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Trading Center of the Missouri Slope MONUMENTS ( freight charges. 613 Broadway—Phone 691M MENTS ices are the lowest because we buy all our material in large quantities direct from the quarries, saving jobber’s profits and high Send for free catalog. BISMARCK MARBLE & GRANITE WORKS Monuments at Wholesale and Retail Louis H. Carufel, Prop. A. W. LUCAS CQ. UNDERTAKING , PARLORS Day Phone 645 Night Phone 100 - A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in Charge UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS ———_————— WEBB. BROS. Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 % Night Phone 687 TAXI SERVICE TAXI AND AUTO LIVERY Phone 27 The old number but the - gy shine Smith & Morford, || “FOR A TAXI Fine Cars“Always at Your Servjce DAY: AND NIGHT Lambert’s Livery oO HOTELS TRANSFER and STORAGE STOP !! TRANSFER AND S STORAGE | ee » We have unequalled facili- i atthe _ ties for moving storage and Ne) shipping of household an om Hotel goods, Careful, experienced ‘ men. We also handle ice. “ WACHTER: TRANSFER WHY? d COMPANY 202 Fifth St. Phone 62 THERE'S A REASON. | IRON and, JUNK a HIGHEST PRICES PAID For Men’s cast off Suits, Coats and Shoes. WE ALSO -BUY JUNK OF ALL KINDS IN HANDFUL OR CARLOAD LOTS. “We have accepted the agency for the Fargo Iron & Metal Co. Inc., with a capital of $50,000.00 and we can pay the highest: prices. Don’t leave old iron around to rust but bring it to us or Phone 358 and ‘we will call for it and pay you the high- est price. COLEMAN’S NEW.AND 2ND . HAND STOR® 109 Sth St. Opposite McKenzie Clothes Cleaned and Pressed. ‘Hats Blocked and Cleaned. —— | * BISMARCK -Nonrts Davora: BURLEIGH AMONG NORTH DAKOTA’S “LOWER COUNTIES Class 1 Men in This Shire Must Be Revised, Adjutant Gen- eral Fraser States Dickey and Emmons counties show a gross Class 1 pefcentage under 15 per cent; Eddy and LaMoure. below 20 per cent; and Adams, Barnes, Blil- ings, Burleigh Cass, Divide, Foster, Golden Valley, Grand ,Forks, Grant, Kidder,-Logan, McHenry; Morton, Nel- son, Oliver, Pierce, Ransom, Rolette, Sheridan, Sioux and Walsh’ are over 20 but under the 28.7 national average, Provost Marshal General Crowder to- day hotified Adjutant General Fraser, who has forwarded this telegram to the local boards., Banner counties in North Dakota, whose Class 1 men run above 35 per cent, are: Ransom, Bowman, -Burke, Dunn, Mclntosii, McKenzie, Mountrail,’ Steele and, Ward. The purpose of the reclassification ordered yesterday by Provost Marshal General Crowder is primarily to throw into class-1 and render early available for service registrants who now have deferred Classification on’ the strength of partial dependents. “Investigation in many instances reveals that the extent to whicW this dependency actu- ally exists is highly mythical, and that the registrant can very well be spared by the member of his family whom he is claiming to support, in part. Agricultural classifications will alse be: revised, MAKE Your WIDDLE NAME "NURVE'T 4 STAMP! SEND US YOUR OLD HAT Have your old hat cleaned and reblocked, good as new, at a small cost. .The saving will surprise you. We are experts. Mail orders to all parts of the United States and Canada EAGLE HAT WORKS 313 Broadway PHOTO DEVELOPING Piertsieul finsiine fon Anarron Piceamras HiMMiERe Bring or mail in your films for Expert Developing FINNEY’S DRUG STORE . Bismarck, N. DJ SHAW,WINS IN TRYING OUSTER BEFORE PEOPLE Re-election Is Vindication. for President of. City Commis- : sion of Minot Minot, N. D., June 8:—W. S. Shaw, president of the city commission, who resigned under a bombardment hy Governor Frazier and then ran for} reelection, was vindicated yesterday when he was reelected president of the Minot city commission by a vote of 1340 to 1071 for Johnson. Ten hun- dred and eighty-six, women voted, giv- ing Shaw’a small majority. Frazier brought ouster proceedings against Shaw following Langer’s vice raid on Minot. Shaw twice fought |through the supreme court a question jag, to the governor’s jurisdiction, and he twice lost. He then resigned, an- nouncing that he would try his case before the people of Minot. The ma- | jority verdict pronounced by the elec- tors yestefday was ‘Not Guilty.” MORE THAN INCH IN LOCAL RAINS Dickinson was favored with 1.22 inches'of rain Friday. ‘The downpour was almost purely local, New England, only 30 miles to the south, reporting no rain, while Williston, to the north, also had none, Bottineau had .50 inch Bismarck is the shopping cen- ter for the entire Slope because it never has violated the confidence of its friends. Bismarck became preeminently THE trading post of the upper Missouri valley more that forty years ago, when it was the “jumping off place,” so far as railway transportation was con- cerned, and when gold-séekers, who have since hecome million- aires or mere memories, “outfitted” here for the long overland trek to the Black Hills. Later Bismarck ‘became the supply depot for all of the rapidly developing territory. wes}.of the river. At that early day, pioneer settlers and home- steaders learned to depend on Bis- marck for honest goods and fair dealing, and the reputation estab- lished then endures to this day with the descendents of those frontiersmen and the new blood which has come to join them in building of a mighty common- wealth, ~ Bismarck has too much to lose to forfeit for a moment the re- spect. of these people by foisting upon them goods which Bismarck cannot stand back of. There has been established among ‘Bismarck merchants a high morale of which every business house is proud. Bismarck has been fortunately free in all the years of its com- mercial development from fly-by- night concerns. It has been im- mune from bankrupt ‘sales and professional clearancé mongers. Its merchants have built on a solid * foundation; they have come here prepared to stay, and they have stayed because their patrons haye returned .year after year in in- creasing numbers, bringing friends and neighbors with them. Serves Great Population. Because Bismarck serves a shop- ping clientele of 150,000 to 200,000 people—the most progressive and prosperous people to be found anywhere in this great country of ours—it has been necessary for merchants to carry large stocks and to adopt modern methods. Opportunities are offered here for selections common only in cities of 50,000 to 100,000; stocks are turned over rapidly; Bismarck stores Ravé successMlly followed the practice of carrying over at the end of: the year nothing but standard staples, and new goods are constantly coming in. We have in mind the experience of a friend of ours which bears out the oft-rereated assertion that women may shop as satisfactorily in Bismarck as in the Twin Cities, and with far better assurance of economical values. “ This particu- lar lady—and there are many like + her—commissioned a friend to se- lect for her some waists in Min- apolis, confident that the “BIG” stores there would have some- thing better and newer than Bis- marck offered. The waists came on; they all ranged around $12 to $15; the styles were not good, nor were they new. The very same after- noon. this friend of~ours strolled into a Bismarck department store and for $10 picked up a waist that showed more style and more chic and better value than any of SHOP IN BISMAR BISMARCK SLOPE SHOPPING CENTER BECAUSE. IT ALWAYS HAS DEALT FAIRLY WITH ITS PATRONS which promptly went back to the BIG store. The lady was out some parcels postage, but she had received in exchange for her ex- periment ful value in renewed con- fidence and in satisfaction with her own Bismarck stores, Shopping By Mail. Shopping vy mail ig pocoming increasingly popular am8ng Slope folk “who ‘cannot conveniently come in to town every week. They have found this plan safe and sat- isfactory. Expert shoppers in the ‘hig stores make the filling of mail ord their especial business. Orders are filled promptly and, carefully; goods are cheerfully exchanged, if the customer is not satisfied beyond the slightest shade of a doubt. Selections are mad eeasy for out-of-town shop- pers who buy ‘by mail through consistent and intelligent advertis- ing. The store news department af The Tribune, as represented in its advertisements, is one of the most interesting and popular features of this Home Newspaper of the Slope. People have acquir- ed the habit of reading Tribune ads and of relying upon them, and they know when they ask for Tribune-advertised goods they will find them precisely as repre- sented Bismarck's train service is ex- cellently arranged for, the shop- per who has only a day or a haif- day to spend in the city. For those who can devote more time to a tour of the shops, the effort is well worth while, and the splendid hotel service of the capjtal city makes a few days’ stay a genuine EAT— MINUTE LUNCH Now Open—It’s New 413 BROADWAY C.M. Rosson. C. R. Downing Proprietors ' BUSINESS REPAIRING —of locks, keys, guns, bicycles, motors, lawn mowers and ma- chines of all |. kinds. , OTTO DIRLAM £ 218 Main St. bernie. Ba ee TRAINING | ,. Ce? BISMARCK + BISHARCK "ELECTRICAL —THE— ELECTRIC SHOP. B, K. SKEELS ~ Everything Electrical , Wiring Fixtures and Supplies Delco Farm Light Plants Willard Service Battery Station ; Phone 370 408 Broadway BISMARCK HOME ‘ GUARD FORMS A CIVIL SOCIETY Military Features Abandoned and Patriotic Work Adopt- ed .as Program ‘The Bismarck ‘home guard, having elected not to affiliate with the,state militia. now being formed, has been reorganied as a purely civil patriotic association. Bradley C. Marks, vice and Langdon, 27. All of these showers were of a local nature, prelims a You Can Enroll at This MODEL OFFICE PRACTICE school under guarantee of a sat- isfactory position as soon as competent or your tuition :re- funded. Send for particulars. When you know more about this college and what it has done for hundreds of the most successful