The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1917, Page 4

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THE TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. ISSUED EVERY DA apt SUNDAY, GEORGE D. MANN Editor ENSLEY A. WEIR, Business Manager G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative. NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg; CHI- CAGO, Marguette Bldg.; BOSTON, 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresge Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. SUBSCRIPTION PAYABLE IN ADVANCE, Daily, by carrier, per month....- $ 50 Daily, by mail, per » 4.00 Daily, by mail in > three months ... Daily, by mail out Dakota, on ear Daily, by mail outs Dakota, three months Weekly, by mail, per yea THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Eatablighed 1878) sees a a WEATHER REPORT. for 24 hours ending at néon Oct. 19: Temperature at 7 a. m.. 20 ‘Temperature at noon 29 Highest yesterday 29 Lowest yesterday 24 Lowest last night. Nae: 12) Precipitation . Trace Highest wind velocity. .26NW FORECAST. for North Dakota: Unsettled tonight, probably light snow or rain, and warm- er in the east and central portions; Saturday generally fair. Lowest Temperatures Fargo .....- eee ad Williston ... « 20 Pierre .. . 16 St. Paul . . 26 Winnipeg . 2 Helena .. . 30 Chicago . . 34 Swift Current » 26 Kansas City .. 30 San Francisco . see 56. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorogolist. SPE EEE SHOE E ES “ There is nothing of which we % “ are so liberal as advice—La % ¢ Rochefoucauld. o SEER EEGe Gees A $50 bond will buy a six-inch shell, So purchase three or four and give the boches h—! Z SETS AN EXAMPLE. At the suggestion of Jghn Steen, the board in‘charge of the ‘teachers’ pension fund did ndt delay investing | in liberty bonds. What a fine exam- ple for the board of university and school lands. ' Of course the books aré open until Oct. 27, but if Governor ‘Frazier and his advisers desired to show more speed on matters patriotic and less steam on matteys political, they would hardly have delayed action so long. A patient people is waiting until the special meeting, of the board of university and school lands tomor- row. ‘Even the prisoners in the state peni- tentiary have contributed some of their earnings to the liberty loan. Neither did .they wait until the eley- enth hour. All. honor, to those in control of the pension fund. They honored the teachers of the state in setting aside $100,000. Next! Bryn Mawr girls badly beat each other in hazing fight. Who says wom- en aren't fitted for war work? PARTY WRECKED. The socialist party in this country is a wreck. The real Americans— men like Charles Edward Russell, William English Walling, John Spargo and many others who could be named —have left the party in disgust. There is no evidence that A. C. Townley, Bowen or Brinton have left the North Dakota socialist ranks. The leadership that remains is largely pro-German, and is busily play- ing the pro-German game. It seeks to paralyze the fighting arm of our government and beguile us into a Ger- Tian peace, well knowing that would tbe a great and enduring German vic- tory. Thus the shell of the socialist party in America becomes a mere annex of the majority socialists of Germany, who have made of themselves an an- nex to kaiserism. “Time was when socialists prated theirs was the only real international party, the only party which did not pay, any attention to frontier lines, but considered only human beings and their needs. No king, no kaiser, no president could make them forget their common humanity and fly at each: other's throats. All plain bosh and balderdash! When the kaiser, anxious to con- quer the world, forced the war, the German socialists marched up to the trough like little German goose-step- ping soldiers and voted all the credits the kaiserists asked to wage war up- on the great democracies of France and England. like Suedekum, Heine, Hanisch, Kolb, Geck, Lensch, Adelung, Quark and Landsberg were just as flushed by the early triumphs of German arms over the unprepared nations of the west as were the veriest fire eaters who surrounded Wilhelm Hohenzol lern. ‘They forgot all about the bromnerly Jove and no frontier busin! with a vision of a permanent German vie- ltory, they parroted the cry of the | pan-German ruling classes. Hanisch, for instance, as late as ‘}ast fall wrote in Vorwaerts: “But as far as the much discussed annexa- | tions are concerned, I have for my own part