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ys Classified Advertising Rates. + ferms Strictly Cash—No copy without remittance attached will be inserted. First insertion, 35 cents; additional insertions without change of copy, 15 vents. Advertisements containing more than 25 words will be charged at the Fate of two cents a word for each additional word, Copy for Classified Advertisements, to insure proper insertion, must be in this office before 10 a, m. of day of publication. HELP WANTED—MALE # WANTED—A teamster to drive a team Apply Bismarck Bottling Works. _'204 Main St, 7-16-8t WANTED—We want a boy to learn Pressfeeding; pay while learning, Call at Tribune office. 4. 15-3t WANTED—A_ boy to wash bottles at Bismarck. Bottling Works, 204 Main Write Los Angeles Y. M. C. A. Auto School. Get started right. 7-1-1mo. WANTED—Four good carpenters, come prepared to work, Mandan Mercantile Co., Baldwin, N. D. 7-14-8t SOLDIERS & SAILORS We will run your Want- ed-a-Job for one month FREE of charge. method. Constant practice. mer tates. Write for catalog. Moler Barber college, 27K Nicollet Ave., Min- neapolis. Est. 1893, 7-2-lmo HELP WANTED—FEMALE MEN AND WOMEN learn barber trade and earn $25 a week up. Positions guar- anteed. Few weeks completes by our s! N OF M 9 Sven YOUR DOME - WHEN MOSQUITO ALIGHTS TO EAT MOLASSES PUT ON HAT TO PREVENT ITS ESCAPE AND - ER, BEI! eas REMOVE HAT WANTED—Good dish’ washer at Broadway Cafe. Phone 722, x 7-15-1wk, WANTED-—Strong girl or middle-aged Woman to do housework. Apply Dohn's Meat Market. 2-12-tf WANTED—Two dining room girls, Amer- ican Cafe. Broadway and. Fifth. WANTED—Chambermaid at the Hotn_Hotel. : 7-12. WANTED—Waltress at Homan’s Cafe. 7-10-1WwK WANTED—Competent girl or woman for house work, small modern house, See Mrs. G. D. Mann, Tribune eae et WANTED—Girl for housework. Perma- nent tsponition, at highest wages. Call for E. Lahr at Lahr Motor Sales Co. 7-10-10t WANTED—Housekeeper. on farm for widower _ with ta * children; good Rages. Write F. H. Bobzeln, ite! a Bee SALESMAN » Ny _D. -9-8t | SALESMEN—Need two youni n WANTED—Pantry girl at-Grand Pacific] good appearance and ndplteetomeravel Hotel. 6-28-tf| with manager for. old established cor- WANTED—Chambermalds; apply Grand poration and learn line. Experience wats, 6-27-tf Pot necessary. oust, nave ene wae At Bieta capital, cook | habit. Position is well paid and offers ood future. Apply McKenzie Hotel. and dining room girl. G-ab-iwke| RieSyanetord, toon Bn nS Tiga POSITIONS WANTED WANTED—Position as general clerk etght years’ experience, timekeeper, cost clerk, etc. Address No. 6 care Tribune. T-12-1wk A_MALE NURSE of 15 years experience wishes care of an invalid or private Address F, E. case; best of references. Lynn, Afinex Hotel. Will be at the hotel’ until, Saturday ‘morning. _7-14-4t POSITION WANTED—By young man running gas or kerosene engine. Has had eix years experience, rite No. 4 care Tribune Co. 7-9-1mo. AGENTS ONE of the most important discoveries of the age, Millions are suffering with Rheumatism. An Herb that actually drives the most stubborn case of Rheu- 5 nts are coining money. Price 72¢ pound postpaid. Rheumatism Herb Co., Santa Monica, cae FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES AND FLATS LANDS FOR SALE—Thre weil improved farms, consisting of 640 acres in Burleigh County will be sold in one-half. or one- quarter sections to suit. Will accept city property with bungalow in ex- change as part payment, or part cash and balance reasonable terms. Call J. H. Jensen, Phone 523 or 346K, 7-14-lwk FOR SALE_OR TRADE—160 Improved Burnett County Wisconsin farm for tractor or Dakota farm. Write me and let's make a deal. John Poortinga, Renville, Minn. 7-9-1 4ywks, AUTOMOBILES —MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—One cycle car. in good condition, $70.00. Call .at Dodge Bros. garage. 