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NEW ARM BAND FOR SELECTIVE SERVICE YANKS Boys En Route to Training Camp Will Wear Official Insignia Henceforth The new arm bands which for select service soldiers en to camp will be used for the noon, when four limited service men entrained for Camp Grant, at Rock- ford, 11], The arm bands are firm] sewed to the select’s sleeve. band is provided for the officer in charge, bearing the initials “S. P.,” which stand for spe police, and this official receives a formal warrant as a military policeman. The four limited service men go to Grant are John E. Savalaga of Wing, Henry L. Ruth of Tacoma, Wash., Frank H. Johnson of Seattle! and William E. Beltz of Buffalo Center, la. On Sept. 27 full service selects leave for Camp Grant as a portion of the 1,000 men whom North | Dakota entrains for the Illinois post this week. On Sunday C. A. Wilcox, James J. Tucker, Henry Malm, Francis D. Register, Raymond D. Burman and Harry D. Flowers left for Grand Forks } to enter the vocational training school at the state university. All are well known Bismarck young men. BUY W. 8.5 MISSOURI VALLEY ASSOCIATION WILL HANDLE FAIR SHOW At the request Valley Agricultural ociation the Missouri Valley Poultry association has agreed to take charge of the poultry exhibit to be held in con- nection with the annual fair at Man- dan on September 10, 11 and 12. Harry Clough and E. K. Leonard, ex- perienced exposition executives, have been named as the committee in charge, and a fine exhibit of classy poultry is promised. Excellent prizes haved been offored. ay w. 5. 5. MOFFIT. The ladies of the Red Cross have made a beautiful service flag in hon- or of our boys who have entered the service and it will be dedicated by George N. Keniston, Bismarck Commercial club on Satur- of the Missouri day night, September 14, in the Benz hall. Mr. Keniston is one of the not- ed speakers of the state and we look for a packed house that night. The community is invited to join in sing- ing patriotic songs. Supper will be served at the Bung- alow after the address and people are looking forward to this event with pleasure. Those who miss hearing Mr. Keniston will miss a treat. Everybody come out and show your heart is with the boys over there. BUY W, 8. &.——— HEBRON NEWS. Private Henry Backfish, who has ‘been home on a 40-day agricultural furlough, returned to Fort Banks on Monday. Word was received here Sunday that Private A. E. Funk of the Coast Artillery arrived safely overseas. The members of the Congregational Ladies’ Aid were invited out to the Dunham home on Tuesday, the oc: sion being Mr. and Mrs. Dunham's ver anniversar: “Mrs. M. Crowley returned home Sat- urday after spending several days with friends in Mandan. Mr. and Mrs. G. Schaffner autoed through on their way to Leith with Mrs. Schaffner’s sister, Anna Wang. on Thursday. ‘A social dance was given in the Op- Yra house on Saturday, the Felton orchestra supplying the music. A have been provided as the official ensignia route first time in Burleigh county Tuesday after- number of young folks came up from Glen Ullin for the occasion. Mrs. H. F. Funk and children re- turned home on Sunday, after spend- in a few months with relatives in Min- Rev. L. A. Lovelace visited with ds in the city on Monday. d Charlotte Kaip left Saturday to spend several days with her sister in Glen Ullin. Miss Blanche Halpern accompanied her sister Mrs. Kosen to Bismarck to spend a few days there. BUY W. 8. = — EVERYTHING SET FOR REGISTRATION All registration cards, certificates A special jand regulations have been forwarded om the ajutant general's office to| who |! |September 12. to jthe local boards in preparation for the | registration on September 12, when more than 100,000 North Dakota men between the ages of 18 and 45 in- clusive are expected to sign up for sel with Uncle Sam. Thirteen j thousand large pla dg are yet to go Il be all set by {| finish up the big registration in record time. It is esti- mated that the number registered will be fifty percent greater than the origi- nal registration June 5, B, 1817. BUY W, ASSESSMENTS OF TELEPHONE LINES State Auditor K out. North Dakota itzky is engaged in certitying a ments as-levied by the state board of equalization to the telephone companies operating in} North Dakota. Telephone exchanges ing battery phones will be assessed per phone; magneto phone ex- es will. pay $10 per phone up to instruments; $13 per phone for 100 sets numbering from 101 to 500, and $16 per phone for sets in excess of 500. Copper wire in telephone lines is assessed at $15 per mile and iron wire at $5. Country lines are assess- ed all the way from $12 to 963, accord- ing to the number of sets and wires used. Pay stations, such as are in- stalled in hotels, are assessed $6 for each telephone connection. BUY W. 5. 