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“ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1922 ———_—_——_-—_ | SOCLAL AND | | PERSONAL | OO Mrs. Call Entertains At Informal Tea . N. R. Call entertained at an informal tea Saturday after- noon in compliment’ to her daugh- ter, Miss Katherine Call of .New York City who has been a guest at the home of her mother during; the summer. The Call home was artistically decorated ‘with baskets and vases of roses and asters. Mrs. Obert Clon gave two readings during the afternoon and Mrs.\P. Kk. Byrne rlaved several piano se- lections, which were much appre- sted hy the guests. Miss Call eau be leaving soon for New York ‘ity. a , In rimal Reception For City Teacher An. informal reception will be given by the members of the Bus'- ness and Professional Women’s club tomorrow evening at the club rooms from 8 to 10 o'clock for all the teach- ers in the city school. Invitations are already out. Music and games will be enjoyed during the evening. Refreshments will be served. All teachers and professional women coming into the city are invited. MOTHERS’ SOCIAL CLUB. The first meeting of the Mothers’ Social club will be. held tomorrow afternon at 3 o'clock at the home of Dr. Alice Schutt, 803 Fifth’ St. The program for the afternoon reads as follows: Parliamentary drill. Victrola selection Mental Hygiene—Dr. Haines. Reading—“The Qucenly Mother.” This is the first meeting of, the secial club for the coming seaso” end all members are urged to be present, Thomas RETURN HOME. Mrs. H. Singer and daughter, Miss Ethel of Fargo, wh.» iave been guests at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Charles Rigler and family, left this morning for their home. Mr. and, Mrs. O Schwartz of Dickinsn motored down for a short visit at the Rigler home yesterday. WEFK-END VISITOR. Dr. and Mrs. H. 0. Ruud and son. Edward of Alexaadria, Minn., who were week-end guests at the home of Rev. aid Mrs. James M. ‘Taylor will leave tomorrow for their home. Mrs. Taylor was formerly Miss Ruth- ella Taylor, a popular Bismarck girl. TO VISIT IN FAST. Mrs, William Laist and daughter Betty, left Sunday for a visit with Mrs. Laisi’s daughter, Mrs. William Aibertson of New London, Conn. On her way she will visit her brothers in. Evie, Pa, and other relatives in Jersey City. She expects to return insabout. a month. MISSIONARY SOCIETY MEETS. The Woman’s Foreign Missionary society. ofthe McCabe Methodist church will meet tomorrow after- noon at 2:30 o'clock at the parson- ago, 405 Sixth St. AN members are urged to be present since this is the last meeting for this season, “ GUESTS OF DAUGHTER. Mrs. Sherman uwens and son. Merrill of Rochester, Minn., are guests at the home of Mrs, Owen's daughter, Mrs, Boyd Webster, 306 Ninth St. RETURN FROM WEDDING TRIP. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence C. Larsen have returned from a short wedding trip to the Twin Cities and Rush City, Minn., and Glenwood City, Wis. ACCEPTS POSITION Mrs. L. 8. Wilbur has accepted a position traveling over the west ern part of the state in the inter- ests of the Modern Brotherhood of America Lodge. GUEST OF DAUGHTER, Mrs. ‘T. J. Atwood of Jamestown, is a guest at the home of her daugh- ter, Mrs. D. C. Seothorn. Mrs. At- wood expects to visit here for two| weeks, FOR TWO WEEKS VISIT. s. Rose Daryan of Fargo, ar- rived Saturday for a visit of two weeks with her son and daughter-in- law, Mr. and Mrs, A. M, Dargan, RETURNS FROM VACATION, Miss Nellie Smith returned yes- terdav after spending several weeks vacation at Dixon and Missoula, Mont. ENTERS HOSPITAL. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Albrecht of Dawson, arrived in Bismarck yes- terday. Mr. Albrecht has entered the Bismarck hospital for treatment. | ROY/¥. NEIGHBORS MFET. The Royal Neighbors wSl hold their regular monthly meeting at the K. P. hall tomorrow evening at » o'clock, ACCEPTS POSITION. Miss Mabel Lucken of Salem, S. D., has accepted a position in the Do- mestic Department at Webb Bros. ENTERTAIN FOR COLLEGE GIRL. _ Mrs, D, C.Scothorn entertained at tea Saturday afternoon in honor of a group of young ladies who will leave for college in a short time. IMPROVING AFYER OPERATION. Mrs. L, Rader of Dickinson, who underwent an operation at the Bis- marck hospital Friday, is reporteu 9 be improving. TO ENTER COLLEGE. Miss Katharyn Goddard left Sat- urday for Grinnell, Ia, where she will enter Grinnell college. LEAVES FOR COLLEGE. Noel Hamilton left last-night for Carleton College, ‘orthfield, Minn., where he enters his college training. TO CARLETON COLLEFE Miss Exine, Schultz will leave this evening for Carleton College, North- field, Minn, this evening, TO ST. THOMAS COLLEGE Divieon Dodd ,has left for St. | Thomas College at St. Paul, Minn. Mr. and Mrs. C. N. Lee of Dodge, | visited with friends here over Sun- | day. | Mr, and Mrs, G. W. Twiford of Mi- not spent Sunday in the city. H. J. Porter of Hazelton was a business caller here today, : ‘ Goes to Washington. | J. A. Kitehen, commissioner of {agriculture and labor, leaves today |for Washington, D. C:, to attend a conference called by the Interior De- nartment to consider employment problems and another-conference on labor. ! PROSPECTS GOOD. Des Moines, la, Sept. 11.—Pros- pecs for a strong football team at Drake university are beginning <w: have a rosier hue as the veteran varsity men and last year’s “fresh” come back from tgeir summer vaca- tions. Coach “Ossie” Solem sees a prosperous year ahead with much good material to ~rork with, SHORT SUMMER SESSION. Lawrence, Kan. Sept. 11—Short summer sessions for Indian schocls of the United Stes, beginning ia the summer of 1923, has just been ordered by H. B. Peairs, superin- tendent of Haskell Indian Institute here, and chief supervisor of Indian education in the United States. m Club Shoot* Fifteen Bismarck Gun club mem- bers journeyed to Mandan Sunday morning to an invitation shoot of the Mandan Cun club. The trap broke during the morning and the crowd came over to Bismarck to finish up the shoot. Get Hunting Licenses A special. request has been is- sued by the county auditor’s of- fice to hunters to get their licenses within the next few days, to pre- vent the last-minute rush. Relic Committee to Meet A meeting of the members of the Relic committee will be held at the home of Mrs. Amanda Lo- gan this evening at 8 o’clock. Bismarck Hospital. W. F. Cushing of Beach, Duane Mumth of Dickinson, Ralph Crutch- field of Steele, Edith Jones of Fre- donia William Dorheim 0° Tappen, Julits Stowell of Max and Mrs: H, L. Wheeler and baby of the city have returned to their homes after being under treatment at the Bis- ! marek hospital. St. Alexius Hospital Bernard Kzmarzick of. Garrison, Baby Mary Ann Fettig of the city, ‘Miss Lucille Blasus of the city, Mrs. A. A. Simmer of Hazelton, Mrs. Mike L. Connolly of Mandan and Master Fred Farngworth of the city have entered the St. Alex- sius hospital for treatment. Miss Charlotte Russell of the city, Miss Helen Gallagher of. the-city, Miss Emma England of Golden, Valley, Mrs. Ben Wacher of the city Se- bastian Fried of Center, James Fieds of the citv, Joe Dillman of Strassburg. Miss Arna Kuntz of Raleigh. Miss Viola Sinner of the city and Misses Erma and Cather- ine Cox of Sterling have been dis- charged from the hospital. BOY RESTING EASIER | (By the Associated Press) Fargo, N. D., - Sept. 11.—James Inches, the 17-year-old youth . wh» broke his back Saturday when he fell from a tree along the Red River here was resting easily today the attending physician said,” and al- | though he is still paralyzed from the waist down hope for his recovery is | held out. OLD TIM ROUNDUP. Pendleton, Ore., Sept, 11.—Pictur- ing ‘the fast-fading west of the old days, the\thirteenth annual roundup will be held here September 21-23 From all over the west cowboys, cow- girls, Indians and broncho busters will come to take part in the cele- bration. i psc LATVIA AT WORK. Riga, Lativa, Sept. 11.—It is three |years since the Paris Peace Confer- ence brought its youngest child, the Latvian Republican into, the world. | Like most of its other progeny, Lat- via is doing well, but is finding life a difficult and rigorous one. { SC | _ POSTOFFICE PROBLEMS, | San Francisco, Sept. 11.