The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 25, 1918, Page 3

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a _ SATURDAY, MAY 25;/1918. ANOTHER DAY SEES NO MOVE. ON HUN'S PART Both Sides Continue Raiding Op- i erations—Germans ‘Cap- ts ture Prisoners RAIN NEW »TEUTON fOE) Downpour Impgoses New Hard- ships on Kaiset’s Positions on Somme Front (Associated Preés.) “There has been no change on the battle-fields of northern France. Both sides continue their Taiding operations with the Germans paying most atten- tion to the line between the Somme and Albert. Between Albert and Rheims, British patrols have captured Prisoners. Rain is falling generally on the Somme and Picard front. This imposes greater hardships on the Ger- man positions in this sector. _American troops may soon be fight- ing the Austro-Hungarians in the mountains of Italy. As a clmax of the , celebration in New York of Italy’s entrance into the war, Secretary Bak- er annonnced that niachine gun and artillery units soon would be standing Side by side with General Diaz’s nien. Strong patrol and artillery. activity contifues ‘in ‘the IWalian mountain. fronts. The British mercantile cruiser Mol- davia, carrying American troops from America to Europe. has been tor ~pedoed, and fifty six American soi- aliers are reported missing. The tin er was sunk Thursday moi $, ace rding to an official statement by the ritish admiralty. \ .. The Moldavia is the third transport ‘carrying American troops to be tor- pedoed and the fifteenth troop ship sunk ‘by the Germans. Of the vessels carrying Americans, the Antilles was the first to meet with destruction hy a U-boat. She was sunk October 17, Jast, when returning to this country from Europe and seventy lives were lost. The second was the Tuscania, which was sent to the bottom off the north coast of Ireland, Feb. 5, with a Joss of life totalling 101. Only One Other Serious Attack. The only other serious attack made on American transports occurred last June when vessels carrying some of the expeditionary units, under a con- Gleaves, nerrowly escaped disaster in the mid;Atlantic. That German :¥bmarines are oper- ating off the south coast of freland is evidenced by the sinking of the steamer Inniscarra, of Cork, with loss of life. David Lloyd George, speaking at Eu- inburgh, has said that the submarine isstill unconquered, but that it is no longer a“vital menace to the entente allies. He said that the U-boats are being destroyed, a Germany Can’t Keep Up. He said that the Usboats ure being destroyed faster than they canbe built by Germany, while.the allies are building ships faSter than the sud- marines are sinking them. — , in the battle zones in France, there have Ween numerous local engage: ments, particularly in the Somme set- tor. The Germans, under cover of a heavy artillery barrage, made a raid on the British lines at’ Bucquoy, on the line to the southwest of Arras;| and captured prisoners. ; In the Kemmel region, and on bothe sides of thé’ Lys river, in the Flan: ers battlefield. there has ‘been’ heavy artillery firing, while on the Scarpé river, in the region of Arras, and south of the Somme, between Moreux and ‘Montdidier, the vig guns have been in actioh, according to the official staté- ment. % Aerial Activity. The remarkable aerial activity | along the western battlefront contin- ue3 with both sides participating in air fighting and bombing operations. If the Germans repeat their attempts to bombard Paris from the air, Amerl- cans will feel a keen interest in the attacks ‘because American aviators now are aiding in the defense of the French capital. The German troops that faced the Americans along the lines of the Toul sector have been repla For some time the teutons — the were units which had becn hdrawn from Rus- sia. These now have been replaced by Tavarian reserve regiments. It is probable that the men withdrawn hav been hurried north to participate in the coming renewal of the great Ger. man offensive in Picardy and Fland ors. In spite of Perlin’s promise that the German forces would not penterate further into Russia, a large teuton army is reported to be within 25 miles of Kursk in the Dnieper-Don region. BAD HAILSTOR ; Aberdeen, S. D., May 25.