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ee THURSDAY, MAY 12, 1921 re No Price Reductions | On Essex or Hudson Cars , There have been statements circulated that ° we were about to reduce prices on Hudson and Kssex cars, and we wish to contradict these rumor§ for they are without founda- tion and authority. , We beg to inform the public and all own- ers and those contemplating purchases of Essex arid Hudson cars that last fall when we made a price reduction ranging from $200 to $400 on the old scale of prices, we ‘ anticipated market changes that have since become effective and put in force. Essex and Hudson cars are as low in price as they can get, for both quality and car merit. - : ; Place Your Order’ Now. R.B. Loubek Motor Co. 216 Main Street Phone 234 Bismarck, North Dakota r FLORENCE Florence @il Cook Stove lightens kitchen work. Burns kerosene, Cooks, bakes, and roasts at the same time, and economi- cally, too. No wicks totrim. N valves to leak. . Let us show youhovw the powe: | ful burners direct the. intensely ‘ hot blue flame close-up wader the ¢ cocking and- why, the Florence means more heet ane locs care. Less Cares Lomas Hardware Co. i ‘TRIBUNE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS — ||to class.one roads were greater by |of the board of the Southern Pacific} DESCRIBES HOW BERGDOLL GOT AWAY FROM HIM Soldier Guard: Declared He Had, Not Heard of Buried | Treasure | SLACKER GIVEN UNIFORM Washington, May 12.—In giving a!” first hand account of the escape of| Grover C. Bergdoll, the Philadelphia} dodger, Sergeant John O'Hare, who} was in command of the escort which! started out with Bergdoll from Gov- | ernor’s Island forthe mountains of} Mrayland, told the house investigating | committee that he had never hgard a; word/about the buried pot of gold wr-| til long after the prisoner had fled. O'Hare was positive in the assertio! that when he started out for th mountains the only instructions he received from Colonel John BE. Hun! his superior officer, was to procee: with the prisoner to Hagerstown, Md, getesome money from a bank, oe! it to another bank_at Philadelphia, anil! return to the barracks, There were no written orders ex-| cept to stop off at North Philadelphia. meet the late D. Clarence Giboney, | Be¥gdoll’s lawyer; and thereafter be} guided by what Gibboney said, that! the party halted at Philadelphia,! went for a long automobile ride, with | Bergdoll at the wheel, visited a bur-| lesque show and stopped at the Berg-| do} home, from which the prisoner es-| caped. 1 The sergeant told how Bergdoll wno; hail evaded the draft for a couple of; years, was sent from the Island in; the full uniform of-an enlisted man, | with a hat cord indicating that he be-! longed to the infayry branch of the! service. Step by step he told of the various} moves, up to the mdment when Berg- doll walked into a bath room to an-| swer the telephone. He’ was. never! seen after that and to this day, the| sergeant said he does not know how | he got out. Except for that single} moment, de declared, the prisoner was |. never out of his sight. i No amount of cross-examination could ‘budge the witness from his.) statement that he was in entire ignor-| ance of any plan to go out and dig up the buried gold. RAIL REVENUES | SAID DEFICIENT Chairman of Board Says Labor ~ Costs Outstrip Gains i Washington, May 12.—Labor costs 115 per..cent in 1920 than they were in 1917, Julius Kruttschnitt, chairman railroad, declare mitted today to t! commerce ,committee. in a statement sub-| senate interstate | i During the same period, he added,| gross revenues of carriers increased less than 54 per cent. n ‘i | local eset oon. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE DECORATED—Vivani of France, re- cently decorated» Belle da Costa Morgan librarian in New York, for services in aid/ of French art and literature, + KICK BY HORSE LEADS T0 DEATH OF FARMER HERE Andrew Weikum of Near-Brad- dock Suceumbs to Blood Poisoning Injuries sustained when kicked him Weikum, near Bra a horse ars old, a farmer living ND. He died in a at 1 o'clock this after- . , ‘The injury was between the ankle and knee, The:limb was badly crush- ed by the force of. the blow from the horse's hoof. When brought to tha hospital two days ago infection had already set in and’ it was impossible ‘to arrest the blood poisoning. Mr. Weikum leaves a wife and three children, All other relatives live in Russia, The body will be shipped to Brad- dock tomorrow for buri BANK BANDITS STEAL $7.000 Chicago, May 12—A uniformed po- liceman assigned. to escort a messen- ger for the State Commercial and Sav- ings bank failedjto.daunt five bandits today. Yhey heli! up the policeman and the easter and escaped ‘with approximately "F000, after ‘first force ing the policeman to walk away a block, threatening to shoct. him» if he turned around.‘ INDICTMENT IN’ I. W. W. CASE IS _ FOUND FAULTY St. Paul, May.12.