The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 21, 1918, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE RVARD-MAN DOWNS : ~ NOTED HUN AVIATOR western steers steady butcher stock 10c to 15c higher. Sheep 17,000; choice and prine $17.65 to 18 dium and goo $10 to 14. [Be BUY W. § §—e ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK, Hogs receipts 3,100; steady; $18.85 to 19.00; ‘bulk. 18.90 to 19.00; Cattle receipts 3,000; killers steady; ers $7.00 to 12.00. Sheep receipts 200; steady; $10.00 to 16.25; wethers $7.0 Oto 13.00; ewes $5.0Pto 12.50. BUY w. MINNEAPOLIS CLOSE. No. 1 dark northern 223 1-2 to 229; arrive 223 1-2 to 224. 0, rive 221 1-2 to 222. * No. 2 dark northern 226 1-2 to 227. No. 2 northern 213 1-2 to 2 No. J dark hard Mon‘ 226; arrive 223 1-2 to 225, No. 1 hard Mont., 221 1-2 to 224; arrive 221 1-2 to 22% No. 1 amber durum 223 1-2 to 232; Tarrive 223 1-2 to 226, | 1 durum 221 1-2 to 229; Grrive No. 2 to 223, to strong} lambs steady. lambs, $16.25 te 17.65; culls range | “ steers $6.25 to 17.50; cows and heif- lambs 1 northern 221 1-2 to 227; ar- PAINTING HIS “BIT” . Barber Blames Customer. Thigistuff about the talkative barber is all wrong, it appears. A barber writes Seattle. Post-Jntelligencer pro- testing ‘against further misrepresen- tation. It-is the customer who Insists upon ‘opening his. heart, he. weftes, and |* the-poor barber is obliged to listen to aJt manner of confidential patter, home troubles, scandals, und occasionally the customer gpills a-bum tip fon the stock market and the barber goes broke. It: is this lafter contingency at impels him to protest. | With Self Forgot, Greatness is nchieved, not by direct and eager. chasq, but while we are look- ing for something eltoy « If is-the litle things we get by hot ‘endeayor.. The great things come: to us, as It were | ureufe a corner. We never heceme beautiful, or eloquent, or, popular, .or happy,.or intellectual, or even goad, by. hardAubor, fhings will cone to us when we gre most self-forgetfil, and most absorbed in the ‘service of our kind, ‘Edward Whatever we get of such |. Wounded and convalescent soldiers fn front of the American Red Cross, headquarters at, . It ts an understood fact that. all Red Cross. headquarters are “home” to American troops, well or wounded, 2 221 1-2 to 222 rum 2613 oat Judson. a / \TENNANTS WINNING IN FIGHT | ‘ wees QN - RENT PROFITEERS . In a thrilling airplane battle AE \ 10,000 feet above the fighting 4 yellow corn 173 to 178. There are some men and some won-. BY J. H. DUCKWORTH. league had its birth, there is another yellow. cor! 166 to mixed corn 174 to 17 Other grades corn 160 to 1 No. 1 white oats Mont ae 1-2 2 tw 72 1-2, Standard white oats 68 ry to 70 1-2; arrive 69/12 to 70. No. 3 white oats 69 to 70; arrive 69. No. 4 white oats 66 to 69; arrive choice 99 to 104, Barley ordinary 90 to 99. ) Rye 173 to 174. Rye to arrive 172 to Kiax 448 1-2 to 450 1-2 to 450 1-2. Oats 469 3-8 to 12. rent strike now going on, the most formidable that has so-far occurred. Over 300 flat dwellers, who have - their rents raised from 15 to 40 per cent and have refused to pay the in- N. E. A. Staff Correspondent. ‘New York, Aug. 21—Victims of the profiteering landlord in New York are-enrolling by the thousands - in the Greater New Yark ‘Tenants’ league. So acute ig the rent situation |crease, have demanded that the Muni- ‘becoming here, and so aroused have! cipal Court investigate the profiteer- ~ trawn. out. by their Intercourse, and | the outraged tenants become, that “the | ing methods of the owners of prop: aime 3x we find a music in our. souls that was lease has arranged to hold a mass jerty. fice ak ‘Mite ciek ac agever there before, meefing, September 25 at Cooer| One of these strikers, Mrs. John Th: Arie dames Montgomery, Flagg reproducing his famous “Tel . ve wk Union, the scene of many historic|Stemler of 993 Union avenue, has a at to the Marines. poster wii € original