never made a seeret of the fact that in the interest of the Ger. people and especially of the working cl: s, I consider a consid- erable extension of our frontier lines toward the east, possibly as far as the Narew line, a highly desirable war aim.” With few exceptions all the social- ists in the reichstag have been seized by a similar war madness and a simi- lar war lust for loot. Tha braves! and best of those who stood out against their party, Karl Liebknecht, is being killed by degrees by his pris- on sentence for telling unpalatable truths to royalty. The majority socialists were wiser. They saved their hides by trailing along in the ranks of the kaiser sup- porters. Since ‘Michaelis has come on the scene, since the pan-Germans have re- newed their demands for heavy in- demnities and big annexations, the majority socialists have had very lit- tle to say. The truth is they are either will- ing to play the kaiser’s game or they are afraid to do anything else. And their stoutest adherents in this country are those Who constitute the shell of the socialist party. They do not stand with Liebknecht. They stand with the supple-kneed socialists who are immensely flattered that some of their number were recently invited to a garden party by the kaiser. man Now begins the season when news- papers reassure their readers by tell- ing them how much colder it was somewhere el BUY THAT BOND. Every young American who has vol- unteered, or has been chosen for the national army, ig making a sacrifice for the sacred. cause of democracy) and country. He is giving some of the best years of his life, his job, his profession, his business, so liberty may not perish from the face of the) earth. Pe Now—the question for us who’ Te- main at home to put to ourselves is: Can we make any sacrifice at all com- parable? Of course, we cannot. Even if we do not have,as much coal as usual, even if we do not eat as hearty a meal, even if we pay more taxes— all these things are as nothing to what the soldier boy is giving. On his behalf, so that the war may be quickly won, the government is asking all of us to Duy liberty bonds. If we merely invest of our surplus in these splendid securities we cannot lay any patriotic unction to our souls. That is about the only kind of sacri- fice most of us. ‘will be called upon to make and, éven that does not de- serve the term “sacrifice,” because we are really only enriching ourselves. We save thus more than we might otherwise have done and we escape the Prussian indemnity gatherer. Austrian troops are refusing to fight on the Russian front. They refused to fight very hard on the Italian front several months ago. WAR AND HABITS. We make life easy by our habits, or we make it hard. “Our nervous system grows to the modes in which it is exercised,” is the scientific explanation of habit. Some of us exercise our nervous system to our advantage. For exam- ple, we have good habits of putting on our clothes neatly, quickly and with- out thought. And some of us have bad habits of temper, or of worrying or over-eating. We seldom recognize the power of any habit until it is formed. And the great trouble is that we slip into habits, good and ‘bad, drift into them, or slump into them without thought. But they are none the less binding because we have not intended to make them, and it is none the less hard to break them. What the new soldier in tratring suffers from most is not the chanxe in his food and collars, but the mix ing over of the habits of his body to suit his new profession. The walking habits of the soldier. are often bad, and it takes months of training to replace them with the fine, easy marching habits of the regular army man, Many human habits are being made over by the war, and there is no rea- son why the soldier boy should re- ceive all of the discipline and benefit. Once in a while it is a good plan for all of us to take stock of our pecu- liar assortment of habits—and then to treat them as allies—or as enemies. Buy a bond and knock the “hel” out Not only that, but German socialists of. Wilhelm. TT) Wee, IF (TIS FUN YoUIRE COOKING FOR > Tru PLAY WITH You A LITTLE You'RE (IT $e SURE, VvE Cor HS MONEY, Bor 1 <== FIGURE I CAN HAVE MORES FUN WITH IT =| THAN BUYING LIBERTY COAN i TWAS HILLY LAST NIGHT BUT NO FALL RECORD WAS B9OKEN Imitating - Annette “Kellerman, . the mercury last mgnt did some deep div- ‘ing, fetching up at 12 above zero, giv- ig bismarck the prestige of being the chilliest spot in thé northwest, but no records were broken. One night last weck the thermometer drop- ped to ten, and temperatures of two below have een recorded in October. 