business men and women, you'll attend. Write G. M. LANGUM, Pres., Bismarck, N. D. HARDWARE—IMPLEMENTS FINE BUGGIES» | If you are thinking of, buying a new carriage or wagon it will pay you to get our prices. FRENCH & WELCH Hardware — Tools — Implements Harness — Carriages — Wagons president of the City National bank, is president; Associate Justice A, M. Christianson of the North Dakota su- preme court, is vice president; A. J. Arnot, cashier of the First National |° bank, is secretary, and G. B. Allen, auditor for the International Har- vester Co., is treasurer. These offi- cers, with Capt. E. G. Wanner, sec- retary of the,state board of control, constitute the board of governors. fhe Bismarck home guard will con- tinue to engage in patriotic activities in which it has shown such profic- iency, but will eliminate military~fea- tures prohibited to units outside of found them trustworthy and have the ~ Minneapolis consignment, pleasure. + carne WHERE TO DINE REPAIRING Have You Heard the Latest Music? at— STEIN’S Folsom’s Jewelry Store 414 Main St. Phone 542R HEMSTITCHING HEMSTITCHING AND PICOT- 3 ING Mail Orders Filled, MRS. M. C, HUNT 114 Broadway. Phone 849. CLEANING and DYING BARBIE’S | DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS] Phone 394—409 Front St. We call for and deliver. Mail orders promptly filled. het fr yale? KLEIN’S My Tailor Expert Dry Cleaning Phone 770 the state militia. The first big under- taking of the reorganized home guard will be .the exhibition of the official war pictures, “Pershing’s Crusaders,” here June 17, 18 and 19. : The guard will cooperate with tle! state council of defense in showing | thees pictures, which are by far. the best the film department of the cém- mittees on publicity has yet offered the public. Guns issued members of’ the Bi marck home guard Will be turned i2 to the original governing board, of which A. P. dd is chairman. Tribune s Bring Results. cH Mo TVET r= ak we arn Prominent Scenes from the Thrilling Photo Drama Entitled “Over There,” a Seven Act Special Feature at the Bismarck Theatre Tonigh gh IN ees, | K The ae Trading Center of” the Missouri: Slope Mt AUTOMOBILES, ACCESSORIES AND SUPPLIES Western Sales Co. Distributors of MAXWELL, CHALMERS, REO AUTOMOBILES PORTAGE TIRES GREEN DRAGON SPARK PLUGS Automobile. Acces- sories of All Kinds FILTERED GASOLINE Free Air and Water _ BATTERY SERVICE STATION MARSHALL OL C0. Bismarck, N. D. Aj] kinds of automo- bileoils, greases. and supplies. Use— Crystal Gasoline More miles per gallon. French Auto Qil ‘Tungsten Spark Plugs PAINTING and DECORATING WALL PAPER PAINTS &. OILS Varnishes—Kalsomine Brushes and Supplies CHRIS ENGEN CO. Bismarck, N. D. 4 DAIRY—MILK—CREAM SAFETY FIRST —Buy Only— BISMARCK DAIRY CO. 210 Broadway Phone 348 CREW AND PASSENGERS | ACCOUNTED FOR At an Atlantic Port, June 10.—Cap- | tain J, MacKenzie and sixteen mem- bers of his crew of the American steamship Pinar Del Rio who have been missing since the vessel was sunk by a German submarine off the coast of Maryland on June 8, reached here today on a Norwegian steamship which rescued them from a small boat about 70 miles off the coast of New Jersey. All the members of the crew are thus accounted for as the’ chief mate afd fifteen men were landed early this morning at a lifesaving station ou the North Carolina coast. aera eens] Methodical survey. > ‘Washington, June 10.—A methodical survey of the entire Atlantic. coast from the Mexican line to Halifax has failed to bring to light any evidence DAKOTA MOTOR CO. ° > ! Bismarck, N. D. i “TAKE out of our. Die the teles; phone, the wireless, the automobileand the aeroplane and ‘instantly wo retro- Grade 50 years” John N. Willys LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. Willys-Overland Distributors SERVICH—that’s our middle name sar MISSOURI: VALLEY MOTOR CO. Factory Distributors of CHEVROLET AUTOMOBILES Smith Form-a-Trucks Smith Tractors Kelly-Springfield and Firestone Tires ‘ Everything for the Automobile Eee BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY: _ Distributors of STUDEBAKER and CADILLAC Automobiles . OSGOODLENS BE is Within the law—More light : than plain glass. MOTOR CAR SUPPLY CO. REAL ESTATE—LANDS F. E. YOUNG REAL ESTATE CO. Farm Lands—City Property Fire Insurance FIRST NAT’L BANK BLDG. _ Room 15—Phone 78 —_ that German submarines have employ- ed a shore base or have had touched: with thé shores at any point, Secre- tary Daniels said todey. This was taken as an official deiial of reports that strange signals had been ‘seen at night from remote sections of the coast. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. gin to fill their bins ue to accumulate their winter supply, during the summer monthg.”” Be on the Safe Side-and Order Now Adv.—Western Coal Producers Association. yee 984 FUEL ADMINISTRATION WARNING ‘Consumers will suffer a serious short- ‘ age of coal next winter, unless they be- neem ee reopesconpsenansce: at once and contin-