The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 16, 1917, Page 6

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rT eee SORTS Sd AIT" 7 _TDESDAY, OCT. 16, SCOOP .HESHt The Ross. Is Seriously Worried ‘About Scoop’s Mental Health By ” Wa a é es ; NEP-SCOOP IS 1 : HUH?- WHUTS MY NOUD WANT TO Scena at iF : TY : Big DEE PUY. BE JUSTAS CLOSE a eA ‘ ; L GUESS Bosse TD HER AS You LOOK QUITE, 4, i At NT BOOST NOU WERE..IN COULD SE —— f Cigars and Tobacccs and Other é Forms of Weed Cost a Heap More in Bismarck ] ft DEALERS DECLARE THEY 1 ACT IN SELF DEFENSE : is all that’ Sher- declared the Bis- moker when he laid down a j wy: quarter yesterdi for his favorite : smoke ,and in } ae of ane usual fil: is ea 7 = = # te —— ~ ee teen cents receivel as change one ‘ ¢ Bs y q Z j that Mandan has shown up as good as’ ¥jJ 5 thin dime. 5 ; Cl. f 1917 B { b ll 5 . any city of its size in the entire na-! Wha Do You Know b! “Can't be helped,” ate the fopac: ose Or were wet * ase a eason tion. It expects to fill its quota of t : ? ‘ : conist. “Tobacco ‘has ‘been advanc-| Wika 4 ga Mere i Pie. rs approximately $22 per capital based | : BI Ban My} f ing right along, and now on top of} c Ss. P, y f Oldt S on a population of 5,500. About Your 00 Su | e | orp carrer mpere sees Passing o IME SEATS) 5 ren eg. som PP'y yf of $2 the thousand on ten-cent smokes’ stone, chairman, C. F. Kelsch, A. H. - - sa and a dollar the thousand of the five? Z re ee L Potorson Joli alistoea. Jon ee Hens | Your ignorance may startle you. portant subject. It tells how-to keep cent size, and we're forced to ioost re 7 bs ia John Sullivan, A. L. Farr, A. K. Han-| G the blood strong and free from ‘the the price in self defense.” son, Dr. Mackay, Frank Barth. Few people know of the many many impurities to which it is con~ di And the price certainly has been The Mandan country committee {s: | functions of the blood. supply, and] stantly subject. | a ft boosted. Fiye-cent cigars now sell at G: A. Renden, chairman, R. A. coun-|i¥St how important it is that it be] It gives the history of S. S. S., the soven:cents.or four for3s> 1c; cigars = ce aa kept absolutely free from all impuri-| world’s most successful blood remedy, seven , or four for 25; 10c. cigal tryman, Anthony Damskey and Rev.| ¢: 9 u : + singly bring 15 cents ,and sell two Poothby. The advertising committee! tes The health of the entire body| which has been sold for more than eee) ed ao Guntheee oa ic: at were ice b z ~ 4 depends upon ¢he condition of the| fifty years by druggists everywhere. for a quarter; all stogies that were is E. R. Lanterman, Cleve Keennell: et Fy ‘1 iwo and threo for five-are not jive and 8. Ve les g Y| blood. You are invited to write and| This book will be sent free to all nts straight. Small cigars formerly ‘Report to Reserve Bank obtain Hooker that-gives you some|who write & Swift Specific Co. 1u cents the packet now are 15 or Chairman. Johnstone ‘stated last as mal ec mm pencorosy on ‘this im-[Dept. A tlanta, Ga. two for 25 ,and the 15 cent boxes are]. evening that in the early part of the 4 20 cents. . aficrnoon, Mandan reported to the , : 3 ( Five-cent cans of smoking tobacco Ninth Federal Reserve bank that it i 8 cents, or two for 15; 19-cent had reached $110,950 the first day. i s are 15 cents, or two for 25; Never has there been an election 3 scrap tovacco is 8 cents, or two for 15, that returns were so anxiously look- and 10-cent sizes are 1o cents or two ed for than the returns of the com- for 25. ' mittee. » All of the Fismarck tobacconis Working Hard Today. oye with two or th Xceptions have Yesterday's success has served only oo joined in this y per cent flat to make the committeemen work that + raise in the cost of smokes. It is much harder. Every committee man hitting the tobacco-user hard, but the is on the street today plugging, plug- ; dealers contend that without this in- sin beyond every might to reach the crease in the retail coat their profit ee $150,000 mark by tonight. By GILSON GARDNER. every mine have been drafted. The w ould be 80 smal i U at evewou ft es “ ey : an $ Who says Mandan