The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 9, 1919, Page 2

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‘RUMOR AAS - “N IEL MACDONALD IN’ WATERS’ JOB), There is current at the capitol a $umor said to be based on a statement made by a prominent leaguer to the effect that Niel C. Macdonald, former state superintendent of public instruc- tion; is to be named’ bank examiner, tp succeed J. R. Waters, who has been Inade manager of the Bank of North Dakota. Mr. Macdonald’s previous experi- ®nce has been entirely along educa- tional lines, and the probability of his being selected for a post requir- ing a certain amount of technical ex- perience in banking is scoffed by in- siders. It has generally been be Neved that Mr. Macdonald will find a} place on. the board of administration created by Senate Bill 134, to take! over the duties of tne superintendent of public instruction, the staté board | of regents, the state board of control; and the board of education, should this act meet with the approval of the peo. ple at the referendum election to be} held in July. .A number of league of- ficials, however, are strongly opposed | to this act, and there is a very grave possibility that the electors may re-| ject it at the polls. In this Macdonald would then be wi state job, unless some other should be found for him. It is said that no bank examiner | will be appointed immediately. YANK EXPLOITS PICTURED IN NEW VICTORY FILM place MS) Minneapoli and unparal American ich batle- government's lat film which will b for the Victory Libe i The super screen thriller show detail'why the Victory Loan is ne biggest war) } in sary. It gives an idea of the millions we spent to bring peace to the world months before the most optimistic | hoped for it; the millions we spent to save the lives of American boys w20 were in jeopardy’ every time a gun roared. All scenes in the film were taken by photographers of the signal corps and one man lost his life in his anxiety to give the folks back home a close- up view of actual battle scenes, Cha- teau-Thierry and Belleau Wood, where American soldiers wrote his- tory last summer, are shown clearly. The death of a German aviator inj midair; the sailing of the monster Leviathan with “10,000 men aboard; the obliteration of a batery by the di- rect hit of a big shell! a trenchful of German dead and General Pershing} decorating Kankee heroes are some of the ‘high lights in+the picture. The five-reel picture was made by American) film men without a cent of profit to anybody and wil b edistrib- uted in the same way. The treasury department insists that the film be not ‘shown any place where admission is charged. It will be, distributed throfehout the ‘Ninth district and shown generally at Victory Liberty Loan meetings. Bookings are now be- ing made. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. Chicago, Ill, April 9.—Hogs, re- ceipis. 17,000, 10 to 15 cents higher; ; } $20.25 to 20.40; bulk $20.30 to sows! 918.25 to 19.85; pigs $17.75 19.00; Cattle receipts 6,000; s 25.to 50 cents hig! cents lower; heavy beef steers $11.50 to $17.40; butcher cows and heifers .25 to 17.75; veal calves $14.50 to ;_Stockers and feeders $8.2 lambs 84 pounds or 1 to 19.65; culls 14.00 to $17. medium and go 5 and common $6.50 to > light weight $19.20 to 19.45; to MINNEAP: a GRAIN. Minneapolis, M pril 9—Flour| unchanged, shipments 87,191 barrels; | IEUMONIA , Calla physician, Immedi- | €-ately begin “emergency” >.< areatment with— NICKS VAP Dp" OR UP. ‘The Home ¢ " MR. CAROW a the next s fiw weeks you be getting out your auto- mobile and p for the sea- son's run. Doubtless one of the first:things that you will have to be tires. - j and a well-organized corps of secret | headquarters aoescescrss Ccceceatetteceeneterctett erate ebeereeeetetetDEDt eee DDOLOOOOED L ARMY AVIATOR TO SPEAK FROM UPPER DECK OF A REAL ARMY TAN A real army aviator will spec day afternoon. Chairman H. ak from. the deck of a real army |tank upon the realities of the Victory loan in Bismarek on, Satur- P. Goddard of the Burleigh county war loan prittiant | organization today received word from ninth district headquar ters ot at St. Paul that Lieut. Browning; recently#returned from active , Service overseas, W here he was engaged in making the air safe for | democracy, has been assigned to Bismarck for. this date. The tank will amble up and down Bismarck’s principal streets Saturday afternoon, and Lieut. B ers. jat the more important street corn |has done with our money and credit abroad, afd what. he must |eontinue to do if our victory