The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1917, Page 8

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APPEALS CAN'T SAVE. REGISTRANT IF RES CALLED Must Go With His Quota and Take Chance on President’s Ac- tion Later DISTRICT BOARD SENDS OUT SEPARATE NOTICES A wholesale practice of appealing from the decision of the district board to the president is making a great amount of needless work for the hoard’s clerical ff. In a majority of instances it is believed these ap- peals are made not with a view to ultimate discharge or exemption, but as a means of gaining time. The board announced this morning that the reg- istrant who appeals with this end in view is doomed to disappointment, as drafted men who have filed presiden- tial appeals will be taken in the order heir liability for service and im- d for duty. Should the pr dent pass favorably upon their ap- peals they will be di: ‘ged or ex- empted, but when their time comes to go, pending a decision from the president, they will be taken. The fact that they have appealed will make no change in their status until the president decides that they should be urged or exemptet It is not regarded probable that the president will grant any great number of exemptions or discharges over the head of the district board. Mven in cases where the district board has granted discharges, in cases where it] is shown that the registrant has a minor child, federal agents are re- opening the cases in instances where they have found the registrant to have an income aside from his salary. The board also wishes it understood that the denial of discharge on occu- pational claims does not necessarily mean that unfavorable action will be taken on dependency claims, in cases where the registrant has applied for exemption on occupational grounds over which the board has original ju- risdiction and has at the same time appealed from a decision of the local board denying him discharge on de- pendency claims. In all of these cases the regulations require two separate notices. A registrant may be denied a discharge on occupational grounds, and still exempted Teanse he has de- pendents. A registrant who has filed claims for exemption on industrial grounds“and who also has appealed from an adverse decision of the local board on other grounds is advised not to regard his case as finally decided until he has received notice of action on both claims. t GET YOUR GOAT “CERTAIN WAY OF ETT H.C.L * Do Away With the Useless Family Dog and Replace it With Fragrant Nannie Chicago, Sept. 13.—That the hither- to despised goat may aid materially in solving problems arising from war conditions by increasing the milk and cheese production is the opinion ad- vanced by H. L. Hollister, publisher HENRIETTA Ifenrietta Crossman and her sup- porting company in ‘Mafion de For- ests comedy, stwhile Susan,” which is a dramatization of Helen R. Martin’s novel of Pennsylvania Dutch life, entitled “Barnabetta,” is the first important dramatic attraction of the new season at the Auditorium, Satur- day, Sept, 22, Miss Crossman now. under the di- rection of Joseph Riter, returns in her present play to the high comedy style of acting in which she occupies the foremost position on the Améri- can stage, It is safe to say that never before has she delighted her admirers more thoroughly than by her impersonation of Juliet Miller, an elocultionist from lowa, who comes to uplift and to bring gaiety and kind: liness to the little Pennsylvania Dutch town of Reinhartz Station. Technically the role is one of the most difficult that Miss Crossman has CROSSMAN in “Erstwhile Susan,” coming to the Auditorium soon. ever essayed, since its sucéessful in- terpretation necessitates a sustained emotional purpose through scenes of | the most whimsical comedy. The _ love story of the play concerns Farna- j betta, a pretty and wistful Cinderella of the Pennsylvania Dutch. Trans- formed: from a household drudge in- to a happy, fascinating and thorough- |ly emancipated young woman through the agency of the elocutionist, whose tenderness and maternal love being aroused by the unhappy condition of Barnabetta, marries her hard-fisted old father, Barnaby Dreary, for the sole purpose of bringing about the re- lease of the girl. The play is said to be a very accu- rate picture of life in certain of, the smaller Pennsylvania Dutch commun- ities, and it is written in such a spirit of genial good humor that even the originals of the characters might well enjoy the performance. 