mode! gatherings of rotest against oppres-|son, her only support, fighting in the New York public library to aid in marine corps recruiting. Old Chinese Industry. siod in the past. France, yet the landlord has added Experts, differ as. to Mow- long ago. BRITISH UNDER_ GEN, BYNG lines in France, Francis Peabody Ma- goun, Jr. a Harvard man, and second Neutenant in the British royal flying corps, sent one of the Germans’ most noted fliers crashing to the ground, causing the Hun’s death and complete destruction of his machine, according to a letter sent by Magoun to his parents in Cambridge, Mass. This was the Victor's first aerial conflict. VELL “KAMERAD” IF. n In whose. company: we are always At our (best. While svfth them we exnnot think mean thoughts or speak mgenerous-words. Their mere. pres- once is elevation, purification, sanctity. All the best stops in our nature ‘are 73 arrive 446 refused to exict her. The league~has definitely endorsed|$8 to her rent. Judge Robitzek has he Chinese began to. make -rugs, The judge admits: the rent: profiteering bill, now before congress, which, provides “that all in- ‘As the law™ se Uats V 70 78. ' Mere-are yome who think it is one | creases in-rent above the 5 per cent| stands the courts are powerless to aid od ‘ i" by THEIR BOMB MISSES Rye U 171. CAPTURE SEVERAL TOWNS t ne native arts of Choa and others allowed ae taxed 100 per cent,as “ex- oor fenant in ia going to be abc: i fit, Rye 173. P % | naintain tha is acquired.. Never- | cess profits.” ‘lutely impossible for the poor o} ee ‘BUY W. S. S.——— . IN IMPORTANT THRUST ‘heless, It is: safe to say that, like the |, Out at Bath “Beach landlords are| bronx. to meet the. demands pet tha : t i Ma- DULUTH CLOSE. —_——————_—_ sther arts of the Flowery ‘Republic, | raising rents from $8 to $11 a room/'landlords ff the present scale of in- i St. Louis Boy Tells of How Ma Oats on track 70 to 71. (Continued From Page One.) Chinese rugmaking is of very great and from $11 to $15. crease is an indication ot what is to f In ‘the Bronx,. where the. tenants’ RICE RIOTS” STILL SERIOUS Tokio, Aug. 21.—Riots over short- A i age of rice continue. The government Charged With Embezzling $6,000 has-made concessions to the newspa- From Rogers Lumber pers and permit the publishing of two| , , bulletins ‘daily.° The first bulletin come.’ ' ‘WANFRED AGENT UNDER ARREST. quate shipping, and while the Emergency. Fleet Cire is| antiquity. constantly swelling the tonnage at the government's disposal, it jis necessary to requisition many ships. | The chief of staff said that the 36th National Guard and 90th army division, including many Texans, reached France be- tween July 30th and August 20th and been in training. The 90th jhe said had not get reached the front line. ; Lacking official details of the British drive, reported in As- sociated Press dispatches, General March declined to comment on the new thrust. Oats to arrive 70. Barle yon track 80 to 102. liye to arrive 171-B Flax on track and arrive 463. Sept. flax 463 B. October flax 445 1-2. Nov. flax 440. Dec. flax 435. BUY W. 8, $———— _ tines Took German Ma- ; chine Guns, ‘An interesting description of an tack by United States marines ‘on: a German machine-gun position is given in a letter by Henry A. Bauman to his father at St. Louis. He says he Is suf- fering from sores caused by gas, but otherwise is all right. He says his company in several fights have killed F 4 He said since the period elapsed since his last talk, the allies ore than 500 Germans and captured ny \had continued to attack at widely separated fronts. “Our battalion was picked to take. es eet a 4 . Y 4 Taking Out Ink Stains. Tt may not be generally. known that t is quite easy. to take out ink ‘stains: vith common soda, Damp the stain vith cold water, and . then. . cover t with soda. Lerve ity for about n hour, till the stain completely dis- ‘sppears. It’ does not leave a mark ifter, < The Point of View. very strong machine-guo position held: The. difference between. American during the last three days explains| ‘ Company i ‘is- IN SIBERIA y Ancients_Played Ball. . 