Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
FRECKLES AND HIS _. FRIENDS. By ‘Blosser IT WAS’ A SHARP CAT., res BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUN _ ‘SQUIRREL FOOD By Ahern Ki THERE WOULDN'T BE ANY FUN IN IT IF THEY DIDN’T HAVE A FIGHT. \ ‘10 cLANCY! pIDNT SEE YOU <QVTTIN' IN-ON TH’ CARD GAME LAST NIGHT ! ae AOW IVE TOLD YoU For. WE LAST TIME To PUT THAT KAIFE DOWN = YouUL } cur Your HAND OWNER You Jv: HOWJA (AN’.O) WINT QUT FORSOME HEINIES t CMON: PUSSY <DUSSY = ~ SMART ARE YA~ WELL, SCRATCH ME AN' SEE WHAT YA GET! our @ GONNA GET. st TRY Tt PAN ACROSS A FLOCK OF THIM ASLEEP IN A DUGOUT ~ SEE~T Told You, You'd CUT YouRSELF = You WON'T USTEN Td YOUR FATHER. WILL You 2 DIDNT. GET CUT ON TH KNIFE ~ 1 GOT CUT ON TH’ CaT!! be “TH. SNORES, EH? Pa Classified Advertising Rates. - Terms Strictly Cash—No Copy Without Remittance Attached Will be Inserted. First insertion, 35 cents; addi of copy, 15 cents. Advertisement: will be charged at the rate of two cents a word for each additional! "OR RE THE TRIBUNE'S CLASSIFIED COLUMN ey tional insertions without change s containing more than 25 words word. A HELP WANTED—MALE ___ MISCELLANEOUS LOCOMOTIVE FIREMBN—$150-$200| GARAGE FOR, SALE—Also_ electri monthly, en perience unmeceezary ally’ operated dictaphone an shav- ir oe aa lea fear ay. 28] ing machine’ for sale, H. C. Bradley. WANAED—Two young men ,to work by month, Address 421 Twelfth street. F. Jaszowski, , { 10 26 3t TRACTQR SCHOOL—The Twin City > Practor school'is conducted in con- noction with one of the world’s larg- est tractor shops affording. practical and inexpensive instruction in all branches’ of tractor operation anil care. Four 5-week terms start. re- spectively on Nov. 18, 1918, Jan. 6, 1919, Feb. 10, and March 17. Small tuition fee. Write for catalog and application card,” Minneapolis Steet & Machinery *C€o., Minneapolis, ™ Minn. 1 ’ y 10 26;'11 2 9 16] HELP WANTED—FEMALE ae GIRLS WANTED—Two, neat and of good appearance, as waitresses’ at ‘Van Horn cafe; good wages, pleas- ‘ant working conditions. Apply at once, Bougas Bros., Cafe Van Horn. \ ’ 10 29 3t__ WANTED—Girl for general~ house- work. , Highest wages. 610 Seventh street. Mrs. P. 'C, Remington. 10 26 tf WANTED—Girl or elderly lady for house work. Mrs. Chris Engen, 718 Mandan ave. 10 23 tt ‘WANTED—Rxperfenced girl or wom- an at highest wages. Mrs. W. BE. Lahr, 504 Mandan, Ave. Pi: di a 10.17 tf OO FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES AND ELATS _ FOR RENT—Modern four room. house between 8th and’ 9th -oy’. Rosser. Martin Baurgois.: 1229 3t FOR RENT—9 roem house all stricy (mddern. Inquire 216 Thayer..Ph6ne 389L. Joe Dietyick, 10 29 6t WANTED—Woman to do a.small fam- ily washing. :C. L. Curtis, care Trib- une. y ~ 10 28 tf FOR RENT —Hight room modern house suitable for two fainilies. Phone 477L. i 10 28 3t FOW RENT—Modern § room house. Inghire 0. W. Roberts, Phone 15:.or 751. 10 11 tf THOUSE FOR SALE on easy terms, or exchange for piece of land. Call __712 11th street. 10.23 Gt FOR _RENT—Thoroughly ~ urodern ‘bungalow,.5 roons. and bath almgst _new, exceptionally well arranged and finished. 923 7th street. Phone after 6 p. m. 548X. f So 10 23 tt ‘FOR RENT—Five room house. In- quire 214 5th’ street. 10,28 6t_ FOR RENT—Modern 6 room house with both, kitchen and electric range. Electric washer. — Close in. Reasonable rent. Phone 389X; 419} ~ Third street. 