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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered af the Fostoffice, Bismarck, NR. D, as Second Class Matter GEORGE D. MANN “—_@, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, portation. Special Foreign eer eAGO, Marquette | the gasolineless Sunday rule in effect west of the | Kresege| Mississippi you can make up your mind that the)! ifue’ administration department would not hesi-| The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use tate to do so. From all that can be learned the} pab- West is confining its automobiling very principally || ‘ness and its very strictest requirements, : ta xEW YORE, ee IN, 3 Winter DETROIT, aie eee N pois. 810 Lumber Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS for republication of all news credited to it or not wise credited in this paper and also the local news ; to ts r abe ights of publication of special dispatches herein without tre also All rights of of special dispatches herein rig! pablication Bre also reserved. Ee MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier per year day would work more of a hardship in the west | than in the east because the automobile is used t travel such great distances across country, i ° eater | many instances it being the only means of tran: If it would become necessary to pu any order. DON’T LET SUCCESS SWELL YOUR HEAD. |} Nearly every man who has made good acquires) j,, crt7%'o9 an air of certainty and_ self-confidence which curator of the Historical society. tand out above the crowd. Daily mail E oe t Daily By mail ger gear (in state). 4.00 makes hi: Daily by mail outside of North Dakota. es SUBSCRIPTION, RATES (In North Dakota) there are One year by mail.. «$4.00 Six months b; Three months +. 1.00 One year a months *1t gg annoyance. 3.00 | Six months .. pes months cy “59 | ness. THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. j (Established 1878) A GREAT DECLARATION. Gee NITEDQTATES What Germany wanted, whether she has a gov- ernment of and by her people or by her autocrats, nconditional urrender’ was time. One of the greatest things that Wilson ever got off is his declaratidiffthat the process of evacua- tion and conditions of an armistice must be left to the judgment of the military advisors. Will Foch and Haig, Pershing and Allenby give bombs, tanks, gas, grenades and a hundred differ-' man who stood out when he was at his best, Can't enoiee “aud aicbursenicnts of $3008 ent varieties of powder and shot. This is the onlY pope to win against these when he has distinct] Tt : : slumped in his interest and in his aggressivenes If you're in his class, you'd better get a new grip Industries board, with ~25,000 is the} on yourself—forget about your past successes, and, put yourself into an open-minded, open-hearted} Democrats, including Vance McCor-! sure cure for Hunism. PU Let’s give the same deaf ear to the arch fiend | of Berlin, who has led his uncivilized hordes of | titude, so that life will take on the freshness-of|™ick-2ud A. Mitchell beasts in men’s image on to unspeakable crimes, | that his cruel followers have given their victims, until the brutal Huns are completely defeated and | crushed to a pulp. For soon he may forget the way he struggied—' bones. ‘when he was down near the bottom—to make! things “come his way” whether he was a leader, ‘in a world-wide enterprise or just a gang-boss in! Elbe and the Oder. the shop on on a road job, or whether he was sell-! ing goods. | But now—he may get the impression that he’s} so far above the rest of us that he can’t afford to: DEMOCRATIC seem like a “common -hustler’—and he stands! aloof, able, efficient, but feeling that the job must now come to him. i And he'll awake some day—maybe when his: compet:tors have passed him in the race—to find: out what he himself once so strongly believed, that jobs don’ For there are the Hun time? They'll give the Hun balonets, chafing at the bit —eager to be let go—and the:ded that of t come that way. your early successes. | New Zealand’s death rate is less than one per of bath parties. The Demoera ;cent. What we want is not a lower death rate bu Then the officers from the lowest to the high-/, jower living rate! { est who have ordered these crimes should be! sought out. Our soldiers should go all over the; empire to capture them and bring them before an|new novelty. Were baseball in season, we