14 above, a temperature which Huron, S. D., tied. At Calgary, some dis- tance to the north of us, the lowest registered was 16, which also was re- ported by Pierre and North Platte. To the west and.each, the tempera-, tures were much_ higher. Unsettled weather is predicted for tonight, with probably ‘light snow or rain. Saturday -will, be fair and cool- er. The eastern starm, now is. cen- tral over the great lakes, and low temperatures have spread over the ‘Missouri and Mississippi valleys. Lit- tle snow or rain was reported during the night. . | CITY NEWS ——————__ de Horse Buyer Here—Jack Charles, horse buyer for the war department, is registered at the Grand Pacific for the week-end. League Organizers—Joe and Hank ‘Richardson, two of ‘Townley’s star organizers, are in the Capital City for the week-end. Dickinson Barristers—F. C. Heffron and T. F. Murtha, prominent Dickin- son barristers, transacted business at the capitol today. Child Dies Here—Adelia Schutt, aged 1% years, ‘daughter of Henry Schutt of Eureka, S. D., died this morning in a local'hospital. The body will be taken to Eureka for interment. Dies in Fit—James Stewart, a har- nessmaker, employed by the Wachter Transfer company, -was found dead in bed following an epileptic fit. He came here from Montana about a month ago and is practically unknown. Coroner Shipp is trying to locate someone to claim his, body, which meanwhile lies at Webb Erothers morgue. . Publicity for Capitai—The current number of the American: City, ao monthly periodical of wide circulation among municipal, county and siate officials, engineers, commercial clubs and similar organizations,) contained a detailed write-up -with : attractive half-tone illustrations of ithe ‘road work which has been prosecuted in Burleigh county during the, last two years. Burleigh, throagh tivis public- ity, is ranked as one of. the. progres- sive counties of America, 'and is shown to be well in the lead in the amount of road work done’and the manner in which it has been ‘executed. The Engineering News, another influ- ential trade publication of’ national circulation, in a recent issue: devoted several columns to an illustrated de- scription of the extensive paving oper- ations in Bismarck, which it notes as among the most important ever under- taken by a city of 8,000. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—A_ moder» furnished room. 112 Thayer. Call after 6:39 10 19 tf WANTED—To exchange Reo six’an- tomobile nearlv new, for land. Call Phone 250 or 10 19 2t FOR RENT—Steam heated rooms lo- cated over Knowles & Haney’s Jew- elry store. Suitable for offices, or} defeadant J. S. Dickson in a The next-chiliest spot.on the weath: |: er maps last’night was Moorhead, with’}’ \ At the Orpheum’ tonight in’the thril- ling drama “Queen X,” not a costume play. living apartments. Apply Knowles & laney's. 10°19 6t FOR SALE—Household goods. 308 Ave. B. Phone 420. 10 19 tf FOR mpletely furnished cight room house. Enquire of Mrs. Mary L.-McLeaa, 401 First street. 10.19 ti. DECISIONS OF -SUPREME “COURT From Renv.lle County. Charles ureedy, Plaintiff ani Appel- lant, vs. Emil Moody, Defendant and mespoadent. % Sylabds: In order that an: agent may recover commissions for sell- a land, he must tender a purchaser aaving ability and being ready) and willing to pay, for the same upoa the terms and conditions under which uc and was listed and the agent was authorized to sell. Action for commission on sale of land. Appeal from the district court. of Reaville county; Hon. K. E. Leigh ton, J. Judgment. for defendant. -Plaintiff appeals. fi Atiirmed. pinion of the Court Sh. J ‘ Rovinson, J., Concurring specially: Mr. Jusuce Grace, teing disquali- fied, did. not, participate. J. E. Bryan, Mphall, and E. R. Sinkler, Minot, attorneys for Plaintitt and Appellant. Iyan & Traynor, Devils Lake, At- by.. Bruce, forxeys for Defendant and Respond- ent, Paws NOTICE OF SHERIFF’S SALE ON EXECUTION. By Virtue of an execution issued out of and under the seal of the District) court of Larleigh county, North Pako- ia, Sixth Judicial District upon a judg: t rendered and docketed on the sth day of July, A. D. 1917, ia an ac-; tion wherein Mary Johnson was plain- tiff and J. S. Dickson, defendant in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the sum of “$557,845 which execution was directed and de- livered to me as sheriff in and for the said county of Rurleigh, state of North Dakota, I have levied upon all the right, title and interest ofthe said the Flax on trk.... 309%@ 312% Flax to arr. . 