Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FOUR BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE. THE TIRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck.! N. D., as Second Class Matter. ISSUED EVERY DAY GEORGE D. MANN, Editor G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative. NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHL CAGO, Marquette Bldg.; BOSTO 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresge Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber | Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively | eutitled to the use for republication 0! all news credited to it or not other wise credited in this paper and also he local news published hergin. All rights of republication of special i ches herein are also reserved. MBMPER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIR- CULATION. © SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE ee: ADVANCE Daily, Morning and Sunday by ‘arrier, per month $ 7 Daily, Morning, Evening and Sun- day, by Carrier, per month. . “Daily, ‘Evening only, by Carrier, per month .. Daily, Mvening and Sunday, pe . month Morning or [ve North Dakota, one year re Morning or Evening by mail out- side of North Dakota, one year, 6.00 Sunday, in Combination with Evening or Morning by mail, one year . | IN 90 ing by M WEATHER REPORT“ For twenty-four hours ending noon, Nov. 28. Temperature at 7 a... Temperature 2( noon . Highest yesterday . Lowest yesterday Lowest last night .. Precipitation . é te —_—_— Forecast. For North Dakota: Generally fair tonight a ursday; warmer tonight south portion: colder Thursday north and west portions. Lowest F Temperatures Fargo .... 16 Williston 20 Pierre . 24 Bt. Paul . 4 Winnipeg Helena ‘Chicago Kansas City . San Krancjaco. . ORRIS W. ROBE Meteorologist. There is an imperative need of co- ordinating all war relief measures so| ‘aa te eradicate waste and prevent du- * plication, The mails are loaded with ‘many amd divers schemes. Some of . Utem are geduine, but others are filmsy vagaties. hy Demands we growing and multiply-) ing’ until tlie\ average. citizen is con- * fused and wunned. He is generous , and ‘patriotic, desiring to assist every | worthy project. : ‘There’ should he a central body, clearing house as itwere, for all _ relief measures, Fath appeal should hear the seal ot anal of such an organization. NX Any fraud or deception\will have al bad effect on all worth | order to keop the publie\y Present state of response, een to guard againy all ill-| advised and inappropriate wy relief. oh ‘The best boly The Tribune sweat &$ a clea:ing house is the Na- tional Pet Cross society. Its puryose is unimpeachable and its recomm n- | dation would be ali sufficient. | RETUR) THANKS, Tomorrow will .e ow first Thanksgiving. The nation never Naged more the guiding power of a divh, Providence. May an infinite efficacy viajize every prayer offered up throusouyt she length and breadth of the (nitea States for a peace with victor, any with honor. Any other peace wuyq be worse than defeat—it would b bondage. here is much to be thankful for. war The enemy has been turned at the Pjave. In France, probably due ir Some measure to America’s interven. tion, the Hindenburg line has been twisted. ar away in the Holy | veg of our allies are triumphing in| A. D. 1913, and this glorious war to make the world| Office of the revister of safe for democracy. May this Thanks. giving be made brighter by the over- whelming defeat of the cruel Moham. medan. Because the nation is in war is more 400r of the court house reason than ever that the nation re-| 2i™arek, im the county turn thanks to the Creator. our war preparations have been un. tainted by fraud and scandal duty to civilization, we have moved forward swiftly to take our place in \to give th , dred other relief measures directly or | | may never pel |of the controversy. I “| signed by said and, the] Wepp, a So far As al mighty nation quickened to a sense of | ‘2@ day of sale. every man at the front may have that sustaining force necessary. It is gen- erally estimated that it takes six men to support one soldier at the front. Let us rejoice and be thankful that} health and vigor enable us at home ervice. America is thankful today because) her people responded so loyally to the Red Cross, to liberty loans, to ~M.C. A. and to a hun-| activities