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— MONDAY, SEPT. 8, 1919. MANY PEOPLE are not enjoying the physical com- fort that they should simply be- cause they are wearing sets of teeth that are not giving satisfac- tion. Poorly fitting sets of teeth are constantly annoying. and are un- necessary. We can make you teeth that fit. If you have badly decayed teeth that should be extracted do not hesitate to have them out, for they can be extracted absolutely without pain. We would be glad to “have you call, Our prices are half what you will pay elsewhere, Examination and Estimates FREE Union Dental Parlors Phone 118—Opp. N. P. Depot Over Orpheum Theatre Degree of Honor Meeting. 7 Regular meetings of the Degree of | ®S Henor will open tomorrow evening, September 9, when it is hoped that all ofticers and members will attend. Da of -Isabi The Daughters of Isabelle ‘will re- sume their regular sessions with a meeting in the Knights of Columbus hall this evening. Mothers’ Social Club. The first meeting of the season of the Mothers’ Social club will be held Tuesday afternoon at 3 o’clock at the home of Mrs. Ceci] Burton, Mrs. Wil- liam Harris will assist the hgstess. This will be a social meeting, and all associated members are cordially in- vited to attend. SHOE FITTERS Richinond Whitney MAIN .STREET Cor, 7th & Main St. Bismarck Missouri Valley Motor Company R. B. LOUBEK, General Manager The House With a Variety to Satisfy Every Possible Desire DISTRIBUTORS FOR CHEVROLET - HUPMOBILE HUDSON — ESSEX and PAIGE Motor Cars ACCESSORIES AND SUPPLIES Distributors for SMITH FORM-A-TRUCK A 3-in-1-time-and-money Saver Expert Attention Prolongs the Life of Car Jobbers and Distributors of KELLY-SPRINGFIELD ——and—— PENNSYLVANIA TIRES Our Painting Department is the best in the Northwest. Let us make you an estimate. BATTERY DEPARTMENT ~ PRESTO-LIGHT BATTERIES AND PARTS Batteries tested without charge, re- charging, repairing, rebuilding. PHONE 234 JOHNSON COMING 10 BISMARCK 10 TALK ON LEAGUE (Progressive Republican Leader Will Follow President Wilson Here iG. O. P. SCOUT IN CAPITAL | n, Tiram Johnson. , regional director for t of the Mississippi for {Will J. Hays, chairman of the re- ‘publican national committee, scouted ‘around Bismarck on Sunday in ad- jVance of President Wilson, and after ‘giving the situation the — once-over wired the national committee that it ‘would do well to schedule he Califor- nia senator for an address here. | Johnson, who with Borah and other x in opponents of the league of akes up the president's trail in a ss meeting at Chicago Wed- ‘nesday, will give the other side Bf the league of nations question when he speaks here under the auspices of the ‘re an national committee. The date for i appearance here has not been set, but republican leaders in the eapital city are confident that Bis- mureck will not be overlooked. ade a great reputation and has often been j considered possible presidential tim- ber. He is reputed to be a speaker of remarkable force, and it is expected that hundreds of North Dakotans will ek to hear him, After Wil | Victor He the state w Film Masterpiece Shown Here Tonight Bismarck Theatre Presenting True Story of Turkish Barbarity “Auction of Souls,” which is pre- sented at tht Bismarck theatre tonight has the unusual distinction of having je leading nin who acually en- ,acted the original scenes which_ the motion picture reproduces. | Aurora Mardiganian, the girl who has |tie leading role, is not a motion pic- oe actre: but was s induced to gach ssed through in arn menia in 1915. | Miss Mardiganian’s experience be- jYore the camera is not apparent in |the picture for she holds up her own jend as well as any of the regular ac- tors. Perhaps her art is that born of the vivid memory of the horrible scenes throug “h which she passed be- fore es rom