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FRIDAY, DEC. 20, 1918 FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ; By Blosser WOULD YOU CALL \ * FRECKLE A SPUG? FROM Nov - You KNOW WHAT BAD BONS GET For CHRISTMAS. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNB THE TRIBUNE'S CLASSIFIED. COLUMN Classified Advertisii Terms Strictly Cash—No Copy Withast tes Remittance Attached Will be Inserted. First insertion, 85 cents; additional insertions without change of copy, 15 cents. Advertisements containing moie than 25 words will be charged at the rate of two word, cents a word for each additional HELP WANTED—MALE HELP! HELP! The U, S. Employmen Service | in Bismarck’ is receiving daily urgent calls for coal miners. ‘If you can mine coal give us your ad- dress, BIG WAGES. Write, tele- phone or call U. S. Employment service, Northwest Hotel, Bis- marck, N. D. ca WANTED—By Doy 17 years old, a Place to work for board and room while attending high school. -Ad- dress Clyde Babcock, Hazelton, N. Dak. 12.17 1 wk. | | | HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—We want girls for work in our bindery. No experience ne- cessafy. Good positions with pleas- ant surroundings, and pay as learn- ing. Call at Tribune office and see. Mr. 01 5 12 20 3t WANTED—Lady clerk. Apply Won- der Store. 1219 1 wk WANTED—Waitress and dishwash- er immediately. Small hotel, Six lars per week. Box 93, Medora, 12 18 1 wk MAN can make money; stalk ing orders for Guaranteed hoslery. Salary or commission. All or part time. Experience unnecessary. Ad- dress No. 683 Tribune, Bismarck. #12 171 mo WANTED—Competent girl for genér. al housework. Mrs. H. R. Berndt. Call at 104’ Avenue A or phone 622 12 14 1 wk WANTED—girl- or -svomen: for-house- work on farm. Mrs. J. W. Bureh Bismarck. Phone 406F13 12 14 1, wk \ WANTED—Girl to assigt with house- Work and ‘cafe éf‘baty..” No objec- ‘tions to’school girkt Mrs. F. Holm- doe, 208 W. Broadway. WANTED—Girl for general house |, work. Highest wages. 610 Seventh+ street. Mrs. P. C. Remington. aii ee eae EE FOR RENT—In desirable location, furnished room with kitchenette for light housekeeping, 411 5th ‘St. or phone 273. 12 20 lwk FOR RENT—Warm_rooms, with the use of kitchen. House No. 719 6th St. Phone 242X.. 12-16-1wk. 12.9 tfls WANTED Branch Manager ESTABLISHED CORPORATION. Formerly large manufacturers of steel products, now engaged in pro- duction of mammoth patriotic work, is opening a Branch Uftice in Bis-! marck. Requires services of good bus-{ iness man ag Manager. Applicant must assume duties about January 1st. be able to direct a small sales force, the most of whom will be attracted to the work on acc nature, $1,000 cash bond required, ful- ly secured. Entirely new proposition; national advertising campaign start- ing, including double-page ad in local papers, tremendous opportunity. ‘Re- plies solicited from parties who find their busitfess unprofitable or not in harmony with war conditons. Com- mission basis with earnings upward of no) per year, Sales Manager will assist in organ- izing sales force and supervise open- ing. 2Erench House... Make your an- swer complete to secure interview. You- will be’ required té come to Chi- cago for two days’ instruction and training, and unless you can do ao be- fore New Years. it will be useless to apply. for cash bond, and. your reputation will stand the third degree, save your stamps. This is a real opportunity’ that will present itself but once"in a lifetime, Write or wire PRESIDENT; 1810 Advertising Building, Chicago, Ill. MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—Lignite coal for year 3919, about 200.tons.. Submit bids to. Bis- marck hospital. 12:17 St TOR SALE—2¢inch circular wood saw, complete with belt and frame. A bargain if taken at once. Call at 121 First street. 12 19 2t WANTED—to sell a cutter, also a stock ‘barn for rent. Inquire 400 7th street. Phone 506L. x 12 19 1 wk FOR RENT—Two~=modern houses. Phone 404 K. Geo. W. Little. 11 29 tf FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES: AND FLATS FOR RENT+O Toont house, partly modern. beatin “Register. 12 20 1 wk FOR SALES" room ‘gtrictly ~ mod- om ‘bungalow in Riverview addition. A bargain if-bought at ance. If in- terested. call C. L. Burton, ayie FOR RENT—Sroom coltage, Phone 894R. 2 18 tf FOR -RENT—Modern” steam heated four. room flat. Household furniture for sale, also other raoms for- rent equipped for light housekeeping. phone, 183. 