8 Stillwater is the sudlimated concep- tion of the duty and obligation of such a citizen to the United States and its ideals. Speaking of the situ- ation created by “The government of Sweden permitting itself to. become the lackey of the kaiser” in the Argen- tine affair, he said, as a citizen of Swedish blood: Whatever kindly feeling we may have towards the people of Sweden, we may say to them that unless they choose to have a gov- ernment. in harmony with the as- pirations of the free peoples of the earth they must suffer the consequences of the actions of their rulers. As ‘to us Americans of Swedish blood or descent, they are our friends in peace; aye, more than friends, for they are kindred. But in war, if such should come—which God forbid— , they are enemies. This is and is not,a remarkable dec- laration. It is what America has the right to expect and in that respect is not remarkable; it is what America is not getting from all of the sons of its 1 adoption and in that respect is re- markable. Eut it expresses admirably ‘the at- titude that sHould be taken by every American of foreign blood and de scent—and all of us are such, if we go back far enough. It applies equal ly well to Germany and Sweden, It gocs right to the heart of the situa- tion in Minnesota. It should be sub- scribed to by every man in the state whose citizenship is the result of the opportunity offered by the great re- public, GOES TO ST. PAUL :. Treacy Will Confine Self to Tubercular Husbandry, Work Dr. R. H. Treacy of -the United States bureau of animal husbandry, in charge of the North and South Dakota and Montana district, with headquar- ‘ters at Bismarck for a number of years, has been called to St. Paul to specialize in the tubercular branch of the bureau's work, and is succeeded here by Dr. H. H. Cohendur. The Way of Winged Death of a farm paper. Governor Lowden, | WHY GERMANY’S FLYING HATE SHOWERS LONDON WITH of Illinois, is quoted as considering this theory sound. The keeping of a goat or two may pecome as popular a way of doing our bit in the world war as planting a war garden, according to Mr. Hollister, who says that even the dooryard or roadside bay be profitably made to serve as a pasture for this animal. If you are a suburbanite, your goats will make you independent of the milkman and may enable you to slide safely through tight times, resulting from sickness or lack of employment. Do away with the useless family dog, Mr. Hollister urges us, and sub- stitute the profitable goat. It is hardy, free from disease, adaptable to all conditions and ig easily domes- ticated. Some Swiss goats are hornless, have amiable dispositions that qual-| ify them as pets, and often yield as much as six quarts of milk a day. At the present price of cow’s milk, Mr. Hollister estimates such a goat would produce fully $160 a year. The goat has a great advantage over the cow, in that it costs only about a fourth as much to maintain, and gives milk ten months a year. The milk is easily digested and maki excellent food for the baby. Goat flesh has the same food value as mut- ton. * Governor Lowden, of Illinois, has asked Mr. Hollister to appoint a com- mission to investigate ways and means of educating the American pu lic in the value of the milch goat. Mrs. C. H. Cahill, one of Mr. Hollis- iter’s experts is already on her way to Europe to investigate the extensive goat milk and cheese industry in var- jous countries there. An attempt is being made to. persuade governors of other states to take action similar to Governor Lowden’s and thus bring about a concerted campaign to induce \suburbanites,. villagers and small farmers to take up goat raising and to make the milch goat a permanent American family institution. | WITH THE EDITORS | — ee P Bs (St. Paul Dispatch.) “LIND RINGS THE BELL. It remained for Former Governor ‘Zind to strike ‘the highest note of “the devotion to Americanism of the “citizen of foreign antecedents. What at the patriotic meeting at By BASIL .M. MANLY. Washington, Sept. 13.