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} Mrs. L. M.. Largonhas .returned ‘to Mandan after undergoing successful surgical treatment at the Bismarck hospital. ——. ‘Swedish Lutheran Church, Good Friday services ‘will be con- ducted at the Swedish Lutheran church, Seventh street and Avenue D, af 8 o'clock this evening. Guild Ladies Sew. Ladies of St. George's guild mét at the Red Cross headquarters in the fed- eral ‘building Thursday to sew for the Red Cross. i ; fs Home From Florida.” Mr. and Mrs. John Kiefer returned Thursday from Tanypa, Fla., where they spent the winter forthe benefit of thelr health. They report a splen- did winter’s outing, and a decided improvement in health. To Have’ Food Sale. The ladies of St. Mary’s pro-cathe- dral- will hold a food sale at the Hughes Electric Co. office Saturday afternoon, Aprons. and other fancy needlework will be offered. Coff and cake will be served after. | o'clock, and a general invitation’{s extended Saturday afternoon shoppers. Leave for Spokane. Miss..Grace Brittin; for the last fif- teen months stenographer in the of- fices. of the attorney general, will leave Saturday for ‘Spokane, Wash.,| where she will join‘her family, pio- neers of the northwesterh. part’ of the state, who havé gone to Spokane to make their home’ * For Select Soldier. Mrs; N, F., Julius and Mrs. W. H. Williams entertained at the home of Mrs. Williams on Thursday evening in honor of Harry Bernstein, brother of Mrs. Julius, who left this afternoon with 26 other Burleigh county select service men for Camp: Dodge. Cov: ers were laid for 20; an unusually tasty course dinner was served, and/ Russia, a:e steadily traversing Ger- the occasion proved an enjoyable one. The Lord’s Supper. ‘The Lord’s Supper will ‘be solemnly observed at the First’ Presbyterian church at 7:30 this evening. Special music has been prepared for. the ser- vice, which wiil*have, been concluded | describes it. in time to permit members of the church ,to. attend the’ patriotic pro- gram at the Auditorium, the hour for which has: been changed from 8 to 8:50 to accommodate church-goers at- tending Cood ‘Friday observances at the various houses of worship. ‘CITY NEWS. { + - Enters Hospital. ‘Rev, B: C. Stuart, pastor at Stew- artadale, entered the. Bismarck {p- iptal today for surgical treatment. ~ Has the:Mumps. © Attorney C. L.. Young is confined to his home on Avenue B by a severe at- tack of the mumps. “On Speaking Tour. JusticeA. Mi Christianson of the su, preme court is making a speaking tour in the interests of the Third Liberty Loan through Kidder and. adjoining counties. i Mrs. Squires: improving. Mrs. George Squires, who was quite ill, is reported at the Bismarck »:bos- pital today to be showing an exceMent improvement, and it is thought “Chat shé 1s now out of danger. From Steele, R, 9. Armstrong, color sergeant of the ‘Steele home guard, and O..J. Mil- ler were prominent Kidder county vis- itors in Bismarck on Thursday. Sergt. Armstrong is acting ‘ds’ color sergeant pending the recovery of the use of his | right arm, which was badly crushed several months ago. .He is an enthus- jastic home guardsman, and he re- ports that the Steele cavalry troop of the home guard is preparing to make a great showing at the encampment in Bismarck next summer. The Steele home guard is completely uniforhed and accoutred. : “ON TO VICTORY” MEANS SACRIFICE (Continued From Page One:) Tgating to preserve the institutions we love, the liberty we cherish. Will You Be Slave? “We are fighting in'France because | it ig there we, can strike the “enemy, but if we are defeated in ‘France we shall be conquered’ in:America. No longer shall we be freemen, but the slaves of the. most merciless and bru- tal taskmaster the world has éver known. Our peril is great, and only our courage and: determination can avert disaster.: It ie-not for-glory, or. honor or riches that we Jight. but for liberty, given up [by no good man hile. alive. wwe must not. under estimate our | attack and conquer us. {en and: little children. ;;- | ternational | néarer victory today than’ we were in the: first month of hostilities. We must get it-into our head and heart as a fact, for such it ts, that. though with the help of our allies we are fin- ally going to win’ this war, at this very moment only the great white fleet in the North Sea and the west- ern line from Flanders to Italy save us, our women and our children, at least on the Atlantic seaboard, from = the. fate of Rumania and Serbia and 5 Belgim, and the devastated region of {noble France. | “The task still is unfinished and vic- tory is tar from won. The military party in Berlin still is in complete mil- itary control of the whole resources not only of Germany,, but of Austria- Hungary, Bulgaria and Turkey; and they have not yet abandoned hope of a‘decisive military victory, The Grim Fact. “It is a grim fact that had better be plainly realized, for we cre not afraid because by this means alone shall we succeed. | “The magnitude of the task wi ;qave undertaken. is appalling. | Winston Churchill, Eritish minister of | municions, in a recent speech address- 1g himself to Americans, bas well aid, ‘Never in history has so great ‘ ion undertaken so great a task , nd the allied nations have suferet ;severely and in maintaining ten or twelve -nillion soldiers in the field {have as a result three or four mil- lion graves. ' {| “Gur resources have Jeen poured} out, our homes .are seared ‘with sor- > and institutions have been melted down in the terriblentss of the world (war. Come to our aid. Come in your ‘thousands, but come at once to Eu- rope. “‘Let the soldiers of France and Great Brituin have at their side, month by month in increasing numbers, the sons and grandsons of the men who fought with Grant and Sheridan and! witu Jackson and Lee.’ | “«The eGrman armies released from the Eastern front by the defeat of |many as fast as their deteriorated | railways can carry them, They are on jtheir way to the west, hundreds of | thousands of mea with thousands of guns. Yonder the greatest storm is caging,’ So he sees the situation and ivo time for Sedition. “The time for idle seditious talk has passed. The day cf action is at hand, Let no man say. that we were not forced into this war, or that ii |we had minded our own |usiness we should not have been attycked, not involved in he war. -No :wan com |petent to comprehend the situation can nov deny or doubt that Germany | intended after conquering Europe to “Through the patient years of our honest attemot io ‘keep the peace of nations’the ;eco'd of the German au- tocracy is damnable. “With a fanatical faith in the des-| tiny of German kultur, its submarines | in defiance o¢ civilization have. blown up neutral vessel-, and covered the waves with dead and dying .nen,; wom- It has set the torch of the incendiary to cur factor- our wharves; laid the bomb of the assassin in our munition plants and in’ the -holds of our ships; sought to corrupt,our manhood with a selfish dream of peace when there is no peace; destroyed our commerce and murderously butchered our citizens on the high seas; sought to terrorize the world with its hellish policy of fright- fulness; violated every canon of in- decency; set at naught every precept of international law, and plunged the world in the maddest orgy | of blood, rapine and murder which history records. When ePace is Criminal, “To refrain from entering into the war, would have been a crime against | civilization and. our ancestors who gave their lives in order that we might be free. “kor years we were lulled to sleep ‘vy German propaganda, We held tof a neutrality that made us ashamed, that made every red blooded American deep down in his heart apologize for the human race, for those things which outraged man's every sense of decency, fair play and humanity. There came a day when we awoke, genuinely alarmed at the peril which confronted us. We have come to know that from the day of the in-| vasion of Belgium the German war lord’s plan led onward across bloody fields westward,.with slow but steady | strides to an invasion of our shores, “So now, as President Wilson says, ‘We are fighting as truly for the lib- erty and self-government of the Unit-; ed ‘States as if the war of our own Revolution had to be fought over again, .and every man in every busi ness in the United States mugt know; by this time, that his whole future ‘ies in the balance.’” Bo Cheerful! Don't be a gloom-distributor, join the Silver Lining club.