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me ‘ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE em Ground floor—next door to Grand T: — To cheer those who can- not serve as you serve but whose hearts are, with you-- your photograph. S| OYALTY--first to country then to home. Special Discount to Drafted Men and Yolunteers ' Make the « appointment to-ddy ' HOLMBOE STUDIO PUBLICITY FILM CO. | heatre. Bismarck, North Dakota | BISHARGK EN BEGIN TRAINING AT SNELLING Large Number of Candidates Fro Capital “City Enter Sscond Officers’s Camp ‘A large number of embryo. com- manders from Bismarck today entered the ‘se¢ohd officers’ training camp at Fort Snelling for a three months’ course of training which will gradu- ate sucessful candidates into the regular army, the national army or the officers’ reserve corps. The Bismarck candidates left for Ft. Snelling on Sunday, and a majority reported bright and early Monday morning to the commandant. The first two days were devoted to pre- liminaries and assignments, but actual work will be reached with this camp much-earlier than was the case with the first, officers having benefitted from their previous experience. As a result of the system of regis- tering students for the second camp there has been no confusion, and ev- ery man reporting has been registered, assigned to barracks and equipped within two hours after reaching the reservation. Street cars and automo- biles were placed at the disposal of students en route to the post, and Minneapolis is showing in many ways that it is glad to have been favored with another officers’ training camp. Saturday night will be the very last date upon which students may be re- ceived. The places of those not re- porting by that date will be filled with alternates. Bismarck’s honor list at Snelling in- cludes Lyman A. Baker, Ellsworth G. Bowen; Robin A. Day, Addison B. Fal- coner, Fred A. Graham, Lawrence W. Hamm, Thomas €. Madden, Jay B. Shirk, Frank W., Snyder, Porter T. Talcott, ‘John P. Tucker, Robert H. ‘Treacy, Jr, and Irving G. Vivian. Ally of ‘these men are ‘believed to have already reported. SUBMARINE PROBLER {5 NEAR SOLUTION: (Gentinued trom Page One.) striking distance of any ship out- fitted with this apparatus without its presence and location being known. It is only the question of a short time when every naval vessel ‘engaged in the submarine hunt will be so outfitter This’ does not mean that from now on the submarine will not continue to; take’a great toll of shipping, or that at any time in the near future the torpedoing of ships will absolutely stop. In other words, the apparatus or device or method, or whatever fame we call it, will never be 100 per cent effective. But‘even the least scientific strategically minded layman can un- derstand what a long step has been laken toward eliminating the suoma- rine as a Vital factor in the war when} he realizes that ONCE A DESTROY- ER “GETS IN TOUCH” WITH A SUB- MARINE IT CAN KEEP IN “TOUC H” UNTIL THE SUBMARINE RISES. And every submarine must rise at in- tervals to change its electric batteries. No submarine is a match for a de- stroyer in a surface fight. There have been more surface fights between destroyers and submarines during. -the past month than in any month sincé the submarine war start- ed. And there are certain to be more and more of these fights, the number increasing in direct proportion to the number of destroyers fitted with the “ears” that not only will enable éhem to hear the submarines, -but to know EXACTLY WHERE THEY ARE. By no possibility can the Germans build enough. submarines or build them powerful enough to keep on equal terms with the great and power- ful allied destroyer fleets now on the oceans, under construction or pro- jected. It would not be permissible even to hint at the size of these destroyer fleets, if we had the figures; but it may be said that if the war continues for another year, the submarine zones, so-called, will be covered with power- fully armed destroyers capable of ex- press train speed, against which the; submarine’s ability to submerge will| be a defense only whiie it is sub- merged. ot When it rises to “breathe,” as it must sooner or later, it will in most cases be in range of a five-inch de- stroyer gun. Behind these guns will be the BEST NAVAL MARKSMEN IN THE WORLD, all specially trained to} “get” submarines. Terrible Toll. Unless every naval officer who has; studied the submarine problem is ab-} solutely wrong in his calculations, long before another year rolls around the ' or) | sides, Judge Crawford announced the | an examination for the Elgin people. | Brother anese destroyers will have taken such | a terrible toll of German submarines | that the losg-of tonnage by torpedoing | will have been reduced to