could, international court martial, where they should be! visualize tried for the high crimes against civilization! which they ordered. And then they should be shot, hanged and im-igonne drive. Fritz may well do some backing’ up] sea tio this combination. prisoned, according to their just metes——Denver!when the Yank gets HIS back “up.” Express. KS FORWARD. DRESS RAN ; The German notes not only had nothing to tay, ; REMOVE ‘but said it poorly. Even the crown prince, how- | Sir Eric Geddes, first lord of the British admir-|ever, could understand Wilson’s notes. alty, makes the startling declaration that the, U-boat menace is greater today that it ever was. | He urges America to turn out destroyers and anti-|ships if we could have unequivocal assurance that | gn poison. submarine craft to the limit. And adds: “There | one of the “details” of the peace settlement will be} before the poison has tinte to ¢o is) ’ is no greater need today than the need for the|drastic punishment for every responsible German’ utmost naval effort against the greatest offensive \criminal. of the submarine which is now materializing.” | It has been the opinion of the British admiralty ; for some time past that Germany was construct- ing a large fleet of submarines of greater strength | Sitting in the United States senate. It would be fundamental | and sailing radius than any which have yet ap- peared for the sole purpose of breaking up Amer- ica’s rescue of the allies. 1a would be a different Germany from. the peace, chattering, humbled Germany of today. She must | Ino fit place for It would buck us all up for the winter war hard-|have on hand and keep a supply and | fortunately, there is no imminent danger of womeN| are cther wives and mothers and chil- women without ichanges in senatorial courtesy. WHY WE SUPPORT DOYLE. | being made on the western front to get all her!nor of North Dakota? power well in hand there she must have time. Perhaps there are some voters not familiar Dr. M. R. Gilmore, curator of museum, whose collection of war | WAR POSTERS SHOW THE PULSE OF EUROPEAN CO-BELLIGERENTS plete in America, if not for the world, translations of some of the characteristic posters which are now on display in the reading room of the museum. Nothing more clearly reveals the pulse of America’s European co-belligerents, and The Tribune will Present in this column one of these translations eac hday until the en- tire number has been given its readers. the North Dakota state historical posters is probably the! most com- bas made for The Tribune Description and translation of | French War Poster recently acquired | by the State Historical Society by ex- | change from France The following description and trans- This poster is one of the class of in- | Structional.. posters used throughout He shouldn't be blamed for this—assuming that | France for the information of the peo- 2me who charge him with conceit—_! ple. | history of Prussia. The head-piece of 2.00 because in his thinking and working he quite | the poster is a shadow design of the naturally fell into the mood of being alone so that; Prussian eagle. Ac $5.00 he could plan and execute, without distraction OF | representing militarism; at the right | side is a cocked hat and wig to repre tion are furnished by Dr. Gilmore. 42, gained their independence. aVistula and the themselves in 1226 in the region where today stands Berlin. Prussians Poles. By War and by Perfidy 1525 a Hohenzollern took the title of prince. By War and by Perfidy Prussia prospered with By War and by Perfidy Prussia a great power. By War and by Pertidy | | { i ; } Nieman, planted But the! were the vassals of the} EI the Great: | It ief review of the Elector Frederick William, whose son sives_ 2 sbrie Frederick was crowned king in i702. | gssistant ri Dal the left side of Frederick conquered Silesia, brought | morrow for Minneapo | the sheet is the design of a casque, the disruption of Poland and made} joins the forces of the |terrea from Aneta to a larger field at jSarles. | Aandahi Home, home from Chicago,-where he attend- ed an interstate car distribution con- ference at the LaSalle on Friday. To Registrants of September 12. | There is still a chance for you t | be inducted into the S:udents’ Army ‘raining corps at Jamestown college | |tf yoy hace 13 or more high school | peredics and apply at one. Time limit) No influenza there for} j October 30.. jten days past. Packing