isn’t loyal to her Washington, D. C., Oct. 16—All the Men do not seek exemptjon and the ae ages sites Weel ycune ee soldier boys? psd world will be short of coal this win. 0PeTators have hesitated to ask it. But é 3 ; patie thine LoDeeeo. teat like. somistblae dlte Pian “Bill” Martin Here—Senator “Bill”| ter. ‘The United States will be 100, (he,l0ss,¥ crippling mining, when the eeane z 5 peal * mines are operating at only 70 per to wear—you don't have to have it Martin from Huff, was in. Mandan at- ‘ rf . t une s to took well” a tending: to. ‘buathioss tatters ( 000,000 tons short, but Europe will be cent of their capacity and ought* to és Ea Si aan eS tie a fee oe 1, As an aftermath of the baseball sea- day ni yester’| almost coalless. Only for .war pur- be producing to the limit. 2 i biel eae nae Phe Si ewe son just passed it is not amiss to con- s bee poses, and the barest necessities, will | The demand for coal for purely war pete eueen. eae Seana sider some of the really grezts of the | Spending Day in Bismarck.—Mrs,| Europe use coal. ‘uses by our allies is: Italy, 250,000 of existance 1 ale si nt * |game who passed out with the pen- Johnnie Carey spent yesterday in Bis-| _ 11 France hotels and dwellings were tons a month or 4,000,000 tons a year; nant race. marck the guest of capital city fireless many months last winter. France 6,000,000 tons; Canada, 3,000,- Scarcely a year has passed that{ friends. The best French coal fields are be- 000 tons. 9 some of the old time veterans of | eee ae hind the enemy lines near Lens. There Pussia is no exception in the matter many battles have passed in their Harry Ingalls in Town.—Harry In-; was plenty of coal in Newcastle across of coal shortage. keys, never to punch the ball park gails of Sweet Briar, was in Man-|the channel, but ships were too ‘busy In July, £916, Russia started to DISA INT time clock again. dan numbered among the business| carrying men and munitions. | regulate price and distribution. ‘The ; The season just passed sees the re- visitors in the city yesterday. The situation in Spain has become navy-and arsenals were given first irement from the game of two, per- Seen (LS so acute a royal decree has created call, then factories having government r 10 RECORD BUGS haps three of the greatest perform- Pict Mackinac He Olt ot a national coal syndicate of all fuel contracts, then the private. consumer. Mn . ers of the last decade b fesbcmen: Whol were: ng i | producers to stimulate production and By a recent order the use of wood is sis, Eddie Plank, hero of many seasons, business ta Mandan yest dee ana te | Tegulate distribution and price. The , substituted in many cases. The 1916 hi racing season| retired this year, almost in mid-sea- aay bats yesterday and to-| government stands behind this with. Germany is, better equipped, having } just closing was disappointing m some | son, when he felt himself - slipping. ; almost unlimited funds to explore new started earlier to wrest the coal in- # ways, although very satistactory in]There were several good games left, . Mrs. Glasmann in City.—Mrs. A. R.|C8l areas, acquire better mining dustry from private speculation In * others. in Plank’s southpaw arm, but he re- Glasmann was in Mandan from Sweet | ™echanism and encourage mine labor September, 1915, the imperial govern- rt With a few minor exceptions no | fused to remain in the game when he| Briar yesterday attending to busi-| bY model housing colonies. ‘ ment forced all coal producers into.a new records were set up for 1918 en-| knew he was not at his best, = }ness matters and visiting with, THe British have acquired a fair con- syndicate which fixes prices. The trices to shoot at. The most notable} Honus Wagner, who after announc- friends. trol of the coal situation. When the ¢hief trouble is to secure distribution ¥ exception was that of The Real Lady | ing his retirement last fall and came i war began there were about 1,000,000 to the weaker consumers. This. has “s with a new record for three-year-old | back into the game at the request of Mrs. Estep -Home.