the point) where it will not equal the new ton-| nage built. | When that’ point is reached the sub- | marine, while. it. may continue to be| an. annoyance or even a danger, will cease to be such a menace as to jeop ardize the cause of the allie: The knowledge that a device and aj} method of defeating the submarines | have'been worked out has greatly heartened all allied statesmen and! military leaders. It has‘'spurred them on to greater activity in the building of both de-; stroyers and merchant ships. They realize that the German autocrats’ con- ; trol over the German people has de- pended latterly upon the seeming sue- |! cess of the submarine. Starving England with the subma-! rines has been the great and last hope | of the German people. This is thé | hope that has sustained them through | all the bitter trials of the past six | months. The sooner it is proven to them that the submarine is doomed the so they will break under the te strain and ‘sooner they will admit de- feat and make possiile the ending of | the war, which can end in no other way. ELC SEEMS TO: HAVE FAST BOUT ~ IN CAPITAL SCRAP. J wage Crawford Gra Grants ary Injunetion—Case Vet to Be Tried on Merits Tempor- | FINAL TRIAL PROBABLY | TO BE HELD AT CARSON! Carson, N. D., Aug. 30.—While work | on the new Grant county court hot is proceeding’ with all possible d patch, Elgin claims first. blood in the reopened ‘county seat fight. At Dici- inson in the hearing before Judge Crawford, a temporary injunction was granted F. G. Boettscher et al, of El- gin, petitioners for an order to show| cause why the county commissioners shodlu not be restrained from any,| further expenditure of funds in the erection of a county building. Col. | I. N. Steen, state's attorney, of Grant; John F. Sullivan of Mandan, and W. F. Burnett of ‘Dickinson represented the county commissioners, while the petitioner was represented by J. K. Murray of Mott, state’s etiorney for Hettinger county. The argument on Boettscher's peti- i tion consumed all of Thursday. At the conclusion of counsel for both granting of a temporary injunction, re- straining the commissioners from pay- ing any funds over to the contractors or work on the court house, pending the trial of the case on its merits.) , Copies of this restraining order were immediately served on the Grant coun- | ty officials present at the hearing. The court announced that the trial of the case on its merits would take place at Carson. J. K. Murray, for the plaintiff, stated that he was ready to try the case immediately, but the court declined to accept jurisdicti Judge Crawford urging that he had been called in only to try the tempor- ary injunction and that arrangements must be,made in the future for the trial of the action itself. Attorney Sullivan, for the defendant commissioners, in his argument laid much stress upon the importance of having a suitable building for the stor- ing of public records and decent ters for the county officials to work in. The court held that only two questions were involved: First, what funds could be transferred to the building fund, and second, whether there is suf- ficient money in these funds to com- plete the court house. The questions of fact are to be de- termined by the certified accounts of former State Auditor Carl O. Jorgen- son, who represented Grant county in| the partition from mother Morton,j and of Thomas Poole, chartered ac- countant of Bismarck, who has made FELL FROM SIEAMER | of Cooperstewn Man « Brought Home for Burial Cooperstown, N. D., Aug. 30.—The remains of Carl Bendickson, brother | of Matt Bendickson of Clearfield, who} fell 29 feet from a steamer on which | he was working in the harbor at} Cleveland, O., and was instantly killed, were brought here for inter- ment. jly hope the Russian democr: jfully echoed Heat ‘administration ‘desires to con NO DANGER IK RUSSIAN. LOAN SAYS RUSSELL Gloomy Cussas Wiic ‘Are Worry- ing About it Will Be ‘to ° Blame If We Lose It |ONE OF RICHEST NATIONS . IN NATURAL RESOURCES This is another of the series of articles by Charles Edward Rus- ‘sell, staff writer of The Tribune, who has just returned from Rus- sia, where he spent three months as a member of the official Unit- ed States commission to the new * Russian government. American, British, French and Jap-; By CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL. | 1917, e Association.) (Copyright, Here is the Russian situation com- pressed into one incident. A few days ago the administration idecided to lend Russia another $100,- 000,000, At’this all persons and newspapers in this country that secretly or op cy will 1 professed great astonishment. Then the other persons and newspa- pers tha ve no knowledge of Rus- » but j an’t believe actual dem- ocracy can succeed anywhere, cheer- the