Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Bismarck Tribune from Bismarck, North Dakota • Page 3

Location:
Bismarck, North Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1913. Cook and HmfitOh A Pioneer Institution. St. Alexius hospital was ed in Bismarck in 1884, and Sister Boniface, the present Mother Superior, or retort to smffaai only irritats tie delicate "THE ACTRESS ABO THE REPORTER Talking, "The Pendulum of Fate" A Tragedy of Title CAST EARL MILBURNE, Edward Wallock LADY ELIZABETH LORD PHILIP MILBURNE nui.Tn'Iu'i rk1 PHILIP, their son Wm. Stoweil Clary ELIZABETH, thejr dauohter LORD.

ROBERT MILBURNE Miss Sajje Modern science catarrh a symptom of poor Treat cause withSCOTTS EMULSION which contains pure cod lirer oil to enrich the blood and OMtgize the hypophosphites to nourish and build the nerres, and glycerine to sooth and heaL Thousands testify that Scott's fimulsfon overcame catarrh in a permanent, natural way and it will surely help you. Hiwii Iks sjcsfcolk nlrtftfNs Henry Lonsdale LADY MARY 8E.T0N Miss Pieroe 2 000 Feet of Real Comedy 2000 Feet Always the Best Show in Bismarck for 10c and 20c THE HOUSE THAT PLAYS THE REAL FEATURE ATTRACTIONS NEW ST. ALEXIUS HOSPITAL $100,000 1 (Continued from Page One.) rear of the main building, and is in direct connection Willi the electric elevator, so that helpless patients. may be transferred directly with minimum handling. The entire build-1 ing will be piped for a most complete vacum cleaning system.

At the end of eacu wing will be a large sun porch connecting with every floor, so ranged that the patient's bed may be rolled to the fresh air at any lime. has been in "charge 21 vears. She fully realizes the gigantic project she 1ms undertaken in the construction of the new hospital, but is confident tha' the task can be easily plished. When the hospital was first started there were but eight sisters at the institution, while now a force of 25 is engaged. As there will lie a training department in the new stitution the force will be greatly creased.

Intended For A Hotel. The present hospital building was erected in 1884 by Alexander MeKenzie and Richard Mellcit for hotel poses' and was designed to suit the tastes of the members of the state legislature. In 1885 the building was purchased by the sisters of St. Bendiet, and the hospital was opened der the management of Ulster ior Alexia, wKo came from St. Cloud, and who was succeeded by Sister Regina, who remained till ter Boniface came here in 1895.

yer Life's Work. Sister Boniface has given this pital her most earnest and devoted attention, through the succeeding years, and at present one cannot fail to observe ttyat she is the controlling spirit, and admired by all who have come in contact with her in this most noble work. The old building will be sold, and is in such condition that it could be utilized for public poses. The erection of the new pital will mean a great advantage to Bismarck which is the leading tal city west of Chicago. The two hospitals of the capital city combined care for over 2,000" patients annually, and when this nefr institution is pleted the number will be greatly creased.

Second Baseman Del Pratt, of the St. Louis Browns has resigned his place as the-representative of his club in the Basebnll Players' Fraternity. Harry Welehonce, who had tlie Unction of leading the Southern league in batting last season, has been appointed field captain or the Atlanta team. (s abscilutely the biist coal we ever handled, and it's giving A' No. I faction.

It looks now, that before long everybody will burn Carney. Equally good for furnace or range No Clinker and Very Little Ashes "WE DO AS WE ADVERTISE'' 0. ANDERSON, Mgr. Phone 77 Dakota ami 44 Lvnciiis Mat 13 for Are Two Stales to Ihe List Chicago, ,11., Dec. fortyfour lynctiings, known to be Hitch yond doubt, havd occurred in tlie United States during the year This is the loweist number on record, more than 50 being.recorded last year and as many as 250 in some previous years.

The record for the year shows de elded improvement in other respects than in mere number of victims. So far as the newspaper accounts show none of the victims was burned at the stake, an atrocity that has been indulged in by infuriated mobs more than once in the past. Nor were any of the lynching cases.this year accoun panied by tlm so-called race riots, which always added to the number of victims and served to intensify the an tagonism of the white and black races. The town of Harriston, nished 'the nearest approach to a "reign of murder," when two drugcrazed mulatto boys, on September 28, ran amuck and started a riot in the course of which three white men, four negro men and one negro woman met. death.