—A. tervif's hail and wind storm struck Rockham, a town south of this city, about 8 o’clock last night and as a result four fifths of the windows in the city were broken. Espectally great was the of done in the business section of town, where large glass fronts were derfolished by the huge hail stones. The total damage done rater. Svein « d_.hail, was estimated svoy commanded by Rear Admiral! by the .wind -ani - FOURTEEN-YEAR-OLD: BOY | i ATTACKS TWO PERSONS, BOTH SERIOUSLY WOUNDED May 25.—Harry Ja- Id yesterday after: r qld Leo Schultz ‘Winona, Minn., coby, 14 years noon attacked ‘witht a’ tock afid eo. badly’ crushed ‘his ‘boy. head that he is expected to die ‘be fore morning; and ‘then shot and prob- ably fatally wounded the boy’s moth- er Year old twins in‘ the mother’s arms at the time escaped: injury. . The boy‘ is still at large. “":\Jacoby, employed as chore boy, on : the farm of Frank ‘Schultz’ at'Minne- ka, near heré;°askéd to be permit~ to, take Leo, with him ona walk, "esterday afternoon. An hour later he mother, cafrying an infant on éach arm, saw. the chore-boy standing tiear the bdrn with a rifle taken from the Schultz horne’ over his shoulder. ‘As she’ approached he raised the gun -Welfberately and fired. ‘She fell, shot through one lep and a shoulder. * Mrs. ‘Schultz crawled ‘back to the house, “dragging the twins after her. Two «men: passing -in an. automobile heard her crie# after attend 2 MON FOR MEMORIAL DAY her bega na search for Leo. He was found ‘an hour ‘later. A posso searching for the Jacoby ‘was’ driven to’shelter by a storm last night: _ ft 2 : ‘The © motive “for ‘the ‘¢rime ‘13 “un- known. ee LEARN STENOTYPY The New System of MACHINE SHORTHAND The Most Wonderful Invention for Business Efficiency in £0 Years wiitten by atiny machine 1 issuperior to all other jaster'to learn and as plain ly FOUR MONTHS Required t better salaried by reason of greater te $125 per month. nghand, Stenotypy will supplant pencil shorthai For fall Infortation address HNIC BUSINESS COLLEGE OAKLAI UMENIS Our prices: are the lowest because we buy all our material in large quantities direct from the quarries, saving jobber’s profits and high freight char, 613 Broadway—Phone 691M Bismarck.ND. The Oldest and Largest Bank in this sectionof {| the State e anal . Send for free catalog. BISMARCK MARBLE & GRANITE WORKS Monuments. at Wholesale and Retail Louis -H.. Carufel, -Prop:, THINK OF THE FUTURE It is certainly ‘risky to live: for - the.. present alone. What are you go- ing to do when old age comes .or when some emergency arises in which only ready money can ‘assure *comfort and happiness? ~ By starting 4 Savings Account in this strong Much stock in the stores was damag- |& = BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE ~Miles City, ‘Mont.,:May 24.—D, .C. Dorman, ‘state ofranizer for the Non- Partsaf ‘league, was today deported fr®m Witiaux, neat here by a com- mnittee of 100 members ‘of the Wi- baux honie -yards, , Dorman was at- tempting to hold a meeting here in conjunction w! th three, other organiz- ers, J, A. McGlynn: William) Caryer and Albert Mills, atid had Wired them to meet him at Wibaux. Before the meeting ot under way, however, the citizens waited upon Dor- ‘man and proceeded with him to the depot, where a ticket was bought and he was‘vlaced on the train with or- ders to keen going, This. the fourth N tonight ‘to be Uetween $2,000 and $5,000. ‘Tt is not Rnown how badly the hail damaged ‘the crops in that