12 18.1 wk FOR RENT—By January 1, a five- room cottage partly modern. Ap- _ply_1200 Broadway. 12 18 4t. | FOR RENT—Modern;$% room house. Inquire'O. W. Roberts, Phone tee or Le tl BL. BANNER House Good ‘hoard and rooi;:$8.00 per weet, | or two $a a room, $7.00;per week. We have single or double rooms. S. NICHGLA, 1M Main St. __ WORK WANTED ‘wise steady -work exe 512K or call e 12 171% { 7 = + PIANOS AND PLAYERS. ‘Remember-no homeji# complete with- out a Piano on.-Christmas Day. -have a few that I'can still furnish from here, all new and they are all Baldwin made, which means quality in each instrument. Call, ‘Phone or write Saturday and Sun- day only of this week. J. M. Wylie, care Grand Pacific Hotel, Bismarck, iN. D, State: Representative The Baldwin Piano Co. Chicago, ant Home address, Grand sero ND. bt Bismarck - Furniture Company 220 Main Street: Phone 231 i FOR SALE—Gabler piano. Cowan __Drug Store. 11 22 tt «OR SALE—200 tons of upland hay, $18 per ton f. 0, &. See or write Albert Hamajer, Driscoll, N. D. 12 14 1 wk WANTED TO SELL—Carpenter's shop, complete set of carpenter’s tools, large writing desk and con- crete mixer. Call at 716 Maia St., or phone 268. Ibe ban 12 id 1 wk ADAM SCHAAF PIANO—None better, Direct from factory to home with- out middleman’s profits. Conven- jent payments. Sample in Soo Ho- tel lobby. D. Ernest Hall, resident representative. 12 16 6t 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 fér prices of all! kinds of poultry. eorthers Pro- duce Co., Bismarck, N. 10 te 21-2 mo TODACCU AND SNUFF remedy, Gold Seal No, 10 kills the desire for to- bacco and snuff. Great success Sworn testimonials of men who have been cured. A guaranteed vegetable . treatment . $2.25. Our wook “A” tells why you should quit! tobacco and snvff. It is free. Send today: Start the new year right. Ad- dr ss Inland Chemical Co., Bismarck N. 12 17 t FOR SALE—$50 Victrola almost new, 20 records, $60.00; base burner, $15.00; coal heater, $9.00; 50-foot garden hose, kitehen table. 223 12th street. . 12:19 3t FOR FIRST CLASS DRY CLHANING ‘pressing call at the Eagle Hat orks and Tailor Shop. Phone 58. 11:22 1 mo IF YOU WANT TO CLOSE OUT your stock of goods at auction or put on a special sale, now is the time to see us,. Zimmerman. Bros. Midwoy Mdse Saléa Co,, 1948 Uni- versity Ave. St’ Paul, Minn. 11 20 1 mo. ne thevliy. ta ‘piapo: party. leay- ine the tity. Call at Bismarck Fur- niture’Co. 12-1411wk. FOR SALE—Nearly new drop head sewing machine in good order for $7.00. This is « Don’t‘ miss it. 209 12th street. 12 20 2t Furniture Upholstery Repaired, Re- finished and Packed. FO SALE-Todd protectograph check , writer! Good as-new. Call at Trib-! Oftice. . B 19 tf count of its patriotic | » Unless you have the money] NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SA-E. Default having occurred in the con- ditions of the mortgage hereinafter described, notice is hereby given, that thet certain mortgage executed and delivered by George +. Wilson and Mftie I. Wilson, his wife, mortgagors, to Carl P. Jacobson, mortgagee, dated the 8rd day of January, 1912 and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of the county of Burleigh, hstate of North Dakota, on-the 12th day of January, 1912, and recorded in Book 104 of Mortgages on page 398, and assigned ‘by said mortgagee to C. A. McCarty and V. S. Langlois by an instrument in writing, dated the sist ‘day of August, 1917, which assignment was filed for record in the office of) the register of deeds of Burleigh coun- ty, North vakota, on the 4th day of ‘September, 1917, and recorded in 'Book 189 of Assignments, o1 Page 141, and C. A, McCarty, one of said assignees, assigned is. interest in said mortgage to V. Langlois, by an instrument in writing dated the hth day of April, 1918, which ment was filed for record in fice of the register of deeds of ‘Bur- leigh county, North . on the 20th day ot April, 14 1s recorded i Rook 1 ned by said V. S. Langlois, and whieh mortgage W ia HANNA THRILLS BUSINEES MEN WITH WAR TALK (Continued From age One.) don’t seem to have that sort of The former chief executive told of the journey overseas on a Freach beat to Bordeaux; of the boat's be- ing hailed there by boys from every state in the union. He described the rail journey from Pordeaux to Paris through country which was untouched by the scathing hand of war. The first night in Pe and an air raid. He told of the preparations made for the protection of the, people; 0 soundine of iid outs °° fort: fuge gon where @ re- ome rene American to HONOR - 1 er knew an GUEST OF § assignee, to Ethel D. Know {instrument in _ writ Ke dated day of May. ment was fil tice of the re leigh county. 