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TWO POPULAR BIS} MEN “FLi (Continued Frog Li VIC ‘CUMS | Hehiuot building on ‘Thayer j streets, The dece in July and on J sismarck aud Burleigh counts nent In Fr lfor Camp Custem ‘There he w aud tis, family | MD a apie der is executive ability ningewon: him +s} mproy' ns noted, condition > and friends had reason to hope for Mis hw complete, recovery until a suudelen th his father business in the new and Sth 1 was indugtea into the uly he left! with a contingent of other change for the worse came nd he was making ean nt two ago. “Mr, Richholt no CH | yr : iehly in love route home with the remains of bis! with nish in- son. | fine y mp Custer, Frank Richholt, the cider son of} j He was atnong. the first victims to be Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Richholt, was} , and he at the point’ of born in Bismarek on Nov. 1s ps of his sick- month na th He rallied however. only to sut- rs old another and fai yelapse this ttended . + as Jie The deceased is survived hy his er maturity, active ind one brather, Gerald) Rich- in the the Camp Lowvis, ma tionery bu: which his H conducted for so many years on street and.anow. eccitple aati White's confectionery. More récehtly! daughter of Dina “Mr, and Mrs! old Peter | SEE IN THE PAPER © “SHE”—A tailor will make you a-suit for $16.49— why don’t you try him? “HE’_Let me have the paper, dear, just a minute. same paper that we can stop at the Hotel de per—so let’s economize the next time we go for our week-end to Goodtown. We will stop at Hotel de Bum and save a lot of dollars— | “SHE”—What do you mean—are you crazy? “HE"—No, dear—but we both w ould be, if we adopt- ed dither of these plans to economize and expeet to Fetain our self-respect and that of our friends. No, if we go broke we’ will cut out the “week- end —THAT’S ALL We will not put this little scenario on the ee penaitl Ss too true tobe funny: That kind of economy makes everybody miserable— the kind that follows the man who buys TWO “bargain” suits or overcoats for ‘the price of one good one, and mas- querades through the season feeling ashamed of his. clothes, and attempting to m ke excuses for them. ‘alse Economy. i \ HAND PRESSING DRY CLEANING CUSTOM TAILORING EXPERT REPAIRING G.©. Bergeson & SON THE UNION DAYLIGHT STORE OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS-CLOSED SUNDAYS Ue The bank that renders you the best-service is the one whose officers and employes make a point to cultivate your, personai acquaintance so understand ~and with as to meet your neécs promptness and ency. J. L. Bell, Vice President F FE. Shepard,’ Cashier A. J. Arnot, Asst. Cash. | C. B. Little, President The Oldest and Largest Bank in this section of the State MTU EEOC OL Os CUCL CULL COELLLLOLb ADANUEVAUESEQEOEOEUDASUNDAUALODREQDOGUEQEDS £2 (3 SUUBUGUUOVEEOLEUCUGOCUCUOAEEUOLSLCLEDEODSORCOEBUE EL tenn UT 1 Frank G. Grambs » ‘> Successor to GRAMBS & PEET - _- 304 MAIN ST., : BISMARCK, N. D. < . x JOBBERS OF Pipe Fittings & Valves ~All Work positively wiahinteed ? PHONE 561 tl to have an operation for gall stones. si-| Our mail carrier told me-of Mayr’s - | Wonderful Remedy and, on’ his advice, 4 Changes Mind About Going Away “Five years ago doctors told me | would have to move my wife:to an- other climate, as she suffered © so. with stomach and liyer trouble. and bloating. Also, that sen would have she has taken it and is now as well as ever in her life,” Jt is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal nuicus from the intestinal tract, and allays the inflammation which causes practically aH stomach, | liver and intestinal ailments, includ- ing appendic One dose will ¢on- vince or money refunded. ~" Lenhart | Drug Co. —————————— nnn fen, succumbed to at aw local hospital Schoenert of. ! spanish influenza this morning. | MRS, LANGER B } 4 slight improvement. was this morning it the condition of Mrs, | « Her situatign re- ve, however, that her