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PAG PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1923 FIN I Detroi fact The ¢ motor ¢ influenc Away of Buer Hijo & in the 4 the departn the mos the fle: limousii There which + in fleet eral hu or two of the Los Ar Clevela. ) | di would copue motor year-ro “Beet closed Loubek compar tion of in the “Tew tomobi useless of its most stood “But v It ¢ I -dats in this style are cut before flak- EX-GOVERNOR SENT T0 JAIL | | Fined $100 and Given 30 Days: For Flouting U. S. Court | Oxford, Miss. April 1 Theodore | i. Bilbo, former governor of Mis-| ippi Went to the Lafayette cou jail tod: erve a sentence of | days for contempt of federal court. Mr. Bilbo d fed her y r to Large of contempt be of as a witness in du s Birkhead Russell 1 Judges lure to appear 1it of Miss ernor Lee M. Ie pleaded guilty. ed the “io nd 30 days jn ja BANDITS MAKE . $3,000 HAUL neiseo, Cal, April 16.—Five d bandits held up a special iver and aw clerk for the Bank of | aly a few blocks from the mair | iness district to and fled in an nutemobile with 00 in currency ud check Holmes At a fine of $100) | CLUBMANGORS HOME OF ADAM LESMEISTER, NORTH DAKOTA MAN CLAIMS HE HAS KILLED OVER 8,000 WOLVES ___AND CLAIMS THE WORLD TITLE Has Collected Over $20,000 Bounty from States, Coun- ties and Ranchers — Never Shot Wolf in My Life, Le: meister Declares. fun than for the money, but says} that if the bounty were high enough he would quit farming and hu The world’s record as a wolf hunt-) wolves altogether, Some people ha claimed by Adam Lesmeister,| intimated that he specializes on you tivinig neam Harvey, Pierce count wolves, for the bounty, and allo’ ,501 woly welcomes chall record and he since res 10 cass {his record. His kills include mostly coyotes, taken on the prairies of Yorth and South Dakota, but also in clude 18 gray wolves and 48 buffaio wolves, April 16.—Henry p.|, Lesmeister ean back up his claint and. clubman, today |t@ the world's championship as a woif was sentenced from six to ten MOE ONE Re ait in the eastern state penitentiary for Show that during the last. twenty: A three persons with his auto- | ree North a ner meee {South Dakota and $8% ‘ L jeounty, and in addition, he says, ya tinerciearaTclens 7 Lesmeister the business NEAR MILLION Paul, April zie, former North Dakota left an estate c 16.—Alex political leader in| who died last May r the million mark, | by George P| utorofthe estate, who] inventory with Probate) £ Wheeler. The total }1 s shown by the} nder Me: St ne losed today Flanne filed Judge vee an Howard tue of the est nventory is $979, Most of the estate is in bonds, in- cluding large amounts of Liberty Ronds of the several issu and » block of St. Paul city bonds xgether with more than worth of bonds of the N. D., Water Supply compar also formed a part of the er was a tive of Russia, and he hunted wolves near Odessa. The first dogs used by Le r in the Unit- d States were n and German yolfhounds The North Dakota hunter embarked on his career back in 1888, when he lived near Eureka, South Dakota, vith his parents, when but His first wolf was killed whe on the prairies with his father. family moved to North Dakota in and Lesmeister began to build up the splendid f: owns ne Harvey and to hunt in hi odd moments. | Never Shot a Wolf. rms he wolves Lesmeister boasts that he never ghot a wolf in his life. His dogs do the work. He has, however, hii some close encounters. When he went in a wolf den at one time after a litter he encountered the mother — — wolf. Having a club he pinned the » !mother wolf against the back of the EW TRIAL ‘eave and then clamped his hands DENIED MAN over her jaw, and held on until others 2 dug him ‘out. UP FOR LIFE) iieving been hunting wolves for ——— 35 years Lesmeister has learned a Minot, N. D., April 16.