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poweeecee: e - TA TA (LIN ACE George mon é tic ir up, we ills of tl plenteot of good ously re |, our Lo , George inday sa rtia see) the hum lent amc ves then All great g from th » string € ed. Day breed sf} country z the tin financial rs surre 2d so far To Nov pare j As will a the ft In: you i: perfec twice he! : Jackson Blvd, Dearborn and Quincy Streets, Opposite the Postoffice. N the friendly intimacy of the Pullman smoking, compartment ask the most competent looking, gentle- man present what he thinks of The Great Northern Hotel — ten to one he will say: “That's Where I'm Headed” . SINGLE With detached bath, $1.50 6 $2 With private bath, $2.50 to $3 DOUBLE — $3 to $6 Joun.C.ONEILL, MANAGER. No Need to Rub Try .Sloan’s Liniment and see t how quickly the swelling is reduced and the pain disappears. No need to rub; it pene- trates quickly and bringsrelief. Have a bottle handy for rheumatic pains, neuralgia, back eche and all mus- cle soreness. Generous sized bottles; at your druggist, 25c., 59c., $1.00, ‘Sloan's The World’s -. liniment To Cure a Cold in One Day. know the facts, not in sensational headlines, but as. plain facts.” Quoting figures from the surgeon general’s office of conditions in the j army from 1911 to 1913, he said one recruit out of every six was diseased and that this average was rather bet- ter than that of the young male popu- lation from which ‘the army was re- cruited, Be ‘The great body of our soldiers and sailors of our new army and navy straight and clean,” said Bishop ce. “On the other hand there Law are in our communities a certain num- ber of professionally loose women, | j and an appallingly large number, of} girls from 14 to 20 years of age, who, attracted by the uniform and the ro- mance, emotionally stirred by the un- wonted excitement, either yield to or throw themselves at the young men. — Propagation of Disease. “Phis is war, and it is one of the dangers and sometimes one of the horrors of war, that emotions, both bad and good, are pitched to a high | power. We all-feel it. The-greatest | danger is with this last great class, the girls of our villages, towns and cities. It is only a question of time, he went on, before they are contaminated by loose men,and loose women, “and i then follows the horror of the most i terrifying and wasteful diseases go- | ing through the innocent homes of the { country. It is the duty of the medical. | profession to give the facts; until they do, others must speak. Secrecy al- spicion and exaggera- NAVAL CHIEF OF POLICE Seattle, Wash., Nov. 27.—The Seat- tle Post Intelligencer Tuesday morn: ing will announce that a “Unitéd States naval officer, backed by all the military forces of the federal govern- ment,” is to be chief of police of Seat. tle and will assume absolute contro! of the’ police department in the cam- paign that will be launched not only against vice, but against pro-German- ism as well. Moreover, he will wear ' the uniform of his rank and his word will be the word of the federal gov- ernment.” It is’/stated that this is the plan agreed upon by. Mayor Hiram Gill and the Seattle Minute Men for, the elem- ination of conditions responsible for Major-Genetal H. A. Greene's order forbidding Camp Lewis soldiers to visit this city. General Greene de- clared the operations of a vice’ syndi- cate’ made Seattle’ ‘dn unsafe place for soldiers. Little Boy in Blue Rompers Draws Slips for Means’ Jury Raid on Defendant’s New York Apartments Gives Evidence - of Propagandaism. FEDERAL OFFICIALS SHOW UP AT THE PROCEEDING Concord, N. §.,Nov. 27.—The trial of Gaston B. Means in county court here today progressed no further than | the drawing of a special venire of 150 men to supplement the regular panel of 13. Court officials hoped to {select from these the 12 jurors who | will decide whether’ the defendant shot and killed Mrs. Maude A. King, wealthy Chicago widow, at Blackwe]d- er Springs, near here, on the night of Aug. 29. The great number of veniremen summoned indicated the difficulty ex- pected in filling the jury box from among citizens of Means’ home coun- ty. Under the orth Carolina law, requiring that the names be drawn by'a child unable to read, a little boy in blue rompers’ solemnly ‘picked out the printed slips. They were passed to the court clerk. who read the names. An agent of the department of justice also was present again to- day. The government’s interest in the case has not been disclosed, but New York officials have said that papers. taken in a raid on Means’ New York apartment connected him with the German propaganda in this country. PROPERTY AND PRIVILEGE OF HIGHER CLASSES ARE CONSERVED BY STATE Petrograd, Nov. 27.