Plant Progress. | Ps M. Casey, president of the Co- \perative Packing Plant Co. at Fargo, advises that machinery finally is be- In ling installed after several weeks’ de- lay, and that work is progressing as | favorably as could be expected upon} ithe cottages for the workingmen. Goes to Twin City Bank. Miss Bessie Varney, who has been cashier at nk for a number of years, leaves to- where she rst Security ; and National bank, which is the larg- fest financial institution in the Twin sent diplomacy. The foot-piece a copy this power increased itself. especially | Cities. The great legion of her friends {| plunged through it. Scattered about 300 strength. But in this also lies his greatest weak-' "Evins and bones of. battlefields and smouldering fire and smoke. Car- !rion birds are picking among the The text of the poster is as, follows: PRUSSIA'S PAST. Formerly Slavs were between the By War and by Pertidy the Prussians, established between the COMMITTEE 3B. Washington. © Expense ac- ungsters in training who are} counts filed with the House today in-} National Dem- owing receipts of he jocratic committee 71459. The Republican national com- B. M. Baruch, chairman of the War fund. Palmer= are} named as lending $150,000 to the com- | ) mittee. ; Reports also were filed by the sen-} j atorial and congressional committees | sen- {| torial committee reported receipts of ‘only $1,000,950. donations by nator | |mittee’s statement has not been filed. and of France. In 18 king proce uermany. Ey War and by Perfidy Germany declared in 1914 that neces- sity is under no law and that treaties are nothing 0 raps of pa at this time see part of Asia. Germany bas forced the_world to combat egainst Eer., to rule Europe and Emil Larson, Jewel) Iowa. Osmund Oslund, Eutialo Center, Is ARTHUR TIEDEMANN, Jamestown 'N. Dak. WOUNDED SEVERELY. | Corporats: Royal L. Richards, Lewistown, Mont Privates J Harry T. Oliver, New nia, [2. i WOUNDED, Lindetermined. : Sergeant: Harley J-Campbell, Minburn, Ia. | Privates: Carl M. Broman, Duluth, Minn. Eugent Carlson, Duluth, Minn. Roy Edwards, Brainerd, Minn. Albert Sandzak, Broadview, Mont. | John A. Fox, Decorah, Iowa. Lawrence S. Molde, Rochester, largest contributor to the Democratic | Minn. He with a number of other | Henry J. Schmidt, Jetfers, Minn. Thomes S. Senkyr, Olivia, Minn: WOUNDED SLIGHTLY. | Privates: And this has, in a measure, been his tower of ine an engrossed treaty with a sword at the expense of Austria, of Denmark, | here will wish Miss Varney every suc- j;eess in her new position, where her imed himself emperor of | vancement. at Versailles, the Prussian |raients are sure to tell in rapid ad-| FUNER AL RITES | ij | per. and | ' } { | { i | are we LAST RITES FOR CHRISTIAN.LUCAS Funeral Services’ Held . This Morning for Prominent Bis- marck Young Man. d upostentatiousiy as bh€| brief young life, the re- ian G. Lucas were laid forenoon in St. Marys es at the Lucas chapel on Main streer. The Very Rev. M. J. Hiltner, vicar general of the Bismarck diocese, conducted the rites. which were at- tended py the immediate family and . the most intimate friends of he de-j; Ernest H. EBengtson, Swea City, [3-} ceased. : The paltbearers. selected from the ranks of Bismarck council, Knights; of Columbus, of which the deceased was on active member, were John Maasen, Jr. Ed White, Thomas | y , J. B. Hall d Walter C. Parsley, Hornick, Iowa: | 5G, Harry Homan, J. B. Halloran am Among those from out of town who came for the funeral were Drs. C. H. Kohler of Minneapolis and F. G. Kob- ler of Hector, :Minn., uncles of the de- Wilbert E, Mulnix, Cedar Falls, 1a.| ceased. Edward Kalous, Cedar Rapids, Ta.j Hartsell C. Mills, Springtield. S. D-: in mourning in sympathy with Mayor) Harvey J. Sieversing. Bellevue, Ia. MISSING IN ACTION. Pittman of Nevada, and Senator Gary | Lieutenant: of Rhode Island, while -Republican | contributions were 371,900, and ex-/ congressional committee reported re} 7,632, while the Republican com- spent $140,895. out of its ‘re its of $159,398. The Democrats! ot $s mit ss fe ~ , cep | The Americans back up the poilus in their Ar-igaid all but about $7,000 came from | mal col ict ' Bu .