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,| Charles F. Bleckreid. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE TAXPAYERS T0 DECIDE SCHOOL BONDING ISSUE Electorate Will Vote Tomorrow on Obligating City for New $15,000 Building Although the fact has almost been lost sight of in the turmoil of the state primary campaign, Bismarck will be asked to decide an important ques- tion—whether the city shal] bond for $15,000 to construct a four-room grade school south of the tracks to provide the children of that fast-growing sec- tion of the city with adequate school facilities. Pupils from south of the tracks at present attend the Northwest and Will schools. Both of these institu- tions are over-crowded, and the need for additional quarters has long been | felt. Several months ago, the board of education, having $18,000 in its building fund, voted to erect a four. room brick building south of the tracks. It was believed at that time that $18,000 would cover the cost, and the architetct’s specifications were drawn accordingly, but when the bids came in it was found that they called for an expenditure ‘of $15.000 more than the bodrd had available. The citizens of Bismarck, women aS +well as men, are asked tomorrow to elect as to whether the city shall bond for this required amount. The election for all wards will be held at the Will school. BUY W. ©. KILLDEER WILL CELEBRATE HERE Terminus of North Branch Plans to Come to Bismarck Killdeer in all probability will cele- pbrate the Fourth in Bismarck, advises ‘H, H. Ellsworth, who was in the city last week en route home from Fargo, where he had attended state grand lodge meetings of Masonic fraterni- ties. Killdeer home guard, one of the best organized and equipped in the Slope, has planned for several months to take in the home guard encamp- ment here on the Fourth, and it is probable that the bulk of the city folk | will accompany their military unit. Other north branch towns will turn out big delegations. WALTER BURLEIGH DIES IN SEATTLE Pioneer of Territorial Days Passes Away in West Walter A. Burleigh, son of Dr. Wal- ter A. Burleigh, one of the most prom- inent physicians of territorial days, and for whom Burleigh county is named, is dead in Seattle. Walter A. Burleigh, Jr., in the seventies, wher Bismarck was a struggling frontier settlement, wts employed as a steam- ship clerk by the Benton Packet Co. He went to the Pacific coast years ago, and there became prominent in realty circles. Speaking of his death, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, in a copy mailed to The Tribune by Harry ‘W, Bringhurst, another former Bis- marcker now secretary of the Pacific Coast Association of Fire Chiefs, says: (Walter A. Burleigh, a well-known rea] estate dealer of this city, died yesterday afternoon at’ his residence, 7408 East Green Lake boulevard, of heart trouble He was born in Kif- tamung, Pa., October 14, 1854, the son of Walter A. Burleigh, a prominent physician in the former territory of ‘Lakota, who held office under Presi- dent Lincoln.. Mr. Burleigh’s mater- na) grandfather was A. J. Faulk, for- merly governor of Dakota Territory. Mr. Burleigh had been a resident of Seattle since 1888, with the excep. tion of four years spent in Alaska with the ‘North American Transporta- tion & Trading Company. He is sur- vived by his wife, Mrs. Clara R. Bur- leigh, who was recently elected presi- dent of the Seattle library board, and by a son, Timothy A. Burleigh. His mother is still living in Yankton, S. Dak. Andrew F. Burleigh, a brother. was formerly a law partner of Sena- tor Samuel H. Piles and is now secre- tary of the Western Union Telegraph "To the Voters of 7 Burleigh County Gentlemen—I am a candidate for the Re- publican nomination for county commis- sioner from the First District at the Pri- | maries W ednesday, June 26, and I respect- fully solicit your vote. If elected I will give my best efforts to the honest service of my district and will also keep in mind the best | interests of the county | as a whole. I will be impartial in my deal- ings with everyone, and will be bound by and responsible to none but the people. On this platform I ask your support and your votes. 6:24-25 Company. Another brother, Wade Burleigh, is a clergyman in Iowa. The funeral will be held at 2 p. m. Friday at the Bleitz-Fafferty under- PAMERICAN LIST OF CASUALTIES taking parlors in mont. The re-| @. ° mains: will he cremate) eof Washington, June 25,—'The army casualty list today contained 97 names ROME G. BROW. divided as follows: Killed in action 54. ARGUES CREAM 0’ Died of wounds 7. Died of accident and other causees WHEAT APPEAL Rome G. Brown, nationally famous as an opponent of the recall of judges and judicial decisions, and for his de- fense of the courts, was here Monday arguing for the defendant and re Died of airplane accident 1 Died of di Ce rae ee Wounded severely 26. Wounded degree undetermined 2. The list include KILLED