—London and all England are at the mercy of peri- odic visitations of frightfulness from German air raiders. Paris and France are practically im- mune. Why? Is it because British airmen are in- ferior and French airmen superior? Is the ki r venting his spleen on the “arch enemy,” England, and show- ing mercy to France? Or has the kaiser some great stra- ic plan. jo! \ Geography and geography alone! Look at the map. From the German airplane hases at Zeebrugge and Ostend on the jan coast to London is 130 miles, a little more than an hour's flight. From the German front to Paris is only 75 miles. But in the flight to London the first 90 miles is over the water, with lit- tle danger of attack and no danger of detection except wireless _ messages from patrol boats and seaplanes. Even if the German air raiders are sighted .the second they cross the |coast line, there are only 20 minutes |to mobilize British airplanes to repel te; | This map helps explain why Lo | the attack. This would be enough if | sires BEE Np PESSTN than Paris from German air raids, ‘ 3 RUIN AND SPARES PARIS it were certain London would be the point of attack; but there are scores of other points besides London—muni- tions plants, army and navy barracks, and industrial towns—within easy striking distance. Generally the German bombs have done their deadly work before the British planes can locate and engage them, and then it is a running: fight with all the odds against the pursu- ers. Now look at the French map. It is only 40 minutes flight to Paris; but see how the conditons differ. The second a squadron of German planes take the air, they are spotted by the French or British fliers, who can mobilize at any point on the front an airplane squadron of equal strength in less time than it, takes to tell it. Then the German planes must.cross the Kranco-Belgian. trenches and run the gauntlet of anti-aircraft :guns. Then for 75,miles they must fly over French soil with the alarm spread by telegraph and hundreds of French planes taking the air from the reserve airdromes: and flying schools all the way to Paris. A fine chance they shave of teach- ing Paris in sufficient numbers to do any damage? And a great chance to return to tell the tale! if C indon, farther distant, suffers more™ TORT CATTLE ON FLAY Sudden Death of ‘Ten Head of * Stock in New England District Leads to Investigation A warning against turning cattle into flax fields while the straw. is green-or before it has been cut has veen issued by Dr, W.F. Crewe, sec- retary of the North Dakota livestock sanitary board, as a result of an in vestigation of the sudden death of.ten cattle in;the New ‘England district |which were found to fiaye succumbed to prussic® acid poisoning resulting from the eating of green flax “This is the first important case of trouble reported from grazing cattle on flax since 1910,” said Dr., Crewe this morning. “At that tins thera were even instances. where catite died as-a result of feeding on bran and chaff left by the threshers. Appar- netly the condition under which the flax has grown has. something to do with the amount of prussic avid which the straw contains. “This fall farmers should be very cautious about ‘allowing cattle tu go onto flax fielde -until the “crop has been cut and the straw thoroughly matured. Prussic acid ‘will result..4a death inside of two: hours, and it is seldom that corrective measures can be taken in time fo save. the cattle, once they are affected. So” prompt is \the action of the acid that’ often farmers: who have “lost cattle. lavor under the belief that ‘they have been maliciously poisdned,; ‘An investiga- tion, however, always will show that the cattle have been eating ereen flax straw.” pet W'LEAN COUNTY: T0 GIVE BOYS FAREWELL McLean county planning’ a big loyalty demonstration’ at Washburn, Sept. 18. This will be a farewell to the forty percent. of the, drafted men who leave Sept. 19. for Fort Dodge cantonment.- Karl Klein was in Bis- marck today making arrangements for the big celebration! i The second regiment: band has ‘con- sented to furnish.the: music and Col. White, Dr.E. P.