—iMrs. Carl Es- te» returned home yesterday after English mine workers. Of these 240,- finally been worked out by a card sys- trotters. Rarney Dreyfuss, did not, finish the} 000 enlisted. Coal production became| tem. France is now trying the same The trotting queen stepped the mile} season and probably never will play having spent about two weeks in the so curtailed the government tried to! system. in 2 clipping half a second from| again. i scribed in Mandan prope: and boat twin cities visiting with relatives return the enlisted miners to the The embargo on coal will keep in Peter Volo’s mark. Wagner really did not ‘ant to get ; $3,000 was subscribed by the Man. 2" friends. mines. No mine worker in England] the United States much coal which One of the disappointments of the| into the harness this year, but felt he aan county commutes -towthe farm-| Glen Uni te Visits Ci Tacoh’ can now enlist unless his enlistment is| would have been drawn abroad by year was the failure of Miss Harris| was needed when the club made such ‘ oe Heaney. whiéh is 1o-be included in Tieth of Gl bad Pin setts ieee ai certified by local tribunals. high prices. Italy, for example, has M,, the pacing sensation of 1916, to]a miserable showing and went into i “AAD @ 2.4] the Mandan'allotment, Other reports attending business matters vesteniay | ,,2 the United States a similar situ-| been paying as high as $100 a ton for lower Lady Maud (’s record and be| the game against his own wishes. | ' j Ay ie not in will boost the sale over $120, after ae nite ah ore vente ‘AY! ation is faced. Aout seven men from coal laid down in Italy. ; thefirst pacing mare to step the mile] Even Wagner was unable. to. put A x O00. cdtaie alloyed tae, tlie countey teniay, eeettag: ia ad [or © in two minutes flat. Fuibbs Drewes neakended eee committee secured oversubscriptions | Lacneae inc Mana bees noon. Mr. Pitzer plans on coming to} been busily engaged as switchman ‘ ; 4 to the amount of $2,000. In the opin- a Rose in Mandan.—Dr. V. J. La yang: ive i future. | since. : SPORT CHATTER er, and late in the season left the club. FIRST CANVASS ion of Mr. RS. Johnstone, chairman lose of Bismarck, was in Mandan yes, “27480 to live in the near future. ee ¥ Of all the words In prose and poem It is Hractically certain he will nev- of the Mandan committee, there will terday afternoon attending to profes-| Tostevin Home.—Walter Tostevin| Painter Here—R. L. Oasting, Jr. The saddest are, “He pulled a bone.” irre tiset ot the trie dé Waheo Sam be good news to be given, out this ever: sional araies ade sronirned home returned home Sunday evening from | artist who at the present time is liv- Subniatine Dempsey met Gunboat@Fawford, a big league favorite for|{ncomplete Returns Indicate That] 15 ,1hen jt Is expected that neatly | last eveniig on No. 2 Ft. Snelling, where he has ween at/in& in the vicinity of Hensler, was in Se h Ha y h st. It | almost two. decades. reached including what the country| Timmermans Return.—August Tim- the officers’ training camp for a num- business matters. Mr, Onsting is a Dae ARE MSiantcaboorne ‘and the| ,.N@ Announcement has been made of More Than Quota Was Se. committee has to report. merman ‘and daughter, Miss Mary, re- ber of weeks. painter of considerable aility and has : Gunboat was sunk. Cau wtond s-getirement put bis’ Pacor Secured Out Bright and Early. Heya ois nee tae da ra Father Clement in Bismarck.—The | exhibited some very fine specimens Too-bad Tris Speaker isn’t a foot: three Cari the infrequency Sak i The committeemen were out bright’ spending a few, days visiting with rel-, Reverend Father Clement spent yes-4 ot his work at the various fairs held ball player. He would be accusing whic’ Jennings used him indicates} Mandan, Oct. 16.—Mandan over-| and early and solicited everybody on atives and friends. terday in E'tismarck visiting friends|in this state during the past few Chick Harley of using something On| 115) the Detroit pilot will not be will-| Subscribed its allotment of $120,000 | the street, in the store, in the shop at St. Alexius hospital and attending | years. : the ball. ‘ ing to separate himself from a lot of| the first day of the campaign. That|no matter where his vocation called| Pitzer Returned Home.