The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 18, 1918, Page 2

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materi ait DUETOHOUSE League Majority Was Warned That Priority Clause Might Have Result JACOBSEN MADE BIG FIGHT} Senator From Hettinger County | Sought to Prevent Inclu- sion of Provision Tho announcement that the St.j ie lial = aaa apis spre ecoeremesieeionrsngn PETS 3 cs eT temetnetl Anne Martin is 42; Hails From is From Reno; Used to be State roll Champion; Was One of 16 Original White House Pickets NO ASSURED Patriotic Bismarck, Business Men’ Subscribe 960 Monthly | to Cause ‘WILL FINANCE THE WORK | ! ‘Phe Burleigh county. Red Cross! chapter is now assured a steady in-} j come of $960 the month, sufficient, it iis believed, to finance the purchase of! supplies and defray all other neces-} sary expenses, through monthly | | pledges of the following patriotic in-| | dividuals and firms: Hoskins, Hoskins, R, p. Johuson's Store: Kershaw, A. L, Dr. Know AL Kirk, CW, Li ‘Lenhart Drug Co. Little, C. B. A. W. Co. Dr. V. J. McDonald, W. McCurdy rome iMcGray, C. W. Marks, B. C Missouri Valley Motor Co. Motor Car Supply Co, ‘Neussle, W. L. PACE 2: ° ny toed io} BCs PAM A BISMAROK-EV. TRIBUNE ELIMINATION calaaee yh MPA, sa INCOME Be Bectiitos Wars! ‘anes ab Gus WASHINGTON ~ SEES PRACE FAR DISTANT Officials Are Not in Favor of i Any Discussion at This | Time Washington, D. . C. Mar. 18.—First intimations from official sources that President Wilson possibly might soon make a statement bearing on the Rus- sian debacle came. today. There is no official indication of 1 Paul federal land bank fs to withdraw | Anderson, J. ¢. the medium the president will choose from ‘North Dakota ts 0 blow 10 th | Faker, 1. P. Orr Robert or when he will choose it, but it is Rremn-krowrers ‘of therm licker!al-s 2 | Bence eat Owens, D, T. Co. generally believed that as usual, he Belinda will direct his statement to the world In some sections the last two crops | have been almost complete failures. | CLARA BARTON interest the; Bergeson & Son. | Bertsch, Chris. Ramstad, Dr. N. O. Rawlings, Dr. G. A. through an address to a joint session of congress. The past winter has been a bitter one; i Trandt,-Dr. A.M. | This‘ picture should ngs, Dr have not been in the staie} i lave doing aa Worl ; " t r tone enowsh, v0 acquire much capital Burke, EB. T. photograph of the late Clara Barton, | Reeds Wank cela aca: of blockade, Field Marshal inden Best R. L. founder of the American Red Cross. ; Rosen Clothing Co. burg and General Ludendorff tha’ ‘ many might be proposing a peace at teserve. . History of the Act. :) The seed-bonding act which con- She did relief work in the Civil war,/ the Franco-German war, the Spanish-| 1 | | Bodenstab, Dr, W. H. i | 1 Carpenter Lumber Co. i | Schipfer, Dr. L. A. ; the expense of Russia, made peace | talk in, general’no more popular in ction to whi ch the feder-| ‘istensen, A. M. rican war and the Boer war. | . ; ated iw ed} ‘ B Co. { Pia i Sass ime since - oe a 2 : re Conwte oe i Stecle, HH war. Officials everywhere declining to this provision when it went from the’ Finney, Burt Cowan, J, G. Rouse to the senate. In the senate) ' { French, J. P. nate ‘make statements for the very reason this section was stricken out, and oth-| aaa ne: bats | that any sort of a statement would er amendments added with a view to; | Gamble-Robinson Co. pas er la | give comfort to a peace movement, making the act more workable. The Duemeland, H. J. | Graham, J. A. bene eee | gave unmistakable indications of how house declined to concur and referred the bill to a conference committee of, three from the house and three from) Grambs & Peet i lam, G. F. H ae! Greibenow, F. Dr. Dunham, 0, W. Vesperman, E. H. L. unwelcome peace discussions were at this time. the senate. This commiitce remain-, zg ¢ { ed in cession from Saturday evening # e i until Monday ettermoon about & A “os t AARTIN. d ‘Cc levoting more than 20 hours arteraee Fy] the ‘bill, Two pro- By GIBSON GARDNER, {lobby work of this suffrage organiz-: Start today to buy PRL A lent investment visions were the center of dispute | Cpecial Staff Dispatch. aol ae ! Lat Stamps = i n excellent One of them provided for the state) ’ ; Miss Martin is an announced candi-| War Savings Pp B..| and a patriotic duty guaranteeing the bonds issued by the) | Washington, March 18.