The two boys were ed by the citizens, but as tliey met iteatir resisting teaptiufe Che case cannot strictly be classed as one of lynching. In the fortv-four lynchings the tims of all but one were negroes, and all but two of the- eases occurred In southern states. No woman was cluded among the year's victim. North Dakota and Montana were tiie two northern states in which ings occurred. At Williston, X.

Cleve Culbertson, a white man, cused of the murder of three persons, was taken from jail by a mob and hanged. The only other case in a northern state occurred at Mondak, in April, when C. Collins, a negro, who shot and killed the sheriff and deputy sheriff of the county, was hanged by a mob. The states in which the lynchings occurred during the year and the num ber in each were as follows: bama, 2 Arkansas, 1 Florida, 4 Georgia, 8 Kentucky, 1 Louisiana, 4 Mississippi, 8 Montana, 1 Nlorth Carolina, 1: North Dakota, 1 South Carolina, 1 Tennessee, 2 Texas, 0. Double lynchings occurred at Blanchard, Cornelia, and Pauls Valley, Okla.

At Houston, two negrops- were lynched, a day apart, both being accussed of complicity in the same crime. At Drew, a negro was lynched by members oi his own race after he had shot and killed two negro women and to gro men. As in previous years, murders of white persons and crimes or alleged crimes against white women caused most of the summary executions. The murders were in the big majority, however, and the number of cases in which attacks on women were ed showed a gratifying decrease over the figures of previous years. Nineteen of the victims of the forty four lynchings ere accused of the der of white men.

Four were ed with (murdering ja igirls or women. Attempted criminal is on record as responsible for nine of the lynchings. Two negroes were lynched for frightening white en, one for insulting a wliito woman, and another for being- found ed under the bed in a woman's room. Two negroes were lynched for ing or assaulting white men, one for robbery and shooting, one for ing a negro murderer to escape and another for horse stealing. In one case the crime charged against the victim was not stated.

The gratifying decrease in Ivnchiiv in southern states is attributed ly to the efforts that hare been made by governors, county sheriffs and prominent citizens in the last few years lo prevent mob violence. Many of those in authority have acted promptly and energetically to prevent lynchings, with the declared policy of giving the law free opportunity for the punishment of all alleged ers white or blacks A notable example was set on Aug. by the sheriff of Spartanburg, S. C. In spite of the fact that dynamite was used, he prevented a mob from lynching a negro who was accused of assaulting a white woman.

Later the negro was tried before a. white jury and found not, guilty. WBYER MAY JBE PROBED (Continued from Page One.) parently the only danger lies in the possibility of blood poisoning. er was accompanied by Charles ner, auditor of the Federation, who was also roughly handled by the mob at Hancock Guarded Prom Reporters. Moyer.

guarded from reporters, could not be seen with reference to the deniai of James McNaughton that he was with the mob at the railway station at Hancock, as charged by Moyer, and that he searched Moyer, staining valuable papers. No Doubt of Hold-Up. Hilton acted, as a messenger in the confirmation charges He ed for a moment itti the sick room, but upon reappearing said, "There is RTSMABOK DAILY no doubt about it. Moyer could not have been mistaken. McNaugliton ordered him out of the country, and said he would hang if he returned then he searched him.

Two gunmen held him and McNmighton took two wallets from Moyer's person. He returned the one containing the money bill, kept the other." Plan Won't Work, Says Governor. Big Rapids, Dec. won't work," was the comment of Governor Ferris, after the latest posal for a settlement of the Calumet copper made by Charles Moyer, in Chicago this afternoon, was read him. The governor said he was positive the mine operators would not consent to the arrangement which compellod them to employ, without discrimination men who at present were strikers.

Deportation Not a Surprise. Butte, Dec. Lownoy, member of the executive of the Western Federation of ers, who recently returned from umet, said, the "deportation" of er was not. a surprise to Federation officials. He said, "The deportation of Moyer was planned a month ago, and we knew it, and it is not the sult of the refusal to accept, funds from the Citizens' Alliance following the Christmas tragedy.