7-16-2t, FOR SALE—Buick touring carin ex|,4ll governments and turning our des. cellent condition, Ask to see Cole's car at Corwin’s garage, Bismarck, N. D. 711 6t FOR SALE—1919 Olé@smobile, for a quick deal to be sold at once for $1325. Extra Rew :tires included. Write No 659 Tribune. is « LOST AND FOUND FOR SALE—At a bargain, a four. room house in fair condition to be moved off of lot. Geo, M. Register, 1.wk. LOST—A gold Cameo broach between Van Horn and the Grand Pacific Hotel. Finder please return to Tribune and receive reward, 7-15-21 FOR SALE—Nice six room home with hot water heat, well located, Geo. M. Register. 7-14-1wk FOR SALE—Modern five room bungalow. Write No. 8 Tribune. 7-14-1wk ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM OR BOARD at 311 4th St. New management. 7-16-2wks FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room in modern house, suitable for one or two gentlemen, 202 8th St. Phone | 636. FOR RENT—Five rooms, all strictly modern; single and double rooms. Nice lace for summer. $6 and $7 a month. 0c per night. 713 3rd_St. 7-11-6t LOST—Will the party who picked up the silk umbrella with gold handle at. the general delivery window in the post- office on Friday, 11th, A. M., please return to Mrs, R, H.’ Thistlethwaite, 102 Ave. B. 7-14-3t LOST—Blue spring coat north of town between M. Breen and Bis- marck. Also white slipper. Finder please leave at Tribune, Fred Robinson. 7 15 3t LOST—Lady’s . gold ring, set with ruby. Lost on Broadway between Second and Fourth strects. Finder please leave at Tribune office. J. O. Brown. 7-16-1t FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 419 7th St. Phone 4351 MISCELLANEOUS WANTED—Clean white rags. Apply Tribune. 7-5-tf FOR SALE—Dining, room set. Phone 262-R. 7-12-1kw FOR SALE—Thriving grocery business in a progressive farming and railroad community; doing business of over $100 per day in a North Dakota town of 1,500; best town in three counties; three’ railroads, good crops, excellent opporttnity; must sell on account of health. .Stands investigation. . Address 7 Tribune, T-12-4t FOR SALE—Circassian walnut chif- fonier; single vernfs martin bed with apting and mattress. Reéd rocker and rug. Phone 730. 7-15-3t FOR SALE—Cheap. Fumed oak piano new. Phone 836U or call at Apt. 2, Pearson Court. 7-16-1_ wk. FOR SALE—Lewellyn sette, four years old, well bred and trained good | ranger, Address B. P. Adams, ae Falls, Minn. ‘ 7-16-1t LIGHT BAY two-year-old stallion with black, marks; wire mark on both front legs above the knee. Same can be had by applying to City Poundmaster Geo. P. Strohl, 101 Main St. 7-15-1t WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT—6 or 8 room house by permanent renter. Must be well located and modern. Phone or_354X, T16-Lwk WA D. TO RENT — Furnished rooms or flat for light house keeping, Write No, 9 Tribune. 7-16-3t. Puzzle for Marines, Friends of the citizen “sea soldiers” are telling them that a marine not reg- ularly a marine, although coached in | the signals and likely to be called upon to “pinch. hit” for a regular marine, must necessarily be.a submarine. The “rookies” themselves say that WANTED—To buy good second hand hand ‘single driving buggy, must be in’ good ‘condition. Phone cell at 808 7th st. pop oh, Pop! B Tss-esmn’ = HIS CANDY 7 ee peers ee Noah Webster overlooked, this knotty problem, when he wrote his best sell- 442L or} et, and they are calling on sports ed- 7-16-2t.