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at B , | 000; unsettled; 10c under yest @143 @138 $194 @198 185, : 340 @347 » 340 @347 No. 1 flex: tn: Sept., Oct. Sept. whent: . Old Sept. oats: < pu LUTH. . 290 285 58%4@. 37% 197 + 130 @185 ~ 100. @145 ere arr in-Sept. Oct: and Nov. . t . 9 CHICAGO. 'HOGS—Receipts, 7,000; Monday 30,- EAT YOUR SUNDAY DINNER iat i , Fried Springer oe such good fixings you'll want to order twice...For hide dishes we will serve New Potatoes. Tomatoes : Olives Celery ~~ Pies four kinds from which _to choose, with Ice Cream and Cake Watermelon and Cantaloupe (Don’t. forget the new loca: tion’ sntt nu mber—114 Mair a 7 GHARLEBOR, PROP. bul, $1630016.90; lett, x tmixed, "$15.75 17.14 heavy, $15:60@17:10: roueli $15; 15.80; pigs,-$11:25@14.40. Dogs CATTLE Receipts, ‘ 6005 stead native beef stéérs; $7.90@14.35;: we: $7.00@ 12.25; stockers ‘and 15.20: HOGS—Keceipts, 200; 15¢ to 206 higher; $15.60@15.65;, ‘bull $19.55@16.00." CATTLE Receipts, 600; steady; steérs, $5.00@12.75; cows heifers, $6.00@9:00; ‘calves, $5.00, tol EN. VISIT WITH” MOMEF Ot All rigged’ oiittn' 2 in their spick and’ span new uniforms, 149 enlisted ‘men of Co.:1 yesterday were given three day’s leave in' which to go home and receive the adultation of relatives and friends. At Tappen, Steele, Napoleon and other points from which these men were recruited receptions, ban: quets and dances were’ staged last ‘night: in their. honor. - All are bound |! to. return early ‘Monday. morning to :receive their first “shot in the arm,” as the unpopular prophylactic treat- ment agatnst. smallpox and typus is popularly known. ‘With 149. men, Co, I lacks but one of full. war: strength, and is probably :more completely recruited than any /other company which has been mus- ‘tered into federal service. _ In addi- tion ‘to the 149-men. accepted, all of Co. I's’ officers, Captain Welch and Lieuts.. Préston and Cordner, have been recognized under Sec. 74 of the :national defense act, and the company 38 réady to go. FARMOUNT WAN ~ READS, DRUGEISTS FOR WENT YEAR Peter ayia“ Elected President at Grand Forks—Travelers Also Elect Grand Forks, ‘N. D., Aug. 11.—The North! Dakota Pharmaceutical associa: tion closed” its thirty-sécond annual tmeeting here withthe election of the ‘followitig officers: * President, Peter | Mergens,” Faitmount; ; vice. president, John H: Vold, ‘Grand Forks; second para Peston Homer. L; Hill, Sutton; retary-treasurer, W...F. Parker, wip: his’ held’ this’ position for more than 20° yéars. The executive’ com- } mittee’ wag:formed of Max’ Strehlow, Kindred; Roy” Cook, Fargo, and E. A. Engebretson of Devils Lake. 'W. P. Porterfield of Fargo and Walter Mas- ‘ter of Willow City'were recommended as meiiiders of thé. state board of phar-, macy. The North Dakota Travelers’ auxiliary to the association, Which met Lat the sime time, elected as’ follows: ‘President, Harry Siegfried,| \Fatgo; first: vieé president, Frank J. Warner, Fargo; second vice president, P. M. (Grace, Fargo; secretary-treasurer, G. Hammond Brown, Minneapolis. TOO LITE TO GUSMY FOUND--Class pin ‘mai pin marked “B.' C. N., 11.” Owner. call at Tribune, prove property and pay for this adv. 8-11-3t WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Apply 612 Av or phone 483. 8-11-8t FOR RENT—Large, modern rooms in Haggart Bldg., steam heat, hot.and ‘cold’ water. Apply at Hughes Elec- tric ‘Co. 8-11-1t You condemn her—‘“Hell Morgan’s Girl.” You love her—‘‘Hell.Morgan’s Girl.” really gives you and hi North Dakota: Are: ea iete ¥ - ret aha TAILOR-MADE SUITS AT ; READY-MADE PRICES Strictly ai! Wool duitings, made-to-measure, wi $< GEE Nihtnge’ a€ from’ $18:00%-t5:, 945.00, iven to over a thousand good dresse:s in Otie tho usand patterns to select from. KLEIN—Taifors and Cleaner Expert Dry Cleaners DAKOTA MOTOR Co. NEW LOCATION 212 MAIN ST. Exclusive F ORD ee Ts EW SYOCK.OF FORD PARTS fad ACCESSORIES one year guuran- what, . Bismarck, N. D. AGENTS ; RRS eHeeee? “er Hell Morgan’s fe | [MATINEE TIME, 3:P.M. loved herself --but she. : PRICES 5c and 15¢ an = the Barbary Coast—loved life— loved the lights, loved. aduieationt “on the wrong sidé of Paradise.” and our story.a new turn—we’ll let the screen story tell the rest. The action’is laid on Frisco’s Barbary Coast before and during the great earthquake.. It’s a:wonder- ful story, wonderfully told, wonderfully staged-—is _“HELL MORGAN'S, GIRI,” Then. came the artist and. life EVENING BISMARCK 7:15 and 9: GRAND 7:30 and 9:15 INHTS OF GRIP TO PICNIC SUNDAY M FALGONER GROVE Big ‘Time Promised Travelers. in i, at 10 O'Clock One of the biggest big times over is promised local knights, of the grip and their families by the committee in charge of the annual picnic of Eis- marck Council 325, to be held tomor- row at Falconer’s grove. H. J. Zim- merman, Dan Stewart and Felix Ul- man, in charge of arrangements, have been planning for weeks for this event, and a decidedly interesting program has been prepared. Not the least enjoyable feature will be the eats, of which “Dan” Leonard ,a vet- eran caterer who knows ,all about good things, will have charge. Indoor and outdoor baseball, tugs of war, races and athletic contests will be indulged in and there will be some- thing to interest everyone. Cars will leave the corner of Fourth and Eroadway at 10 o'clock tomorrow forenoon, and all travelers who have machines are requested to come pre- pared to give a friend a lift. TESTS FINAL FOR CANDIDATES SENT TO FORT SNELLING (Continued trom, page one material .for ‘United, States army of- ficers: Bismarck Delegation. “Bismarck’s delegation. will consist fot Lyman A. Baker, statistician with thé: North Dakota tax commission and who resigns from the. quartermaster corps to go to training ‘camp; Ells- worth G. Bowen, Holly °M. Beall, Robin A. Day, Addison B. Falcuner, Fred A. Graham, Lawrence W. Hamm, |. Thomas C. Madden, Jay B. Shirk,|~ Lietit.-Col. Frank W. Snyder, Porter, F. Talcott, John P. Tucker, Robert H. Treacy, Jr., Charles R. Verry and Irving Vivian. Some Prominent Ones. Among the prominent citizens of this: section gelected is Francis B Streeter of Linton, editor of Emmons county’s pioneer newspapers, and son of one of the county’s founders. BY BETTY BROWN. Atlantic City—The modern —or at least the modern bati at this most modern of beach tie mark of the man not in hotise- hold drudgery but in initials tatoed on the arm. Cut the initials from court- ‘plaster._ Paste them on the arm. | Bathe=but! not too mitch, spending -! the morning and returning in the af- ‘some timé resting’ on the sand. And gu So}; will do the rest,” “The initials outlined by the tan. Forgery and Fibbing, Anything to Beat the State, Says Tom Hall Secretary of State Wrahty Over Situation at Fargo Unearthed by ‘Automobile Registration Sleuths—Says 120 Prominent Citizens Are Facing Prosecution On Serious Charges at Gate City. Evasion of North Dakota's new auto registration. laws is go that 120 Gate City citizens, many of them prominent business men and enthusiastic members of Cass county automobile clubs and highway boost- ing organizations, face prosecution up- on: various charges, ranging from sim- ple failure to purchase a license to forgery, said Secretary of ‘State Hall today. The generat practice which obtains in Cass as’ well as other eastern coun- ties of buying the cheaper Minnesota licenses in’ lieu of North Dakota tags has already ‘been commented on. In Fargo, enthusiasts for good roads have gone several steps further. They have bought at 25 cents the set, crude imitations made of pasteboard, which a Fargo painter has turned out whole- sale and for which he has found ready sale. Other imitations have been made of sheet iron, galvanized iron and common tin. Some of the fake tags have been of ‘excellent, workmanship and others of*tie roughest type All have been procured at a fraction of have had to pay