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a pO § UBERTY LOM TALCR BRINGS REAL MESSAGE World Issue and Ignores Selfish Claims TIME HAS COME WHEN NEW WORLD MUST ACT Placing the great conflict upon the higher plane of a world issue, ignor- ing international causes and the sel- fish claims which America had for en- tering the war in retaliation for the brutal ignorance of its national rights | on the part of Germany, former Con- gressman Frank M. Nye brought to an audience which filled the Auditorium! Saturday night a real message, filled with inspiration. Everyone who heard him left the theater thrilled with a new loyalty for his flag and his coun- try; proud of her past, confident of her future, and with the conviction that she is destined to play a great and noble part in the consict now waging. President H. P. Goddard of the Bis- marck Commercial club introducing the speaker sait “The fact that you are here tonight is an indication that we are rising to a higher type of patriotism,” and on this higher type of patriotism Congressman Nye dwelt in an address which was sane, temper- ate, free from hectic bombast, but filled with genuine American senti- ment. Thankful for Heroes. “1am (hankful for every hero and patriot who has left his impress on the world. [am thankful fomthe good men and women who have enriched the world and human life. Only un- selfish souls have left their impress on the world. No man can stop and | study the history of this country, with its brave men and women; its self- denying men and women, without a tendency to get out of the rut. In coming here tonight, | speak from the standpoint of an optimistic patriot. 1 have lived long enough to know that we as a nation are not a community of saints; but there is s# much that is good as compared with any of the] old world nations that I daily give thanks that I am an American. “The hero never dies. Washington still stands at Valley Forge; Grant still fights at Vicksburg that a nation may be reborn; Farragut still stands trapped to his masthead; Sheridan still rides the valley of the Shenan- doah; Sherman is still marching to the sea; Dewey still stands there on the bridge at Manila, They cannot die. This meeting here tonight is to renew, and in some cases, to resurrect our patriotism.” The sneaker told of the inspiration he found in reading as a boy a proph-! esy made by a great Irish statesman 140 years ago that the new world would become the renovation and in- spiration of the new, and he declared that it is true of a nation as of an individual that “as a man in his’ heart thinketh so he becometh.”, Amer- ica, he declared, has been too busy, building a great nation to think of War | SCOOP FESS TLL NOW SING 4 LIC LOVE SONG TO MY BLONDE HER Way! MY LOVE- MY OWN WYNN LSOLLIL LLL LIA LG DNDN, “A NN AN SIIINN, N ny wa AA SAILS SIGS. ILI. A 4 NS oy y ‘A Bn aA YAK, a 2 2 a N NS AEE. S RYE s a N N iS x S A wa na Sy SS a A, NN yA RARRALAALAARAA RANA DAIS RAARARARAALA SSASSS RARRARARARA SISA ARRAARARNA DRAIDAs BARRRRRARRAY RRARARAAAA AAAAAAD AAARAAA ANNAN PRADA PARAADARARAAAA ANN ANZ a IS A AK wa a A a NS N NS LARA NS 5 A y NS y NM WA 5 NS N MS A wn LN n S AAA Sy MS NS ‘”A A . xD NS NS a A ee aS ny ‘- - A x S. . WAX J y ! ! > aN ~? x S; . ¥ ¥ Sy NS 4 Y A WS AR yi NS AD AA wn aA a uA mS ix Is S SES WAN SS SS a WS S yn oe IN Ss an n wn an a y IS NS Y. n SS AALS, NS RAN WARAAA A. VAARAAAL N WA AA wwe A ” A A an ‘A A aA A aR MS A SS x S A N a MS By A A ” AK AL NA AA wn wwe AA A we. A - ‘A R A A A 2 n a ! A n I WS A SN NEN AN SA SN ANS SA IN; NN INA A IS a oS 4 Y; A AN WN Be AGE. A Oa A A . n A ” A An 2 A - n nA w ‘ ASSASINS RAN AANANSANNANSANS LALIIIL LAL ALA LAL ALG. OLLOILLILL LALLA LALA LAR, NARA AANA AAAAAR ARAL AAA A a A NA A a A wh ‘An Ah Y A y AA Ae AX, a 2 Arnold Gandil, first base, wa Tse9 and started baseball as a pr has been in the American | jor Chicago but was late sed ton and later went to Cleveland. Jack Ness. upon whom Comiskey agree on terms with the boss of t Gandil who was the property of t reported. Cleveland. v willing purchased his contract. Gandil h been better than the average. H He is 6 feet 2 inches tall, weight in Chicago. AOLPLL LAA, ARAN ARA LES WS é VARA VILLI LLR 4 s born in St. Paul, Minn. Jan. 197 ofessien in 1808 at Shrevport. He seven Vears. THe played a year . THe then played with W ‘ At the start of the present season had relied for first base, could not he White Sox, At that) ttm. he Cleveland Americans had not to let Gandil) go and Comiskey as fielded well and his batting | » bats and throws right handed. 