| itors to decide the question. WELL, , | allies, though defeated, Just’ Let Thent‘Alone Is the B i BOB, You Go ON AND Vb BE ovr IN A MINUTE AND SEE WHAT?S THE hgeaira BOLSHEVISM: The question now before us is, did the wounded. and. the gassed, and the maimed, and the sick and the crip- pled in the war.on autocracy suffer in vain? Do the. graves on foreign soil represent the ‘Great Sacrifice, without recompense to the rest of the world? Did Germany and her really de- stroy all that is good and sweet in the world? In plain words, will the bolshevists of Europe and their blood ‘brothers, the I. W. W. of the United States, succeed in upsetting rtintes over to a distatorship of & few, chosen from the fanatical half- ‘baked crowd of theoretical commun- ists or anarchists? Did you and your. fellows fight the good fight in vain? Did we, who remained at home anc kept this carmine colored crew from stabbing you in the back while you were away, merely, postpone our mu- tual destruction? Let us face the-facts, then let us take sides, stand up and be counted! Let us separate the sheep from the goats, whether in or out of office. We are either for our government or against it! We are eitaer for bol- shevism or against it! We are elther for the I. W. W. or against them! There is no middle ground. The people c¥ Russja overthrew the government of the Romanofts and justly so, although the time and place were unpropitious. One hun- dred and eighty million people could not and would not live forever under the tyranny of an absolute monarchy. They revolted. Kerensky became the leader, and if in his veins had run the red blood of Roosevelt, Russia today would be a free country, aj free republic, and labor unarmed, but unafraid. would be wresting from the wonderful resources of that vast do- main all that its great population needs. Thirty-six million men and women went. to. the polls and elected their representatives to a constituent as- sembly. This assembly was to meet Decemder 12, 1917. The entire num- ber of the bolsheviki in all Russia amounted to but 200,000, but when the crucial time came: Kerensky tried honeyed . words and: sent to other lands for the very men. that over- threw ‘his government. Trotzky was, at that itme, in the United States. He- had applied fora passport and our government had refused its is- suance, but the government of Kerensky ‘and Kerensky himself asked our government and pleaded ‘with our government that. Trotzky tbe given his passports and allowed to return to Russia. This our gov- AN OLD-WORLD MENACE WILL FIND NO PLACE IN By OLE. HANSON, Mayor of. Seattle, in The American Legion Weekly. est Way. By, Allman Now, DANNY You MusTN’ QUARREL WI'rh Your CousINS Nov Go OUT NOW AND.PLAY NICE. AND DOM THROW -—— AMERICA turend to assist in the overthrow of the men who thought they could compromise with anarchists. Three weeks before the constitu- ent assembly was to have convened these men, under the leadership of Lenine and Trotzky in Petrograd, seized control of the food supply, secured by glowing promises the sup- port of a portion of the Russian army, overthrew the government by force and violence, and took control of the affairs in Russia. By murder, rapine, threats and bribery they still control a very large portion of Rus- sia. _ Under the doctrine of common property, @ few fanatics, thieves and anarchists in Russia have destroyed all property. Crying ¢or the division of all wealth, they have confiscated and wasted all wealth on hanJ, thus exhausting the savings of gencra- tions and bringing the waole nation face to face with starvatioy, Shout- ing the common use of rvihiaz, they have not stopped with dividing land and tools, but have declared fcr and put in practice the common use of women. Forgetting that all gov ernments are paupers and get thei’ sustenance only from the governed they have tried once more to put into practice that age-old fallacy of creat- ing wealth by law. Forgetting that without labor and toil there can be no wealth production, they have seated themselves upon the raft of idleness, and even now we watch it slowly sink into the depths. Now this doctrine of bolshevism, alluring to the ignorant, full of sweet promise and hope on the surface to humankind, has invaded many other countries of the world. Even here in this land, declared to equality of} oportunity, we find that propaganda is being carefully spread, teaching the necessity of the overthrow of our government and