The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 10, 1919, Page 2

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PAGE 2. DEMOBILIZATION PASSES TWO MILLION MARK :: Washington, tion o fthe wa y has 1W two million mark, General chief of staff, announced toa) the number of troops returned France now s one million Official estimates of the g staff show that a continuation o® the present rate of transporting — troops from tion by ve will result in the reciac- An | ugust 1 of the Amer force in nee and Germany to 024 oftificers and men, including coure bat and service of supply troops, ma- rine detachments and the navy person- nel, attached to the arm, he move- ment from France durin, 1 totaled 308,178. General March sai celeration of the general proceeding to the point wh certain that the official 810,00 per month will be -exceeded, PACKARD HOME FROM ARGUING | BIG RATE CASE, Assistant Attorney General F. E. Pa d returned last evening from Washington, D, C., where he repre- sented the state in the action brought by Attorney General Langer against the federal railway administration. If the supreme court of the United States, before which an appeal from the supreme court of North Dakota was argued last week, upholds the fav- orable opinoin of the Flickertail tri- bunal, the federal railway administra- tion will be enjoined from charging | the greatly enhanced freight and pas- | senger tariffs made effective intra- state by order of the director general last June. The federal railway ad- ministration will also be compelled to refund excess charges aggregating some $12,000,000 in the state of North Dakota and more than $1,750,000,000 shedule is it seems mate of hed and | i -[BURGLAR ATTACK ‘| Loren Benscoter, Killed at Aber- Postmaster General Burleson’s admin- i tion of telegraph and telephone stems, whcih has resulted in greatly increased intrastate rates, was argued before the supreme court of the Unit- ed States at the same time, the briefs presented largely following those pre- pare by Attorney General Langer and Assistant Attorney General Pack- ard in the North Dakota rail rate cases, CAUSES DEATH OF FORMER FARGOAN deen, Was Husband of Wash- burn Young Woman Aberdeen, N, D., May 10.—Death fol- lowed switly upon the murderous at- ‘k on Loren Benscoter in the dark- of his little bungalow home, and sung man died yesterday evening At five o’clcok yesterday afternoon word came from St. Luke's hospital that Loren Benscoter, bookkeeper for Armour and company, had succumbed inflicted upon him by ilant. Snatched from the prime of life in his full vigor, with bright prospects of a successful. business life before the body of Loren Benscoter today lies at the Wikson undertaking parlors, His wife and little 18-month: child are left to. fight out life's gles alone, The hearts of Aberdeen people go out to the young widow and her baby in this sudden bereavement. WIFE WASHBURN GIRL. 0, N. D., May 10—Loren Ben- who was shot at Aberdecn in his home by an’ unknown — intruder old rug: Wedensday evening and died yester day from the wound, lived in for several years and was employed branch of Armour and a bookkeeper until Jast by the 1 company August, when the company transferred him to Aberdec He is a cousin of Mrs, Andrew Quam of 74 Front street. He is sur- ived by his wife and one small child. Benscoter, who was formerly Florence Anderson of Wa for the nation at large. é A similar action borught against | ALGOHOL 3 PER oan f H AVesetable Preparation ; eerepetretiay by Regula : fing the Stomachsand Bowels AhelpfulRemedy for nstipation and Pe dd ris! . an OSsOF SLEEP | resititing therefrom ht ** 9 Focsimile Signatorect AtOmonths old Exact Copy of Wrapper. Nice Three times tran ‘feet high; 21-2 diameter. POCCCC CCID OOOCL EEE IELIOLE LES IIIOLOLIDOLSLIOLI DEL OLILEIEDL OLDS, IAQESUAEFOOERETOAGOEREEOEOUCAOERGONEUGGEOOGGLOOROUOAGOQOOGSOCESOUSOG0QCAGOCUOOOOEGGEOAOOOOGOUOGAEUOOO AOE Bullll CASTORIA Mothers Know That CASTORIA HN Me woe re ee We Have a Block of 500 | North Dakota Grown Elm. splanted; 8 to 12 $2.90 to $3.50 Each ; HOSKIN’S | IVIUUUANELUUEH AULA ALAA wean . D., was married to hey husband at For Infants and Children. Genuine Castoria Always For Over Thirty Years ‘THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NeW YORK city. to 3 inches in POOPLOOL LOL OOL IDL OOL DD OEL DOD DOD *OLOLELOOLE. = = PODAPOPOLALPODORIL ESOL PDO DIED: | tion, Mr, Ziegler was engaged for a Mandan’ five years ago, when he was un instructor in the state reform school and she was employed as a ste- nographer, BISMARCK DIVORCE SUIT IN HIGHEST COURT OF AMERICA Clarence Zeigler, Sued for Not Paying Alimony, Asks Ha- beas Corpus Writ Washington, May 10.