is to rowning will address the crowds | § He will tell what Uncle Sam be made permanent. Everyone in the Slope country who can reach Bismarck on Saturday is urged to do so, for worth while. the doings will be very much Fair weather is promised, and the abundance of the beautiful will have been sufficiently :tamed, by that time to make roads passable. rye No. 2, $1.68 to 3-4; wheat receipts | 111 cars compared with 106 year ago. 2.42 to $2.50. ats No. 3 white 66 to 6%; flax $2,828 ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK. Paul, Minn., April 2—Hogs re St. ceipts $19.80 to 20.00; bulk $19.95 to $20. Cattle rec eipts 14| | LEAGUE OFFICERS} MUST WATCH STEP; SLEUTHS AT WORK | League officials at at the capitol op- ' posed to Townley are being subjected, | it is said, to a system of\ espionage which involves the use of dictographs | agents who daily report to Townley bits of iwformation which they may succeed in picking up. A story purporting to cover an in- terview between T. J. Nelson of the Independent Voters’ association and Attorney General Langer at Fargo, which apepared in the Courier-News yesterday,-and a report of an alleged | | private office. conversation between Jerry Bacon of the Grand Forks Herald-and former State Treasurer Gifhder Olson, on a railway train between Grand Forks and Fargo, are alleged to bear out these statements. During the Langer faction luncheon in Secretary of State Hall's office Monday, a Townley representative is ‘aid to have been detected with an eye glued to the keyhole of Hall’s It is_alleged that the boast has openly beén made that a | dictagraph was planted~in Senator |F. W. Mees’ room in a local-hdtel dur- ing the recefit session. The plot ap- pears-to be thickening rapidly. JAPS GO TO KOREA. Honolulu, April 9.—Six battalions of Japenese troops are being sent to Ko- /rea to Sy¥ppress (sturbances whic are spréading, according a Nippu Naji cablegram received here today. ————————_—__ Get Rid of That © Persistent Be ing, it cough ae at ‘weal ning, persion saat tftes tie Possibly you didn’t know we the truest line of Tools that suggest an outfit of the Tools little jobs with. Tools are a moderate. * 806 Main St. Tools of All Kinds for Spring Repair Jobs in and look over our Tool Department. With Spring house-fixing and building coming on, we can have a reputation for selling money can buy! Better step you should have to do all.those specialty with us. Prices are © THINGS TO MAKE A barrel cut in half, lengthwise, with an extra -half round _ head nailed in the center as a shelf makes a rustie looking magazine stand to go with your porch furniture. / i French & Welch, Hardware and Machinery —Phone 141— FIFTY MURDERED» WOMEN AND MEN. TRAMPLED - €. A. ial to The Tribune. Reval, Hsthonia, April 8.—Stories of 60 bodies. buried in, one. grave, five of them women, skulls crushed by the Bolshevik?, the victims bayonet- plerced and mutilated, the remains stamped down by the heavy ‘boots of the Red Guard, are béing ‘told to Hs- thonian authorities. ‘The esttionians have cleared a por- tion of their.terirtory of the ‘Red ter- ror. They havexbegun to gather offi- cial reports 6f the Tathlessness of the} invaders. And the sfories they are j told rival: afy’ before: related four years of warfare. ‘The grave'ot. 50 bodies was the lar- | gesto0f a number fround Wesenberg which- were “opened in the search for evidence. The story of the murders was told by’ A. Munstram, who .es- caped from his Bolshevik, guards. “Fifty-six of us were led to the place of execution,” he testifies. “The grave was already dug, a long trench. Halt of ‘the victims, includimg six wo- }men, were lined up at the side of the first. “One ‘tried to escape. Red Guards shot her and she sank to the ground wounded. “They dragged her by the feet to the grave, shot her again and shoved her fn. Then they stamped upon her body until she was trench. ‘The’women were to be shot} NTO ONE GRAVE silent. tumbled into the graves. down. lot I managed to slip away.” Investigators identified 41 of the 50 One el of Wessen- bere: Another was a sister of mercy. The skulls of 33 had been shattered. The clothing had been taken, even to bodies taken from this grave. was the Baroness Wra! the boots. In Dorpat similar stories were told. | Bodies of 16 victims. dropped through holes in the ice, were recovered.., Arms and legg had been broken, skulls fractured, eyes put out. Twenty were killed in Dorpat with) hatchet blows and hombs in the cellar) © of a bank. -Among them. was A! bishop Platon, a university professor and a gray-baired clergyman, says