16th day of M in Book 151 of 293; will be fo! premises i inafter described, at the tr the court house at Bismarck in the county of Burleigh, state of ‘North Dakota, at the hour of ten o'clock A.M, on the 30th day of Decemfer, 4918, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises’ described in said mort gage and which will be sold to satis- fy. the same, are situated in the county of Burleigh, state of North Dakota, and described. as follows, to-wit: ae record in thes of prot e North 11S, an Mortgages recor dea | on page t the South One-half (S 1-2) of Section Two (2), of Township One hundred thirty- eight North (138N), range seventy- eight (78) west of the 5th p, m. There will be dué on such mortgage on the date of sale, the sum of Two thousazd@ one hundred thirty-eight dol- lars and forty-five cents ($2,138.45). besides the costs, disbursements and expenses of this foreclosure. Dated, Bismarck, North Dakota, No- vember 20th, 1918. ETHEL D. KNOWLES, Newton, Dullam & Young, Bismarck, North Dakota, Attorneys for Ossignees and Mort- gageos.\ 1122 29; 42-6 13 20 27. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE ECRE- CLOSURE SALE. Notice is hereby given that where- as default has been made in the terms, and conditions of that certain mort- gage made, executed and delivered by Albert E. yones and Blanch? D, Jones, his wife, to Walter L. Williamson, dated November 20, 1912, and filed fer ‘record in the office of the Register of Deeds cf Burleigh county, North Dakota, on November 23, 1912, at 1:15 o'clock P. M. and there duy record- ed in Book 105 of Mortgages on page 830, and which mortgage was there- after and on the 10th day of Decem* ber, 1912, assigned to Ezra E. Miller, which assignment was filed in the of- fiee of ‘the Register of Deeds of Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, on the 18th day of February, 1913, at 1:80 o’clock p. m.-and there recorded in Book 105, of Mortgages on page 427, the sathe will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage de- scribed and hereinafter described, at tha front door of the Courthousé in , the city of Bismarck, county of Bur- ‘leigh and state of North Dakota, on Semrday, the 4th day of January, ; 1919, at 2:00 o'clock p. m. | The premises described ‘in such mortgage which will be jsold in pur- suance of this notice are described as follows: The northeast quarter (si 1-4) of Section eight (8), township one hundred — thi ine\ (139) north, lrange seventy (75) west of the Sth {principal meridian. containing one ihundred sixty (160) acres more or Jess according to the United States government survey thereof. The amount due on such mortgage at the date of sale is $2.175.11 besides the statutory costs and disburseménts as provided by law. Dated November 20, 1918. EZRA E. MILLER, Assignee of Morigagee. KVELLO & ADAMS, Attorneys for assignee of mort- 1 gagee, Lisbon. North Dakota. | First publication November 22, 1918. 11—22 29; 12—6 13 20 2 Phone 75, City Fuel Co. For the Beulah Coal ‘TO POSTPONE = ACTION. Washington, Dec. 20.—Senator Lodge: of Massachusetts, republican leader, in an address today advocated tthe postponement of formation of a league of nations until after the peace <comference. - Call C. A. Finch Lum- iber Co., phone 17, for iOld Hickory, Lignite.... i Tho North One-half (N 1-2) of the!’ +take to. an abri. | i who Addressed the Commercial Club | < at Noon Today. ~They seemed to want to stand outside where they. could see tho: show, taking it tor granted the bombs would drop some- where else—and they usually did. Surprisingly little damage was done by the air raids, even less by the Big Berthas which came over regularly at 15-minute intervals, except on Good Friday last spring, when one of these big shells struck a. pillar in the chureh , of St. Dives while the worshippers: were at vespers, killing 70 or 80 and norve.” | GEEWIT2 ~WE ALL CHIPPED IN T BUY SISTER A PRESEAT~ MA PUT IN FIVE DoWARS AN’ EAN TAG DUT WA NICKEL in i, THYPRESENT COST ONIN: FIVE DOLLARS. AN NOW MA WON'T GIVE US OUR MONE, <<. Back !! alyzed he could not talk who conr pletely cured by Charlio Chaplin in “A Dog's Life.” The ‘boy went in a broken shadow of a man who had not spoken a word for weeks. One of Charlie's antics hade him forget him- self, he chuckled. and. began talking with his comrades. He*came out of the theatre a normal, laughing, hap- py boy. Octoder 1 Capt. Hanna was mdved up Yo one of the front line hospitals. He reached ibase hospital No. 9 five s after the Ar ri began, when s hund of new cases were; coming in ¢ night. to the evacuation hospital +t ‘Verrgn ‘he witnessed the burial of 71 boys in a gle trench one day, The suppty {ot coffins was exhausted, and the bur- ial could not wait. Two chaplains | Protestant and tholic officiated. The grave diggers were Indo-China jsoldiers in French unifor “L thought as 1 stood th n upon this long row of ‘forms of Lincol: at Gett a1 echoe ‘that these tin vain.” in Verdun in Oc: \tober when a German plane flew over jtroppin 5 Hua propagande 4 © looking soldiers } de oand in th the head- People Off Then he went {ha nes, on the old Hindenburg line. Hée [is jmous request of club members sented a slate of five nominees, this being the number to be elected. The nominees were H. J. Duemeland, sec- retary and general manager of the Bismarck Grocery Co.; P. R. Fields, general manager of the International Harvester, Bismarck branch; Chief Justice A. M. Christianson of the North Dakota supreme court; W. E. Lahr, president of the Lahr Motor Sales Co., and E. B. Klein, Bismarek merchant tailor. This is the younge: et of directors ected by the Bismarck commer- Each member of the board ieved unusual or profes ever cial club, of clue af Jn announce the nor Chairman Conklin. stated members of the retiring board, ing President H. P, Goddard, given so liberally of the v that v him, had found it impos- sible to accept re-clection. Phone 75, City Fuel Co. For the Beulah Coal HANNA JOINS You’re Bilious! Take Cascarets Pleasant relief for liver and bowels, and cost 10c a box—no gripe! =a] Be efficient! Clean Your torpid liv id sluggish bowels with good, harmless Cascarets—They. don’t gripe or sicken. Give your in- cleaning and rid yourself s, ‘bilious spells, dizziness, » bad breath, stomach gour- , etc. Cheer up! Get a from any drug store. Al- ic for ‘biligus, eonsti- Feel grand! salownes ness, £ 10-cent SO ‘best cath pated chilg never fats. you sleep ets work while foetareeS iMRS. KATE O’HARE WILL APPEAL CASE TO HIGHEST COURT RED GROSS AT ment of Ame! these litle may a re nile for i not heea wha. the se Uhey souvenir room w ated a fe He inspected the he forced — conercte Wilhelm had sur- chamber, and he saw the} {periscope reaching up through the ‘root with which the crown prince been wont to survey the coun- for miles around. La Fover the samo ground ; Col. Quain, who with | Goodman and other B fand a number of Bismar« | Dakota surgeons on h staff,~ had jcharge of base hospital No, 60, With iDr. Quain hé toured the crown in bul becw ‘to bring t home as At Verdun he was in the |the crown prince had had to \w hich rounded hi: iprince’s tunnel through Dead Man's | hill, by means of which A ei Wil helm had hoped to throw his Deaths Head battalion unawares on the French, and he saw how French atr men had riscovered the tunnel and gassed it, leaving the crown prince's men to die like rats in a trap or to come out into the arms of the wait- ing French troops. And the only thing hoe found alive in this vast network of tunnels and chambers in the limestone of Dead Man’s hill was} with! er he went} ;|Soon as be entered the Grand Pacific vil | quit a venerable gray rat, who during the ‘interview sat contentedly munching ‘Then Half a loaf of bread left by some Yank ry of Poilu in a chamber of one of the t/ roms, oblivious to the inspection of ‘Capt. Hanna and other officers whoso ashlights were trained upon him and his banquet boards. wounding many more.” The former governor the transportation departmenc. ‘he was transferred to :the milita: section and sent to a base hospital a (Vichy. Here were doctors from ev- ery state in the union, with 500 nurs- es “and as many orderiie: serving | “y eighteen hospitals with a capacity for! , “DY. Quain,” said Capt. Tanna, ois 4,000 to 5,000 wounded and gassed doing splendid work over there e@ men. ‘During the three months Goy- a3 as many as 60 operations in one ernor ‘Hanna was’ stationed here, this Tight. He declares it isnt pareety base handled more than twelve thous. PUt butchery, and perhaps 1 a Th | and cases. The former governo- «Je it produces wonderful results 1 scribed the splendid America: ‘:vspit- boys have the recuperative pov ers oe lal trains. too few by two- thirds of: youth, ‘They come in with terrible the needed capacity, carrying 300 to Wounds, infected, suffering with gas : hich gangrene, and a few days later they Speen teraction are. walking about, well and happy > im. 28ain. iGipes and of the, Wonilers eins 'bother ‘these boys. . Everyone was first in ‘GP. BOOTH | Governor Can’t Resist tempt), tion Whenever He Sees the Opportunity. i 5 ; Former Governor Hanna, who at his own expense gave more than a year jot his time to the Red Cro: and who had already answered “Present? in two North Dakota towns to the Red Cross Christmas roll call, step- ped up to the Red ¢ booth lobby today and signed up for some additional mem/erships. “If everyone could see the work of the Red Cross as I have seen it, 1 know that not a single man would buying memberships as long as has a dollar left,” said Capt. | seems to have peen the idea jof Frank G. Grambs. | Mr, Prams ftame in at noon with $ ay memberships for poor families “a ch canot subscribe for their own, Miss Liel Diesem, in charge of the Grand | Pacific booth at this time, yatefully ;accepted his subserlption, and told him of an aged woman who joined the ‘Red Cross last year, but whose boy, her chief support. has been at the front for several months, and who had confessed, with tears in her eyes, | that she could not afford to renew her subscription this year. She had brok- »bed in telling the solicitor that she feared she would have no right to have a Red Cross banner in her window this Christ- mas. ‘Mr. Grambs’ eyes were suspiciously moist as he walked away. A moment later he was back yith $20 more, “If the people who can’t afford it and who have given their all feel that way about it, this is very little for any of us who can give without hurting ourselves to do,” said Mr. Grambs. ord on this Christ- roll call will be about 3,000 per and at least thirty Bismarck en down and tas there has the souvenir eraze. ed in surgery and medical skill in re- li ne day and we building thes@ Brditen fien, a young: licutenant 0 were comparing scuvenirs. He show-! Three moving picture . theatres, iu Bets ceaalite Wid geseyee ion’ rooms, cote, peter y sont be bad peer aes ‘the public parks of Vichy l h and the told me, ‘that he g wounded | river, ¥ ved bath- d that while ing in sui the Red \aiting for the stretcher bearers to Croes were among the all me up he employed his time dig | directed hy the something to take! One or th enterprises ‘And I found later that all this! -this establishment the manu he machine gun builet wre of comfort bags, in which and another through women were employe). There never 11 ne could think of were enough to go ’rovind. There was souven: nothing the Yanks prized more-highly,| Aq] a fact which should be gratifying 10 there, and the patriotic ismarck ‘women who of them ev were suppli 5 loyal hours in the American women. These dr cture of these housewives for meant life to our wounded bo boys at the front. The-movies, pa 0 cases through out hos-; said Mr. Hanna, were especially effi- pital and ‘there were cacious in the treatment of shock other hospitals doing the same work.! eases. He.told of one boy so par- And every wound had to be dre&sed | and filled with gauze which had been | {prepared by American women at| | home.” | Capt. Hanna’s narrative was one of | Limber Up Quickly Vado Undor the Soothing, Reputrating Application of the most convincing heard in Bis-| Harfin's Wizard Gil we used over endless mon ntities j mack since the war began. He spoke} ie the memory of what he had gone} | through vivid and fresh, and with ex-| | Bao powers of description. } No| {one noted the passage of time. was difficult to believe, when he had finished, that he had talked for more than two hours. The business of, the annual meet- ing was briefly disposed