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PAGE EIGHT.
1
ANNUAL MEET
IN JAMESTOWN
,vi,
Local Pastors to Attend the
North Dakota Conference
Next Week.
Dr. E, P. Bobertson, president of
Wesley college. Rev. A. H. Thompson,
pastor of the First Methodist church
of Grand Forks, and Dr. Georgre
Quigley, superintendent of the Grand
Porks district, will represent this city
at the thirty-third North Dakota con
ference of the Methodist-Episcopal
church to be held at Jamestown, Oc
tober 11 to 16.
Blahop R. M. Cooke of Helena,
Mont., who succeeded the late Bish
op Luccock, will preside at the ses
sions, and also will be one of the
principal speakers.
said.
•will figure prominently as an example
of the work which has been done
and the advancement of this institu
tion will be reported. Dr. Thomas
Fessenden, pastor of Wesley church.
Minneapolis, will represent the board
of education.
XjOCAJJ SUFFRAGISTS DELEGATES
May
Mrs. James Collins and Dr.
Sanders to Valley City.
The Grand Forks Votes for Women
club has named Mrs. James Collins
and Dr. May Sanders to attend the
annual meeting of the Votes for
Women legaue of JCorth Dakota at
Valley City, X. D.. Friday, October
13. It is expected that several other
members of the local organization also
will attend.
Mrs. Walter McNab of Missouri,
first vice president of the National
Suffrage association, will be the prin
cipal speaker.
EX.-PRES. MOHLER
Of U. P. LINE HERE
Veteran Railway Man, Former Gen
eral Manager of Great North
ern, Passed Through City.
A. L. Mohler, ex-president of the
Union Pacific lines and a number of
years ago general manager of the
Great Northern road, was in Grand
Forks last evening on his way to Se
attle, Wash., where he will remain
for several weeks.
When interviewed Mr. Mohler
stated his -western trip was devoid of
any significance, and that he was
merely making it for the purpose of
visiting friends. He declined to dis
cuss politics, but asked as to busi
ness conditions stated that the east
•was enjoying exceptional prosperity,
especially those localities which are
"Meat Prices Will
Not Come Down"
YOUR
MONEY-
HOW DO YOU
INVEST
IT?
mt:
if
•Ssfe
'fr
is
the cheerful news that comes
from the Department of Agri
culture. Meat prices will
not worry the man or woman
who knows that a Shredded
Wheat Biscuit will supply
more real body building
nutriment than beefsteak or
eggs and at much less cost.
Shredded Wheat remains
the same price, the same
high quality, supplying all
the nutriment a man needs
for a half day's work. Two
shredded wheat biscuits
with peaches and cream or
other fruits make a complete,
nourishing meal at a cost of
not over five cents. Made
at Niagara Falls, N. Y.
KODAKS
Developing and Printing
At lowest prices, best work and
prompt service. Write as for
price list. We want your
mall orders and guar
antee satisfaction.
BiOOTAI nuuuo.
OcanA Porks, V. S.
W A E S
GIRARD&SON
JEWELERS
fife. 4tli W. Orantf Forkil
directly benefiting because of war or
ders. Such prosperity, he stated,
was merely temporal and would not
outlive the period in which it flour
ishes. He expressed the hope that
the country would soon settle down
to a normal condition, and its re
sources used in the exploitation of
peaceful pursuits rather than for war.
He deprecated the fact that because
of crossing the state at night he
would not be able to see its fertile
fields, but remarked he would make
the trip in daylight on his return.
SCHOOL BOARD IS
TO MEET TONIGHT
Reports of Committees to Bo Heard
—Building Matters to Be Tak
en l"p With Contractor.
Much "hiiQlnpss"will rome before the' present at the session and will assist city council will meet and canvas the
church o^ciafs^ lnit fexchanges wiltj in making the selections. Two returns, after which the report of the
be made in the pastorates, it is
I samples of brick will be examined
On Friday evening. October 13. Dr. and it is expccted a section will be
E. P. Robertson of Wesley college
will be the presiding officer when the numbing and electrical plans and
educational anniversary of the church specifications will be discussed and
will be celebrated. Wesley college
pthe
matters to
w"
be acted upon.
TEACHERS TO MEET
TOMORROW AT GILBY
Instructors of Rural Institutions in
County District to Take l*p
Educational Problems.
in attendance at the gatherings and
will be in charge of the programs.
R. K. DOE EXAMINES
CITIZEN CANDIDATES
Twenty Are Naturalized Before. Judge
Cooley—Two Will Appear
Again.
