The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 17, 1920, Page 3

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Announcing the Opening of Our Lunch Room We have now opened our Short-order - Lunch Room in connection with our Ice Cream Parlor and we will serve hot and 4 cold luriches. ; 5 y . Table service and everything served will be prepared by a practical chef. ' \ Our prices will be reasonable and mect ( with satisfaction of the public. MENU. Changes Will Be Made Each Day Almond Olive ......... 20 Ripe California Olive... .20 Ham and Egg........:20 Assorted Nuts ..... "25 Hee oe eens eee 5) SOUP Ham <..... Cream Tomato .. Cold Pork . Vegetable aqui e aisles 15 ( Cold Beef . OTA cco edocseus 20 a American Cheese ..-.-.15 Chile con Carne........ 20 a Brick Cheese ...-+.+-10 Gonsomme . Sardine .......6.. 2220 . ‘Salmon ..........- -..20 BEVERAGES ie Peanut’ Butter ........ 15, Coffee ...... ee » 05 Olive mie Saanysteee 15. Milk sc. se ec gees es Home-mad Bread, Cake and Pie, 10¢ SWEET SHOP spread for bread at a price that is an economical surprise. |. | editor + (June vefoefe Trtsesi delicious product ikern every home a real opportunity to have a delicious quality, NORTH DAKOTA MAN WRITES QF HARDING Lamoure,. N. D., Sept. 17.—Joe Mitchell Chapple, for several years and publisher of the Grand Rapids Journal, the first newspaper to be established in LaMoure county 1882), has written a book en- rren G. Harding—the Man.” is not so much a campaign The biography of Senator Harding as a appreciation of a friend. He rd that it is not book, though it y true that he praises Sen- ator, Harding so highly and speaks sc eloquently of his godd points as they have been developed through long years of personal acquaintance that the book may well prove a most ef- fective campaign document for the re- publican ticket. It is a little volume. but very attractively put together, and with many illustrations to supplement the text. Commenting on the publi- cation, the Burlington, Vt., Daily Free in the for intended ; is undeni: already know all about . Harding, the Republican ate for the Presidency of the JInited States. There is a hu- nan interest side to a political si tion which few writers have the art ot depicting, and that is the side of the Republican candidate’s life that ap- peals to the poblic, particularly at the mL ANDERINE® Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. | A few cents buys “Danderine.” At- ter an application of ‘“Danderine” you can not find a fallen hair or-any dand- ruff, besides every hair shows new life, vigor. brightness, more color and thickness. = are cececese We want you to try Holiday Nutmargarine and compare it with the best creamery butter. We know you will-be fully convinced of its genuine goodness—a wonderful combination of rich cocoanut oil, peanut oil, milk and a little salt. Your grocer can supply you. MADE IN —— NORTE ON PANY. burreg a y NORTHERN COCOANUT BUTTER COMPANY MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, ‘clients of the William J. Burns de- MADE IN MINNEAPOLIS *, Dealers Supplied by Stacy-Bismark Co. Wholesale Distributor ns at ts ‘|stated that his personal investigation PAGE THRER, |BOMB PLOT DETERMINED CAUSE OF NEW YORK | DISASTER BY BUREAU (Continued from Page One) the first task would be to asse! the fragments in an effort t struct the bomb and detern made by skillful hands of by a novice. Find Pieces of Clock Search of the. wreckage of scene revealed, @ccordiug to : official who requested, that his name be withheld fragments of clock work, such as is commonly ysed in makinz bomts. Three pieces of curved metal also were found beneath the surtace of the pavement in the hole caused by the explosion. Another piece of. similar metal w taken from the body of Robert West- day, a 16-ye ld ‘messenger who was killed, ding to Dr. Charles H. Norris, chief medical examiner. The ayithorities said that the find- ing of ‘those bits of evidence dissi- pated the theory held earlier by some officials that the \explc i have been caused bya collision with a wagon loaded