Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FOUR BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE. ; | THE TRIBUNE (ie iiise amiaon te omer tay i x, | im the trial of a case at Grand Forks Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, | siiel aa cbrewing company: was.in- N.D,, as Second Class Matter, _")!" “hich & i company ISSUED EVERY DAY | volved under the bone-dry law, struck |out at one swoop forty-seven of the GEORGE D. MANN, - - - Sditor’ torty-eight specifications of the plead- G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, _| ings, he performed an act which great Special Foreign Representative. ly simplified the situation. NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHI-) Obviously there was but one issue CAGO, Marquette Bldg.; BOSTON, | jn the case. It is not material whal Bldg, MINN Ee aeai6 sere that issue war, but of the counts Exchange. | eliminated by the court it is obvious MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press is exclusively | warding or helpful purpose entitled to the use for republication of any other reason than to make @ all news: ctedllcd 18 it OF nok other | big case out of one of really little wise credited in this paper i alsoj| Wars or for ‘that they were introduced for no for- The Great American NES, AND Tuts STUFFING AND’ GRAN Is FiNe. WARMED OVER. ( BELIEVE We A STILL Wave ENOUGH Y FOR TOMORROW, MAY All rights of republication of special | dispatches herein ure also reserved. [MBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIR- CULATION. HUN KAT ADVAN y, Morning and Sunday by rier, per month C ening and Sun- day, by Cartier, per month 90 Daily, Evening only, by Cari per month see eeeons 50 Joatiy, Evening and Sunday, per MONth .e sees sees eres oe 40 viorning or Evening by Mail in North Dakota, one year ...... Morning or Evening by mail out- side of North Dakota, one year, 6. Sunday, in Combination with Evening or Morning by mail, one year . SeGhieisieselyeoes 0.00 THE STATE'S OLDI NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ae Sie 4.00 THANKSGIVING. With more than a million men un- der arms , at the front, on the way or in training camps, and with tae coun- try in the grip of a great war, the pe- culiar circumstances of the present, ed with some Thanksgiving are reali; sense of shock. PAYABLE IN| ‘precedent which Judge Adimon has | pointed out there might not be less litigation but there would be much business and less necessity for courts of review to fill volume after volume wich extended argument and analysis lor the problems which come before |them and which they cansider it ne | cessary to review if for no other rea- ‘son than to show that they are not germane to the issues or relevant ‘0 |the case in hand. | The trouble is not one that lawyers [themselves are likely to correct, It lis their business to see that no stra-| | tegy is left to the imagination in the jtrial of causes which it is their pur 'pose to win ‘by all of the many re sources offered by legal contro versy. A reduction of pleadings to the act |ual issues by the courts themselves ; would save an immense wastage of | language and of paper used in making ; books, and Judge Amidon’s course in | the instance mentioned indicates that the courts have the matter in their But we are in this}own hands and may use it at discre- war and we are going to win it, and/ tion. it will-%e won with an expense of; men and money and of time also in) | An I. W. W. who is looking for sym all probability much less than enter! pathy and love would have some dif into present expectations. During the past few months this; nation has done wonderful things pa- tiently and in order. It as overcome a tradition established the binding force of law—that shall not engage in foreign complica- tions or mix in European versies, armed or otherwise. This rule | was broken out of a nec that its in, ce was practically ,! observed at ‘ail. Piracy and murda: on the open sea confronted us -and sulmission of fight were the alterna-| tives presented., This issue, however, | was soon lost sigh tof in the greater) one of making the world more safe for self government. been merged in another greater issue. Ai-a time of peril Lin- coln sail that this nation can not live half slave and half free. Can the world live under a system of middle-| a and civilization and age feudalism manhood survive is tha question now. The manner in which th i have been understood and me! remarkable. A year ago we met i army of suc meager proportions A when trouble ar necessary to call