IN ACTI : Privates Ralph Amundson, Edger- ‘, Brandow, Morley, M. pondent in the case of the s\ SI y¥, Cameron, Gilman, Wi: s the Cream of commis s Wheat Co. The tax commission is en nh, Jackson, ) Herbert deavoring to collect a tax bill of sever-| Dobson, Blanchardville, W Leo, M. Monien, Dancy, Wis.; Peter Peplinsky, 940 Bremen St., Milwaukee, Wis. DIED OF WOUNDS: Corporal Herman F. Levin, eKnosha, Wis.; Private Henry H. Yonker, 176 Apple St., Muskegon, Mich. DIED OF DISEASE: Private Ederene lL. Bushey, Malmo, Minn. DIED OF AIRPLANE ACCIDENT: | Lieutenant Billy Glenn Rushing, At- more, Ala. DIED FROM ACCIDENT AND OTHER CAUSES: Sergeant al thousand dollars from the Cream of Wheat Co. on the ground that its home office is in Grand Forks, altho the company has no plant or other in- sts in North Dakota. In the dis | court at Grand Forks the tax {commission was defeated, and it ap- pealed to supreme court, which now has the case under consideration UY W. 8, 8, STANDING OF THE | CLUBS ° | ie Knutson, 804 Lay- o. # | ton Boulevard, Milwaukee. NATIONAL LEAGUE. WOUNDED SEVERELY: WwW. OL. Elmer O. Smith, Ovid, Mich, Chicago 2 38 17 p97 | WOUNDED, DEGREE UNDETER. New York . 3619" MINED tenes Boston ... 28 30 Privates Clarence R. Johnson, 622 Philadelphia 25° 29 Jennings St., Sioux City, Ja.; Jasper Cincinnati 32 J. Jones, Greenfield, Towa. Pittsburgh 31 The marine corps casualty list to- Brooklyn . 33 day contained 19 names divided as fol. St. Louis 49 jows: TUE — 2 Killed in action 8. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Died of wounds 1. Ww. Le Wounded severely 10, Boston ... 36 0 25 ———AUY W. 5, 8. New York 33 24 ¥ i Cleveland 3327 City Will Pave Washington 3 86 Gnieage te Downtown Alleys St aie # a 3 The city commission at a brief meet- state ie ing Monday evening voted to pave Philadelphia 21 36 downtown alleys at the rear of the t rand Pacific, in the block occupied AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. | | by the fire station and around the city Kansas City 28 «19 library. It was decided not to open Milwaukee 29° «19 bids for the sanitary sewer on the Columbus 28° «19 south side until the outcome of to- Louisville 26 24 morrow’s school bonding election is Indianapoli 23 22 known, Andrew Miller, representing St. Paul .. 21 «(7 the Bismarck Water Supply Co., ad- Minneapolis 2 26 vised that the company was planning Toledo ... Soya 34 to extend its mains on 11th street as recently requested. TO WORK EIGHT HOURS. Washington, June 25.—An agree- MONDAY’S GAMES. Detroit 6; Chicago 2. Washington 2; Philadelphia 1. ment was reached today by Senate and New York Boston 2. House conferees on the legislative, ex- NET ee ecutive and judicial appropriation bill : National League. ‘providing that all government em- Chicago 8; St. Louis 3. ployes in the’ civil'establishment shall New York Boston 4. work 8hours daily instead ‘of 7, as at Philadelphi ‘Brooklyn 1. present, beginning July 1, and shall Pittsburgh Cincinnati 2. receive $120 additional pay monthly. The conferees also.agreed to the continuance of/sub-treasuries at. Bal- timore, ; Boston, ;Chicago, Cincinnati, New: Orleans, New York. Philadelphia, St. Louis and San Francisco, wihch the house had voted to abolish. All Traces of Scrofula Cleansed from the Blood: _ Impurities gam Wiped | for removing the last trace of Scrof- ut. American Association. Columbus Milwaukee 2. ‘Minneapolis 7; Louisville 1. HUY W. 5. 8. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. ula and other blood taints, and there, is no case that it does not promptly reach, S, S, S. will;thoroughly cleanse If there is any trace of Scrofala, or/ and remove every disease germ that other impurities in your blood, you] infests the blood and give you new cannot enjoy the full physical devel-| life and vigor. It is sold by all drug-' opment that a healthy bddy is ca} gists and you should get a bottle and pable of until your blood has been] begin its use to-day. Write’ a com: thoroughly cleansed and purified of} plete history of your case, and you ‘all traces of impure matter. can obtain expert medical advice free S. S. S., the wonderful old purely| by addressing Medical Director, $0 vegetable blood remedy, has no equal| Swift Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. Good Farms-On Easy Terms We offer a number of fertile farms for sale in tracts of ., 160 acres or more in Perkins County, South Dakota, also in Bowman, Burleigh, Sheridan, McLean and McIntosh Counties, North Dakota, at prices ranging from $8 per acre upwards, 1-3 cash, balance mortgage on easy terms at 6%. For particulars address THE JEWISH AGRI- CULTURAL SOCIETY, 174 Second Avenue, New York. Auditorium THLY 1p - Direct from The Bijou Theatre, New York City ce] *CicaL pispu™ By MAY TULLY a> “It’s worth going miles to see. Better than ‘Fair and Warmer’.”