of. Presi- dent Goddard called attention to- the ifact that this was the date of the an- nual election of officers. He refer- red briefly to the magnificent spirit | which Bismarck. had displayed during ithe war; to how nobly it had -resppnd- jed to every call made upon it, and he jasserter that the incoming board of ‘directors. would have before it the) greatest opportunities ever offered a sick ‘commercial body. Nominations were Lavet ithen.ealled for and F. L. Conklin, st chairman. of thé. nomiating commit- > tee name: In cases of rheum: and lame back it penetrates quic drives out soreness, and limbers up stiff, aching | joints and muscle: Wizard Oil is an: absolutely reli- able, antiseptic appl ication for cuts, burns, bites, and stings. Sprains and | bruises heal rea under its sooth=! ing, pene trating q a Get it from druggists for 30 cents. If not satisfied return thg bottle and Tony back. : pitie pi sratitecd. t}at the station by Edith iPhone 75, City Fuel Co. families in addition to hi | owe to his patrioti display a Red Cros mas eve. re's lots s banner on of other food fellows ‘Socialist - Here F Avitatar: Convicted iles Petition for Stay of Proceedings. eee | Kate Richards O'Hare, the speaker who fac a five- min the women’s federal )brison at Jefferson City, Mo, as a | resutt of her conviction in federal court at Lismarck last winter’ on [charges of disloyalty, will take “her case to the United States supreme court. Mrs. O'Hare, according to word received in Fargo by Col. M. As -Hil- dreth, United States district attor- ney who prosecuted her, has filed ‘a petition with the clerk of the United States circuit court of appeals ‘ask- ing a 30-day stay of proceedings that her attorneys might make the neces- sary preparations, M O'Hare had appealed tg--the it: epurt. of appeals which’ con- firmed her centence while in session at Denver, lest October. The time al- lotte.. her to surrender to the United States hal in Fargo soon would have expired. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK, Hogs, 56,000; steady. Sales to 17.60. . $17.45 to 17.65, Light $16.65 to 17.40. Packing $16.60 to 17.40. Throwours $15.50. Pigs, good to choice $12.75 to 15.W. Catle, 7,009; beef steers and can- ning stock steady. Calves steady to 25¢ lower, Beef catle $14 &: Common and medium $9.00 to 15.85, Butcher stock $7.60 to 14.00. Canners and cutters $6.55 to 7. Stockers and feeders $10.00 to 13.2 ; eval calves good and choice suite 30 0 $15.00. ay Soci BL jyear ern range beef sters $13.75 to heifers $7.60 to 12 ve and prime $14.60 to Wes $9.00 to 9.25. Sen ae aren 2 at the Lewis & Clark hotel evening, in honor of former 3. Hanna was unquestion- the most brilliant event in the and they have h to do its} as roll call | an ‘0, li ( bse tomor Let Carney ‘Coal Phone 94° (QO. E. Anderson Lbr. Git HANNA SPEAKS AT SCHOOL ON | RED CROSS WORK Former Governor 1. 2. Hanna on! Friday gave the work of the Funior | Red Cross a decided impetus by ad-; dressing high school pupils on the} | work of the Red Cross overseas. Gov- ernor Hanna, who spent se eral | months in a high executive position | with the Red Cross, came over in the morning from Mandan, where he was} | guest of honor at a testimonial ban- quet Thursday evening, and was met} Wakeman | Hughes, who is in charge of the Jun- ior Red Cross drive, and who immed- iately commandeered his services as speaker extraordinary in the cause. For the.Beulah Coal | KNIGHTS ATTENTION. Instalation of officers will take place at a special conclave of Tan- cred contami? called for Saturday evening, Dec. 21, at 8 o'clock. ’ Carney Coal Phone 94 history of the city. One hundred cov- were laid. W. H. Stutsman, prest- dent ot the Commercial ciuh, was toastmagter. E. K. Bitzing speke on | behalf of the business and ,profes- | sional men of the city, and 1. ® Han- onded in a wonderfully inter- 8S, .in.which, North Dako- and overseas experiences and im- § were skillfully blended. | Phone 75, City Fuel Co. For the "Beulah Coal ACHES AND PAINS QUICKLY RELIEVED “Tou’ll find Sloan’s Liniment “softens the severe rheumatic ache te Put it on freely. Don’t rud it in. Just let it pezetrate. naturally, What a sense of soothing relief soon follows! External aches, stiffness, soreness, cramped ™muscles, strained snews, ‘back “cricks”—those ailments can’ Linimen: Kills Pair