state guard the border and keep the line safe from invasion. troops to sode than over all of the prodlems in- volved in the preparation for the conflict over the water, involving mil lions of men and billions of money. The country has taken the emer- gency much in tue same manner that France met the war at the outset, not willingly but as a matter of course, knowing it was sure to come and knowing also that sooner or later the! German menace would break its leash. The young men tolled off for mili- tary duty accepted the service earn-| estly _ but without demonstration. There hasbeen none of the enthus- iasm growing out of the pure love of & fight. Those at home parted with them in the same solemn and even religious spirit. Copperheadism in any of its forms has shown itself in few and sporadic instances. An appropriation of a billion dollars & year ago would have been a stagger- ing proposition, no matter what the circumstance or purpose. A dozen bil lions u'ready spent, taxes and the thousand things which go with en- trance upon a great undertaking have ceased to be of more than accustomed contro-| Even this has | and still!dred thousand a year or better. e in Mexico it was, hammered There was more) of the grumbling and criticism over that epi-| Nellie, the I | ficulty in finding the right postoffice | address | From all that is toll Sy present in- ith almost| ications North Dakota is going to we | Bet through the winter several laps | ahead of southern California. It seems that there is a German sity so plain| language pulpit as wel las a German languago ‘pulpit as well as a German cloth it may, ybe said, however, that there are very few preachers engaged in that kind of busine: The treasury department has the names of four thousand well-to-do cit- izens who have incomes of a. hun- It is jall the. same with the -plutocrat and |the man in the trenches. Both will have ,to dig. According to that Berlin account | the first Americans in the trenches saues| Were attacked by an intense artillery ‘Tite ASSIStéd" Hy machine guns. They Wéte © ta ad? wit hand grenades, ae about! with gun butts and with bare fists. Consid- ering the rather mild extent of the | casualty list it must have been one most exciting affairs since utiful Cloak Model. The question of fuel for the north- west is not so much one of coal as of cars. But when the United States takes hold of the eastern roads and proceeds to operate them, and indi- cates by its actions that it is prepared to take over the other roads in the same way, the car problem suddenly becomes much less complicated. Hence Captain Laker is able to mod- ify his order and make everybody happy. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE BY ADVERTISEMENT. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That that certain mortgage, executed and delivered by Frank H. Warner and Es- tella A. Warner, his wife, mortgagors, to C. H. Clague, mortgagee, dated the 1st day of May, A. D. nineteen hun- dred and thirteen and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of the county of Burleigh, and state of | North Dakota, on the 9th day of May, A. D. 1913, and recorded in book 107 of mortgages, at page 217, and as- signed by said mortgagee by an in- strument in writing to Sereen L. Webb, dated the 18th day of August, A. D. 1913, and filed for record in said office of the register of deeds on the less volume to the record of court} SX ~ ar SIE ISS ——J =a Wl “TRANKSGIVING DINNER Home! fq RELIGIOUSLY OMY (Conunued from Page One) awful arbitrament cf world de- mocracy, yet the p'nch of poverty, business stagnation or retrensh- ment, or the sad casualties of the | firing line have not flaunted in | our faces the Prussian threat of “Deutchland uber alles.” Further, we shall be thankful in our fixed conviction that our liberties shall remain unmenaced, even though American blood be spilled in their. defence”. ae ' GN. Ke ‘ Secretary, Bis cial Club, VILLA BANDIT SCURE PaY TRAIN INTO DISASTER (Continued from Page One) federals from Juarez, cut the railroad | and federal telegraph Jines, and cap- tured many horses, gifles and oth | the elements on Monday, accoriling'to con- | firmed information which’ jwas’ ceived here late today, from “Mexico. The attack on th yistrain was said} to have oceurr cat iy Mocho, station, 35 miles nortfi;ef Chihuahua! City, where a large i@Vnamite mine was} placed under ‘a Fail, destroying the engine and tender and wrecking the pay train. General Eduardo Chavez, who was on the train enroute | from Chiahuahua City to Sonora, open- ed the door to discover the cause of the wreck when he was shot four times, one bullet penetrating his fore- head and three entering his body, ac- cording to-the reporis. Of his troop escort of seventy men, thirty escaped, including six wounded, who were brought to Juarez last last night and given treatment at the mil- itary hospital. On this train was said ‘to have been $50,009 in Mexico cur- rency and $10,000 gold, which was to have been paid to the troops along the road. These sums were seized | by the Villa forces. 