The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 17, 1918, Page 3

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\ ‘hate A BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE FREED FROM PEN NELSON LANDS IN COUNTY BASTILE \- Sheriff of - Minnesota County Wants Him on Statutory Grouid ” , HABEAS CORPUS GRANTED Police Court Steps In and Jails Man for Ten Days Pending Extradiction After gaining his freedom from, the penitentiary Friday, George E. Nelson, committed from HKamsey county, ran into the arms of the sheriff of St. Louis county, Minn., whe was armed with extradition papers ‘to ‘take him back to Duluth where -‘a charge of adultery is pending. i ’ Nelson was sent, up. for garrying concealed weapons. When arrested on complaint of the Minnesota author- ities, he applied’ for Writ of habeas corpus. which was granted by Justice ‘Robinson. He was promptly rearrest- ed by local police and brought before Police Magistrate Bleckreid' and com- mitted to the county jail for ten days. In the meantime it is believed Gov. Frazie* will be back on the job and the extradition papers from Minnesota honored. ‘ Nelson was indicted by a St. Louis county ‘grand jury about, a year ago. It is charged-he eloped ‘with a Mrs. Harry A. Gress: of Duluth and_ that the two lived under an assumed name at Hibbing, Minn. When indictment was found, it is charged, he escaped to Devils Lake, N, D., where he was picked up for carrying concealed wea- pons and sent to the penitentiary for one year, Governor Frazier is away on his vacation so’Nelson ‘is being held on can, be signed. -+——-_BUY W, S$. S.———— Queen Objects to Wearing Uniform (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass’n.) London, Aug. 17.—Queen Mary has declined to present the military med- als to women who win them because she has an objection to appearing in uniform and feels it would be’ incon- gruous to present the medals in civil- jan garb. BUY W. % S—-—me ———— + | THE WEATHER ( +. 3 For twenty-four hours ending at noon, August 17. Temperature at 7 a.m. . a 7 Temperature at noon Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday . Lowest last night . Precipitation Highest wind velocity . , . FORECAST. For North Dakota: weather tonight and Sunday; Unsettled prob- ably showers east portion, not much change in temperature: : : Lowest. Temperatures. 64 Fargo .... Williston Grand Forks St. Paul . Winnipeg - Helena . Chicago . Swift Cu . Kansas City .... ORRIS W. Ri Meteorologist. —— aw. 8. 8. 1 Is” Was Good. é “] fs,” began a small student. “T am,” promptly Corrected the teacher. “] am the ninth letter of the alpha- bet,” finished the boy.—Boy's Life. Each Cop. sule bears t! | name 4a © peware of counterfeits DON’T WAIT FOR COLLECTOR ; 4 All city shbseribers of The Tribune are. asked to call at office and settle for their pa- per so that the management can continue delivery each day after October 1. The war industries board has ordered papers stopped after October 1, where sub- scribers aré in arrears. This ruling applies to mail sub- scribers as well as those on the city list. It will be impossible in such a short time to reach all city readers so if you do not desire to miss any copies kindly call-| at Tribune office ‘and ask for circulation department. Collectors are now checking up the various routes. Be prepared when called upon to pay, all past due subscriptions as the carrier boys should not be*asked to make more than one. cal, for the’ remittance. After October first in com- pliance with order of war in- dustyies board, the Tribune must drop from its list all subscribers who are delin- quent. The Tribune asks the co- operation of its readers and gives this notice so that no one may be cut off without due wargind, a fugitive’s warrant until the papers |. Germany Now Admits London. tination safe and yell. Since the United States decl: and broadened. So the 4600 to 1 - “As safe as achurch,” one S Additional protection to the escorting war vessels all the way More war craft, especially U-boats, are constantly getting ‘ there were The percentage of ing. A recent British official st: In these inspired IT 1S IMPOSSIBLE ~~ FRONT SA This news story is for American mothers. The facts which follow are now permitted presented in this form by Admiral Sims’ U. S. Navy staff in As Safe as a Church. chance which the long-period figures prove, does not actually show the percentage today, It’s better than that. plants turn them out in constantly increasing numbers. carrying ships are being put into service too. On one day, in July 100,000 soldiers at sea at once. " More U-Boats Being Sunk. U-boats sunk by the allied navies is climb- time in the war the number of U-boats exceeds the number Germany has been able to build. In short, they rebeing sunk faster than they’re being built. ’ The German government, through inspired articles in the German press, has begun a campaign to “explain” to the people at home why they haven’t been able to stop or even interfere with the flow of American troops to France. : articles it is now admitted as a final