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= mADUCEADUROROCODOROROONOSREDNT POUT UUUNUDDUABOUNGOOONEOD SNGUNNNDLOUOOANUDDONOOOLGOOSOOOSOONOONS ULUUORDOCESUDUQUCUSUNGGOCECANEOUE: Ss andganeancgecnannsacnaongre JOHNSON'S: UT The Store With Over 1,000 Garments Two Stores: Bismarck Grand Forks Popular Priced Store Bismarcks Fastest Growing Store BIG TEN SALE. Tuesday Only 3-Piece ‘Breakfast Sets, slightly soiled, aljjcalarsy at+- BI 98E Bungalow Aprons— Allcypuavant. at— Serge Skirts in Navy Blue and Black, all sizes, at— $4.98 One lot of Corsets at, $1.59 One lot of Waists, a little soiled, at— $3.98 Percales, at-— 19c Cheese Cloth, at— 7c Blankets, at— 20 PCT. DISCOUNT a NO CHARGES NO APPROVALS NO REFUNDS BIG HAT SALE Over 100 Hats in this lot, at— | $3.98 and $5.98 — FURS!! Come Early, Please! fo Avoid the Rash ee OOUDUAUOUELOUUROSOEOEOOOGS! OX CARTS TAKE SUPPLIES TO STARVING SERBIANS Trains Are Few and Take Five Days for. 150- Mile Run; Autos Can’t Travel and Need Is Urgent save thousands of,war was a clty of 80,000; now of 25, 000. Jt is estimated that another 10,- 600 of refugees may return. Nearly everybody needs clothing. The Am- erican Red Cross recently distributed a carload, but it was only a start. ing in equipment that trains are few, ch Enemy Stripped Country and seryice most uncertain. j e retreating Bulgarians and Aus- |trians literally stripped, not only the Highways are so torn up that mo- stores and houses, but in some cases tor cars can proceed but slowly in the people themselves of clothing. good weather, and not at all when | The Serbian government is giving the rains come. one-quarter pound of bread a day to And the condition in Serbia is as nearly 20,000 of the 25,000 inhabi- serious as when tie Red Cross com-. tants, +The American Red Cross is mission brought relief in 191 ‘giving a little more bread, as well as A pasesnger coming from Soffia to rice and a little lard,*to 5,000 people. Salonika, a distance of only 750 miles, It also distributes some beans. Ex- made the trip in five days, When he cept for the brgad given by the gov- asked an explanation of some of the,ernment, the American Red Cross is delays he was told the train was wait-|the only relief agency. ing for coal. j; , There are two doctors for the pop- On the one railway line from Ath- ulation of 25,00 ns to Salonika there is an express! Refugees from Bulgaria are coming train three times a week, which is|in, emaciated, in rags, and typhus eg- scheduled to make the distance at 12;demic and that typhus is spread by miles an hour! But it is often ai where from one to 12 hours behind | apprehensive. time. Whenever there is a heavy: rain it is almost sure to be greatly; tion for refugees. delayed. | 50,000 Are Left Without Doctors The special survey party of the} From Monastir west of Ox carts must Serbian people from starvation this inter. Unuttera>ly slow as they are, er thousands must die. Railroads are destroyed, or so lack- oth- The American Red 000 people in the district, there is| 1 in 36 ‘hours. en/tributing any food in that country ‘de- route! cause there is’no means of transpor Overland to Belgrade Thought Impos-/ tation, sible Formerly it sa fruitful, agricul- Opinion differs as. to the possibil-|tural district, ‘But this year the peo- ity of going from Salonika to Belgrade | ple had no seeds, and the farming im- overland, The railway may be r | pliments weré taken away by ‘the Bul-} paired in a year and a half. The to-|garfans.” TH# Bulgarians ‘also drove tal distance is less than 500 miles. laway the ‘sheep and cattle Of the The railway is operating from Sa-jpeople in the district, 10,090 are re- lonika as far as Uskub, 160 miles.!ported to be in immediate need of They were six days Lakeling a American Red Cross, leaving Athens; Ochrida, a distance,of 40 miles with! to that adopted by the labor party in thé formation North Dakota along the lines outlined bythe federation of the states of Mi- nols and New ; therefore. he it AA eR PIRES ANAM EM NL SUERTE PRT TEARS SE I “= Ver shies a BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE : ‘ ' cone sine Toes } “A PAIR OF. SILK STOCKINGS* Be i Cee phde At the Orpheum. Theatre tonight. Don't miss it. UNION. LABOR T0 ORGANIZE THEIR PARTY Milhollan, vice president of the North, Dakota Federation of Labor, returned at noon the louse, the people of Monastir are| today from Fargo, where he attended a meeting of the state executive com- pss has established a de-lousing sta-| mittee Sunday, when, to use Mr. Mil- hollan’s terms, organized labor “decid- ed to get into politics right” hy form- 2 along lines similar Railway | Comthfssioner "labor part Hnois. just after a washout on the railway,! ae took the best of the coastwise boats.