—The supreme court of the United States was today asked to release from the district jail on haveas corpus Clarence L. CG, Zieg- ler, who for four years was se ry to Governor L. B, Hanha of North Dakota and seetetary cf the board ‘of pardons of that state, and who, when arrested Friday, was secretary to Congressman Harold Knutson of St. Cloud, Minn, Ziegler has been sent to jail for failure to pay alimony to his wife, who sued him for a divorce in the courts here, Ziegler claims that she is a resident of North Dakota and should have begun her suit there. Mr. and M Ziegler were well known in Bismarck, where they made their home for a number of years and where both had many friends, Follow- ing the close of the Hanna administra- few months as torney general Washington. Mrs, Ziegler was a charming little woman, admired by all who knew her, and the couple seemed very happy, during their residence here. The Wash- ington dispatch contains the first in- timation received in Bismarck of any domestic difficulties between the cou- ple. They have three beautiful little children. 0 stenographer in the at- 's offices, later going to N. DAKOTA MAN WEARS D. S. C.‘PIN Edgar Odell of York Rewarded for Heroism at Varennes May 10.—Edga" -D., wearing the ision, at Varennes, in the Argonne, reached Minneapolis to- day in the company of 15 other North Dakota men on their way back to their homes, The story of Odell’s citation was used in the New York press during the Victory loan compaign and is con- sidered one of the most remarkable in- nees of bravery on record in the war, After e at San Mihiel, in the Argonne dr and elsewhere with distinction, the unit to which Odell v tached advanced upon Varennes. Coming upon a house from which th enemy was firing, Odell alone, carry- ing an automatic pistol and half a dozen hand grenades; advanced to the door, rushing quickly forward‘ in the face of machine gun fire from a win- dow. Reaching -the threshold, he he hurled his grenades into the interior and fired his automatic into tha door of a closed room where the machine gun .was at work, When a platoon of the company reached the scene they found Odell with 16 enemy prisoners, who had: surrendered to him, an in the house were found four machine guns. The citation speaks of the incident as “conspicuously heroic.” Edward C.- Gale and others of the welcoming committee invited Odell and his fellow North Dagotans to remain over for the homecoming celebration as the gttests of the committee and several of the men remained. WELL KNOWN BISMARCK * MEN OPEN NEW GARAGE | Among the many new, enterprises which have shown the quickening pulse of business life in Bismarck this spring is the Indegendent . garage, -lo- cated in the, rear Wf the, Northwest hotel building in quarters formerly oc- cupied by the Western Sales Co. The new institution plans to conduct a general garage and sorage business. The men behind the enterprise are O. W. Roberts, chief of the U. S. weather bureau service for North Da- kota ; his two sons, Warder and Frank- lin, late of the U. S. navy, and J. B. Stangler, an all-around mechanic and garage man, All of these people arq well known Bismarck men of many years’ resi- dence, and success is predicted for them in their new undertaking. JAPS WANT TO RUN HAWAII LEGISLATURE, IS CHARGE N. E. A. Special-to The Tribune. Honolulu, May 9.—Japanese lobby- ists are out to control the,Hawaitan legislature. This is the open charge of menrbers of that body as result of organized opposition to bills regulat- ing foreign language schools. A dele- gation of Japanese, A leading Japanese newspaper and a prominent Honolulu attorney are named as active in the cabal. x n e to the Black Sea.” hemmed _ in. Another Man speare The Ukraine Nations va « fancies, reality for ‘Tis a Mark of Distinction to The Literary Digest 5 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK. Chicago, I, May 10.—Hoge, re- ceipts 7,000; mostly. steady. + 0. to 20.70. ~ Hetavyweilght' $20.60 to 20.8: ‘Medium weight $20.35 to Light weight $20.10 to 20, Light light $19.00 to 20.35. Heavy packitig scws smo6th $19.75 to 20.25, rl Heavy packing sown rough $19.00 to 19.75. . ( Pigs $18.00. to 19.00. Cattle 1,000 compared with week ago-Steers mostly 50c to/$1,00 lower; fat cows and heifers mostly 50c to 75¢ lower. Cannerg and med: grades 2c to 50c¢ lower; bills. steady, calves 75 to 1.00 higher. x 1 Stockers and feeders 25c to 50c low- ery Sheep 6,000; compared wita week ago‘shorn lambs best 25c lower; oth- ers 35 to 50c lower; spring about $1.00! Jower. | ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK. So. St. Paut-Minn:, May 10.