—M. Fitzer,|tO business affairs. Eleven Gets Trimmed.—The Reform . Philadelphia is happy again. The! (oi to keep -him on ‘the: payroll in| the city will oversubscribe its quota| him. -He was interviewed and asked | Sr., who had been in Mandan for a Heegaards Return——Mr. and Mrs. C./ school football squad got nicely trim- » chess season will soon be open. Phil- 3 vi by $50,009 seems to “bea safe predic-| to buy a bond. The committees work-| few days looking after business mat- bd Aa SEE Spiel eee 4 neces ly has a right to be happy, anyway,| 1918 "That any other club will buy] (7 To. be exact. $117,000 was sub-! ed "hard and there is no: doubt but |; eel terday after.| 4: Heesaard returned yesterday morn-| med in Bismarck Saturday afternoon ‘the Athletics having closed their sea-|C'awford also seems improbable. fon. Tanbe. exac! , a8 bear ash te teas ‘ers, returned home yesterday after-| ing on No. 4 for their home in Minne-| when. the high school eleven topped son. ‘ ‘Crawford's retirement would be one apolis, after having spent about ten|off an easy practice game. The game Members of the St. Louis Browns] f \the really pathetic incidents of e 9 i days in Mandan the guests of friends.! was played at the Athletic park. It is " received less than $100 for their post-|'Paseball for many years. — __ {understood that a real game, no prac- season series with the Cards. Which| Sam has long cherished an ambi- r §) ) n > Here From Halliday.—R. L. Nor-| tice to be about it, will be announced was more than most of them deserved | tion to gather a total of 3,000 hits dur- g 4 , : , man of Halliday, was numbered’ for,the two teams in the near future. s pas Feehan ing his diamond ‘career. among: the important business visit-; The M. H. S. team and the B. H. S. f ‘A delegation of Michigan hunters| | His: goal was in view at the start of ‘ = ors in the county seat of Morton will clash tomorrow for honors. carla cari when he needed less. than e yesterday. Mr. Chas. M. Kay was —— attended the world series. Presum-| the season T F, P ably: ie invite Heine Zim to go with| 100 ‘to. reach that mark. His poor he Art of orward assing also a representative business man dias real Hebtiog Ass hee tea sie ther fi ii a | we vi ick, v i in Mandan from Hailiday yesterday. | Frank eloling ant aby. returne: them as squirrel bait. work with the stick, however, has kept hoiae -yesterihty troit. “Dickinson, him from realizing this ambition, and it is doubtful whether he will ever have another opportunity. There's another name which might be casually mentioned in this connec- tion—Johnny Evers. The peppery little Trojan is almost through. -His high priced contracts expired this fall, and if he does play next year it must, be at a'much lower figure-than he has received for years. He’ may tefuse'to do this and retire. For First Vacation Schallern to Fort Rice.—Arthur’ where they had-been visitink for sev- Schallern, proprietor of the Schailern eral days with relatives and friends. Drug company, went to Fort Rice yes-; Return Frem West—Mrs. Albert terday afternoon to attend to busi- Larson and: father, Chris-Olson, re- ness matters in connection with his turned home yesterday morning from farms located in the Fort Rice vicin-' a several days’ visit with relatives and ity. {firends in Spokane and Seattle. Miss * ————, seri ‘Lulu MaCadams who went. west with New Fireman.—Lewellyn Williams inom is sending a couple of. weeks’ returned from Glendive Saturday aqqiiional visit at the Dan MaCadams morning where he took an examina- home in Seattle. tion for locomotive fireman. He pass- ce dan excellent examination and ‘Mon- day morning assumed duties firing the switch engine. New Baggageman.—Frank barth, Jr., yesterday morning assumed du- ties as baggageman at the N. P. pass- enger depot to succeed George Grun- eafelder who for the:last eleven years the company in that capa- ir. Grunenfelder-has accepted ition at the carshops as a car carpenter and assymed his new du- ties. yesterday morning. Mr. Barth is Leaves for the East.