government that this be consid- ered at once.” A. R. Tucker and six other persons signed the following telegram received from Index, Wash.: Citizens’ Petition. “We, the citizens of Index, in mass meeting assembled, respectfully de- mand an-immediate state investiga- tion of the lynching of Frank Little at. Butte and punishment of the per- petrators of the crime to the end that there may be no repetition of such dastardly outrages.” Attorney General Ford left for Butte Wednesday night to make an investi- gation. Governor Stewart will await a report from him before taking ac- tion. That the I. W. W. situation in Mon- tana is attracting general attention is evidenced by a drastic resolution passed by the Montana State Bankers’ association at Great Falls, in which it appeals to the president and to con- gress “urging that forthwith suitable legislation. be enacted clothing the military branch of the government with authority to enable it to deal expeditiously and summarily with the I. W. W. organization and with all traitors and suspected traitors to the government of the United States.” Mr. Ford stated that Governor Stew- art and all other state officials were deeply shocked and \horrified when they first received word of the mur- BANANAS 10 and 25 cents: PER DOZEN 4 CHERRIES Fancy Ripe Yellow Stock Fancy, large, ripe, 16 pound box Also a full line of Fruits and Vegetables, FANCY SPRING CHICKENS We have a full line of fancy meats and sausages at all times and offer a very special 40c value in . $2.25 BACON, BY STRIP, per pound ..............20c0.0000- GUSSNE R’S | 310 MAIN ST. «Phone 60 High Cost of Living Reduced by John Figure the cost of flour, at from 7 to 10 cents per pound, the gas or electricity used, saying nothing about the time consumed in a hot kitchen and you'll find my BUTTER KRUST BREAD at 10c per loaf the best and. cheapest. way to knock out old man H. C. of L. Our usual Saturday SPECIALS Cookies, Pies, Cakes, Vien- na Rolls, Butter Rolls, Rais- in Bread, Tarts, Bismarcks and lots more good things. The Place 5th AND BROADWAY the; and of passing that duty‘on to sume-| __ der! en ee ee | A SGds| eairar nner nu | nccaste eee staté machinery was set in motion and every effort is ‘being made to co-operate with county and city officials in the apprehension and Ko bsequent conviction of the six or seven men who took Little by sur- prise in his room ‘Wednesday morning. A “Cold Blooded Murder.” Mr. Ford stated that Governor Stew- art had termed the lynching “an atro- city and a cold blooded murder.” While the attorney general returned to his headquarters in Helena last night, he will continue to work upon the case tor some time. LW. W. CURSES FLAG; ARRESTED BY GUARDSMEN Salt Lake City, Utah, Aug. 3.— With a deep bayonet wound in his back re- ceived when he resisted national suardsmey, when they arrested him, L. 'W. Longfars, an admitted I. W. we is in the Salt Lake county jail. His arrest was effected in Gingham after, it is alleged, he had cursed the government and damned the United States ie ns LNTLE OAB CF BUTTER AT YOUR ELBOW (Continued. f from page ) one) ist year ir they produced more than one billion pounds of it. Respect that tiny dab of butter at your elbow! Why, for the purpose of making a photograph there were piled up at the local creamery of J. A. Long & Co.—one of the largest in the coun- ry—40 odd firkins of butter, repre- senting a value of $1500. Fifteen hundred dollars all in one eyeful. And it represented only about one- twelfth of the day’s production in this creamery which works day and night. If as the $1500 worth of firkins were posing for their picture, the price of butter had advanced only one cent— as it often does nowadays—their value would have gone up $35 as you looked. Ah, little dab of butter, you’re some bab! That’s how quickly money is made among the butter magnates. The butter works for them while they sleep. One of them may have in transit 300,000 pounds. And if, while the ‘butter is thus on the way, the market price goes up one cent per pound, the butter at its destination is worth $3000 more than when it left the factory. ‘But it works the other way, too. One day, according to Long’s Dan- ish manager, M. P Knudson, they had 300,600 pounds on hand and there was a drop of 7 cents “That made s different story,” he said. But he smiled in a manner that indicated it ended happily. i Long started buying and selling butter, eggs and chickens’ jn a small way about 40 years ago. In those days butter was made in the old fam- ily churn. It was a pretty way, with ma in her neat gingham sunbonnet presiding. [t was picturesque, but not efficient, nor always sanitary, nor highly profitable. Today the farmers sell their cream to Long who makes 5,000,000 pounds of butter a'year