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MONDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1917, BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE SOCIETY Red Cross Division Nurse Makes More G ‘Need of more Red Cross nurses throughout the division is imperative, | declares Miss Edith Barber, director of the nursing bureau of the northern division. Ifj@ general call for Red Cross} nurses should be issued throughout the’ ‘division less than 400 could re- spend, Miss Barber says. If a second cal} should follow, and the continua- th of the war for another year would make the second call probable, there would be none to respond. Miss Barber became director of the nurses department for the Red Cri on Nov. 1. It is her duty to recru the number of nurses in the divisioa | so that the disgrace of a failure to respond to a national call may be averted. Her task is even more ditli- cult than that of any army recruiting Appeal Fo i. Aah overnment Workers: officer. Men in all walks of life can. be made into soldiers in a few months. | It takes years cf training to develop a Red Cross nurse. i However, there are hundreds of nurses in the division who could be- come Re’ Cross nurses upon enroll- ment. Miss Barber will concentrate her efforts in obtaining recruits from these nurses. Young women, without previous training, she urges to enter the training service so that they may be fitted to respond to a later call from the government. Other women, ' who are beyond the age limits set for Red Cross nurses or who are married and therefore cannot actively join the Ped Cross corps, Miss Barber urges to take training in home nursing, that they may fill the places. of private nurses who are eligible for Red Cross work. ' | EPISCOPALIANS TO CONDUCT INSTITUTE An institute primarily under the auspices of the women’s auxiliary and guild of the Episcopal church denom- ination in Nort Dakota, will be con- ducted in Gethsemane cathedral in Fargo beginning Tuesday and lasting through Friday. St. George’s Episco- pal church will be represented by Mrs. Fred. A, Copelin and Mrs. Benjamin Tillotsdn. The delegates will be mostly women from all parts of the state, al- though a number of the clergy will attend. The institute will open with the cel- ebration of holy communion Tuesday morning at 10 o'clock at the cathe- dral. Tuesday evening the Gethsem- ane guild will hold a reception for the visiting delegates and members of the parish in the cathedral crypt. A meeting of the state officers of the women’s. auxiliary and guild will be held Wednesday evening. They are: President, Mrs. George Hancock; first vice president, Mrs. R. H, Devine, Wahpeton; secretary, Mrs. R. J. Hax- by, Fargo; mission study secretary, Mrs. D. B. Bolt, Fargo; treasurer, Mrs. J. B. Wineman, Grand Forks; united offerings treasurer, Mrs. C. C. Gowan, Grand Forks; junior vice president, Mrs. W. E. Black, Grand Forks. The visiting delegates will be entertained by members of the Gethsemane par- ish. Miss Mary Smith of Minneapolis, educational secretary for Minnesota, will conduct the senior classes and Miss Frances Withers of New York city the junidr and: Sunday’ "school classes, "Morning sessjon will be from 10 o'clock to 12:30 and afternoon ses- sions from $ o'clock’ to’ 5:30. The morning will be devoted to the Chris- tian Nurture course, as taken up in the Sunday schools, and to confer- ences of the women’s auxiliary. The afternoons will be given over to the mission study classes, taking up the next book, “The Way and How of Mis- sions,” also to Classes for the ‘junior auxiliary. Maccabee Meeting. ‘The Women’s Benefit association of the Maccabees will hold a meeting this eveining in the Knights of Pyth ias hall, A nitmier of important bus- iness Matters’ Will be'discussed. Work Meeting. The Ladies’ Aid saciety of the Pres byterian church will bold a work meeting Thursday afternoon in the church chapel. Mrs. Price Owens, Mrs. Thomas and (Mrs. McCoy will be in charge. ' R. N. (Meeting. A regular meeting of the Royal Neighbors will be held Tuesday eve ning in the Knights of Pythias hall and will be preceeded by a potluck supper served at 6:30. All members are asked to attend. Visiting in Fargo. Mrs. Fred A, Copelin of Person cdurt, has gone to Fargo where she will visit friends during the week and while there will attend the institute conducted by the Episcopalian church guild and Woman's auxiliary. Nearly $70.00 were realized. The wom- en will use the money to buy com- forts for the boys. Club: Notes. The P.:E. O. Sisterhood was enter- tained this afternoon by Mrs.: Hollings- worth at- her ‘home - in» First street.’ An interesting feature of the program was the discussion of the work of police women by Mrs. P. J Meyer. The roll call was responded to by current events. 1 The Mothers’ Social club will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Wil- liam Harris in First street. To Make Hospital Supplies. In response to a communication re- ceived by the local branch of the W. Cc. T. U. from Mrs. Kate F. Wilder, superintendent of the W. C. T. U. work among the soldiers and sail it was decided to assist in the war work by making handkerchiefs, nap- kins and tray cloths to be used in the army hospitals. Used materials can be utilized for this purpose to ad- vantage. Anyone wishing to contri- bute to this work is asked to com: municate with Mrs. F, L. Watkins. > Reception for Nurses. A reception was held Saturday eve ning in the home of Mrs. Roy Cooh in Fargo, in honor of the eight nurs- es from that city, Lismarck, Grand Forks and Hillsboro, who leave Thurs- day for the government cantonments for war service. The honor guests were Mabel Olson, Mabel Farr, Ossa Opedahl, Clara Qualheim, ‘Marie Sten- seth, Fargo; Olga Engstrom, Bis- marck; Mary L. Hanson, Hillsboro; Miss Jerde of Grand Forks. Many of the friends of the nurses attended... tween the hours of 8 o'clock and 10. CHARAGILA FORMING, MOST IMPORTANT; + [ASY TO MAR SOUL Rev. George from the text: “Whose is this image and sup-r seription?”—St. Matt. xxii, at Si. George’s church Sunday said: “To each individual soul is give1 the task of graving its own imag: and superscription. The sculptor hew; the block of marble, rough and ang - lar, just torn from. the hillside, iniv a thing of beauty, chiseling out littie by little the ideal of his soul. In one of the chapels of St. Peter’s at Kome, just at the left of the great westera entrance to the nave, is a marvelous work of the great artist Michael An gelo. The cold marble is made to tel the impressive story of the death o. Christ, and of the mother’s grief in a most touching manner. The sword stab of the soul is shown and all of the poignant grief of the mother’s love stands revealed. Little by little, with chisel and mallet, the glorious deal of the artist’s 5rain found form ind meaning. We are called upon by Buzzelie preaching " Grateful for Patronage. The Woman’s Auxiliary to Company A, wishes to thenk the public for it: generous support of the food sal reld by them Saturday in Hoskins’ store and the management of the store for the use of the store room Shaky“ Nerves in PEARS PEARS PEARS *We-have a very choice stock of Winter Nellis Pears. Estra fine for pre- serves, sweet pickles, can- “Ring or other purposes. The price of these pears now at wholesale is $3.00. ~We will sell them while «they last for $2.00 a box. * Where you buy an equal amount of other goods, per box, $1.75. : The McConkey Commercial Co. {| 510 Br adway Phone 209 ‘he great master to transform the ideals of our life into character, and we do it as the artist did. We do not work with rough material, quarried from the ledge of rock, but with the solt pliable and pulsing human life. Nor are we called to form an image from the beginning. God created man, and the interesting and blessed state: ment is placed in the foreground of his revelation té us that this act, the MANTLE 1S NEWEST FUR COAT By BETTY BROWN. New York.