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i f 4 4 ; THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1917 story BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE cette eee ena CAPTAIN WELCH AIDING LIBERTY LOAN CRMPAICN Bismarck Military Chief Leader in Work for Second Loan at Camp Greene MORE THAN MILLION | HAS BEEN SUBSCRIBED (Special to The Tribune.) Camp Greene, Charlotte, N. ©., Oct. | 25.—Major Bolles and Captain Welch announced today at headquarters of j the Camp Greeno liberty loan cam- | paign that the work would come to a close on October 25 at midnight, giv- ing hours in which to make up and coordinate all of the reports and file them in Washington by October Camp Greene today had added $75, 000 to its subscription of yesterday and at midnight last night the figures stood at $1,025,750, while today's re- turns will add $50,060 to $100,000 more | “The camp,” said Captain Welch, de | tailed to assist Major Volles, in the! campaign, “stood second in the aver-| age sum subscribed by each man in the division, taking the last general report from other camps as a ba: ; The captain added that the average subscription of the men of the forty- first is $55.88, and this is increasing with every dollar added to the total. Wet Day Program. Because of the muddy condition of the drill grounds, outside work was generally halted early in the day and} the troops were taken to shelter | Where they were given instruction in military science. Officers at headquar- ters say that in spite of bad weather there will be no idle moments for the} men in training and that mental work will largely replace manual exercises | when the weather is inclement. The artilery regiments were out early be-} fore the rain began, but were recalled | later on account of the muddy condi tions on the drill and parade grounds. | Headquarters expect a new judge, advocate to be detailed to Camp} Greene shortly, the office being atj present in charge of Captain Cramer. | The officer first in charge was ordered | to Columbia, and his place has not ye pach permanently filled at headquar- ers. ELEVATOR MEN NOW ENGAGED IN GIVING BUSINESS RECORDS Detailed. Reports, Covering Busi- ness up to October 31 Prepared for Rail Board Report blanks which will just fit cosily inside the average elevator of- fice have been mailed by Fred M.| Schulz, chief elevator accountant, to all elevators and warehouses in the | First congressional district, who will ‘be required to report to the state rail. way commission business transacted up to October 31, 1917. “It was not prac 1 for us to name the dates on which warehousemen ! were to make their cutoffs for the| crop year of 1916," says Schulz in sub- mitting the blanks, “and therefore all) the reports will not cover the same! period. However, the cut-off or weigh- up date for warehousemen operating within the first congressional district of North Dakota is April 30, 1918.” Elevators are required to show the amount of all grains weighed in and! out, the amount of dockage and the Brade igned to wheat of different varieti¢ amount of grain stored, amount of transit; number of eleva-| tors and warehouses operated; amount 1 | Russian boy scout of 12, wears the had hardly [RUSSIAN BOY OF 12 WINS REO BADGE OF COURAGE BY SAVING A SOLDIER'S LIFE UNDER FIRE THAT WOUNDS HIM i i | FEODOR KULICH, JUST AFTI IS OF THE RED BAL OF COURAC Cu LEFT WRIST, STANDING B DE IVAN KORKC DIER, WHOSE LIFE HE SAVED THE Petrograd, Oct. 25—Feodor Kulich. Little Feodor, though the fi kened ade a second Iter. Red Badge of Courage. lt is on his left sleeve, just above bringing f his wrist. He got it saving Ivan Kor- ages. ovin, a Siberian soldier, from death. hui Feodor had lived near Kishiney. And here, near the war frontier, eo- nted dor was a member of a company of n could boy scouts which went even up to the started Lack for help. first lines to serve the Russian army He tne left shoulder. in recent fighting. But with } pinch- In the main the Russians held their} ed a roll of bandage against Sround. But the line had been \ the wound and trudged “to the ened by the dispatch of divi Ss field hospital i ; pornward 2 ine territory about Riga,! ‘There, after his and in spots it gave. jtied up, he isu De ruil Z :: At the close of several days of seat) stret« Me 1 a eae Kaela ati tered fighting the Austrian troops had Ue knew for the woundel soldier i been pushed back to their old front. was a case of carly res or of death And in these contested sectors, once almost. wi ‘ t more in the hands of the Russians, the repe: Au battlefield was still littered with sc And for tered dead and wounded. ‘dor, despit The boy scouts were working behind ttrip to ix r the youngster cloth and s: od. the wounded So Feodor shoulder had been from the s the new Russian first lines, but still behind the ridge in the zone of the bitter bombardment plain, in the zone ¢ : the checked