with explosions Examination of the wrecked wagou revealed, the police said, that it w: what was known as a rock true and that it was unlikely that 4 vehicle of this typé would be used Thomas W. gan, & Lamont, of J. P. Mgr: , however, front 23 the explosion oc- curred, expressed the opinion that it was pureiy accidental. Mayor Hylan called a meeting of the bozrd of estimates to consi by him to offer : 0 for the apprehension ‘and conviction of the persons responsible to for the tragedy. Thirty-six vsons are dead and more than 200 are injured a re- sult of the explosion, dec i by the police here us probably caused by an infernal machine. Discovery of parts of clock work in wreckage and announcement by experts that trin- itrotouol, or picric acid, was used in the bomb, if there ;was one, have sent detectives and department of justice men on thirty “leads,” pointnig to bomb plots and radical activiti Meanwhile the scene of yeste blast is roped off while the stock ex- change and allied organizations pre- pared to resume business at the usual hour. Several New York detective secret service men left the cit: this morning for unannounced desti nations on out-of-town ends of the investigation. ‘Troops were held in readiness on Governor's Island today and detach- ments of the 22nd infantry were in barracks subject to instant call. All. public buildings and the hom of wealthy and prominent men he are under special watch, and every avaitable man is held, in erve OF actively working in federal, state and city investigation agencies. Between 8 and 9 o’clock this morning police lines in the financial district were relaxed for admission for the thou- sands of office workers. During the same period emergency patrois were doubled and very doorway and alley was under close~ inspection. Down- town subway stations were kept cleared by a large force ‘of police. During the early hours public and private agencies cleaned up Wall street, sweeping up tons of debris and } washing down blood spattered side- walks and buildings. Workmen start- ed work repairing the twisted iron j office, fixtures in the Morgan build- ing and glasers by’scores began Uh long task of restoring, window panes in the entire finan | N HURT New York, Sept. 17.—Every window Ifacing /Wall and Broad streets in the banking house of J. P. Morgan & Company was broken by the force of the explosion yesterday at noon. Tite t Uy Morgan building, and the re pmumeted annex to the United sub-treasury, suffered heaviest lane age by the explosion. The glass dome in the Morgan building also was | broken. Five members of the Morgan firm were in tie building at the time of the explosion. They were Thomas W. Li mont, Dwight W. Morrow, Eliot Bacon and George Whitney und Junius Spencer. Morgan, son of the head of the firm. Junius Morgan, at his desk on the lower floor, suffered cuts and bruises on his hands and arms from falling { glass. William Joyce, a valued em- ploye of the company, was killed. There were between 400 and 500 Morgan employes in the building at the time of the explosion. THINKS IT PLOT New York, Sept. 17.—Chief Police Inspector Lahey reported that he had) found evidence to justify the conclu- sian that the explosion was caused by a huge bomb Joaded with T. N. T.— trinitrotoluol—reinforced with iron slugs ‘fashioned from window .weight bars. Pieces of these slugs were found in several adjacent structures. Thi type of weight bars, a close in- ion by. police and department of justice agents disclosed, is not used in any building within a radius of several hundred feet from the scene of the explosion. Radical Warning Given Warning that radicals planned a re- newal of bombing outrages were sent less than a month ago to all eastern tective agency, according to a state- ment by Mr. Burns who said he was convinced that. the explosion was a premeditated attack and was not acci- dental. ‘Mr. Burns, who said he had been engaged by the Morgan, firm to make an, investigation of the accident, convincéd him’that &@ wa%on contain- ing a bomb or bombs was left in front of the Sub-treasury