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PAGE EIGHT : BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUN tial schools; the house of correction | and the reformato were not to} VE y DY | blame in a majority of the cases. { “If parents would keep an eye on} | ! MAY 6, 1920 + eletetolededetoleeededotedededeledetoleededolehelodetelebededotetebeedetolelebeedobelbdetebdedebebdetobs bbb? Nation, turn aside from our usual tasks to pay homage to her who gave us birth, whose guiding hand and unselfish love made life’s path smooth for our first faltering steps. run along and play, there would be | less need for industrial schools and} reformatories,” he said “A large | number of parents in these modern | times do not see their ghildren from { one week to another, and then only | ort time. If home life is} New Hope, Ohio, Has No Prof- .... FLOWERS FOR MOTHER.... Profusely fragrant and delightfully refreshing, flowers are true tokens of love and devotion, Let your gift to Mother or in her memory De ee eT Offer Services as Chauffeurs,| for a not made. pleasant for them they will! ic Sa i- | seek diversion outside the home an iteers ai o - i 0 ill’s Gre Ses. : : : Ticket Takers and Omni: i i h 1 it nd No Poli be flowers from Will’s Greenhouses : . It that nearly always leads to ruin,” Mr.! nes We are especially well prepared to furnish your flower needs for Mothers’ Day and at our usual reasonable prices. bus Drivers | Harris declared. ticians z Through our telegraph connections we can deliver fresh flowers to your mother anywhere, - — Only 4 or 5 per cent of youths who | eee Paris, May 6.-—-Many fashionable | leave — the —reformatory —_ violate | BY HAL COCHRAN, women have offered their services to| their pledges to r n straight. ac | N. E. A. Staff Correspondent break the strike of workmen, which) cording to Mr. arris. Since the! New Hope, O. May 6.—Here began on May day, and some of them) state board of control was organized | a town that the rent profiteer doesn't have ben on duty as chauffeurs.| August 1, 1907, until March 1, 1920,| know is on the map (and few others ticket takers at the subway stations,| 1,233 prisoners have been paroled and | do) and where Overall clubs were in and at other posts deserted by union] only 1 of that number were return-| full sway long before the h, ¢. of 1. workmen. ed. made them popu PIONEER GREENHOUSES OSCAR H. WILL & CO. 824 4th St. Open Until 1:00 P. M. on Mothers’ Day Phone 163 t eee ee ee ee ee a Be te ek ee Ae ee eS ee ee ee be ae rt MOTHERS’ DAY has been set aside by an Act of Congress as a day to be kept in honor of ine: “Mothers” when we, as 2 + pard, French ambassador to Turkey,| Jowest per cent of violations of any|a home, Practically, every inhabitant 7 ie Fs 1 who volunteered as an omnibus dri ite in the union, according to stat-| Wears denim or ginghams day in and Meisner, enry Burman and Myr.j; charge of the services. Interment was i out—-except possibly Sunday, and POSSES HUNT ‘ WHITE sox JUST Blakemore. The Oddfellow lodge had} in St. Mary’s cemetery, ficult than might be expected for a] rules and regulations of the state.’ | even then the high cost-of clothing -_- — does not hurt for the Sunday best 6 5 : 3 “It was the most natural thing in outfits—-so New Hopers , the world” she said referring to her bought back in times when pric WERE DURING 1919} efforts to help break the strike. were not “up there.” a “When men desert their posts it is About one hundred people proudly —— ! By Fred Turpyville cull than it seemed in theory.” New Hope has no police force, no}| _ BY HARRY B. HUNT, dand org any other: American) Cegion Another fashionable women, who | mayor and no poiitlicians. N. B. A. Staff Correspondent entry will win this year’s race. The volunteered to punch ticket at a sub- | “We don't need a police force,” } | —— Mme, Bompard, daughter of M. Bom-| “this,” said) Mr. He “Is the| Every family in New Hope owns declared she found the work less di and speaks well of the prison | da woman, AS COCKY AS THEY ‘laim-~ re necessary indeed for women to do the| jeall this town “home”. And where | %~——--— od You can’t convince Kid Gleason or! ; hest they can to make themselves use- i there is a ‘home there's a garage and|| “BONE-DRY” REED GETS A any member of his team that