— i LANGER’S DUTY.TO | LID) (Comtinued From Page One) H | When a person is bitten by a rattle-! | snake or flu germ, he has no time to [send off for liquor. Everyone should} | know how to use it to counteract the} The ‘antidote must be used | deadly work. | “The attorney general knew how to! save the life of his own good wife by | | securing a friend to rustle for him a} {bottle of good. whiskey—and in that The British commons admits women, but, un-|he did right, regardless of any take Statute to the contrary. But there | }dren to protect against the sudden at-; tack of the deadly pestilence, and} there are others who cannot secure a | friend in need to rustle for them a! | bottle of whiskey. Their position is; [mot as good as that of the attorney j | general. prosecuted any | governor of the state, the attorney To a great extent | this may be done by telegraphing the express companies, and the j houses to accept and fill orders for We may live to learn that during this palaver enough with the politics of North Dakota to see|the delivery of liquor to any part of the state. and by giving due publicity about armistice we were standing on the brink of |the consistency for themselves, so it is a fair! £6 the fact that.the bone dry statute an abyss. Let us not take our minds and efforts enough question, and should have a straightfor-! . ie ward answer. To begin with, party labels have no meaning in| E ofypitor North Dakota aoe days. E i ! CEG Yo Note how the Nonpartisan league candidates are running on the republican ticket in North Dakota; pes When Fue] Administrator Garfield and Oil Ad-|on the democratic ticket in Idaho; on a whiskey ministrator Requa announced that gasless Sun- | ticket in Minnesota ; and on a national party ticket | , off unconditional surrender for one minute. On to Berlin. And buy more bonds. EAST OF THE MISSISSIPPI. days would apply only to territory east of the Mis-|in Montana. sissippi a great many people wondered about this. They were anxious to know why one part of the Bf country should be affected by the order and’the|manent lodgings. They steal the organiza-! 5 : wo other not affected. Here is the official statement leone they iii comes convenient ae kiss en as died o disease, 92) 5 weaned peveroly jlong as they are of value. | have stolen the republican nest. The Forum fers to roost with the other birds while they regarding it. “The appeal for a gasolineless Sunday was re- stricted to the territory east of the Mississippi river for the reason that the shortage was acute jin it. at the eastern seaboard, and the reserves there that territory than in one far removed, although the stocks in the east were to be further augment- ed by shipments from territory west of the Mis- sissippi river, namely, the mid-continent field, without it being necessary to restrict the use of automobiles in that district for the present at least.” Thus it could be maintained quicker by a curtailment in/one of principles. The Nonpartisans are the cuckoos of politics They build no nests of their own; have no per-/ American Expeditionary forces: Kill- | The issue then is not one of party labels, but | It is an issue between democ- racy and socialism. There is only one choice for| sergeants: an American to make. We can’t support Governor Frazier because he} stands for removing the limit from the bonded in-| debtedness of North Dakota; for removing all re- strictions on how the money shall be spent; for) : removing all bars to equality in taxation and put-| ~ aitrea Elie: Johnson, Blue Earth, a is, seen that the government had good | ting into effect the single tex on land; for House! Minn. t sated practical reason for making the gasolineless Sun- Bill 44 and sll thet % isaplies; for removing alt} Hote’ day order just the way it did, besides it is prob-| safeguards that stend between "gible that the enforcement of the gasolineless Sun-! and the Townley gang-—Fargo the public funds water (axe. Fallen For Freedom | a ee eg i SECTION NO. 1. The following casualties are report-’ *\ ed by the commanding general of the i ed in action, 38; djed of wounds, 5 |121; wounded, degree undetermined. In North Dakota they | 27;: wounded slightly, 228; missing in pre-| action, $5; prisoners, 2; Te aero | wrt plane accident, 6. Total, é i KILLED IN ACTION Privates: Charles Skewers, St. Paul, Minn. g Herman, ‘Minn. | DIED OF WOUNDS. f a Frank Brown, Glendive, Mont. | receipts of $132,900 and expenditures | 2 ' . zs }general and the judges to do all in|}in Why should The Forum, a republican Ne€WS-| théir power to abate it and to give the | realize as everybody else does that the decision is| Paper, support S. J. Doyle, a