1 After seizing the railroad station at Mocho, Villa was said to have placed an experienced railroad train dis- patcher in the telegraph office and had him report the line open at .hat point. This resulted in the train approaching j the station without suspicion. This is said to be an old trick of Villas. , CIRGOLI STUDI ARRESTS | SHOW WIDE PLOTTN (Continued from Italian armies by a pro-German peace at any price propaganda. BOSTON HUB OF INTRIGUE Boston, Nov. 28.—Agents of the de- icle. The belief was expected that sev- eral persons now under arrest for vio- lations of the draft law might be in- volved in the Lynn case. Machine Gun Story In connection with the report from Seattle that Italian leaders had told their followers that Boston police had been furnished with machine guns to quell food riots, it was recalled that state public safety committee equipped the police several months ago with rapid firers to safeguard the public inierests when the national guardsmen were called into federal service at the outbreak of the war. SCENE OF GOARY BATTLE (Continued trom Page Ore) ‘ed (to embrace an armigtice “on all the fronts of the belligerent countries,” it is. certain that the eBtente allies will give no heed to .the QNertures, either of the Bolsheviki, who comprise the radical section of the Russians who long have desired Rugsia to cease fighting, or of the Gefmans who for even a greater period ‘have been en- deavoring to put into Operation nego- i tiations for a peace that would prove a suitable one for themselves, and their, allies. uy ta Leaders et ful ‘That the Bolshoviki;Miaders are dis- trustful of the Germans} although they have agreed to enter into negotiations | for an armistice, is apparent from the! fact that Ensign Krylenko, the Bol- sheviki comander in chief, has order- ed, pending the conference, that there shall be no fraternizing.on the part of the Russians and Germans, and ad- vised vigilance and caution by the troops. Meanwhile the great inter-allied com ference was convened in Paris, and doubtless it discussed all phases of the tangled situation in Russia and will agree on some method to bring the disaffection to an end and permit of the Russian army taking up the gage of battle again, or of putting the Bol- sheviki element in the category of an ally of the gentral powers. In’Northern France On the fighting fronts in northern France, the battle between the Brit- ish and the Germans jfor points . = vantage around Cambrai. continued: throughout Tuesday night, but on Wednesday died down to somewhat small proportions. The Germans had brought up large numbers of reinforce- ments and the fighting for Bourlon village, the Pourlon wood and Fon- taine Notre Dame was waged with great biterness, the positions several times changing hands. Fast and northeast of Ypres violent artillery activity is in progress es- pecially on the sector of Passchen- daele, and it seems probable that an- other big battle in this region is brew- Int. ‘To the south, in the region of St. Quentin, north of the Aisne and in the vicinity of Verdun, there have moment. We have accepted the war} 97th day of August, A. D. 1913, and as a duty. That duty is the defense | recorded in book 110 of assignments, of self government and the continuing |0n page 168, will be foreclosed by a partment of justice here tonight con- been small infantry operations, with firmed the d losures in Seattle of the advantage resting with the French the existence of an ‘anarchistic plot troops. right of men and women to live their own lives in their own way. The Ger- man menace is not a European men- ace but a world menace. The war will end in the triumph of decent and orderly liberty throughout the world. There is no doubt about that. Many of the things we look forward to with apprehension will not come to pass. The allies a>road have greater need for our material resour- ces than for our blood, and tragedy in the latter sense may not come ai all or may come sparingly. Eut we will give both freely in the just cause. This holiday is one