Cleve- ful. In p it proved less difli-| at least one automobile. | (PRESENT Kid and his charges are as cocky as i way station, stood all day at’ her post says John Hower, retired farmer, whe | | vachington; Ami: nO Seh ever. i smiling at the gibes of strikers ail Sears velers which way to go to{| ator Jim eed, Missouri, of “ ” Fy jokes of idlers hanging about the Fight-Year- Old Mystery Solved | teach Richmond, Ind., or Dayton, O. “bonedry” amendment fame, re- ‘Not worrying about my team,” says station. . |“Kiver’ body here knows how to be || turned to Washington from a | Gleason, “they'll come through. ‘The civil union, which began re- by Statements Made in Viste all go to the same church— trip back home recently and, | “I've got a better looking team than cruiting volunteers in view of the j the nited Brethren- and folks} | in unpacking his grip found a I had this time last year. railroad strike, received applications Court minds their own business. | quart bottle of fine rye whiskey. |! “Phe 1919 pitching stars are just from a large number of women, who} Si le | Hower pointed to a pile of bricks “Well,” Reed soliloquized. |] as good and besides | have Faber and professed their readiness to do any} Steele, May 6.—-While being ques-{ and plaster. “See that wreckage,” he|{ “That's nice. One of the boys {| Wilkinson.” ‘oad work even to acting as engi-| tioned on the witness stand in an| Said. “That used to be a saloon—]| no doubt has remembered me.” || ‘The Kid admits he misses Gandil. neers on the locomotiv They have aM iferent deli Mrs. Frances | the only one New Hope ever had. Whereupon Reed sampled it, | “Ted is a fine first baseman,” said not, however, been called upon. entirely different action, Mrs, Franc S ‘rhe folks didn't like the idea ‘round{| found it satisfactory, and plac- the Kid, speaking of Jourdan. “The Announcement that the strike of| Sheldon stated that ner fatner, J. C.| nore, and the day after it opened|| ed the bottle in a safe place for || gox are not weak at first, But, of railroad workers throughout France} Clayton, a farmer, had killed Ed| we went down in a body and egged|| future reference. \| course, we miss Gandil. Theve isn’t virtually was over was made in official | Leitske, a hail insurance salesman, ! the place out of business. Ain't had!) Last week Reed returned to |I another first baseman who can take | here last night. Since Sat-] who disappeared in 1912 and whose | 9 saloon since. ‘St. Louis. \| the throws he takes.” | atlic has been seriously em-| mysterious disappearance had baffled] “and do you see that store? Some “Say, you old (deleted),” one | The Cleveland Indians took two out a ad but the volunteers have] the authori ies since that time, _| place, eh?IU’s’ the only one we've got | | of the ‘boys’ greeted him. of three from the Sox, but you: couldn't given material aid and yesterday large Mrs. Sheldon, 18, and her 14 year-| put it’s a plenty. You kin git anything} | “I'm off you for life! I hid a convince the Sox the Indians were numbers of strikers returned to their| old sister, were testifying as to the | trom a piece of court plaster to a] quart of booze in your grip and || the pest team of the series. posts, | relations of their father, and brother, | plow in there--and Lem’s prices is{! you carried it off.” |] “Did you ever see a team get as many a Roy, charged With rape. Mrs. Shel- | yight." \ a re *| breaks?” indignantly asked little Ne- don. it is claimed, testified that her) New Hopers have made their for- mo Liebold. “Gosh, they had every- with metro 2 icine ather and brother acknowledged kill- "i BY LEE J. SMITS, soenG ys ¥ etropolitan service and cuisine—where you may non Hak ree AY nh fae hate vat ! tunes out of tobacco, wheat, corn, e thing they needed and then it was a rf Fay, solf on a sporty mountain course—swim in warm ing Leltske alter (ie three iad at (oats, hogs and cattle. The town is in N. E. A, Staff Correspondent close squeak for them. Just. watch » Isand through glass enclosure watch snow- jceuged a stag picnic near here 1} Preble-co, Jackson township, -which{ Ruffsdale, Pa. May 6—Not for] ug win out again.” i rg sunshine over the mountain peaks— | oils body. GfcLeitske Mis. cshedog ore te claimed, the richest county} violets and buttercups do they search| Jee Jackson is wielding a mean} s, motor and fish brook trout to your ene ches eadiedl iadee ai ahaa and township, per capita, in the Unit-] on the brushy hillsides of the old| “Black Betsy” this spring, too, but irt'S Content, ed States. Bryan place these spring days. EX-]| Joe says he ought to°have a lot ut! Ve've all been.to the cities ‘round | peditjons headed by Grant C. Hockey | hits that haven’t gone down in the | they say. And we don't wani| and Rodger his noted rum-hound jn- records, New Hope to get like a city. We've|.tend to make a survey of, every “They wear horseshoes when I’m at] | near the farm home, but after digging Say, y 6.