—The mo-jlot about their habits. He doesn’t tion for a new trial by counsel for|have much respect for a coyote. A iarry W, Carter, now serving a 20-;coyote won't dig his own holes, ne sentence in the state peniten-|says. He will find a badger hole for the murder of Marshaljand dig it out for his mate. Any harles Madison at Stanley last sum-|good wolf dog, too, can outrun and was denied by Judge J. C. Lowe|outfight any wolf, he declares, of district court in a decision an-} Prairie wolves, or coyotes, live sounced today. A new trial had been | chiefly on young rabbits, youms cought on the ground of newly dis-| prairie chicken, gophers and sovered evidence. birds, Leismest They An appeal will be carried to the tate supreme court. DEATH STRUGGLE IN RUHR SEEN Berlin, April 16. ter Von Rosenberg on Foreign minis- addressing the Reichstag tnrs afternoon declar-} jwill sneak into a flock of sheep and kill young lambs and also will attack jealves two or three old, but jonly, if the calves are a considerable \distance from their mothers, he said. A prairie wolf is cunning in evad- {ing capture by man. If a human hand jtouches a care a wolf will not go near it. He will detect the touch of a human hand to steel trap and banks of the Rhine and in the Ruhr} i. suspicious, If a mere Russian was not one for coal or wood but a/thistle is put in front of a hole and fight which would determine wheth-|touched by a human hand, a wolf er the ideas of right and peace/ will stay in the hole and starve, or would progress or loose ground. jit the mother wolf is outside the = an ae hole, she will let her young starve. THREE- A fox, on the other hand, the hunt- The youthful type of three-piece suit that is so popular with women the chemise froc the round neck and the monogram, with a short coat of the same or of different material, cut on short, lines and sometimes heavily b: or embroidered. NOVELTY STOCKINGS. A novelty in hosiery is the one of glove silk with paisley and oriental designs in brilliant colors complete- ly covering it. Such stockings are worn with black or white pumps ang with sports or fancy costumes, but are probably at their best with the pleated white skirt. THE QUICKEST OATS KNOWN There is now a Quick Quaker Dats—the quickest cooking oats in ihe world. It cooks in 3 to 5 minutes as well as an hour would cook it. The same super-flavor that made Quaker Oats world-famous. Flaked from tle finest grains only. But the is ing. They are rolled very thin and partly cooked. So the flakes are stnaller and thinner—thatis all, And those small, thin flakes cook quickly. Your grocer has. both. styles — Quick Quaker and regular. Ang both have that matchlegs flavor. <!winter time, er says, will dig himself out of the hole in another direction. Always Back Home. Every wolf has a home. They will wander off eight or ten miles in the but always come back to have young ones in the latter part of May and June. The male wolf usually stands guard in some buck brush in front of the hole. The young wolves have to shift for them- selves early in life. Usually in two months after birth young wolves are |clares that he hunts wolves more { He Thig picture, taken in the studio photograph taken of her before her 4d; Fproviding their own food by killing gophers. There usual five to 11 young: ones in a litter, and many wolves live to be 17 or 18 years old, die said, While Lesmeister has collected more than 000 in bounty he de- the old ones to go, buthe strenuously denies that. His usual equipment in hunting wolves is a buckboard, a couple of fast horses and three or four wolf hounds. SSS Dakota City Briefs | ——* FESSENDEN. L. Netcher left nd Forks, where led by the illness of Mr, mother. Tuesday he wa Neteher's left last week for ft nding several iting: friends and look- farming inte: John Hayes gow, Mont., weeks here v ing after t. week busi- spending the looking after G. L. Hope is in Minneapolis ness matters. Nella Young, who is in charge abstract department of the Farmers Trust Co., is able to be at her desk against six weeks’ illness with the Mrs. of the Edwards was taken to the Mayo hospital at Rochester, Minn., t week for treatment. He has been ailing for some time and it was thought best to advise with the ester physicians. Roch- Miss Clara Burgs to the Carrington hospital la for an operation for sppendicitis She is reported to be getting along nicely. W. A. Denison left day for points in the western part of the state and Montana to look at- business interests of the Beiseker Cashier Mon- line of ks DICKINSON NEWS Mrs. Oscar Smith and children, How: and Jean ise, came down from Killdcer a week here as Smith’s parents, } b Hart, and sister, Miss Nettie Hart. to spend Mrs. Frank Kostelecky and little daughter, Irene, came down from Glengive on Monday and spent the remainder of the week here visiting at her husband’s parental home. Phillip Gartner and Miss pert, a well known Richardton cou- ple, were united in’ marriage — by Judge Fred Mager on April 12. They will make their home on a farm in the Richardton vicinity, Susie Al- Mrs. J. D. da Dobson returned home last. Thu after being absent from the city for six weeks, the greater part of which time she spent ut Oshkosh, Wis., where she was called duc to a death in the fanuly. Returning Mrs. Dobson stopped off to visit relatives and friends in Minneapolis. After visiting here for three weeks with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Vrana, Mrs. Joe Haidu, departed for her home at Laurel, Mont., on Sun- day afternoon. : Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Thacker of Glenwood, Minn., who have been guests here of their son-in-law and jand complexion beautifier. “WORLD'S Giant Cargoes By Modern Carriers To Change Course of Continent’s Commerce ‘ National Trade Convention Delegates in New Orleans, May 2-5, to Inspect Great Locks of Mississippi-Lake Pontchartrain-Gulf Canal and New Fleets of Government-Oper- ated Boat and Barge Lines, President Invited To Open “Greatest Work Since Panama."? CHAMPION WOLF HUNTER.” —<$<$<<_————_—-* | AT THE MOVIES | —_—_—_—___—_——_—_—_* THE CAPITOL All New York stopped, turned and looked, and then looked again, when Irene Castle, star of “Slim Shoul- ders," a Hodkinson released produc-] tion, which comes to the Capitol theater tonight walked up Fifth ave- nue the day after heg return, with both ears showing. Shop girls creamed the news to each other. Matrons and dignified old ladies turned to stare. Even the men looked. to the new and unusual, crowds Fifth avenue that day were one of the biggest shocks in the his- tory of the city. A girl, with both cars naked! Of course everybody knew it was Irene Castle. The newspapers that morning said that Irene had return- ed with the new French style of let- ting her ears show, but ever blase New York hardly expected to sce such a sight, But there was Irepe, stepping along daintly ever, with a jaunty little French hat on top of her bob- bed curls and two tiny ears, pink from embarrassment, pecking out from ‘under the brim of the hat. Gone, too, was the short skirt and in its place Irene wore a demure model of white satin reaching to her shoe tops. That night in thousands of homes in New York there must have been frantic THAD B. LEHR, well-known Kansas City business man, who says his recent recovery of health is entirely due to Tanlac, Ever curious, ever alert on efforts at copying Irene's gown and coiffure. Before| “I can place only ; the week was out thousands of girls|mate on the Tanla r were struggling with long dresses| have realized wonderful mei and naked ears, but there isn’t much|in my own cai recently Thad B. Lehr, proprictor of the Shirt & Underwear ( 36th St., “Before taking Ta hope held out for the bare-ear style. Ears must be small and pink for this fad. Lent headache BISMARSK BOY: fering from nervousness, Owihpito tracrice cuaearnare, indigestion and loss ; B fo the fact thay Wacier 688 | ich hed pulled mo down un Son banquet is to be held on Friday night and also the fact that other Father and Son activities are being arranged at some of the churches all the Pioneer and Comrade mect- ings will be canceled this week. Basket Ball. The referces, Al Alfson and Jack Burke, and official scorer, Herd O'Hare have made the following se- leetion of the All City team: Forwards, Jim Olson, St. Mary's; Balser Klein, Richholt; center, Hur- ry Lobach freshmen; guards, Fred Landers, Richholt, ang John Roeh- rick, St. Mar The following players did good work: during the whole series and are worthy of consideration work was like a burden, “Panlac measured right up to my expectations and since taking it 1 am enjoying a full measure of good health. I eat and sleep like a school boy and have energy and strenzth that makes life and work a ple ure. My confidence in Tanlac we certainly well placed.” Tanlac is for sale by all druggists. Accept no substitut. Over 37 million bottles sold. ———————= ville promifse to use ont