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TUESDAY, SEPT. 17, 191 FRECKLES ‘AND HIS FRIENDS GIVING HER FAH WARNING ff SQUIRREL FOOD By Ahern THIS HEINIE TAKES: HIM- SELF PRISONER , AND MAKES SURE.OF If ACH MOUSENHAUS ! ME 18S PRISONER ~ JA ~ PRISONER ! WHEN WERE NOU TAKEN PRISONER 2 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Kos “TooKEN2~ NEW » ICH COME PY ME ‘ALONG ~ YAW come uNo Look t “\cH MAKE ME PRISONER PY MYSELF ~ see + 2 eZ oe. A ama Wy i. (TRIBUNE ern \ CLASSIFIED COLUMNS} — CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES Terms Strictly Cash—No Copy Without Remittance attached will be inserted. First insertion, 35 cents; additional insertions without change of copy, 15 cents. Adver-| tisements containing more than 25 words will be charged at the rate of two cents a word for| each additional word. _ <HELP WANTED—MALE CIVIL SERVICE” EXAMINATIONS— everywhere October 5. 12.000 wom- en clerks to be.appointed at Wash- ington. “Salary $1,200. Experience unnecessary. Women desiring gov- ernment positions. write for free particulars, R. E./Terry (former Civ) Service examiner) 122 Colum- > bian Building, Washington. 912 8t WANTED—A first class watchmaker and, optician. Registered in’ North POSITIONS WANTED { MISCELLANEOUS WELL EDUCATED capable young| WELL ThAINED man, single. draft exempted, as bookkeeper, or secretary on u far. F i’ references, Write 621 Trib- 9.15 lwk } re: WANTED—Permanent position in Bis- marck by young. woman stenograph- er. inexperienced, nine months’ thorough training. Phone 132R. 912 1wk ~~ | bANDS L FOR SALE—N._W: 1-T of section 32, tqwnship 140, range 80, Now work- eli. by Philip .Harvey.-. Send. your Dakota, will pay highest wages to right man. Permanent position. Ad- dress 623 Tribune.” MEN WANTED—We have ‘worked ahead for. over a year. Call at new farmers’ Equity tate bank build- ing, or at the bank Mandan, N. D., or at the new packing plant, Huron, S. D, Eugene Schuler, Mandan, N. D. 9161 wk WANTED—! balance of fall and winter. eparate house andfarm. ‘Must come immed- jately. R. J. Olsen, Sanborn, N. D. 9 16 2t WANTED—A man who can drive a truck, apply to the Finch uLmber Co. 9 11 tt ‘WANTED—Linotype operators. Union. Apply Bisrharck. Tribune. 911 te WANTED—All around automobile me- chanic who can earn highest. wages. Corwin Motor Company, Bismarck, N. Dak. i 9 3 tt WANTED—Able bodied men between axes of 46 and 5@ by U. S. Army. for all kinds of trades. “Apply Room 20 Soo Hotel, Recruiting Station. a - §2iet HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Hoysekeeper for men on farm near town. Steady job. Two men during winter. State age and wages wanted. R. J. Olsen, ,San- born, N. Di 9 16:3t WANTED—At once, an experienced kitchen. womay, Good wages. Cap- ital Cafe, Main St. \9 16 2t WOMEN WANTED—Salary $24 full time, 50c an hour spare time, dis- tributing guaranteed hosiery to wearer. . Permanent. Experience un- necessary. Apply / International Mills, Norristown, Pa. 973 wks “WANTED—A girl for general house- work, highest wages. Apply to Mrs. P. C. Rémington, 610 7th street’ morning and evening, or Room 20 City National Bank Bldg, after- noons. 8 ___| ROOMS FOR RENT BOARD AND ROOM at the Dunn- raven. You'll like it. Very reason- able rates. 9 16 It FOR RENT — Furnished modern + room. George Gusesner. es > 9 16 at FOR RENT—Two pice, @ rooms for light housekeeping, furnished or unfurnished: 2 rooms up stairs for 3.college girls. 311 4th street. Phone 627R. 9121 wk ROOMS—Single, doubie, light heat. and water, unfurnished, elevator and janitor’ service, excellent location. Bismarck Realty Co., Bismarck bank sbuilding. FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- ern house. Hot water heat. 621 ¢th street. Phone. 619-R. ‘ j 8 23 6t CO __ ~ WORK.WANTED PRACTICAL NURSING _WANTED— ‘Mts. Cora A.. Lamb. “Phone 692X. 4 PaaS ee, Man and wife for farm} ‘best offer to John Bylund, Coon Ra- pids, Iowa. 4 973 wks FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES AND FEATS _ FOR-RENT—Modern six room house close in. Phone 536X 9171 wk FOR'RENT—Steam heated housekeep- itg'rooms. Over the First Guaranty bank. Newly painted and decorated, Inquire’ at the bank. 917 3t FOR RENT—Apartment furnished or unfurnished. Call between 9 a. m. and noon or between 2 and 5 p. m. Mrs, F. E, Young, 610, 5th street. 