—How ‘ that is a coat seems to have been the goal thi: attained y ere. the fur sash, completes the coat il- to make a cape’ lusion. In the mantle we discover the pos- designer set for himself, and | sibilities of adorning fur. The combin- so successfully in the fur} ation of two furs, such as seal and lors, Mantle shown here. The garment is a} skunk, as in this model, is one way cape in reality, but it is so shaped that to attain this effect, and the applica- it seems to fall into broad sleeves, and the heavy colar of long fur, with tion of heavy braid and chenille orna- iments is another. Mandan News Bureau This morning work in the Y. M. C. A. drive was started uader the chair- manship of William Ordway in the city of Mandan. He has sixteen as- sistants representative of the vari- ous vocations and a stringent cam- paign is on to raise an early allot- ment sum of $3,000 for the ¥.'M. C. ..Work for the soldiers who dar Chairman Janda of, the » Manda district has his ranks well ‘lined ‘up and the dattle is waging in’ full swing regardless, of the earliness of the campaign. The silver bullets are being exchanged tppidly and ofter many from the,sdme source. Tt he nieeting Saturday night. at the Com- mexcial club was .marked with ea- thusiasm and interest and there is nat’ the shadow of doubt but what Mandan, Morton county and the ea- tire. Mandan Slope district will reach its allotment carly’in the campaign for Y..M..C. A. ammunition. \ 0 Solenite Here—N. E. Schobe, popu- lar manager of the Lingeheimer Mer- cantile company ‘at Svulen, was in Mandan Saturday evening on business matters this morning. Rep. Wiley of Solen—L. D. Wiley, the distinguished Morton county repre- seiative, autoed to (Mandan Saturday from his home in the Solen locality to attend to businéss matters. Here from. Raleigh—Nels Miller of Raleigh, was in ‘the city yesterday looking- after business matters. Glen Ullinite Here—G. H. Pichell of Glen Lilin, was in Mandan yesterday attending to business matters. Hazenite in City—Oliver Heverson of Hazen ig in Mandan today looking after business. matte: Harvey Sever nH re—Harvey Sev- rin of the. Flasher ~ locality, is in ndan on. business. crowning one’of all his creative decds, presented man in the perf ct image. of God, and God himself pronounced. it wery rood. “It is only by! sia and evil that the divine image has bee so distorted and broken that it is difficult for the angels of God to see unde! h the overlappings of sin the outlines of the features of the Holy One. So casy is it to mar the divinest work. In the lady chapel of Ely cathedral the splen- did carvings have been rudely destroy- ed by some vandal hammer. It takes but a moment to destroy the beau'y and grace that long years of toil evolved. The rose comes to perf-c tion after many months of toil and tra- vail as the bush sucks from the cold earth, from rain and sunshine, from dew and warmth the elements that bring forth the perfect flower, ind a~ idle and wanton child crushes its pre cious beauty in a moment. The im- age of God, stamped by God's love in the heart of man has heen tramoled and destroyed by our wanton selfish- ness and evil desires. But the oui- line is there still, and by loving care and with God’s help we can restore its beauty. We are not left to our- selves in the work. The nerfect nat- tern of the Christ is ours. His humility His grace, His unselfish love shine be- fore our eyes, and His Holy Spirit is givea in bounteous measure to inspire our soul and guide our hand in the | | work. Whose image and superscrip- tion is stamped on our souls? Cae- sar's?.God forbid. With, all our knowl- edge of what Caesan’ means it cannot be that we.choose that. Christ's im- po inthe heart... Christ's life of wi- selfish love lived day;;by day. The. will, the angels of God’ see His image in our. \R0ul:” Ke ‘HALL HAS BORROWER (Continued from Page One) Walla took an envelpe out of his pock- et and showed Edwards a number of personal checks azgregating about $4100 and stazed. according to Edwards “tle was pounding Hall on the back to make him kick in” Attorney Stutsman, for Hall, odfect- ed to this repetition of Walla’s alleget remark, and the court sustained the objection. Aat that time, said Edwards, two de- posits hud been made aggregating $729.80. A portion of this sum, Ed- wards stated, later was found to repre- t 1918 business. October 25, said the witness, he went to Hall and show- ed, him a statement which indicated the department should have $3,477.55 “CEEP YOUR POWDER DRY, GIRLS!” — In giving these women the mot:) “Yeep your powder dry” the “lady instructor” doesn't mean the kind of powder you think she means. She is telling one of the groups of women riflemen formed in many italian ci- ties to wait until they see the whites of the Austrians’ eyes. To-Night T AOMISSION 10 and 20c COMING “THE LITTLE AMERICAN” on hand. Hall looke dit over, said he knew nothing