—The ‘Maximal- ists commissioners have “proclaimed the abolition of class titles, distinc- tions and privileges. All persons henceforth are citizens of the Russian republic, and the corporate property of ‘nobles, merchants and_ burgesses, according to the proclamation, must be handed over to the. state. PASSPORTS DEMANDED. Copenhagen, Nov. 27.—If Russia en- ters into separate peace negotiations the ministers of the allied powers at. Petrograd will demand their pass- ports, according to a dispatch from Haparanda. GRAND DUKE ARRESTED London, Nov. 27.—Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovitch, brother of the former emperor, according to a ! Petrograd dispatch to the Times, has been arrested and- imprisoned in Smolny institute, the headquarters of the Bolsheviki. Take. LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE, Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. FE. W. GROVE'S signa- ~ture is on each box. § COLLAR. Wear Yo3sF Sesh Tribune want ads bring results eras We A yk When Father Carves The Turkey at the Thanksgiving Dinner Don’t have his temper spoiled by using that old Dull Carving Set. Get one of these new high tempered Carvers, guaranteed to make the whole family happy. LOMAS HDW. CO. _ 816 MAIN STREET BISMARCK, N. D. now, can do so under guarantee of a satisfactory position or tuition fees refunded. Later we may nov be-able to enroll students under “ this inducement. All who wish to attend evening school should call to arrange at once. For particulars write G. M. LA NGUM, PRES. Bismarck, North Dakota RD I I ET ARROW HORRORS OF WAR AS REVEALED. W FREAK EMOTIONS Bishop of Massachusetts Delivers Plain-Spoken Address on ‘War Vices. 'PROBLEM THAT BAFFLES MILITARY HEALTH MEN Attraction of Uniform and Ro- mance the Lure that Leads to Shame. Boston, Mass. Nov. 27.—Social dis- | eases in the army have become more than a question of morals and pity; they have become a necessity of win- | ning battles Bishop Lawrence of the | Massachusetts Episcopal diocese de- ‘clared in a frank address before the | Espicolan club Monday. Speaking on “Making am American Soldier,” he ; said that the meeting of vice condt tions in Europe was one of the most baffling problems which the military and sanitary authorities had to deal} ‘and that they needed the strong and/ intelligent support of the whole peo- ple. : { Loose Living. — “The, loose living swasnbuckler as | an effective soldier has gone by the j board,” he said. “I believe that the time has come when the people should War conditions make the study of! ;commercial branches a paying invest- ment these days. For information as to the commercial courses, write the State School of Agriculture and For- estry, Bottineau, N. Dak. Used Car BARGAINS i Dodge Bros. Touring .. .... 750 ‘| Chatmers Touring, 7 Pass.. 500 || Chalmers Touring, 7 Pass.. 325 |J Overiand Touring, 5 Pass... 425 if Overland Touring, 5 Pass. 259 i] Michigan Touring, 5 Pass. 225 | Maxwell Touring, 200 Velié Treick 250 All cars worked over and in good running order, Free storage to May 1, (918. MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR CO. 7th at Main - + - Tel. 234 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE. - TOWNLEY LIMKS THE PURPOSE OF ~ FARMER LEAGUE North Dakota Man Speaks at Food Conzerver’s New York Ci ention DENIES N. P. LEAGUE HAS PRO-GERMAN LEANING Charges‘ Millers and Middlemen with More Than Five-Cent e Bread ‘ 4 New York, Nov. 27.—A. C. Townley president of the Farmers Nonpartisan league of. North Dakota, an organi- zation which aims to eliminate the middleman in the system of food dis- tribution, spoke ai a meeting here last night called to consider tue organi- zation of a similar league in New York state. Mr. Townley and othe r speakers, administrator, and Representative John Baer, of North Dakota, denied that the organization was pro-German or against the prosecution of the war, but that the aims were avowedly pa- triotic. “The farmer of the northwest,” Mr. Townley declared, “did not subscribe heavily to the first liberty loan be- cause, he had invested his all for a heavy crop. as called for, by the gov- ernment, but in the second liberty loan North Dakota. surpassed every other state in the union by oversub- scribing to thé loan by 73 per cent.” Mr. Townley declared the middle- man reaps a “heavy toil at the ex. pense the producer and the con- sumer.” "He dwelt largely on “war profiteering,” especially among the millers, who, he-said, are making a dollar a barrel on flour