-Quain:-and Judge Burke will attend. ‘There will be a dance in the evening. FROST STRUGK HARD E. J. Taylor. keports Things Bad- ly Frozen to the North Returning from the northern part of the state, former Supertitendent \of Public Instruction E. J: Taylor reports everything frozen. stiff the+fore’ part of the week. Corn,’he déclgred} looked as stark and deadjas it gould in mid- winter, while vegethtion of‘all kinds was wilted to the-ground,: ‘The frost’ extended as for. south and west as Jamestown. © No loss whatever was're- ported in the . vicinity .of Bismarck. Sweet peas are fn luxuriant bloom, and war gardeners)'are enjoying sec- ond and third crops of:peas,: beans and other garden Crops. crop has been unusually good. OF HUMAN INTEREST 18 “PASQUALE” AT THE BISMARCK Human interest is the stpreme’ key- note to the very remarkable story of “Pasquale.” George Beban has achieved a triumph in artistic produc- tion by his’ marvelous interpretation of the character of “Pasquale,” the Proprietor of a, small town grocery sthre, who after years of the most] absorbing devotion to ‘his business, finally saves an amount suffictent to repay his frend,. Martinelli. the local banker, the loan: which énabled him to become a merchant. “Pasquale’s strong Italian devotion |, is divided between Margarita. an or- phan girl whom he hasg‘adopted, and with whom he falls in ‘love, and Co- lomb9, ‘his ‘horse, x Hardly has “Pasquale” ¢leared. th mortgage. when he and ‘Martinelli are called to Italy dnd the colors. They return to. America, crippled: and bat- tle scarred,’ each to find his home and affections in’ danger, .. The great -sacrifice made. by “Pas. quale” that his Margarita might be happy with» the man of her choice, and the wonderful revelation of his strong principles of right and wrong in saving Mrs. ‘Martinellf to her hus F eraiti finding the happi- ness he ‘crayed, make a: story ,teem- ing with human’ interest,’ with com- munity spirit. and the things which every man, woman and child hear and encounter in their own local circles. “Love OT Res ieRe The litle fiarrots called “love birds,” are natives of Africa and are abundant tn Madagascar. These birds adopt themselves readily to captivity. They breed rendily in confinement, produe- Ing two broads fn a season. i See the big’ military pageant at the Orpheum tonight 9 charges: of unfair’ prose ax murder. case. EVERY: COUNTY WILL BE Judge Birdzell: Declares Local /Ex- have: its.40 per cent ready to move Sept.19,” ‘announced; Justice: Luther E.. Birdzell, «chairman ‘of:-the; district exemption board, this morning. | The board ‘is. It is now; considering agricultural and occupational claims from) men includ- ed ‘in’ the ‘second call of the various counties: This task probably will be completed this week, when the board will take up'and complete the consid- eration of appeals from decisions of local. boards. the president are not as-numerous in this state asin Minnesota, and espe- cially in the twin cities,” said Judge Birdzell, who spent a part of last week in*conference with Gopher state -district ‘boards., .: a tary ‘pageant will be tonight. Don’t fail to'see yourself in the. movies at the, Urpheum. i‘ —_—___—_————_ | “PLL SHOW YOU HOW The tomato} - ‘Ever Peel a Banana Skin? That's It! —I just put some.‘Gets-It’ on,” Corns used to pester the world into a frenzy, enduring pain, digging, slicing toes, . tinkering with plasters and tape, try- ing to fix @corn so it wouldn’t hurt. But now no‘one*in the world “should worry,” corn..“There is nothing in the world like “‘Gets-It"—nothing as sure and certain—nothing that you can count on to take off a corn or callus every time, and without, danger. never grew that “Gets-It” .will not get. It never irritates the‘flesh, never of “Gets-It” and presto the carn-pain as your palm. Never happenéd before, THURSDAY, SEPT, 13, 1916. fs Attorney General HM. Hayner of Towa,. indicted in connection’. with gution .in. the READY SEPTEMBER 19 10 SEND 3:40 PER GENT emption Boards Have Work. #6 Well in Hand, forth dakota, will “Every county, ‘ell, advanced: with its work. “Appeals from the district. board to. LEGSLATE. REFERENCE LBARINS SHOW SPAT OF REAL FIGHTING Two Former Employes of North Dakota State Commission in Service Over There The average legislative reference li- brarian is not ordinarily regarded as ‘a militant person. In view of this fact it is notable that the North Dakota public library commission now has two former employes “over: there,” / Mrs. Minnie C. Budlong, secretary of the state commission, this morning received a card from Stewart Will- iams, who resigned his post as réfer- ence librarian about two months ago to take service with the quartermas- ter, corps at Chicago. The card’bears the allied arms