paren have beet’, summoned from Sew York ci and they’ now are en ‘oute to Bisin It was feared this chances of ‘ultimate {recovery are very. § FROM HAZ i Ha the morning, suffering from un attack of Spanish intluenga. jollan Infant. Bessie, 20-months-old ‘daughter of Frank Milhollan, passed away at the family home on Friday night, surviv- ing her mother not quite two weeks. The little tot contracted influenza at about ‘the same time as her mother, who died, two. weeks ago tomorro When Frank Milbollan returned from whither he had accompanied ins of his wife, he found the baby very ill, and in spite of prompt medical attention, the little one did | not ,succeed in shaking off the a Funeral services were held at | Fair iew at 4:15 this afternoon | Mrs. Watson is Called} Mrs, Edith Evelyn Watson, wife ot Ralph M. Watson, formerly assistant | cashier of the City National bank, and for the last two years cashier of the First State bank of Lemmon, S. D, succumbed to infnenza at her home in Lemmon the middle of the | wveek. Funeral services were held at) Mrs. Watson's former home in Min-! neapolis toda: Mr. and, Watson have a host of friends’ in Bismarck, where they made their home for several years. ‘vhey were prominent socially during ‘their stay here, and Mrs. Watson, who iwas a niece of A. R. Rogers, ninth | district.Liberty loan chairnian, was ha particularly lovable young woman. Sh® is’survived by her husband and \two little children. . | Mére Patients Come In. | Probably fifteen new flu, cases have }{ been admitted to Bismarck’s two large \h spitals during the last, 24 hours. | Perhaps a third of these come from iismarcR. The remainder are from | surrounding towns. oth hospitals report an apparent slackening up in | the epidemic although conditions are | still very bad. David Olson of Menoken is very lilt at the Bismarck hospital. C. C. | Mahlman of Bismarck, a patient at ‘the same hospital, shows a favorable improvement today. i eset | GENERAL IN MEXICO. ; Mexico City, Oct. 2 Spanish in-j fluenza is epidemic in practically all parts of the republic. Newspapers | estimare’the number of cases here at, 60,000, but the dea’ rate is low. - yf | ! E. s&s. PETER ON DEAD. + Park Rivr, N. D., Oct. 26.—Attorney \f Smith Peterson died here today from pneumonia. He was 54 years old jand came to America in 1885- from | Burnstad, Norway, He is succeeded !by two sons, Fréd and George veter- i son. * | MRS. YOUNG DEAD. | Washington, Oct. 26.—Mrs. “Ella Flagg Young of Chicago, chairman of the Nationa} Woman's Liberty com- mittee, died here today of pneumonia following an attack of the Spanish influenza. — SAUy,w. & 8. [PETAIN SMASHES THROUGH | “TEUTON DEFENSES FOR | GAIN OF TWO MILES (Continued , From Page One.) ‘| from the city in March, 1917. In strip- ping every factory in the city,, the Germans cartied off_all »models and designs, and even the accounts of the acre eee 0) MILES. Washington, Oct. 26.—Suminarizing the situation tod: al” March said that: ‘the Germans had evacnted or béen driven out of 7.060. square SVACUAT! | Cuticura Heals | | Stubborn Eczema On Head, Forehead: and Face, Itching and Burning So - Could Not, Rest. Used Three Cakes Soap and Stirring events in the great world war have ailawed one upon the other Sith such bewildering. F swiftness recently that the: various changes leading:&p to the presents ‘situation are. not clear insthe * |) public mind, the confession. body wants.to group together just as before great di This article treats every angle of the war and will be read with enthusiasm by the” ‘American public. s *\ The Idading article int ‘THE. LITERARY DIGEST ‘this eae Geb 26th—clar ifies, the war news oe so as to give the reader a grasp of the entire subjegt. That “only military reasons” could have compelled z the groveling T euton, pleas for: peace was clear enough even if a leading German newspaper had not made ry ‘Only..military reasons” in the shape of Allied victories from “Dixmude to