when twenty- five cents is considered a reasonable profit. The farmers did their part to establish a five cent loaf of bread by reducing the price of wheat to $2.25 a bushel but the excess profit of the millers compels, the consumer to pay more than five cents for bread, he added: 4 “An executive conference of forty farmers and. representatives of labor unions. was. held in the afternoon at which Mr. Townley presided. Res- olutions, were adopted that ‘a city in terms of foag, extends beyond its po- litical bounddyies for miles and in-! cluded the Yood producing farms as well,’ and added that ‘the, producers and consumers of this conference who! in the past have been kept apart by cunning middlemen, politicians and their. agents must bring their influ- ence to bear on gli.citizens’ food coun- cils in which they participate toward representation of some kind from both the produced and consumers.” COALITION ON CONGRESS | Chicago, Nov. 27,—Plans for Non- partisan campaigns wherever neces- sary to quiet’ any anti-war political | urpisings were discussed Monday by democratic national committcemen and state chairman from twelve mid- western states. Fred By ‘Lynch, na- tional committeemen from “Minnesota, was elected chairman of the confer- ence. He declared a-nonpartisan com- bination was an immediate necessity in congressional districts and states where there was any real danger of an anti-American socialist combina- tion that migh result in the defeat of the administration and its war pol-} icies in 1918. Wisconsin, with its immediate situ- ation, caused by the death of Senator Husting and the activity of senator. La Follette, was the center of the dis- cussion, but those in the conference were concerned about other states. Tilinois has some counties that have failed to get behind the war, it was charged, and in Minnesota and the Dakotas the so-called “farmers move- ment” has made .an impression po- litically. All kinds of tailorin; Bryants. Phone 788. solicited. =) | Zz It is now asserted wih, conidence that these painful effects due to uric acid in the system are entirely eradi- cated. A new remedy, called Anuric, has’ been discovered by Dr. Pierce, which is many times more lithia, and is the cause of 3 a outward of the uric acid with which tt comes in contact within the body. It will watd off backache, héadache, and the darting pains and aches of articular or muscular rheumatism—of those dis- cases which are cal by too much uric acid, such as gout, asthma, sciatica, renal calculus. _Anuric prolongs, life because old le usually suffer from hardening and thickening of the walls of the arteries, due to the excess of uric, acid in the Blood and fitsnes. i Anuric can be obtained in 50c and $1.00 packages at the principal drug stores in’ town. ‘PROMINENT WOMEN EX- DORSE OUR STATEMENTS, | Missoula, Mont—“At the time I was | passing through mid ki le life, the Coccors said could not possibly live. They could | do nothing for me. | Finally, f began taking Dr. Pierce's. | Favorite’ Prescrip- = tion and took 12! bottles of it. Then I was satisfied that was a well wom- an. I am now as str and | iui "Stoddard Se John J. Mitchell, New York state food | Mazola is EVANGELICAL MINISTER QHES IN LOGAL HOSPITAL Rev. L, H. Fischer, aged 61, a well known minister of the Evangelical de- nomination, died last night at 8:30 in the Bismarck hospital where he had bken for two weeks undergoing treat- ment. Rev. Mr. Fischer had been in failing health for some time. When taken ill he was pastor of the Evangel: | ical church of Bowbells, a caarge he had filled for several years. A widow and five children all resid- ing at Lowbells survive. Funeral ; services will be conducted Wednes-i day ernoon at 3 o'clock in the lo- cal Evangelical church. The body will aken that evening to Ramona, S. D., where interment will De made. Mrs. Fischer and children will arrive in the city trom Bowbells this eve- ning. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wiltgen of Lew- istown, Mont., who nave been spend ing several days in the city visiting Mr. aad iMrs. Walter Zimmerman of the ePrson Court and Mr. and Mrs. dames Harrison of Thayer str left | Monday for Des Moines, io visit tives. Mrs. Wiltgen is ¢. Sister of Mrs. Zimmerman and ‘Mrs. Harrison. NEW CORPORATIONS. The Ebert Electric Co. of Crary has been chartered by the secretary of state. J. H. Smith, F. R. Stevens and John W. Koert are the incorporators, and the capital is $5,000, Ladies and gents pressing and clean- ing. Bryant Tailoring Co. Phone 788. 