—Mi date for the seat left vacant by the various counties the other; was to/ Martin, tho f woman death of the late Senator Newlands! give the seed contracts priority over! the United States Senate, has large of Nevada. Her first claim to the of all mortgages which might be ¢ Irish gray , a creal complexion, 2) fice rests on the fact that she won} cuted after this act became effective. | girlish gure anda gentle voi the state for suff: Her Al i aie Sacer ee eget ane oe oe woe A I comm. | : en he cou ts tthe “other five were Nonpartisans) Mer bome is in Reno, Nev. a voice and yote in leg Aa a Ny \a argued for more than 20 hours upon She was once tennis champion of} ters, WAY the proposition of the state guaranty; vada. ¢ Ii was as a suffrage campaigner! and the priority clause. Senator Ja- | She iy rather long on-education|that Miss Martin first achieved fame. | cooson strenuously opposed the state/ 8 this summary will prove: She went to the people of Nevada by guaranty provision as well as the} After her graduation at Leland! traiv, by auto, on horseback and on, provision which would give the seed| Stanford she took a course in art in| foot. When a mining camp was ‘80° es eee AN contracts priority over mortgages ex-| New York; then went to Cambridge,| high up among the hills that the: Leeann! “tor quality, always Wok x2 3 ecuted after the law becamo effec-| England, the University of London|remained only a footpath to it, she! orepiis Manes voice = sce es tive, He called the attention of the; @ud Leipzig; thence back to Nevada) took the path. She got to the people| le Victor Talking Mach’ committee to. the fact that this pro-|to take the chair of history in the} and won, against the united opposition | vision would interfere with the work-| State university, From there she em-| of both parties. | ings of the Federal Land bank and | ¢rged into the suffrage fight. She is for government ownership) a private concerns doing business in| hb, yes, the candidate's age: of railroads. | j North Dakota and might eventually| “Am 42,” she said. “You could have} “What particular things would you; ster ant ems at eli t } ar them from transacting business in| found that out in Who's Who.” work for in your state?” she was; ; the state. The house majority well| Anno Martin calls herself an inde-| asked. | khew the reasons why one man was Pendent. Republica. on sahesits her : Hor further reclamation of dessert | iN hanging out on the conference com-, republicanism from her father. lands by government works. For the! lovers of sacred music Mitte and knew that the state guar-| She is a Woman’s Party suffragist,! abolition of the long and short haul anty. and priority clauso were the; Which means that she was a picket. ; railroad ra! pointa-in difference. In fact, he was| She was, in part, in the first group of: And for a more intelli-! gent sokution of th. eproblem of sca-} given to understand that these pro- 16 pickets sent to the workhouse and | al employment, the failure to solve visions: would remain in the bill or no| Pardoned by the president. For two! which is largely responsible for 50: seed grain act would be enacted, years she has been in charge of the called I. W. W. troubles.’ Action Is A Mystery. l The house majority finally prevailed 4a the closing hour of the session, and the priority clause remained in the dill as it finally was passed. It has always been a mystery to those famil- Jar: with ‘the history of this act that the house majority should tako a stand which it had been warned might deprive the farmers of aid from H the federal land bank as well as from f : insurance companies and others that 1 have been ‘doing business in the state, i} when of reality it was contended by ; a those opposed to this provision that it was of little benefit to the act and peers ald in disposing of the bonds. \ More than three million dollars’! yw Sonera = Dab of seed and feed bonds have Will Wear Uniforms of Same = n voted or issued by the followin " Fi i counties in the amounts named: ®| ‘Type as Last Year’s Suits Billings. ..... .. $ 65,000 — |cials had decided some start should be D 75,09); Chicago, March 18.—Uniforms to be; made toward producing vessels that 100,000] Worn by the Chicago Americans this | could not be sunk by submarines. 