9 16 3t_ FOR RENT—5 room cottage. Phone 894 R. 9 16 tt POR RED ight room modern house. - Inquire 512 Ninth street. » Phone 477L. 9 14 3 FOR SALE—Six room house strictly miodern. Phone 719 R or call 718 9th street. 9 i3 6t FOR REN?T—Sept. 16, four-room cot- _tage._Phohe 600. 913 1 wk FOR SALE OR _RENT—Six room mod- ern house. Will sell on easy térms if taken at once. Call at.523 2nd street or Phone 687. 4 9101 dw FOR SALE at a big bargain, my resi- dence at €15 7th 'street. Must sell at once, Phone 877. 97tt FOR RENT—Five room.cottage, part- ly modern. Apply 1200 Broadway. 9 17 4t TOR RENT —New cottage, ‘all modern, ready after September ist. Apply to Finch Lumber Co., Phone 17. 8 28 tt FOR RENT—A warm modern house at 310 Seventh street. Phone 410-4 FP-12, 1lwk FOR RENT—Modern house. “Inquire of E. H. L. Vesperman. eis WOR_SALE—six room modern bung- alow. 917 6th street. Phone 374 K. ° 23 tt FOR RENT—Small house convenient ly located. Apply C. L.*Burton. 726 tt FOR RENT—Two modern houses. Al- so furnished rooms for light house keeping or otherwise if desired. Phone 404K or call 801 4th street, or inquire of Geo. W. Little, Second Hand store. 7 20 tt so AUTOMOBILES. MOTORCYLES |FOR_ SALE—Smait_ Chrevolet road- ‘ster, excellent. ition. Price right: FOR SALE—Chalmers Six, Pullman Cloverleaf, Buick Four, Studebaker Four, Ford touring ,etc. Corw'n Motor Co. 97 WANTED—Particular. car owners to try GOODYEAR CORD and FABRIC CASINGS. We find they are better. Corwin Motor Co. Bismarck, N. D. ‘ 710 tt FOR SALE—Slightly used camcins trailer. Cheap. Corwin Mets Co a7 ——SSSS——— LOST AND FOUND LOST =Meal ticket of Homan’s Res- taurant. Finder please deliver to 622 Tribune office. BIRD DOGS for sale. Write to H. Walker, Napo-! ‘leon, N. D. 9 111 wk} FOR SALE—Four good sherard pups, | three months old. Good heelers Price $5.00. This_is\a_ bargain. Write or see Gust Sack, » O. B. 128.) Judson, N. D. 9111 wk} china closet, vacuum sweeper, porch swing. Call 1024 5th street. 917 1 wk FOR SALE—One high grade Baldwin plano. “the best. you’can buy,” Will consider trade on old piano. Fol- som Jewelry Store. ‘ DO YOU HAVE an old piano you want to trade on a high grade piano? See Folsom Jewelry Store. ‘ FOR Sa E—Three dressers. two beds, two rockers, one bookcase, ice box, carpet. sweeper; dishes, ete. Call 319 Mandan Ave. FOR SALE—One $65.00 mahogany roll ) top desk, 26x40 inches, $30.00 Fol- som Jewelry Store. FOR SALE—Cheap, hotel im small town, doing good business or will trade for good light six runabont, or touring car. Address 624 Tribune. 9 17 2 wks FOR SALE or trade for good land, confectionery and grocery stock and ixtures, Write 625 Tribune. i 94.7 1 wk. On, | WONDER | TwaT’s For ME { Even if broken, we pay from $2.00 to| $25 per set,, CASH for gold crowng,| bridge work, old gold, silver and plat- inum. Send and recei f turn mail. BERNER'S SPECIALIST, ?2 T N.Y. $ 19 Imo. FOR SALE—Two standard met- al pots for Mergenthaler lino- | type machines; ‘in good condi tion and at a bargain. Bis- marck Pribune. 8-2-tf | 1 \PROPOSALS. The hoard of directors of Hay Creek | chool district No. 31 of Burleigh unty, N. D., will receive sealed pro- pogals, until. 8 o'clock p. m., October Fred Bartholomew of Grand Fork: democratic-independent candidate for to the Daktoa Leader the fol- lowing letter, correcting takes made in a recent article appearing in The Leader: 11, Sept. 1918. | North Dakota Leader, Fargo, North Dakota, My Dear Mr. Editor: I n sure you would not circulate untruths, and Task you for the privilege, through your columns of correcting some erro: i {sue of Sept. 7, 1918. The i {campaign are so large tt there is no room for personalities or misstate- ments, and such «will be my position through the campaign, In your article you say that two years ago I was andidate for con- 6.1 for erecting a two one-class reom me or ti the said school district, in accordance ; with plans .and specifications by A. | Van Horn, architec Separate proposals will be rece! on the-heating system. The right is reserved to reject any or gil bids. y ‘ived intendent