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. spooetel of me Calavells By eyeup BISMARCK ‘DAILY TRIBUNE FRENCH WOMEN PRESENT FLAG TO DEFENDERS Mayor of City in Which Ameri- cans Are Quartered Makes Presentation Speech FAL: SEX FIGHTING THIS WAR DECLARES PERSHING American Training Camp in France, 15—The mayor of the town in ch the American field headquarters located presented to General Per- shing today a silken American flag on behalf of the women of the town who e it. Many French and American ers, civili and women were present. In_ hi: presentation speech today the mayor referred to the splen- did sacrifices of the women of France and America, who were not only send- ing their sons to fight for democracy, but were making the war possible by their energetic work at home. Accept- ing the flag, G “This occas the tenderr with which our own women bade us goodbye. This war is heing fought by women. It is women who suffer and lend courage to us. Women are the ones to whom honor will be due when the war is over, and they will deserve honor for their aid in establishing democracy.” He thanked many of the women per- sonally before returning to headquar- ters. A granite tablet was placed in the wall of a local hotet with an in- scription in gold letters commemorat- ing the establishment of the American headquarters in the town in Septem- ber. WOMEN INIURED IN AUTOWOBILE. SPL: LITTLE BOY. SHOT Mrs, W. H. McGahey of Wilton, with a badly wrenched back, and her daugh- ter, Mrs. A. R. Asbridge, residing 13 miles northeast of Bismarck, with a broken arm and fractared collarbone, e brought to the Bismarck hospital tims of an automobile Wilton yester lav, when car turned turtle. Neither is in jous condition. A little daughter se, in the machine at aped uninjured. Little Boy Sivt. Herbert, 8-year-old son of Guelay Schiender of Hazen, is in the marck hospital suffering from wounds in his right hand resulting from the accidental discharge of a shotgun. EXODUS STARTS FROM PETROGRAD Seen from Page One.), ums for tickets. The situation is ag- gravated by rumors that passenger traffic will be stopped shortly in view of the expected evacuajjon of government institutions. It is stated in government circles that no exten- sive evacuation is looked for as no immediate danger threatens thte cap- ital. The new front is still three hun- dred miles distant, it is pointed out, and the roads are impassable. It is not believed, a landing in Fin- lend will be attempted owing to the scarcity of supplies there and to’ the fact that provisioning would be ren- dered difficult with the winter ap proaching by the freezing of these. ‘Appeal to Soldiers. The central committee of the fleet has addressed to the sailors an ap. peal which has caused cessation of the meetings at Helsingfor: The i-official news agency says the naval engagement in ‘the Ocsel aters have shown that an appeal to tho erewe of the fleet may be courte] on with certainty. Possession of the Gulf of Riga by the Germans appears to military writ- ers to Ye a most s2rious menace and to give & cad bia advantage to the enem7, who ha able to nisk secure ‘lis commu by sea. LARGE LIVESTOCK CO. Concern at Bowbelis Capitalized for $100,000 Charters were ucd by the secre- tary of state today to the H. Co. Inc., of Fargo, capitalized for $25,000 by H. P. Prindell, J. R. Molloy and L. Prindell, all of Fargo, and the the time, Western Land & Livestock Co. of} Bowbells, capitalized for $100,000, and; ‘ ) | EAT WHAT YOU WANT WHEN YOU WANT IT People who consi consistently deny mB ular i appetite some say to ahale ane ulgence has al- bal 's meant equent suffering, ¢ subs; think this a strong statement. Ms is a fact, however, that mest eople can, without fear of dic= wessing consequcuces, ixdulye tho appetite within reason if the how- els are active and regular. Heavy dinners and te suppers a7 be snyed with impart ye before will tak @ mild combination of sim- tet Pa exative berks iitty” pep: sin amgcists sell for cont bottle. Gentle in action and positive in effect, it regulates the bowels, a an easy, natural way, vithout griping or other disconi- fort, and is the ideal family lax- ative. Get a pane gs Dr. Cala- wells. Syrop, F. ep: rom your ari ‘and keep it in the house. Use it occasionally and you will find can eat almost anything you ‘without fear of conse- A trial bottle can be writing ‘Wash- | ko] Man a Har, even without r Prindell ; whose incorporators are R.A. Grams, ®. M. Grams and B. J. Hinds, all of ). Bowbells. UNCENSORED WIRES INFORM CF TROOPS ARRIVAL AT FRONT | ashington, Oct. 15.