—“Crime! some time the authori failed to among children in” W nsin is in-; unearth it. A further search for the creasing and parents, in my mind, are skeleton will be made this week, it Corne This June June here is azure- ; ‘ sure res i for got back ,yards, plenty o’ ‘air—ain’t| square yard.of ground in the for-] bat,” says Joe. . wers, busy with birds in a great measure responsible for| was announced today: bothered by policemen or a mayor—{mer domain df. Colonel Solomon Bry-| Grover Lowdermilk, the former er- ‘ ‘sezms— June is the this condition,” said G. F. Harris, es | what more do we wan a \ / : Pavia once og # . solenaid fest cf Jour ‘pontis, And so easy president of the board of control at | MAYBE THE JUDGE publ ioe a ratic lefthander, says he isn’t that |” & to rescil : ee a meeting of the board at the state] TOOK A LOOK AT ’ER ROBBERS AT WORK It is Whiskey Rack they seek, anymore; : i reformatory here. SAN DIEGO—But judge, she can't A fragment of ‘this stoi the T never was in better shape than \ Tris at Baoff-i th i igati i , ON U. S. VESSELS this spring, and I have control now,” oe tS a) in the Mr. Har said that. investigation | do 28 miles, I tell you she can't.” The| ~ gan DIERGO—These burgiars ‘had size of the hole, in a country pring, ayes OF NOW, an] a. a of a number of eases that come be- | judge believed anil remitted the fine) the nerve of profitcers. ‘Two entered | Coushnuts, | wil produce, when ne falda ee ed mom luat wae he Canadian Pacific Rockies fore the board have shown that | of $15 paid by J, H. Maize charged | the lockers : dissolved in a pint of spring v ‘em something, ; children - wi ; ‘ ‘ oo ine $ : of sailors aboard the U. A fellow can’t keep his "m Banff, on the Canadian Pacific Railway, is a picturesque children who were inmates of indus j with speeding. water, a fluid possessed of all D arm in shape town—garrison cf the famous red-coated Mounted Police and headquarters of the Rocky Mountain Netional Park, and Banff Springs Hotel is the name of ths magic castle. Feservations!— Albertsen, Gen Ry. @1l 2nd 4 es Ee FUNERAL HELD YESTERDAY Jeb Tells Just So: Much The funeral services for, the late Some insist. that Whiskey Rock| Williams Mills were held yesterday has already been located. Jeb Mus | afternoon at the Presbyterian church, | ser was arrested Jast week in Mt.| Rev. H. C. Postlethwaite, officiating. | Pleasant, in a mood of friendliness The pallbearers were H. J. Stroke, P. toward all the: world. The mar-|(G, Harrington, Charles Hansen, John, shal found him doing/ a_ bare-foot : dance in front of the Baptist church, at the same time chanting. “I’m Standing in, the' Need of Prayer.” When interrogated by the Mt. Pleas- ant police, Jeb told him: “Whiskey!” “I know,” said the policejforce, “but where did you get it, Jeb?” “Ol Colonel Bryan got his out of a rock, didn’t he”: parried Jeb. And that was as much as the third degree could elicit from Jeb. The old colonel, scorning the com- forts to which his station and_ his property entitled him, dwelt in a small cabin on the steep hillside over- looking the pretty village of Kuffscyle and éommanding | a majestic sweep of landscape as well. No one ever presumed to invade the colonel’s wooded acres unless ac- companied by the old man_ himself. -He could shoot and would shoot. zi Surprise Is Promised Ruffsdale As the years mellowed him, Col- onel Bryan promised the people of Ruffsdale a surprise. His closest be one neal eet af waatet friend was Calvin Hightower, who jewelry and money. THE CALF GETS » Canadian lis, Minn. THE REAL LAUGH SAN MATEO—Three bales of hay DS Caasatian: nescereipen aad information rearing were stolen