fact that UNDER THE CONVOY SYSTEM THAT THE ALLIES HAVE PERFECTED, TO ATTACK THE TRANS- PORTHS WITH HOPE OF SUCCESS. Sak j In other words, the German government realizes that the danger to a U-boat which attacks a convoy is far greater than the danger to the convoy. So they’re not showing their heads. Submarines Can’t Sink Transports BY HAROLD EDWIN. BECHTOL, (European Manager of the Newspaper Enterprise Association) LONDON, England. tobe assembled and _ When your soldier son starts across the Atlantic he has better than a 4600. to 1 chance-of arriving at his des- ared. war, about 1,400,000 Ameri- can fighters have come across. The total casualties’ at sea have! been 291. . That’s only one man lostin 4600. There’s another point: That proportion, as small as it is, cover: all the men sent across since early 1917. And every month meth-| ods and appliances safeguarding the transports have improved ammy who landed recently put it. Practically every American soldier now comes to Europe ina convoy—a group of ships. Which means, in case of the improbable torpedo, that there are other ships very near for rescue work. Practically everyone of these transports is armed—that. is, there are big guns on the actual vessels‘carrying the soldiers. form of escorting war vessels is provided for every convoy in-so-called danger zones, and many have across. designed for beating down the on the job, as the shipbuilding More atement shgws, that, for the first sunk in the past six months TREASURER’S REPORT For Ealdwin School District No. 29, County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, for the, year 1917-1918. Reccipts Cash on hand including sink- ing fund, at beginning of |. school year, July 1, 1917 . $ 479. Total: amount received dur- ing year from interest on open account \....-....++ 13.14 Total amount received dur- . ing year from apportion- ment of county and state tuition fund .......:.+5+ «4 280.10 Amount received during year from taxes levied by dis- trict school board ....... 993.34 Amount received during year into sinking fund,,interest 43.63 Amount received during year from state aid .......... 60.00 Total receipts for year .. $1,340 Grand total’ receipts for year, including cash on hand July 1, 1917 ..... $1,819.60 Expenditures Amount paid during year for school \houses, sites and permanent improvements $ Amount paid during year for 5.10 Amount paid during year for library books and text DOOKS 26.06. cee eeeeeeeee Amount’ paid during year to on ac- retire- 70.84 county treasurer count of teachers’ ment fund Amount paid during year for incidental expenses 12.00 176.73 res for the ee ++ $977.72 . g sink- ing fund, June 30, 1918 ... 841.88 Grand total expenditures and cash on hayd to bal- ance above total receipts $1,819.60 Relating to Sinking Fund Amount of sinking fund in 3 treasury July 1, 1917 .... $ 418.00 Amount received into and transferred to the sinking fund during the year .... Total $ 594.96 Balance in sinking fund’ June 30, 1918 ld sla aw wreere aig tee $ 594.96 ei H. G. Higgins, Treasurer of Baldwin School District No. 29 Approved this 9th‘ day of July, 1918. ‘By ofder of the District School Board: Percy Fréeman. President. Clerk’s Statement of Indebtedness of District Total amount of warrants outstanding June 30, 1918 $ Total amount of bonds out- 2,000.00 5.35 standing June 30, 1918 .. YFotal indebtedness of dis- trict June 30, 1918 $2,005.35. Approved this 9th day of July, 1918. By order of the District School Board: J. C. Poole, Clerk. teachers’-salaries ........ 689.05 Amount paid during year for salaries and expenses of school officers ........+ ae 44.00 Amount paid during year for 7 interest on bonds and war- | TAMS ...065 ceeeeereeeee 80.00 ‘PROMOTED’ GENERAL AW. CATLIN Colone! Albertus W. Catlin of the Marine Corps, was recently severely wounded in the fighting on the Marne. Now he has been promoted to briga- dier-general. He was the marine of- \ticer on the Maine when she was ;was sunk in Havana harbor and has seen service in the Philippines, Cuba, China and Mexico. : FINDS VOLUNTEER WHEAT | Farmer Declares It Was Growing In a Crop of Alfalfa. William Kranz, a farmer near Jef- fersonville, Ind, has seven acres of alfalfa and on 16 acres he ts grazing with it, but in the same field there is | wheat. It is better in condition and appearance than many fields of wheat which were sown last year, byt failed to produce good crops. Mr. Kranz | Says he would have two good crops if he could separate them. Near by, James B. Green has 94 acres in alfalfa and on 16 acres he 1s grazing 230 hogs which dre unable to ‘keep down the growth. He has cut two tons of hay from this fleld as well. H ;|, ‘NEW GERMAN ATROCITY | Woman Says Huns Cut Off Right Arms of Boys. Germans are amputating the right arms-of every youth over ten years of age-who falls into their hands, ac- cording to Mrs. Eugenie Guenier of Besancon, Franee. As a result of war conditions she has lost 27 of her immediate relatives, ' She said that in Besancon there {s not a youth over ten years of age whé has not his right arm off at the elbow. | Her grandmother, eighty-nine years old, was found dead with seven bayo- net wounds, and two girl cousins, six- teen and eighteen years old, were at? tacked by the Hu she said. Antispy Law in- Force. Publication of any news of the move- ments of merchantmen is prohibited in Spain. This is the first application of the new antispy law. BUY W. 8, 8.