|no physician, Influeriza is still pre-| The || following resolutions were] the cars to seek food. nearly always whi vas a lve ¥ is-| adopted a ee which was scheduled to make the trip; valent. The government is. not dis- a removed, sometimes six, eight or ten. “Believing that, the time is ripe for of a labor party York and other states, “Resolved by the hoard of di zo thig 23fd day of February, in} Re tors of the North Dakota State Federation | of\Labor in regulars atel 1919, exsion ‘assembled that a committee be appointed MONDAY, FEB. 24, 1919. GREEKS DYING BY HUNDREDS RETURNING FROM BULGARIA Swarm Aboard Trains and at Each Stop Bodies Are Removed for Burial BY LIFUT.-COL, HOMER FOLKS, (American Red Cross Investigator As- “gigned by N. F. A. to Write of Con- ditions in the Balkans.) Salonika.—Between Constantinople and Salonika, along the route by which deported Greeks are returning :o their homes, the refugees are dying by the hundreds of cold and starvation. At every station crowds of these ref- ugees swarn upon every passing ‘rain, filling every inch of space, riding on |the roofs, on the trucks, under the guns of the trains, carrying artillery under the field kitchens, on the ammu- nition; but chiefly crowding into the freight cars, packed so closely that no one can either. sit or lie down. Americans, well provided with cloth- ing, blankets, etc., and inside a closed ear, suffer severely from the.cold. The condition of those poor unfortunate by-: products of the world’s great war— thinly clad: or in rags, and traveling on the top or in ‘open cars, can hardly be imagined... They have lived through months of privation and many of them have had no food for days, except a little which the American Red Cross had managed to get up to stations along the railroad.. The train crawls along slowly—six. days from Constantinople a distance of about 400 miles. When a train stops at a gtation and the refugees unpack themselves from a which these returning pilgrims? fi. thelr way, After they reach Greek territory, at each station groups leave the trains to go over the plains or the barren hills to their village homes.. ‘ In one such waiting group*sat two women, each with a small dead child in her arms. If these people succeed ed in reaching their homes they were likely to find them either campleret; destroyed or stripped of furiiture,, bedding and utensils, and without doors and windows. MINNESOTA D. A..R. ) ‘Minneapolis, “Minn., Feb! 24.—Tho. annual -mid-winter conference of the Minnosota society, Daughters of the American Revolution, will be held on February 27 at the Leamington ho- tel. in Minneapolis. It is expected that the names of the Minnesota del3- gates to the national D. A. R. conven- tion at Washington, next month, will be announced at the conference. K. of P. Lodge Dance at Ar- mory Friday night, Feb. 2%. Everyone welcome. EL DALLO At one station, 45 fresh graves were j counted, The weather approacged the freezing point, but children “stand! barefoot in water up to the ankles, ice forming around the edges of thé pools, waiting On for food. sewing If theré' ‘are any’ laws 4? Bulg i regulating the libor of woien And ¢ehil- dren, they did not apply to these un- happy Greeks. They were given the | DEADWOOD COMES BACK. Deadwood, '8.°.D.| Fev. 21.—It_ has heen a long, long time, since Dead- doow hag had any substantial exclie- ment and local , fans have enthusias- tically joined the movement to sup- port a bill to legalize boxing in South Dakota. It has been stated that a majority of the Black Hills delega- tion, now atending the sesion of tae state legislature, is in favor of the | measure ‘provided, boxing is carefully © watched anit. sufeguarded: ~ The pill submitted to th eSouth Da” kota legislature is patterned afler the (Minncsota law. K. of P. Lodge Dance at Ar- mory Friday night, Fel. 28. Everyone welcome. ‘ FEATURE NUMBER THREE = TITANIUM—A rare mineral, enters into the lead plates, har- dening them and giving them longer life. It precipitates min: erals and impurities in solution, thus increasing the efficiency of the: Battery. - Vesta ‘Indestructible Isolator, ja’ Impregnated.‘ Wooden ‘Katts, and . Vesta’ Titanium At 25 Eee Discount MTT) CT There is one break of two miles, over/food and clothing. In, another dis- which persons and goods are trans-|trict not far away, including 47. vil- ported by auto. The schedule for the|lages with 22,000 people similarly 160 miles is 24 hours, but schedules; stripped by the retreating army, 6,009 do not count very much are reported in immediate need. Monastir, in southwestern Serbia,| There are neither physicians nor med- near the Grecian frontier, ‘before the licines. AMERICA DANCING TODAY AS SHE NEVER DANCED BEFORE, EXPERT ASSERTS—OLD DANCES TO STICK ‘ Chieago, Feb. 24. the other foot,” said one her, “It in dancing. has quickened isn’t rythm; there is no art; the chick- ties ended, rccording