—The federal cir- cult court of appeals today set asida the first of the four counts in the in; dictment on which 25 members of the I. W. W. were convicted and sentenc- | roved fatal to Andrew, jed various terms in the Leavenworth | penitentiary from the federal ‘district court of Kansas. ‘The three other counts in the indictment are held valid. The first count, which ts found faulty, charged conspiracy to hinder the execution of six different acts of Congress and presidential per- 4mit intended for the carrying out of the. government's war program. [SLOPE VETERAN . PASSES AWAY Charlos,Urell, a veteran of the Mis- souri Slope country, died at his home ]in Carson Ahis week, according to in- formation is Bismarck. Urell was a soldier in the United States army dur- jing fhe time of the Indian fights. wnireron BOOKLET on MOTHERHOOD sub tne BABY. raae BRADFIELD REGULATOR Co., DEPT. 9D." ATLANTA, GA HUSBAND AND WIFE BOTH SICK Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Comer, She- nandoah, Va, were both ill. He | writes: , “Rheumatism and bladder | trouble was our trouble. My wife had rheumatism in her arms so she could not use them, She hag had no trouble since taking Foley Kidney ‘Pills. don’t have to get up at night so much since taking Foley Kidney Pills, nor have I a weak back.” Backache, sore, swollen or stiff, muscles or joints, tired languid feeling—yield quickly to Foley Kidney Pills, 4 - >» ay ~~) | WIDOWED—Three months ago Miss Cecil Ready, 26, of Syracuse, N. Y. ‘ married George M. Oyster, 72, million- ‘aire horseman. Oyster has just died iin Atlantic City. | has made itself felt, hearken to, quantities, . of flowered voiles --of crisp organdies -of dotted Swises, tinted HETHER you are going to have two, | Y three or a dozen Frocks this Summer you will enjoy choosing them all right now while every mode is new, fresh and unhand- led. Of course, you may not wish to don them immediately but you will be mighty gratified that you made your selections of pretty tubable Frocks bright and early, when those who delayed will be searching for appropriate modes after the first heat wave Thin Frocks summery in style, fabric and colorings — as delightful in every way as the most fastidious tastes could desire— are enough of an. excuse, if indeed one. is ‘needed, for getting the Sum- mer wardrobe in readiness at once. Arid with prices way - down, lower “than they have been for years on the self- same qualities, every woman will feel that there is really no reason why: she shouldn’t er present im- pulse to buy and to buy in Webb Brothers | RYE ACREAGE DROPS ONE-THIRD Neen SAYS FEDERAL CROP REPORT FOR NORTH DAKOTA; HAY OUTLOOK GOOD AT AUDITORIUM Al. Jolson Coming to City in “Sinbad” On gJune, 16 Answering many inquiries regarding coming attractions to the Auditorium, Manager Vesperman today announced that Al Jolson is coming to Bismarck in “Sinbad” on June 16, ‘Other attractions booked are “Mary”, a musical comedy, on Aug. 5. ‘Fay Bainter is booked to play in Bismarck in her famous vehicle, “East Is ‘West ‘on Sept, 27. There are not many big attractions ‘now on the road traveling from or to the Pacific coast. - J. KREMEMSKY, WASHBURN, DIES Joseph Kremensky, well yknown merchant at Washburn, succumbed to cancer of the stomach, friends in this city have been informed. He was ser+ lously ill for about two weeks before he passed away. Mr. Kremensky con- ducted a general store at Washburn. He was 66 years old, was born in Rus- ‘sia, near Odessa, and leaves a wife and eight children, Chimney Fire The fire department was called to the home of A, W. Mellen, 610 Eighth street about 10 o'clock this morning, where a chimney was burning out, Firemen used no water but dumped some salt in the ‘chimney, and the danger soon passed. - The fire department was called out a second time shortly before 1 P. M. to a chimney fire at the home of: Rob- ert Melville, on South Ninth street. There was no damage. ~ INGROWN NAIL Toe Nail Turns Out Itself if You Taughen Skin ' . A noted authority says that a few drops of “Outgro” upon the skin sur- rounding the ingrowing nail reduces inflammation and pain and so tough- ens the tender, sensitive skin under- neath the toe nail, that it can not penetrate the flesh, and the nail turns naturally outward almost over night. “Outgro” is a harmless, antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. How- ‘lever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle contajning direc tions. ° T0O LATE TO CLASSIFY - FOR SALE OR TRADE—Maxwell touring car, model 45, in good con- dition. iNew battery, two extra tires, newly painted. Have no use for car, wi'l sell very cheap or trade for anything. worth while. What have you to offer? Joe Crewsky, 109 3rd street. Phone 898, . 5-12-tf FOR SALE—Modern seven room house, on pavement, in good loca- tion. Write Tribune, No, 227._5-12-3t Grand Forks, N. D.,“May 12.—The rye acreage in North Dakota‘is one- third leas than a year ago, according to the monthly report of A. J. Surratt staté statistician for the United States Bureau of Crop Estimates, made pub- lic here today. The condition of rye, hay and pastures is about the aver- .age and the progress of plowing and planting on May 1 was near the high record mark, the report said. Live- stock wintered well and the seagon’s losses were extremely light. The slump in the rye acerage is largely due Ae the grasshopper men- ace, the report said. The acerage remaining for harvest is estimated at ° 616,000 acres compared to 934,999 last year and 1,945,000’ acres in 1919. Reports on the hay crop outlook are mostly favorable from over the state and the same applies to pastures, but good rains are needed quite generally to assure the continuance of the Present satisfactory start: SENATOR GOES _ TO STUDY RUSS Baltimore, May 12.—Senator France announced he would sail for Russia May 24 to inveatigate conditions in Bolshevik Russia. — conti 99 Greatest of Motion See “MIDSUMMER MADNESS” “Pictires atthe TT Revs THEATRE Matinee Daily, 2:30 p. m. Evening, 7:30 and 9. FEATURE PICTURE begins at 8 and 9 unless otherwise specified. Program subject to change without notice. LAST TIME TONIGHT NORMA _.. TALMADGE as the Spanish beauty for whose smiles men fought, in Jacinto Benavente’s vivid play . ‘The Passion Flower’ You'll smile with her smiles, sob with her sobs, love with her love, hate with her hate. Also Showing “READY TO SERVE” Featuring “Snooky” The Humanzee in the Character of a Farm Hand. Two Reels of Laughter at Aston- ishing Antics of This Almost Human Animal. . TOMORROW and SAT., MAY 13-14 Douglas MacLean in ‘The Homestretch’ jsmarck, Monday )