from A. S. Barron. -His Canada cu file at tins ofice ships in the harbor here, and took 100 proof rye liquor. Ty OHN SCO N' neighbor lost a calf the same night. ‘We had no use for the hay so we took the calf to eat it,” said a note on Barron's door. POPULAR PRICED STORE COPS HAD A GOOD —— HUNCH ON AUBREY’ MEMFHIS—lor his ambition Au- Bismarck’s Greatest and brey Hallowell must languish in the donjon keep Aubrey was pinched Largest Garment Shop and on the way to jail cut a hole in the wire screen of the patrol. The i) | a |__| a a a | a = Hi cops suspect Aubrey planned escape | @ a | | | ~ | a = a through the hole. Anyway they took away the pliers and charged him’ with malicious destruction to property. Stores at Bismarck and Grand Forks Sue TIRES F re say that Diamond Tires are far and away the best tiresmade is a sweeping claim for us to make, Yet thousands of. Diamond Users say so every day—de- SHH! NO CARD GAMES Detroit — Hughey Jennings doesn’t think a ball player ought to play cards after the pennant hunt starts. His ultimatum to the Tigers is that any 7 vlaver who violates this rule will be ct to a fine. He permitted it in Here are a few specials which we are going to place on sale for Friday only: 36 in. Percales. Sale.................88e 27 in, Percales. Sale.................25¢ s.s.W is ; a S. Welles and U.S. 8. Salem, ware} ine appearances and properties of | by sticking to the benc 27 in, Dress Ginghams. Sale..........38¢ Safa re da ty KOROL had battled for the Confederacy while clare it without reservation, B ¢ I A S: ] L. 49 9 reer erel ria ‘Toward Cth fast Gal and Colonel and cite the performance of ungalow Aprons. Sale .......... $ ete ! their tires to prove it. igre nes Bryan were much together. They ead “yi leu! dulleeass prowled the hills behind the colonels cabin, Une fall night, Ruffsdale was shak- en by a mighty explosion from Sol's CREWSKY’S SHOE SH P||ravite A keg, charged with a secret con- tou, ‘oveaity, La Hair Pins, package. Sale.............2e Crochet Cotton, ball... .....4........17e White Oileloth ......................69e Talk tires with a Diamond User, and the chances are he'll sell you Diamond Tires before you are through. ‘ The Store With Over 1000 Garments Children’s Hats. Sale Rismarck, N. 1D. coction and tightly plugged had. let : ; seg alata wise ny SS igaray eee: 109 Third St. Phone 898 go, demolishing the colonel's cellar, Adi Basis Children’s School Hose ......... .28¢ ALL WORK GUARANTEED Rae Car Higkiawerr canna tne eg ene Miles REPAIRING NEATLY DONE his own as the village mystery. He|* roamed the hills and marched the streets of Ruffsdale, always in a state of exurberant happiness. Lit-' le by little he permitted his secret NRIVALLED — the same old to escape him. He was making use of Colonel Bry- Fabrics - 6,000 Miles high eres in its new form as an’s Whiskey Rock. Then Cal died -and, until recently, a pure, w oll esome beverage —to the tale of Whiskey Rock was told in| Ruffsdale as a local curiosity. Pro- servein your home—to your guests. hibition and the doings of Jeb Musser | In Bottles Everywhere revived interest in the famous rock. Rodger the Rum Hound Mr. Hockey. proprietor of the] Kurfsdale garage, denfes that he purchased Rodger, a registered En- glish bloodhound, for the express! purpose of using him to locate Whiskey Rock. He does admit that! Rodger is being trained to trail moon- shiners, and other felons, sought by the authorities. And the sensitive nose of Rodger is being educated with precious samples af rye and bourbon. so that he has already learn- ed to give voice, in a deep, blood- curdling bay, when he sniffs ethyl alcohol. It is the theory of Mr. Hockey and those who join him in his quest for the Rock, that Rodger, the Rum) Hound will at least come to a point if there reaches his experience nos- trls the scent of a stone ‘contain- ing the chemical constituents of whiskey. Chemists say Whiskey Rock is aj myth; that there is no such thing as a_ solid natural formation of rye whiskey. But the posses from Ruffsdale, and | Stacy-Bismar : ! y ck Co ; the surrounding country, say that, Phone 447. 211 Main St they have nothing to lose but their | Order a Case for your Home Today Made by Miller Brewing Co., Milwaukee ; time, and a vast amount to gain if Whiskey Rock can be found.