R. K. Doe, government naturaliza
tion agent, today examined 22 candi
dates for citizenship papers, before
District Judge C. M. Cooley. One of
the men failed to appear while two
others were instructed to again ap
pear before the court at a later date.
Twenty passed the examination and
were naturalized.
The nations represented by the ap
plicants were Norway 12, Denmark 3,
Canada 3, Russia 2, Turkey 1, and
Germany 1.
Several of the candidates were
anxious to become citizens in order
to be relieved of the demands of their
home countries that they enter mili
tary service.
BRUSH AND FRENCH
EXCHANGE LECTURES
Universty Professors will Go to Mani
toba University—Stoughton
and Clark Come Here.
The exchange lecturers between the
University of North Dakota and the
University of Manitoba have been an
nounced. Dr. Henry R. Brush, pro
fessor of Romance languages and
literatures, has been chosen by the
University of Manitoba as the first lec
turer. He will go to Manitoba some
time early In November. Dean H. E.
French of the flschool of Medicine
will be the second lecturer and will
go to Manitoba some time in January.
The two lecturers from Manitoba
chosen by the University of North Da
kota are Dr. A. K- Stoughton, profes
sor of architecture and Dr. F. F.
Clark, professor of I^atin and Greek.
November and March have been sug
gested as the possible months in
which these lecturers will come to the
university.
1.004 LICENSES ISSUED.
Scarcity of Wild Fowl Believed Cause
for Light Demand'
At noon today. 1.064 hunting per
mits had been issued at the office of
County Auditor Hans Anderson. Last
year over 1,200 licenses were issued.
The scarcity of wild fowl is believed
to be the cause for the drop.
ARCHIE ROOSEYEI/T FIXED
FOR SPEEDIXG HIS ACTO
New York, Oct. 5.—Archibald B.
Roosevelt, son of Colonel Roosevelt,
appeared as a defendant before Jus
tice of the Peace Frank P. Seaman at
Mineola, L. I-, to answer to a charge
of having driven his automobile along
the Pericho Turnpike at thirty-five
miles an hour. The courtroom was
thronged with the curious.
"Your Honor. I'll just throw my
self upon the mercy of the court," said
young Roosevelt and the court fined'
him $25, which Mr. Roosevelt paid.
Every person with money, much
or little is vitally interested in
the investment of his or her
funds.
The essentials of an ideal invest
ment are safety and a fair return.
As soutid investment securities,
yielding a liberal return, First
Farm Mortgagee, placed with
understanding and proper regard
for their ultimate security stand
supreme.
Our First Farm Mortgages are super
ior In that they have never, now for
a third of a century, failed to return
interest and principal promptly.
Let us tell you about these invest
ments.
Investment Department-
E. J. LANDTR CO.
414 DeMera Ave. Grand Forks.
Hav*
Your
FURS
mi 111 1 M'T 1 v.'i 1 I |M 1 .p
At an adjourned meeting of the city held in the tame building's used for
school board to be held this evening the primary election.
at the city hall, reports of committees The proposition of issuing bonds to
will be heard and the selection of the extent of JCS.OOO to obtain im
material for the new high school ir.ediate funds for improving the city
building will be taken up. water and filtration plant will be put
Instructors in charge of schools in
the Gilby district will gather tomor
morrow in that village for the first
district institute of the term. For
two days the pedagogic representa
tives will hold sessions, taking up edu
cational problems and devising moth
ods to pursue to advance the work iniator- will speak at the city hall in
the rural sections. Grand Forks next Monday night, ac-
BOND ISSUE UP
BEfORf VOTERS
Arthur Gray, contractor in charge before the voters tomorrow.
of the construction work, will be At S o'clock tomorrow evening the
decided
Special Election to be Held
Tomorrow—Council Will
Meet in the Evening.
.Tudsrcs and clerks to have charge of
the special election to be held tomor
row are beir..tr selected today and will
be completed this owning, according
I to City Auditor William Alexander.
The polling stations also are being de
cidod upon. They probably will be
water committee will be read and the
proposed improvements will be out
lined. Several bids have been received
from concerns for the installation and
the furnishing of machinery for the
softening am'Tfiltration plant. Experts
representing the bidders have made a
survey of the plant and at the session
Frkiay, will make recommendations.
JOHN BURKE TO SPEAK
HERE MONDAY NIGHT
Will Slake Brief Tour of North and
East Parts of Grand Forks
County,
John Burke, United States treasurer
and Democratic candidate for sen-
Five other meetings will be held at cording to definite assurances given
other points in the county in the near
1f,cal
future. M. Beatrice Johnstone, coun-1,lon after the speaking will take place
tv superintendent of schools will be
nt
Democrats. An informal recep-
*he rederick.
didacy for United States senator.