10 26 at FOR RENT—Smail house convenient ly located: Apply C. L- Sarin. y 6 tt FOR RENT—Two, three and f room flats in ‘modern house ' for light ~ housekeeping. Call at $03 7th street. i: 10°17 tt FOR RENT—A five room cottage new- ly renovated. City! water, electric lights, outbuildings, nice trees, etc. _ Apply 1200 Broadway. . - 10 29 6t FOR RENT—Small buvgalow, close in, 515 4th street. ~ 10 25 6t : HOUSES WANTED WANTHD-—Furnished fiat or small erences house for man and wife: Ref Son, Phone 267. e 10 23 tt Ss .E, Bergeson & t 0 26 6t{ KO RSALE—Good milch cow, a few pure-bred barred Rock chickens, several iron beds complete. Call 124 | Avenue A, eveningsgor phone 862U. ~ oe er Oeste WANTED—Shetland pony and cart. _Call Sanitary Bakery=_ 10 29 It WANTED=—Winter pasture for Shet- land “pony. F/ Holmboe, Phone 264. i 10 26 tf fi on SALE—Used piano, cheap. Cash or terms. Address A. B. Emshwiller, Annex Hotel, Bismarck. » 10 28 3t h@led hay-here on track. Bismarck “Dairy Co, et BKtt FOR SALE, TRADE’ OR RENT or will take a partner competent to run the business. “The Delmonico Cafe” at Mandan, fully equipped (restrictions removed) This place has enjoyed a replitation second to none, The key has not been in the lock for 7 years. I may be seen at toe Messmer Pool hall, . Mandan, “Wednesday and. Thursday of this. week. G. W. Howe, owner. 1 28 3t PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS—It qou want a piano, or a nice player plano before Xmas, gall or write Saturday and Sunday, J. M. Wylie, Grand Pacific. Hotel. oF _g 210 29 6t WANTED—Furnished flat_or small house for man and wife. References S. FE. Bergeson & Son. Phone 267. 10 23 tf} J} FORSALE—100 tons of cholce green hay: cut before ». harvest... 2' miles from Steele. Jno C: Loerch, Steele, N.oD. 10°23 kwk MR FARMER—Now is the time to dispose of your live and dressed poultry. For best results and high- est ,market prices ship to the Northern Produce Co., Bismarck. N. D. Write us today for prices of all; kinds of poultry. Northern Pro-/ duce Co., Bismarck, N.-D. : 10 18 21-2 mo’ WANTED TO BUY—Electric pump, engine, 1 or 1 1-2 horse power, di-i rect current. Write Box 285, New Salem, N. D. ~ | 10 41 mo. WANTED—Electric “ pump. engine, 1/ or 1 1-2 horse power. Write D. C. Currant, Box 285, New Salem, N. D. eke 10.41 mo_| FOR SALE—Expecting call to Tmilitary | service soon, all my household goods are offered for sale. Phone 310 or! call 118 Avenue A. Dr. M. W. Roan. \ 10 9-tf MERCHANDISH STOCK WANTED— Have three quarters of good farm land and, some cash. Land in, Burke county; N. D. Prefer dry goods or; clothing. (C. H. Warren. Sherwood, N-D. 10 10 Nov. 1! FOR RENT—New cottage, all modern, ready after September let. Apply to Finch Lumbgr Co., Phone 17. | & 28 tf} WANTED—Furnished flat house for man-and wife, References S. E, Bergeson & Son. Phone 267. | % Sef 10 23 tt .: i LOST AND.FOUND — | LOST—G@old Swiss Wrist watch; Oc-| tagon shape, chased link: bracelet. Gild dial. Return to Tribune for reward,’ ‘Mabel Nathan, » 10 29 6t, LOST—Check book on First State} ‘bank’ of Zap, in leatHer case. Find- er please return ta Tribune. p Voss 3.28ate | ‘FOUND—Black leather pocketbook. ‘Owner may. have same by calling ati The Tribune and identirying same} and paying for ad, 10 29 2t. or smali+- AUTOMOBILES, MOFORCYLES| FOR SALE—lord car in first c Hl condit Inquire Missouri Valley j Auto Co. i 10 28 tt r y second hand P, Phorson, care S. KE. Bergeson & 4 Son, ROOMS. FO W. ae t rle Jocation, + furnished-rocm with kitchenette for light housekeeping. 441 5th St. Phone 4 10 26 1 wk} FOR RENT—Two desirable rooms in modern house./ Call 856 10 23 31 FOR RENT—Warm modern rooms for light housekeeping. Why money and labor. on coal when rooms are warm and for less cost? Enquire 622 Third street: 10 14 12t —\fodern room, hot w: in, 615 4th street. , 10 2 Gt oo First Glass Eyes, Oddly enough, the first artificial eves were not made for living persons, but for the dend. In the days, of the -earlieast Pharaohs the - Rgyptian \em- Dalmere removed the e: poured plaster: or wax into the sockets and set In eyes of yolennic glass or some Precious stove. any w. 8. 3 . *Record for Divers. Jn salvaging the United States sub- marine F-4, which was sunk off Hono- lulu In March, 1915, divers went down to n depth of about 300 feet and ad- justed chains and cables and directed operations of men at the surface, Tbis is said to have broken all diving rec- ords, a ror'R ter heat, clos spend | ewe nn no nn nnn ne nn enone PRESIDENT OF WAR MOTHERS OF AMERICA WOULD HAVE HUN BOOK ' aI | _' BONFIRGS FOR OUR HALLOWL’EN ooo + + on et By MRS, ROBERT ¢. MORRIS. 