the | isthonfan report. cellar sembled a shambles. A report from. Elister The skulls flayed. Everywhere are reports of homes plundered, books burned, valuable art works destroyed, The einen were shot and Then with the butts of their rifles and their bay- onets, the Bolsheviki. finished ’ then off. and they trampled their! bodies When thef lined up the next says before three peasants were killed there their eyes were put out our their noses smashed, their bones broken and their 121 TOWNS FEDERATION Facts compiled in year book of the No eration_of Women's interesting and show the women’s clubs of the state have carried on during the growth the federation ‘has enjoyed since’4ts “first meetl 1897, .in° Fargo. One ine clubs in the state ited. members of the federation, which has a’ membership ‘of 4,268 . women. One hun@red twenty-one towns of the state are represented in the federa- Red. : Cross work took up a..great portion. of the time of the club members during the year, but considerable attention .was ‘also given to other important matters and tion | ‘membership. S REPRESENTED IN N. OF: WOM! included in this work the 1918-1919 rth Dakota Fed- clubs are most] meetings, plantin® trees, the work that} ses, library work, aid of poor, care cemetery, \yest rooms, Florence} year and of the) @rittenton Hofhe, Y.°M..C. A., work, ing in . October, hundred eighty- fre now accred- In addition to sponsorin; istence the federation eight .presidents./ Mrs. ler, Fargo, was first; M x 1S Never were the people-—the buying public—more_ 1A There is no acakeity of honey. spam in America today is greater than in all history. The field for new and greater | business development is’ here. \ Advertising is the — quick, — economical — and its great economies back of your own business, you . The | U. S. Departiient of Labor urges all progres- : _sive merchants oh inanufacturers—in_ fact, all who have anything to sell—to advertige now and take advan- oer of the great i market which exists at t this time. school gardens, clean-up day munity sings and Christmas<t by welfare campaign, food conserva- tion, day nursery, student loan funds. ‘S$ ‘CLUBS were improve- meuts, home gardening, public health » lecture cour- ig these works, thé federation purchased a -$1000 Lib- erty bond, subscribed $2,000 for the “furloigh house” fund, and adopted 1¥ French war orphans, In the twenty-two years of its ex- has. had but Jennie S. Tul- S.. Lau- rs: Wo aa ~N com- ba-/ BY REDS, .ES ‘HONIANS REPORT |r der, Wahpeton, “second Eord, Cando, third; Mra, H. 8. fourth } Valley Gity, fifth; MrsyN. ©. Young, ‘sixth; Miss: Minnie Jean Niel- son, Valley City, seventh and Mrs. ©. Vick, Cavalier, | the president cumbent, Lisbon, ‘ar, Mrs. Nielson | consecutive terms, \ The complete list of officers for the federation ‘for, this session are Mrs. H. G. Vick, Cavalier, president; Mrs. C. torian; ready and able to buy t than they are teday. method of developing your business: When you put the power of advertising promotion are also . SpFeOMINE the spirit, of optimism and sora. will. vice. president at large; \Mrs..M. A. Hildreth, Fargo, recording\ secretary; Mrs. Robert McBride, Cavalier, cor- responding secretary; Hanchett, Harvey, W. B. Denault, Jamestown, auditor; Mrs. M. bledon, general federation secretary; BE. W. vice president, }LA DAY, APRIL 9, 1919 Mra.-C. ;Eugene ‘Fenelon, vils~-Eake, vice Oliver, ‘President, ‘second. district; Mrs. E. C. Frank White, !carney, Wiliston, vice president, third district; Mrs. H, L. Bolley, Fargo, vice president, fourth district; ‘Mrs. W. EB. Hoopes, Carrington, vice president, fifth district; Mra. ‘Albert C. Strand, Eljendale, vice president, sixth district; Mrs. Mark F. Jones, ‘Beach, Nice, president, seventh dis- trict; ‘Mrs. |. ‘Davidson, Mercer, | vice preside » elghth district. Honister’s Rocky. Mouritain Tea? When you are overworked, feel ro ‘less or languid, or when‘you can't’s) or eat, better take Hollister’s cky Mountain Teay Ii fens you up, purifies the blood, ‘soothes and regulates the stomach, makes you eat and sleep. A real Spring Medicine, 35¢ Pea or Tab- lets. JOS BRESLOW. ‘Tribune Want Ada Bring Results. Mrs, in- eighth. Mrs. H, 8. Oliver,’ C. Young, Miss Minnie J. id Mrs, Vick each served two W: McClusky, Carrington, vO. Mrs. Mrs. ‘treasure! C. Budiong, Bismarci®, ‘his- (Miss . Helen Bascom, ‘Wim- Cunningham, Larimor first district; Mrs. ‘When you have bought a Lanpher hat from your | dealer, you can con- sistently say, “Good Buy,” it’s $5 \ \ ~ The purchasing ‘ /

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