310% October flax 30916 i] November flax 309 December flax 303 May flax ....... 305% Close 1:35 p. m : MINNEAPOLIS, No. 3 yellow corn.. 185 @187 No. 3 mixed corn....... 184 @185 | following described personal property to-wit: ~ a One Studebaker five passenger, 4 cylinder automobile purchased from the Bismarck Motor Company. Notice is hereby given, that I, the undersigned, as sheriff in and for the said county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota will sell the above de- scribed personal property 'to the high-| est bidder tor casn at public auctiuil’ at the front door of the Court House in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh ‘County, North Dakota on the 29th day of October, A. D. 1917, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon, to satisty the said execution together with in- terest and costs. thereon. Dated this-17th day of. October, A. J. P. FRENCH, 7?" Sher of Burleigh County, North fs kot | 10-18 10¢. A i ° GRAIN MARKETS DULUTH. Oats on. trk: Oats to arr. ¢ Rye on trk and to arr... 178 - Barley on trk. + 100 @130 Corn other grades...... 170 @184 No. 2 white Mont oats.. 61%@ 62% + 58%@ 59% S.’W. to arr. « 58%@ 59% No. 3 white oats...... 57%@ 58% No. 3 white oats to arr.. 57%@ 59% | No. 4 white oats suse 56%@ B8% Barley .. 108 @122 Barley choi 122 @130 Rye ...... 18t @182 Rye to arr 1s1 2 Snetes 314 Flax to arr . 312 Oats, Dec. old. 56% Oats, Dec. new 51% 4 Close 1:43 p. m. 4 F ST. PAUL. es HOGS—Receipts, 8,000, 50c to 60c lower; range, $15.00@16.00; bulk at $15.50@15.75. CATTLE—Receipts, -9,500; killers, 10¢ to 15¢c lower;-75c to $1 lower for the week; steers, $5.00@14.50; cows) and heifers, $6.00@8.00; , veal calves, steady at $5.00@14.50; stockers and. feeders, dull at 75c to $1 lower ‘for the week, $5.00@10.00. SHEEP—Receipts, 8,000; lambs: 25c |. lower;. sheep steady; lambs, $8.00@'| > $7.00@13.00; ewes; 16.50; wethers, $5.00@10.50. « CHICAGO. oe HOGS—Receipts, 13,000, slow; bulk,: $15.60@16.50; light, _$15.00@16.60; mixed, $15.30@16.99: heavy, $15.30€0 16.90; rough, $15.35@15.55; pigs, at. $11.00@14.75. J CATTLE — Peceipts, 5,000, weak; native beef steers, $6.75@17.10;. west- ern, steers, $5.90@13.65; stockers and |. feeders, $6.00@11.40; cows and heif- ers, $4.85@11.90; calves, $9.00@16.00. SHEEP—Receipts, 7,000, _ weak; ‘Wethers, $9.00@12.90;. lambs, $12.75@ 8.00. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the matter of the estate of Died- ena Walton, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned Robert L. Walton, execu- tor of the last will of Diadena Walton late of the city of Bismarck in the ‘county of Burleigh and state of North} Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against, ‘ é OCOPBER 19, 1917 HOTELS ~ The Northwest Hotel ‘The NORTHWEST, 100 Rooms ‘The McK! THE HOTEL CENTER IN BISMARCK, These Articles Just what to send the boys in khaki for Christmas ts the one topic absorb- ing the attention of the people at home. Many things may be sent them but just what is the most appropriate | for the comforts of army life is the question. After a thorough study of the needs of the boys the American Red Cross has completed a list which will:give the boys both pleasure and comfort. The list follows: Khaki-colored handkerchiefs, 27 in- ches square, for container. Writing- paper pad, about 7x10 inches, envel- opes, pencils, postals, book (in paper cover), scrapbook home-made contain- ing a good short story, some jokes, ete.,.knife, such as boy scouts use, mir- ror, steel; handkerchiefs, khaki-col- ored; neckties, mouth organ, electric torch, compass, playing cards, meckar- ical ‘puzzles (an assorted lot of twely small mechanical puzzles can be bought at the rate of 12 for 50 cents), Red’ Cross checkerboard (this is a combination set of checkerboart, checkers, chessmen, and_.,.dominoes made of heavy carddcard_ especially f*¢the Red Cross‘ and. tan 9e pur- chased from the heedquarters for 5 cents apiece). Other games, tobe cco, pipe and: pipe cleaners, cigarat papers, water-tight match o0xes, chewing | office of. the Northern Express com- pany in the City of Bismarck in said Curleigh county, North Dakota. Datel September 25, A. D. 1917. ROBERT L. WALTON, Executor. Newton,Dullam & Young, Attorneys for Executor, ’ Bismarck, N. D. 9 28;.10—5 12 19) —<—$< <$<$ $< < ——_—_—_ |‘ PERSONAL NOTES Mrs. W..H. Stutsman and son, Will- jam, of Mandan have