about it, that he de- pended on the head of the department, and that Mr. Walla, who was away hunting, had the keys to the cash box. Brennan asked if Hall had not urged Edwards, too, to go hunting. Edwards replied that he could not say that Mr Hall had urged him. Safe Sealed. Edwards, Brennan and Thorberg, deputy state examiner, went to the secretary of state's office at noon Monday in the absence of Hall and Walla and sealed the safe. That eve- ning they returned, while Hall and Walla were in the office. “We Went to the safe and noticed that two seals were not on the safe,” said Edwards. “The third one, which had been placed on the combination, was: still on but barely attached. We asked THE STAR OF The BIRTH OF A NATION. [T2-Nisht HENRY B. WALTHALL —IN— The Saints Adventure -morrow GEORGE BEBAN in “His Sweetheart” PERFORMANCE BISMARCK also saw Mr. Hall in Baldwin the eve- ning of October 28, but that Mr. Hali did not appear in connection with the Joan or with any other financial mat- ters. Walla Obtained Loan. E. M. Thompson, cashier of the Bis marck bank, testified that Walla had obtained a loan October 29 on a per- sonal note for $1,200 which was to be signed by Thomas Hall and Alex Mac- donald, and that ‘Hall's signature was obtained October 30, Walla, he »tat- ed, obtained the money in bills the afternoon of October 29. Macdonald, he stated, had not signed the note. BOWMAN HAS BAND Obert A. Olson Manager of Re- cently Organized Aggregation Bowman, N. D., Nov. 12.—Bowman has a new band, headed by Obert A. Walla to open it. He did so. Our in- tention was to count the money on hand in the safe. After the safe was opened, Walla went to a cash drawer m his desk, took out a number of en- velopes with stamps, checks and cur- rency in them, and placed the cur- rency from the safe on top of it. Bren- Olson as manager, and with Fred Olson as director and Carl M. Hjer- leid as secretary and treasurer. nan asked Walla where the currency had come from, and Walla said from his desk. The total when counted still showed a shortage of $175.63. which Walla explained was accounted for by Carlson, a clerk in the depart- ment, having about that much, repre- senting receipts from October 23 to October 23, on his person.” ‘A. W. Carlson, placed on the stand Jater, testified he did not carry any a the receipts of the office away with im. Edwards continuing told of check- ing over deposits in the state treas- urer’s office and finding a consider- able sum in unidentified checks which he later discovered represented 1918 business. Hall later denied knowl- edge of 1918 applications, which were finally discovered by Thorberg of the state examiner's office. The safe in the secretary of state’s office again was sealed unon Edward's discovery that $200 worth of 1918 business had come in, and upon reopening the safe, | Edwards alleged, the amount waica should have accompanied these appli- cations was not to.be found. ‘There were found applications covering $108 of current business, but no money was attached. The safe in Hall's Private office, which also had been Sealed, was. onened and found to con- tain three silver dollars. Considerable time was devoted to an effort to prove that the secretary of state’s monthly reports did not account for cash carried on hand. Stutsman, for the defense, contended the question arose largely over a dif- ference in methods of bookkeeping. Endorse Checks. A. W. Carlson and Harold Wright, employes of the office, told of endors- ing checks drawn in their favor by Mr. Hall, at the request of Mr. Walla. state owe dthem nothing and — that should draw checks in their favor, and that they had received no proceeds from these checks. Carlson said he handled the cash October 29 and put it all in the safe; that he did not have in his possession the $175 which Walla was alleged to have credited him with Martin Thompson, another employe, told of endorsing two checks drawn by Hall in his favor. The secretary of state, he said, owed him no money, and he drew nothing from the checks, one for $125 and the other for $2: whieh he endorsed and returned to Hall. No Currency Listed. Miss Margaret Wynkoop testified that she attended to listing of checks and drafts and the making of deposits, but that no currency had been brought to her to