buflding with a timing device so fixed as, to cause it to explode precisely at noon. No trace of the driver ‘of the wagon has been found, he said, and added that in his opinion a man escaped a few |moments. before the explosion oc- curred, Fire” Chief Kenlon and_ officers from the bureau of combustibles also expressed the belief that the explo- sion s caused by a bomb after examining fragments of metal found in the street in front of the Morgan offices. Dr. William F. Doyle chief 1, oe fifteen would no doubt have been, gre: the office workers were just beginning THE NEW ELTINGE | BISMARCK Finest Theatre in the Northwest; $25,000: Robert Morton Pipe Organ. Special Big Attraction! ‘MARK TWAIN’S Celebrated Story, Never Before in Pictures, ‘Huckleberry Finn’ os It stands among photoplay enter- tainments just where the book stands among other books; and that’s. at the top. The picture that will live forever. isport powerlul explosives. street near the Morgan offices and the William) Furman Careful investigation by ‘city au- {| Widely scattered scars on the faca¢ about: 80, thorities showed that no permit had] 9 nearby buildings also indicated! gan city, N.Y been granted for carting explosions | that the blast caused by a bomb| Se © y . yesterday. rather ‘than by an explosion of a John Johnson, Would Offer Reward quantity of dynamite or other explo- _ Joseph Schmitt sives. * side, N.Y. Had ‘the expidston occurred: ten or minutes later the alties er, as pour in the streets for lunch. LIST OF DEAD New York, Sept. 17.—A partial list of the dead follows: William T. Jolce, clerk of J. P. Morgan and Company. Jerome H. McKean, chauffeur. Ludolph Portong, bank teller, Jamaica, N. Y. Colonel Charles Nevilli, U. S. A., New York. Alfred Mayer, New York. | Mildred Alexander, New York. j KE. A. Sweet, address, unknown. M. McArthurs, address unknown. | Mr, — Ellsworth, Brooklyn. Charles Tindrother, Brooklyn. A man, about 30, at Volunteer Hospital. i A man thought to be either G. B. Barnes or Joseph C. Cran- berry. 1 Robert West Day, 16, messen- j ger boy, New York. . Bernard J. Kennedy, 30, mes- senger. Miss Carolyn N. Dickinson, 40, Elmhurst, N. Y. | Colin B. McClure, 25, Younkers, N.Y. Mrs. Margaret Drury, 29, steno- grapher, Brooklyn. insurance broker, Ne- TABLETS= AR Fine for little folks. THEATRE Tonight and Saturday, BUCK JONES in, “The Squaze Shooter” ? Thrills, romance, mystery and _ stunts. Now Installing Alea Added. l'eature, Elmo Lincoln in “ELMO, THE FEARLESS” | @ Joseph Aurebury, 27, married, York. Raymond known, Lew) ‘Thom {Tutchinson, Gar- | Ne Miller, address un- K. Smith, New York, porter, , clerk, Bhy- Osprey, 18, Brooklyn, Better Than Pills For Liver Ills. Get a 25° Box MOTHERS, READ THIS! 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I consulted several doctorsanid every one told ine the same but I kept fighting to keep from having the operation. Thad read_so many times of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it helped my sister so I began taking it. I have never felt better than I have since then and I keep house and am able to do-all my work. The Vegetable Compound is certainly one grand medicine.”—Mnis. J. R. Marrugws, $311 Sycamore Str Cairo, Ml. Chattanooga, Tenn.—*I used Lydia E. Pinkhanm’s Vegetable Compounds before my baby came when I could no Jonger keep up. It strengthened my back and relieved me of the ill effect w hic h so often develops at such times. my first experience with the Compound. Years after- I took it during the-Change of and got along so wellI scarcely ver had to lie down during the day and seldom had dizzy, fainting spells. Iam now well and strong, can do all my housework with perfect ease and it is a comfort to me to be able to say to other suffering women ‘take Lydia E. Pinkham’s medicine and be strong.’ Iwill be glad_to have you use my name if it will be the means of helping any one.” — M. R.. A. Fammzurn, 606 Orchard Knob Ave.,Chattanooga, Tenn. ESE APE SP. x ‘a Ailing, Overworked Housewives Should Rely Upon

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