The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1917, Page 6

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LE RIOR ENE ( BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1917 TH SCOOP WHUT TH’ DICKENS DO ME WHUT UK B008 I WAS TO SPEND 50 MUCH ON FLOWERS AND CANDY? | NEWS OF NORTH DAKOTA AND NORTHWEST DUNN COUNTY LWE. STOCK HEAD WOULD HAVE. OPEN SEASON Urges that Free Range be Re-! stored West of the River for This Winter f.,. Out. —Impressed with the fact made apparent during a recent visit to the South Saint Paul stock market that a large amount of immature beet is being sacrificed for want of forage, A. P. Donohue, man- ager of the Dunn County Shipping as- hing an appeal for open season west of the two or three Werner, sociation, is publi the tion of a gen for cattle on the rang river, ments of this section, has the open range been closed during the winter seasons. Even in Burleigh county, one es of the state, a resolution closing the open range during the win- ter months was adopted py a small | inajority only at the last general elec- ticn. Farmers generally, evea those | who have no livestock, agree with the cattlemen that an emergency should be declared and the range opened, and it i 1 at the prairies west winter will be cov- s of thousands of heads of cattle, as free of restriction as they ever were in the days of the old cow country. ANTE-YAGCINATIONSTS TO MEET IN GATE ITY 10 OPPOSE STATE LAW uearTBROKEN BY DEATH Call has Gone out for Conference October 30 of those who Choose Own Healing Fargo, N. D., Oct. —North Dako- ta opponents of compulsory vaccina- tion have heen summoned to convene here October 3) with a view to tak- ing united action against the state board of health, which has resolved to enforce the statute requiring all school chilren to be vaccinated before being admitted to any public school in the state. Resolutions with which the call is headed hold that “Some state league or organization is necessary to! protect ourselves and children from this pernicious ruling of the state board of health, and as these rulings effect every citizen of the state of North Dakota, we hereby call a meet- ing at Fargo Tuesd October 30, the purpose of which is the forming! of a permanent organization which will have for its object the abaie- ment of any action of the state board of health or any individual or set of individuals who practice any mode or method of healing or prevention of disease from enforcing their particu- lar method upon the people against their will” The resolutions are i y M. E. Kemp, D. C.; B. W. T.; O. A. Bahlke, D. C. » MacAllen, D C.; and A. O. Wold, D. ¢., D. O. RROW OLLAR 2OF each Yor35° S65? For Good Dry Lignite Coal PHONE REPORTER | continues: “It was a great sight to} see the shells bursting in the air as 105 E CUB OH FERGET IT’ GV ME THOSE LOVIN’ ; EPISTLES, ee ~~ 9 (Oy in@ om aed — <= FINE CONSOLIDATED SCHOSL BUILDING IS BURNED TO GROUND Hannah, N. D., Oct. 25.—Scores of Minto township school children are enjoying a vacation enforced | by the complete destruction by fire of the Minto township con- | solidated school, one of the finest | structures of its kind in this sec- tion of the state and costing more | than $10,009. A carload of lig- nite which has just been stored in the basement of the building also | burned. The district carried $5,- 000 insurance. | YOUNG MINNESOTAN SAN MAN NEXT TO HM CLD IN AR-RAD Standing in Crowd Watching Bombs Bursting in Air when Companion is Slain Aberdeen, S, D., Oct. 25.—"We were , standing there in a crowd watching the shells bursting in the air when a young Britisher standing next to me gave a funny little cry and dropped to! the ind dead, his head half blown , a piece of shell,” writes Cul ssen of Fairmount, Minn., in de- ibing to hideuncle, C a Lange, the recent Ge ai over London, which he witnessed while on a furlough from the front. Young Jessen evidently didn't take to; cover after this experience, for he! the British guns fired on the raiding planes.” Jessen enlisted in Minneap- olis on April £3 and has been station- ed on the U. S. S. Melville, a supply boat. OF FAVORITE SON, SIRE FOLLOWS BOY TO GRAVE Beulah, N. D., Oct. 25.—Heart- broken over the death of his son, Reinhold, who was mortally wounded while hunting, Jacob Miller, a prosperous farmer of this vicinity, followed the boy to the grave within three days. The elder Miller was only 50 years old, but he had long been a sufferer from heart trouble, and the blow proved more than he could bear. The father and son now rest side by side in the Beulah cemetery. Dance every Tuesday and Saturday night at Patterson's Hall. O'Connor's Orchestra. 