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wa Miehay Linas or say 3 BOY ADVENTURERS AA ~ SAD ENONG TR Sanish, N. D., Aug. 14—John Cloon, Sanish homesteader, is home from Barnesville, Minn., with his two small sons, Roscoe and Forrest, who found home life too tame and set out to see NEWS OF NORTH AKOTA AND NORTHWEST | HAKOTI SORE ON TRAIL HOSPITAL GARDENS GIVE BLAZING AGGREGATIONS) STATE PURSE BAD JOLI Makoti, N. D., Aug. 14.—The Makoti sae Sentinel makes the unchallenged as-| Institution Formerly a Seller Be- sertion that many of the trails recent- ly blazed through the Berthold reser- vations have been pure fakes, crea- tions of the master mind of the blazer, sold to enterprising commercial clubs comes Buyer of Produce Due To Drouth the world. Their adventure had a sad | at so much the blaze. Towns which ending at Barnesville, when the! paid the price, it is charged, have younger of the boys, aged 11, in leap-] been provided with trails, no matter{ ing from a freight train was thrown | where they began or ended. Fifty against a switch stand and onc of his | dollars has been the standard con- legs was so badly mangled that ampu- | tribution asked commercii lubs, id tation was necessary. His right arm] many of these “booster” organiza- also was: broken, and he lost two fin-' tions, The Sentinel claims, have fall- gers from his right hand. en for it. ch Brown, Geiermann & Ryan Quality Grocers 5S—PHONES—56 Quality Grocers 114 Fifth St. WEDNESDAY SPECIALS Extra Fancy Watermelons, average weight 25 to 28 60 Cc . pounds each ....... Beatie ractotietae acu lslatasiesere Extra Fancy Cantelopes, 10 Ic Home Brand Peanut Butter, packed in five , $1 10 pound tins=«...:5 0 sadedetn so vidseern erst ademmeaie:s . Home Brand Apple Butter, packed in five 7 5 pound jars : eer Cc Crisco Market has declined, small size 40c, medium 80c large $1.60. Extra Fancy Mushrooms, regular seller 60, special 50. DYNO ao ssciscise tt isreeese ives piace ctowidaeecio niece ure ‘ IC Brussel Sprouts, regular price 25c, special price... 6.0. ccsa.sseGavevs sree Ge eeeres le 20c Fancy Japan Tea, regula ‘ SPeCial PEICE. es eee taaeanee ver eeon nies oe 40c Imported Cooking Figs, 2 for .. Now that prices are high it is more than ever important that you give careful consider- ation to the roof you are going to puton. You can save real moncy and get a better roof by using ‘ertain-teed i | F Roofing “ Thru quality and sheer meritias.a roofing material CERTAIN-TEED is now being used as the prefer- able type of roofing for sky-scrapers, factories, hotels, stores, warehouses, gatagés, buildings etc., where durability is necessary. It is economical to buy, inexpensive to lay and costs foscccally nothing to maintain. Itis weather-tight, lig! t weight, clean, sanitary and fire-retardant. It; is guaranteed for 5, 10 or 15 years, according to; thickness (1, 2 or 3 ply). . (os There are many roll roofings on the fiiarket, but only one CERTAIN-TEED. It pays to get the best. It costs no more . to lay a CERTAIN-TEED roof than it does to lay a poor ‘ roof, but there is a vast difference in the wear. You can’t tell the quality of a roofing by looks or feel. Your only safety is the label. Be sure that it is CERTAIN-TEED—then you are certain of quality and guaranteed satisfaction, |. > ‘Certain-teed Slate-Surfaced Asphalt Shingles Se rere elena ea eae 2 a sf, won > be fe foreseen ‘not have to be painted of stained. ” 7 \ | : \Certain-teed Paints and Varnishes | Rte pe ‘The name CERTAIN-TEED on a ean of paint or varnish is the same [i lity and satisfaction it c t /@ on a roll of roofing or a bundle of S : singles. Made for uses and in all |Beuemeceny ool Se 'AIN-TEED PRODUCTS'CORPORATION | Hew York: i M. Loule, Boston, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Detrolt, | Rapids, » Havana. --Certain-teed Roofing For Sale By FINCH LUMBER CO. 613 MAIN ST. Jamestown, N. D., Aug. 14.—Chair- man R. S. Lewis and James A. Brown | and Simon J. ‘Nagel, of the state board of control, have returned to the capital, aferatcpinen .