—=—— ‘ Full Measure. Bobby—“Uncle, couldn’t a fellow have a nice Sunday dinner if he was as hungry as me and roomy as you?” | =Boy's Lite, a growing a fine stand of volunteer |: S MAKE TRIP TO FE AS A CHURCH FEWER SHIPS LOST since September, 1916. es in gross tonnage: In the face ‘of this sailings to and from the United for the two preceding quarters. IN JUNE THAN IN ANY MONTH FOR TWQ YEARS (By, Newspaper Enterprise Association.) 1 LONDON, England. The latest report of the admiralty on losses of British, allied and neutral-vessels by German subinarines for the month of June shows that the losses are lower for that month than for any other This table, prepared by the admiralty, gives the monthly. loss- Allied and - 1917 British Neutral Total June . +» 482,395 280,326 **, 712,721 \July .. i +» 383,430 192,519 575,949 August :....... - 360,296 180,067 549,363 September ..:.. +. +. 209,212 159,949 369,161 October ..73.. -. 289,973 197,364 487,837 November .... * 196560 136,883 333,443 nageretry +... 296,856 155,707 452,063 January ee. 218,528 136,187 354,715 February . . 254,303 132,334 386,637 .. 224,666 - . 176,797 401,463" .. 228,067 85,348 313,415 May. . 225,689 131,845 357,534 June .. . 161,062 114,567 275,629 low logs ‘record, the admiralty states that Kingdom continued at the high level of recentthonhths, the total sailings for the three months ended June 30 having been considerably higher than the sailings CANADA’S SONS FLOCK TO WAR Every Boat Brings Them From “‘the U.S. Vancouver, B. C., Aug. 17.—Canada, already a country of old men, women and children, is crouching for a last spring. r. . Far and near,*she has sent the call to her remaining sons to rally roting the banner, already dyed with the blood of those who have gone to war, Fronr Mexico, Sotth «America and the United States, they are answering the call. Board any steamerfi any train leading to the'great province to the north, and you will see,’them on their way. - Many have their families with them, and some their methers. On a recent steamer from Pacific port+sto Canada, 440 young men with their relatives were on their way to the great con- centration camp at Victoria. There is no Peace movement’ in Canada. The returned: ‘soldiers, of whom there are now thousands throughout the dominjon, would sec that it was laughed to ‘scorn, Canada, after four years of war, is a machine bent on,turning out one product—Victory, She has passed the stage of war hysteria which — now grips the United States t BUY W. 5. Mrs. O. Av Iverson entered the Bis- marck hospital last evening tq un- dergo an operation for appendicitis. avy W. 5. 5 YREAGURERS REPORT For Burnt Creek’ School District No. 24, County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, for the year 1917-1918 “Receipts Cash on hand including sink- ing fund, at. beginning of school year, July 1, 1917 . Total amount received dur- ing year from apportion- | ment of state and county tuition fund Amount received during _year from taxes levied by district school board. . Amount received during the year from ‘tuition of pupils residing in other districts Amount received during the year ifto teachers’ retire- ment fund Amount received during year from sale 6f bonds and from other sources not ‘before mentioned ... $ 837. ee Total receipts for year +. $1,005.41 Grand total receipts for ‘year, including cash’ on hand July 1, 1917 .. .. $1,842.47 ‘Expenditures ‘Amount paid during the year for school houses, sites and permanent improve- ments : Amount paid during ye: apparatus Amoun® paid during year teachers’ salaries Amount paid during year for salaries and expenses of school officers Amount paid during year for library bookS and text hooks os . Amount paid during y' county treasurer On = ac- . county of teachers’ retire- ment fund ...... ....+ : Amount paid during year for incidental expenses for Total expenditures for the YOAT veieeeceee see eeee $1,696.26 Cash on hand, uding sink- ing fund, June 30, 1918 .. 