1 023 St SUMMONS, STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh—Ss, In District Court, Sixth Judicial Dis- trict. B. Greteman, plaintiff, vs. Wilhelm Hilken, George A. Joy, guardian of the estate of Wilhelm Hilken, an insane person, Estella W. Wilcox, Alfred C. Wilcox, John Henry Geling and all other persons unknown, claiming any estate or interest in or lien or in- cumbrance upon the property de- scribed in the complaint, defendants. The State of North Dakota to the above defendants: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this action, a copy of which is hereunto attached and herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscriber at his office in che city of Bismarck, county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, within thirty days after the service of this summons upon you, exclusive of the day of service; and in case of your failure to appear or answer, judg- ment will be taken against you and de- fault for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated this 9th day of August, 1917. J. A. HYLAND, Attorney for Plaintiff, P. O. Bismarck, N. Dak. To the Defendants above named: Please take notice that the Sum- mons and Complaint in the above en- titled action has been filed in the of- fice of the clerk of the district court, Burleigh county, North Dakota; that the o'ject of said action is to quiet in Plaintiff the title to the North Half of the Southeast Quarter (N% of SE%) and South Half of the North- east Quarter (S14 of NE) of Sec- tion Twenty-four (24), Township One Hundred Forty (140), North of Range Eighty (80), West of the Fifth P. M.. Burleigh County, North Dakota, and to exclude the defendants and either of them from any interest in or lien upon the above described premises; and that no personal claim is made against any of such Defendants. J. A. HYLAND, MERCER COUNTY, WHICH WAS SAID TO HAVE. NO} SHERIF, NOW HAS THO Felix Conrad on the Job and Wil-; liam Haevischer not Ready to Quit—Row Due Stanton, N. D. Oct. William | aevisher, who resigned the Mercer shrievalty when his alleged TH. sounty failure to ppress blindpigging and gambling s stigation by State's Attorney H. L. y, upon the occasion of the appointment of AND ONE DAY SLOWLY BUT SURELY SOUTH AMERICA IS PHO \S o's Felix Conrad to succeed him, advised the board of county commissioners there would be no succession without a fight. Mercer county, charged a while back with having no sheri now has two, and the hootleggers duly awed. Haevischer alleges his resignation was improperly procured and that it does not stick. The board ‘declines to take his change of mind seriously, and has selected Matt Crow- ley as a member of its body in place of ‘Mr. Conrad, who was commission- er from the fifth distric STOLEN CATTLE TOPPERS J. A. Stiles Company Heads Mar- ket at Union Yards Solen, XN. D., Oct. Six hund head of cattle shipped by J. A. iles from this point topped the Chicago market. The best ‘steers brought 13.75 per hundred and the poorest $9.40., The Stiles company is making | weekly shipments while the market holds out. TO SELL INDIAN LAND Fort Yates, N. D., Oct. 25.—The In- dian department in ‘Washington has approved 175 tracts of Indian lands in North Dakota and 124 in South Dako- ta which will be offered for sale this fall or in the early winter. The last sale of registration lands was held December 27, 1916. NICE COMFY SWING, BUT SUPPOSE THE ENERY SEES HIM! d « Ss are gradu- Latin-American republi ally coming over to the side of, the United States and her allies, as shown by the map above. All countries ‘in| white already have severed diplomatic relations with Germany. They are: Peru, Uruguay, Panaina, (iuatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, San Domingo, Hayti, Cuba. Chile (shaded) is ex- pected to sever relations as soon as Argentina (dotted) can persuade its president to obey the popular and leg- islative demand to line up with the JOINING HANDS WITH US IN WORLD WAR; ey United States. Brazil (dotted) has re- voked neutral relations and has her fleet patrolling the South Atlantic with our warships. Ecuador's action in refusing to receive the German min- ister expelled from Peru is near the breaking point. This leaves but five (black) entirely neutral countries in South and Central America, and of and Costa Rica has offered her ports to American war vessels. In the end but on, Colombia, still angry over the Panama deal, may remain neutral. PERSHING WANTS ONLY YOUNG MEN IN FRANCE Send Word that Work in Trench- es is too Strenuous for Older Officers John W. Farmer, Sioux county sur- veyor, was in Bismarck today en route to his home at Selfridge trom Fort Snelling, where he was discharged from the officers’ training school af- ter six weeks’ work. Mr. Farmer is a man past forty and he states that the impression at Fort Snelling is that all candidates of his age are to be dropped, as General Pershing has sent word from France that America should sent none but young men to the trenches. Dance every Tuesday and Saturday night at Patterson’s Hall. O'Connor's Orchestra. 