| the capital, after an inspection of the state hospital for the insane. They find that the almost complete loss of garden stuffs resulting from the con- tinued drought which Stutsman coun- ty has experienced presents a reat problem, as no provision for the pur- chase of provisions which the hospi- tal gardens heretofore always have raised in abundance was made in the board’s budget last winter, and the state has little or nothing left in its emergency fund to draw upon. In other years the hospital has raised enough potatoes to supply its own needs and a number of the other insti- tutions. The probabilities are that the hospital will be forced to buy po- tatoes this fall. IN EFFORT tional Dictator. There is no indication of any ef- fort upon the, part. of North Dakota lignite miners to combine to unduly advance the. price of coal in this state, Dr. V. H. Stickney of Dickinson, presi- dent of the North Dakota defense council, announced ‘last evening, prior te his departure for Chicago to attend the conference of home defense coun- cils of the 16 coal producing ‘states. At Fargo Dr. Stickney was joined by Dean E. J..Babcock of tho ‘North Da- kota school of mines, head of the fuel committee of the state defense council and member of the national body. Dr. Babcock ‘has procured com- prehensive data on the lignite re- sources of North Dakota, whose store of this fuel has ~been estimated by the United States geological survey to exceed 700 billion tons, and he will advise the conference that North Da- kota is in a position to handle its own fuel problems and to solve those of sister states. Dr. Stickney expressed the opinion that a result of the conference will be a recommendation to President Wil- LIGNITE. MINES NOT. ENCACED Dr. V. H., Stickney, President State Defense Council, Anticipates No Trouble at Home—Goes with Babcock to Chicago to Attend Conference of Sixteen Coal Producing States—May Ask for Na- |. recognized it as an eflicient fuel. The TO BOOST FRICES . ual or a committee to regulate the prices of coal, iad that there be estab- lished a imum price ‘to the retail trade by on similar to that taken in fixing a minimum price for wheat. “North Latota’s difficulties lie on its easter rontier,” said Dr. Stick- ney. “One of our problems will be to educaje o stern counties and per- haps adjoining states, as well, to ap- preciate the value of lignite. Central and western North Dakota long have little bituminous coal which we use in this section comes from the west. The Red River valley, however, im ports its coal from the eastern and middle western fields. There is no question as to the ability of our lig- nite mines: to supply the entire state with a cheap, satisfactory fuel. I am advised that an advance of 50 cents the ton is contemplated. This would seem to be justified by the advance in freight rates and the much higher cost of labor. Even with this ad. vance, lignite coal at $3.25 to $3.75 the ton would be by far the most ef- ficient and economical fuel we could son that there. be named an _individ- burn.” GRIGGS COUNTY BACK © (LIDGERWOOD MILLING CO, OF ITS SOLDIER BOYS ONE OF STATES LARGEST GREAT PICNIC SHOWS Give Volunteers Great Picnic At Willaw Lake Binford, N. D., Aug. 14.—Binford showed that it was back of its sol- dier boys Sunday, when it enterta ed all Griggs county at a monster picnic in honor of volunteers from this section. The event was staged at Willow lake. The massed bands of Binford, Jenry and ePkin furnish- ed musi J, S. District Attorney Mel- vin A. Hildreth of Fargo delivered’ an address on “Unfinished Business,” and there was a big community din- ner, to which the merchants of the county contributed viands free of charge. Automobile sto carry sol- diers and admirers ‘to and from the lake were supplied by Griggs county people. : NORTH DAKOTA DURINE LAW TO BE TESTED IN CASEIN HIGH COURT Williams County Horse-eOwnsrs Appeal From Decision of Fisk in Favor of Board The supreme court is asked to pass on the constitutionality of the North Dakota law providing for the destruc- tion of horses found affected with dourine. A. M. Neer