COUNTRY SCHOOLS
BREEDING PLACES
FOR TUBERCULOSIS
rGRAND
Ramodtl*
•d
S. FRIEDMAN
12 So. 4ti St.
!,i
r»t
W
A full outline of his speaking dates family is not wealthy enough for a
has not yet been arranged, hut it is child profitably to be held for ran
known that Mr. Burke will make a som, and the little girl says she was
speaking tour of the east and north not harmed in the least.
parts of Grand Forks county October
!, and of the western part October I NEGRO WOMAN IJYNCED.
14. His appearances between the two Albany, (la., Oct. 5.—A negro wo
dates will be announced later. man named Connolly, whose son is
October 14, Mr. Burke will speak at charged with killing a white farmer
Niagara in the forenoon, at Larimore after a quarrel in which she took
at 4 o'clock, and at Northwood in the part, was taken from the jail at
evening. Leary, Ga.. and lynched, according
Mr. Burke will remain in the state to reports reaching here. Her body,
for several weeks in the interests of riddled with bullets, was found yes
Wilson for president and his own can- terdaj*. The son is tinder arrest.
Louisville, Ky., Oct. 6—The average
"Little Red School House" and farm
home are hotbeds of tubercular infec
tion, according to Dr. W. F. King, as
sistant secretary of the Indiana state
board of health, in a discussion before
delegates from fourteen states of the
Middle West gathered here for the
sessions of the Mississippi valley con
ference on tuberculosis.
NORTH DAKOTANS
BUY MONTANA SHEEP
Glasgow, Mont., Oct. 5.—Montana
sheep are in great demand by North
Dakota farmers. Because of the pres
ent. prices sheep are bought only in
small lots.
Superintendent Charles H. Ruzicka
of the Wiiliston experiment station
traveled through much of the eastern
part of the state in company with F.
H. Peters of the livestock department
on the Montana Agricultural college.
Ruzicka purchased 300 head of sheep
which he will ship to Wiiliston for ex
perimental purposes.
Anarchists Predict
the Fall of Labor
New York. Oct. 5.—The Federation
of Anarchists held a meeting in Un
ion Square as a protest against the
arrest of Carlo Tresca and seven oth
ers concerned in the Minnesota coal
strike and against the continued im
prisonment of David Kaplan for par
ticipation in the dynamiting of the
Los Angeles Times.
Leo Stark said in the course of
his address that the days of the
American Federation of Labor are
numbered and that a general reform
of labor conditions will follow.
Many have been agreeably
surprised with tne
DON ALMQ 10 CtS.
Surprise yourself by Smoking
one today.
THE
rM0RTHERM
STATE BANK
FORKS-NORTH DAKOTA!
HEED THE VOICE
OF EXPERIENCE
Sounding through the
centuries of struggle for
riches and wealth the
voice of experience has
never recommended spec
ulating nor accredited
prosperity to luck.
Industry and thrift are
what have started and
amassed the fortunes of
every age.
Money multiplies with a
bank account.
A check book is a con
stant reminder of your
bank balance and a com
pelling force for thrift.
TALK TO US ABOUT
HAVING A CHECK AC
COUNT HERE.
SECOVD-SUMfD
HEATING STOVES
VOI
UAXiB
OIZAP
Giese Noonan
BAIT SXBB EiBBVimi
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GRAND FORKS HERALD* THURSDAY EVENING, OCTOBER 5,
ZEPPELIN CHASER
NEW YANKEE CRAFT
New Triplane Risen 10,000 Feet in
14 Minutes and Has Speed of
120 Miles.
Buffalo, N. Y„ Oct. 5.—A Zeppelin
destroyer was tested on the Curtlss
Aeroplane company's flying grounds.
Reports of its performance which say
that it is the most remarkable ma
chine ever built for pursuit and Zep
pelin chasing. Victor Carlstrom, the
long-distance record holder, was the
pilot and tested the aeroplane under
all conditions, remaining in the air
for more than an hour and landing
with ease.
The aeroplane is a tractor triplane
and was developed in answer to the
demand for an aeroplane which could
leave the ground, overtake and de
stroy a raiding Zeppelin.
The new machine made a maximum
speed of 120 miles an hour and throt
tled down until it made 45 miles an
hour. Both the British Sopwith and
the French Nieuport pursuit ma
chines make about the same high
speed but cannot be throttled down
to much less than 65 to 70 miles an
hour, thus making it difficult to land
without breakage.