—New York Globe. PRICES—50c $1.00 $1.50—PRICES \|PATTEN TELLS HOW LABOR IS 10 BE FOUND Nothing Radical Contemplated by U. S. Free Employ- ‘hent Service "|A RESERVE RENDEZVOUS “The federal government is not planning anything radical in the way of conser{pting and ¢gntrolling. labor,” said Lindley H.. Paften, state director of labor, on his return from the war labor conference:at ‘Washington — to- day. ‘Itsefforts .will be directed to- ward stabilizing industry during the war. It will try to keep all workers at home as much as possible. The policy of thé. department will be to consider,loealplacement of labor first. This means that the farm labor re- serves, and,:boys’ working | reserves are of first importance in a state like North Dakotev-and that they will. be. called upon to do their part in the harvest field. North Dakota has start- ed right in foriing a farm labor re- serve. ‘Second of importance ig the state placement of laborers, and men will be ‘called’ upon. in parts'o f the state where labor is not so much in demand to supply. the demands in other parts, where the need is greater than the supply. The great demand for men in. North:Dakota in the com- “Real Gravely ves a pure, isfaction that Curtain, 8:30-—_—_—_—_—_——Tickets on Sale at Knowles ing harvest will be for the importa- tion of a vast army of outside common labor, and it will be the task of the department of labor to.agsist in bring- ing in this help without, embarassing or crippling any essential war indus- try in other states. . Draft boards, un- der the work or fight order, will fur nish lists to the department of lapoy of every person in deferred classifi- cations, and when it has been deter- 1918: mined that a person in a deferred clas- Congressman from Second Dis- sification is an idler or engaged in non- trict— productive service, the classification JOHN 0, HANCHETT, and order number of such person wi Governor— be withdrawn and he will be imme-|5 diately inducted into military service.” |&. “Kt. Lincoln or some other desirable |3 center may be considered next year as |= the rendezvous of the boys’ working = JOHN STEEN. Lieutenant Governor— . T, KRAABEL. Secretary of State— LYMAN D. PAGE, State Auditor— JOHN L. GEORGE. State Treasurer— BERNT ‘ANDERSON, ‘Attorney General— GEORGE P. HOMNES. Tnsurance Commissioner— reserve, says Director Patten, who comments favorably upon what the department of labor has accomplish- ed in Pennsylvania and other states ' with the boys’ working reserve. “This ,matter will recive the special attention fof'the state director for ‘North Da- kota, as well as the unqualified sup- port of the United States public re.) serve and the department labor heads ADOLPH WACKER. at Washington,’:. said Mr: Patten? BUY We 8 . Versatile. ‘A versatile man is one who can talk ‘at the right time and keep still when there is nothing to say. - for them at the primaries. found read: VOTE at all tim HIS TICKET STRAT FOR A LOYAL, EFFICIENT AND ECONOMICAL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION by casting your ballot for the following can- didates on the Republican ballot at the primaries on June 26th, toa Superintendent of Public In- struction—, MINNIE J, NIELSON. Commissioner of Agriculture and Labor— ALEX MACDONALD. Railroad Commissioners— M. P. JOHNSON, JOSEPH GAECKLE, JAMES TAYLOR. Judge of Supreme Court— C. J. FISK. State Representatives (27th Dis- trict), (Burleigh County)— J. W. BURCH, JOHN H. NOON, LYNN W. SPERRY. These candidates will all serve the people well and are worthy of your confidence and support. You will make no mistake by voting During these critical and ¢rucial times it behooves voters to place the affairs of théjr State in the hands of MEN who will be nea to’stand squarely behind the Government. GHT AT THE PRIMARIES. 6:18-19-20-21-22-24-25 taste—a lasting tobacco sat- ordinary tobacco doesn’t get. ! Real Gravely Chewing Plug 10ca pouch—and worthit 1e Scr Chewing Plug clean tobacco the chewer of Peyton Brand (Political Advertisement) ‘ Repair your heating — plant: now Don’t wait until fall—labor will be hard to get at that time. We can take care of you now if you will call us up.’ This.is import- ant on your part. Don’t delay—Phone 14 1. Ny Smother the Kaiser with War Savings Stamps Sacred treaties are called by the Kaiser mere ‘‘scraps ‘of paper. His words are an example of the ‘‘Kultur’’ of the uns who commit unspeakable crimes. against innocent women and children---the ‘‘Kultur’’ that America is fighting ‘to remove forever from the world. We are in the fight to win—our soldiers must “carry on”—those at home must back up our boys to the limit. \ FRIDAY, JUNE. 28 NATIONAL WAR SAVINGS DAY On-that day every loyal American will be summoned to provehis patriotism by “signing the pledge’—by agreeing to faved ina definite amount of War Savings Stamps each month during 1918 Smother the Kaiser With “Scraps of Paper” on June 28th National War Savings Committee — This space contributed for the Winning of the War by U, f Paper’ that wil 4 Help Win the War ~ 2? . Missouri Valley Motor Company