1 | National Pfesident of the War Moth. ers of America. At their national convention the | ' Mothers of America adopted a} Ww regolution “expressing ‘their apposition )+-] Hto the, teaching of German in public schools and their desire that “it be} eliminated, : » Now they are going to test the sin-) | cerity of all people who express ‘the same Aversion, to the language of the HUN. They ask every cily, town and vil} | lage to plan a unique Hallow e’en celebration, in every which “| printed work in the German language ' | | will be banished from the homes of | Americans. There are, on, the shelves | of many home libraries, old textbooks treasured sinve school days.,when, we | studied German. Only a bit of out- worn sentiment. makes us ¢ling to ! these relice of the past, when we were innocent parties to a Prussian plot | to, Germanize the United States, Now, let us sacrifice a dead to a| living sentiment. Let us dig up these pooks and cas tthem out of our home: and memories forever. -Let’s make great heaps of them in every town, pile them in a vacant lot or empty, store room or your armory, or have a{ hib patriotic mass meeting. Let the} admission fee be one old German | book. But let us not make’a bonfire of them; let us sell them for old paper and give the proceeds to some cause that is helping to win the war: your war chest, the Red Cross, thé Y. M. 1 MIPS Te. 2IORTIS™- C. A. or your local chapter of War Mothers or America. Paper fs scaree and expensive, The war has made it so. Why hoard up one scrap of paper on which is the language of the beasts who plotted to kill our songs long before our sons were born? If we fever study Ger- man again, let it be when it is a dead language, when not a man survives to speak it who helped write the blackest page in-history. Now, will you help the war mothers DOINGS OF THE DUFF 2 PEPPER. “N “ Youn: - OH, Doc. COME. RIGHT OVER. - Weve ALL GOT TOM THOUGHT THEY ALL HAD SPANISH FLU. ~ LISTEN To THAT CovTeER. SNEEZE. BY ALLMAN iv! AN (| SUPPOSE Be WE WOKE THIM UP You “10SSED A SET NOPE- AN’ MADE THIM FOIGHT, OF GRENADES IN og, HEN WE TROTTED IN TH’ MIDDLE OF i ay NTH REST (ear ar CS PRISONERS ¢ to express in this concrete and p tical fashion your opposition to the German language? , | When the old is converted into new! paper, who knows but there may be! printed upon it news that will make} joy bells ring all around the earth! AY W. 5, Ss FULL FREEDOM [Objects to String of Neutrality Held by Central Powers. NOE. A. Washington Bureau, H 1128-1134 Munsey ‘slag. | Washington, D.C, Oct, Patter the war will not ag fo a “scrap of. paper" her neutvalit One experience Jenough, and th complete and any in be a party guaranteeing of that sort was ws tied to it in.the officials wil, not s the subject, but it js under: | stgod that somé sort of ptorrounc jment will soon be forthcoming from the government at Havre. | ‘The Belgians’ position is that a re- | turn to the status quo and a_renewa! | of the treaty of 1988, violated hy Ger- | amany th 1914—which brought England and indirectly America into the war— would curtail her sovereignty and en- ‘able Germany to exercise an economic superintendency which would be in- tolerable to the Belgian people - The people in occupied Belgium al- ready have made clear their opposition (to neutralization, and King Albert hinted at it in his reply to the pope’s peace note last December, in which he HOT SHOWERS SAVE | N, E. A, Special to The Tribune. Prance.