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& a é } a i 4 a= ~ 4 q N MONDAY, NOV. 4, 1918. : Ff GEE WHIZ, Pop, } MY EARS AINT f= — L DIRTY! é Ra FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS. By Blosser HE CHANGED HIS MIN “YoU LOOK ABOUT AS C'MON, CHIRP! SQUIRREL. FOOD... TWO OUT OF TWO MILLION “DOUGH” BOYS ‘ WHATS TH’ MATTER ALEC? HAPPY AS A PICKPOCKET WITH HANGNAILS ~~ _ \ THEY ARENT 2 WELL~.WE'LL JUST SEE IF THEY \ ARENT DIRTY! WHAT @ DON'T EVER LET ME HEAR YoU SAY + “THAT AGAIN, NOUNG MAN! Awe 11S ABOUT EATS ~° GOSW HOW 4 RATE CARROTS oN EVERNTHING ~~ GAY, {0 CLEAN UP A WHOLE HUN CORPS FOR JES ONE GOOD ‘ou HOME COOKED FEED | JIMINY CHRISMUS ! Tt DONT WHAT'S THAT 2 " ESPECIALLY ONE RARE DISH- NOW “THINK, AN’ WE'LL BOTH SPN IT AT ONCE ~ % NOW, ONE - TWO- 2 THE TRIBUNE'S CLASSIFIED COLUMN. | ey Classified Advertising Rates. Terms Strictly Cash—No Copy Without Remittance Attached Will be Inserted. First insertion, 35 cents; additional insertions without. _Ghange of copy, 15 cents. _ Advertisements containing more than 25 words wae charged at the rate of two cents a word for each additional wor HELP WANTED—MALE LOCOMOTIVE FIREMEN—$150-$200 AUTOMOBILES, MOTORCYLES FOR SALE—191§ Dodge touring car. monthly, . eperience _unnecesgary. Run 3,000 miles, good condition and Send stamp, Hallway, Care 647 Trib-| Teaschable. Phone 448. ' _lne. 114 18 25 10 31 3t W. ‘TED—Capable young men and __LOS' women‘ or-young Married couple: for ir f AND ESE attendants at the State Hospital for Find- the insane. Wages $35.00 to $50.00 er return to 423. Third street for re- FOR RENT— MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—To buy from owner, dence for equity Wisconsin land and |quick recove 4) Scores of villages FOR SA # nite burner, $ STORAGE—Ow Warm rooms for winter, double and ; single. 713 3rd. street. 11 4 Gt ‘Small house convenient ly located. Apply C. L. Burton. 7 26 tt resi- 510 Eleventh streetyis: 11 4 6t? some cash, d jhands. Phone 13 Fourth street. _ enix S 209 12th~'st 112 brick 1 ‘BUSINESS AS USUAL WHERE HUN ARMY IS DRIVEN OUT | BL C, C. LYON. N. E. A, Stafi Correspondent. i With Pershing’s The ground second batt tially o ing. le ¢ sToRa ‘WINDOWS washed and put | shelifico ape resecupiel Army in France— | where wis fought the | i ofthe Marne making | which were pa royed by and rebuild- ver} The city of Chateau Thierty, the lieugne over by the Kren ze_heater, lig-|largest in the battle area, suffered |cans } : hait {hardly less than the village cans holding the south haif, {addition, one-hal; nearly fire- | Completely from the other ha and, in cut off by the ithe city. w proof, warehouse offers the public | blowing up of the magnificent con- a safe, clean and light storage for |crete bridges that spanned the Marne. household goods, etc. Automobiles | stored at $3.00 per month dead stor- a month with board, room and laun-| ~W@", or call 243, Ruth Erlenmeyer.| 98@, B. V. Lahr, First Guaranty | dry. Photie No. 110 or write to W. 114 3t ic gta . | ‘M. Hotchkiss, M. D., supt. LOST—Between Witton and —Bts:| WANTED—Twin baby buggy in good | Write 649 Tribune, 11 4 6t marck, October 28, one new Advance| condition. GOVERNMENT wWJEDS 12,000 clerks, | Ure and casing 32x3°1-2. Reward for 1 2 1t Bismarck examinations Nov. i6,|- ’eturn to Chas. McLaughlin, Under-| ADAM SCHAAF Pianos, grand. up- Dec. 7. Salary’ $1200. Experience }~ Wood, .N. D. 111 8t|° rights an@ players, made in Chicago! TOST—Gold Swiss? wrist watch O tagon: shape; chased dink. bracelet: Gild dial. Return to Tribune. for reward, Mabel Nathan. 10 29 6t FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES AND FLATS )FOR RENT—Small modern house for light housekeeping, furnished or un- furnished. unnecessary... Men and women de-‘ siting government positions write for free particulars. J; C. Leonard (former Civil, Servicé Examiner), 52 Kenois Building, Washington. MEN WANTED. at for general work. _HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—At_ Bismarck” hospital? Second cook, assistant dishwasher, seamstress, hand ironer. -Call Mon- 11 4 2t in fine modern Mary M¢Lean. 404 Telephone 86. FOR RENT—Room home. Mrs. First: street. house— FOR: THE OTHER FELLOW Beiter’ way—Own Your Own Home! No. 8 Rosser ‘St., is unexcelled for location, comfort, appearance, and con- ss 10 26 ie WANTED—Gir¥ to work at Dunraven house... For further particulars call ‘at Dunraven* house. 