—Boston Giobe. danger or over estimate our strength. We should understand that we.are no} _ | Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. The very latest and most dis- tinctive HATS for Milady. Parisian Pat- terns, very be- coming Styles to suit your individual taste. Some very ex- clusive Blouses On Broadway i6s;" ‘our. work shops,: ‘our ships, and|‘~ Hundreds of Pretty Easter Bonnets : —-for your immediate selection—styles and trimming to your desire—a hat to match the ex- clusive gown—we are here to serve you. Miss Mary Buckholz 119 Third Street Easter fashions change but the desire to cele- brate the great Spring festival with everything fresh and fine to wear is unchanged from gene- ration. to generation. There is one difference however—it used to be the Easter Hat that was all important; now it is the Easter Shoe. row, and our industries and 8 finances |“syyqqqqyanuueeanuneanuenssseunvuuesndnesnuesnscatscueegnsuassuecancvsueccensuoannsuesdcosnvscisanecneatit We are showing a variety of new models in Boots and Low Shoes selected from recent shipments of COUSINS SHOES For Women (Made in New York) Among them you will be sure to find just the Shoe to go with your Easter costume.. And you’ can depend also upon getting here that expert service in fitting which is so es- sential. : weg SS The Time when Everybody's Thoughts THe 2: ag flowers are the one thing that can fully express your! senti occasion, —these are but a few of the many Es which we can offer you floral gifts. for persveal sifts, [dies Rocce Sweet Peon Spring Flowers, Hampers of Plants that last, Arrangements of or Growing Plants in baskets, EASTER. * Center on raged Berge ly As tj ift in slendar- flowers. ‘Easter. and sentiments Se ees HOSKINS ~~ BISMARCK, N. D. ery’ woe Date ~ Members of, the, Florists’ maet ee FIVE HOF aaeliniadiaass aaa NEW ENTRANCE. Recent’ important improvements made in the Western Sales Co.’s big distributing plant on Main and Fifth streets, include a concrete pave af- fording a convenient Main street en- trance to the garage and sales rooms. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. The swiftest, funniest, cleanest comedy-drama ever screened. The debut of America’s Madge Kennedy Star of “Twin Beds” and “Fair and Warmer,” in the international stage success. “BABY MINE” Munnunanenevenagsnenauacuoqaucqegigunin SUOUEUGRUGUEDOAUOUOUDGOUOOOUOODONUDELUGOONOHOAEHUOGOO ONO NOOOONONOORNONOOO NOONE ee anecanacocannn TTL , “FOR AMERICA AND LIBERTY” And Many Other Popular Songs KIMBALL PIANO STORE . Mrs. Ina M. Stein. 410 Broadway. OVUGUgNRUUUuONOAAREULL greatest stage comedienne Annan naaNONEANANONOuaOONEuONooN Paris Inspired Styles in Women’s Coats and Suits AUOUUDEDRUCEDULAUSUODAUAAEENGO CORES mceanauauuaaaqanaaasqun ‘In the most wonderful lines, with backs that hang perfectly loose or come into the figure : with almost severely straight lines, or with the most graceful “belted” effects imaginable. And Collars! They are more important, more effective, more flatteringly becoming than ever. : Coats and Suits without dupli- _ The Coat and Suit you cates of be de Laine, oom A de Luxe, Chiffon Taffeta, Suede will wear depends a si Silvertone or Crystal loth. Colors — Beaver, Monaco, Cantaloupe, Democracy, Poilu, Mist, Clay and Quaker. Styles reflecting—but only to a certain degree, and in the most artistic way—the martial ardor of the moment in an ut- terly feminine way— $19.75 to $60.00 oe ef -— 1990? arroyo) Ein Hiidunnsovaccececnececccennaacuncenuecuueuiayasrannnceacenneene ett great deal on your in- dividual taste of style and workmanship and the quality of mate- rials. Our showing will please you in every sense of the word.