The chief feature of the new tri
plane model is its ability to climb,
On Sunday it ascended 10,000 feet in I
ten minutes, or at the rate of 1.000
feet a- minute. It left the ground
after a very short run and climbed
at an angle nearer the vertical than
any of the other fast machines yet
developed.
Child Watches Posse
Kill Her Kidnapper
Lexington, Ky„ Oct. 5.—In a battle
fought from behind rocks, trees and
fences near Bagdad, a village in Shel
by county, Roy Dickson, kidnaper of
12-year-old Catherine Methig, was
shot dead by a posse headed by Sher
iff Jacob Smith.
About 50 shots were fired and Dick
son was struck by several bullets.
None of the officers was injured. The
girl witnessed the figlit.
Dickson's object in kidnaping the
child is a mystery, as the Methig
"OU will want several of
these good-looking Rugs
the moment you see them.
They're different in texture from
ordinary grass, fibre or fabric
rugs cost less and wear longer.
No place for dirt to settle and
frequent washings won't harm
them.
Every room in the house should
havfc a Congoleum Rug. Come
in today and let us tell you all
about them.
SPECIAL PRICE
on size 1 by
1 yard for
Third Floor.
II
79c
Hi
Ten Dozen Aprons
worth 59 cents each were also slightly wet.
A washing will remove stains. These are
full size dress aprons in a half dozen differ
ent styles made of percales in light and
dark patterns. While 2Qf
they last, each
Basement.
TODAY'S MAIL ORDER SPECIAL
Bedroom Slippers
These slippers are made with knitted
top, trimmed with a turned back upper
of contrasting shades and with a pom
pom. Soles are leather covered, with
lamb-skin inner sole. Color combinations
—black and lavender, oxford and red,
red and white, pink and white, and blue
and white. Sizes 3 to S. 7Qf»
Postpaid, per pair I
This Price for Mail Orders Only. Offer
Good for One Week From Date.
PERCALES AT TH!
PRICE OF PRINT
Last Monday morning we had the beginning of a fire but our
sprinkler system soon drowned it out. In doing so, however, abou
3,000 yards of percales and ten dozen aprons were wet. We canno
put them back in stock however and therefore offer them for sa
Friday and Saturday at a genuine savings.
These percales are in both light and dark.
patterns, of a quality worth 10 to 12% cents
per yard at present wholesale prices. Buy
them now at the price of prints. Per yard
Bargain Basement.
HAVE YOU SEEN—
OUR SUITS?
If not make it a point to do so. This year, in keeping with our
reputation as leaders in ladies' wearing apparel, we have a stock, not
only large, but one featuring the latest and most approved style cre
ations. We would consider it a pleasure to show them to you.
Second Floor.
ROCHESTER,
READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIED WANT ADS READ ALL THE ADS.
Aitken, Riding Goodyear Cords,
Shatters World's Record!
Captures Astor Trophy in Sheepshead
Bay Speedway 250-Mile Classic
Rickenbacher Also on Goodyear Cords a Close Second
Catapulting along the edge-to-edge board course at
Sheepshead Bay Saturday at the rate of 104.66 miles
an hour, a world's record for the distance, Johnny
Aitken drove his Peugeot to victory in the Astor Cup
Race over afield of 3 1 starters.
He rode on Goodyear Cords!
And he won on Goodyear Cords!
Desperate competitors thundered at his hubs every mile
of the way—a treacherous tire might have meant defeat—
but he won—his Goodyears did their splendid part.
They stood the burning, tearing, grinding, rending punish
ment of 250 miles over edge-to-edge boards at a 104.66-mile
pace—and victoriously!
Aitken's victory is not an isolated instance of the unflinch
ing stamina of Goodyear Cords. The racing records of the
past three months are formidable with additional proof.
Proof, not alone of stamina—though this is paramount
—but of speed, spring, and exultant vitality.
Proof of the very qualities that led to the adoption of Good
year Cord tires as standard equipment on the Franklin, the
Packard Twin-Six, the Locomobile, the Peerless, the White,
\e Haynes Twelve, the Stutz and the McFarlan.
Proof of the qualities that make these tires better.
The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co.
Akron, Ohio
A i&fa. O N
I E S
Goodyear Tires, Heavy Tourist Tubes and
"Tue Saoer" Accessories are easy, to get from
Goodyear Service Station Dealers everywhere.
am for sale
7c
Black Glazed
Kid Boots
Just received another ship
ment of those beautiful
black glazed kid boots in 7
and 8 inch pattern. Button
or lace style, all sizes and
widths. This Is an exception
al value at
Per Pair
AR
j*
ft
-UK
*4r jf*
£¥t
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