—Problems | confronting smaller _postoffices | throughout the country will be dis- |cussed by the N-tional League of | Postmasters of the United States, jan organization cumposed of 10,000 | third and fourth class postmasters, | when it meets here in annual con- vention September 18-20. Standard-| ization of government _ postoffice equipment will ve the principal topic | of discussion. WET ISSUE ABSENT. f Kansas City, Mo., Sept. 11—Com- | plete absence of the wet and dry | issue marks the coming election in| Kansas, not one candidate having injected the ques.ton into the con- tests in the dry’s stronghold. 1. W..W. CLAIMS ASSAULT Carrington, N. D.—Nick Brokop, transient, who adimtted he carried an I. W. W. card, arriving here in a battered up condition, claimed that | at Courtenay, a man in a group of | transients engaged in a heated argu- | ment over threshing wages, stepped | forward without warning and struck him several times, Knocking him un- | scious, He also claimed that during the melee he was either robbed of | $25 or lost it. | ANU. C. T. Auxiliary mem- bers who are going to attend the Card Party Tuesday even- ing at the Elks Hall, Call 901 or 376M this evening. 7 —_—<$<$<________--—_- AT THE. MOVIES | ¢—_-—_________—~¢ CAPITOL. There is no doudt about it. is to-say, the public no longer seems | to care for the sort of play. that fe: tures the star above everyone else in| the cast and relies upon said star to must be more than the star to at- tract an audience nowadays. There | must be a good }*.y with plenty of | dramatic action and a chance for some of the other members of the company to do. more than stand around woodenly and listen with a smile on their faces, but murder in their hearts, while the featured play- er monopolizes the spotlight. The three dramas that are playing to! capacity audiences in New York at the present time. “Cheating Cheat- | ers,” “Turn to the Right” and “The: Man Who Came Back”—are interest- | ing because they are, first of all,; good plays and the companies pre-| senting them are notable for en- semble excellence. These plays do not rely upon af one star to bol- ster them up,/ See “Turn to the Right” at the Capitol tonight. THE ELTINGE. “If sin has any ages, I have a lot of back pay coming.” Back Pay,” a Eltinge Monday and Tuesday shows Seena Owen as Hester Bevins both earning and collecting her back pay. The conflicting desires that control the destines of every imaginative and pleasure-loving woman are vivid- ly analyzed through Seena Owen, who has the leading role in this re- markable picture. Shall she stay in the little town of her birth, marry the man who loves her and give uo all thoughts of adventure,and riches or shall she essa a flight into the great city? She has a “crepe de chine saul” she says. and decides to yield to it. In’ other words, she leaves, finds a protector and grows wealthy. The man who had loved her is near The | public is beginning to grow tired! of the tailor-made “star” play. That | realistic Paramount picture at the; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | ASKED TO GO TO | TAX CONFERENCE Because the most important tax in the United | States is holding its annual meet- ing close to the Borders of North Dakota, Governor R. A. Nestos is asking a large number of the men ; and women of the state who are in- considering body cary the drama to success. There! torested. in taxation matters to go to the meeting and bring back to the state the bene‘it of the dis- cussion there. The meeting is the fifteenth ‘annua isession, of the | National Tax Association and will {be held in Minneapolis,.September 18th to 22nd. The program of the | association contains the names, as |speakers, of some men, nationally known as experts on taxation, The North. Dakota representa- | tives will be the men and women of the state who have had the larg- est interest and experience in tax- W. W. Felson, Cavalier; Mal Gainor, DeLamere; G. E. C Mohall; C: C. Converse, Bismarck; Gordon V. Cox, Bismarck; C. R. Green Cavalier; Horace Bayley, | Towner; Lyman Baker, Bismarck; | Hans Anderson, Grand Forks; J. L. Bell, Bismarck; Miss Ida M. Bernhard