her native land to come to Amer for future relief. She is the daughter of a former prosperous banker at Harpout, and thirteen years old when the war brol out, | Being a beautiful girl she at- t ed a Turkish official who wished to make her his wife, imposing upon hed his own religion and the, lowly state of Turkish women. Her father refused to give ee up. Whenth e massacres of the Armenians CASTORIA For Infants and Children | In Use For Over 30 Years | Always bears ” OE AUTH a | eignaterd lo he i | PHONE 189 SOLD BY BEULAH COAL COMPANY I. HAY .FOR SALE IN CARLOAD LOTS — me %: 8-22-tf wa ba en Geo. Coleman Opposite McKenzie Hotel - WANTED --- Telephone Linemen ~ and Inside Wiremen B. K. SKEELS ELECTRIC SHOP Delco Lighting Systems Willard Battery Station PHONE 370 408 BROADWAY |The Oakes BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUN: & Democrat Sees Necessity of Compromising Washington, Sept. 8—The peace treaty will be reported to the senate next Wednes- day noon, Chairman Lodge of the foreign relations com- mittee announced today. It jis planned to call up the tréaty for debate beginning next Monday. Senator Simmons,’ demo- crat, of North Carolina, an- | nounced to the senate that | while he favored ratification | of the treaty without amend- ments or reservations, he was convinced that concessions | must be made to those favor- | ing reservations and that he | had been discussing with | democrats “a compromise” | on conservative reservations | | | | | | | of an interpretative charac- ter. a secret agreement with the Germans, the Mohammedans made . further et- forts to get possession of the , girl. After seeing her father, mother, two brothers and three sisters brutally siain, she entered upon a series of ad- yentures which prov that life may be more ting than the wildest dream of the fictionist., ors | She goes through an untold succes- sion of the Turl is captured by the Kurds, of the desert, sold as a slave, put in a harem, takes refuge witn imouks, and at last is saved by, the h who sent her to America he has talked and written of and finally acted out her experiences. In “Auction of Souls,” whicn is the menia, every detail of the story fol- lows the actual, experiences of Miss Mardiganian, and the report to the United Stat of Viscount Bryce, former English am! the Unitea States, investigation of the Armenian atro ties. ador to SOO LINE TO RUN | | TWO BIG TRAINS | FOR WILSON DAY | oo or The schedule of the two special. Soo trains to Bismarck for V Wednesday are as follows: Leaves Minot Minot 12:30 a. m. Leave Underwood Falkirk 6 lwin . ng in Bismarck 9 a, m. Leaves Oakes Leave Oakes 4:00 a. m. Fullerton. 4 Monago C: Fredonia Lehr 6:20 a. m. Wishek 7:00 a. m, Burnstad 7:20 a. m, Napoleon Kintyre 8: Braddock 8:20 a. m. Moffitt 8:50 a. m. Britton Arriving Bis arek 10: 00 a, m. Heturning to Oakes and Minot, the special train for the former city, will leave Bismarck at S 80 p.m, ednes: ng morning. at 8 p.m. t Minot at a, m, Thursday. special train will be com- posed of eight cars and the Minot train of nine ca SENATOR GIBBEN; SENATE LEADER, SUFFERS STROKE Word reaches Bismarck today from Cando that Senator A. S. Gibben, the oldest member in point of years’ sery- ice of the North Dakota senate and for many terms a leader in that body, suffered a severe stroke of paralycsis on Saturday night, as a result of over- wan, and that his condition is criti- cal. Senatoir Gibben served as chairman of the appropriations committee of the senate in the last assembly and was a member of the budget’ board. Few members of the North ‘Dakota legisla- ture have been more respected or bet- ter loved than this stalwart old Roman, and friends here trust that he wilt make an early recovery from his pres- ent illness. GREAT FIRE RAGING ON ISLAND OF ARCHANGEL COAST Archangel, Sunday, Sept. 7—A