gone to St. Paul, where they will spend the winter | months. Jean and Charlotte, daugh- tars. of Mrs. Stutsman, are attending school there. | Miss Alma Sundquist entertained aj Mmited number of the clerical force of the A. W. Lucas store. Wednesday eyening at a game dinner at Homan’s: Cafa ds hh eeidey odes SHIELDS BOYS GIVEN “~~ ROUSING FAREWELL Rasmus Puntland and: Emil Heyer, the two Shields hoya who have enlist- ted’ to fight for the freedom of the world, were given a rousing farewell last night by the Shields people. A big dancing party marked the event. The boys were showered with gifts among them handsome furnished kits from the Freda Red Cross chapter. They arrived in Bismarck today, and are at the Grand Pacific awaiting time to leave for St. Louis to go into train- ing They were accompanied here by law. Bevo is the and to’ safe; Association,“ + chall refuse to who are foun offense. ANHEUSER BUSCH BREWING ASSOCIATION igh-Clas Hotel at aise ! oes |b AB cnt 0c per day and up - Sagereen vita $1.90 | The McKenzie “ee Rossina Seventh Stry of Noth Dakota. papclap onal lami ego Europese, ‘ 2 0. Sample rome Oppaite McKenzie Hated | 3! 0th ther. Daky hunch epee EUROPEAN Gey cod aight opposte Depot Park. 100 room with ENZIE, 210 Rooms . The SOO, 126 Roome N. D, _ EDW..G. PATTERSON, Owner ad Prop. ———_—_—_—_—_————————————————eeeeeees oo You May Send Sammy AnyOneof : for a Christmas Gift gum, fruited chocolate, and other sweetened crackers, in original pack- ages, fruit cake, preserved ginger, salted nuts, prunes, figs,.dates, rais- ins hard candy, chocolate in tin foil and licorice. The khaki-colored handkerchief for. container, the writing pad and the Red Cross checkerboard can be purchased from Red «Cross. chapters,.’. Oblong tin boxes holding each a quarter of a pound is a good way in which to send the gifts. The base of the pack- et can be formed by pla¢ing on the center of the khaki-colored handker- chief the writing paper pad, The var- jety of articles selected should not exceed $1.50 and arrange.them on the pad so that the entire. package shall be the width of the pad and approx- mately five or six inches high. The package cap then be.wrappedsin,pa- per and tied with the Christmas ribbon and may contain a Christ- mas card. Light brown Manila paper should be used for. the outer wrapper and strong’ cord should be used. to tie it. The Red Cross seals, Christ- mas labels or American flags may be used to ornament. it to give it the Yuletide cheer. $ Further ‘information for :the send- ing of the gifts canbe secured from the local Red Cross chapter. y ie eee EEE Andrew and John Puntland, brothers of Rasmus, Mr. Puntland.is a brother of Mrs. Wamaugn of Avenue C. BISMARCK BOY WITH RAIN. BOW DIVISION IN FRANCE Paul Marshall Jewell, son of Mrs. Marshall H.. Jewell of Thayer street, has arrived’ in France:with the fam- ous Rainbow division and is now with General Pershing’s forces: He is a member of the 151st U. 8. field artil- Jery headquarters compapy,,, and is ‘thé third Bismarcker to artivé.on the fighting ground. Capt. A.A. Jones z <to® his mother announcing. his gafe arrival.no mention was made-of what part’ of Fvance the Rainbow division was to- cated. Mr. Jewell has expressed a desire to be remembered by his’ Bis- marck friends.'! Communtcations ad- dressed to. him to, the American: ‘peditionary forces in caré of the post: master of:New :York’ city will reach. him, c Te ee} A Compound of O;1s that Has Steed the Toda: had Jos. Breslow. ‘ We are informed that at some cafes, res- taurants and gardens. beer and strong crinks have been sold under the guise of the popular soft drink, Bevo. : These reports have been confirmed ‘suf- ficiently to compel us to take action. .” The: beverage Bevo enjoys the pro- tection cf both federal _and state cuthority. In preparing it for sale and in marketing it, we adopt cvery possible precaution to protect the public against imposition and to prevent evasion of the sold in bottles only, bottle all cf it ourselves, and we have adopted a kind of bottle, crown and seals designed to prevent imitation... =< « We shall omit no measure within our power to defend the authority under ~— Bevo is manufactured and sold, to protect lic from imposition, the good name of this, We therefore ‘give fair Warning that we our products to those guilty. of the above said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of ‘this notice, to sald executor.ut the Pe gecteens bs af 4 j ’ | ” | 4

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