out of it. ‘His ambi- tion is to make 10,000,000 pounds, and to that end he is building a new fac- tory. He will then, it is said, have the largest butter industry in the world, making Union City the butter capital. Ma would take the cream as it was, germs and all. The creamery today sterilizes it ti Long has 300 field stations to wh farmers bring their cream to be tested for ‘butter fats. The farmer sees the test made and gets his cash immediately. Long uses about 25,000 gallons of cream each day and last year there accrued to him as a by-product $20,- 000. worth of butter milk. re was shipped out of ation 3,209, according: to ‘the last census—$2,000,000 worth of butter to all parts of the world, in- cluding Japan and Russia. Yes, timid little dab of butter, you have your romance. ~ ELAS’ MEETING mneeting. of Bismarck Lodge No. 11 B. P.O. E., will be held at the E home this evening. Important matters will come up for consideration, and Brother O'Hara, delegate to the grand lodge, will make his report. All Elks are requested to attend. A regular WILLIAM O'HARA, E. R. P. R. FIELDS, Secretary. lt. CAR GOES INTO HOLE IN ROAD NEAR TOWN Atiautomobile ‘tour, which Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Schanrock of St. Paul were enjoying, was rudely interrupted when their car went into a hole in the road near one of the Apple creek bridges. smashing the front axle and a wheel and rudely jarring the occupants. Re- cent rains had washed the earth away at the approach to the bridge, and a guard rail had fallen down, leaving nothing to warn the automobilist. The car, a Mitchell, was towed to Bis- marck for repairs. A Maxewll, whose ownership is un- known, was smashed by running head- on into a telephone pole near the pen- itentiary this week and was still there yesterday. Frank’s famous sausage of Milwau- kee will be demonstrated at the Ku- pitz compdhy store Saturday. Don’t forget to come in and have a sample. See Mary Miles Minter at the Grand tonight. HAS RIPE TOMATOES— Ernest Wanner, secretary to the state board of control, is proudly ad- vertising the fact tha he picked his first perfect ripe tomato from his gar- den last evening. o aol 1 SENATOR THORESON KILLED; ACCIDENT DISCHARGES. GUN Hastings, N. D, Aug -Word has been received here of the death of Senator Thoreson at his home in ‘Sheyenne valley. It is reported that gun which he was cleaning was acci- dentally discharged, causing his in- stant death. It was impossible: to verify this re-{ port today, the only advices received at the capitol being contained in this dispatch. Martin Thoreson was one of the best known members of the upper house, in which he represented the 28th legislative district. He was elected a representative in ‘1905 and re-elected to the house in 1906 and 1910. He was first elected to the sen- ate in 1910 and was re-elected in 1914, having recently served his fourth term in the upper house. The sena- tor was born in Norway in 1856, was married and has four sons. He came to North Dakota from Christiania, Nor- way, in 1883, and had become one of Barnes county’s most prosperous farm- ers and among its most influential citizens. Politically, ne was a repub-! lican, A'QUIRE OF GRAND FORKS ARRESTED FOR IMPERSONATING OFFICER) St. Paul, Minn., Aug: 3.—Robert Me- Guire, also known as Thomas Gurney, of Grand Forks, who claims to be the inventor of a wireless torpedo which will destroy submarines, is under ar- rest in St. Paul on a charge of im- personating a federal officer. He was arrested when he flashed a tin badge on secret service agents here and told the he was on a “big government job.” McGuire is said to have run up a $125 bill with a local taxi on “gov- ernment business,” and is wanted in Minneapolis on a forgery charge. He was arraigned today in St Paul and pleaded not guilty. He will be given a hearing late today. STATE CAN'T INTERFERE WITH GRADING OF GRAIN SAYS EQUITY MANAGER “No state has anything to do with grading of grain when the govern- ment grades go into effect August\1,” writes P, H. Gallagher, manager of the Farmers’ Equity Elevator Co., of Bucyrus, in paying his respects to North Dakota's much abused grain grading act, in a letter received by the railway commission } today: MRS, ROSS AGAIN DENIED nlGHT 10 RECOVER DAMAGES A final chapter in the notorious (Ross-Cooper murder case which has occupied the courts constantly for several years was written in supreme court when the court handed down a decision adhering to its original ac- tion in reversing the Traill county court’s verdict awarding M Ross damages in the sum of $25000 from the senior Cooper for the alleged mur- der of her husband 'by McLean Coop- er, son of the owner of the farm upon which Ross was employed as foreman After the supreme court’s