200,000 Season will be exact duplicates of} Out of thousands of methods sug: 40,009 their outfits of last year. gested, the ship protection committee, nee | consin, Washington and Kansas Agrl-| three years, a new contract offered cultur21 coliege. j bi having Leen signed. Richards is] College Section—Coe, Cornell, Des;a Wisconsin Alumnus. He made aj Moines, Grinnell, Hamlin, Hightand | good record with mediocre material | Park, Iowa Wesleyan, Morningside, | here last ae Penn., Simpson, Wabash, Yankton,} University of South Dakota, South }a- | pote ercultural Coe: Carleton: \MAXIM’S SUB H obras a Wesleyan, Duduque, Belcit, "| PROOF IDEA | IS ACCEPTED | Invitations also were sent to more] tha nthirty high schools. | | Washington, D. C., Mar. 18,—Hud- NO CHANGE FOR SOX | son Maxim’c device for a non-sinkable| ship has been accepted for experiment- al purposes by the shipping board,! vhich announced aSturday that offf-: The approach of Faster brings with it the desire for the beauti- | i i i ful anthems and other music of Eastertide. And with the Victrola it is easy to gratify that desire—to actually they x hear this music in all its beauty right in your own home. Awe ee 4 Sacred music is one of the a £ 1 140,000} “It would never do to make aj headed by John A. Donald, has select i i i ¢ Golden Valley . 425,000| Change of any Kind in the uniforms af- | ed gy, al for special tests, of which | branches in which the Victor has t Grant... 100,009 ter the ho won the world’s cham-) Mr, 1's will be the first. ! oe ° ‘i Hettagee 150900) Pionship,” explained Charles A. Com: specialized, and among its collec- a eo Kidder ., Shae the club. i stage success “The = McHenry 33 | rainer Bruckner, who has rub y with Clara Kimball = # McKenzia . 380, 80 the aches aud pains out of the player Young” is the attraction at the Or- | tion of more than 350 hymns. b McLean . 290,099 | muscle for sev: ears, Will be in| pheum tonight, d Mercer .. 200,000 | Charge of the co k again i i i Mounts pootonn| this year, Com Mmonces,| ‘TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY | anthems, oratorio numbers, sacre Renville . . . ¢ Biieviaan RICHARDS CONNECTS. | IRL WANTED—For general nouss:| songs, revival hymns and other en Stark . Madison, W. $.—John! work. Must be good cook. Small | 2 Ward: | Richards coach; modern home. Family of two. Best} ir ‘Williams { the Unive of Wisconsin for| ‘wages. Phone 587, 3:18 6t | religious music, are numerous 2) vil ey u ‘ ar ih eee ig ee ce | tteetnceanceeucorveaccuccczcaneussnunsevacacaceanacqacceceenszaaveeanoneseaneasia Easter selections. of surpassing ‘ ne |= =. Pe a. apeet farm land bank at St. Paul applica- tions ‘for toans 9 approximating $9,500, beauty,’ including numbers by “Bismarck’s Shopping Center.” JOHNSON'S POPULAR PRICED STORE the world’s greatest artists who , make Victor Records’ exclusively. ‘CARNIVAL. TO: BE A BEANER Des Moines, la., March: 18.—With a view to increasing interest in the.an- nual. classic, several events are be- ing arranged for the Drake relay car- nival,.to be -held here April 20. .A spe- cial.100 yard dash-has been added to the program .as.one of the features and it is expected the race.-will at- tract such sprinters as Howard Drew of Drake; Charles Hoyt of Grinnell, now in the army, and Sol Butler, of Dubuque College. In, addition’ to the usual relay en- 8, a crack half-mile soldier team beds camp b Dodge will participate and he. other. cantonments. may ed paren he Dodge team be composed: jearer, Jones, Kase atid King, all former collegiate PB. tis hoped that this year's meet wil @ larger field than Inst year, as Of the schools’ that called oft inte 8 last season have signt-, + Intention’ of: sending relay. “fvitations were ‘sent to : Soueeing, fastitutions,. a uumber of UGUUDUnaaeUeaancCeuauscdaacesiay . Hear your favorite hymn today at any Victor dealer's. He will gladly play any music you wish to hear and demonstrate the various styles of the Victor and Victrola—$10 to $400. Saenger Voice Culture Records are invaluable to vocal students—ask to hear them, Victor Talking Machine Co., Camden, N. J. Important ‘Notice. : Victor Records and Victor Machines are scientifically coordinated and synchronized in the processes of manufacture, and their use, one with the other, is absolutely esscntial to a perfect reproduction. Values up to $8.50 $5.98 . New Victor Records demonstrated at all dealcrs on the Ist of cach month bed Choice - ee Come Early and Get a Gapd Selection. Extra! ! Extra! ! Drake, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas Minne. . ( a i a il ‘Missouri, Nebraska, Noty me, |= i ! h \ WN) AEST MEN ‘Northwestern, Purdue, Michi Owe Siguecgaseececaneneanonanantevednnngat nearer nin iaanaueaninainiaiminaiainnanan TMT RAT MAM a

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