great fire has ‘been burning furiously for more than two days on Maimasa is- land in the gulf of Archangel. Timber and sawmills for three miles on both sides of the gulf have been destroyed. The destruction of property for miles around is reported complete. Estimates of the loss was placed at 60,000,000 rubles. MAIL’ ORDERS ACCEPTED Mail orders accompanied by some- thing that can. be ‘turned into legal tender will be: accepted for the forth- coming engagement of the Marcus Sbow in “Oh Baby” at the Auditorium While the regular advance sale will not open until Wednesday. Manager Vesperman has arranged to care for numerous. mail requests for sittings. Many have already been received. To guard against the inroads of speculat- ors only six tickets, will be sold to one person unless the management. is assured that they are not to be re- sold. FOR SALE—Heating ‘stove ati 3rd_St. ‘Phone 415 9-8-3 fambermaid. Apply Grand WANTED TO, ‘apy INT—Two or three fur- Call nished . =a) housekeeping rooms. 9-8-1t Room 236, {Grand Pacific, started, carried on by the Turks under | wild || story of her harrowing years in Ar-|# James| i? \ EXCLUSIVELY ™ BIG FEATURES | Day The 162nd birthday anniver: the Marquis de Lat ly commemorated hy chapter, | Revolution, with a dinner and a Lafay- ette program at the Counrty club § Minnis and covers were laid Mrs M. Martin presided. The inyocati rendered by Re thwaite, and the principal delivered by J. L. Bell. . Bell’s addre: terpiece, will ieves of the Bi arck chapter. ib Lefayette’s contribution to the — free- dom of the coloniesfi and ef the ap-} preciation which America Engagement alee Today, Mon., Sept. Sth Aurora Mardiganian DAUGHTERS OF AMERICAN REVOLUTION NOTE 162ND BIRTHDAY OF LAFAYETTE y of when Lafayette ing- pshe Daughters of the American : the evening, a tribute to Lafayette, was Which was a real The | the speaker vividly he Janding ot the young French aristocrat, then| The hoste ere Mesdames FE. A, WANTED—50 or 60 men for concrete work nly 20 s old, the shores of; Thorberg, E. B. Cox and L, F. Luthe & South Carolin: “ie Vit; he told. of! Miss Dorothy McFarland of Valley | on streets. Apply at mixer, west of the showed | At the close of the evening programs | MRS. CHARLEBOISS SUPPER “snd sy xy phe PUN Herself, and Cast of 5,000 in i “The Auction of Souls” The amazing story of the lone twenty-year-old survivor of 500,000 young Christian girls. Facts more astonishing than the greatest creations of fiction. revelation of Persecutions in World History. Hitherto. shown to adults only at $10:00 per seat Now Released for Public Exhibition at Popular Prices The most astounding ADMISSION—ALL SEATS ONLY 30c ISMARC THEATRE WORLD FAMOUS STARS reopen their doors until 1.30, follow- ing the departure of President Wil- son’s train. Business of all kinds will be practically suspended during the two hours of the president’s stay, from 11 a. m. until 1 p. m. for the ensuing chapter year were dis- tributed. Banks to Close Wilson Day. All Bismarck banks will close at returned to these | 10.45 a, m. Wilson day and will not nores as a visitor in i824, when he ved such an ovation as never had before or has since been laid at the feet of a nation’s hero. years later Lafayette was gathered unto his | Columbia Phonographs Columbia Records ON EASY TERMS WHEN DESIRED COWAN’S DRUG STORE s The Lafayette day prog! ecssful from every view , through the pat ot Minishoshe chapter, honor of sharing with other large centers in man whose 1 and Bis | activities enjoyed — the ew York and} ing tribute fo, indelibly in- 's history. seribed upon A City and Midshipman Paul Register! of Annapolis were out-of-town guest: Internaticnai Harvester Co., Main St. AMERICAN LEGION TUESDAY NIGHT | PATTERSON HALL A. L. ORCESTRA Help Us Organize! We Want State Convention Featuring Don McDonald ~ Here Banat