indirectly connected with this great truggle against an autocratic mili- tarism. War has not been an unmitigated evil. Every cloud has @ silver lining. | ‘The United States has profited already by the lessons imposed. There is more thrift in the land today. A deeper realization of the great moral issues is evident. Commercial life has been revolutionized over night and we do would have precipitated near-revolu- tion. Extravagance in the operation of railroads and the conduct of cor- porate affairs has heen largely elim- inated. Even when peace is restored, business wil) never return to the old way—it wil have found a better and more su!stantial modus operandi. Patrotism has lost most of its ab- stract qualities. It is a living, vital-| izing convic ion leading men to die fof the nation with a devotion that is traditional in American annals. Lots to be thankful for? Indeed A nation has found itself. 5 aroused, from sodden leth- argy induced by years of easily accu- mulated wealth. It has shown that the spirit of the fathers is not dead. tates can practice again the) ons of denial that laid the) of the republic back in the Pilgrim days to the end that liberty sh from the earth. s Ss United ame | Whale meat in the Frisco market| has risen to 22% cents per pound.| Somebody cornered whales? THE KEPT PRESS. is a kept press in North What League leaders have Deen eager to! apply this title to any newspaper that had the temerity to disagree with of, their socialism and) some phas paci ‘an *4phe last #4Wi weeks there have been developmentssit the staté-house which rai: the issye,,“What is a kept press?” i It is painfully evident that all league papers refuse to publish Justice Rob- inson’s weekly letters. Justice Robin- son shared honors with Governor Fra-| zier as far as the volume of vote goes and should by all the rules of the! game have an even break when it} comes to publicity. The Tribune publishes his letters each week. jen What is the kept press?” ;Becgntly, State Auditor Kositzky re- jto tha traveling expenses of the jubtebs ‘of the ‘supreme court without an-itemized statement. The story appeared in The Tribune. | Hardly a league paper printed it and none printed the state auditor's side The Tribune printed both sides—| Langer’s and Kositzky's. “What is the kept press?” Recently the ‘state auditor refused to allow a bill contracted by the attor- ney general for a survey for tax pur- Doses, No league paper published the re- fusal of the Nonpartisan league state auditor to allow this account. The Tribune published the without comment. “What is the kept press?” news NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That that certain mortgage, executed and! “clivered by Frank H. Warner and Es- ‘ella A, Warner, his wife, mortgagors, tore H. Clague, mortgagee, dated the ee iy of May, A. D. nineteen hun- ie L \( thirteen and filed for record | of ihe “dice of the register of deeds n! North ee y of Burleigh, and state of | VtkOW on the 9th day of May, recorded in book 107 page 217, and as- r{A. D. 19103, a of mortgages, strument in ated the cay of August, | ‘led foFeecord in said [27th day of August, A. Reus Om the! | recorded in book 110 of a \on page 168, will be foreclosi -| sale of the premises in such mga at the font | | and hereinafter described, at in the citvor of Burleigh + at the hour the and state of North Dakota of 2:15 o'clock p. m., on greater self-denial at home, so that € Attracti things calmly today that yesterday | | case is of long standing or recent d velopment, whether it is present ‘Fairand Warmer” and Warmer,” the farce elass ason and of a good ten sea- sons before it, the finest thing Avery wrote, and money-maker Selwyn & Company e era produced, will be presented by Selwyn & Com t the Auditorian on Thankegivin at. The fame of t rollicking farce of Temperature and Temperam rad over the country within the J six weeks of ils spectacular .engag' Hopwood ever on at the Bism the best}, Thanksgiving Night arck Auditorium z, Ee oe ment at the Eltinge theatre, New York, and the demand for it came with increasing avidity from east, north, south and west. The continues jation of the New York ¢ ed the out-of-New York be and Warmer” was all thi its sponsors claimed for it, and, anythi more, Its stay of e' month in Chicago, provided any cor- roboration that may hav been needed. It will be produced here with an ideal company of farceuns. Disconcerting Woman Undergoes the Ordeal of Cross-Examination With Ap- parent Candor FROM MOMENT OF CRIME HER MEMORY IS BLANK Fails to Amplify Story When Led by Recital of Incidents vent: v. 28.