146.21 Grand total expenditures and cash on hand to bal- ance above total receipts $1,842.47 Ole Sather, Treasuret of Burnt Creek School District No. 24. Approved this 9th day of July, 1918. By order of the District School Board: F. C. Klawitter. President. Attest: Frank Paris. Clerk. Clerk’s Statement of Indebtedness of District Total amount of warrants outstanding June 30, 1918 $ 32.18 Total indebtedness of district * June 30, 1918 32.18 Approved this 9th day of July, 1918. By order of the District ‘School Board: Frank Paris, Clerk. SY WS FOR RENT—A warm modern house at 210 Seventh street. Phone 410- Keep Cheerful. You find yourself refreshed by the presence of cheerful people; why not meke ernest efforts fo confer that pleasure on others? You will find bok thé battle is gainec if you will never allow yourself to say anything gloomy. “THING ECZEMA BISMARCK COUNTRY CLUB ~~~ MEMBERS ROYALLY ENTERTAINED The Mandan Town and Country club entertained the members of the smarck Country club most royally evening. The invitation was not as generally accepted as it would have been if the weather had not been threatening, and there had not been a counter . attraction in Bismarck. Those who went, however, report the most unique and interesting party im- aginable. Eoth the reception room and the dancing ‘salon of the club were beauti- fully decorated with ferns, gladiol and asters; the lighting was entir by ex e Japanese lanterns the effect was fairy-like indeed. splendid musical prog? i by the Mandan orch: very talent@d young woien and g! Then followed- dancing~to the music of the very excellent Mandan orches- tra. The large screened-in porch of the club house was delightful to rest in between dances, and all were en- thusiastic about this part of the even- ing’s entertainment. About midnight guests and hosts WAR PROFITEERS 10 BE PROBED Washington, Aug. 17.—War profi- teers in 1917 were most numerous in ihe businesses devoted to food produc- \tion; cotton, wool, coal mining, iron, ‘cenper and other metal industri cording to a treasury analy In addition many small industries made from 100 to 3,900 per cent » in comparison to pre-war) margi which were even then high. commission has gained 8 information from the income tax re- ports = A tement of war profits has been placed before congr that body. ny w, §, §.§ Class of 1918: Shows Same Spirit as 1917 Ashley, Aug. 17—At the § of the adjutant general, loc wero requested to nd $s at Tequest of iggestion 1 bo: { GAMEDAY Burning So Intense Scratched, Face Disfigured. In Five | Weeks Completely | HEALEDBYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMEN' “T was troubled with started in a mild pimply f worse until my body, and face were a sore eruptions. The ing and burning was so intense that I irritated it by scratching, until my clothing aggravated tho Y eruption. I suffered un~ told agony and my face was disfigured. “Afriend told me to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I began to use them. In five weeks I was completely healed.” (Signed) I. M. Twinam, 316 S. Second St., Columbus, O. You may rely on Cuticura to care for ‘your skin, scalp, hairand han ing better to clear the skin of and blotches, the scalp of dor drutf and the hands of chapping. ides-the Soap has no superior forail toilet : Sample Each Free by Mail. Addi ard: “Cutioura, Dept. K, b. F-12, 2 See lwk least $10,000.00. this for quick ‘eash. Telegraph or telephone / J. H. HOLIHAN © Bismarck N.D. at the ain einen Hels! Help! Iam Drowning! I will be drowned financially unléss I can sell a piece, of property at once. This very desirable property is worth at It is a corner on Main street, 75 x 150, ten-roonr house, and when the world war is over, and when Bismarck becomes a little Chicago, which we hope will be soon, I predict « very active demand for a corner of this kind. I am offering sale for only $4900. $2500. BY MANDAN ORGANIZATION drove to the Lewis and/Clark Hotel where small tables were spread with an appetizing and satisfying supper, during the serving of which occurred “hit” of the evening. ,Eight of ir young members of the club gw true Ziegfeldtian cabaret enter- tainment. They were dressed in‘elab- orate evening “owns, were made-up in in the most approved style and were decorated h lovely colored balloons. They ig solos, rendered’ cHoruses and danced gracefully around. and among the tables at which the guests were seadte. Several Bismarck mon j were the recipients of marked attea- tion, and came away feeling ‘very | much flattered. It was hard to realize that-one was not on tl gfeld roof; young la- dies composing the chorus are beauti- ful and gifted in the extreme, The Bismarckers who ; were > fortunate enough (o attend will always remem- ver the gracious hospitality of the Mandan club, and the gorgeousness of ‘the entertainment. of Aus of Class | . ‘The allotment for this county fas heen yery promptly filled by voluntary enlistment of Class men of the class of 1918, which shows that the class of 1918 is of the same spirit as of class of 1917.’ Attending to Chickens and Garden My neighbors are surprised to see me looking so ¥ ‘or they thought I '} would not live to summer. | had such pain around 11y heart as to cause me to faint. I knew it el bloating and pressure of stomach. A triesd in Sf. Loui me to.use siayo's Wonderful Remedy and [ now feet better than in all my life, fam doi my own work, at- tending to miy ens and my gard- en and hav aned house.” [t is a simple, harnu ‘ation that re- moves the catarrhal macus from the inte: inflam- inal tract and ali ion w auses pmach, including appendiciti pnvince or money the ally all inal ailments, One dose will efunded. Saturday Evening Post 5 , for today, pages 52 and 53 For My “Ad.” - B.K. SKEELS \ det

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