10 gt 6t venience. Some one will snap it up—wi]l YOU WORK WANTED be IT? RH, Ayers. WANTED—Practical nursing. _ Ad-| ~~-———5 ST TI Tee eae 3 FOR RENT—9 room house all strictly | dreag? 264, Bismarck: ‘Tefbahe. 22 modern. Inquire 216 Thayer. Phone —————————————————— |] 8891. Joe Divtrick. POSITIONS WANTED WANTED—Position in’ hotel or cafe by chef Al, or chef and wife. S. b. 10 29 6t WANTED—Woman to do a small fam- ily washing. C. L. Curtis, care Trib- une. 10 28 tf ~ Since 1878; cin “the state. 3 FOR SALE—Grapes, 25¢ a eaekeer 4 baskets $1.00. Phone used city sclfools of Chi mare®, 31 6t 231 or call at Banner House, 104 Main street. 11 2 at Phone 478L. } PIANOS AND- PLAYER PIANOS—If qou want a piano, or a nice player piano before Xmas, call or write Saturday and Sunday, J. M. Wylie, Gsand Pacific Hotel. The -entire ‘civilian the district hurriedly homes, with ‘could carry on their backs or in carts, hind’ the lin es, population in had left their what belongings they and retired to places of refuge far be- All this happened only a Jittie more than three months age. * | usiness. as. Usual. | Yet I find business going on as us- ores lusively in th® | ual in hateau Thierry in thos cago. Sold direct {that escaped destruction. to the users, by D. Ernest Hall, Bis“! many as 20 of the finest bu ins ;N. D. Thirty years desidenée | |the business district of the Perhap were tin flattened ruins as a result of Ger- } D. | ; Fors kinds gf poultry. duce Co., Bismarck man shells, but the owners of these, in Write ys today for prices of all Northern Pro- | Dz 10 18 21.2 mo ALE—Bxpecting call to military | tion service soon, all my household goods | ing ¢ Yj, SEED ANY Twine OvT DAH most instances, have, cleaned the debris and have piled ths bricks.and stones in neat 1 sireet, waiting for the whe will be over and the city arpenters and» plumers builders will return from in on the work of pies and | aad other | ce frout recon! nmosy hand Ame: foot of the ¢ the river, and the Germans holding the north side. Millions of machine gun! bullets were exchanged, and, ag a re- ult, there's not much window glass jleft. but the merchants do business in the open air during the amd board their pleces up at night Hotel Red Cross Quarters. No attempt has beén made io re-| pen the ancient Hotel Dlephart, on | the snorth bank of the river. The courtyard Ned with American Red} Cross trucks, while most of {he recins are jammed with Red uppltés, and the office now houses aff of | a Red Crosg.-captain, who is direct ing the relief work in the vicinity. French and American sincer: have built temporary bridg ross the Marne, and all day th er-ending, stream of traffic side to the other. A French captain told me én inter- [esting story about the main bridge “It was a pity to destroy the noble struc which had stood for near 200 y ” he said, “but it’s destruc- tio: done under the most thrill- umstances. = days. /Do not telephone, it 4 tr 10 29 6t are offered for sale. Phone 310 or “The south end of the bridge was | Becta ee 112 3t z MR FARMER—Now is the time to| Call 118 Avenue A. Dr. M. W. Roan. held by American machine gunners, WANTED—immetiately, a chamber-|®OR RENT—Modern & room house.| ““gispose of your live and dressed | 10.9 tt who had taken terrible toll of the maid and waitress for a small town| 2duire O. W. Roberts, Phone 15: or! joultry. For ‘best results and high- | FOI SALH—200 large breeding ewes Germans on the north bank, ; hotel. ‘Twenty-five dollars per | =" 1011 tt] est market prices ship to the| in fine condition. Jno. C. Loerch, “One afternoon tho Germans decid- month each, Address Box 93, Me- FOR RENT —wightroom modern! Northern Produce Co.) Bismarck. N.| Steele, N. D. . 11 1 6t ed to ‘make a supreme effort to take ddéra,-N. D. 111 6t house. Third street. Enquire First WANTED—Woman for gencral house: |. Guaranty bank, __-_ 1.2 6t x _ a work, 700 10th street. C. 2. Down- is ® room house. Inquire] WILBUR IS ON HIS WAY ing. 10 2! - 214 Sth street. wan - 11 2 6t OVER. + WANT Girl for general 1 work. . Highest wages, 610 seventh $85.00 12 equals $420.00 = street. Mrs, P. C, Remington. In 9 years you have paid for a good SAV Boss, HAB Yo’ poxe Tim if Whar Looks Like LAND FOR RENT—Three_ rooms all mod- ern five and six dollars a month. Spera, Box 566, Breckenridge, Minn. 10 31.1 wk BREN ouT TWo DAYS - Four DAYS VET - We WONT SEE LAND FoR THAN TH. AND MAYBE LONG! SAV, Boss, WHERE am DIS HEAH PLACE DEY CALL FRANCE. AT - ANY HOw ? Timely use of WANT ADS5 _ is always cross | lhe coming back this way?’ I asked one plowma His reply epitomized the confidence that all France ‘now feels. “We have seen the last of them; they will never be bai uy We |the bridge and send their troops over | to. ene ie cans. ‘In spite of the deadly fire from the | uddenly | ses and | dense | defe bridge in the sy wére well across the bridge. | "Literally there were hundreds of them | fon it. Banishing Troubles. Quick is the succession of human the cares of today are seldom «| ever the ¢ lie down at night, to most of our troubles your t, and we sowper, Blow Hun-Filled Bridge. | “Then something happened. All a lonce the whole structure seemed to be lifted skyward and to fly apart into | 1 million piece and with :#he pieces | ‘went the hundreds of Germans who were on it. { “The French, we may safely say “Ye have done shall meet no wo long ago, had taken ihe precaution to mine the bridge with | % SATA * jexplosives, looking to the po: || VOTE FOR DOYLE! | time hen the enemy might -t 1 ——— ¢ 4 jcross; and on this particular after-| | HELP HUNT HOME HUNS! | |noon we thought the proper moment; |Cq{ECK CLASS ~ CON- | ;had arrived for some ‘fireworks.’ ” | FLICTS! | In Chateau ‘Thierry, Dormans, Vaux 5 and many other places, most of the) | PROMOTE PURE PATRI-* {civilian populations have ‘come back.; | OTISM! In the villages many of the families SUPPRESS SOCIALISTIC aro content to live-in one or two w SOPHISTRY! |touched rooms, with shattered wal | “T will smash the German ‘line in France if YOU will smash that damnable Hun propaganda at home.”—Gen- eral Pershing. towering above them. I saw mar elderly Frenchmen piecing together ithe tile roofs to keep out the rain. | In many of the shell-swept fields | farmers were doing their fall plo ling. It was hard going for the horses | jgetting over and around the holes. en't you afraid the Germans will Boys Can Help Win the War U. . Working Reserves Gives Opportunity to Serve Country on Farms By P.G. HOLDEN o— will likely increase as the war progresses, But in spite of the labor problem, farm acreage under cultivation must not be decreased; food production must be kept up tothe max- T: shortage of farm labor is the greatést we ever have known, and it imum. We must win this war, and we cannot win it unless we produce every land that is busy" is working for | possible pound of foodstuffs. Every acre of us; every idle acre strikes a blow at Liberty. But farmers cannot cultivate all their land unless they' have sufficient i labor. Farm machines will, make up for some of the shortage, but not all. | Human labor must be recruited from some source. Uncle Sam Appeals to Boys. In this great emergency, the government is appealing to the schoolboys ' of America—to' the great army of strong, alert, active, energetic youngsters ‘ between the ages of 16 and 21 to enlist in the U. S. Boys’ Working Reserve. ! These young men aré filled with the patriotic spirit of the nation. They | are under the legal age for conscription in the army, but they want to do all they car to help their older brothers win the war. They cannot fight, but | they can help produce food to feed the fighters. ! In order to encourage these boys ta work on farms this. summer and Young Men Are Filled With Patriotic Spirit--They Can Help Produce H Food for the doah | help make up the shortage of labor, the U.S. Boys’ Working Reserve has | been organized under the direction of the ee ee of Labor. | By applying to his federal state director, whose name will be furnished | by the State Council of Defense, any boy between 16 and 21 can enlist in the Reserve, in the agricultural, i or vocational units. Boys are par | ticularly urgéd to join the agricultural unit that they may be detailed ta |help out the farmers. = Every Boy’s Opportunity. ‘Members of the Reserve are given federal recognition ut are not liable | to militdry duty. a it This is every boy’s opportunity to have an important_part in making ‘history. Their Zervices will be as important as though they were inthe army. | ‘or navy. The work will be hard but healthy and in eter years, when liberty. jhas been forever established throughout the world,hey will proud to show F jtheir badges of honor given them by the United States as evidence of their | faithful and loyal service in the great strugle. Every boy should te Reserve and give his best to bis country in aaeat hour of need. Every farmer should be kind and patient with the his best to heip = “Be careful not to work him too long —