deposit until October 30. She never saw currency listed or heard of its being deposited. Frank Garnier, a Norton township farmer, who said he had voted three or four times for Mr. Hall, told of a transaction in cattle which he had with the secretary of state and Mr. Walla during the past summer. C. H. Olson, secretary of the Automobile Mutual Insurance Co. identified a check for $71.44 which he had given Hall in payment for a life insurance policy and which had been deposited wit hthe state treasurer to the credit of the automobile registration fund. Mary Parsons of the secretary of state’s office told of having listed checks and drafts for deposit while; employed in the automobile registra- tion department last summer but said she did not know what became of the currency, if any came into the office.| Miss Edna ‘McMahon testified briefly. M’Donald a Tartar. Alex MacDonald of Glencoe proved a tartar for the state. He denied any knowledge of recent efforts on the part of Hall to borrow money or ne: gotiate u note, and declared Hall nev- er had attempted to borrow any money from him. He was promptly, dismissed. T. W. Streeter, cashier cf the Farmers’ State bank of Baldwin, told of an alleged effort of Mr. Walla on Sunday evening, October 28, to negotiate ‘a loan, and of cashing Loth admitted that the secretary oi, here was no particular reason why he; ARE OVERLOOKED Negligence in Studying ‘Rules by’ Players and Officials, COACH CAN TEACH SO MUCH Knowledge of Rules Would Have Made ‘ast Year's Yale-Princeton Game Much Closer Struggle—Errors of Officials Two vital points are often over- looked in the preparation of n football squad for its big games which not only may prove responsible for the winning or losing of these games, but which also causes the player to lose much of the after benefit to be derived from his participation in football while in school or college, 4 The two vital points are negligence in studying the rules of the sport, with t Its accompanying code, and the failure of the conch to impress upon the play- ers the fact that he can only teach them so much football, that thelr status as players is only to be above the av- erage, when they think beyond the coaching and thus reach a state of proficiency in play as well as confi- dence in themselves and their abilities which, after all are the main factérs in the best work of any player. When a player does not know the rules he is no more likely to help win games than the lawyer trying a case who has avoided studying the law gov- erning the case, writes Sol Metzger. in Pittsburgh Dispatch. Last year the Yale-Princeton game should have been much closer struggle than it was. Both teams were about equal in play- ing ability but the Princeton eleven, if it did know the rules, gave away any chance it had for the game when it failed to catch one of Yale's kickoffs. Both teams have equal rights to the ball on a kickoff and all football men at the game were amazed to behold a Princeton eleven in its last game watch the Yale eleven kickoff and then come down the field and recover the ball near the Princeton goal line, An Official’s “Boner.” For some unknown reason this rule, which makes a team onside on a kick- off or kick from a fair catch, is often- est neglected by coaches and players. Even officials are not always clear on this point. Witness several years ago when West Virginia was playing Ge- neva, Twice the West Virginia team kicked off to Geneva recovering the ball back of the Geneva goal line for a touchdown. In ench case the referee called it a touchback, and a touch- back it remained. Needless to say such an official was never used again, for one so {ignorant of one of the primary ules of the game fs not going to be used by teams which want a square deal all the way through. A similar ignorance of the rules on the part of Indiana against Purdue in 1912 gave the latter a one-sided vic- tory. Purdue made several fair catch- es during the play and once pulled from a fair catch formation to the side of the field. The Indiana team did not know the Purdue players were onside on this play and were much upset be- cause the officials called it a touch- down when a Purdue player caught the punt and ran over the line for a touch: down, ROYAL ARCH MASONS Aregular meeting of Bismarck