Damascus” accounted for the reported revival of gaiety in Paris, while neutral observers told show i in Berlin “every- sasters.” It is ilustrated by.a large’full-page colored Map with a complete index., - Other. articles of special importance ¥ m the oe 26th “DIGEST” are: ‘Moré U-Boat Savagery -; ; France’s Storied Fields “ =. S (Prepared by the U. S. Bureau of Education) / Germany’s Colonial Crimes - Eurépe Admiring Yankee Teeth Seeing Through Brick Walls. - nies _How Museums Help Win the War Are: Your. Phonograph Records Slacking? - ~ Prince: Max’s Applied Christianity News af Finance and Commerce 1 a Many Fine Illustrations, In “THE DIGEST” NOW SOLD ON A STRICTLY NON-RETURNABLE BASIS With. this number—October, 26th—THE LITE ARY DIGEST is sold to news-dealers upon a stric ly non-returnable basis.. This means that’ new: dealers will buy. omly enough copies of | “T| Digest” to furnish regular patréns. Our actionM®s made necessary by the ruling of the War Indus- tries Board calling upon publishers. to conserve paper, freight tonnage, labor, power, etc., by a October 26 Number on Sale Today Passing Sentence on ‘the Kaiser and His People ‘ > A. Review by the American and European Press of Germany’s Pleas for Peace to le Tas Warand the New Congress The-Voice of British Labor Through Rapine'to Peace : 5 Foch as the Huns See Him, ; yA Peach Stones for Gas-Masks. : Troning Out Iron os Literary Prophets Who Day . A French Leader for the Boston. Symphony ’ Are We Growing Profane? ‘ Best of the:Current Poetry nm cludiag Maps, Cartoons, Ete. ing publishing to actual demaifd. their news-dealersif they. would it regularly, tell the news-dealer to save ne: for you, or, better -yet, several future numbers. This is the only way to insure your régeiving “The pet Digest” regularly from the news-dedler. Al News-dealers-. 10: Cents LITERARY DIGEST should place an order with When you buy thi x Foresaw Our> Readers of. ‘THE be sure of,getting is week’s number, . xt week’s' number ital previously miles of territor¥“smee July, 18, and | wounds, 17° sick in hoj “otal 45, that all the coal fields <in north} reported™missing. 3: France_have been reconquered | Privat DIED OF UNS.) for a. mile tract neat the” ‘wan C. Walker, ora, 10.4 border. ont.) * | DIED OF@ EASE. | Corporal: MAINTAT AO. 2. La J fet, Elk Riyer, With the Amer@ities are~N. W ha pnerenae 79 3 a of Verdun, Oct, 26% genepsi’ MISSINGe tg CTION.’ : Friday by. America® tPoors west of the Mense were today in spite of violent sery e 1 Ms position against the Am net rc OH in ae lines and the areas in therma ° Jhissing, Vi thé extreme Jeff — the\ “Wmerick'S, 4 iin, a De strengthened their olds: on posit! a gained in the Bourgogne Wood. £ Private: LB jnton, intuined viously report: arbinskd, Glen 950 MORE RED CROSS DRIVERS | KRAVIELYO OCCUPIED. London, /.Oct.’ 26—Kravielvo, niles east-northeast fos occupied by -Serbian troops bian official ‘statement of Frid the same region, the Serbians crossed the Tsarnitsa Pree i Fallen For Freedom SECTION NO. A The following casualties are report- Led by the Commanding general of the. if Amorican Expeditionary forces: Kill-| 1° ed. in action, 5; died of disease, 4;' wounded severely, 1; wounded degree undetermined, ~ 42; wounded slightly, 27. Total, 109. , x S DIED OF DISEASE. x 60 ny. Chicago! Oct, 24 26M jor H.P. Hard: ing. commander %€ Camp Scott, Chi- ‘0; the official training camp, of Red . announced that because ilities at the barracks; 5 950 more/met for duty yin France and Italy. ‘This ection is} open to men under, 18 years, or over > ious. It 48 necessary that the ap- x experience. A course Of intensive training Inst- ing four weeks is given, consisting of Willie H. Cordes, Lockout. Mont. | John £.