Austrians kept up. Feodo. cour sample inspir- Feodor Kulich found the s an ed the troops of AOaHa HES r soldier Korovin in a shell hole. The é soldier had dragged himself into the crater for protection after his wound. He had been almost two days with- out food or water. of it spread to « Leven to Petro receiving ready to return tot the side of The twelve-y y made the the wrist of first trip to ide, under) war hero hi heavy fire, when he was attracted by name i: ist of the waving of the man rim of the shell crater. NORTH DAKOTA. BOYS arm over the | the Piedm | of the south jis ona rel h Corn of realty and other property used in connection; nature of trading in grain} done with the farmer, with the mill/ or terminal purchaser; commission | companies with whom business is| done, and quantities of coal or other products handled. | Reports will be asked from differ-| ent congressional districts in alternate | months, with a view to relieving the} burden on the state railway commis- sion. The information so gathered will be kept on file and will constitute a certified record of the elevator bus- iness of North Dakota. Dance every Tuesday and Saturday night at Patterson's Hall. O'Connor's Orchestra, 10 23 5t. BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get | at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the substi tute for calomel, act gently on the bowel. and positively do the work. > afl with bad brecth quick relief through Dr. Edwards live Tablets. The plocsant, susar coated tablets are taken for bad breat! by all who know them, Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets act gont!: but firmly on the bowcls and liver stimulating them to natural action, Clearing the blocd and gently pu: the entire system. Thcy do that dangerous calomel does withoct any of the bad aftcr effects. All the behefits of nasty, sicicaing, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets without gripinc, pain or any disagrecable cficcts. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered thc formula 2 bloody ‘and small grains are profitably grown |The city has a pop uf about ~) (S1uun and is quite a anes center, 4 goods being the chief ouput. T main is located on the First American Declaration of In- line of the Southern Railway ‘from New York to New Orleans and dependence Signed Near Char j has a halt a dozen or more other male lotte in 1775 {way line one of the great: a est shippis yt the south. “The First North Dakota regi Hu at Charlotte, N.C. is camping or historic ground,” Secretary Brewer of | the state board of regent to a newspaper man tod: “harlotte is my old home town. I born in Mecklenburg county, of which it is the county seat. “The famous Mecklenburg tion of Independence of ATT was almost 14 months in advance ot the similar document enunciated trom . Philadelphia. It is well authenticated) "22 Southern hospitality so tr and in the Carolinas and elsewhere in. | Her thes sol the southland May 20 is ob: stead of July 4, as the real national birthday. “Charlotte was famous for its early patriots. So enthusiastic and such excellent fighters were they that Lord Cornwallis called the then small set- tlement ‘a regular hornets’ ne: military organization of that city ha since been known as the Hornets’ Nest Riflemen. : “In the revolutionary period there: !* was a fort constructed at the inter. e city orth Dakota treo re excep: e in having drawn remarked | in its highest a s Charlotte's s house is open to th are | est sense and th enti Unite more “Under the favorable climatic con- ditions and brightened by the patriot- ALES the triotism means places in wher have fallen in pleasant place: BOARD OF REGENTS IN | PRELIMINARY MEETING George Governor | sof the e board a conference at Val- y. when it is un- n for the mect- eld here be *M section of Tryon and Trade streets.| "8°! ! : This was built on posts and occupied fe Aon mapped the entire corner space. This gave pare lopment, are expected. at ion, which the early patriots command of the country in every direction, and the troops fired through the portholes of this fort so effectively that the Brit ish red coats were unable to capture the town. be “Within sight of the present camp- jing ground of the North Dakota sol- | diers is King’s mountain. where a revolutionary battle was fought. There are many other histori- cal fields of struggle in that vicinity which have places in the making of Will be the with 1A on pro the board in control said to be fected are! ing developments. 