196 pounds, is married and lives and conquest and aggression. Its few! that a nation, but that a whole world wars have been humane wars, and in them the God of right has marched with the colors. America has thought along peaceful, constructive lines, while an element of brutality comes down through the centuries in the}, nations of the old world. Those Who Gave All. He spoke at length of the moral) other points, including members of heroism shown by Wendell Phillips,| the district liberty loan committee who had the courage to preach eman-| and those of several counties, attend- cipation when the very business life| eq the rally. of the nation seemed based on slav- ery. Today, in this crisis, he declared, we should emulate such men as Phil-| jean flags being used with good effect lips and others who gave all, and in spite of the men who criticize ; and growl and grumble, there is but} one song on American lips tonight— may be born. “And, in spite of the copperheads, | ‘My County, "Tis of Thee.” Many from Country. Scores of prominent citizens from The -stage had been appropriately decorated for the occasion, huge Amer- | Co., who had charge of this detail. ‘by a representative of the A. W. Lucas Cemmunity singing of “America” and the “Star Spangled Banner” was led by Miss ‘Bergelot Caspary, and the divine blessing was invoked ‘by Rev. George Buzzelle, - rector of St. George's. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the matter of the estate of George MY DARLING TANE. AVIATRIX AN’ TRUST TO TH” L HOPE THIS SONG LOOK DOWN UPON GENTLE. BREEZE TO AINT SUNG INVAIN — YOUR LOVER GUY — WAFT IT : a SALES ACIAAD A, IRINA SIA ALISA, MY Love ey own; If AS “(OU SAIL HIGH If! BY GOLLN SHE SAW ME ALL RIGHT — THATS HERD, WHUDUACALLIT | NAD DIISSSSSISLS NS SS ORARAA ARN MORSE n a DNAS SS SA SERRE NN RARARA a . S We, a RA LL wn PARR DNREN a S XN WN A SIS A an a y A RARRANANEN, RAR SYA NNN RSA AREA WA NS S SS i S aA WA S AAR NA, A N AR SS NS ALL. AAR SALLY Za “a A NS a Ny DAA NS WE. ww, N we DAA ww ” ” S ! NS 2 en S SN Ss . ” ! - - na N ‘A ‘A x AAR Ss Sy OA ay ALL OWN RAR WN in iy Ry A ! 4 wA A ” & x x ” N wan S ~ N a ” mL x? wa N - f mA A wR ARS, N NS a Vn “we AS A WN, NA A! n SS NA vA Rae sS A A AN ROR, wa SN JN! MOINS where he play he joined the Dalla als in August, 1908. years old, w TLETCHER Arthur Fletcher, shorstop. | orn at Collinsville, Hl. June 5, 1 as a semi-pro in 1907. ub and was sold to New York Nation- Fleteher’s hiome i: ghs 170 pounds, is 5 feet, 10 and 1-2 inehes and is ALS In the following year at Collinsville. He is right handed in batting and thrc wing. Sower, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the under- signed, William Sower, executor of the last will of George Sower, late of the city of Elgin, in the county of Kane and state of Illinois, deceased, to the creditors of, and all. persons having claims against, said deceased, to ex- hibit them with the necessary vouch- “We will always have the fault-find- er, we will always have the copper- head. The patriot and the copperhead live side by side. One growls at ev- erything in the nation, the state, the county—the other goes forward to do and die for his country.” America’s Justification. Of America’s entrance into the war, he said:, “We are justified from the lowest, standards of civilized history, by everything we call material; by the loss, of lives of our citizens; by outrages, of national dignity and de- cency. From the usual standpoint of resentment we have as much as any nation ever has had unless it be Bel- gium. But I place this war upon the higher ground of a World issue—of a battle for an ideal. Germany has bowed to material power. Down at the bottom of its national being is an idolatory. of military power which shuts out all humanity. Germany has ‘been ripe for war; as a result we have a war which had no cause, which didn’t need any cause. Austria and/ Serbia were ready to make peace, but wthin 12 hours Germany was march- ing its armies across poor, liberty- loving Belgium. If there is any sym- pathizer with the kaiser here tonight | let him remember that the kaiser him-| self admits Germany had no right on Belgian soil. Students of history 50 years hence will turn with holy horror from pages that tell of the fiendish- ness, the brutishness, yes, the hellish- ness of this war in its inception and its execution. “But that huge. collossal bluffer, the kaiser, will come tq an end as sure as tomorrow's sun shall rise. The liberty loan is surely the safest invest-| ment a man can