for the regulation state tag. As a result of evidence procured by sleuths in the emplcy of the secretary of state, one Fargo manufacturer of imitation’ tags faces prosecution for uttering forged instruments, and 119 others will be prosecuted on various charges growing out of their unsuc- cessful efforts to beat the state out of their share of the money due the state highway commission. One motorcycle company has sold with every machine a tag reading, “License Applied For,” and the riders have used these tags in lieu of a lI- cense, in some cases for the entire season. Violations of the registration law have been general, but Cass coun- ty has ‘been found by Secretary ot State Hall to be the worst offender. And Cass county has asked for more miles of state and federal reward road than any other county in the state. Two-thirds of the money derived from the registration of motor vehicles goes into. the state highway: fund,'and the other one-third into the county fund the, amount which the violators would. for road_building. FEDERAL OFFICERS. TO PAY RESPECTS TO GHIEF JUSTICE Settle and Captain Hughes Accompany Capt, Welch on Visit Lieut. Col. Douglas Settle, 41st in- fantry, U. S. A., and Capt. Leonard Hughes, Fort Logan, Colo., who have been: in charge of mustering North Dakota troops into federal service, will join Capt. A. B. Welch of Co. I on Stinday in a visit to his foster father, ‘Chief Justice John Grass, mightiest of living Sioux chieftans, at his, home near Fort Yates. The pilgrimagé will be’ made by atitomobile, leaving Bismarck early in ternoon. The experience will be no novelty for Chief Justice Grass, who has. enjoyed visits from Sherman, Sheridan, Grant, Logan, Custer and others of the greatest paleface gener- als of his time, but the aged warrior and statesman has not lost his appre: ciation for any consideration shown him by the fighting men of the whites, and he will enjoy the brief conference and the mark of respect which the federal officers show him in journeying more than a hundred miles to call. New Honor. A new honor has just. come to the venerable chief justice of the Sioux in_ his appointment as vice president of Sfoux county’s Red Csoss chapter. The post was tendered him by Frank Fiske, Standing Rock reservation photographer, at the request of Judge N. C. Young, state chairman, and ‘Grass promptly accepted and pledged to the work his best efforts. He is in feeble health, but he has not lost his power over the tribesmen among whom his word for half a century has been law. Boys Doing Their Bit. Not only Chief Grass, but the younger braves of the Standing Rock are doing their bit. Among the mem- bers of Co. I, commandéd by Capt. Welch, an adopted son of the tribe, are’ Sid McLaughlin, grandson of Ma- jor James McLaughlin, grown gray in the Indian service; Albert Grass, grandson of the chief justice, a stal- wart six-footer who not only gives promise of making a good fighting man, but is a baseball pitcher of uote,’ delivering equally well with either hand; Bear Ghost, who stands six feet two in his stockings, and is a son of Ole Bear Ghost, a famous war- rior of the days of Custer, and Blue Earth, member of a family long prom-} inent on Standing Rock. From Berthold reservation have come Joe Young Hawk, Winans and; Rogers, all Arikaras. Rogers is a} ‘and very light. {ter to the day of his death at Little Big Horn, and to whom the whites of | early territorial days are indebted for many a warning which saved life and property. Richard White Eagle, another ae Sioux from Standing Rock, was jected because of poor eye-sight, Little’ Soldier could not be accepted because of dependent relatives, and Harry McLaughlin, another grandson of the major, failed to qualify physi- cally. Rejections among Indian re- cruits have been comparatively few, Captain Welch advises, flat feet, a common cause for rejection among the whites, being practically un- known among the Indians. BRITISH