Hettinger; A. P. Han-! son, Litchville; L. | E. Birdzell,| Bismarck; R. W, Kennard, Minot; ' Andrew Blewett, Jamestown, Peter | Davidson, Arnegard; Jno W. Ja-| cobs Steele; Gilbert .G. Mustad, ' Finley; P. A. Melgard; Coopers- | town; Theo. Kaldor, Hillsboro; Lee Nichols,:Mandan; Frank Shan- ; ley; Cando; Robert Norheim, Alex- ander Henr-7 Jelander Lakota; Vic- tor Wardrobe, Leeds; S. Th. West- dal, Williston; H. E. Wheeler, Mi-! not; A. M. Kvello, Lisbon; R. A. Lathrop Hope; Miss Jean Hunting- ton, Williston; W. J. LaMarre, | Grafton; D. K. Brightbill, Cando; | M. C. McCarthy Beach; W. B. De- Nault, Jamestown; Oscar Miller, ation. . The list follows: ¢ death from wounds received on the fighting line. She goes to him in the military hospital, marries him and ment, for he is blinded and has three weeks to live. He asks no questions and dies with a great belief in her—a belief which is so strong and so compelling that it is t ransmitted to her and she be- bins once more to dei ‘ieve in herself. She bies from her “gilded cage,” and turns to another lite where every- thing she gets will be through her own honest efforts and bravery. Matt Moore admirably plays the part of the inspired and inspiring Jerry. Others, adding strength to the brilliant cast are J. Barney Sher- jThe story was written by Fannie Hurst, Fargo Residents Hurt When Car (By the Associated Press) Fargo, N. D., Sept. 11—Mrs, Axel Johnson, 23 is dead, Mrs. George L. Lofthus, is in a local hospital with a broken shoulder and Charles R. Carlson, although slightly injured is being held in the city jail as the re- sult of an automobile accident near the city limits last night when Carl- son’s machine turned turtle. The three occupants of the car were all residents of Fargo. Mrs. Johnson is survived by a daughter, two and a half years old and her husband. MAY FORCE SHIPPERS TO PREPAY FREIGHT (By the Associated Press) Fargo, N. D., Sept. 11—There is a possibility that a rule will be put in- to effect on the railroads making it necessary to prepay all potato ship- ments except U. S. grade No. 1 it was announced today by H. A. Ar- nold of Minneapolis, official of the is in Fargo conferring with H. B. Fuller, Secretary of the North Dako- ta farm bureau federation on plans for handling the North Dakota pota- to crop. “While such. a rule would probably work some hardship on the shippers, it} would have a great effect in strengthening the potato market for good quality potatoes,” Mr. Arnold declared. “It would likely result in| hdlding a great part of the poor| quality stuff off the markets, which |. would have the effect of bringing tatoes,” he said. THRESHING RIG IS DAMAGED Washburn, N. D., Sept. 11.—The new threshing outfit of Newhardt & Albrecht, prominent farmers north of town was partly wrecked and ruined when some person under cover of darkness, placed iron bars in bundels of wheat and emery dust in the cylinders of the engine. Mr. Neuhardt has no idea why the act was committed, except to put the rig out of commission in order that there would be more business for other rigs. The Bismarck Coffee Shop is the latest addition to the eating houses of Bismarck and is located in the building next to the Bismarck Hotel, formerly occupied by the Singer Sewing Machine com- |pany. The lunch-room has been completely furnished and fully equipped with lunch- jeounter and tables and in a | position to serve lunches and | light meals from 6 a. m. until |12 p.m. The Coffee Shop will be formally opened Tuesday morning and will be in charge of Chef Clausen of the Grand Pacific. takes him to her gorgeous apart-/ ry, Ethel Duray and Charles Craig. | Is Overturned; North American Fruit Exchange who | better prices for all good quality po-| * living | =" ae | | ‘There are ‘so many new and at- | tractive styles for girls that the | young woman who jis going away to | boarding school or college will have 'a difficult time choosing which to | take and which—regretfully—to de- ; cide against. A new version of the slip-on dress | is shown with a wide pointed collar | instead of the round one which has. been popular so long, It has reglan | | | | FROCKS, DEVELOPED IN | URED PUSSYWILLOW SILK. | BY MARIAN