8. To Hazelton. Rev. George Buzzelle of St. Georg retary of the; {replace ‘broken lights. church left this afternoon for Hazel- ton, where this evening he will ad-- dress a Red Cross meeting and auction sale. BUY Ww. PRIORITY PRIVILEGES. Priority shipping privileges for ma- terial required in the construction of an addition to the science hall at the agricultiral college have been obtain- ed by the state board of regents af- ter extensive correspondence with the war indust! board. BUY W. S. §.——— SECOND COLORED CONTINGENT. William H. Thompson of Driscoll, the second colored contingent to leave Burleigh county, entrained yesterday for Camp Lewis, American Lake. Wash. Thompson,is a splendid ex- ample of the Afro-American fighting man and promises to give a good ac- count of himself. BUY WwW. 5. 8. “The Man Without a Country,” Ea ward Everett Hale's masterpiece, at the Bismarck Theatre tonight. BUY W. 8. 5. THOSE STORM WINDOWS. Now is the time to have your storm windows overhauled and repaired be- fore we get busy. See Faunce's Fourth street. Also have your auto shields repaired. 1 have all sizes to Lowest prices Faunce’s Fourth street. t 83192W95 BUY ‘V. 8. 3. 8. 8,—— guaranteed. Reverse Action. “One's nim is everything.” remarks a moralist. Don't know about that. Many a man has gone to the bad trying to he a good fellow.—Boston Tran- Questionnaire— ™ What hat leads in style? What hat leads in quality? What hat leads in popularity? _ — answer script. ie ® "5 . The Oldest and Largest Bank in this sectionof the State USELESS MONEY. Money in hiding is like a man taken prisoner— of no value until released for service. Your friends must work if they are to ben- efit you and your coun- try. Money hoarded may not even provide for your future needs for you may lose it as the result of theft or accident. We invite you to de- posit your money at 4% interest with this bank. i T ‘and perfectly expresses the wild ad-| | ences at the rustic wedding with the; | dancing girls or Arabi: | sentiment to the wildness of the hero’s | violin and piano. “TO HELL WITH THE. KAISER” One of the many gripping scenes in the most startling picture of a century wh CASUALTY LIST NO. 14. Sestion No. 1. Washington, D., C. Sept. 2.—Killed in action, 10; wounded severely, 110; died of wounds, wounded, degree | undetermined, «1; died of disea | total 203. Killed in action: VIN E. HANSON, George Neher, Oshko: Wounded severely in action: Capt. dward J. Schmidt, Manitowoc, W: Tehodore G. Lewis, McFarland, W: Sergt. Louis | Downs, Eau Clajre, Wis. Alfred Magchozzak, PRIVATE MAR- if oCrporals Oscar F. Druckrey, Gillett, .; John Earl Franey, Allouez, Sam Nytroen. Minneapolis, Everett C. Stutz GRAFTON, N. D.; | 8 h opens for a three day engagement today at h a matinee at 3 o’clock and two shows nightly. Clarence Waller, ; tSephen Man- | Privates Wil-| man, Harlan, Ia.; Amherst Junction, Wi: gold, Kaukauna, W: | liam Bell, Eau Claire, Wis.; Arahur W. Benhart, Taylor, Neb.; Ralph L. Rey- nolds, Beloit, Wi Kenneth Thorn, Eau Claire, Wis.; Walter Zalazo’ Milwaukee, Wi: fdward F. Rycien- Milwaukee, : Harry Kilbey, Oshkosh, Wis.; aw HIE E McDON- Hans C. Ned- ; Joseph 'M. Os- John Pfeister, Cam- Henry Pohlman, Ross, Shawno, ALD, WERNER N. DG loso, Stoughton, W borne, Blair, Ned brai ‘Wis.; Harry ton, Kans.; Fred Norman E. Minn. Wounded, Carl H. Moses, Carter, S. D. degree undetermined: AMERICAN LABOR FOOLED THE KAISER WHEN IT STUCK LOYALLY TO ITS JOB) . (By Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) ! Amsterdam, Holland, Sept. | “Americans double fooled Germany, asserted a Dutch war correspondent, who has spent consideravle time in| German mills, factories and fields, | ing with German workers. “Germans thought the United States | would not get a million soldiers in} France within the first two years That was one error. “They also thought American labor: would not back up the United States! government in war with Europe. That | was mistake No. 2. \ Lied to People. itm) “German governmental officials and | German newspapers for the past three | or four ye red again! and again that American working peo: ple were against wa and would resort to strikes and sabot- age if their government went to w and attempted to send troops acro} the Atlantic. They said American | workers would not finance a war. | “But now even the German people | course. that American labor is fight- | They don’t | i have seen their mistake. |i call it a mistake. They are convinced { ‘great labor riots,’ that their ruling class deliberately lied to them about!!American labor | conditions, just as they have lied ‘to them avout everythin~ else, Labor in the War. “Germans, government officials, newspapers and people, are astonished lat the remarkable war strides by American labor. German newspa- pers no longer play up little strikes of workers in American cities as ind the Germans have come to a realization that Amer- ican labor is just as firmly in the war as American soldiers and they now know that there's over a million of the latter in France.’ German newspapers coming into Holland have shown a remarkable change in the way they handle Ameri- can labor stories and editorials. They no long la: war pacifists and Sovialists Berlin newspaperyare calling’ upon German workers to look at the “astounding ‘ef- fort of U. S. labor,” and do as much for the “fatherland,” forgetting, of ing for right and German labor is be- ing driven to fight for might. BISMARCK BRIDGE WORKER INJURED | a member of a North- ern Pacific bridge crew, is in a hos- pital at Glendive recovering from se- vere sustained when the speeder which he was operating col- lided with a pus rat Odessa. The injured man was first taken to New Leipzig, where his hurts were dressed by Dr. E. E. Hamilton. He then was brought to Mandan, where Mrs. Sandy of 121 First street, Bismarck, met him and accompanied him to Glendive. Several ribs were broken and his limbs were ‘badly bruised, but he writes from Glendive that he is recov- ering rapidly under the good care he is receiving there. ¢ BUY W.3 S “The Man Without a C ward Everett Hale’s nia ZI the Bismarck Theatre tonight. BUY W. 5. 8. Some of Bismarck’s Best Talent to Partici- pate in R. C. Benefit The program to be given next Mom day, Sept. 9, at the Auditorium for a Red Cross benefit will be a ‘benefit in of the word. Some of best talent are interested and all who are taking part are giv- ing their services. The principal number will be the Peer Gynt suite by Edward Grieg, mu-| tten to illustrate Ibsen’s drama. | is music ranges from grave to gay | Ed. at ountry, ventures of Pe he hero, his experi- | his encounter with the trolls and fail of the moun- tains, the stor mat sea and his moth- er'’s death. The beautiful songs Solveg, Peer's faithful sweetheart, are most | appealing and add a touch of tender of themes. A brief outline of the story will be, read during and between the musicat | numbers which will be given by voice, A part of the piano | music is arranged for four players on! two pianos. ———ary w.s s--—— Blackheads, blotches and pimples are generally caused by the improper action of the bowels. Hollister’s Rocky ‘Mountain Tea regulates the | bowels, cleans the stomach. clears the; complexion from the inside—nature’s way—"Get that healthy, happy look.” Jos. Breslow. avy W. S. $——— “The Man Without a Countr ward Everett Hale’s masterpie the Bismarck Theatre tonight. BUY W.S,S Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. ” Ed- 2, at DICKINSON NORMAL The state board of regents an- noynces that the Dickinson normal school, the first state educational in- stitution on the Slope, will open in the Elks’ hall at Dickinson on October 1. The Monday last preceeding the opening date will be registration day. ee S. T. May, the president. already is re iving many inquiries from pros- pective students and an excellent at- tendance is indicated. AUY W. S. 8. “The Man Without a Country,” Ed- | at | ward Everett Hale’s masterpiece, the Bismarck Theatre tonight. MOTHER'S FRIEND FOR Expectant Mothers ABSOLUTELY SAFE ~ Scoggin, Buttesville, | | made U. S. workers as anti- ” | Fs | CITY NEWS I Miss Florence Homan, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Ho- %. man, will leave this week for St. Paul, where she will attend a girls’ school. Miss Agnes Weber, after convalesc- ing at the home of her parents near New England following an operation Enoyjing Vacation. Henry Newton, clerk of the supreme court. has gone to Hazelton to spend his vacation helping with the harvest. Eastern Star A regular meeting of the Bismarck chapter of the Order of Eastern Star will be held at the Masonis temple at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening. At Lewis & Clark Capt. Frank Edwards of the Brit- ish Royal Fusiliers spoke to a large audience at Mandan on Sunday even- ing and was a guest at the Lewis & Clark while in the Morton county seat. To Resume Work. The Surgical Dressing department will resume work on Tuesday, Septem- ber 3, at the Masonic temple. Those in charge are desirous that all form- er, as well as many new workers will report for duty Tuesday. Mother’s Club Tomorrow The Mother’s Club will hold their first meeting for the new club year at