HOLD YPRES SECTION AGAINST ATTACK (Continued from page one) Fokshani, connecting the two lateral lines along the western Modajyian Iront. Iven here, the report toda nounces, that the Russo-Rumanians, although forced back across the Fuch- itza, west of the Fokshani-Ocna rail- way, held their ground to the cast of that line, where the menace to the road is greatest. i The most signal Russian success | was scored in the vicinity of Brody, where the Teutonic command launched an attack on Thursday in an appar- ent effort to clear the Russians from the small remainder of Galician soil which they still hold. Petrograd an- nounces that the heavy assaults re- suited in heavy losses to the German forces. IN DENSE WAVES, Petrograd, Aug. 11.—The Russian war Office announces that Austro-Ger- mans attacked in dense waves near the village of Zarkov, southwest of Brody, in northeastern Galicia. The battle is still in progress. SPECIAL ARMY AMBULANCE. To fill a demand for such a convey- ance Willys-Overland Inc., has just placed on the market a special Red Cross ambulance, completely equipped for $1,250 f.o.b Tcledo. This car, before being announced to the public, was carefully investigated ‘by the medical and Red Cross authori- ties and met with their hearty en- dorsement. It is recommended for the sericus consideration of fraternal and Red Cross organizations desirous of presenting local ambulance and hos- pital corps with such a vehicle. The ambulance body is of the regu lation French army and Red Cross type. The body has a frame of selected ash. The sides are weather proof Brass and nickel screws are used insteati of nails. The top is of 10-ounce regulation duck over noplar slats. On one side of the car on the running board is a 16-gal- lon- water tank; on the other side is a large emergency box. To the regu- lation equipment are added three reg- ulation army jitters with blankets. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Li Qonklin of Fourth street are entertaining as their guest Miss Louise Jennings of Hot Springs, S. D. \ Entertaining Guest. | * Ex sule bears the name #3 Besrare of cousiterfeits Mandan Couple Married—Thomas C. ‘Lee and Eva Bright both of Man- dan, were married Thursday by mt ice Bleckreid. ‘Try a: Tribune want ad for results, HOUQUOUDOUUOUOGUGEOEONUAUGUDODONSOUGHOOUAOSOQNONOULAOOSAUUDECUUOLGDHUOCUOUOUOUOLOULOOSOUOOURNOUOODOOT A Ladies’ Thriftiness Oft Times Means a Fortune This short talk is intended for the lady who hasn’t a 1A : . Checking or Saving Account in her name, The money left from your weckly household allow- ance, or from the pu e made yesterday should be the nucleus for the st. Savings or Checking Account Surprisingly fast do these small amounts grow. It relieves you of every embarrassing situation that might “arise over moncy matlers—you haye your own’ money to do with as you please—that is American Independence. OUUHRGUUGUELUUQUIOUUUUGNOUUEOOUOUESEOOGHULOGUUAGOUSO DAULUCUUEDUQGRORUUOUUNOAOQONCSIENT: We pay 4 per. cent on Savings; 5 per cent on Certi- ficates of Deposit for 6 or 12 months. We Invite Your Checking Account FIRST GUARANTY BANK Capitalization, $50,000.00. F. A. Lahr Pres. E. V. Lahr, Cashier. Lahr Building, 212 Fourth Street, Bismarck, N. D. CGOQUEEONOQAUUUGNUEOOUOUGEAELUGOOUUQUQERONOSG0UNCQQGS00C00000RRORGQCHQQQUEUQQGEUDOUEQQQCCCNQ00UG00000000UROQROQQOQEQUOGOREOOOUUOTONEEL SS Opposite Grand Pacific Hotel. MMMM <1 = UTD att TTT Tonse BROTHERS MOTOR CAR Concentrating on one car simpli- fies the problem of production and leaves the Dodge Brothers free to devote themselves to a continuous process of improvement. Perfect balanee of light, strong parts contributes to economy as well as efficient performance. “ter Missouri Valley Motor Co. grandson of Old Star, most noted surviyor of the loyal band of Arikara [scouts who remained faithful to Cus: Tribune want ads will bring results. Distributors M. B. GILMAN, MANAGER *' See BISMARCK 2 Sg