democrat, for gover- | people poems access to the. best | Bugler: ee it Lester Harter, Keokuk, Iowa. Privates: A megaphone and fan has been combined in @ipentitures $56,805. ‘The Democratic; John C. Pressman, Orange City, Ia. Ernest C. Hayes, Valley Junction, Ia BUY WLS. S. DON’T FORGET TO REGISTER} If you would land the kaiser a jolt in his solar plexsus, don’t: forget to register tomorrow, providing: You have moved since the primary election from one voting precinct to another; You had not lived long enough in the state or county or voting precinct, one year, six montlis, ninety days. respectively ,to vote at the primary election; You have attained the age of 21 or. become a naturalized citizen since the primary election. Registration boards will sit in every voting precinct tomorrow. It will be your last chance to register. In Bis- marck the registration places are: WARD ONE—North Ward School. WARD TWO—Faunce building, Fourth street. WARD THREE—New High School. WARD FOUR—Northwest hotel. WARD FIVE—Soo hotel. WARD SIX—City Hall. ALY W. 5. $,——— Bleick Has It. ‘Charles W. Bleick of Elgin, railway Back From LaMoure. Miss Luella Diesem has returned ing her brother-in-law, W. C. Taylor, the publication of the LaMoure Chronicle. ‘ To Detroit, Mich. Hazel Mead left on No. 4 this morn- liquor | ing for Detroit, Mich. She will visit at the home of her parents for a few jays and then enter a training school as nurse. } Entire Force Out. Chairman James A. Brown and Miss Beatrice McQuillan, stenographer, were the sum totat of the state board of control force Saturday. “All oth- ers had flu. i Goes to Saries. Rev. W. L. Clough, a veteran North }Dakota minister of the Methodist church and father of Harry E. Clough, chief clerk of the North Dakota rail- way administration, has been trans- HUMPHREYS’ ‘The full list of Dr. Ha:aphreys* Remedies for Internal and external use, meets the needs of families for aeariy every ailment from Infancy ty old age—Cescribed in Dr. Humphreys" Manual matied free. PARTIAL LIST i i ne i, 1- Fevers, Congestion:. Inflammetions ‘2. Worms, Worm Fever 3. Colte. Crying. Waxefulness of Icfance 4. Disrrbes of Children and aduits ‘7. Coughs, Colts, Bronchitis 8. Teotbache, Faceache. Neuralgia ®. Headache, Sick Headache. Vertigo Dyspepsie.i Weak Stomach (Creep. Hoarse Cough. Laryngitis Eczems, Eruptions. Rhesmetism. Lumbago Fe Adee, Maiaria 7. Piles, Blind. Bleeding Interr.3t NaRahe i t i 1. Caterrh, Infinenzs. Cold in Head DIED OF ACCIDENT. 20. + 21. Difficult Breathing 27. Diserders of the Kidneys 2 77. Geto. Getvve. L. Cron, Cedar Rapids, Ia. ROLAND W. JONES, , N.D.| Forsale by druggists everswhere, Lioyd E. Biack, Bemis,.8. D. BUMPHREYY HOMEO. MEDICIST CO, Vv Johnsog: Hasty, S.D. | @aeeer Willem and. Ana’ Bireen Sow Yorb And this is due to the rigor C7mmissioner, is confined to bis home, f Se A en a A A | } Germany with her forces in hand from Russia, | }with which he has the Balkan regions and Finland and with serious WITH THE EDITORS |silotion..of thes fake’ statute. | f . : S S ‘Now that such a great pestilence is Hl ' interruption of our trans-Atlantic transportation upon us, it is the manifest duty of the | from LaMoure, where she was assist- Bismarck generally bowed its head and Mrs, A. W. Lucas and with a per- ‘sonal sense of deep loss in the pass- ing of a young man of such brilliant } promise. 7 ALLIES LAUNCH BLOW ~ “ON SUNDAY WHICH IM- PROVES. POSITIONS (Continued From Page One.) “The Bulgars sent large numbers of Greek children into Bulgaria with- out their parents knowing. the pur- pose of the Bulgariaas. here is a 14-year-old Greek girl, who was outrageously treated by the Bul- garians, who murdered her father and mother. The girl died as a result of inhumane treatment at the hands of Bulgarian officers.” TAKE 327,417 PRISONERS. London, Oct. 28.—British troops have taken 327,417 enemy combatant prisoners. There are 97,000 German combantant prisoners in the United Kingdom at the present time. ENTRY OF AMERICANS. London, October 2S.—American troops have entered the ughting east of Attigny, capturing 172 prisoners. the war office announces. The Amer- ican advance was made in the region of the forest south of the Aisne, in the region of Attigny and Vourcgq. * CONTINUE ADVANCE. Paris, Oct. 28—The French con- tinue their advance between\the Oise and the Aisne, especially on the left advance. The war office today an- nounces the capture of Hill 123, north of Coucy, on the Fere. THREE AMERICANS ESCAPE The Hague, cct. 28.