3 # + | that the mob in Tokio varying from a by. the Germans,” Bauman. writes,|Premier and His Daughter Dis P 4 Baseball “fans will. ba interested nal renal urormebile.deiving js this: 300 to 1,000 damaged police boxes, at!) Fessendent, N.D., Aug, 21—J F. ‘ ¥ “They, were dug in in a Jarge strip y « consolate we to know that Egypt is the birthpince a 3 P | tacked), pedestrians, damaged Gesha| Field, who had heen agent for the of woods, and the big rocks made the Position what looked to me likea reg- {of the original ball game. How ‘it ou say ur. tire. “Good heavens! There goes ” and in France you. say: houses, rice stores and attacked. thé Seiyoken hotel. ‘The ‘building of the (Rogers Lumber Co., at Manfred for was played history does not record. {Recent excavations made near Cairo (By Newspaper sper Enterp London, Aug. 21.—Premier Lloyd terprise Ass'n.) avout six years, was arrested for.em- bezzlement, it being charged that he minister of. communications and -com- Hooray! Automé- ular nest of fortresses, That was only the tire.”"— 5 ge 3 Stars and Stripes, merce was \algo assailed. “It sure was a sight as we marched | Gorge’s dog “Cymro” is missing.’ have, brought. to, light. 2 number. of ep : . biles. ‘and tram cars were singled out|had forged notes by signing promin- acrosg an. open field in a valley, about} “The premier has offered a reward small balls, some of leather pnd oth- for attack. ent farmers’ names’ to them. He was 700 yards, There were three waves. We seared the Germans so. badly, though, that they never tried to hold us, but beat it, leaving a-lot of- guns of: $25 for his recovery, ‘but make no mistake—that figure has nothing to do with either the value of the dog, oF the Premier's distress. over, his” joss, ers of wood, dating back to at least 2000 B.C. These are the oldest balls Canada’s Big Canal... The Weltan(t canal: in. Canada, cate jesnavigation .around Niagara. Falls nd ‘connects Lakes Erie and Ontario. S—— avy w, 8. 8 Y DRIVE WILL START NEXT. NOV. vrought to Fessenden and it is ‘said, made a confession of the crime. It seems that the forging has covered, and ammunition in our hands. « “We. dug. in, expecting . a .counter-. attack, which. never. came.. The..next, “Cymro’ ‘is a fine Welsh terrier with ai face that is described as\al- -most human.” several years.--Field receiving pay-.,. < oy ment ior farmers’ book accounts and 4 instead of turning the money over ta the lymber company he kept the mon;- Fargo, Aug: 21.—Official notifica- tion of, the dates of the coming Y. M. C. A. drivg, with the assurance that Just a Little Too Much. bis 27. aleralgne, was’ built by Can- Young Fiddle’was a very learned da.andy Was opened in 1833 and cost bout $20,000,000. day |we. made another attack where they ‘tought like h—1 for a while, but the boys waded though thelr machine- gun fire and made such quick work of them that they broke and ran, agalu, “It was the first. time I heard the Hun yell ‘Kamerad !'—which he gure did. They throw a bomb at. us, and He paid absolutely no attention to, political” attdcks. on his master,’ dor: did: it make any difference to “Cymro’: whether anybady ever praised the pre- mier. Minister’ of munitions, or prime minister, or private citizen, iti was all the same to “Cymro.” | All of which, any political statesman will tell you, constitutes a friend that |. | very disappointed, not to say surprised, 4 when he refused to accept tlie degree. of doctor of divinity.’ One of his cok Tengues tackled him on the subject. “Ah, well,” replied the learned young \man, “tt's enotigh to Bé named Fiddle, without being” "iddle, Dp. D.” young man, and. his friends were ally ae yYoM. AY. _Undeneminational. A The ¥. Acids undenominational,| san institution. Its aim 4s .to. pro- ioté the: snelal,. mental, physical, and: ritual well-being ofall young “nen ithout regard to thetr church su:fillas plans may. be made ‘without fear of a change in date, was receivedyes- terday by Y. L.. Stockwell, chairman of the personnel committee. The’ drive opens ‘Nov.'11 and finishes Nov. 19. WwW. The drive will ‘be for $133,090,000, of which. $100,000,000 .will go to the charge. vook account and was: informed there was an unpaid note against hit. ‘The ey and marked-the accounts: paid by notes. ‘The discovery of the embezzle- ment was made last week, while Field. was from the office, apd. Auditor’ &., Thorpa and another. man in: A farmer called to pay his. Y.-M.'C. A., $19,000,000 to the Y. W. C..A.,“and $3,500,000 to the American, Library ‘association. This is $18,000,- farmer denied this, and was ‘shown the note which was signed in imitation’ would “be hard for any man in public if it Kills, us th il is they stick a’while longer. lite: to: replace, \ ee ons or religious beliefs. 7 : i If ft doesn't kill us up go their hands and off go their helmets—'Kamerad!’ “We captured 300 prisoners, 37 ma- chine ‘guns and one trench mortar that .is,, my company, did, Altogether we’ killed 500 Boches and captured Aside’ from ‘this angle of it;-Lloyd George has two daughters who are wishing‘almost as hard as the premier himself that somebody will put “Cym- ro” on the track for home. The dog disappeared at Sutton on duly 19. Labor EverywherepWelcome. ‘ T hear, therefore with joy whatever is:beginning to, be-said of the dignity. and necessity of labor to every. citl- zen. and the spade for the learned as:well; There. is virtue yet in the, hoe}, “Lead” Bencils, The common blzek lead pencil ts vnde from graphite and. contains no ad. Lead pencils received, .their 4 ame froty the leaden plummets which 000 more than :was first announced, | of his signature. Upon further inves; ang. the state. quota of $400,000 may, tigation a number of notes were found have to be made $450,000. “Mr.-Stock- well stated. ‘The personnel committee of the Y- M. C.'A. war board met at the Mason- ic temple yesterday afternoon. Eight that farmers Field’s arrest fqllowed. , had nét signed, -ang, The last information is that notes, amounting to much over $6,000 ha@: been made by Field, one of over a 800 prisoners, besides a lot of machine GENERAG | } p hi d dollars ‘with the na of ‘4 F as the unlearned hands. And labor | -cre used to rule lines on paper. be- applications for positions. were pass-|thousand dollars ‘ wit! ie name guns and several pieces of artillery, DUNN. Me oh ieG { é aa ‘ Li ed: upon, three of them being applica-|Jacob Wagner signed to it.’ “Outside of shooting at ug with ar HD.STYER: is everywhere ‘welcome; always we| ore. the use of araphite. tillery and gas for the next few days, the Boches let, us alone.” ~ PITCHING HAY A PASTIME Majesty. of the Law. “Here,. now!" sternly, ‘commanded Constable Sam T..Slackputter,-the Te- doubtable sleuth of Petunia. “You fevers. move on there! Scatter out! You're blocking the sidewalk go folks P ! ‘ he Brig. Gen. Henry. D. Styer is: in command of the 2th regiment U. S. ‘army, which has landed at Viadiostok to aid the Czecha-Sloaks control Si- jare invited to work.—Emerson, ‘Stupid Ceremony Perpetuated. A mad. ceremony was performed at Bedfordshire, England, thq other. day, é Yee, | T Does! “tt kind o'-ziles a man dat prides his- elf on.eeein’ haw. much work he: kin io,” said Uncle Bben, “to hear some tions from women for canteen service, and the others auto mechanics, who, are ready to go on-vvevseas service with the “Y." BUY W. 8. 