2... The Liquid Wash for Skin Disease We have witnessed such remarkable cures ‘ = ” ! with this soothing wash of oils that we offet our American government. ou a bottle on the guarantee that uniert it firs’ Frazier ay er of ¢ In commenting on that section of Goes the sme for you, it costs you Dot + | the south, Secretary Brewer said: | Bb %¥- 5c and & SS Chstlotte_is located inthe heart 96. cnccmpimeOS-Bres ‘Judge Nuessle Rules Dickinson NORTH OAKOTA BANKS MILLIONS AREAD OF 1916 ‘Despite Fact that Year has been Marked by Poor Crops, Great Advance is Shown SAVINGS DEPOSITS CLIMB; CERTIFICATES $55,000.000 North Dakota's 69 four trust) compan State Examiner Water: tions as of Sept. 11, 1917 and $ is and to state ban reporting their condi- ase of $3,5. » made June 20,191 iS over the total shown : panies reporting Sept. 14, 1916. Total resources reported as of Sept. li, 1917, are $115,196,435.42, as com- pared with ‘$107,031 7 June 20, ItT, and $100,172,311.82 shown Sept. 5.024,123.60 03 for 14,1916, an increase of tor the year and of $8,1 the quart Capital stock during the year has | increased from $9,973,000 to $10,944, | and the sur- increased $446,561.36, to $3,- The total due other banks | sed $406,017.54 during the} ooo, a gain of $971,001 plus h 1954 decre; tins are shown in deposits for Deposits subject to check | ined $644,986.08, standing at) Sept. 11, 1917. Demand tes of deposit show a gain of standing at $1,177,102.77, of deposit have} 98,669.58, to $5485 ings deposits there is| shown a substantial gain of $636,-/ 789.39, of which more than half, $388,-! was shown during the last) the quarter, MUTI CANT. gOLLECT HEAVY AMOUNT W FEES Barrister’s Contract with treasurer, who paid White's warrants. They also recovered. Then, the trust companies, feeling that someone had recovered too much money, brought suit against the North- ern Trust Co.,and the banks and the city of Dickinson, and make Stark county a co-defendant, on the grounds that it had recovered about $1,300 in excess of the amount of which White had defrauded it, had been paid in full measure and had nothing more coming. The county, contending that it had something still due in fees, interest and the cost of expert counsel en- gaged in the persons of Miller & Cos- tello of Bismarck, again sued in its turn, and in February, 1913, procured judgment for $9,200. This case was appealed to supreme court by the bonding companies in June of that year. In August T. F. Murtha resigned as state's attorney for Stark, a successor was named by the county commission, and with the approval of the new state's attorney a contract was made with Murtha by which he was to de- fend the county in the appeal and was to receive a contingent fee of 50 per cent of the amount finally recov- ered. Murtha won his suit for the county; objection then was raised to paying him his fee, and when the mat- ter came up for hearing yesterday Judge Nuessle ruled he had no fee coming; that his contract was con-; trary to public policy and void. SURVEYING BOUNDARY Hannah, N. D., Oct. 25.—Arthur Collins has joined a party of United States engineers who are engaged here in making a topographical sur- vey of the international boundary. The survey is to extend to the head of the lakes, and the work will con- sume several months. “TLL SHOW YOU HOW | GORNS PEEL OFF Ever Peel a Banana Skin? That's It! “| should worry about those corns! —I just put some ‘Cets-It’ on.” Corns! used to pester the world into a frenzy, | enduring pain, digging, slicing toes, 2 oan Puts Your Feet in Clover —It Ends Corns Quickly. Sera ‘i tinkering with plasters and tape, try- An echo ot the famous J. S. White “ing to fix a corn go it wouldn’t hurt. forgery in Stark county Was’ But now no one in the world “should heard in di court here yesterday | worry,” because the moment you put when Judge L. Nuessle decided | “Gets-It” on, it means the end of a that former e's Attorney T. F.' corn. There is nothing in the world Murtha of Dickinson was not entitled jike “Gets-It’—nothing as sure and to $4,794.70 in fees, for which a con-' certain—nothing that you cam count tract into which he had entered with on to take off a corn or: callus every «former Stark county board of com- time, and without danger. .The- corn joners called. \never grew that “Gets-It” will not “Geti County was Void W. s * pecroy ine county ot Stark, represented by- State’s Attorney H. A. Burgason, was the plaintiff, and the defendants were Adani Mischel, Dominick Wetzstein, Thomas Braun, Adam Foster, Joseph K Delbert Hughes, the National: Security Co. of New York, Frank A. ringer and J. P. Berringer. S. White, who served as auditor; of e county from 1903 to 1909, was charged with forging salary war- rants and other vouchers numbering 309 to the amount of $48,000. The cou following White's conviction, red from companies which had onded White during his four terms 3.04, ' f the warrants forged $13,000 th had been registered but not paid, and were held by the Dakota National bank and the First National bank, and the city of Dickinson, which in turn brought suit against the com- panies which had bonded the county wor Relieves Stiff Neck When you wake up with a stiff neck or sore muscles, strains or eprains, use Sloan's Liniment. No need to rub; it quickly penetrates to