Chap- through their Eismarck correspondent a check for $800 drawn to the favor of E. M. Walla by the Hanson-Holid:y Co. of Baldwin. He testified that Le ter No. 10, Royal Arch Masons, will be held at the Masonic Temple on TWO BIG POINTS at 7:15 COMING “THE LITTLE AMERICAN” WAR Y DRIVE IS ON IN SIKTH DISTRICT (Continued trom Page Ore) He loved you for the love you gave him. Now he is gone, or is going away. It is right that he should go. It is God's will that he should go. He goes to de- fend you whom he loves against those that would rape and rob and kill; that would make this land of ours a sham- bles and a shame; that would make the words “life, liberty and the pur- suit of happiness,” a bloody sneer against the vast background of time. And now as he goes, you must say to him, “God bless you and bring you safely back to us!” . . . You kiss, . + + Your hand lingers in his—lin- ‘gers, quivering—and then withdraws. . .. And he has gone. He has left you. For a time he has gone from your life and you from his. Temptations Many. He will be exposed to many tempta- tions—even as would you at his age. Many men and women will try in many ways to tempt him to do tie things that he should not. Life is life; and to be human and young, i3 to be all that the words human, and young mean. But there is one way in which you can still be with him—by which the hand of yours that aided his baby footsteps—that helped him in his little lessons of primer and of arithmetic— that guided him past childish dangers —can still ‘redch’ out to ‘help ‘him. Better’ than we,’the Young Men's Christian, Association realizes the pow- er of evil associates, of rotten environ- ment, of sodden dangers that are bound to pitfall the road of those that are human and young. ‘These men want to give your boy the things that you, who love him, can no longer give him. They want to give him the loving care that you can no longer give him. They want to give him clean places to live in, clean books to read, clean games to amuse, clean music to hear and sing, clean drinks to drink, clean associations with which to, associate. They want ,to send him back to you as honest, a3 fearless, as gentle, as clean as when he left you. Want It For ‘Vour Boy. To give him these things, (his at- tention, this love, this care, will take money. These people that weuld do it, do not want your money only that it may be spent in caring for your boy. They can now do what you no longer can. Will you help them to do this thing? Or will you, now that your hoy has gone far away, turn your hack and leave him to be stained, and coars- ened and corrupted in the hands of ‘hose who would exploit him in sin for profit, and in corruption for a price? Evil women, rotten men, and the counterfeit joys that dwell in the glit- tering hell holes where rum distorts the brain and stimulates the body, be- set the path of every young male hu- man being in the world. Protect your boy. from these things now. Or else don’t blame him too harshly if a different boy comes back to you from the boy who went away. ABERDEEN GIRL DIES Exploding Gas Grate at Los An- geles Kills Instantly Aberdeen, S. D., Nov. 12.—Judge and Mrs. A. W. Campbell have been ad- vised by Mrs. Ed Taylor, a former ,, Aberdeen resident, of the death of her daughter, Avis, aged 15, who was in- stantly killed when the gas grate in the Taylor home at Los Angeles ex- ploded, imbedding a piece of steel in the girl’s head. We make a specialty of serving parties after dances. Allen’s Cafe, 116 Fifth street. 119 lwk MOTHERS, 0 THS— When the Children Cough, Rub Musterole on Throats and Chests No telling how soon the symptoms may develop into croup, or worse. And then’s when you're glad you have a jar of Mus- terole at hand to give prompt, sure re- lief. It does not blister. As first aid and a certain remedy, Musterole is excellent. Thousands of mothers Feow pas Go) should keep a in use, for instant use. i, is the remedy for adults, too. Re- lieves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, head- ache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, chilblains, frosted feet and colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). — Wc and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50. Tuesday evening, November 13, at 8 o'clock, PARC sar