séction of the country, but estimates tonight, placed “the Yamage jat a high ‘igure. . SECRETARY,.BOX. AND MRS, BOX AT Beach, N. D.,. May 25,—Thomas Al- lan ‘Box, secretary, of the North Da- kota Council of Defense, Mrs. Box, a well kiow# members.of the woman's committee of the national council. of defense, and George V. Halliday, pub- ‘icity director of the state council will ete ras uOUensuanuenasnnnsvandanddraanednveauceasnanneAuenveeusuencottsnduendcuda‘ntanueuenucd teuuasUdt4reaetasuanreenocenuacatcnnceancuatuansteadtaeendesqn0ueddveauensdatQnetOGOU¢0S9 G04ii00040{0040RRSrUIU.0000000 (700000 JUCRUDORURDODRDGDSREUNegRORaROORgtRENUADORUOUAUNOOOOOGA bank today and adding to it systematically it will not belong until you have a substantial re- serve fund: We pay 4% compound interest.on savings de- posits of one dollar and upwards. ; BUY LIBERTY BONDS NOW FROM THIS. - BANK Depository for -Govern- ment, State, County __.and City Finds... i Bininarele : x DA 217-219 Main Street partisan league | _ BEACH TOMORROW |; r Tractor Annihilate TIME— They’turn Day Jobs call LAHR MOTOR SALES COMPANY Distributors’ of OVERLAND and WILLYS-KNIGHT AUTOMOBILES ‘A. MOTOR COMPANY itiorized FORD Agents for the FORD AUTOMOBILES. AND PARTS F. A. Copelin, Manager DEWEY ‘DORMAN, LEAGUE ORGANIZER, _: |Mirmesota County IS ESCORTED OUT OF WIBAUX BY 100 MEMBERS OF THE LOCAL HOME GUARD organizer to be deported by the Wi- baux home guards. Carver, Mills and McGlynn: having previously been warned to leave, Organizer Indicted. Walla, Walla, Wash., May 24.—Alfred A. Crow, organi ‘or the Nonparti- Sat, league, was.indicted today by the federa] grand: firyon a charge of im-| personating a United States officer. Crow is out on bonds. He was arrosted “hére sov weeks ago. He is charged with representing that he was a secret service man ‘and usco this to help get mempbers for the lea- gue, It is charvod'that he carried a star which he exhibited to nrdspective members. Bet Ttated ' address:a patriotic ‘raly here Sunday. While here Secretary Box will also organize a farm jlahor reserve, MERCER COUNTY CROP CONDITIONS ARE GOOD =e i Zap, N, ‘y crop though the weather sonably icold, Xcellent,. al- ntinues unsea- allea throughout the céuntry dur- ing the last we IN MEMORIUM. Bismarck, N. D., May 24 1918. Iu loving remembrance of my hus- band William Deakin, who. died May 24, 1914. Gone’ but not forgotten by his wife and son’Clarence, ee RRR S a Pia Bae cht Pb iateatr thay Hoorerhay . AUDAUOANUAUDEUONGNNUNCOUOOUUARODOSOANGEUOGALOGOEAUOOOGRUOAOODOONOOUDOUDOUDOUOROROOO CUUSEsuORULONERNRONNOOOGOND suvnecnnuauagnenonenennnoconesunaveoccatcusnnndavedisn¢deovnuaegeeutnddieteuinideetanineteacaphitdnnonnngy en ’ The iy Motor Car Truck and Peo ’ into Be ‘ Hour Tasks. They fail to \ weary urider the torrid sun, for they Thrive on Work, Asking for f Rest only F when the Job is Done ‘North Dakota Bismarck Bisniarck, N. D. BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY C. Bertsch, Manager STUDEBAKER and CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES 416 Broadway e Bismarck, N. D. . 212 Main Auditor Guilty of Disloyalty Winona, Minn., May 25.—Charles W. Anding, auditor of Winona, county, last night was found guilty of a vio- lation of the espionage act ‘by a jury in federal court here, after: delibera- tions of five hours. The trial lasted two days. “A stay of sentence for 42 days was granted: Anding’s bail of »v,000 con- tinues. Anding was charged with having told. Kurth Schellhas of Winona that he could not ‘be made to go to France, that all that was necessary to escape win the war. Judge Page Morris, in charging the jury, declared that a man registered under the selective service law, as Schellhas is, is a niember of the mil itary forces of the United States: Anding was arrested January 7. He has continued in office as auditor, but his immediate removal by the govern- or is expected. e THIRD BID COMES Kelso Man Offers $15 for White} House Wool ri5 An: abundance of rain ‘and impoverished. foretell eczema, boils, blisters, scaly eruptions and other skin disorders that burn like flames of fire. They mean that your blood needs &. 