—Aroused by publication in some parts of the coun- try of private cablegrams announcing the arrival of troops in France, the ' war and navy department today took to prevent a repetiticn of the !incident, which may result in court | martial of officers who sent the mes- | sages. | In one case, a former national guard officer wired his governor of the ar- rival of troops, but so far as is known here the newspapers in that locality observed the government voluntary censorship request and did not print the cable. In the other case, however, a for- mer national guard officer telegraphed the governor of his state of the ar- rival of his regiment ‘with a request that it be given the fullest publicity. |The governor's office gave out the |cablegram and many papers have | printed the news. This morning oth- ler newspapers published the dis | patches and added the number and designation of the regiments, all in violation of the censorship. ‘The war department has most urg- ently requested that nothing be print- ed about the arrival of troops abroad, ing to report at the same time Friends who know led and hear nothing ume they have. ar- troops further may riyed safely. ONLY ONE APPEAL OF 20 ALLOWED BY PRESIDENT WILSON Chief Executive in Great Major- ity of Cases Sustains Exemp- tion Boards Washington, D. C., Oct. one in 20 appeals to President Wilson for draft exemption on industrial crounds have been decided in favor of the applicants, it was said today at the provost marshal's office. In other cases the president has ratified the de- cision of the exemption boards that icants were not indispensible to necessary industries. About 8,000 appeals have been received. GRAND FORKS GETS NEXT MEETING OF DAKOTA BAPTISTS Association Adopts Resolutions Pledging Support to U. §. in.War Jamestown, N. D., Oct. 15.—Grand Forks was selected as the place for holding the 1918 convention of North Dakota Baptists at Saturday’s session of that organization. Invitations from several other towns and cities were, presented, but Grand Forks was prac- tically the unanimous choice of dele- gates in attendance. The adoption of a resolution pledg- ing the support of Baptists to the gov- ernment in prosecuting the world war Only every moral safeguard was a feature of today’s meeting. : | Giving the Lie in Georgia. Chief Justice Hill of the supreme court of Georgia said in Rumsey against Bullard: “All the judges of this court, being ‘to the manner born,’ are willing to take judicial cognizanee of a fact which as individuals they all well know, that in Georgia to eall a ng a stick, usually prov: sa breach of the peace, and most generally brings on a fight. There may be exceptions to this | rule, but they are rare exotics, and find | i little nourishment in our Southern soil | and beneath our Southern skies.” NO APES IN MAN’S ANCESTRY Fundamental Differences Between ‘Them Cannot Be Explained by Any j other memb and insisting that steps be taken to] ¢j surround soldiers at the front with) g: The Sammies are coming! had just heard latest reports of iers about ready to leave their t the firing line. The photographer FRENCH SOLDIERS REJOICE OVER U. 8. AID “Phe soldiers in th French version of the Highland fling, in celebration of the arrival of this aid in erushing the Boches. French camp the number of United. States sold- raining camps behind the lines for caught two of them doing a PINEER MATRON IES: WHILE PREPARING FOR Sad Ccincidence in Passing Away o! Two Old Residents—Webb Emploge Called A sad co-inciden niorniug of Mrs. 1 86, widow of in the death this Margaret Stebbins, the late Joseph 3 that only a few hours sed to the great be- 3 were conducted for her son-in- She died ‘at in the family home in Fif- teenth street. . Stedbins, who was among Bis- jarck’s oldest and 1 ad cit- izens, Was in her usual health until the death of her son-in-law Saturday. She visited him Friday evening with of the family. She was a long life member of the McCabe Methodist Episcopal church. Two sons, William of Idaho, and Mack Stebbins of Livingston, and four daughters, Mrs. William Empting, Mrs. P. J. McGarvey, Mrs. Themas Phelps and ne Jack Arnold of this uneral arrangements a completed. -bins, si after she boiled ered in parsnips it ‘ome regions urope to be the proper vegetable ve With salt fish, but th radi- toll ia the United 7 slips w roast y are also used and so on, rents pf ata ‘ for soups, for fritter: WUNISTER IS ACCUSED AS PHO-GERMAN SPY IN BOLO PASHA PROBE | ‘ Theory of Evolution. Dr. Mattoon M. Curtis, professor of philosophy in Western Reserve uni- versity, protests in a letter to Science | | against the assertion, still common inj current scientific literature, that man | | is a descendant of the