Moyer will be back in Calumet under governmont protection within a few days." JUNBENT IS BENBERII MUST II. LORENZEN Mandan, N. Dec. verdict in favor of the plaintiff Mrs. beth Glazer of Odessa, awarding her damages from Dr.

E. C. Lorenson of Elgin, in the sum of $1175, was turned by a jury in district court. Mrs. Glaser, through her attorney, J.

K. Murray of Mott, brought suit against Dr. Lorenzen for $10,000 ages, alleging that negligence on the part of the physician caused the tlefilli of her husband, Gottlieb er. Where Living Is Cheap. "The cheapest place in the world Is Antioch.

in Syria." says a returned traveler. "Being on the Mediterranean the climate is just right in the colder months. 1 once passed a winter there. all it cost me was £1 week though I leased a tine bouse and kept three servants. For the house I paid "0 shillings a month rent, while the ants were satisfied with shillings a week.

Mutton cost three halfpence a pound. ISggs were a penny a dozen and chickens twopence-halfpenny each The finest of fresh, fruit and bles (in February. were so cheap that they were not sold in Yon got all you wanted for so much per week. All I required for.my'house­ hold cost ine 1 An American resident of Antioch told me that he and his family lived comforta lily on £35 a ye! Ga Roach and Rain. There is one sport which benefits by the advent if not by the actual arrival of rain.

This is tisliingi While the rivers are still clear of Hoods and there Is light enough for t.he Ifsli to see the ha it. hnt no sun to hetrif.v the shining hook, the fisherman has chance to make a big catch, for fish rise and bite greedily before a rainstorm. The roach, known as the "Weiither tish." leaves his muddy bed. sometimes as long as twenty-four hours before the actual storm breaks, and swims around continually, all the time gasping for Hamburger A Disconcerting Habit. "Yes.

Dinah Is a very good cook, but she has one falling. She's passionately fond of my perfumes." "You can lock them away from her. can't you?" "Of course. But I can't get used to hear her. snuffing under the Cleveland Plain Denier.

KIT CARSON'S SON DIVORCED. Survivor of Alamo Aged 80, Gets Legal Separation from Wife. Reno, Dec. C. ling, the 80-yoar-old adopted son of the famous scout, Kit Carson, and sole vivor of the massacre at tho Alamo, got a divorce in the local courts from Joanna Schilling Schilling has lived in Reno since last May.

Schilling's mother and two sisters were massacred in 18S6 in the Alamo. He self, a boy of four, escaped having his brains beaten out with the other dren by crawling into a where he slept through the din of battle. GIRL FREES BURGLAR ROBBED. Boy Promise to Reform But Leaves with Watch. Pittsburg, Dec.

Emilie Collingwood, instructor in household omics at the Margaret Morrison gie school found a young burglar under her bed when she was about to retire. She' caught him by the legs, pulled him out and lectured him on the uselessnesg of a criminal life The boy peared crestfallen and promised to form. She bade'him "goodnight," after he had thanked her for her wbrds and her failure to turn over to the police. She was much annoyed later on to cover her gold watch and money missing. naouiiKii eommrLM Beginning with New Years ing the Grand Pacific hotel will bo conducted on the European plan.

This is the announcement of Henry led, proprietor of that popular hostelrv. Robert 8. Wilhite, an experienced and up-to-date steward has been gaged from the east, to take charge of that department. Mr. Wilhite ed several weeks ago and has proven liis worth in his profession, but the adoptiori of the new system has been delayed through several reasons.

The Grand I'aellio Is one of the finest hotels in the state and this new departure places it. light up in the first row. The new iilan will be quite acceptable to (he public and assures the very best, service at all times. THERE IS WORK FOR ALL UNEMPLOYED It is very fortunate that. Bismarck has so few unemployed and it.

speaks very much for the prosperous tion of the city and the surrounding country. But there are always ditions which place men and women and young people for a brief period ASSOCIATED CHARITIES. FORMER PREMIER 90 YEARS OLD Belleville, Dec. kenzie Bowell, former Dominion mier and for many years a leader in Canadian public life, attained the age age of four-score and ten today, ing been born Dec. 27.