1 023 St NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE. CLOSURE SALE. Notice is hereby given that default existing in that certain mortgage, ex- uted and delivered by Jacob J. Berg and Annie Berg, his wife, mortgagors, to Barnes Brothers, Incorporated, of Minneapolis, Minnesota, mortgagee, dated the 26th day of March, 1913, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, on the 3ist day of March, 1913, at 11:10 o'clock a. m., and recorded in book 106 of mortgages at page 231, and no action or proceeding having been instituted at law or otherwise to recover the debt secured by said mortgage or any part thereof: Said mortgage will be foreclosed by a sale This ist so bad as it might have been, for the tree: might have been higher and th balloonist’s parachut set farthr from the branches. As it was the British observer just swung ovr to the nearby branches and then climbed down, as easily as any small Amer- ican boy could have done it. The parachute was caught in the tree Attorney for Plaintiff, Bismarck, N. D. 10-11-18-25 RA LET OGRE firma, jim preventing a landing on terra 1 nisaiiandeeinnacuedh | of the premises in such niortgage and | hereinafter described at the front door of the court house in the city of Bis- marck, county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hor o'clock p. m., on the Ist da; cember, A. i). 1917, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on ,the day of sale. | The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as fol- viz: The southeast one-quarter (SE) of section eight (8), township at the date of sale the sum of $34.36, principal and interest, and the further sum of $108.44, by reason of certain interest coupon notes, which were prior liens upon the said land and which were paid by the said mort- gagee and which makes the total sum due on date of sale of one hundred forty-seven dollars and eighty cents ($147.80), together with the costs and disbursements in this action. Dated at Kenmare, N. D., this 23rd day of October, A. D. 1917. BARNES BROTHERS, Incorporated, Mortgagee. A. W. GRAY, Attorney for Mortgagee, ‘Kenmare, N. D. 10-25:11- 15-22-29 Printi ;one hundred forty-two (142), range seventy-five (75). There will be due on said mortgage these Dutch Guiana is unimportant,’ -THEBISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. | BOOKLETS OFFICE STATIONERY CATALOGS RULED BLANKS PRICE LISTS ‘ANNOUNCEMENTS Scoop Took The Whole Night To Think Out What He'd Like To Say By “Hop” AND THERE THEY RESTED UNTIL THE OLD Cow. HAPPENED, SD ALONG sa HEY LEM - NE FOR TH VETINARY! OLE BESS ONIN’ coven’! MANDAN GOES DOWN BEFORE _ Superior Weight and Techniaue of i Capital City Team Wins Open- ing Contesi MORTON COUNTY SEAT PAST AND FULL OF PEP Young:ters Altho Short on Beef Prove Long on Headwork-—-509 People See Game Mandan and Bismarck clashed on the Mandan gyidiron yesterday after- tiwon in the opening slope football same of the season. Pep and ginger showed by the players. Dattling with all their might Mandan went down to defeat 20 to 0. Over 509 people Mitnessed the game. Liberty Day being observed in ‘Mandan, many were afforded an opportunity to at- tend the game, Bismarck was repre- sented by about 150 rooters. The game \ called at 3:15 and closed after 5 o'clock. Feature plays ‘were made by Peters, McDonald, Ol- son and Toepke for the Mandan team, while Couch, Berndt and Groves play- ed the best game for Bismarck. Al Steffins of Mandan and McCoy of Bi: marck acted as umpire and referee, respectively. “More Beef in Victors. The Bismarck team overweighed the Mandan boys by considerable and this is what largely contriduted to the ismarck eleven copping the initial honors. Bismarck also roughed things a trifle. : It is believed if Mandan had used a little more delayed buck in their playing and more trick forma- tion and shift playing it would have been easier for them. Bismarck fea- tured interference to a remarkable degree and that with overweight won the game. Mandan Half Put Out. Fred Young. Mandan left halfback, was put out commission in the ond. quarter by rough playing. While in the game Young proved an ale player and had he been able to stay in the game