the scat of pain and removes it. Cleaner than mussy plasters or oint- rients. It docs not stain theskin or } clog the pores. Alwa;rs havea bottle hanc!y for rheumatic aches, neuralgia us druggist, Z5c., THE Northwest Hotel A High-Class Hotel at teasonable Rates ee 50. day and up Single vom with bath, $1.00 oer Running hot and cold water in every room Opposite McKenzie Hotel ) EUROPEAN Roquette, T. F. Murtha, Peter F. Ber- ys your palm. Never happened before, | did it? Guess not. as the world’s best corn remedy by as Th ‘ ie X Soo Hotel The NORTHWEST, 109 Recess The McKENZIE, 210 Reems The SOO, 125 Reems THE HOTEL CENTER iN BISMARCK, N. D, "DW. PATTERSON, Owser sod Prop. get. It never irritates the flesh, never makes your toe sore. Just.two'dréps of “Gets-It” and) presto the corn-pain vanishes.- Shortly you cah peel the corn right off with your finger and there you are—corn-free and happy with the toe as smooth and corn-free Get a bottle of “Gets-It” today from wiy drug store, you need pay no more than 25c, or sent on receipt of price by K. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, Il. Sold in Bismarck and recommended Finney's drug store. Wanted Three Car Loads Second Hand FORDS For making Smith Form-a Trucks, To get these ¢: low high pr xchange for any of eur USED CARS in stock. Standard makes offered DODGE BROS... CHALMERS, OVERLAND, BUICK, ete. Free storage on the car you buy from us to May 1, 1918. See us at once, we must have — these FORDS immediately. MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR CO 7th and Main St. Tel. 234 we will al- DOUBLE-JOINTED LAW SUIT APPEALED TWICE TO SUPREME. COURT City of Fargo and James Kennedy Both Come Before Highest Tri- bunal with Plaint A complex and interesting double- jointed lawsuit involving, the city of Fargo and James Keanedy reached supreme court yesterday by way of two appeals. The city cf Fargo ap- peals from an order enjo‘ning ihe city from enjoining Kennedy. Kennedy GURED HS RUPTURE 1 was badly ruptured while lifting a trunk several years ugo Doctors said my only hope of cur? was an 0, eration. ‘Trusses did me no good Finally { got hold of something that quickly and completely cured me. Years have passed and the rupture has never returned, although I am do- ing hard work as a carpenter. There was no operation, no lost time, no trouble. J have nothing to sell, but will give full information about how you may find a complete cure with- out optration, if you white to me. Eugene M. Pullen, Cafpenter, 308 1D, Marcellus Avenue, Manasquan, N. J. Better cut out this notice and show it to any others who are ruptured— you may save a life or at least stop the misery of rupture and the worry and danger of an operation. Dakota Fuel Co. Dry Lignite Coal Delivered to any part of the ity. P PHONE £69 Pat Kelly, Agent. They fit. tection. Be sure that it from. Hunt him up. Saint 210 MAIN WORK men. be proud to wear. “A Dollars Worth for Every Dollar or Every Dollar Back” The FAIR Store SHOES A Large and Complete Line Of dress shoes for men, women and children at prices that cannot be beat anywhere in the Northwest. We have a large assortment of work shoes for boys and We can save you money. GIRLS’ SCHOOL SHOES We wish to call special attention to our new stock of school shoes for girls—all the latest styles. Good shoes that you'll LET THE FAIR FIT YOUR FEET | appeals from the ortginal order grant- ed the city enjoining him. The bone of sonteaiion is an area- way which Kennedy anid others wish to cut into a Broadway sidewalk near the Norcher) Vacific tracks at Fargo to give access to a basen:.nt room in their business block. The city “restrained the contractor from proceeding with this work, on the ground that Fargo needed all the :.ide- walk room it had at this particular point. Kennedy and his backers then obtained an order restraining the cit) from interfering with them. Now both cases are in supreme court. Spalding & Shure represent the citv of Fargo, and Lawrence & Murphy and Barnett & Richardson app2ay ror Kennedy et al. —E—rlE—E=—=—e =———————— Bu the Teart of the Tesy” Pereens! Management of Harry C, Meir Clark and Madison Streete : Chicage Beary Room with « Bath SingleBulte- (e00c— 000, Terrace Garden Chicago's Wonder Restaurant But Terrace Garden is more than a restaurant. Itisa lariess ampitheatre, with face uponterrace—all incres- cent » leading up from the ice rink and the stage, Where Food, Service and Light -- Stylish -- Warm The lightest warm rubbers made. There is so little weight you'd hardly know you had them on. They are good looking. splendid wear resisters, like all other Foot-Schulze rubbers—and there’s one for every purpose. You'll enjoy wearing these. Our name is moulded into the sole for your pro- They are is there. In nearly every town there’s a dealer selling Foot- Schulze rubbers—and he’s a good man to buy Foot, Schulze & Co. Paul STREET DUTT SHOES a