astonishment. What! Lend more money to Russia | at a time when according to the press | dispatches the |; vottom has fallen out of everything? Whea the dread- ful radicals with whom the country is filled are raging up and down thirst- jing for hot blood and threatening de- | struction? When, it is plain, chaos reigns. ja is bank Above all, when Ru rupt. That makes $27 werhave this nation that wails the Low Shall we ever get ! Let us bid a fond Why does the the good ‘Pressure Chorus it back? Alas! farewell to our mone; thus throw mazuma after the bad? Lut it doesn’t. The administration {is perfectly right in its estimate of Barring one chance, Russia afe a country to lend money to see how ‘monstrous and dan- gerou re the nm onceptions pro-! {duced in-the American mind by the | Dismal Dopers and the Gloomy Cusses |of the British pr from whom we get nine-tenths of our so-called new trom Russia. As a matter of fact bankrupt. It is one of the countries: of the world. It is not only rich in possibilities Russia isn’t richest |lut it is rich in the actual thing. It} of nice, jhas The Goods. J don’t mean that the soil is rich, although that is true. I mean that ihe government is rich. It owns a vast empire of arable and | timber lands. There is no question about its own- ership. The title has always been} | vested in the government. Comparatively speaking there is not a great deal of private landowning in Russia. I mean compared with {other countries, An immense amount of land is owned in common, either) by the villages or by the general Bov-| ernment. was just being completed. amazing total o! —$30,000,000,000. if the government ate the huge estates of the czar and the grand dukes, ail |grafted from the public, it avill have enough to pay the det and lay by a surplus. It could ke land It indicated the sixty billion rubl Besides all I] leave the entire brood of imper- jal parasites, idlers mutts enough to keep them in splen- der all their days. If it would confiscate only the} crown jewels and the palaces in Pe- trograd it would go far to wipe out all the national debt it has at pres- ent. More than that, I am told that there was a meeting not long ago in Petro- 1 there was held a convention althy men, ers, exploiters, merchants and high lights in Big Business, what there is of it an:d when they came to compare notes they found that the interests they represent could absorb, if need be, the greater part of the debt so far created by the war. At present most of these resources are untouched by taxation. It is evi-| dent, therefore, that the assets back of this real Russia are almost un- limited. No one need worry about that. Also, as to chaos in Russia. There isn’t any chaos. There are elements in the newly created political life that differ as to the details of the policy the gov- ernment should follow. But such differing exist in every country that has democr You} couldn't have healthy democracy with- out them. But except for a few noisy anarch- ists and a handful of returned Amer-} iean trouble makers the people are unanimous for the of democracy. They don't agree aout their government but they don’t want to assassinate it. A certain amount of confusion was utely inevitable after the de- ab: | struction of one great system of gov- ernment an¢ before another could be instituted that would work with per- fect smoothness in every part of this | |}enormous country. Such confusion such times. ed States it lasted eleven years. the case of Russia it has lasted less than six months and is steadily di appearing. There never was a country in the, In the case ‘of the Unit In world that underwent anything like | the revolution that Russia has had and six months later presented any- by, the Newspaper} ‘ment of the government's holdings in entire national | from these estates | enough to pay the national debt and| and worthless, | bankers, manufactur- | broad principles | thing like. the same spectacle of ol order and substantial progress. | This, of course, ,is totally see to the impression created by actionary press and the ee foreign colony at Petrograd, but is} nevertheless the actual fact. Barring the one chance | have spok- | jon of, the United States will get b all the money it has lent to Rus: lay | and get it back with interest. i That chance is that wnile Russia is) still finding herself the kaiser’s sup-! porters in this country will help the| German troops to break the Russian! line and crush the new democracy in} ils infancy. With their peace chatter and treas-| onable peace coun their maaen | vers in congress to cripple ana dis-} jeredit the govern t ,their transpar- tent demands for the ting of peace } |terms ,and their widespread organiza: | ‘tions of disloyaliy, they have already) |done much to v na Russiaa ri | jance and ‘enable the kaiser te ad | ' vance. 