1825. Sir keiyiie became a member of parliament at the time of confederation. I and in 1878 joined the cabinet of Sir! Macdonald. During his ioug reer he held numerous cabinet posi-. tions and for a period of abont mo1 year he was prime minister.

BILLY SUNDAY STIRS PITTS BURGH. Dec. is stirred from center to ence over the coming of "Billy" day, who is scheduled to open one of his characteristic evangelistic paigns in this city tomorrow ing. Pittsburgh is the largest city that the noted evangelist has ever vaded, and he has made his plans in proportion. A monster tabernacle has been erected in the heart of the city and a mammoth chorus has been trained to lead the singing.

Three hundred ushers have been trained in their duties and one hundred dishpans of largest size are in readiness for use in taking up (lie collection. While the voices of 10,000 persons have been raised in nightly prayer in preparation for the opening of the campaign, an equal or larger number of persons have been active in posing it. The opposition, which cludes a number of ministers and many prominent church workers, went, so far as to seek an injunction to restrain the building of the labernacle. President Dreyfuss of the Pirates made "Honus" Wagner the only ception in any trade for "Big 'Ed" Konetchy, when lie and Manager Clarke discussed the proposed deal. who have never used NEW SALEM Say "Lignite Coals are all Those who have used New Salem Coal say there Is a f.

DIFFERENCE Phone 56 for' a.trial order and you will understand why our business is growing Dakota Coal Produots Co. 911 Main Street A 3-REEL FEATURE 1 of time upon the good will of the community. This fall lias been so open that, with no walks to clean and no Ice harvest, the dozen or more of our citizens have had a hard time to get. steady work. The free employment, has helped these a great deal and already Adjutant Wolverton is more than pleased with the results, and there have been many expressions of mendation for this free employment bureau.

It. was organized only last week, by the officers of the ed Charities, and is primarily for the unemployed citizens of this city. If tlie citizens of Bismarck havo odd jobs, such, as cleaning cellars, chopping wood, putting on storm dows, or if they want, a woman for washing or for house-cleaning or tra they should telephone to Adjutant Wolverton of the Salvation Army headquarters, who has charge of the Free Employment Bureau, and he will find the person for the place. There is a place for every ed citizen of Bismarck, if each one lends a hand and has the jobs done now, when the need is most, ing. Honest work for the honest man is real charity.

The Only Fireproof, perfectly Ventilated InthcClty V. Monday Tuesday the sensational film success "The Great Aerial Disaster Note Some of the Unusual Scenes The above is an actual scene. Reals Wait for the Great ture New Years Day, Thu. and in Two Shows Nightly In the City's Only Perfect Playhouse THE TWO SERGEANTS Thrilling Military Drama of Six Thousand Feetl U. S.

DEPOSITARY Also Depositary for Gov. Postal Savings Bank Funds First National Bank C. B. LITTLE, Pres. FRANK E.

SHEPARD, Cashier J. L. Bell, V. Pres. A.

J. Arnot, Ass't. Cashisr BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Established in 1879 SAFETY DEPOSIT LOANS MADE ON BOXE8 FOR RENT FARM LAN91 Capital and Surplus $175,000.00 (mn. 450 IF YOU PUT MONEY INTHEBANK NOW IT WILL GROW INTOAFORTUNC AND KEEP YOU SOME DAY The above statement is absolutely true. You are spending r.ot.

alone the money but the FUTUER it that money. That money you are now spending would some day moki a goodly sum which would insure you COMFORT INr YOUR OLD A (IK or protect your FAMILY should you die. Let OUR Bank Be YOUR Bank FIRST NATIONAL BANK A 3 REEL FEATURE The gorgeous baU room scene. The great Alhambra Theater scene. The dazzling Queen of Tire.

The Parisian underground Cafe. The great hospital scene. The aerial race with death and The Disaster in the Clouds The Aviator nr.akcs the record for high flight and is about to descend when an explosion occurs. The winged engine now cornea quickly to earth, a most sensational spectacle and we are given a scorchingly close view as the great machine strikes the earth and is consumed by flames. The Aviator is rescued, but is disfigured for life.

Reels GRAND Yellow Bananas Two doz. 25c Geo. Gussner I0c-15c With More for Your I Money.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Bismarck Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
1,010,285
Years Available:
1873-2024