make in these trou- blous times; certainly it is the best, | and it will cost us nothing. Within two or three weeks you will find this American people reaching their hands! down in their pockets and raising! twice, yes, thrice, the amount asked of! them. | ury be laid aside for a day; let us as a nation get away from our material- ism. It can be done, and will be done. “Let us have new faith in the pos- sibilities of the American people. This manufacturer, vilities of world reve-| waye farewell nation has po. H. E. Dodge Releases Another Mag- nificent Yacht to U. S. For War Service. Shortly after the United States de- clared war on imperial Germany a dapper crew of officers and men sail- ed away from Detroit in the Nokomis, Let the gods of vice and lux-| acknowledged the finest steam yacht on the great lakes. The vessel was being turned over to the government for war service on the high seas. H. E. Dodge, Detroit motor car was at the dock to when she departed. lation. The boys go forth bearing a! without debate he had turned over flag whose stars are to redeem the world’s night and to plant a new flag, not- of conquest, but of peace; not his magnificent vessel for war duty, when it was announced that boats of this variety could. be-used .to-advant- ‘Tne Nokomis cost approximately $250,000, She is now on duty “some- | where on the Atlantic.” | Last week Mr. Dodge went down to the dock to wave another farewell. Aj neweF and much larger and more splendid Nokomis had been completed in the meantime, and she, too, had been called to the colors. Yachtsmen ! of atl the world expressed admiration | for her e7; equipment when she came up the St.| Lawrence a few months ago on her) y Detroit L admiradly was she adapt gotiations for taking her over were! \ begun almost immediately, i the fact that the original Nokomis_had despite [loo SECOND NOKOMIS “GOING OVER.” ‘age in the patrol and convoy-service.; been turned over for service only. a Mr. Dodge, how- ever, recongnized the necessity for ocean tonnage as one of the requisites short time before. of war, and again made the sacrifce- The new session just long enough for a mo: cruise and one fishing and bunt trip into the northern lakes. latter sojourn was shortened to & the government men navy yard. Included in the “tr ming” was the removal of thous not vital to the immediate needs of ed to the government's needs that ne-/ the officers and men of a man’ o'war. mn steam loot .beam. ‘okomis was in his pos- more ‘time [o} -efulness and magnificent | “trim her down” for the trip to the nds from Wilmington, Deleware, to of dollars worth of costly furnishings | ers, within six months after the first publication of this notice, to said ex- ecutor at Baldwin State bank, in the town of Baldwin, in said Burleigh county, North Dakota. i Dated Sept. 13, A. D. 1917. WILLIAM SOWER, Executor. First publication on the 24th day of September, A. D. 1917. NOT IN THE LEAGUE, The Wolford Mirror has started on the thirteenth year of its usefulness, Mike says that he:will run the Mirror in the future as in the past, to. please himself, . It 4g oie, 0) pike anbee, valued exchanges.—Knox Advocate. Printi BOOKLETS CATALOGS PRICE LISTS Accident Occured Before Policy Was Issued; Must Pay Important Ruling in Insurance \pase Handed Down by Supreme Court ‘The agent of an iastfrance company authorized to receive applications fo: insurance is an agent of the insurer and not the insured, and when a com pany issues a policy with an option of revoking the same within a certain period anu iaus to avail itself of that option, the policy becomes binding ai the piration of such period, rules Lhe North Dakoia supreme court in an opinion written by Chief Justice Andrew A. Bruce reversing the judg Meat rendered in favor oc the mer chants’ Life & Casualty Co. by the Ward couniy district court in a sui brought by Afthur B. Stearns to re cover the amount of his accideat pol icy. About the first of Octover, 1911. Steorns bought an accident po ol Agent Francis of the ‘Merchants’ Life wCasualty, paying $5 down and re ceiving in return a receipt providing that his policy should Le paid up and remain in force until December 1, 1911, providing the home office did not within 20 days decline to accept the risk. October 28, eight days af ter the expiration of the optional per- iod, Stearns was injured. The hue office, it was claimed in the com pany’s defense, did not receive Stearns’ application until October, when, ignorant of the fact that an in- jury had been sustained by the in- sured, it approved