of schools, A. Van Horn and P, J. Heltenverg all of Bismarck, N A, certified check for $100 must a company each proposal. Dated at Bismarck, N. D., Sept. 14, 1918. P. J. Heltenberg, Clerk, Hector McLean. President. Bismarck, N. D. 916; 10 16 A Woman's Opinion. “Colonels, generals und military get looked up to considerably,” says Mrs. ‘Tom ‘Thompson, “But any worn can tell you right off the griddle that {t's easier to control a Inindred men than it one.” peas City Star. men UT HARD Fe ? COME DWN AN! building within | & Plans tire on file with County Super-; , HELLO, THERE - How WOULD You LK TO ess and: that I sought the endorse- ‘ment of the League; you are mistaken lin both those statements. I have been ja gandidate for office but once, ‘that was in 1914, before the League ;was organized; hence could not have ‘sought the endorsement of either the League or of its leaders. | You also s that I ace iLeague of being socialistic se the nd dis- loyal. I have never charged the lism, on the contrary, I have atedly declared that the members ‘ot the League anti-socialistic and absolutely patriotic and loyal. 1 e said, what I .now_ repeat, which is, that I believe Mr. Townley, iMr, Thomason and Mr, ‘Teigen, and, in fact, all of the leade who ure in leontrol of the League’s operations, jare soci 3 proof to many of \them lies before me as I write, in the |North Dakota Blue Book. These gentlemen have the right to be socialists if they belieev socialism expresses thei rhopes, aspirations and |beliefs. ee DOINGS OF THE DUFFS ae wes BY ALLMA —— rtf OW, | WovkD ID HAVE DANER WITH ME AND Welt Go To THE THEATER. AFTERWARDS: willingly | and |; j whatever, and the cu: militarist 1 * | government | principles the so lically recommend MA =F hei ao SMELL ANYTHING, “pls 189 pen ict MADE FOR ME ~~ NOW ME 199 PRISONER ITAIN'T ME! WHE PRISONER, \ AINDT \T2~ JA WOHL~ PRISONER: Yaw 2 Gas BARTHOLOMEW CORRCTS MISTAKES MADE BY NORTH DAKOTA LEADER id, what I now repeat, that House Bill 44 and the sed constitutional amendments are, in many particulars, pure s i ance the amendment to h the state and its omary debt lim- is destroyed ; form of so- vith respect thereto the most dangero a. I believe in co-operative enterpris es; the success of the Farmers’ Equit in this state, the Federal Farm: Loan act, the Rochdale Co-operative Stor jof Great Britain and other enterprises sefuln bmmon bi are ample proof of their but there is nothing in‘ ‘tween them and state op, municipally operated farms, ete. Under these amendments any mu- nicipality is authorized to engage in rming operations; bonds could be sued in any amount to buy up the and then it could engage in farming; the authority-is amply suf- ficient; indeed, the legislature, by amending the condemnation statutes could. authorize these subordinate agencies to condemn the land and pay the owners the amount fixed by a enterprises, stores, or its members with disloyalty | jury, I said, what I now repeat, that so- cialism is disloyal and unpatriotic and that no true clalist, is,,,gr can be, loyal and patriotic, uu 1 because of the St. Louis platform adopted by the socialist party in April, 1917 r this country entered the ; this platform was reaffirmed at go by the social. within the last sixty days. Space prevents quoting in full, but among other things in that platform the socialist party declared: 1, “Its unalterable opposition to the war” and it calls upon the work- ers of this country “to refuse to sup- port their government in this war.” 2. “Our entrance into the European instigated by the predatory in the United States. * a The war of the United States Germany cannot be justified on the plea that it is a war in fense of American rights and Amer- ican “honor.” 