—Four, hou 1s examination’ iby. District. Attorney’ Chas. 18. Weeks’ ‘to: Blancha De from the story she told from stand yesterday in her 1 on a charge of murder former husband, Joha L. De Her answers were deliberate and were frequently made after pauses in h she seemed to giving them deration or ing to freshen her recollection. Her attitude of com- plete self-possession notwithstanding the unusual nature of the examination she was undergoing, a subject of comment among the spectators who crowded the trial chamber. Witness Undisturbed a his questioning had been proc g in a rather tedious vein for some minutes, the district attorney veered unexpectedly, and, in an abrupt tone, asked: ‘When did you first know you had shot your husband?” The question failed of its evident purpose of taking the witness un- es, for she looked sieadily at the prosecutor, deliberated fer onds, aad finally answere. Once, wh FKEE TO ASTHMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Ti We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense, No matter whether your occasional or chronic Asthma, you should send for a free trial of our method, No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or ‘pation, if you are troubled with sthiia, our method shoa!d relieve you of December, A.D. 1 7, to amount due upon s: Mortgage on| > day The premises de, scribed in said mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are promptly. We yspeci: want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms\of inhalers, douches, opium vreparatious, fumes, “patent smokes,” | ficulti Question Fail to Lead Madame De ‘Saulles into. an Ambush “Why, — tr. Wright told me.” “Did he tell you, you had shot him in the back?” was the next question. “J don’t remember,” the witne: answered after a pause. There was a reversion to this point some minutes liter. when, the pros- eculor asked: “When did you first kn6w that your husband was shot in the back—he was, wasn’t he?” “Was he?” questioned Mrs. De Saul- les in return. m asking you,” urged Weeks. “Why, it was in court last week— when I heard Marshall ‘Ward: testify,” id: the defendant finally.’ : “Marshall Ward was an_ intimate friend of De Saulles and was called ¢by. the: prosecution as’ a witness last week. Recalls Nothing Of the actual shooting, Mrs. De er Saulles maintained, her claim thag she s. could recall nothing—that her mem- ory failed to serve her in relation to what had happened after her divorced husband told her she could not have her son, for whom she declares she went to De Saulles’ home, the night of the tragedy. She clung to her pre- vious jon that not until her awakening in the Nassau county jail , Some days later did she oath become! rational. With Justice Manning's permission, the district attorney sought to assist the witness by asking Whether she did not remember having; told officers who arrested her that théy would find the revolver with which’ she. did the shooting lying near a hat rack in the | hall of the De Saulles’ home;, that the following morning she wrote a check for $14,000 with which ‘to bail our her maid, Suzanna Monteau, who had been held as a material witness, and that soon after the shooting she thought of such things as “lawyers, {aids and money.” On none of these points, however, was the witness avle to amplify her story, she declared A large number of _ letters written by Mrs. De Saulles to her sband during the time she alleges he was “indifferently neglectful” and |i vaithful to her were read into the record by Di ct Attorney Weeks during the cross-examination. Endear- and warm professions of love contained in them were empha- I by the lawyer as indicating that De Saulles’ alleged martial dif- did not weigh so heavily upon e claimed in her direct testi- Heart Broken but Silent “My heart was broken, and I would not let him know—I never told any- one,” explained Mrs. De Saulles when asked why she wrote the love letters if her relations with her husband were as unhappy A humorou: ‘BUZZELLE STIRS would mark the beginning of the in- troduction of expert testimony in sup- port of his client’s claim of mental derangement at the time of the shoot- ing. MEET AT PARIS FOR EXCHANGE OF PLANS Colonel House Represents United States at Conference of Cab- inet Chiefs VENEZELOS OF GREECE NOW FACE IN COUNSEL Paris, Nov. 28.