of the overthrow of law and order, and of the confis- cation of honestly earned and saved competencies; and) advocating turn- ing over the government to those who talk the loudest, promise the most and do the ‘least. . One would think that here; where every man can vote and the govern- ment is really ourselves, such seed would fall on barren. ground; but I fear that our soil, watered by the tears of injustice: in the past and carefully tilled by the agitators of the present, promises to bring forth a crop of weeds, which, unless we do our full and fearless duty both as citizens and as public officials, may choke out and destroy some of the most ‘beautiful flowers of our civilization. Turning the government into a ernment finally agreed to, and he re- Ld .T, DIDNT EAT MANE YET, pope “Look HERE! DIDNT - MOTHER TELL YoU NOT To EAT NOUR ‘CANDY UNTIL AFTER SUPPER ? worse autocracy than ever before existed in the world, the leaders in Russia found they could only main- tain their position by murder and rapine, Jtealizing full well that one or two nations could not ‘become bol- shevik and the other nations of the world remain free, they were com- pelled by self-preservation to go throughout the’ world and preach their damnable doctrines. The effect is now seen in Hungary, Germany, Sweden, Italy, Spain and France; and even Great Britain herself, as well as our own land, may feel the effects of this destroying curse, They advocated a free press, and the press has never been free since they came into power, Lenine admits this in his “Soviets at Work,” a speech delivered in April, 1918. He says: “We must systematically sup- press the dishonest and slanderous press.” They not only “suppressed” the so-called coliservative journals, but nailed up the doors of socialist papers and threw the editors in jail. They advocated free speech and yet men are murdered for even disagree- ing with them. Lenina, in this April speech, ads mits that uniformity of pay is im- possible, that he will not allow a free press or free speech; that since equality of pay cannot be put into effect the old managers of business must be hired at enormous salaries. In other words, ho admits the failure of his government. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that that certain mortgage made, executed and delivered py Edith M. Wilton and W. L. Wilton, her husband, mortgagors to Barnes Brothers, a corporation, mortgagee, dated the 18th day of No- vember, 1913, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, on the 28th day of November, 1913, and recorded in Book 106 of Mortgages on page 251, will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage, and hereinafter de- scribed at the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck, County of Burleigh and State of North Da- kota at the hour of 2 o’clock p. m. on the 2nd day of August, 1919, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. Default has oc- curred:in the terms and conditions, of said mortgage, the mortgagors having failed and refused to pay, 1917 and 1918 installments and two coupons, the interest on a certain prior mort- gage and notes, and the taxes on said land, and the mortgagee has, as auth- orized, paid said interest on such prior mortgage and said taxes, and declares the remaining indebtedness, secured by: said mortgage, due and payable. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are described as fol- lows: Northeast Quarter (NE%) of Section Twenty-four (24), Township One hundred thirty-eight (188), Range Seventy-eight (78), Burleigh County, North Dakota. There will be due on such mortgage at the date of sale the sum of Two hundred sixteen and 43-100 ($216.43) Dollars, BARNES BROTHERS, A Corporation, Mortgagee. MW’GEE & GOSS, Attorneys for Mortgages, Minot, al (6—25; 7—2-9-16-23-30) IPROCEEDINGS OF CITY COMMIS- SION JULY 14, 1919. The city commission met in regu- lar session Monday evening July 14th, 1919. There’ were present commis- stoners Bertsch, French, Larson, Thompson and President Lucss. ‘The minutes of the meetings. held on July 7th and 11th, 1919, were reac and approved. Tho matter of the read to the Indian school was referred to Commissioner French. Attorney C. J. Young was appointed assistant cily attorney and also employed to act as special council in presenting the city’s case against the Bismarck Wa- ter Supply Co. to the state railway commission. ‘Mr. Hoskins apyea and asked that some steps be ta’ to pave the intersections of the car track and the cross streets from Ros- ser street north. President Lucas stated that the commission would act in this matter soon. The following bills were allowed: French & Welch Bismarck Machine Shop . D. C.. McLean Mike Getz J. Empting J. Hummel J. Alsbury J. Burden ... H. Christopher . J. Schweigert . J. Katz .. F. Schneider M. B. Morford E. D. Pierce Jim Jensen Ed Randall Harry Buck . A, Scharnowski . J. Batcher .. Harry Crane Geo. Hammekson . Wachter Transfer ( Home Laundry . Wachter Transfer Geo. Little .... Bismarck Gas Co. Kupitz Co. M. Dahl . Mary’s Sc J -AINT BEATIN’ \T, PoP ~T'M JUST LICKIN’ TH! JUICE R. P. Logan + 38.00 St. Alexius Hospital . « 43.00 French & Welch . + 27.00 Mrs. H. Heibert .. - 14.00 Upon motion the dvoard adjourned to meet again July 21, 1919 at eight o'clock p. m. Attest: C. L. Burton, City Auditor. PROPOSALS. Sealed proposals for a two class room and ‘basement frame school building to be erected at Arnold, N. D. in accordance with plans and specifications by Van Horn & Loven, architects, will be received by the Burnt Creek School District No, 24, of Burleigh Co. N. D., at the office of County Supt. W. E. Parsons, in the court house, Bismarck, N. D., until 2:00 p. m. turday ugust 16, 1919, at which time and pl they will be opened in the preesnce of bidders, A certified check for at least five per cent of the amount of the tender must accompany each proposal. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids. | Plans and specifications will be on file on and after July 26, 1919, at the office of W. E. Parsons, County Supt. salve the architects in Bismarck, A Dated July 16th, 1919. PAUL SCHONERT, Pres, Bismarck, N. D. WILLIAM PAUL, Clerk, Rismarck, N. D., 6 13. BIGGEST BARGAINS During the past six weeks not a day has passed that we have not had letters from South Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa, telling us of the tremendous land business and advance in values in those states, This is going to increase our busi- ness and raise our values. Our Mr. Young is now down there looking up business and our ad- vice is for you to buy now before local prices advance as they sure- ly will by Fall. ©, E. YOUNG REAL ESTATE CO. -Phones———— 4. F. O'Hare, 78M. _—‘F. E. Hedden, @ F. E, Young, 78R, ——— CHIROPRACTORS E. E. HOARD, D. C., Ph. C. Licensed Doctor of Chironractle Gentleman Assistant, Phone 327 ; 19 Fourth St. Bismarck, N. D. —————————— E. T. BURKE LAWYER Tribune Block Bismarck, N. D. Phone 752. R. S. ENGE, D. C. PH. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free. Suite 9-11, Lucas Block Phone 260 Bismarck, N. D. | Fine Interior Decorating ; | and painting is my specialty. If you want a real job— 1} one that you will be ' proud of— I make a Specialty of Wood Finishing Phone 855 and I will call and make you an estimate. J. GOLDEN 518 Third St. TYPEWRITERS & SERVICE REMINGTON Typewriter Co. GEO. C. KETTNER, Rep. Phone 258. Bismarck. ed Hedden Agency, Every man would like to own a lot or two so that sometime he may be able to have his own home and stop paying out money, with nothing to show for it but rent receipts. This agency can help you get the lots you want. : Webb Block, Phone 0. —oOoOoOoOoOOOO BISMARCK FURNITURE CO. 220 Main St. Furniture Upholstery Repaired, Re- finished and Packed. oS THE HURLEYS TRAPS AND PIANO Up-to-the-Minute Musie 10 Main St. Phone 130-K