~ Shaughnessy, ‘Migsoura,|,. Mont. my SEVERELY WOUNDED, MECHANIC "FRANK H. HUMPH-| The Glorious “Knowledge Wome Two Boxes of Ointment. “I had a very stubborn case of ec- 2ema on my head, forehead and face. It commenced like a rash and gave me a great deal of trouble in the way of itch- ing and burning, untih I could not rest nights. - At burned lo get up at night and bathe. “Thenl got ssp Saar ece and Ointment. - I purchased more; and abcut three.cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Ointment’ healed.” - (Signed) R.L.St. John, M. D., Union-~ ville, Mo., July 19, 1917. ‘When used for every-day toilet put- poses, Cuticura Ray Bergh noe str purifies and beautifiesbut it prevents many little skin roubles if assisted by occasional use of Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal the first signe of skin .troubles.g y-bsolutely nothing better. Sampts Each Free by Mail. Addr card: “Cari Serica eae See ole we _ REY, Churches Ferry, N. D. Gain When | Wonderful Thought Arthur R. Wendland, Hawkeye, Ta. Stuale‘Qver Them. - “ s SLIGHTLY WOUNDED. Privates: z Leonard N; Gaustakt; Moose Lake, Minn. i ghd SECTION NO. 2. The following éasualties are report- ed by the commanding general of the American Expeditionary forces: Kill- ed in action 1; Died from accident and other causes, 2; lied of disease, 8; wounded, degree undetermined, 83; inissihg: in action, 6,"Tota}; 105. ' MISSING /1N ACTION." Private” Willard Nellson, Minneapolis. inn. . qlisptineet in. tts most® thi ng conies to woman with’ = ‘though! 1 — MAR.NE CORPS Gasuarties. ‘The following casualties are report- ed by the commanding general of the American’ Expeditionary forces: Kill- ed in action, 1; died of wounds re- geived inaction, 5; died of disease, 17; ‘wounded in action severely, ;, miss- Ing in action, 15; sick in ospital, clas D, previousty ‘reported D nw for ‘so man: ae ee dent bets Paar ee tee Fer hie ae Tid resmeaber, there ts of iLewet MOtHERS se aie wer is atsolul y Minneapolis, Fan¢ TO BE TRAINED) -five and to men in deferred class~) ant have at least ong year's: drive 4 Comes in the Night mechanical. training.and military. dis: cipline. 7: Actual work in’ constructing and reassembling-automobiles is: given. A driving course, which. isx.as: rough the roughest spots Jn No. Man’s }Land, adjoins the biracks, and. the driver is required to cover this-course under all conditions, at certain: speeds ‘and with certain loads. Forty dolars. a month and -maintey- ce, inclxding equipment, is paid_aft- er sailing and half pay and mainten- ance while training. \Recruiting head- quarters of the Automotive and Me- ichanical sections is at 528 People’s | Gas building, Chicago, Ml. How Long. Must I | Is there no real relief in sight? \ Doubtless like other suffeitrs, you |. have often asked yourself this ques- tion, which contifues to remain un- answered. | Science has u Rheuniatisim is germ in | your blood, and the.only way to 1 peach itis by a remedy which elim- _ inmates and-remhov hese little pain demons from your blood. This ex- plains why Jiniments and lotions can do ‘no permanent good,’ for jthey oven that your ie 4 ~ < I tiny pass dollars that cou! ie : > ‘Highest wind velocity ~ We have a location to rent past which, every. _. Why tot.come in and ask us about the business locations we have to offer. : Bismarck Really Compan WEATHER‘ REPORT, Ror #venty-foux hours ending vats (noon, Oct, 26. e Temperature pt 7\a: m. Temperature ‘at noon Highest’ yesterday Lowest yesterday . west last night mecipitation .... Forecast. : For North Dakota: Generally fair ’ tonight and Sunday; warmer central portion tonight and east and_ central portion Sunday: ORRIS W, ROBERTS, Meteorologist. i ee From the Pangs of Rheumatism? canngt Possibly reach these germs which infest your bloot’ by. the mil- lions. > S.S. S. has been-successfully used for Rheumatism for more than fifty years.. Try it to-day, and you will” Mind yourself at last_on the right track to geét rid of! your Rheuma- tism, You tan {get valuable advice about the treatment of yout indi- vidual case by wyiting tb thecChief Medical Adviser, Swift Specific Co. Dept: D,“Atlanta- Ga. d/be brought into a store. North Dakota :