and, the legend, “In | A little help goes a long ways. ‘tt you would keep your body in a healthy and robust condition, throb- bing with that splendid vitality that indicates freedom. from all ailments, first of all see that your blood is kept pure. Any slight impurity that ereeps into your blood will soon effect the well-being of your whole system. ‘A few bottles of S. S. S. will give ust the assistance that nature needs ancapancnucsousnauacoocny: Lahr “Exctasive Service” Motor Sales Company hee Aton France, on Active Service, with the Expeditionery. ‘Conditions here are much better than I had: hoped,” writes Mr. Williams. “There is an abundanceof dood.” In the same mail came a letter from Earle H. Davis, Mr. Wiliams’. imme- diate predecessor, who resigned his position, here to accept a post with the St. Louis public library. Later he enlisted with the medical corps, and his letter advises that he is now in England,’ preparing to pro¢eed to * France. Lester Budlong, a son of Mr: Bud- ‘Jong, -has‘been retained at Fort Riley, Kan., with his ambulance company, No. 17, to drill. drafted men. He probably will see active service in France in the near future. ELEVATOR COMPLAINT Company Claims It Cannot Pro- cure Coal From Noonan The railway commission is investi- gating 4 complaint from the Farmers’ Elevator Co. at Granville to the effect that it has been unable to get coal from the Neonan lignite mines. Nature Needs Assistance In Keeping You Well in keeping the blood absolutely: free of all impurities. This old remedy is a wonderful purifier and tonic, and has no equal ior keeping the blood rich and pure. It builds up the ap- petite and tones up the entire system. . S. S. is sold by druggists every- where. It has been successfully: used for more than fifty years, and people in practically every state testify to its great worth. rite for booklets and free medical advice to Swift Spee cific Co, Dept. E | Atlanta, Ga, ABROSUSUETELUECSODUSEREQUOUSA3S0208. = UNUOUDAANGUEUGGONOSEOOUIONON: he first tently authentic account of | jog ratsod: In thésair was in 178}, when Piltare arts, Octobe yar datloon gnade by Stephen and * ph Montgolfer, to whom betong + honor of having built the first suc: | onuecarrying, lighter-than-alr Niele Your. only chance to sec the mill- CORNS PEEL FE!" “I should worry about. those ‘corns “Gets-It? Pets Yo —it because the moment you put on, it means the end of a The corn makes your‘toe sore. Just two drops vanishes. Shortly you can peel the corn right off with “your finger and |} there you are—corn-free and happy |j with the toe as smooth and*corn-free did it? Guess not. Get a bottle of “Gets-It” today from §ny drug store, you need: pay‘no more than -25c, or sent on receipt.of price by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, if. Sold in Bismarck and recommended as the world’s best corn remedy. by Finney’s. drug store. Tes.) Real Economy iS Mite 80-feet into the “Same dee: Foot-Schulze Footwear will do its bit to help you beat the high cost of living. Here’s how: will give you long they will cut down A QUICK COAL MEDORA 08 LEHIGH , at the \ price of Ordinary Lignite; Fill Your Basement Now ‘ before the rush. : PHONE power and strong i bit 2 er assistance Y . the They are better made shoes. tempt has been made to meet the rising cost of materials by cheapening these shoes in any particular. FINGER are just as quick to realize that our Guns tion are BE READY FOR THE i OPENING OF THE HUNTING SEASON : Shotguns--Shells HUNTERS:—We wish to call your attention to our k BLACK SHELL, as it is par- ' ticularly des:red tor water proofness, penetrating HUNTING COATS, ‘LEG- GINGS, GAME CARRIERS, : SHELL VESTS, ETC. We are in a position to rend- BL lect your paraphernalia for Foot-Schulze Shoes and satisfactory service; the yearly cost of shoes. No at- They have the same wear-resist- ing, shape-holding qualities they have always had. These qualities are intensified by better making due to better working condi- tions inour new sun-lighted factory. Every member of the family should wear them. Go tp the Foot-Schulze dealer in "your town. I!c’s easy to find; a good man to know, Foot, Schulze SPORTSMAN WHO HAVE.,| TRIGGER and Ammuni- the best, its exceptionally Primer, when you se- hunt. LOMAS HARDWARE CO. 316 Main Str ' a4 ue sf

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