—Mrs. M. L. Swect and daughter departed yester- day morning on No. 4 for New York. ¢, Upper St. Clair, New Jersey, and Washihgton, D. C., where they will spend the winter. Mr. Sweet will join his family in Washington in the near employet in his present capacity t St: Paul, Minn, Oct. 16.—John P. future. |only. temporarily as the regular man t Ries had planned to start for Colora- From Dickinson.—Mrs. George Kil- ' succes ae Serre yee io < a do, a trip he had dreamed of many , arrived in-the city Come from St. Paul. -Mr. Barth wi The Hotel af Pestert Srretes’ times during the: thirty-four. years he Net eee sr to ee nthe ttl then resume his former duties at the ‘Ba the Hrart of the Fang” worked ‘for the Illinois Central rail- days visiting at the Matt Zander freight house. Personal Management of Harry C. Meir road as a timekeeper—without losing! By GILMOUR DOBIE, home. Mrs. Kilwine will also visit eRe iaae Clerk,and Madison Streete a day and,without a vacation. Instead’ Forward passing is. becoming more with relatives and friends in the So-, , CONSER sativa LEAUE. ‘hicage | he was buried. . ‘and more important as the game pro- len locality before returning hoite:| Mendon, ‘os t. pte tne assembly Rates; fins's ee ees Mr. Ries, who was 55 years old, gresses. Kach year finds teams more She has a farm near Solen. free ing Sk Bee il nt Cotsrvation . Double, o-» Bae : and lived at 4134 Lake Park avenue, proficient with the use of the forward pauauauul Nan hoon aa nf t + ommercial Beary Eoom with «Bath = died of injuries sustained when he pass, largely because passers"are be- N. P. Man Here.—J. I. Ingalls, su-j CM) rooms yestertay..aiternoon with ‘@pocs3000 was struck-by.an automobile at Ran- coming very skillful in throwing the pervisor of bridges and buildings, was 40 exceileat attendance present. The | 2 |doiph street and Michigan avenue. ball. in Mandan yesterday en route to var- Meeting is the first to be held this Terrace Garden The machine was driven by. Otto Na- There are several ways, of passing, fous points on thé south branch to Scason-and it was marked with en- a $ % gle, 1051. Léyola avenue ,who told the one where the ball is laid on the hand attend to duties in connection with thusiasm “and interest. It promises a % Caleago’s Wonder Restaurant But Terrece Garden is mt ~ thanarestaurant. Itisa darless ampitheatré;with ter. upon terrace sbiacree police the aecident was unayoidable. RYhard } lived at. Mr. Reis’ home, told of his fo uncle’s. plans for the trip. “He had worked years without losing a. day. August 15 he retired on a pension, and Satur- day he .went’ downtown to arange for thé tickets. He had planned to go-to Colorado. with ‘several boyhood . > for thirty-four necessitates the starting of the ball on its flight too low down, in fact so low down that it often is intercepted bythe linemen and ‘by the backs Dlaving directly back of -the' line. Tl ‘with the palm upward and a long flat le. a nephew, who swing of the arm in pushing tae ball rward. This form I think is not so safe and e most practical way‘seems to be crotch made by the thumb: and fin- gers, with the arm: well up above the head. When the ball is shot forward it starts from a higher. clevation and should be allowed to turn inward ,per- mitting the ball to slip off the end of the fingers giving it a spin which Gc- Weinhandle is numbered among the “The C the arm is shot forward the hands official switch throwers and lantern his office. He will return to his head- © be a most successful club year. quarters noon. Jamestown this after. ‘tious plans for the ensuing year's j work was discussed at length. A de- 'lightiul program consisting ‘of a re- port by the president, “Mrs. Hess; eed” a poem by J.-W. Foley, given by Mrs. W. J. Mackin; Piano selection by Mrs. H. S. Seaman, roll tll, discussion of the bést subject for the year's work and-various pa- in Weinhandle ‘Switching.—“Ruddie” twirlers in the local Northern Paci- fic yards. The popular former express clerk resigned “his duties. in the ex-

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