and Andrew Johnson, well known farmers of Wil- liams county, have appealed from a decision of Judge Frank Fisk in dis- trict court holding that the livestock sanitary board has authority to or- der the destruction of infected horses. Neer and Johnson petitioned Fisk for an injunction restraining the board from destroying two of their horses, which, the board claimed, were infect- ed. Fisk ruled that, while there might be doubt as to the infection of the horses, this was a matter gr the livestock board to determine, and that the law vesting the board with its authority was sound. Tens of thousands have been lost in the de- struction of horses under this act. STATE BOARD OF EQUALIZATION IN “FIST SEIN The state board of equalization be- gan its statutory meeting today, with all members present except State Auditor Kositzky, detained in South Dakota by the scrious illness of Mrs. Kositzky, who suffered a sudden seizure while on an automobile tour with her husband. Today and tomor- row will be devoted to inspecting re- ports of the county auditors, of whom all but four have their reports in. Thursday, Friday and Saturday the county auditors will be heard in per- son, and next Monday the railways, whose assessed valuations will be boosted 19 per cent if recommwhda- tions of the state tax commission are adopted, will be given a hearing. TWO YOUNGSTERS HAVE (300 ACRES TN FLAK Segur Roberts and H. H. Erby of Selfridge were in Lismarck last night, preparing for the harvest of their flax crop. Both are youngsters. Rob- erts has 1,000 acres and Erby 500 acres in flax, which they intend to begin cutting tomorrow, and which they anticipate will run 10 bushels to the acre. Flax is now selling at _..NORTZ:LUMBER CO. |. ~ 801 MAIN ST. '$3.50, making the gross value of their Ferop $35 the acre, which isn’t bad on new land. The young men will use {tractor outfits in harvesting. CO-OPERATIVE CONCERNS Entire Countryside Turns Out to |Enterprise Capitalized at $150,- 000—Other Corporations Chartered by Hall The secretary of.state today issued a charter to the Lidgcrwood Co-oper- ative Milling Co., capitatized at $150,- 000, and one of the largest co-oper- ative corporations chartered in some time. The incorporators are C. C. Lurbank, A. We Carlsoa and Robert Boyd, all of Lidgerwood. Charters also have been issued to the following corporations: Kildeer Cemetery association, George LL. Grayson, A. B. Curry, H. N. Owens, all of Kildeer. Trades and Labor Federation of Jamestown, R. G. Mclarland, Arthur Parkinson and Olof I. Bergquist, all of Jamestown. ; Schweizer Mennonite Gemeinde of Alsen, Cavalier county: Jacob J. Gra- -dery.,J., Wick and Carl Graber, all of: Alsen: - The. Halliday, Grain Co., Halliday; B.-A. Card,:-H. D. Williams and Ort Lingenfelter;;capital, $13,000. The Medbery Store Co,. Medbery; capital, -$12,000. Two Minneapolis concerns, the M. Sigbert Awes Co., and the Northern ticles to North Dakota this week and were issued;charters authorizing them to operate iy jthis state. |,” LITLE HAL LOSS AND LESS INSURANGE.FIKDS SATE DEPUTY SHEHA Glass Casket Co., extended their ar-|- Only Two Good Sized Claims Re- ported to Nofth Dakota De- partment for July ’ Reports to Thomas Sheehan, deputy state hail insurance commissioner, in- dicate that hail losses in July were less than half those of last year. But two substantial losses have been re- Ported to the state department—36,009 in Benson county and $4,000 in Eddy. While the state hail insurance fund’s losses will ibe small, its gains will be of the same dimensiéns, for so many farmers were so certain that they would have no crop to pretect that they purchased no protection. Dan- ger from hail is practically over, and the state anticipates little more busi- ness in this line. g pS PRISON TWINE TURNED BACK TO EARLY BUYERS NOW MUCH IN DEMAND Grain growers in sections of the are turning out far ticipated are profiting from cancelations of less fortunate neighbors whe early jn the spring or- dered large quantities of twine from the state prison plant and later ¢c- turned it. The prison now is closing out all oY this rejected twine at the original price of 18 cents the pound, giving late*buyers the benefit uf a price lower than the cost of the raw material. The plant manufactures only about a third of the twine used $800 FOR EVERY Blt AND LITTLE INDIAN ON BERTHOLD RESERVATION Great Prosperity in Sight for Arickaras, Mandans ond Hi- datsus at Elbowocds D., Aug. 14.