6. Railroad Officials Here. Ji°M. Hannaford, federal manager children. Manfred friends ‘to go his bond, and © remains in jail awaiting arrangements to go, ‘before, District Judge Coffey, who is assisting with the harvest on his farms ‘near, Courtenay. Field is a married man with five He declined the offer of, y \ ‘beria. General Steyer has seen ser-|'To fulfill the terms of an ancient char-} tan braggin’ cause he doesn't have to|of the Northern Pacific and J. M.4 BUY WS. H Methodist Jame. mores on Farms Biel aaa a ones i mead ice in the Philippines and Mexico and /fty. bequest a choir hoy had to stand! to no work at all.” ” | Rapelje, general manager, passed| Grace: You.can’t cover blackheads, fence! dog fight insait tatore ic Is a ee was formerly commander of the 181st/on his head Yn the church yard, while ‘ through“Bismarck to St. Paul. They|pimples, red ‘spots’ on the face with™ : Rev. J. E. Bryan, pastor of the Methodist church at Cottonwood Falls, Kan,, is ghowing his patriotism and, is Ratsas City Sta infantry brigade at Camp Lewis, - | Wash. the church warden read parts of the will. He. Wanted to. Get Back... Little, Boy. (who, has.a fear of beng were on their way home after a tour of the branches. BUY W, 5S. $. Enjoy: the dinner and dance! at’ the powder, Why worry and spoil your temper: Take Hollister’s Rocky Mountain Tey they’re bound to be: seen. —'twill banish them‘through the blood helping solve the labor shortage by ouried Jalive),: “Manma, if 1 should putting in quite a large share of his FIRST N ER- ou A Jo SERVICE Hae Se oa We al Bias “Tne Wai deren crening pier zene only pure wag. oS cents, Tea tee time working on the farms of mem- ri L nickel in my pocket, go if T come to mes Ha i. §. oe UY W.S. 5. bers of his ehurch. tife I can get home.on a street car.” ‘ oie Besides fulfilling all his’ pastorate Fossil Ivory in. the Arctic. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY > duties: and preaching at: funerals and * ee ae Perl ne the post, amare e : { performing. wedding, ceremonies, Rev. Lf By No Means Secure. of all the Arctic bonanzas is, that con- - - ~ Mr. Bryan fads plenty 08 tine. te aiako BY PAUL bens iar see your son Sambo'has | tained in the Liakhov islands and New [FOR RENT—Four. roome, single and a full hand in the hayfields for sboyt| The first of the, baseball super- secured A positign.” Rastus—“No, He.| Siberia. These Ie ‘in. the midst bf al- counley one a at atin tn, Aone | three or four days out of the week—|Stars has joined United States rot.one, bat he ain't secured it] most eternal ice in the north of SB qairnrisgrarsteese ‘ | or at least that has been -his recent | Se rvice—or' to be more Correct, | he am lable to fire| berin itself, ard the soil is full of BUY W. 8S rs, record. He likes farm work and gar-| will join. within a week. hin why. minute.”—Life. tusks of the now extinct” mammoth. | waxpeD—At once, competent book- ape an dening and has. done enough of .thig strenuous labor to harden his musdles 80 he can pitch hay with the best of his Parishioners: ~ CHAMPION: N: WORM STORY: i proof. jobs, ‘but. this. can 'be «| States. United Kingdom, and: Japan. FOR SALE—At once, chiffonier and teal ‘Filet ‘Correspondent § Sends Remark. scarcely. be said about a man ——————— “ fressing table, Mrs. J. W. Murphy. ea able. Yarn From West Virginia. What Do-You’ Think of That? 315 R, care Van Horn ‘hotel. Ay A field correspondent sends the fol- Jowing story of a worm offensive from Littleton, W. Va. | Millions of worms have Invaded this ection: | For three days they ‘passed Steadily a half-mile from this city in Eddie Collins, greatest. of ser- od basemen,. will soon wear- a uniform .and be in training for overseas duty. There’s been 4 lot. of criticism about ballplayers seeking bomb- who voluntarily poins the “teu- fel hands,” who have a reputa- tion of always being in the mid- dle of it when there’s Wangerous work to be-done. . Collins is‘one of the most re- N New Zealand's. Lumber. Imports. : Most of the better furniture and in- dustrial lumber! used in New Zealand ig importeg, ‘such asionk, ash, hickory, ete., ‘fad comes largely from the United There isan aspect of spider. an. fly felation: which: fabulists: and natural- ist$ alike have ovérlookell. /,An ob ich Has brought the microscope ‘to beat on many Nouse files and finds that |. The Wanderer.” During the last century shiptoads of this fossil ivory have been brought out and sold at very high prices. BUY W. 8. 