2 | | i} i ! If they keep on they will-have him} in: Petrograd and Moscow. In that event, of course, it wht be! goodbye to our money. Also to many jother things infinitely dearer, includ- ing democracy. in Russia and armies iof young American lives. That is the result of which the work of Mr. LaFollette and his com- i pany is tending. I.can do no more and no less rhan to tell you the facts’ as I found them in Russia. | The American pacifist is Russia's deadliest enemy and the kaiser’s most powerful and_ efficient a | SAE YOUR STRAW “RAL COWMISSION ~—ADVIBES FARES | Assures Grain-Growers Who Have | Plenty That There Are Many Less Fortunate i |DEMAND FOR EVERY | TON OF FOOD-STUFF st -if you don’t some other farmer will,” is ge which the state railway n last night sent broadcast | Dakota srain-growers. straw in the * said Sec- need it the me; North Every ton of valua le for feed this yea retary J. 0H. Calderhcai. “Not a single | to stack should be buried. Even if the | eastern grain-grower doesn't get a) dollar out of this straw, he should ve it for the, benefit of his brother rmer in the western part of the | state, where there is no hay and no} grazing tor livestock. This is a time for unselfish cooperation, and I be- te, | |} Dakota farmer tu co-opers “There's tens of thousands of tons lean straw in the valley and the southeastern pi of the) state. Eyery ton of this straw should he set | at work doing its bit to preserve a) valuable food supply. \Vithout for-| | age, the slope rancher must sacrifice his cattle, and if he does t it will} ‘mean many meatless days in the | | months Los On Men om come. STATE OFFICERS HOOVER'S RULING | Wire Representatives Calling At- | tention to Injustice of 30- Day Clause EELIEVE PROVISION H | ! WOULD BE DAMAGING | j Governor Frazier, dahl and Re Bleick and Johnson, Comm Agriculture and Labor :Hagan, Attor- ney General Langer and Secretary of State Hall following their conference yesterday jcined in the following teie- | gram, which was addressed to Reps. | sorton, Young, and Baer, Senators McCumber and Gronna and Food Com-} missioner Ladd, at Washington: | “Food acininistration lic regula- 7 tion requires elevators to give storage facilities to no one except the admin- istration for more than ¢ Stor- | age tickets governing transactions pe) | mit warehouse men to ship grain co) | ered by such tickets at the end of 30 day period to the terminal market ; for the best price obtainable. wheat is forced to terminals in large | | quantities, there is grave danger of, depressing uming that the| government prices is a maximum, as the law ns to provide. “Believe the 30 day storage limita- tion will tend to ¢ facilities, conge $ | take away from producers all the pro-| | tection which prov the law in-| | tended to give through, exemption in) | sections 5, Do everything | possible to regulation scinded. “Administration ment to elevators for subject to order of the departmnet, and in consideration the admin tion guarantees again decline in pri | Why not make this arrangement with producer and not with warehouse man, | who takes title to grain by force of | | 30 day storage rule?” Aan- | Chairman | @HAPLAIN OF SECOND |Rev, H. G. Markley of Hamilton! \ | Capt. | Hamilton. of a returned from a 3 h his family at Pittsburgh ! pa., and is now here for active serv-| ice. | ARRANGEMENTS MADE i chief elevator ac lieve we can depend upon the North j s FRAZIER ORDERS LANGER TO “GET” FARGO RIOTERS |General j sent to Fargo last night by | decide Lockner, the local secretary, and \ | Williams, publicity director of the council, had reserved rooms at the ‘on Sept. 1, {order of Governor Bu | Governor Burnquist from meeting rey i EW COMMODITY RATES 10 AFFECT THE WHOLE STATE ‘ Schedule Arranged by Rate Ex: pert Little Adopted by Railway Commission FOR HANDLING COAL A new schedule of commodity rates prepared by Rate Expert J. A. Little and which will establish all freight tariffs on a distance bi wader North Dakota's new tariff act was adopted by the state railway commis: sion at its meeting yesterda The chedule, which makes many import- ant changes in existing tariffs, will | be ready for publicagion in the near j tuture. To Handle Coal. The rail board has directed the Soo line to arrange for an interchange of cars with the Great Northera and oth- er lines at Minot and adjacent terri-! tory to care for the coal trade con- tributory to the magic city. Looking Into Failure. The commission took note of the failure of the Hoge elevator at Burl- ington and directed F. M. Schulz, ‘ountant to secure all books and records from Hoge and to thoroughly examine hi accounts. Holders of storage tickets are noti- fied that their interes are being safe-guarded. To Examine Books. The secretary was directed to order the Northern Pacific to allow Mr. Schulz to examine the records of the} Milnor station in St. Paul, for the purpose of determining shipments made from the Hoving station. No ir regularities hinted at, but the agent there is to be checked out, and! certain records nec! ‘y can be} found only in the St. Paul offices of | the Northern Pacific. Assistant Resigns. The resignation of T. C. Croll as stant chief elevator accountant was accepted, and Chief Accountant Schulz was authorized to fill the va- cancy. Hearings Deferred. As previously intimated, because one, including the commission- busy. with threshing, the hear- heduled for Medina on Septem- ber 5, when ‘phone rates were to be looked into, and for Biismarck, Se) tember 6, when the recent grade crossing a ent at Third street was [to be investigated, were deferred un-| til October The stated meeting of the board will be held at Grand Forks on October 2 as originally scheduled. | (Continued from Page One.) Langer in Fargo. Fargo, N. D., Aug. 30. -— Attorney ! Jliam Langer, who was Governor | zier to “see that the law case the People's Council of Am for Democracy and ; Peace held its national conference | he announced today that he had | notified the Fargo authorities that he was informed the propased meeting j would not be held here. The attor- ney general refused to indicate the source of his information. Mayor Alex Stern, who had called a special meeting of the commission to what action the city would take, if any, last night, upon being in- j formed by the attorney general this ; morning that no meeting would be ‘held in Fargo, called oif the proposed | meeting of the comm joners. Le’ Lynn J. FI was obeyed" i hotel, but could not be located. Both | had come to make arrangements for ‘the proposed meenns INVADES FARSO. .—Repre- il for ng ar: | which ipolis ad by COUNCIL Minneapolis. Mi sentatives of the People Peace were in Fargo today m rangeme: for the r ting was to have been held in ¥ and which v au BROTHERS C'FF. R. Paul, Aug. 3 ~Wiile S. a. {Stockwell of Minneapo: ‘> reais at the meeting of the pe «cs council ‘of America-at Fargo if} '1 Lere, his! | brother, W. L. will be delivering a patriotic address | |at Moorhead, Minnesota, just across Red River, A. Stockwell is prominently identified with the peoples co: Wt known as a “peace at any price or ganization,’ which was prohibited iy» | Minnesota. W. L. Stockwell recently wrote to the Loyalty Lyceum in St. Paul tendering his services at loyalty gatherings. REDUCING COST. The Ryrant Tailoring Co., a branch of fhe Chicago wholesale house, claims frou their advertising which ng daily in The Tribune, an man-tailor suits and $22.50 and m gin of profit for themselv fall line of woolens is now they request you to eal 100 (ATE “TO GLASSIFY x of white coral beads. Their in ana niler call at 321 Fifth St. | or phone 4: receive reward. 8303 Six reom modern hou 8 39 2t.| FOR RENT Phone 618K FOUND—String of valuable beads. Owner may have same by calling at) Tribune and proving property. 8-30-11 tockwol, probabry | y GRADE ASSIGNMENYS _IN | . CITY SCHOOLS North Ward School— Grades, 1, 2, 3, 4, 7, 8 | Will School— | Kindergarten, Grades 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 | | | | High School— — days More closes our cash Underwear | sale. But for the next two days we are making the follow- ing prices. High school and grades 5 and 6. Outside Schools— Northwest Hotel, grades 4 and 5. Those pupils who passed from Mrs. | Casselman’s room last June or from} summer school will attend the fifth | grade in the Northwest Hotel aud! those pupils who sed from Miss | Clemens’ room will attend the fourth! grade in the Northwest Hotel. all enrollments will take place Tuesday | in all buildings. Freshmen and sophomore enrolr! Ladies’ Star Vests, mark- ed down to each 10c and seveee 15 Ladies’ Star Pants, cuff knee, each 25c and. 30c ment w I iake place all day Tuesday. ies’ i i Juniors and seniors will enroll Wed: Ladies’ Union Suits, nesday forenoon. i North Star Mills, each J. M. MARTIN, | Lena incest OE: City Supt. H 8 30 It. i Ladies’ Union Suits, (the ee | celebrated Orchid Und- NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT | erwear) i ved, FOR SEWER CONNECTIONS, | ean i Ss hereby given to the own-| ‘en’, i 5 he following described prop-| men irene Balbriggan erty, that sewer connectior bie vee 400 have been | made to their property and that the | ’ . amount due and payable thereon is as | Men’s French Balbriggan given below: | Drawers .. see. 400 Lot. Block. Add. Amt. ? Fy i: : 96° O.P.. $20.00! Men's Union Suits, Chal- 96 20.00 mer’s 20.00, | 12.06 | 12.085 | 20.001 Spring Needle, President Athletic Und- 9 and 10 erwear, per suit ... 75c The McConkey Commercial Co.. 510 Broadway Phone 209 and 10 and 3 and 24 and 16 and 15 MAJOR HENRY RETIRES FROM LAND OFFICE (Continued from E from Page One.) | great strid from year to vear, and the importance of the properly-sys- tematized, businesslike administration 16 27 NP. N.P.2d 13M'Kenzie which Major Henry has given the 14 12.06| Farm loans made in the last four M 13.06) years totaled more than three million Wt and 12 aM Kenzie ee dollars, a greater amount than in any 13 18 NP, 12.06/0ther period in the history of the 16 18 12. 06 | state. More than 3 1-2 million dollars 17 18 worth of bonds, most of which were ‘ We school bonds, issued for the purpose ae 19 of building new school houses in the § 19 state, were purchased. During the 9 ab) four years not a single farmer's appl- i and 8 1 cation for a farm Joan has been re- 4 a5 fused when the applicant's title was 5 10 found good, and there has always H : WN becn money on hand to loan on seat estate and to sare school bonds. mortgages: for 4 Receipts during the last four years 1 show that collections amounted to 1 > ;imore than $13,000,000. January 1, 1 there was in the permanent e 1 whose earnings are dedicated 1 forever to the use educational in- i 9g | stitutions and public schools in North 2 Dakota the sum of $24,593,902,98. This 13 includes amounts invested in state, county, municipal and school bonds, farm loa: sh on hand in state treasurer e und outstanding land G1 M’Kenzie G1 & Coffins 2 offi a contracts, which under the present 62 !constitution may neverhe decreased, 7 and 18 0 * | Whose principal may never be touched and 20 40 and whose interest and income shall . and 26 90 always be applied to the uses of and 28 90 North Dakota's educational system. and Te 89 There still remain unsold and be- in awd 4 89 longing to the state of North Dakota = zi 99 1,642,674.54 acres classed as sefioor 9 and institutional land, nearly all of ot >| Which is®leased for hay and grazing - 94 9 | Purposes, und ‘this rental increases o1 materially each year. During the last 1 four years the collections of interest 41 {and income have amounted to over 1 59 | $9,300,000, which is apportioned mong the common school and institu- tions of the state. It is of interest to note that the last report of the state superintendent of public instruction advises that at the last biennial period there was made the largest apportion: ment in the history of the state, materially assists in curtailing hool taxation, in spite of the the number of pupils in the hool districts had greatly in- Durie Major Henry’s adminystra- tion, 112,255.60 acres of land were sold by public auction at prices ranging from $J0 to $65 an acre. Most of this land was purchased by farmers. Over 2,000 patents have been issued representing over 275,000 acres, and there are approximately 9,300 “live” coatracts at the present time. “The important relation of the land depsrtment to the healthy growth of ‘the state is so well established that it will be denied by no one,” said Major Henry today. “The administra- tion of this department should ever {have the most careful and attentive 99 | consideration of those under whom 99 | the laws have placed its control, and ‘any measure which tends to make the | department more efficient in the exe- cution of its work should receive the most earnest consideration of all. The 3 and 14 4 |disposal of the large acreage of the 7 and 8 He “| state's land holding and the careful Sand 4 63 investment of the proceeds to the 23 and 24 64 best possible good of the schools and 2 64 nstitutions falls upon this depart- a1 and 32 64 ment, and the security of these invest- The costs of said connections are| 1.515 depends upon the careful and as follow; ; | cons rvative placing of them by the The contract price paid to [board of university and school lands. Grambs & Peet : |In this connection it might be well to Interest 222 y that the careful and efficient man- Advertising, ay agement of the investments of the Engineering iis" |board is shown in the past by the g1910.16 fact that in the entire history of the Notice is hereby gi that the | State’ investment in farm mortgages ioners of the to institute |foreclosure proceedings in only two city of Bismarck, North Dakota, will | 2 meet at the city commission room at | instances an tose eee ag the city hall to approve the same at) ob. from loss.” eight o'clock p. m., September 10th, ; CHC Le S 3 PILLS 1917. |. ATKINSON, Ladies! Ask you 8-29-1 City Engineer. Chivchea-ter's Diam Pills 1s Red snd Gold meatc fous, Sealed, wih “TAILOR-MADE SUITS AT Take no other. READY-ME -MADE PRICES’’ & $20.09 “to. $40.00 DEWOND need fined yeatsknown as Best, Safest, Always Reliabig Bieta Tee ey ke SOD BY DRLGGISTS EVERYWMFRG is has been necessary board of city comm