—Hot bat an an- tidote for mustard gas are saving lives of many soldiers in gassed areas. While gas. shells Are still falling the chemical welfare service rushes up motor trucks carrying 2,500-gallon tanks .equipped with instantantous | water heaters. | Halting behind a sheltering wood, | the orew throws together a wooden | framework. under which 24 soldiers { can stand in hot water showers. Pipes ; L will soon, it BELGIUM SEEKS Relgiun | time she will demand | dependent sovereignty | | oughly. “complete — political, econ omic and military iidependence with: out conditions or restrictions.” The Belgian government, in view of the imminence of a peace conference, is believed, issue a de- failed statement setting forth as one of its principal peace terms the prin- ple that it cannot again be a party agreement regarding its) neu- and will reserve “the right. to © its freedom of action as do independent — nations Tolland, Sweden and. Switze ney W. 8. §——— ‘ NIGHT SCHOOL demanded and, After the situation in the city has returned to normal the pub- lic schools will open a_ night school for the benefit of those who are not eligible to attend the regular day school. Courses will be offered in English, tivies, imanual training, cooking, sew- jing and commercail Classes in any subject will not be formed unless there is a reason- j able demand for the instruction. | Prospective students should i hand name and ‘subjects desired to Supt. J..M. Martin, ’phone 835 or call at 710 Fourth street. Oct. 29—2t “BUY Wy S18 erm FOR COUNTY JUDGE. | To the Voters of Burleigh County: Having accepted the nomination for the office of county judge of Burleigh count and having been a tax payer dent of Burleigh county since ndly ask your support on ‘No- yeuber 5, regardless of party or fac- tion Yours respectfully, Ww 12%. | J.C. SWETT. LIVES J | OF MUSTARD GAS VICTIM jing. Hands and shoes are dipped in lime to destroy the lurking gas, Even helmets are dipped in lime water. Men with obvious burns are sent to tha hospital. The,others are sprayed with liquid soap, after which hot water is turned on and bodies scrubbed thor- After the shower, ‘each man’s eyes, nose and throat are sprayed and clean clothes, brought up in a second truck, are passed out. In a test made recently, forty-eight are connected and the water is turn- ed.on. Soldiers quickly remove their cloth- | FROM TWO TO’ That the disease which is commou- know as Spanish influenza whieh is} ceping the country, is the most di [astrons epidemic known in 40 ye lis ve {public by the United i bureau, covering the principal ci tof the country, which y that the |normal death rate: hi from | two to s of the contagion. de a direct result | advance. In this city the mortality | has jumped from an ze rate of | 7 to 100.4. In Philadelphia the nite ; 2 compared with’a normal rate | . The rate for We Nashville, | mi 11 to 78.6} and- Baltimore from The | normal rates of New hicago | have nearly trebled during the epi-| demic. | The total of case: throughout the se became pre- | n the middle of September, will lrun into\the millions. This is made levident By the actual figures of the | valent h army camps. There haye been 301,- 462 cases of influenza aid pneumonia among the troops in training. . The deaths. in the army camps*from both 0. Boston, topics, and Woods Hutchinson 2 un health {> Dr [moet we men were given the anti-mustard gas shower baths in two minutes. NFLUENZA. INCREASES MORTALITY SEVEN © OLD IN U.S. who has heen employed by the Social Insurance Commission of California an expert to lead in the sociay in- surance fight in that state, states that im his opinion influenza will. cause hs throughout. the country pitted. ‘ United States “Public Health service cannot forecast what the final toll will be, ‘they say that, uking the country as a whole, the pandemic has done little more than get a good start. The end is not in sight. The pandemic will be as’severe from the \ sippi to. the Pacific Slope two weeks hence, as it was in New England a couple of weeks ago, and it is in awd about Washington tod The bureau further states that “the people must take home to themselves a large measure of respon- | sibility for the-spread ‘of the disease. |The spread of influenza can be check- led materially if citizens will exercise |the most ordinary care.”. | ————— 1 ET BURKE © | LAWYER \Tribune Block Bismarck, N. D. Phone 752. such as, . subjects. ' ‘