—David Lloyd George, the British premier, accompanied by Foreign Secretary Balfour and other British officials and Premier Venizelos of Greece, arrived in Paris yesterday. Sir Eric Campbell Geddes, first lord of the admiralty; Admiral Sir John Jellicoe, chief of the naval staff; Earl Reading, the lord chief justice, and General Sir William Robertson, chief of staff at army headquarters, were the other members of the British party. They w met at the station by Premier Clemenceau, former Pre- mier Painleve and Stephen Pichon, the minister of foreign affairs of France. ITALY REPRESENTED Paris, Nov. £8.—Baron Sonnino, the Italian foreign minister, arrive] at Pa this morning. The Italian pre- , Vittorio Orlando, with other of- ficials left Rome for. Paris last night. ‘They will represent Italy at the inter allied conference. BRADDOCK ITH LOYALTY FEAST Patriotic Villagers and Farmers | for Miles Around Join in Demonstration Braddock, N .D., Nov. 28.—Bradddcx ion of a.visit, of Rey,.Gegrge rector of, St.. George's at Bis- pita), city’s pi- | oneer Four Minute men, key, Buzzelle, coming under the:auspices of the Brad; |dock Four Minute, men,; addressed a Red Cross rally in the afternoon, and in the evening was the ‘principal speaker at a big loyalty meeting held under the direction of ‘the local Four Minute men. Iarmers came in from miles distant, and at least 60 cars were parked around the Braddock hall, while the large room was filled almost to suffocation when the «meeting be- gan. Community singing: was led by Supt. G. B. Mayer-Oakes‘of! the: Brad- dock public schools, ‘a recently ‘natur+ alized Briton, and’ a mélequariette gave an artistic rendition of'Teénting on the Old Camp Ground.” Rev. 'Bitz- zelle’s address was a, masterpiece and the enthusiasm, was intense. _ GERMAN EVANGELICAL PREACHER AND BUSINESS MAN HELD FOR SEDITION (Special to The Tribune) Mandan, Nov. 28:—Rev. Sontana,} pastor of the Cerman Evangelical church at Solen, on trial before Unit- ed States Commissioner Lanterman in this city for seditious utterances from his pulpit at different times dur- ing the past few months, was at mid- night tonight held to the U. S. Court for trial under bonds of $5,000. T. A. Schreiber of the same community, was held to the federal grand jury under $1,000 bonds, while the com- plaint against a third party, Henry Ingleter, also of Solen, was dismissed by the commissioner. Schreiber is one of the leading business men of the town. The inquiry was prolonged and of a searching character and left little doubt of the culpability of. the two parties held for final hearing. BARBED-WIRE BARRIERS SURROUND WATER FRONT! New York, Nov. 28.—Patrol of the water front zones forbidden to alien enemies will be taken over immedi ately by United States troops. This decision was reached today. Parriers of barbed wire are to be erected, beyond which no one can pass without proper credentials. There will be two series of wire barricades, and even if any one should succeed in eluding the outer sentinels, the authorities believe he could not pass ‘the inner line. The fences will be built in front of the piers with gate- the oc | *| sympathy WEDNESDAY, NOV. 28, 1917 TRIBUNE FINANCIAL DEPARTMENT | ' RAILROAD STATUS IS DISTURBING FACTOR High Grade Transportation Ner- vous and Effective Tendency Downward BOND MARKET MOVES ALONG WITH STOCKS GRAIN VALUES MEET WITH SHARP SET BAGK Corn Cent Off in Last Fifteen Minutes of Trading on Trans- portation Rating. OATS CONTINUES ITS AVIATION FEATURES New York, Nov. 27.