The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1917, Page 2

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{ W2, } is tT alte industry of “North: ~ , GONGRCSSWAN CARICATURES CONGRESS FOR” is OF BISMARCK DAILY IRIBUNE (9m AY, AUG. 29, 1917. NEWS OF NORTH DAKOTA AND NORTHWEST t When Hay Begins to ponencncn senna ncnnneenennnnnannnnnnnnnnnenennnennes - Come by Parcel Post | | \hen Famine’'s Real em COSTES EE EOE OTS ' ¢ }Ithoda of the Salvation army, who Hazelton, D., Aug. 30.— & ee Abe was Kikiiyo Andrew Hanson, an old resident % of Hazelton who now is located % r set eyes upon her di who met her at the Quality of Grain Is Very High but ‘One of First @hite Premium Offered Less Than Men Born in Foster Logan, Utah. Las’ “ute when her bi land- . : ' Expected Killed in Accident ae © eee THE BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Se ate ate y Mrs. he wa So le ale eke of so badly that he -ton of hay shipped by par- i $36 postage on % & SPEER OEE E OES cece seme (SUPERINTENDENT OF NEW ROCKFORD SCHOOLS MAY TAKE UP Y WOrK J. H. Colton May Ask Leave of Absence to Accept Post at Des Moines hay crop was short in this sectio: of Utah, and one farmer need ms had been through th Dickinson Japanese Restaurant Man.Returns With Bride From Nippon Killdeer, N. D., Aug. 30.—The first -Gilbort | Wheat sold on the local market was white men brought in by Paul Orluet, who re lead aS a opie, Y his Ne | Fos ceived $1.88 for his No. 1 hard and result of ned on the gi oo son 4 S aseaee Wandering ‘m when a team *-77 for No, 2, The quality of of horses ran away with a binder and] all the grain being harvested in this yhe fell under the knives. section is exceptionally high which will go a long ways toward making up EVIDENCE INSUFFICIENT the shortage in quantity. . ‘NORTH DAKOTA SURGEOKS Carrington, N. I Foster, one of the born in Fos Dickinson, N. D., Aug. © son, is in w furore over a Japanese’ bride who has j from Nippon with her hus Ave, local restaurant man. Abe's second matrimonial venture. His first wife was an American g whom he wed in Billir Although on. artist..of unusual ability, she con- tracted habits which led to her Cel- lestial husband divorcing her several months ‘ago, when he divided Pe property with her. Among other = ‘ e titines there fell to her the Star res Velva, N. D. Aug. 30.—Albert An- taurant, here, which, by a q irk |derson of Voltaire, charged with of fate; was clo: »| threatening the life of the president same night Abe r of the United Stat and George Drop Charges of Sedition Against Voltaire and Velva Men ay New Rockford, N. D., Aug. 30.—J. H. Colton, superintendent of the New Rockford schools and formerly sim- ilarly engaged at Towner, has been} new bride,-and as he left the train B- man of Velva, ac of interfer nce | here: be was confronted tacle of his former wife's being car- ried from the ith the ypec-} with recruiting, building by Captain have been rel sed DONT BE MISLED ‘TE tang of a strongly “medicated” dentifrice often gives a false sense of security, merely because the mouth feels clean after its use. The function of a dentifrice is tq hel the tooth brush clean the teeth an mouth, not merely to give the mouth a temporary feeling of refreshment. S.S. White Tooth Paste is simply and eolely a cleanser—slightly antiseptic, but making no impossible germicidal” claims. It is made by the world’s best known manufacturer of dental equipment and supplies, on sound therapeutic princi+ ples. Your druggist has it. Sign and mail the coupon below for a copy of our booklet, “Good Teeth; How ‘They Grow And How To Keep Them.” THE S.S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO. MOUTH AND COILET PREPARATIONS 211 SOUTH 12th ST. PHILADELPHIA , d f “Good Teeth; COUPON as ie Kee Then tale a sample ‘ube of ADDRESS. ~| mai from bond, there not being suflicient|Four Practitioners Selected to At- evidence to warrant holding them. WNENZIE FARMER WILL HONORED BY ASSOGUATION tend Important Conference in Chicago i. P. Quain, head of the Bis- k Red Cross unit, is among four | practilioners from this state sciected to attend the conference of 350 sur- geons from the several states to be held in Chicago, October 19 and 20. Other North Dakota surgeons named are Dr. Murdoch McGregor of Fargo, Dy. Alexander J. McCannel, Minot. The purpose of the conference is to standardize the care of hospital pa- tients. SOW 900 ACRES 10 AYE 8. E. Cl'zbe Responds to Urge for Planting of Sure Crop Cereal Arena, N. D., Aug. 30.—Responding to the urge that ‘North Dakota farm- ers grow more winter rye, S. I. Clizbe, McKenzie farmer, has leased 900 acres of Boynton land near Arena and will sow the entire tract to winter rye this fall. Man Who Had Thirteen Horses Killed by State Is Saved by Neighors Sharon, N. D., Aug. 30.