anthropold apes. | He quotes Professor Duckworth, the leading authority in this field, who | wrote in his “Morphology and Anthro- | Pology”: “We must conclude that the existing | anthropoid apes, constituted as they row are, did not figure in the jancesteal) history of man.” And he points out some of the fun- | damental differences between man and ! the apes, differences which defy any | theory of evolution to explain. Among these differences are those in the form of the skulls, the shape of the most ancient skulls that have been found being substantially the same as the, shape of the skulls of today. | Professor Curtis pleads that sound selence and sound education be based upon actual facts and such theories | 28 grow out of them, rather than upon | | mere speculations, i Tribune want ads bring results. LOUIS J. MALVY. Former French minister of the in- terior, who resigned when accused by l'remier Painleve of haging betrayed years of the war. He was charged on the floor of the chamber of deputies, with having wished to enter the war council to deliver to the German com- «l the plan of attack upon the Che- -cdes-Dame It was during discus- oa of the e of Bolo Pasha, ar- lon the ¢ uted ah undly denounced and his muiliiary arrest demanded, FUNERAL OF RELATIVE} YOUNG LOTHARIO WHO RECEIVED FUNDS FROM SHEETHEART ARRESTED Dickey County Boy to Be Arraign- ed Tomcrrow on: Charge of Holding Siolen Property | Liston, N. D., Oct. 15.—James Peter- son, 19-year-old son of P. Q. Peterson of Roland township, residing eight miles from Englevale, is charged with receiving stolen. property. To make a long story short, it seems that young Peterson was paying attention to young Annie Mohr and it may be they designed to elope.*. Annie 7 $120 of her father, Jake Mohr’s money and ‘tis said gave it to young Peterson. They went to Verona and he bought her a ticket to Aberdeen, ‘but did not go himself. In serving the papers on young James .Peterson, the father in- terferred and resisted the arrest, giv- ing Deputy Stone a hard struggle.: He is charged with assault with a danger- ous weapon. However, ‘both were ar- rested and brought to town, and the next day were arraigned and gave bonds for their appearance before Jus- tice Clow tomorrow for a preliminary hearing. Quite Common Failing. “De 91 bit some men does,” said Uncle Eben, “is to talk a little bit, re- mindin’ others to do their bit.” New Machine-Gun Tripod. | Light in weight, free from the effects of vibration and permitting of rapid and free movement of the gua in any direction a recently perfected type of machine-gun tripod promises to extend the field of the present weapon. This tripod is provided with a ball and socket joint head, permitting the gun to be freely moved in any direction. Yo lock the gun a lever is given a slight turn, while the gun may be held at any angle in the clamp in which It rests. The new tripod can be read- ily earried about, and it is an ideal weapon for use in a motor car or mo- tor boat, and as an anti-aircraft piece, To fact, It lends itself to all the cus- tomary uses of the machine gun, with thany new ones besides.—Scientific American, Free Speech. ° Lincoln Steffens, the writer, believes in free speech—the right to say any- thing, any time amd anywhere. And he has organized a club to that ef- fect. ‘A short time-ngo Mr. Steffens made a specch advocating his theories. At the end he invited those who would to join his “Free Speech club.” Only one man accepted the invitation. He said: “I'd like to join your club tong enough to tell you what I think about it.” Scott’s Body Lost for Ever. Dr. John Cope of the imperial Ant- arctic expedition that was sent in search of Captain Scott’s body, says it will never be discovered. “Every year,” ihe said, “there fi fourteen feet of |snow in the Antarctic. This blows {away and melts down to seven feet, and then the next year comes another fourteen or fifteen fect, and all the | While the barrier wears away under- neath, so that Captain Scott’s body ets to Germany Guring the three! hag been buried so deep it will never | be found.” MOTHER'S FRIEND “me Eypostant Mothers MAKES THE CRISIS EASIER “MONDAY, OCTOBER ‘15, 1917. @ CAFL : TUESDAY, EVENING 8 P. M. LOCATION THIRD STREET-~ One door from Main Regular Dinners 11:30 to 1:30 3 5¢ Watch for our Dinners Specials as they appear in the Tribune during the week. DANCING SINGING LATEST MUSIC NEWEST SONGS Come, Get Acquainted, Dance and Sing. Pleasure for. Every One. Make Your Table Resvervations Early AFTER THEATRE SPECIALS Any Thing You Want--Served as You Want It. | J. H. Fitzsimmons, Prop. FORMERLY OF THE WAYNE Bee i DETROIT, MICHIGAN —