11 14 tf a — — AN IDEAL _, LIME TREATMENT for those suffering from chronic or acute pulmonary and bronchial troubles, or coughs or colds, 13 ECKMAN’S ALTERATIVE ‘The Calcium preparation which may be taken by the average person without dis- turbing digestion. An efficient tonic and tissue builder. Contains no Alcohol, Nar cotle or Habit-Forming Drug, $2 size, now $1.50. $1 size, now 80c. bles the housewife to save butter, lard, ass Suen give her family the 5 ° “THE proof of the pudding is in the eating”—and the prog: of Mazola is in the x salad dressings—it is the perfect vegetable oil Food Administrator Hoover asks us to use vegetable oils. Mazola has not been established in I part of housewives who at first were reluctant to give up butter. lard of cornpounds, If you are not already numbered among the thousands of Mazola users, get a can of Mazola and try this recipe. best of foods ; \ me < cooking. not only the perfect medium for deep frying, sautéing, shatening and \ —produced from golden Amdjcan corn, \ Tt has taken months. of tral'on the a day. BREAKFAST MUFFINS 2 cups fiour 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup milk 4 level teaspocrs 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tal tablespoon baking powder legg Mazola Sift dry ingredients together, being sure they are thoroughly mixed. Beat the egg, add it to the milk and turn it into the bow] containing the dry ine gredients, Add the Mazola and cut all together very quickly. Do not beat. ‘Turn into muffin pans greased with Mazola, and bake in a moderately hot oven about 25 minutes, ‘ Mazola can be obtained from your grocer. Pint, quart; half- gallon and gallon tins--for greatest economy buy the large sizes. Also ask him for the free Mzzola Book of Recipes —or write us direct. Your money refunded if Mazola does not give entire satisfaction. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING COMPANY 17 Battery Place, New York Repro: Geo. R. Frees man & Soa Fargo, N. D. ised by bonds. Secretary) WAR'S SECOND YEAR ESTIMATE OF CS NEAR 13 BILUIN Secretary McAdoo Foresees Bud-\ surs certificates between new and June 29 to meet huge government ¢x- penditures and allied loans. ‘Horsemen Draw Neai - Holy City London, Nov. 27.—British cayr, alry have captured Dittir Station, about six miles southwact, and Ain Karim, three and a half miles’ west of Jerusalem, according, to a } British official communication is- sued this evening, NI \ get Practically of Same Proportions as 1917. GREATER PART OF SUM TO BE RAISED BY BONDS Washington, N —The second year of the war will cost the United States about the same as the first, according to estimated expenditures ; prepared todiy atthe treasury depart-! ment. For the fiscal year beginning next) July 1, ordinary disbursements, not} 1 including loans to allies or interest on bonds yet to be authorized, are esti- I will send you a $1.00 bottle of my mated at $12,701,000,000, compared Guaranteed Remedy for Asthma, 01 with the $12,316,000,000 for the cur- trial. Remedy gives quick relief. “Has rent year ending June 30, 1916. This cured many after everything els» stimate includes interest on the failed. Mention nearest express office $9,500,000,000 government securities al-| Address: / Bo ready authorized. GEO. D. HOOVER, Mfg. Pharmacist! A large part of the sum must be Dent. 441, Des Moines. Towa. Sem THE The Northwest Hotel A High-Class Hotel at Reasonable Rates one PATTERSON HOTELS The Soo Hotel SOc. to $1.00 see Hot and cold waer in every toon 50c per day and up eee Single reom with bath, $1.00 Adjoining the McKenzie, oa Fifth Street aes Ruaning hot and cold water ‘The Seventh Story of North Dakota. bd in every room Pred Riregroof, European, EUROPEAN ; “00 te, $6000, on Opposite McKenzie Hue! | 3) Cveath ftee Date Teh oars eer, 3: EUROPEAN day and ight opposite Depot Park. Cafe in connection oy 100 toons with bath The NORTHWEST, 100 Rooms The McKENZIE, 210 Rooms The SOO, 125 Roome THE HOTEL CENTER IN EDW. G. PATTERSON, Owser and Prep. BISMARCK, N. D. Sold by all leading druggist . ‘Eckman’ Laboratory, PEitaterphia, Southwestern North Da can be had by any body Western BISMARCK =| MAXWELL AUTOMOBILES Direct Factory Contract THROUGH WESTERN SALES CO. ___ Complete display of touring cars, three passenger roadsters Sedans, light de- livery cars and heavy duty trucks. THE RIGHT CAR AT THE RIGHT PRICE - with the be:t dealers discount the MAXWELL contract is without a doubt the most desirable automobile proposition for a dealer, kota, Southeastern Montana apd Northeastern South Dak. as well as the purchaser, that WIRE, WRITE OR TELEPHONE BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE Sales Company, Inc. NORTH DAKOTA