for optimism and courage. To this day we have done our duty, and we will do our duty to the end. Such is the inspir ing fact and prospect. The Italians are doing very well on their own front, but we have a few that we would willingly part with if they could he sacrificed to any ad- vantage in their own country. sale of the premises in such mortgage | and hereinafter described, at the front | door of the court house in the city of Bisnfarck, in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, at the hour , Of 2:15 o'clock p. m., on the 5th day | of December, A. D. 1917, to satisfy the ‘amount due upon said mortgage on | the day of sale. The premises de- | scribed in said mortgage and which ll be sold to satisfy the same, are ated in the county of Burleigh, and | state of North Dakota, and described |as follows, to-wit: | ‘The northeast quarter (NEY) of | section twelve (12) in township one | hundred thirty-eight (138) north, range | Seventy-five (75) west of the fifth principal meridian, and containing one hundred sixty (160) acres more or less, according to the government sur- vey thereof. | There will be due on such mortgage jat the date of sale the sum of | $1,874.81. ; Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, | this 27th day of October, 1917. SEREEN L. WEBB, Assignee of the Mortgage. H. C. BRADLEY, Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. 10-29: 11-5-12-19-26:12-3-6t | to seize foodstuffs in various parts of | the country. They also said that! Boston was believed to have been selected as the center of the intrigue. It was their opinion that the neighbor- ing city of Lynn was the general head- | quarters of the conspirators, although the ring leaders maintained their homes elsewhere. Evidence of a startling nature has been obtained, according to the fed- | eral officials, but has been withheld from the public pending the trial of three Lynn men who were arrested six months ago, charged with con- spiring to counsel young men against the selective service act. Conspiracy Widespread The defendants are Louis Galleano, | proprietor of a small newspaper called i | the Chronicle, and John Eramo and | Carlo Valdonicci. They are out on| substaniial bail. The case was to have been tried in October, but a | few days before the date set the trial was postponed on the grounds that the | government has obtained additional | important information. Federal agents said tonight that the evidence in-| volved alleged conspirators in various parts of the country, whose move- ments have been traced. Much of the information was obtained, it was said, The Italian Areas The Italians continue to hold ten- aciously to their northern front be- tween the Brenta and Piave rivers against the Austro German forces, who have heen unable in repeated at- tacks to gain additional Terrain. An armistice in order that they might | bury their numerous dead has been requested hy the Austrians but, owing to lack of faith in the enemy's in- tertions, the Italians refusedvto grant Major General Maurice, ‘chief direc- ‘tor of military operations atthe Brit- ish war office, on whose official state- | ments much importance is placed, an- nounces that the crisis in Italy has passed. Jerusalem is within sight of the British forces operating in Palestine, but Turks in force have been gathered about the city and it is not improb- able that a great battle will have to be fought for its possession. To meet the emergency the British are hur- riedly bringing additional men, guns and supplies. Twenty-one British merchantmen were sunk by mines or submarine last week—four more in),the aggre- gate, than were sent to the bottom the previous week. SAND: HA ; CORY NAAT (Continued from Page One) Baulles fired the shots and whether | De Saulles was facing her or had| turned away, the witness seemed con- fused. Previously she had said her mistress took the revolver from her pocket and fired in a deliberate man- ner; that she shot three times "and De Saulles did not move,” whereupon she fired twice more. Today she in- , dicated that the shooting was done in! ‘a flash}as though the defendant: was| { actuated’ by the sudden ‘inipulse. | “Hypothroid’’ Condition The testimony .of,,DriJ. Sherman Wright, Mrs. De Saulles’, physician | during her three months’ imprisoyy,| ment, and that. of, Doctors Jeliffe: and |. Johnson, all tended to show, she had } symptoms of “marked:hypothroad con- dition,” when they examined the de- fendant a few days after her arrest. The doctors said this disease is caused by an insufficiancy of the se tions of the thyroid gland in the blood stream. Without an ade-| quate amount of these secretions, | they declared, the vital’ processes of | the body are*retarded'‘and! the pa- tient’s mentat funetioning becomes impaired. ‘|!’ eae i contention “'thdt: ‘she! krrew nothing of her surroundings in the) jail until several days after, she shoot- ing.’ They..said that when ‘they ex- amined the defendant she seemed ir- rational and could not make coherent replies to their questions. Trial Resumed Friday When the trial is resumed on Fri- day morning, Henry A. Utterhart, Mrs. De Saulles’ atorney, is expected % have ready for submission to the alienists who are examined today a long hypothetical | question, the answers to which he believes will fur- ther strengthen his claim regarding Mrs. De Saulles’ mental condition. District Attorney Weeks has not yet indicated who he will call to testify | in the attack he is expected to make on the testimony of experts summoned by the defense. It is believed, how- ever, that the taking of testimony will be completed by the end of the week, provided Justice David F. Man- ning holds court on Saturday. In that event there are indications the case will go to the jury for a verdict by Monday night. Mary Pickford in “The Little Amer- ican” at the Bismarck theater tonight. ——— ee FREE TO ASTEMA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent de- velopment, whether it is present as occasional or chronic Asthma, should send for a free trial of our method. No matter in what climate you live, no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled with asthma, our method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, “patent smokes,” etc, have failed. We want\to show everyone at our own expense, that this new method is designed to end all dif- ficult breathing, all wheezing, and all j those terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too important to neglect a single day. Write now and then begin the method at once. Send no money. Simply mail coupon be- low. Do it today’ Neen eee emmemeend FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 1123S, Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N.Y. . Send free trial of your method to: you esses ‘hore’ out “Mrs. De! Crucible Steel .. DRASTIC REGULATIONS REFLECTED IN MARKET Conflicting Advices from Abroad Feature Dull Day’s Pro- ceedings TWO NEW: MINIMUM | RECORDS IN RAILS" Ean i New York, Nov. 28.—The impending holiday and the yet more drastic reg- ulations adopted by the stock ex- change against professional trading were in themselves sufficient to effect a decided diminution of operations in today’s market. To these factors were added the conflicting advices from abroad, such as the reported peace negotiations between the Russian radicals and the central powers, and Italy's further successful defensive. Exchange on nome failed to respond to the latter development, however, and remit- tances to the Scandinavian countries were scarcely altered, despite the re- ported German threat io seize Den- mark. ‘ Rails Consistently Heavy Rails were again consistently heavy, several of the high grade issues yield- ing one to almost three points. Two new low records were established. Pennsylvania failing « fraction to 45% and Baltimore and Ohio yielding 1% to 49 Crangers and ‘iransgonti- nental reacted one to two points, with minor or low priced rails. Industrials were less susceptible to pressure, al- though losing ground in the more gen- eral setback of the last.hour. Motors and a handful of specialties regisiered extreme gains of one to 3% points, but these, too, were shaded at the heavy close. Equipments Sag Announcement of the placing of several large war orders to some of the leading equipment companies failed to stimulate issues of that di- vision. United States Steel continued its narrow movement of recent days, closing at 97, a loss of % of a point. The net result in related stocks was quite the same. Sales amounted to 415,000 shares. i Liberty issues contributed largely to the irregular bond market, the 4's selling at $7.92 to 98 and the 3%4’s at 98.96 to 99.12. Total sales of bonds (par value) aggregated Mere United States Bonds (old issues) e * unchanged on call. NEW YORK STOCKS 75° American Beet Sugar .. aay, American Can . G1, American Smelting American Tel. and Tel..... American Zine ... Anaconda Copper . Atchison ‘Baltimore and Butte and Superior .. California Petroleum . Canadian Pacific .... Central Leather .. Chesapeake and Ohio .... Chicago, Mil. and St. Paul . 