8. S. to purify it and cleanse it of these impure accumulations that can cause unlimited trouble. ‘Phis remedy is the greatest vegetable blood puri- MAXW Portage Tires and Accessories inilitary service was to refuse to take the federal oath. - G. H. Fifield furnished some of the most convincing testimony of the trial when he declared that Anding offered Ugly, Unsightly Pimples ee Are Signals of Bad Blood Give Heed to the Warning. Pimples on the face and other arts of the body are warnings from fature that your blood is sluggish Sometimes they The third bid for the White House wool reached Governor Frazier’s. offic Friday from. W. C, Safford of Kelso, who offered $15 and:enclosed his check for that amount. Other bids have come from E. B, Klein, $13;.and the | supplies. : _ Crystal Gasoline More miles’ per gallon. ..,, French Auto Oil Tungsten Spark Plugs fier known, and contains no minerals or chemicals to injure the most deli- cate skin, Go to your drugstore, and a bottle of g 8. S. today, and ed of those unsightly and disfiguring pimples, and other skin irritations. And it will cleanse your blood thor- oughly, If you wish special thedical advice, you can obtain it without charge by writing to Medical Direc- tor, 29 Swift. Laboratory, Atlanta, Georgia. that dominecring eleraczt in the World’s Busi- néss, BY sagt Today Tite means everything in your busi- ness. Whatever it is.TIME spells success or failure. If it takes you ‘hours to do minute jobs you are not up with the march of Progress. r ae In seediiig time, harvest. time, threshing time and plowing, the tractor answer's the call of the successful farmer. Did you ever. hear of a tractor rendered useless under sweltering rays of the harvest sun? Hundreds of horses topple over every summer—never to get up again. For commercial trucking in towns and cities, for country hauling, getting things to and from market in satisfactory fashion, the truck today offers 100 per cent service. Ask - the opinion of your neighbor who is using one. He'll tell you. The sleepy individual who -yawned when he thought of automobile business in 1918, has experienced a wonderful transition of mind. Men and women of America today find they need cars—need them more than ever before. Time must be saved, work must be done. The | auto today is a wonderful factor. ‘ It is no longer a question if you desire an automobile this season. The single question is, CAN YOU SECURE A.CAR FROM YOUR ‘DEALER. Hundreds and :hundreds of deal- ers are begging, demanding, imploring facto- ° ries to make deliveries.. Take an inventory of the dealers.in Bismarck who have cars for delivery. You will find standard make cars— the kind you want—are scarce. ‘s WESTERN SALES COMPANY Distributors of AUTOMOBILES M. B. GILMAN COMPANY Donse BROTHERS otc” CAR Street Haananscsdascdusnconcndduavovendongnendsovscunnsssvanntavanssnnennccnscusnsssenvanonsgnsnduanduvannecnensudnsscdgsoneateanteesonoonusnnnonnseadcenseesuenscoenenty LL.— CHALMERS — REO MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR CO. Factory, Distributors of x CHEVROLET AUTOMOBILES Smith Forn-a-Trucks Smith Tractors Kelly-Springfield and Firestone Tires .'. ., _ Everything for the Automobile Bismarck North Dakota , - Mandan CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY Distributors of ‘ BUICK and BRISCOE AUTOMOBILES Bismarck, N. D. Bismarck North Dakota avsducannnvaceveventeanncnnnocascedanvocnannteenncensduonnseuevngscdnannduentacoennenedernteti bile oils, greasés ‘and z i = : = £ : i ~ =

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