—Hogs | $1,200; ‘steady. i BOARD OF UNIVERSITY AND SCHOOL LANDS PAYS CHECK =. The state board of university and school lands has delivered to F. E.j Shepard, cashier of the First Nation- al bank of Bismarck, its chéck for $30,000, representing the ’ first ten per cent payment onthe $300,000 worth of victory bonds in whica North Dakota school moneys. will be invested by resolution of the board. Those who have not ordered Taylor Fruit call Mrs. A. A. Jones, 5448, j } TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ' MAN WANTED at the Bismarck Dai 5-10-1t 364 Bismarck, N. D. 5-10-8t FOR SALE--One second hand motor cycle, 1 six. inder-Studebaker car, on 1912 4-cylinder Cadillec, one 1914 d-cylindér ‘Cadillac. Bismarck Radi- ator Works, 5-10-1w WANTED—Girl for general. house- work. Call 717 9th St. 5-1013t. WANTED—Girl clerk by the week or month, at Founce: store, 4th St,” 8-10-1w 2 = = = = = : if WANTED—A competent girl for gen- eral housework; two in family. 513 Ave. A, or.phone 142, 5-10-tf Co: YOR SALE—1918 model Ferd road: |? tiny ster.in good condition, “Address Box | Range $20.00 t8 20.20. Bulk’ 2045.» Before The Advent "OF Wortn’s Giatness Before the: arrival. of, tor! for. ov belt's cent? Reve Rey wie Of giving naturs 4 Bel Noysta, © ‘nervou: bearii alectohing jalgs in,..tho. i museics are entirely Svolded Mothet's Friend, according tothe testimony of LT etottiey ‘Of mothers who'have used this n Fries Labtteat fine net ‘Hen al ¢ 18 A mi 2 soft and clastic. Bop tb expand gently and. easily we th {8 Born ai if id di th por and Bale, and danger at ths i Friend reparatidn. of pene ng oll pat ned{cing!, agents pecially “for expectant "mothers, ds for. external use, is ‘absolutely safe end used regularly. during the cntire 8 08, Fite to lator Com wv Dept. A, ‘Lamar Building. Atlanta, a a an ng obtain uerbood ay ‘Georgia, ‘dates (of Pee, 8 pattie of. Freeones S13, hig the tricolor on half the palaces of Europe. position and‘can strike in any direct: Burleson Dropping Turkey’s Melancholy Days'of Peace The First Concrete Freight Car A “Full-Blecded Romance From Italy Be a Reader of TE PT the Wires Who Wrote Shake- Finding Saloon “Substitutes” ‘ (Who the Ukrainians Are, and Facts About Their Country) American Publi¢ Opinion on Fiume Personal Glimpses of Men and Events British Influence in the League of The study of the new social disease, Bolshevism, whose menace is today overshadowing the greater part of Europe, reveals the outstanding fact that - it is most prevalent where ignorance ‘is most strongly entrenched. This ignorance and its at- tendants, poverty ‘and want, create ideal condi- tions fo rthe fostering of this dread disease. The surest way to combat these is by education, by \enlarging the viewpoint, by substituting facts for revolution. No perversion of , the truth can long endure under the pitiless light May 10th Namber on Sale Today-~All News-delers Cattle receipts 260 Steers $6.00 to 17.50. F Cows and heifers $5.00 to 14.50. Stockers and feeders steady 15.00. Sheep none; steady. Lambs $7.00 to 18. Wethers $13.00 to 14.50. Ewes $12.00 to 14.00. ; killers. steady. MINNEAPOLIS FLOUR. Flour unchanged; shipments 94,916 barrels. x Barley $1.03 to 1.13. - Rye No. 2 1.59 to 1.58 1-2. Bkan $39. Wheat receipts 264 cars; compared with 167 cars a year ago. | Cash No. 1 northern $2.65 to 2.70, Corn No. 3 yellow 1.69 to 1.70. Oats, No. 3 white, 64 1-2 to 65 1-2. Flax $3.97 to $3.99. ARCHANGEL G ERAL SERVED HUNS IN DISGUISE| N. E. A. Special to the Tribune. London, May 10.-~seneral Sronsides, who is in command of the Brijish fr- ces in the Archangel region, is consid- SUT i Hides’ & Leather We are wholesale dealers in Hides, Skins, Harness Leather, Lace Leather, Oak and Chrome Tann; and will pay, Top Market Price for Hides.and furnish Leather at Rock Bottom Prices. It will pay you to figure with -us before you place your order, GROVE HIDE & FUR CoO. Bismarck, N. D. SULAUHOREAASOGANQOQQS090S0S0CN0RNRORRUASUAUSOOOS SEQQDSEGQONNOQASLOLONNSNOOSIN0NSINC0 9000005050008 FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers ofthe Famous NEW Standard I | study the German campaizn oper: disguised himself as a native nullock mnnanuonangaail MM