—The uncertain status of the transportation situation resulting from the prospective pool- ing of the eastern railroads to meet war emergencies again constituted the chief deterrent in today’s stock mar- ket. High grade rails were offered at extreme concessions of one to al- most three points, ‘their heaviness gradually provoking one to two point reactions in prominent industrials. General news of the day was rather favorable, railroad earnings taking a moderate turn for the better, money evincing futher ease and lires or Ital- ian exchange making additional re- ‘covery from its recent acute depres- sion. Restricted Trading Trading was restricted at all times, however, and mainly of professional origin, this being especially observed in the relative activity and strength of the more speculative issues. Kquip- ments and the war group were later inclined to throw off the inertia of rails, but rallies were little more than tentative on indifferent support. Unit- ed States Steel steered an extremely narrow course between 99 and 97, rallying only a small fraction and fin- ishing at a net loss of 1.4 points. Re- lated stocks moved in the same ir- regular manner, most of the leaders recording lowest prices just before (the close. Some of the motor shares proved an exception to the general rule and ‘shippings and tobaccos also hardened |at times with coppers and the leather !and paper issues, but only a few of these gains were retained in more than slight measures. Sales amounted to 525,000 shares. Bond market With the exception of Mercantile paper 6's the bond market moved in with stocks, irregular changes being mainly downward. Lib- ‘erty issues were moderately active, the 4’s between 97.76 and 98.02 and enjoyed a genuine feast of loyalty,on) the 3%4’s between 99 and 99.14. Saleg ‘97 \ (pay, value) approximated $4,375,010 [nited States bonds (old issues) were unchanged on call. H NEW YORK STOCKS American Beet Sugar ......... 74 American Can .. » 36% American Smelting and Refining 78 American Tel. and Tel. sees 16656 American Zinc ..... 134% Anaconda Copper 58% Atchison ........ . 84 | Baltimore and Ohio -- 0% Butte and Superior 17% California Petroleum . 12% Canadian Pacific . 134% Central Leather ... Chesapeake and Ohia Chicago, Mil. and St. Paul ‘€hinovCopper ...... aes 42;., ‘Colorado Fuel and Iron . 35%) Crucibae Steel ..... .. 553 Cuba Cane Sugar 1 Erie . 14% Great No 3 27% Great Northern pfd. ... 9) Insporation Copper .. ann 44 Int. Mer. Marine pfd. ctfs ... 95% Kennecott Copper ...... 3355 Louisville and Nashville 116% Mexico Petroleum ... 79% Miami Copper .. 28% Missouri Pacific . 23% New York Central . 69% Northern Pacific 84% Pennsylvania ... 46% Ray Consolidated Copper . 22% Reading . 69% Republic 785% Southern Pacific . 8216 Southern Railway 24% Texan: Co. .52. 143% Union Pacific 114% U. S$. Industrial Alcohol N2% United States Steel .. +. 97% Utah Copper 8% Mary Pickford in “The Little Amer- ican” at the Bismarck theater tonight. Webb Erothers, Johnson's and A. W. Lucas. will be closed all day Thanksgiving. ‘Chicago,- Nov. 27.—Announcements that thereafter corn and oats would have the same preference as wheat in the movement of railway freight led today to a sharp set back of grain values. Corn finished heavy, 4c net lower to 4c advance, with Jan. 120% to 120% and May 118% to 118%. Oats held a net gain of % to %c. The | outcome for provisions ranged from 30c decline to a rise of 72c. Breaks in the price of corn took place chiefly in the last 15 minutes of trading, and seemed the direct re- sult of word that ‘the railroads had been ordered to put all cereals on the identical basis of precedence accorded to wheat. As such a method of hand- ling grain is expected to cause a ma- terial increase of arrivals at the lead- ing primary markets, heavy selling ensued, and support was withdrawn. Unseasonable warm moist weather had previously tended to make corn sympathize with advances in the oats market. New high price records for the sea- son were reached by oats before the government notice was received that oats like wheat would be rushed for- ward by the railroads. Declines from top quotations of the day, however, were in rapid progress when the ses- sion closed. In provisions, the main factor was a lack of offerings. CHICAGO GRAIN. Option. Open. High. Low. Close. } Corn— a Jan: ... 121% 122% 120% 120% May |.. 119% 129% 118% 118% * Oats— Dec. ... 71% B% 1% 1% ‘ May... 70% 71% 69% 69% MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN. Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 27.—Wheat’ receipts, 208 cars, compared with 411 a year ago. n Corn—No. 3, yellow, $1.90@2.06. * Oats: , white, 705%c@71 %c. Flax—$3.23% @3,2514 Flour unchanged. Shipments 162.946"; barrels. é 1: Barkey+$1.08@1.35. Rye—$1.77@1.78. Bran—$35.00@36.00. _ OMAHA uve STOCK Omaha, Nebr., Nov. 27.—Hogs—Pe- ceipts, 8,000; steady; heavy $17.40@ 17.70; mixed, $17.50@17.60; light, $17.40@17.70; pigs, — $12.00@19.00; bulk, $17.50@17.60, Cattle—Receipts, 11,000; steady; native steers, $9.00@15.00; cows and heifers, $6.25@9.25; canners, $5.25@ 6. stockers ‘and. feeders, $6.00@ 12.00; calves, $9,50@]2.5u; bulls, | stags, 'etc., 5@RD0. ‘Shéep—Receipts, 16,000; stea lamas,” 10c @@aky Aower; < yearlinsa $11.50@13.25; wahere, -$11.00@ 12,405 Steet $9.50@$1060; : lanibs, $16.00 ST. PAUL, HOGS—Receipts, 12,000; ‘steady and Se higher; range, $16.75@17.05; bulk, ’ $16 85@16.95, 7 CATTLE—Receipts, 4,500; killers 10¢ to 15¢ lower and :25c to 75¢ lower for the week, with steers at $5.0@ 15.50; cows and heifers, $6.00@8.00; calves, steady, $5.00@12.00; stockers and feeders, slow and 25c to $1.00 lower for the week, at $5.00@10.00. SHEEP—Receipts, 500, steady; with lambs at $8.00@16.00; wethers, $7.00 @13.00; ewes, $5.00@10.50. CHICAGO. HOGS—Receipts, 35,000; — slow; bulk $17.35@17.85; ligut $16.60@17.75; mixed, $17.15@17.9: heavy $17.20@ 17.99; rough $17.20@17.40; pigs, $13@ 3 1 # | CATTLE—Receipts, 25,000. weak; native beef steers $7.30@14.75; west- ern steers $6.15@13.60; stockers and feeders $6.00@11.10; cows’ and heif ers, $5.00@11.65; calves $7.50@13.50. SHEEP—Receipts 14,000; steady; Werhers $8.75@12.70; lambs. $12.50@ 117.00. i When Away — SS he Bank with the Cloc. From Home situated in the county of Burleigh, and | °C» have Yailed. We want to show i ways at f it saterses § : : : n - agi Wl oeeedings when; »| Ways at frequent intervals. - of the wideflung battle state of North Dakota, and deseribed | °Y"'Yone at yur own expense, that this | PrOnert ns Pit | bale For the present the barbed wire bar. ‘When you are away from home you will always democracy. as follows, to-wit: | new method Is designed to end all dif- that Dis rict Attorney Weeks turned riers will enclose small areas, but have cause for ¥ Out of prayer and communion to-|,,1%° Northeast quarter (NEY) | ie breathify, all wheezing and all Justice Manning and said later, it Is expected, they will be ex: Worry tegarding the safety of your » terrible paroxysms at once and , 4 tended toi include the entire zone for all time. fixed by presidential decree as the boundary of the area forvidden to enemy aliens. section twelve (12) in township one morrow should come a deeper sense! hundred thirty-eight (138) north, range 5) west of the fifth| of duty, a more absolute consecra-| seventy-five (75) This free offer is too important to tion of men and resources to the cause| principal meridian, and containing one | neglect a single day. Write now and of this worthy war. {hundred sixty (160) acres then hegin the method at once. Send y more or Thousands of Americans will spend [°S*,2¢¢ording to the government sur-| 10, MOney. | Simply mail coupon be- i [vey theres | low. Do it tod: their first Thanksgiving in foreign; There will be due on such mortgage lands, possibly under gruelling fire.|at the date of sale the sum of; FREE ASTHMA COUPON The Atserican sympathy goes out 10/3187481. |] FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room them and our courage and self-denial | Ded a Bismarck, North Dakota, hae ands Racoon St Mtr Gti : | this 27th day of October, 1917. uffalo, N.Y oor or Ha em in this hour of! SEREEN L. WEBB, Send free trial of your method to: preme trial. | Assignee of the Mortgage. There will be vacant chairs at many | H.C. BRADLEY, an American table. These should| Attorney-for Mortgagee, serve to emphasize the necessity for “The jury scems to be tired “You "t blame the jury—onyone would be tired,” said Mrs. De Saulles | in a low tone. you mean that I am tiresome?” asked Attorney Weeks. “Yes” answered the witness can- didly. valuables unless they are placed beyond the risk of loss by being deposited in a fire-and burglar proof vault. Johnson’s and A. be closed: all day Webb Brothers, W. Lucas _ will Thanksgiving. This bank rents Safe Deposit Boxes in its vault for $2.50 a year and provides absolute zafety for valuables of every description. Thefir st National Bank ——— BISMARCK. N.D. Ss Prosecutor Explains When Weeks explained* that he understood he was not exactly “enter- taining,” but that his duty demanded that he make the examination he was conducting, Mrs. De Saulles apologet- ically sad she meant “no disrespect.” Mrs. De Saulles’ examination com- pleted, her atorney, Henry, A. Utter- hart, tonight declared that tomorrow Bismarck, North Dakota. 10-29: 11-5-12-19-26: 12-3-6¢