to leading dan¢-|¢n, hop and ,its kindred dances soon ing masters, who declare that, the yuh: | Wilt he rel legated tt the burtesqae young and old, are literally dhe; | show.” pe ing off the depression of wee Vy ager for Since early December, a crowds | $8 Deki Nee! York. Cain- have filled publie and pri ute halls, | add and’ Cnidigol tne drie-step, fox clubs, cafes and other places fihere | trot and Walt% will remain, just as the dancing permittes Similar condi-| two-step and waltz were standards for tions obtain in oth jes, the maste say. Dancing classes, in many eases including father, mother and children of one family, have increased to six times the number they contained dur- ing the war months. Junces are governed largely by the musie of the day. For instane sa's marches of 27 years ago r jn’ the re-itrtit ion of the two step. This “Année WV for" thie muscles There are no new dances,to. whieh | toviémerize, Mere van be but: hee the increased interest. may he attripu- f tions of the feet if there is to be ted. Indeed, the experts predict, thit| Perfect ease in dancing. ‘fhe muscles the:pre-war,dances—-the one step, waltz | ¢dinnot memorize.the freik ‘steps and fox. trot—will continue is the reason the waltz and two step andards for the next 10 lived right down to the time of the they have perfect rythm, y | tango, dances with perfect rythm ean sur- “And here let me say that the tango vive. was only a diversion; so was the max- Of course, ixe; so was the hesitation, and so were ever craving y, must have its|the other similar dances. They had freak steps, t s, turns, dips andj their day, but were soon tossed aside slides, but thiese. are merely passing| by the public. The hesitation was pret- fancies, the masters explain. They | ty, but it was also difficult. One can’t add that these steps, silly as they seem, | rest on one foot and dance on the oth- ake thought and there cannot be dane |er without growing weary. “The fox trot has been kept alive by pretty music. This step was not orig- inated by dancing masters. In_ fact, the public, and not the dancing mas- ters, are the originators of new dances, The fox trot was the outgrowth of an attempt by eastern college boys to liven up the one step: “When the dance becotie popular composers were quick to gét'on the market-with music tempermental America, ing rythm where thought is required. Even now, the masters expiain, the into daring dances are fading the baekground, and body positions are becoming more and more dignified, The twinkle toe, the chicken hop, the jelly wobble, and the slip-up, for a time popular, are but a flash in the pan, nd already have been Cisearded in first class dancing institutions. office of the register of deeds #f Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, on- the lith day of January, 1917, at 1:30 o'clock p.m, and recorded. in book 138} of mort on page 200, will be fore- closed by the sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter deserth- ed, at the front door of the court house in the eity of Bismarck, county ef Bur- leigh and state and North Dakota, a: the hour of two o'clock p. m. on the} 12th day of April, A. D. 1919, to satisfy the amount due on the mortgage on the date of sale. The premises described in said mort-!* gage and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are those situated in the county of Burleigh and state of North | Dakota, to-wit : « “The Home of Service” Also the Home of West half of th hwes ’ quer “Cate oene werent | Chevrolet, Hudson | . rai cae halt of ihe southwest ; and Hupmobile Cars quarter (Wz SW%) of section | * | and Parts twenty-eight (28), township one When in need of expert hundred forty-four (144), seventy-seven (77), west of mechanical. work, bring your = car to us. M} 5th P.M. | Default has occurred in said tne | | Look over our battery | department, it is the most gage by reason of the fact that the mortgagors failed to pay the debt se- completely equipped in the state. cured thereby whith was due Decem- ber Ist, 1917. AUTOMOBILE PAINTING You will be interested in com- The said mortgage contains a pro- vision to the effect that the mortgagee ; paring our work with that of other éhopa. ; — or assigns may pay past due notes on} prior liens and by. virtue of said pro- vision the owner of said mortgage paid | range the \ a certain coupon note on a prior mort- | gage for two hundred seventy-four and 20-100 dollars ($274.20). ' That there will be due on date of Sale the sum of six hundred thirty and ae date vere) besides the GEORGE SATTLER, Mortga, pres, wee. North 1 | formation of a state and national and instructed to, procure all informa- tion possible on the subject, the same to: be submitted af the annual econven- tion of this federation to be held’ at Minot in June, 1919, a complete -plat- form, broad