Bismarck would have known it. However, his bstitute, L. McDonald, small but full of ginger, played a fine game. It is believed that ISMARCKERS ‘McDonald p! d the best game of any single player in Mandan. ‘ Peters Featured. Peters made the feature play of the fourth quarter when he made a sixty- rd punt. The ball was caught by Berndt of Bismarck, who was tackled by Love. The ball was within 20 feet of the Mandan goal line. In the third quarter it looked as if Mandan would score but Bismarck made a 20-yard shove and caught a Mandan forward pa Mandan held Bismarck within three yards of the goal to a down in the third quarter. ‘Twas a Real One. \ The ‘Mandan-Bismarck game will be remembered as a real “opener,” how- ever. Bismarck played a peppy game all the way through. Mandan showed ability in many Mandan, while light. made the vi 's work every minute. it By Quarters. First—Formation made. Peters of Mandan takes ball oa kickoff. Fog- erty of Bismarck tackled. Dow gets ball runs behind B: rek goal. Tack- led behind goal Dispute on touch-back k penalized 20 yards a arded. Bismarck got ball on a fumble. Ball put back in play neither side scoring. Quarter ends 0 to 0, Second—Pismarck by quick inter- ference and “good headwork puts ! Couch across for a touch down. E'erndt ked goal. Made counting punt. Bis- arck wins quarter 7 to 0. McDonald ;suostituted for F. Young, injured. Third—Bismarck’s ball. Ball put in Hard tussle for visitors, who eded in winning another touch- down through Couch. Berndt kicked {soal. Score end cf quarter 14 to 0 in favor of Bismarck. Ed Meliecke en- ters game instead of R. Young. Fourth—McDonald of Mandan made feature play by a ten yard skin tackle around Rismarck’s ‘right end. Peters made a 60 yard punt from formation. Bismarck got by Berndt tackled by Love. Advance up field by end runs and line smashes. Bismarck makes another touchdown after hard battle. Again fails to kick goal. Quarter and game ended 20 to 0 in favor of Bis- marck. The Line Up. Mandan—Kalher re; Toepke, r t; Devine, rg; Broshard, c; R. Young, lg; Olso 1 t; Love, 1e; Dow quarter- back; Peters rh; Gray fb; Fred Young, 1h; L. McDonald 2nd p, sub; Eddie Meilecke, 3rd q, sub, Bismarck—H. Spangler r e son, r t; Edwin Taylor, rg; C. ’. Yegen, 1, t; F. Fogerty, 1 e; R. Berndt, quarterback; L. Couch, rh, capt.; Guy Groces f bh; TL. Cook, rh. NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE ON EXECUTION, By virtue of an execution issued out of and under the seal of the District court of Burleigh county, North Dako- ta, Sixth Judicial District upon a judg- ment rendered and docketed on the 26th day of July, A. D. 1917, -in an ac- tion wherein Mary Johnson was plain- . Lar- egen, tiff and J. S. Dickson; defendant in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant for the sum of $ 4; which execution was directed and de- livered to me as sheriff in and for the id county of Burleigh, state of North Dakota, I have levied upon all the right, title and interest of the said | defendant J. S. Dickson in and to the | following described personal property | to-wit: | 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 j Said county of Burleigh and state of ; North Dakota will sell the above de scribed personal property to the high- est bidder for cash at public auction 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 fhe forenoon, to satisfy the said execution together with in- terest and costs thereon. x Dated this 17th day of October, A. D. 1917. : J.-P, FRENCH, : Sheriff of Burleigh County, North Dakota. 10-18 10t. [ai Pia Sa 2S Nature Needs Assistance In | A little help goes a long ways. If you would keep your body in a healthy and robust condition, throb- j bing with that splendid vitality that j indicates freedom from all. ailments, first of all see that your blood is kept pure. Any slight impurity that creeps 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 MAINTAINS A ng of the Keeping You Well in keeping the blood absolutely free of all impurities. This old remedy is 4 wonderful purifier and tonic, and has no equal ior keeping the blood rich and pure. "It builds up the ap- petite and toncs up the entire system. S. 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. Write for booklets and free miedical advice to Swift Spe- cific Co, Dept. E Atlanta, Ga. Completely equipped Printing Plant and Bindery. Bring us your and Stationery orders and we will demonstrate the value BEST QUALITY WORKMANSHIP AND EFFICIENT SERVICE NO ORDER 700 LARGE—NONE T00 SMALL LOOSE-LEAF BINDERS BOOK BINDING BLANK BOOKS OA NEE HIRT ae nee

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