—More pros-| tore for the Fort Berth- tion, a large section of} opened to settlement in ber, 1915, The first distribution resulting from the sale of Indian lands fas $780 per capita. The next payment, now due, Joseph Packineau, sage of the Elbowoods Indians, ad- vises, will be between $800 and $1,000, and every member of every Indian family on the reservation, from the oldest warrior and most ancient squaw to the youngest papvose, shares alike. Automobile men are looking forward to a harvest, as the Berthold Indian is among the most prosperous and progressive of the northwest, and he enjoys the white man’s luxuries. WOMAN OPPOSES PLAN TO DESTROY BREEDING PLAGE FOR WILD FOWL Kenmare, N. D., Aug. 14—On the grounds that it is a popular resort for ducks and other waterfowl and a favorite breeding place for these birds, Mrs. Nellie Norrie is resisting in district court further proceduré with plans for draining Des Lacs lake. Mrs. Norrie has applied for an in- junction against the drainage commis- sioners, C. O. Adams, Jesse Mott an others, asking that they be restrained from destroying the lake, on the grounds that it is meandered and can- not be drained by private parties. TREE PANTER SETS OUT (8.22 SAPLINGS IN IGT-H008 Kenmare, N. D., Aug. 14.—Three tree-planting machines invented by Prof. T. A. Hoverstad, agricultural commissioner of the Soo Line, are be- ing successfully used along the right of way of the Soo in the hills west of Ambrose. Dr. Hoverstad was here this week, inspecting the operation of his machines, two of which are drawn by horses and the third by a tractor. The record run with one machine is 13,022 trees in an eight-hour ay, while they average eight to nine thou- sand trees a day for the season. The device, so far as known, is the only one of the kind in existence. ARE A BIG TREAT FOR EVERYONE ! BETTER ae in North Dakota, and‘ always sells about 2 cents under the market. CORN FLAKES Sucessfully used for fifty yeors. Eczema and similar skin troubles come from a disordered, impure con- dition of the blood, a ne ea be cured iying.the blood a oa ee Cea aa removing from it all traces pf impurity. This is why S. . has been_used so successfully in hi reds of cases Eczema and otheg skin eruptions.| Specific Co., Dept. H Atlan: Fiery Eczema and Skin Eruptions Readily Yield to This Old Remedy This wonderful remedy is without an eqttal as a blood purifitr, being prob- ably the oldest blood medicine on the market. It has been sold by drug- gists for fifty years. You are invited to write to-day for comeicte and tull advice as to the treatment of your owh case. Ad- dress, Chiet Medical Adviser, Swift Ga. | PREPARATION ARE YOU MAKING FOR YOUR AUTUMN AND EARLY FALL TRADE. Crops are Proving etter THAN MOST PEOPLE DARED HOPE _A FEW WEEKS BACK There Will Be No Searelty of money, nor no diminution of trade—every one is pros- perous and were it not; for our relatives and friends tak- ing up arms for democracy, we would be the happiest people on earth. Study Conditions as They Are Not as they Might Be and advance, as does the soldier boy at the word or sig- nal of his commanding officer. People Know Not What You Have Nor What You May Have You anticipate their wants and buy accordingly. After your merchandise has becn received, checked over and marked You Have But Begun In the Process of Building And Advancement Next You Want to Enter Into a Campaign of Publicly thru the columns of a news- paper that reaches the great- est number of daily readets- a paper that stands for the Best Interests of the city in which it is published, and in Bismarck, Mr. Merchant, that paper is The Tribune smarek’s BEST and the States Oldest Paper.