4. “It is not a war against the egime o {the Central Pow- an ‘ers 0 5. “They (the American people) have been plunged into this war by the trickery and treachery of the rul- ing class of the country * * *, We brand the declaration of war by our as a crime against the people o tthe United States a; in all modern hi ‘no war more unjustifiable tha |war in which we about to en- ‘ * “And in harmony with these alist party emphat- “eu tinuous, active and public op ion to the and to conscriptio: and pledges its mem- bers “to oppose any attempt to, raise money for the payment of war ex- are gage j pense by taxing the necessaries of life or issuing bonds, etc.”, This platform was adopted before the enactment of the sedition * laws, otherwise those who promulgated it would have been sent to the peniten- tiary. And it is because they have persiste- ed in carrying out this platform and teaching these principles that so many of the leaders and organizers of the Nonpartisan League have been con- victed both under state and federal laws and sent to the penitentiary. And it is because of these princi- ples adopted by the socialist party and the fact that the socialists are in control of the Nonpartisan League that we find every pro-German and dis- loyal citizen either a member of, or associated with the League. When the farmers and the people of this state awake to this fact, the leaders of the League will be repudi- ated and the League itself will enjoy a period of success such as it cannot have with these men in control. Respectfully, FRED BARTHOLOMEW. BUY W. 8. 5. How He Had Benefited. Chatty Waiter (to well-known cus- tomer who Is growing stouter)—“I am sure, sir, that your stay down here is 'dotng you good; you're twice the gen- | gleman you were when you came,” 4 aid this, among othet reasons,¥| Vea Fea Pia Pa Pa Wa Pa Fe a | A Proclamation To the Real Liberty Loving One Hundred Per Cent. Pa- triotic Girls and Young Women of the City of Long Branch, i | The war Camp Community Service, through its Registra- tion Committee, will sit in va- rious sections of the City of Long Branch for the purpose of registering girls and young women between the ages of eleven and twenty-one years, inclusive, commencing jMon- day, August 26,"and continu- ing until Saturday, August 81, 1918, Register and render some sort of service which you are best qualified to perform in or- der to assist in winning this war, If you cannot fight In the front ranks you can form a second line of defense by assisting on essential necessi- ties, thereby encouraging the boys at the front and keeping pep in thelr punch, When you do this you will be doing only your full duty to yourself, your City and your Country. Done at City’ Hall, Long Branch, N. J., August 23, 1918. JOHN W. FLOCK, Mayor. | | | MITTLIITLLLLLTLLLLALL LLL LLL TELL | to | Attest: wa A.D. SHERMAN, = City Clerk, PPP EERO PEPER E EEE be ee | a \ Wama Pima Pica Pea Pca Pam Pa PP BANKER, WAITER, COOK 1 IN WAR'S MELTING POT. Speaking of melting pots that have nothing to do with the weather, a banker, a cook and a waiter recently sat on one bench in the St, Paul (Minn.) House of the War Camp Com- munity Service, Before they donned uniforms they had all been at the Wal- dort Astoria Hotel in New York simul- taneously—the banker at the table signing the check, the waiter back of his chair and the cook concocting the food, Italians, Bohemians, Jews, Syrians, Greeks and many other nationalities meet and mingle at this clubhouse. Often when their friends“and families, | join them the different groups chatter away in their native tongues, making a modern Babel that is mighty inter esting to the chance caller. Yet they are all Americans in spirit as fn unl- form, and bringing them together Is. exactly what the Commissions on. Training Camp Activities asked War Camp Community Service to do, | | AN “ALL-HANDS” CANTEEN. J | New Brunswick N. J.’s first Soldigts’ ‘and Sailors’ canteen opened on Satur-. day, August 10, at 4 p. m., according to an announeement made by the War Camp Community Service. It will con- tinue to be open daily and sell many; delightful foods and hot and cold drinks to men in uniform This can- teen might be called an “All-Hands” canteen, as it has been. contributed by. bits from various individuals and firms, one firm contributing a barrel of glasses, another a complete set of dishes, a church lending the silver, etc., until even the matter of food ia disposed of in much ‘the same way. Certain people volunteer to supply all the sandwiches every Tuesday, and thus the good work goes on. With such a co-operative spirit New Brums- wick is sure to have a highly succes E. T. BURKE me Block: N