reversal o fthe lower court rehearing and re- argument were granted, and the court today reiterates its stand that Mrs. Ross cannot recover from the elder Cooper for the death of her husnand at the hand’s of Cooper’s son. PERSONALS George W. Hancock, well known Fargo architect, is in the city today F. F. Satterlund of Washburn was a Bismarck visitor today. Robert D. Berry, county auditor, and Don Stevenson, sheriff of Grant county, are in today from Carson. Sheriff R. W. Craig of Lisbon is in the city. Sheriff Craig is a son of Rev. Craig, formerly pastor of McCabe Methodist church, and now in charge of the First Methodist church at Dick- inson. He is one of North Dakota’s Fasay Pane rasien Fancy Pink Meat Cantaloupes Fancy Pears, per basket ... 20c Fancy Lambert Cherries Fancy Oranges and Lemons Fancy Peaches | Fancy Plums BANANA SPECIAL 20c and 25¢ Both Phones PHONE all 120 3rd Street Our Last Delivery Saturdays On Ladies Ready to Wear This sale offers to the Ladies of Bisrharck and adja- cent towns a wonderful money saving opportunity to replenish their wardrobe. Its seldom such high grade merchandise is offered at prices like we have made for this Clearance Sale. WASH SKIRTS— Wash Skirts, all this sea- sons styles. Golf cords, | Piques, Gabardine, Linen. es and Poplins. Clearance Sale ONE-HALF PRICE SILK SUITS and COATS— CLEARANCE SALE ONE HALF REGULAR PRICE SILK WAISTS— Silk Waists of this sea- son’s newest.styles. Reg- WOMEN’S WASH DRESS es, We still have a good assortment of Women’s Made of ular $3.50 quality. Clear- ance Price 2-48 LINGERIE WAISTS— Waists of Lawn, Voile, Rice Cloth and other Sum- mer materials including Wash Dresses, Sport materials, Linenes, Gabardine and Voiles. CLEARANCE SALE at ONE-HALF REGULAR PRICE. = SALE 7 —7e i Middy Blouses. Prices WOOL SUITS and CoATS— | Were up to $2.25. Clear- ance All this season’s Suits and Coats, priced for Final Clearance sale. Suits and Coats that sold Price GIRLS WASH DRESSES— a to $25.00. Clearance All girls Wash Dresses. a Tn’ this ‘season’s newest Price $10.00 styles and materials. Ag- Suits and Coats that sold es 2 to 14 years. Clear- up to $32.50, Clearance | ‘2"ce “ Sale at ONE- Sale 7 FOURTH OFF REGULAR Price ........ $ 1 5.00 PRICE. Webb Bros. Bismarck’s Leading Department Store. youngest sheriffs, and his name 1s in- over the Red Trail, wergnguests fat cluded in the first draft in Ransom the McKenzie yesterday. fi W. L. Richards, Dickinson banker, county. member of the state exemption board Mrs. M. J. George of Ashley, who|and state councel of defense, was a (McKenzie guest yesterday. ‘Mr. and Mrs. James King of Chi: cagé motored into the city yesterday. Mr. King is connected with the Chi- Grand Pacific, is expected home Mon-) °480 offices of the International Har- day from his former home at Mondovi, | Vester Co. Wis., where he has spent his vacation eee = with his mother. j . RESUMES DUTIES— Day Okes of Minneapolis, member |“ \tis; Emma McGarvey has resumed of the firm of Hanson & Okes, has! ner duties in the office of the state gone to Minot after looking over Liis- board of youtry! ‘after a vacation 61 trict 1 paving operations here. Pe pent at Shotebamn, Minn., and in the H. Kundert of Kramer and Jato} Twin Cities: f 7 Kundert of Eureka, S. D., have'!ré- turned to their home after attending} you are gure to enjoy Mary Miles Minter at the Grand tonight. had ‘been visiting in Grand Forks, joined Mr. George nere yesterday for a brief stay with friends. Henry Halvorson, co-proprier of tho the funeral of their brother, the late H. Kundert. Frank ‘Simon. James McCulloch and son, Hugh —_—_——— McCulloch, of Washburn were Bis- marck visitors yesterday. “Kintyre, Best Little Town in the) State,” registered Fred KE. Davis, Si , §. G. Ureng and Clar- ence Simpson, guests at the Grand Pacific over night. H. L. Berry, Stantor’s leading tegal light, was a capital city visitor yes- terday. Mrs. 1A. Gronna, and son, J. D. J. Gronna, wife of Senator Gronna and "ONES. THE SATi3FACTION STORE Mrs. J. D. Gronna, of Lakoti touring GROCERIES FRUIT VEGETABLES MEATS POST TOASTIES are the‘newest and best in corn flakes Call or telephone and be assur- jed of prompt and efficient service. Brown, Geiermann & Ryan Quality Grocers 63—PHONES—6 Quality Grocers 114 Fifth St. SATURDAY SPECIALS BANANAS BANANAS BANANAS Fancy Bananas, per dozen . 206 Special on Swift's Pride Washing Powder, 30c seller now, but we have a few packages left that we will dell at gisiss seeswsa ge oeswea ve wsvseeweiene 20c Barley Flour, fine for baking bread, 10 pound bag ..........--. 00s cece cece eee eeee 65c NORMANNA FRESH MACKEREL Per Can, \ a. 35¢ PURE HIGH TEST SWEET CREAM “SUSE leaves at 5 o'clock sharp. Week days at 4:45

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