the home of Mrs, E. H. Pierce on Avenue D. Tuesday p.m., Sept. 3d. All members should attend this meet- ing and receive the new year book. Pioneer Visiting Here. Simon Fraser of Fargo, a Red river ‘valley pioneer, is visiting his son, ad- jutant General G. Angus Fraser. The North Dakota veteran is much surprised and gratified with the pro- gress which the capital city has made during the last three years. Schools Open Tomorrow. The Bismarck public schools open for the new year at 9 o'clock Tuesday CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years ELDALLO ‘Each Cigarin its st humidor” fy \ G6for35¢ 3 for20¢ | Tonight for appendicitis, has resumed her duties as a nurse at St. Alexis hos-; pital. . gripping stories ever written. when all students will be expected to present themselves for registration and assignment. A full| teaching corps will be on hand, and} accommodations have been provided for all of the capital city’s browing family of pupils. Last Day Sept. 5. Thursday, Septemver 5, is the last day on which applications in the Stu- dent Nurses reserve can be accepted. North Dakota is still over 100 short: of its quota of applicants and it is hoped that every girl who can see her way clear to do so, will enlist in this | service before September If there re any girls who are qualified to en- but for financial reasons hesi- if they will communicate with d C. L. Young, Burleigh county, hairman, she will endeavor to see that| arrangements are made whereby the; applicant's expens s above compensa- tion while in training are cared for. Ww. Cc. T. U. The Ladies of the W. C. T. U. will! meet with Mrs. Varney Tuesday after- noon. All members are urged to ve present. morning, list, tate, BUY W. 5. S. Remove blackheads, stoften rough skin ,clear the blood, brighten the eyes, sweeten the whole system. Nothing helps make a pretty face, winsome smile, as Hollister’s Rocky nual enrollment 1000 courses teac experienced We teacl Low compelled to depart from th until further notice, except in necessities as prescriptions operation, we are, THEATRE ——Presents—— AND ALL STAR CAST IN “The Man Without a Country” Edward Everett Hale’s immortal masterpiece recognized by Americans as the most 3 A play one 1 Me, building in the country. and modern throughout. d for Our Catalogue. wholesome influence. mercial subjccts, cellent modations. Enter any time. Discontinuance of MESSENGER SERVICE Due to the scarcity of messengers after the opening of school and of employes in general, the undersigned will be every effort will be put forth to deliver promptly such otherwise cannot be called for. ge ek Trusting that our patrons will appreciate the condi- tions which prompt this notice and soliciting their co- Very respectfully, BRESLOW’S DRUG STORE,- COWAN’S DRUG STORE, FINNEY’S DRUG STORE, LENHART DRUG CO. BISMARCK Mountain Tea. Jos. Breslow. -——auy Ws. 5. “The Man Without a Country,” Ed- ward Everett Hale’s masterpiece, at the Bismarck Theatre tonight. HUMPHREYS’ The {ull list cf Pz, Huinphreys’ Remedies for +} interndl and external use, mects the needs of families for early every ailment from Infancy a told age—descrived in Dr. Humphreys’ Manuai Try | mailed free, ae PARTIAL LIST FoR 1. Fevers, Congestion. Inflammations 2. Worms, Worm Fever 3. Colic, Crying. Wakefulness of Infante 4. Diarehee of Children and aduits ‘7. Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis 8. Toothache, Faceache, Neuralgia ®. Headache, Sick Headache Vertigo 10, Dyspepsia, Indigestion Weak Stomach ‘ 13. Croup, Hoarse Cough, Laryngitis \ 14. Eczema, Eruptions f 18. Rheumatism, Lumbago = 1G. Fever and Ague, Malaria 17. Piles, Blind, Bleeding. Interna External 19. Catarrh, Influenza, Cold in Head 20. Whooping Cough 21. Asthma, Oppressed, Difficult Breathing 27. Disorders of the kidneys 30. Uriaary Incontinence 34. Sore Throat, eS 77. Grip, Gripp: rippe For sale by peo everywhere, HUMPHREYS’ HOMO. MIDICISE co., ner William and Ann Streets. New York MANKATO COMMERCIAL COLLEGE MANKATO, MINN. Now beginning its twenty-eighth year.An- students. Finest school Equipment new of study, hers and h all com- rates of tuition and boarding accom eir regular delivery service the case of emergency when or urgent medicines that a K | Tonight | Florence La Badie should see. The Big Sensation of a Generation 3 Days Commencing with Matinee at 3 o’clock Today “TO HELL WITH THE KAISER” A smashing T reel production that puts him where he belongs. Capturing the grasping monster of the world by American Aeroplanes MOST STARTLING PICTURE OF A CENTURY. AN ASTOUNDING PROPHESY Admission to All 22c; War. Tax 3c Total 25c IORPHEUM| “ Matinee Today and Wed. THEATER Shows Nightly 7:15 and 9:00