—Three Ameri- | can prisoners of war have escaped from Germany into Holland. the Bismarck} after private funeral ser-/ In a hospital | | DONT | Dr. King’s New Discovery 4 ‘almost never fails to” bring quick relief Small doses once in awhile and that’ throat-tearing, Jung-splitting soon quiets down. Another dose a hot bath before jumping into bed, a good sleep, and back to normal in the morni 5 3 : | Dr. a New Discovery is well i ‘nown. For fifty years it’s been relieving coughs, colds and bronckial attacks, For fifty years it has been sold by druggists everywhere. A reliable remedy that you yourself orany anember of your family can take safely, 60c_and $1.20. | ‘Train Those Stubborn Bowels H Help nature take its course, not | with a violent, habit-forming purga- | tive, but with gentle but certain and | natural-laxative, Dr. King’s New Life Pills. Tonic in action, it stimulates the | lax bowels. Sold by druggists. 25c, FRANK RICHHOLT \Services to be Held Privately at i Webb Undertaking Rooms . Tomorrow. i pallets. | . The remains of Frank Richholt, who passed away at Camp Custer, Mich.. ‘on Saturday, reached the city at noon i today, accompanied by H. W. Rich- holt, father of the deceased, who was | with his son when the end came. The body was taken to the Webb Bros, undertaking rooms where it will yntil tomorrow afternoon, when pri ate. eral. services will be held. Ger- | siaereiobnoit only brother of the de- | ceas€d, ison his way home from Camp | Lewis, American Lake, Wash., and is expected to arrive this evening or |on No. 4 tomorrow morning. Old friends of Frank Richholt will | bear his remains to their final rest- ing place tomorrow afternoon. The pallbearers will be Harry Wood- mansee, Robert Dutton, A. J. Arnot A. BE. Olson, Roy Logan and Ben Lenhart. Elmo No. 4 i’. There is universal mourning in B: {marck for one of the city’s vest- ; Known native-born. Few young men | were more generally popular or had more friends in the city than Frank Richholt, who was born here and {whose entire life was spent in Bis- marck. DUAL MONARCHY READY TO MAKE SEPARATE AND. IMMEDIATE PEACE (Continued: From Page One.) | “The military. powers are also sub- | Ject to it. j “The German government awaits (proposals for an armistice. which | shall be the first steps toward a just peace as the president has prescribed jin bis proclamation. | “Signed: SOLZ.” CY Ww. Ss, { HUGH HALL HOME. Secretary of State Thomas Hall last {week ran down to Jamestown for a brief visit with his brother, Hugh Hall, formerly assistant chief clerk in the ! Dakota division offices of the North-, ; ern Pacific at Jamestown and Fargo and now chief accountant for the Spo- kane, Portland & Seattle Steamship & Railway'Co. Hugh Hall, son of a pioneer of the Cornish colony which emigrated from Michigan to Stutsman county in the early ’S0's, has hundreds of friends in North Dakota who are glad to know that he is making mighty good out west. MOTHER'S FRIEND FOR : | Expectant Mothers _# PENETRATING LINIMENT A.PENETRATING LINIMENT | FOR RENT b rartly furnished, \modern house. ; Two blocks from post office, J. B. HALLORAN & CO. i : Insurance, Bismarck Bank Building, PET) NO ONE KNOWS— selves. industry. be much smaller. » We suggest that you buy close Government’s request. CUSTOM TAILORING EXPERT REPAIRING Protect Yourself— Against the Rise You know the standard quality ahi the price of our clothes today—but what will be the price'and the qual- ity of your next suit or overcoat? "We do not even know whether the woolen mills wi make the cloth we have on order for next season. ‘They are working on government contracts will do next month or next year they do not know them- _ Uncle Sam has complete control of the wool and cloth We know positively clothes will not be as chi again as long as the war lasts and that the assortment will In order to do our ‘‘bit’’ in saving light and fuel we except Saturdays in compliance with the 5.E. BERSESON & SON » THE UNION DAYLIGHT OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS-CLOSED SUNDAYS ° \ now. What they now. HAND PRESSING DRY CLEANING NNDANGUSUAANUNUCASAESONNANNEOUONSNOGEONONOUONOUOOSOOOSLONONOOSOSUSONNSSOSsOsGusuOuonsosusdsusosusosuenensnenusensscnosnsssd STORE |S. J. Aandahl of-Litebville, chair-| KEEP YOU AT HOME man of the state railway board, is} { —_—_—_— oon » CON é ; de va