the policy. Jan- uary 3, 1912, it accepted another pay- ; Mert of $3 on the policy, extending the same. Preliminary proof of dis- ‘ability was received November 7, 1911. The supreme cour} holds that the receipt merely gave the insurance conany an option of 2) days in which to decline said policy, and that , the company not having declined the 1 within the prescribed time and having approved it for a! locner rea ‘sons, the policy was’ effective. It, is ‘held further that in negotiating such insurance, accepting payment and is- suing receipt, the agent was acting as a representative of the insurer and :not of the insured, and that his acts were binding on the insured. There seemed to bme no question tbat the policy was not received at tl home office until October 31, three days af- ter the accident for which the Insured claimed compensation, occurred, but the court holds that the tardiness of the agent im sending #1 the policy to the home office cannot deprive the in- sured of protection, and that the lat- ter at the expiration of the 20-day period had every right to believe that he was protected by the policy. Judge E TT. Burke of Bismarck and J. KE. Burke of Minot represented the plaintiff and appellant, while Bos- ard «& Twiford of Minot and P. W. the insurance company. Seconded the Motion. Jacoh was prone to feel “big,” when anyone called and made a flattering t mark about hin, One evening a neigh- bor called and during the evening said: “My, but isn't Jacob a cute lt rule ho; Whereupon Jacod prompt: ty responded: “I tink ‘so, tov.” MAINTAINS A ng of the OFFICE STATIONERY RULED BLANKS ANNOUNCEMENTS Guilford of Minneapolis represented | FOOTBALL RESULTS. + SATURDAY’S GAMES. Navy, 62; Maryland state, 0. Pennsylvania, 10; Swarthmore, 0. Williams, 14; Cornell, 10. Army, 34; Virginia military insti- tute, 0. Amherst, 19; Union, 6 Pittsburgh, 41; Lehigh, 5. Harvard, 16; Andover, 0. Syracuse, 14; Rutgers, 1. Harvard Varsity informal, 35; Bum- kin Island Naval Reserve, 0,. West Virginia, 31; Carlisle, 0. WESTERN. St. Thomas, 14; North Dakota Ag- gies, 0. South Dakota U., 19; North Dako- ta, 0. Minnesota, 64; South Dakota gis, 44; Oklahoma, 0. Indianapolis, 40; St. Louis, 0. Wisconsin, 0; Notre Dame, 0. Ohio state, 40; Northwestern, 0. Chicago, 48; Vanderbilt, 0. Nebraska, 47; Iowa, 0. ‘Michigan, 69; Mount Union, 0. Marquette, 49; Boston, 0. Case, 0; Ohio Wesleyan, 0. Kansas, 33; Kansas normal, 0. Purdue, 7; Depauw, 6. Kalamazoo normal, 7; Michigan Ag- gies, 6. Creighton, 12; Drake, 3 Hamline university, college, 0. Huron college, 0; Aberdeen North- ern normal, 26. CHANGES WROUGHT BY WAR Thousands of English Women Com pelled to Think of Home in Which Man Has No Part. War has done strange things to women; it has made of thousands of them home-makers and home-lovets. In the days of peace there was a great restlessness, a craving for club or cor- porate life, but out.of the confusions and disruptions of war has been born a deep longing for quiet things and for the solitude of the home, re morks the Lonton Daily Mail. Clubs and hotels for women were popular three years ago, especially those which were run on common- sense lines without annoying rules and restrictions. Because so many women must live in London today, and be- cause there is so little room for them, most of these hostels are full. But they are now unpopular. They are re- gurded as useful stopgaps. ~In -the heart of almost every hostel-dweller, however, there burns a secret desite for a little house of her own, a house that fs utterly unconnected with mar tiage and motherhood, The dream of wifehood that shone ‘as a star for so many girls before the | war has faded away. Happy mating Is the remotest of possibilities for btn- dreds of thousands of woman work- ers today. Women have given not only their husbands but their lovers to the | battlefield, and so it is that the dream- home of tomorrow is one in which the man has no part. MacAlester Not Altogether Goed. Marion's. aunt was a visitor at her heme and Marion was a much admired and petted little girl In a burst of ; affection her aunt said one day, “Ma- rion, yowre such a good little girl.” But the sturdy youngster replied, “Sometimes I am jgnd sometimes I i don't.” * s os ® THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. | Completely equipped Printing Plant and ' Bindery. Bring us your and Stationery orders and we will demonstrate the valtie BEST QUALITY WORKMANSHIP AND EFFICIENT SERVICE NO ORDER 700 LARCE—NONE 100 SMALL LOCSE-LEAF BINDER: BOOK BINDING © BLANK BOOKS Ft