EAL! | The 10-20-30 teock is on | season’s innovations. | Whoever christened it meant to limply that you may have one fur 10, !20 or 80 cents or for thet number of | dollars, as you will, or you can have |16, 20 or 30 in your wardrobe and have use for all of them, Be that as it may, the fact re..nins | one sees these little slip-over dresses | of erepe, voile, silk or cretonne jeverywhere at the fashionable sum- mer resorts and in city and country as well. | They are universally becoming, yet | they do not give the impression tnat | they are the result of: effort or cx- pense. | Rather they are one of the strong- est indications tnt the modern girl- | wants her clothes to be practical and individual regardless of fashion’s whims. | These frocks may be purchased at | the shops, but most of them are made _at home, sometimes in the forenoon | or between engayements or to save | the trouble of a few hours of shop- | ping. | What little cutting is required in | their construction is rendered quite of tl _WIDE VARIETY FOR COLLEGEGIRLS | “10-20-30” 1S NEWEST FROCK OF SEASON i neck and sleeves and turning up the Foreman; J. E. Nelson, Garrison. sleeves which are quite full and are gathered in on a tight cuff. Another simple frock has the new plan front and back with pleated side panels to relieve its severity. It shows, too, the new tight sleeve. So a just proportion is maintained —the material that comes out of the| sleeves goes into the length of the skirt. patterns, The sewing, which in- cludes merely the sewing together of the underarm seams, binding the hem, is of the most elemental sort. ‘Variations in style are possible by the addition of straight panels, ar- ranged on the belt, or by adding side; pieces or cutting the material so that | it forms a ripple. Girls getting ready for boarding school and college are getting a num- ber of these frocks in shape. Manufacturers are co-operating by{ bringing out attractive new fabrics in figured and embroidered wools, silks and crepes that are naturally adapted for the »fmple treatment of the 10-20-30. While these frocks seem most popular in figured materials, thev! are effective, too, in plain colors,| bound with ribbon or braid, or| trimmed with figured fabrics. While thgse frocks follow the same | general plan, there is not the same- ness one might expect. | For when a woman makes a frock! for herself she usually selects ma-/ terials and colors that particularly | suit her and adds some little individ- ual touch that distinguishes her. | Mother ill ....... Bone | years of age, and his father finally ;, Mat FEDERAL BUREAU ANNOUNCES - FINDINGS .IN CHILD SURVEY; CASES STUDIED IN TEN COUNTIES) While finding little to condemn in” most of its avenues of investigation in North Dakota, the representatives of the Children’s Bureau at Wash- ington, D. C., who spent nine months in conducting an investigation of conditions in the state during the last school year are inclined to be- lieve that some’ method of keeping | children should be resorted to other! than sending them to'the almshouse. | The bureau made a survey in ten! counties. In the two year period | over which their survey extended | ninetiy-five children had been expe- diency and in many cases a lack of | any other place for taking care ot} vhem, | In discussing why the children, were at home, the report says: “Although poverty was an under- lying cause in all of the 95 cases, it was given as the sole reason for the presence of only one-third of the children. According to the records, the immediate reason “for their being at the farm were as follows: | Total Children .. 95 | Birth at County farm Poverty Mother dead, father unable care for children. Mother working . Father .unfit guar to Neglect or abandonment Pavcnts unable or unfit to care for child . 