5. Enjoy the dinner ayd’ dance. at: the/ McKenzie, Thursday erenlng otk: RECOMMENDED FOR BRAVERY 14 ACTION. | | 3. keeper. | coming Lahr Motor Sales. Co. 8 2k 4t BUY W. S. ‘| FOR RENT—Partly medern 4 room houge on 9th street. Call at J. P. Hopsiand office, 606 Main St. 8 21 3st ‘ BUY WW. S, S——— ‘Phone Wee 8 21 3t ——aurw. ss, NOTICE. The high school will open for the school ‘term on ‘ September Conditions here do not seem to the: parasite upon that hateful insect is often an. immature spider. Too weak yet to spin its web it makes the ~| fly. its: wi inged palfrey, and courses from’ place to, place at the ill’ of its, captive 5. either until, Pegasus, per- ishes naturally or presumably until the rider has grown up and is able to make a meal of his charger, cd | warrant the postponement of. the: op- ;ening date to sometime in October. In fact the demagd for High School ' boys from_busine’s firms will be even greater next June than now. — Boys, o doing farm work or helping in the. ‘ {harvesting should not enroll until the season i8 over:.The“teachets will’ give these few ‘boys extra time and they " will have every opportunity-to: make ‘ up the, work which they. miss.. In or- der that complete arrangements to markable of present day. ball- players. He has‘been called: the smartest player: in baseball, and | he. is undoubtedly one of the, most: fearless. Eddie broke in withthe Ath-! letics back: in 1906. under the nom de guerre of Sullivan. Fresh from Columbia, where he: had)’ such numbers as to drive farmers from the fields. Work was discontinued in ordér to shovel the invaders away from homes.. The army is ‘traveling a straight course. It is 100 yards. in width, three, miles Jong and several} inches deep... When one. farmer, Mil: lard’ McDougal, arose one morning he found. worms’stacked against his, back door, _ James Fox, another, farmer, was forced’ to stop plowing. The worms are about two inches long,.one-aighth of. an inch in diameter, of a golden Yellow color and-with many legs, ‘ avy Wyss | “CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. Hogs,! receipts ~°11,000; ‘butchers $19.30'to 19.595; light hogs $19.29 ‘to 20.00;" packing $17.20 .ta 19:10; J rough $17.40; to) 17, pigsPeood and choice, $18.00 to 18.50. been a star,-Eddie,was assured slipping Monte.Cross.. For two years he was shifted through the infieldwith the, exception of first base, , landing “finally at ‘second where he continued for his base- ball career, ‘ his ‘famous Athletics: Collins.was sold té Chicago: for: $50,000,’re- Cattre receipts 11,000; ‘native: andjceiving $10,000 bonus. himself of a, berth ‘to fill the shoes. of the], and a contract calling. for $15,- 000 a year. for three years. iest baseball player. Participated: in.’ Perhaps the hos yeareable exploit~of Collins’ entire;career Collins is said'to be thé wealth-| was his footrace with Heine Zim- Baseball .merman in the final: Giant-White whens Connie Mack .broke up! alone:has paid him ‘almost $125,- Sox game of the 1917. world:ser- 000 of which ‘about $25,000 cameties ‘which - proved ‘the’, : turning from: the.five. world series he has|point in the game and’ gave the White: Sox the, ‘championship, Gordon's Defense of Khartum. ~ «For sheer duration General. Gordon's herole defense of Khartum excelled all modern’ sieges, for it. lasted 317 days, or Just nine dayg shorter than. the Rus-) sian retention at: Sebastopol. Uni tunately, as’ we all know, its termina- tion was q tragedy., embittered by. the fact. that; a-very few. days later the would-be. army, of elie? arrived, only. in time: to pick up the poecale ot a}. | pitiful djsaster. TAE OLD TIMERS Wo GIVES THE = OUDIER Boys “A Ripe * do this can be made these boys should communicate with Prin. C. F. Bolt. qwigned) s\ Supt. J. M. Martin.

Other pages from this issue: