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1 ." "4 I eT Wednesday, June 8, 1910. A VARIED CAREER. EMMA GOLDMAN LECTURES WORLD FAMOUS WOMAN ANARCHIST WILL DELIVER AN AD DRESS AT MAENNERCHER HALL AT EIGHT EIGHT O'CLOCK —WILL TAKE "ANARCHISM" FOR HER SUBJECT—WOMAN HAS EMMA GOLDMAN. Miss Emma Goldman and Dr. Ben L. Reitman arrived in the city yes terday afternon at 5:35 and imme diately made arrangements for a lec ture to be delivered at Maennercher hall this evening at 8 o'clock. Miss Goldman is probably one of the best known and most widely advertised women before the American public today. She has been repeatedly ar rested on acount of her fearlessness in expounding the rather startling doctrines of her belief. She has been refused admission to the country, it being claimed by the authorities that she was not a desirable citizen. It ANXIOUSLY AWAITING THE APPOINTMENTS MANY RESIDENTS OF PROPOSED NEW COUNTIES LOOK FOR APPOINTMENT Senator Steele Here from Mohall and he Says Things are Looking Fine in his Section of the Country. Senator H. H. Steele of Mohall is among the visitors in the city, with other citizens of the new counties of Renville and Burke, interested in the appointments for county commission ers. There will be the usual rivalry is stated .however, that she has cool ed down considerably in the last few years and that her talks are not so vitrolic as in past times, but at the same time there is excitement and interest for everyone while she is on the platform. She took a walk about the city last evening, and there were but few people realized when they met her that they were in the same vicinity with so well known and international character. There will undoubtedly be a well filled hall to night. The opera house would have been engaged had there not been a previous date made there. for county seat honors, and a num ber of aspiring towns in each county want to be named as temporary coun ty seats. The visitors in the city from the new counties have called upon Governor Burke, who will make the appointments, to urge the claims of their respective candidates. It is expected that appointments will be made in the near future and the real work of organization of the new counties will begin. Mr. Steele says conditions in Mo hall and vicinity are good. They have had good rains and while the* crop is a little backward, warm wea ther will bring it along rapidly. LIKE FINDING MONEY Your savings in buying those styl ish, beautifully tailored Ladies' Suits at exactly half price offered this week at A. W. Lucas Co. BUILD YOUR OWN HOME Bismarck has many beautiful building lots, and right now is the time to start. You'll feel indepen dent to say nothing of the investment—of owning your own home—of having things to suit O and of the certain increase in valuation. We Have Everything for the Builders' Use Lumber—good lumber—of all kinds, lathe, shingles, siding, frame stuff, cement, in fact we can supply your building needs from basement to comb board, and the price, well, just how little money it takes at our yard will surprise you. W also carry the best line of prepared roo5ng on the market. Come in and talk it over with us. no obligations. You'll be under Goodridge-Call Lumber Co. Bismarck Phone 11 5 North Dakota MICHELJN Tires All the work's important automobile contests have been won on Micbelin Tires. Why? In Stock by OTTO DIRLAN 3d Street and Broadway BISMARCK N. D. U. G. T. HAVE GREAT TIME AMHLLWATER MINNEAPOLIS MAN ELECTED AS HEAD OF THE ORGANIZATION FOR YEAR. People at Hpme of the Minnesota Pen itentiary Made Idital Hosts to the Traveling Men. Returning delegates from the grand council of the U. C. T. at Stillwater report, one of the largest and most interesting meetings of that body yet held. The people of Stillwater exert ed themselves to the limit to make the gathering a pleasant occasion for all and they appear to have succeeded nicely. Fargo succeeded in capturing the meeting of the grand council for 1911. New Officers Chosen. The annual election resulted in tho choice of John F. Ellis of Minneapolis as grand counselor W. B. Clarkson of Albert Lea, Minn., grand junior coun selor F. J. C. Cox of Winnipeg, past counselor J. M. Dresser of St. Paul, grand secretary L. L. Culbertson of Duluth, treasurer W. W. Fegan of Grand Forks, N. D., conductor B. M. Hir-vchman of St. Paul, grand page u. H. Griswold of Winona, Minn., grand sentinel H. W. White of Cal gary, and G. E. Tisdale of Minneapolis members of the executive committee for two years. A. Schaefer of Owa tonna and Hayward Marshall of tfioux Falls are the members of the execu tive committee who hold over from the last election. The convention refused to indorse San Francisco as the place for hold ing the next world Panama exposition. A request had been sent to the con vention by telegraph from the Com mercial bodies of the Pacific coast metropolis asking its indorsement. A' resolution was passed assessing each member in the jurisdiction 25 cents to be used for defraying ex penses of the Fargo convention. It was decided to have the members of the grand council attend to the rit ualistic work at the Fargo convention instead of assigning this ceremony to •teams from the councils of the juris diction, as has been done in the past. The St. Paul team did this work at the Stilwater convention. The executive committee's hands are filled with work incident to secu ing the passage of bills in regard to hotel and railroad accommodations. The bills to be presented to the legis latures in regard to hotel accommo dations wjll be modeled after those already in force in the Dakotas and Washington. The bill regulates the size of towels, compels sanitary pre cautions and in many respects plans for the comfort of travelers. Railroads Neglect Accommodation Action in regard to better railroad accommodations is said by the travel ing men to be a crying necessity, and the executive committee of the grand council has been given full power to act in the matter before the next con vention, after the members of the or der have turned in specific complaints. According to the traveling men the ac commodations furnished by the rail roads, which were formerly excellent, have of late been neglected. The ex ecutive committee may, possibly con fer with the railroads regarding the matter without appealing to the state. Go See Busch for Shoes. The Grand Theatre was fumigated last night and you need not fear scarlet fever or other contagious dis eases. SAVE YOUR VALUABLES. When planning your summer vaca tion, East, West, to Europe or in any other direction, do not forget that the First National bank sells letters of credit and self identifying traveler's checks good in any part of the world. When you close the house for the summer, rent one of our safety de posit boxes and insure the safety of your valuable papers. FIRST NATIONAL BANK. COURT DECIDES THAT NEALS TERM EXPIRED SENATORS FROM NEW EVEN NUMBERED DISTRICTS ELECT- ED FOR TWO YEARS. Temporary Writ of Mandamus Issued —Opinion in the Case Has Nat Yet Been Filed. Late Tuesday evening the supreme court filed an order In the contest over the right of Mr. John E. Williams of the 46th senatorial district, being a portion of McLean county,, to have his petition received by the county audi tor and his name placed upon the primary election ballot. The order of the court is in favor of the proceed ing and it is the unanimous view of the court. No opinion has been filed, but it is understood that the court holds that E. S. Neal, the present senator from this district, was only elected for a term of two years and that automatic ally new districts are filled for the term only expiring when other sen ators of the same class complete their term. The effect of the decision is to place Mr. William's name on the republican primary election ballot and the democratic ballot will have the name of the office only on the same, to be voted by sticker or such other method as the primary law provides. The order of the court is as follows: In the supreme court, state of North Dakota. State of North Dakota, ex rel., John E. Williams, plaintiff, vs. Paul S. Meyer, as county auditor of McLean county, defendant. The hearing upon the order to show cause in the above entitled proceed- BISMAEOK DAILY TRIBUNE ing having come on for argument be fore the court on June 4th, 1910, and the issue raised having been argued by Guy C. H. Corliss and Hyland & Nuessle, attorneys for the plaintiff and relator herein, and by James T. Mc culloch and J. E. Nelson, attorneys for the defendant, and E. S. Neal, a party Interested, and the said matter having been submitted to the court and the court ha\ing fully advised thereon, now, therefore, It is hereby ordered, that a perem tory writ of mandamus be forthwith issued out of this court and under the seal thereof, commanding the de fendant, as auditor of McLean county North Dakota, to print upon the repub lican primary election ballot and also upon the democratic primary election ballot, to be used at the primary elec tion of the state of North Dakota on June 29th, 1910, to be held within the 46th senatorial district of the state of North Dakota, the office of senator for said district, and that said de fendant, as such county auditor, file in his office the petition of relator herein as a republican candidate for such office and print his name upon the said republican primary election ballot as a candidate therefor. Go See Busch for Shoes. Hoover and Eppinger have opened up a new clothing store at the cor ner of Main and Fifth streets. They will continue to operate their place on Main street between Third and Fourth, as before. LIKE FINDING MONEY Your savings in buying those styl ish, beautifully tailored Ladies' Suits at A. W. Lucas Co. The Grand Theatre was fumigated last night and you need not fear scarlet fever or other contagious dis eases. FOLEY MADE HIT TO A HOMHUDIENCE WELL FILLED CHURCH GREETED FIRST APPEARANCE OF BIS- MARCK POET. Easy Stage Appearance Interesting and Entertaining Program—Hearty Applause Given. The people of Bismarck have known Mr. James W. Foley for a good many years as a versatile newspaper man and author of "some of the sweetest verse e'er by poet sung," but not un til last night did they realize him to be a genius in the forum also. It was Mr. Foley's first formal ap pearance on the platform as an enter tainer of the Bismarck public. He gave a reading under the auspices of the regular Lecture association in the Presbyterian church, and the spacious edifice was well nigh filled by a most appreciative audience that gave him a greeting that any man could well be proud of, and the sincerity of it show ed he merited it. The readings given by Mr. Foley are -selections from his own composition, and he intersperces them with orig inal observations that are both apro pos and keenly humorous. Though he is only a few weeks old as an enter tainer on the stage, his ease of man ner and nonchalance have all the bearing of a veteran trained in the art of not only pleasing but enthusing his listeners to the keenest attention which is frequently vented in gener ous applause. His appearance is de cidely priest-like and his delivery more conversational than oratiorcal, yet in reading his verses his enun ciation and intonation impresses one with the loftiness of purpose and tenderness of soul-thought that pro duced them. Certainly, no one could give the lines of his poems so ef fectual an Impression and the interest of the audience never lags. True to his Hibernian instinct his humor scintillates and is keen-edged, even if it involves himself. (For in stance he says, Some years ago there were two distinguished poets in St. Louis one day, and one of them was James Whitcomb. Riley. And the other one? Some fellow near the platform asked in audible whisper, 'Who is this Foley, is he celebrated for anything?' 'Why,' said the man next to him, 'he stands next to Riley.'" The comments he makes between readings about how he has been re ceived in other towns during his first public career are pointedly amusing, and the house roars when he recites how he and Roosevelt once held down the northwestern section of North Da kota, and how Roosevelt Jumped the job for another one in the east and left him to look after the whole thing. Some of the poems he delighted the audience with were: "About a Dog," "A Tale of the Trail," "A Bad Man In at Lanagans," "Chums," one of the most pathetic poems he ever wrote, and which he is frank enough to say is his favorite of them all. Othefs were "About a Wedding Broken Off," "Back to School,," "A Horse Trade," "The Spoiled Child," "Dropping Pebbles In the Stream," and several others equal ly as effective. There was music by the church or ganist, and Mr. George Russ. who pre sented Mr. Foley, said he knew that he needed no introduction to the peo ple of Bismarck. Those who failed to hear Mr. Foley last night missed a literary treat. Go See Busch for Shoes. THE PLACE TO EAT. Why look for a place to eat, when you always find the popular priced Coonen's Cafe on Main street ready to serve you in a jiffy with either short order or meal that there's just one way to describe, "Best I ever ate" they say, and "I don't see how they do it for the money." You'll be de lighted with the service, and glad you went there, and the place is—Coon en's Cafe. TROUBLE OVER HUNG IN GRANDTORKS CO. ATTORNEY FOR J. W. SCOTT ASKS FOR MANDAMUS FROM DISTRICT COURT Claimed There Are Certain Errors in Petition Filed for Nelson as a Re publican Candidate. Attorney Theodore Elton of Grand Forks was in Bismarck yesterday to apply to the supreme court for a writ of mandamus directed to Hans An derson, the county auditor Grand Forks county, to compel the certify ing of the name of J. W. Scott of Gilby as a republican candidate for county auditor of Grand Forks coun ty. The facts in the case as they are stated by the attorney are that there was no petition filed of a candidate for the nomination of county auditor on the republican ticket within the time required by the law. Learning ot this, under the section of the law which provides that a vacancy can be filled by a petition of five electors, a petition was presented regularly signed in behalf of J. W. Scott of Gilby. It is alleged that the auditor, learn ing of such a petition, filed a petition in behalf of his deputy, Nelson, as a republican candidate and then re fused to receive the petition of Scott, claiming that the vacancy hau been filled. It is alleged that there were irreg ularities in connection with the Nel son petition as to the time of its fil ing and the dating of it, and that the whole matter is one for the interven tion of the courts in behalf of Scott, the applicant. After discussing the matter with the members of the court who were in the city. Attorney Elton decided to return to Grand Forks and make ap plication for the writ to Judge Tem pleton of the district court, owing to the short time that must elapse be fore the matter can be decided, and the fact that a decision of the su preme court might not be reached until too late to be effective, if the writ were issued, or that the ques tion of original jurisdiction might be raised to defeat the application. CERTIFICATE OF CORPORATE EXISTENCE Official No. 788 State of North Dakota, department of state. Whereas, Karl Klein, August E. Johnson and *rank E. Funk have filed in this office a copy of their ar ticles of association and an organiza tion certificate, as provided in sec tions 4636 and 4637, chapter 21, re vised codes 1905, said chapter being the law governing the organization and management of state banks, set ting forth all the facts required to be stated in s*id sections, and have in all respects complied with the re quirements of the law governing the organization of state banks, as con tained in the chapter hereinbefore re ferred to Now, therefore, I, Alfred Blaisdell, secretary of state of the state of North Dakota, by virtue and author ity of law, do hereby certify that said parties, their associates and succes sors, have become a body politic and corporate, under the corporate name of Baldwin State Bank, and by that name are hereby authorized to com mence the business of banking to adopt and use a corporate seal to sue and be sued purchase, hold and convey real and personal property, as provided by said chapter to have succession for a period of twenty-five years to make contracts and to have and enjoy all the rights and privi leges granted to state banks undei the laws of this state, subject to th articles of incorporation, and all legal restrictions and liabilities in relation theretol la testimony whereof, I have here unto set my hand and affixed the great seal of the state of North Da kota, at Bismarck, this 23rd day of May, A. D. 1910. ALFRED BLAISDELL, (Seal) Secretary of State. By C. W. LaMoure, Deputy. ORGANIZATION CERTIFICATE Of the Baldwin State Bank Know all men by these presents, that we, whose names are hereunto subscribed, have this day united our selves together to form an associa tion for carrying on the business of banking under the laws of the state of North Dakota, and have adopted and executed articles of association, in duplicate for that purpose, and have duly forwarded a copy of such articles to the secretary of state of North Dakota that we do hereby un der our hand make and file the fol lowing as our certificate of organiza tion: First—The name of said corpora tion is Baldwin State Bank. Second—The place where the busi ness of discount and deposit are to be carried on is Baldwin, Burleigh County, North Dakota. Third—The amount of capital stock and the amount into which its shares are to be divided is ten thousand dol lars, divided into 100 shares. Fourth—The names and places of residence of the shareholders and the number of shares held by each of them are as follows: Karl Klein, Washburn, N. D., 34 ell I*f*S August E. Johnson, Washburn, N. D., 33 shares. Frank E. Funk, Washburn, N. D., 34 shares. Fifth—The period at which this corporation shall commence business shall be 20 years, and It shall termin ate 28th April, 1930. In witness whereof, we have here unto set our hands and seals, ea for himself, thitf 28th day of April, A. D. i910. KARL KLEIN (Seal)ia AUGUST E. JOHNSON (Seal) FRANK E. FUNK (Seal) FOUND Ladies' Hand Bag A Ladies' Hand Bag belonging to some one lies in Cowan's window, containing considerable money and miscellaneous articles. The bag may be claimed by the person making the closest guess of the money therein. Your guess will be registered upon the purchase of 50c or over. Each person limited to one guess. Cowan's Drug Store NORTHERN PACIFIC IS BOOSTINGJOR. DAK. SENDS OUT A NUMBER OF GOOD BOOKLETS SETTING FORTH RESOURCES. One of the Publications Contains Val uable Information About the West ern Part of the State. The Northern Pacific road sends out some excellent immigration literature with regard to North Dakota, copies of which have been received by the Tribune. One booklet deals with the western part of North Dakota and there is an abundance of information, data and statistics with regard to that section of the state. The booklet is liberally embellished with pictures, showing the remarkable development of this western country and the richness of its soil and the nature of its products. There is a brief history of the state of North Dakota, statistics regarding its climate, rainfall, nature of soil, rivers, educational advantages and similar matter, and a detailed descrip tion of opportunities in the counties west of the Missouri river. The whole booklet is handsomely illus trated and typographically neat and attractive. .Another booklet contains a list of the land dealers in the state having land to sell, with a statement of the quantity and location of the land. There is another booklet showing the government land available to settle ment along the Northern Pacific road, and several smaller pamphlets dealing with North Dakota facts. All of the publications should be especially in teresting to the land seekers. SPRAYING DANDELIONS For the past two years iron sul phate has been used at the Minne sota Agricultural Experiment station for the eradication of dandelions in lawns and fairly good success has re sulted from these experiments. Al though spraying the dandelions does not by any means mean absolute de struction of this pest, it at least kills many of the flowering stalks and keeps hundreds of dandelions from coming to seed. It also kills many of the younger plants. If one were to spray a lawn carefully for an entire season the result would possibly war rant the time and expense. Hoover and Eppinger have opened up a new clothing store at the cor ner of Main and Fifth streets. They will continue to operate their place on Main street between Third and Fourth, as before. Five The Grand Theatre was fumigated last night and you need not fear scarlet fever or other contagious dis- Bismarck Has the best Shoe Store in North Dakota While in Town Emma Goldman LecturesTonight The chance of a lifetime to hear the noted anarchist, Emma Goldman. One of the most talented, but most misrepresented woman in the world. Lectures tonight at 8 p. m. in Maennerchor hall, Fifth and Broad way. Subject, "Anarchism, and what it really stands for." Miss Goldman will answer all questions. O SEE Dr Be Reitman, Chairman Admission, 25c Miss Goldman advocates the absence of governments, religion, and the marriage ceremony. It is worth the while of any intelligent man to hear Emma Goldman. 8 O'CLOC TONIGHT At Maennerchor Hall