3 Temporary cai etdedi i..ii sees “ZB Probably the strangest story ot | the many related is the report con- cerning where and why the children were at the poor farm is that of a boy, who had known the farm as, his only home. Boy’s Story His story as told in the report fol- lows: “A boy, received at the poor farm when he was three years old, has re- | mained there. nine years, and re- members no other home. His mother died when he was less than two! sent him with his other children to! the Children’s Home to be placed for! adoption, after failing to make sat- isfactory arrangemtns for their care j in his own home or at a Catholic School. After six months’ at the Children’s home, the boy was re-! leased to his maternal uncle, who offered to care for him, but seven months later he was sent to the poor | farm. The uncle said the boy had tuberculosis, contracted from his’ mother, and he was unwilling to have his own children exposed to the infection. The poor farm reported that the boy had only whooping cough, and that he has always been | a healthy child. “The father remarried, and he had recently written that would like to have. tie child returned ‘o him, | to or with their parents, while nine~ | shooting freely with authorities. ; ments providing for' Federal acquisi- superintendent was not willing to let him be placed out, ‘just for the work that was in him.’ The boy was a willing worker about the house, and helped the matron of the farm | outside of school hours in the prep- aration of vegetables and in the gen- eral housework.” The record made by the workers of the Children’s Bureau is one of a| rather constant struggle upon the! part of parents to keep families to- gether. Unfitness of the home in some cases led to legal action to take the children definitely from the par- ents. Of the ninety-five children whose records were followed, fifty- four of seventy-six were discharged teen were still at the county farm at the time of making report. “High Jackers” Hold Up' Threshers (By the Associated Press) Huron, S. D., Sept. 11.—George W.} Horn, harvest laborer was shot two} times through the head and once in! PAGE FIVE ASPIRIN Say “Bayer’: and Insist! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by physicians over twenty: two years and proved safe by mil- lions for Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago: Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions, Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 160. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic- acidester of Salicylicacid. pcebelbEl has eres EEE Ee the hand by one of a pair of “high jackers,” who held up several gangs of threshers riding a freight train on the Chicago, Milwaukee and St, Paul railroad between Wolsey and Woon- socket, small towns West and South of here about 8:30 o'clock last night, according to a telephonic report from” Woonsocket today. \ Although the wounded men had three bullet holes through his head, two of the bullets remaining in the back of the skull, he was conscious | and able to walk 25 car lengths along the train to the. caboose. When tak- en to a hospital at Mitchell he was still conscious and discussed the i RIVER BILL PASSES (By the Associated Press) Washington, Sept. 11—The River’ and Harbor development bill, speci fying projects upon which govern- ment funds may be spent, was pass- ed today by the senate after amend- tion of the Cape Cod Mass and Dis- mal Swamp, Virginia-North Carolina canals had been adopted. The bill now goes to conference. TWO KILLED (Ry the Associated Press) St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 11.—Two persons were killed and at least eight others were injured Sunday in more than a score of automobile accidents in and about St. Paul. William J. Quinn, 45, Northern Pacifie conductor, was killed near New Auburn when his automobile overturned, Catheryne, 5 months old One of the boy’s sisters was also asking for his discharge from the poor farm, as sh» had found for him a desirable hone im the town where | she was livine » i The superint:nden:, wor, was unwilling for him to leave though he | let the boy choose for himself, and ' he remained at. thy farm. He said that when he v 1s ] ttle no one want- ed him, but that since he was old enough to work he was wanted merely on that account, and he did not want to leave the farm for that purpose until! he was of age. He had grown attached to the only home he knew.” Continuing on the question of adoption from the farm at advanced ages the report says: Children at Poor Farm “Several children had remained at the poor farm for a number of years. There had been opportunities to place them in free homes, but the superintendent suspected that a boy old enough to do considerable farm work was wanted for this purpose rather than on any altruistic basis, and he thought that the poor farm could offer the boy a better home, free from the danger of exploitation. “Two brothers, ten and fifteen years old, in a family of nine chil- dren were deserted by their mother, a widow, and taken to the poor farm. The older had been driving a team for,a road contractor and was phys- ically run down, and the county com- missioner decided that he needed a home and an opportunity to go to school. The younger might have been adopted from the farm, but the daughter of Frank Fostek, was killed ; when her father’s automobile was struck by a street car near Minnea- polis, el MEN WANTED The Northern Pacific Railway Company will employ men at rates prescribed by the United States Railroad Labor Board as follows: Machinists 70c per hour Blacksmiths - - - 70c per hour Sheet Metal Workers 70c per hour Electricians - - -_70cperhour Stationary Engineers Various Stationary Firemen Va Boilermakers 70c and 7 ‘ec\ver hr. Passenger Car Men - 7 « perhour Freight Car Men - 6uc per hour Helpers, all classes 47%c per hour Mechanics and Helpers are lowed time and one-half for t worked in excess of eight hours per day. : Young men who desire to learn these trades will be employed and given an opportunity to do so. A strike now exists on the Northern; Pacific Railway. 6 Apply to any Round House or shop, or to W. E, Berner, Superin- tendent Northern Pacific ‘Railway. rates rates ————o—oooooSSSS FOR SALE—1920 Ford Touring with starter. Car recently over- hauled and new parts installed where worn. New top, Tires excellent. Also 1921 Ford Ton Truck with cab and delivery bedy. Bargain prices, Phone No. 808, M.B. Gitman Co. Biswanch —— Prone 60° Kodak Finishing De Luxe Best Equipped Plant in the Northwest. Everything Electric. Doing Business from North Dakota to Texas. Try Our De Luxe Finish. You Will Be Back for More. Daily Service to Bismarck. Northwestern Foto Service MANDAN, N. D. Let Uncle Sam Finance Sale of Your 1922 Crop $5,000,000 has been allotted to the N. D. Wheat Growers Ass'n by the U.S. War Fin- ance corporation to advance farmers on stored wheat. Wait for Higher Prices ! Don’t Glut the Market ! JOIN THE POOL sme nna vw Please send me blank con- tract and information regard- 1g pooling plan. Cut out and send to A. J. Scott, Secretary of the N.D.Wheat Growers Ass’n, Grand Forks, N. D.: MISS HAZEL KNOTT MRS. K. A. GRIFFIN Dressmaking Parlors Over Chocolate Shop Phone 994-R at Jamestown, N. D. Francis Jaszkowiak Well Driller. Dealer in Wind Mills, Gasoline Engines, Get a Pageant Ticket Cotton Wood Lumber, Hard Wood Lumber, of CLOVERDALE butter holder to a Pageant ticket f the lucky winner! cluded In This, Ad John Dawson. E. A. Dawson. E.-A. Brown. Johs Wray. J. B. Smith. Brown & Jones. Mandan Creamery ® And individuality is always the se+) cret of dress. ms | FREE! WITH For the purpose of special advertising featuring the Liberty Memorial Bridge Pageant and extending all during this week we will place in each 50- pound case Your favorite queen may get an ‘unexpected lift! When you order butter instruct your dealer to make it CLOVERDALE, All Towns Where CLOVERDALE Is On Sale Are In- MANDAN, one coupon entitling the ree of charge You may be vertising Feature. On Sale At The Following Stores IN BISMARCK: Logan’s. Davis Cash Grocery. J. W. Scott. Gussner’s. Tompson’s Cash Grocery. Bismarck Quality Store. and Produce Co. N. DAK. All kinds of Stove and Fire wood. Call or Write. 421 12th St, Bismarck ST RET TTED Cleaning, Dyeing, Repairing Pressing at new low prices, Mail orders looked after promptly. We pay postage one way. Eagle Talloring & Hat Works Opposite P. 0. Bismarck For First Class SHOE REPAIRING Go to the Bismarck Shoe Hospital 411 Broadway Crewsky Shoe Repair Shop 109 3rd St., Bismarck, N. D. across from Van Horn Hotel. We give mail orders prompt attention. TYPEWRITERS All Makes sold