—When the state condemned and ordered shot 13 glandered horses belonging to Engel n, his neighbors’ got together da fund sufficient, with the $650 which Amundson received from the state as half of the value of the Ss killed, to purchase five new enough to carry him through “We Cannot Yield The Principle” N business as in national affairs there are A times when the struggle to maintain qual- ity is hard and there is temptation to skimp values. But, for commercial as well as personal reasons, Firestone Tire builders cannot yield. On quality their success was built; on con- tinued quality depends the honor of the name CORD TIRES» And 11,000 Firestone employecs own Firestone stock; logically they will continue to improve and broaden the service. Firestone Super Size Cord Tites are your most economical purchase. oline and insure Most Miles per Dollar. And the Super Size is important; it affords Sreater air-column and accounts largely for the ridin}, luxury of this most efficient tire. Missouri Valley Motor Co DISTRIBUTORS Corner Main & 7th St. . Phone 234 They save gas- Dr. Robert D. Campbell, Grand Forks; | Theatre Recently Burned to Be fof thirty cars will.go out. than ordinary for lack of grazing. tendered a position with the army Y. M. C. A. at Camp Dodge, Des Moines, Ia., as educational secretary. Colton may accept the offer if he can obtain a leave of absence from the colal school board. DICKINSON MAY SOON HAVE TWO PLAYHOUSES Rebuilt, and Ray Manager Plans New One Dickinson, N. D.. Aug. 30.—Dickin- son, which a recent fire left with no opera house, soon is to have two, H. L. Reichart, owner of the building de- stroyed by fire, has announced his in- tention of while Manager Davis of the Ray theatresis said to contemplate the erection of a first class show house 50} the best show town between Bismarck and billings, and in former years has been noted as North Da- kota’s only Sunday show town. Whether under the new Sunday law expressly prohibiting theatre at tions cn the Sabbath Dickinson wi retain this distinction remains to be seen. SLAYER AND HIS PALS FOUND 10 BE |W. W. WEN Cards of Organization Found in Pockets of Ed White and Accomplices Towner, N. D., Aug. 30.—When Ed White s arraigned here for the murder of D. C. Stewart, 63-year-old painter at Drake, he and Walter C. Jaehnke, G. H. Carson and Walter Karly, companions of White, all were found. to carry 1. W. W. cards. White. Jaehnke and Carson are held in the county jail on charges of murder ana as witnesses or accomplices in the crime. Early, who was badly hurt in the pitched battle between officers and the I. W. W. following the killing, was first taken to a hospital for sur- gical attendance and later removed to a room down-town where it was thought he would be more comfort- able than in jail. He escaped from these quarters and at last reports was still at large. . Northwest’s Most Successful Woman Farmer in Protest Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 30.—Among the many wires received by Dr. E. F. Ladd at Washington, urging a fair price for wheat, was one from the Lake Region Agricultural association and signed by its president, Mrs. Clark W. Kelly, the northwest’s best known and most successful woman farmer. “Our wheat costs us over 2.50 per bushel to raise this year, owing to light crop,” wired Mrs. Kelly. “Don't allow your. committee to per- petrate injustice on the spring wheat farmer. It will defeat the very object of the food control bill, which is to provide foodstuffs for the world until the war is over.” STOCK GOING OUT Thirty Carloads of Cattle to Leave Killdeer Saturday Killdeer, N. D., Aug. 30.—Nineteen carloads of fine young stock bound for Chicago have already gone out of Killdeer and Saturday a second train Much of this stock is being shipped earlier Most Dangerous Poisons. The most dangerous of all poisons are the toxins of infectious disease; the next most dangerous are the toxins of fatigue. Work, whether of mus- cles or nerves, produces. waste prod- ucts, “ashes” which are poisonous, the so-called fatigue: toxins. When these toxins have piled up in our blood to a certain pitch we feel tired, so that fatigue is a form of self-poisoning. When we -quit work or sleep or take immodiately ‘re uilding, | * adjoining the Masonic temple. Dickin |Prof. BE. H, Neff of Minneapolis for the fall term September 10. THIS IS CONGRESSMAN JOYIN M. BAER OF NORTH DAKOTA, CARTOONIST, SENT TO CONGRESS BY THE FARMERS. HE IS SHOWN AT HIS DRAWING-BOARD, ON WHICH YOU CAN MAKE OUT HIS FAMOUS CHARACTER, “HAM A RUBE.” BAER’S FIRST CONGRESSIONAL CARICATURE APPEARS TOMORROW IN THE TRIBUNE NEW PRINCIPAL NAMED ! Prof. tien as principal of the new ; Garrison high school, which will open It Heads Garrison Schools ; had been planned to open the school ison, N. D., “Aug. 30.—Prof. E. at a later date, but the board of edu- od cation has decided that owing to the SS) OLE light crops in McLean county there will not be the demand for help from school children originally contem- plated. Ga ERE ye Tribune want ads will bring results. 1. Neff of Minneapolis will su i) OME folks can'tfind ” any comfort in the flight of time, an’ yet— nothin’ else makes’ fre’ns so aes shoes SO easyor tobacco fot so mellow. [NN The VELVET that you smoke today left the fields of old Kentucky two years and more ago. Two years it mellowed in wooden hogsheads, becoming smoother, milder. That is Nature’s way of making good tobacco better. Learn how much beiter, today. Buy a tin of Velvet. 5c Bags 10c Tins 1 1b. Glass Humidors food these poisons are neutralized or burnt up in the system or washed and | breathed out of it, X Si (ae re

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