tracts as contain no olcohét. spectfully ask the merchants to s only such extracts in their stores. good MODERN CARGO-PUSH A 16,000-TON LOAD OF FREIGHT UP THE MISSISSIPPI — H TO FILL THE HOLDS OF TWO ORDI- NARY SEA-GOIN IGHTERS OR MOVING such ex We re I 800 ORDINARY FREIGHT CARS. aes: Eiehhelt; Stanley a i = ary’s; Pete Balser, lar et athe Elbert Katkins, Wm. More, _ YOUTHS INTOXICATED. Landers, Richhold, and Jerry Mc Minot ye NEED Papen lee Twos loy : Carty, S$ one aged 15, and the other 16, (pat into custody by the Minot po! MODERN SELF-PROPELLED CARGO TABOO ON ALCOHOL. on charges of drunkenness, were tal CARRIER IN BIG LOCKS OF RIVER- AKE-GULF INDUSTRIAL CANAL AP NEW ORLEANS, FOR TEST OPERA- TION. en before C. B. Davis, juvenile com missioner, and given a preliminary hearing. They told the court thai they found the bottle of moonsh Mayville, N. D., April 16.—E: containing alcohdl will be taboo in yville as soon the present stocks on hand in the local stores are austed. ; which one of them had in his pos ; Local merchants made this prom- | S¢8S!0- i ise in writing when solicited to do Papers oats so by members of the local branch of the W. C. T. U. Show your civic pride. Get Mr, for are left polis, where of other re before and the daughter, Scherffius, months, Minne gues time Mrs. past M.A three Saturday for they will be atives for a short returning home. C. G, Thorpe lef on Thursday af- ternoon on an extended trijs to west- His trip will in he ern coast points. clude Centralia, will visit with Wash., where ghier and Sei tle, Wash., where he will be a guest at the home of his son, Leonard Mack and returned the middle of the eek from a visiting trip to Mon- tana points, having been absent from the city for a week. GIRLS! MAKE UP A LEMON CREAM Lemons Beautify Yna Whiten Skin; also Bleach Tan, Freckles Mix the juice of two lemons with three ounces of which any draggist will 1 few cents, shake well in a bottle, and you have a whole quarter-pint of the most wonderful skin softener Massage this sweetly fragrant lemon cream into the face, neck, arms and hands, then shortly note the youthful beau- ty, softness and whiteness of your| skin. = Famous stage veauties use this harmless lemon cream to bring that velvety, clear, rosy-white complexion, also as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because it doesn’t irritate. ES SARAH BERNHARDT’S LAST PHOTOGRAPH ere Sarah ‘Ber nhardt was. working’o on, a ‘motion » ‘pictiire, ‘ws. the last th. The man is Leon Abrams, her director. .Madame Bernhardt is wearing the smoked glasses as-a protection baatiadls the’ powerful bie lights. ‘ Orehard White, | supply for! | the BARED ELBO' Short gloves are to be very short sle As a result of a campaign in the sidential district 134 women signed the following agreement: “We, the undersigned, housekeepers of } behind Bismarck City Band Benefit Thursday evening at Auditorium. |steeved frocks of the summer. |, Bracelets for above the elbow will be the proper finish. worn with dosand no- 1 Above-Board Circulation ROGRESSIVE publications belonging to the Audit Bureau of Circulations have adopted an open and “Above-Board” circulation policy. They lay before advertisers circulation facts that have been verified by experienced auditors. Advertisers, before the advent of the A. B. C., were forced to depend upon hearsay circulation information and unverified “sworn statements” of circulation. No detailed figures were available and no verification was possible except at great ex- pense to the advertiser. : . Nowadays advertisers look to the A. B. C. for dependable, un- biased circulation information and select their advertising mediums accordingly. , Today 91% of the citeulation of. papers having over five ' thousand circulation is audited by the A. B.C. It should not be long before every newspaper goes on 1 record with A. B. C. membership. This will make it possible for every advertiser to use detailed circulation facts, covering the entire newspaper field. This will permit a fair.comparison and eliminate guesswork from the purchase of space. ) J The Tribune is a member. .of the A,B. C. and would be pleased to sub- - mit. a copy of the latest circulation report. ’ INVEST YOUR _ADVERTISING DOLLARS BY USING A. B. C. PAPERS