enough in its principles: to | take-in all labor, whether organized or | unorganized, having-as its object -the seantiest of food; many of them lived in the open; and if they objected, or slackened their efforts, deprivation of food, and beating, were their rewards. Under such conditions diseases chriv- ed, and the number of Greeks rapidly diminished. No one knows how mary of the 120,000 or so Greeks who were Including light, “tele- jmakes the Vesta radically differ- ent and superior to the rest. Out of over four. hundred: Vesta Batteries sold in the past three years we have replaced only two. DESK ROOM sioner commis =:Amsterdam, i LL party for the betterment of the toil- | deported will ever return. ers." Rep. Ge “A. Malone and Comms ik sion. CRISIS. BREWING. Feb, 24.—. wing in:the German ing to tl Zadisagréemen: fie armistice and. blue’ «shall, of ization for every. it without. throwi during the:.war, : efficiency: of-our to join the ranks. named as/ the |Peports that often the names of childrca EARLY five thousand of our boys in khaki course, make a place in our organ- \who took their places and have worked faithfully. for. us ever . since. easy for, us ag: for some others, because the ‘Gov- * ernment designated ours as an essential industry By ving davantage of this Bariy-Delivery Dis. count,.you will not only be helping yourself, ees us more easily to Put back to on “You will find-that ‘you-need a few weeks to re r early can become familiar. with it, Apparently some are being deiained One_ investigator phone and janitor ser- vice at a i ea against their will. |are changed by adding .an “off”. at the fend, so as to‘make them seem to. be chee tae childrén. It is hard to, be-; Mi the reports coming to Greece, ® | whore one “hears: peat ima tes that from b “A are coming k to work. . We one of them, but we wish to do crease in*ttactor production. ing out of employment the men This is not going to. be 80 various dates up to May: lst, farmers intended to o: and we actually increased: the, could just. as, well take ‘now. organizati ‘after our duet sec ries, After March 8th the following discounts will be given: For delivery during week:of Mar. 10 to Mar. 15 incl. For delivery during week of Mar. 17 to Mar. 22 incl. + For delivery during week of Mar. 24 to Mar. 29 incl. For delivery during week of Mar. 31 to April 5 incl. oee ‘ This discount will go a long ways ‘toward paying the fuel bills of your tractor during this season. ¥ ization. your new tractor. ie man'who . shipments without delay, LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. : Distribiitors of fF Vesta Batteries,” Federal Tires and Overland Cars We can, however, give steady -work both to. oun, -present: help and to the returning soldiers and: sailors, if we can bring about an immediate ‘in- . In ofder'to do this, / we must. move. forward to the farm some thous- | ands of tractors that.are ordered for delivery, at , have to‘ship a large umber of : tractors: that tier ‘ater ‘this season, but so. that when the ifrst day. of good plowing weathér dawns, he will be able to get in the field without;4: moment's lost time. .That in itself is a very, good reason for taking early delivery. Go to your dealer and tell him that you will accept immediate delivery of your Mogul or Titan 10-20 horsepower tractor, so he can make up his carload and we ‘shall also To: those ‘farmers who are.so. aiiuated as to be ablé.to'take advanei's (20j010 5 tage of it wemake the Sophy iprpposition : “Faney the lady partner bending the| thatSlended properly with the steps. leg straight back from the knee and oy 1 ihe davieing craze increase aft- % ¥: 4 Cheuk then taking two quick hops forward on | er July Janeing masters think so. ri 7 ‘ Feet y F Rn Care| Bab thiea tr lGalaned: alae predbat Cine a i - Our Early-Delivery Discount’ Plan iG stead NOTICE OF MORTGAGE SALE | ‘reased interest. So do all othér amuse- SS ‘ pup a: Notice is hereby given that that cer-; Ment men. It Is largely a guess what } Cae ain mortgage, made, executed and de- prohiition will do for the various If you will take delivery of a Mogul or Titan tractor now we wil reward © 4 ig z ivered by John J. Schmidt and Lizzie Is 8. we A ve Schmidt.” ae tee nad Jaco) M.|_ “But right now. America‘ is dancing your co-operation as follows: | Schmidt and Mary Schmidt, his wife,/lke she never dameed before.” To those who will accept delivery of a Mogui or Titan ‘10-20 ¢ on, or: before sa mortgagors to George Sattler. mortga- . : March 8th, we will give an Barly Delivery Discountiof 5% from the price gece dated tle Cth eday, ob Decemers 5 of the tractor... (This amounts to,§61.25 in the case of the Titan 10-20 and ‘A.D. 1916, and filed for record in the A : : oan ¢ $56.25 on the Mogul 10-20). UU IHEAOGERSOOOUOL ENE Harvester Company of America | ~ North Dakota \