Drawing a Steel Ring Around Bolshevik Russia Revolutionary France, assailed on every side in 1792, borarle to arms and threw the invaders across the border in a few weeks and then gathered her strength for the great campaigns that planted Other articles of more than usual interest in t his number of “The Digest” are: President Wilson’s “Shirt-Sleeve Diplomacy” _ A Translation of Articles From the Italian Press Showing the State of “Public Opinion in Italy on President Wilson and His Action Regarding Fiume - Riotous “Passive Resistance” in India Bolshevik Russia is now in a similar situation, but any . dreams of a Soviet invasion-of Germany, Poland, Hungary, and Roumania with 3,000,000 soldiers, seem nonsensical to American editors. While the Bolshevik forces under Lenine and Trotzky hold the inside ion, atleast five of the peoples of Europe are actively engaged in military preparations for defense. Of 850,000 Allied troops in Northeastern Europe “the English and French alone number nearly 300,000,” says the New York Evening Post, and “with the Czecho-Slovaks and Poles in the North, a cordon of easily more than a million men can be stretched from the Baltic Read THE LITERARY DIGEST this week—May 10th—if you would obtain a real knowledge of the present military situation in Russia. The article is illustrated by a half-tone picture of Kolchak, \ who heads the strongest anti-Bolshevik Government, and also by a map showing-how Soviet Russia is » Selling Eggs By the Pound German Professors: Kicked Across . the Rhine Uncensored- News of Korean Chris- tians War Department Probe of the Y. M. \ C. A. Prohibition and Electric Light ’ Real Estate Riding on Snowflakes ~ 2 News of Finance and Commerce The Best of the Current Poetry Many. Interesting Illustrations, Including Humorous Cartoons The Surest Remedy for Bolshevism of publicity and common sense. It is up to every red-blooded American to do his share in spreading dhis education as to the real isstes, the vital facts, the actual conditions that lie behind the world’s unrest and are making history at a pace that is simply amazing. To get these facts, stripped of | unessential details, clean---‘t, con’ cnsed, and up | to the minute, you have only to iurn each week to THE LITERARY DIGEST. Buy a copy today, read it yourself and pass it along to your family and friends. ‘ ered one of the most resourceful of | driver. to. son sritish. commanders... 16 msic I winter he has toured the rehangel front in a sled s> to encour- age the troops. ‘Tribune Want. Ads ug results, ‘Watch the Little Pimples; They are Natures Warning Unsightly and Disfiguring Sig- nals of Bad Blood. Don't close-your eyes to the’ warn- ing «which nature gives, when un- sightly pimples appear on your face and other parts of the body. Not only are these pitnples and splotches disfiguring, but they lead to serious skin diseases that spread and cause the most discomforting irritation and pain. Sometimes they foretell Eczema, boils, blisters, scaly eruptions and other annoyances that burn like flames of fire, and make you feel that your skin is ablaze, - When these symptoms appear on any TLE FARM. need. FARMS for sale by— Bismarck art of the body, take prompt steps to rid the blood of these disorders. And the one remedy which has no equal as a purifier is $. S>S, the purely vegetable blood medicine, which has been on the market for more than fifty years. It is ‘sold by drug- “| gists everywhere, If you are afflicted with any form of skin disease, do not expect to be cured by lotions, ointments, salves and other local remedies, as they can not possibly reach Ahe source of the trouble, which is in the blood. Begin tak- ing S. S. S, today, and‘write a com- plet history of-your ease to our chief medical adviser who will give you ata instructions, without charge. Write at once to Swift Specific Co., . ° >, Nature Is Calling You What a.wonderful satisfaction it will be to have a cozy little country home nestling on a LIT- . A little home just as you have already planned it, your own ideal, with chickens if you wish and agarden. The soil fertile for lettuce, radishes, po- tatoes, peas and all the vegetables one’s family will _ Get close to nature; have a playground for the children ; get elbow room and breathe the fresh, pure, invigorating country air. You will have all this and moré Bismarck Realty Co. —_ ~ 260 Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga.» < at LITTLE North Dakota a avd

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