36% Chino Copper ....... se eeeee Colorado Fuel and Iron 5, 55% Cuba Cane Sugar 29 Brie .... 14% Great 27 Great Northern pfd. . 89% Inspiration Copper . 431% Int. Mer. Marine pfd. ctfs ..... 95% Kennecott Copper ............. 38 Louisville and Nashville ...... 116 Mexican Petroleum .. 79% Miami Copper .... 28% Missouri Pacific Montana Power .. New York Central . Northern Pacific .. Pennsylvania ... . Ray Consolidated Copper . Peading ........ reat Republic Iron and Steel Southern Pacific Southern Railway Texas Co. .. Union Pacific .. U. S. Industrial Alcohol i} United States Steel ..... . 6% Utah Copper’....... - 7 To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signa- ture is on each box. 30c. Mary Pickford in “The Little Amer- ican” at the Bismarck theater tonight. iat iba Hivat| i NSTI OOH it [TRIBUNE FINANCIAL DEPARTMENT (WAITING FOR RECEIPTS THURSDAY, NOV. 29, 1917 HOLDS PRICES UNDER Only Slight Improvement in the Number of Available Cars is Yet Noticeable COUNTY OFFERING CONTINUES LIGHT Chicago, Nov. 28.—Waiting for the much talked of increase of receipts tended to hold the corn market today inside of narrow limits. - Prices closed unsettled, 120% to 121 January and 118% to 119 May, with the final range as a whole %c off to. half cent up compared with 24-hours before. Oats showed no change. Privisions advanced 32 to 90c net, except November lard, which declined 20c. Only a slight improvement in the number of railway cars available was yet noticable, and primary receipts and shipments of corn continued to be well under last year's figures. Be- sides, country offerings remained light. Under such circumstances, the ' prospect that enlarged arrivals of corn would result from government orders giving preceddace to railway ship- ments of all cereals did not weaken prices in a lasting manner. After an initial sag, the market hardened on account of evening up for tomorrow's holiday and because of a temporary sharp bulge in the value of oats, Unconfirmed reports that Baltimore was reselling oats wiped out an ad- vance in the oats market here. The upturn had been based chiefly on re- ports of a continued demand from the seaboard. Provisions jumped to record break- ing high levels owing to talk of im- mense government contractc having been placed. Pork coined holders $50ea barrel flat. CHICAGO GRAIN Option. Open. ‘High. Low. Close. Corn— Jan. ... 120% 121% 120% 120% May ... 118% 119% 118% 118% Oats— Dec’... 71% 73% 11% 71% May... 69% 10% 69% 69% MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapolis, Minn., Nov. 28—Wheat receipts''298 ‘cars, compared with 349 a year ago.’ Corn—No. 3- yellow, $1.85@1.90. Oats--Naii8,,;white 70%c@71%e. +: Flax1$3,2716@3.29%. stipe Flour unchanged; ‘Shipments, 99,434 barrels. ur by PBarley—$1.10@1.36. Rye—$1.77@1.79. Bran—$35.50@36. ' OMAHA LIVE STOCK Omaha, Neb., Nov. 28.—Hogs—Re- ceipts, 8,000; strong; ‘heavy, $17.50@ 17.75; _ mixed, $1 @17.65; light, $17.50@17.755 .. pigs, . $14.00@19.50; bulk, $17.55@17.65. Catle—Receipts, 3,200; steady; na- tive steers, $9:00@15.00; cows , and heifers, $25@19:25; ‘western steers, bee ee xas\, steers, 0 10:50; coWs id heifers, $6.25 5% canners, $7%5@6.25; stocke nd feeders, $6. 12.00; calves, $950@ 12.50; bulls, stags, etc., $5.75@8.00. Sheep—Receipts, 2,700; _ higher; yearlings, $11.50@18%25; — wethers, $11.00@12.50; ewes, °$9.25@11.50; lambs, $16.00@17.00. ST. PAUL LIVE STOCK St. Paul, Nov. 28—Hogs—Receipts, 12,000; steady, 5c higher; range $16.75 @17.05; bulk, $16.85@16.95. Cattle—Receipts, 4,500; killers $10, lic lower; $25,.75¢ lower for week; steers, $5,00@15.50; cows-heifers, $6.00@8.00; veal calves; steady, $5.00 @12.00; stockers-feeders; slow 25c to $1 lower for week; $5.00@10.00. Sheep—Receipts, 500, steady; lambs, $8.00@16.00; wethers, $7.00@13.00; ewes, $5.00@10.50. CHICAGO LIVE STOCK Chicago, Nov. 28.—Hogs—Receipts, 35,000; bulk, $17.30@17.80; light, $16.00@17.70; mixed, §$17.15@17.85; heavy, $17.20@17.85; rough, $17.20@ 17.35; pigs, $18.00@15.75 Cattle—Receipts, 25,000 weak; na- tive steers, $7.20@14. western ' steers, $6.00@13.60; stockers-feeders, $6.00@11.00; _ cows-heifers, 11.50; calves, $7.00@13.25. $5.00@ AM TD: un When Away vault. The Bank with the Cloc When you are away from home you will always have cause for worry regarding the safety of your valuables unless they are placed beyond the risk of loss by being deposited in a fire and burglar proof This bank rents Safe Deposit Boxes in its vault for $2.50 a year and provides absolute safety for valuables of every description. The First National Bank . BISMARCK, N.D. From Home >