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we { WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, :1923. NOCATIONAL | MEN AREHIGH | AT MONTANA U ‘Of Seventy Men _ Men There Fif- teen Are on University Honor Roll the supervision of the U..S. Vete ans’ Bureau, The university authorities just finished tabul of all students i: that quarter, group of traine selves very creditably. constitute the next. largest group the university. During the spring quarter of 1923 | only one and two-tenths grade poin there were seventy disabled veterans {pelow the university average. Special Bargains “MONDAY, SEPT. 17th. YOU CANNOT BEAT THESE PRICES. We guarantee our merchandise and our values. To our out of town friends we offer for this one day, Monday, the following special values. Ladies’ Night Gowns Fancy Flannel nae xtra heavy. All sizes. Outing Flannels 1,000 yards of fine quality 36 inch fancy Outing Flan- nels, assorted colors. Reg- ular price 26c. Special for Mond price $1.75. Monday onday. only. . Yard’... 18c BU aliil: $1.49 ‘ 500 yards of fancy Flannels dark colors-36 inches wide. Cretonnes 500 yards of beautiful cre- tonnes, assorted patterns. Regular value 30c Monday Regular price 30c. -Special Yard yes ciciv ao 500 yards. fancy Flannels ye iat 2lc ace Ladies’ Silk Hose Yard ccsresee 16 | frowns" egular pce Percales ra eee 9 Cc 1,000 yards of Péreales 36 Ladies’ Waists inches wide—assorted pat- tetns.~ Regular price, 25c. |] some pink — to clean out For Monday anys 1 8c Monday, - 98c Yard at I WILL GIVE A SPECIAL DISCOUNT OF 10% on every purchase made in this store on Monday, Sept. 17th — including Ladies’, Men’s and Children’s Shoes, Coats, Suite; : Leather Vests, Sweaters, Underwear of every kind—Army Blankets, One lot of 100, some white, / Broadway Bazaar ‘MM. ZVORIST, Proprietor. 504 Broadway Monday Specials Community Day, Monday, Sept. 17th, we will make extra low prices to all cutomers. Here aré a few items. - .NOW IS THE CANNING SEASON. $1.15 ! Crabapples—at right. prices. ‘Extra fine Peaches. Per crate Plums. Per crate ...... Fancy ‘Bartlett Pears—priced very low. Par biskel ee 8300; Dutch Cleanser. 6 35 cC, 3 cans . Rex Lye. 2 cans .. GOOD LUCK JAR nuERES ae Grapé Fruit) Minneopa Brand. Per can <. WH DELIVER TO.ALL PARTS OF THE CITy. Scott's Greene Phone 816. S11—Tth St: pursuing, yocational trsming courses at the University of Montana, under have ing the records residence during nd it appears that th acquitted them- | H They made | an average of 15.81 grade points as compared with> 15.66 grade points imade by the fraternity men, who The average standing of all men in the university was 17.02 grade | points so these vocational men fell This Regular. P. &G. Soap. ‘All you want, per bar..............000 005 .., 6c bi Jar lids. aa -Per dozen .....:.. aoe oe Bie < se a aa 6 2s (28 ” 2Be. on | \ FRUITJARS ; Por deen artsttee sect tesa 95c. acral iy eeeheee $1.15 Sugar> } ‘ r= inj ts | | { leases amot jonly upon selected men. j because of their superior work. WAR VETERANS } farmer and railway brakeman, A Shirts, Underwear, Socks, is an excellent average when all the facts are taken into consideration, namely, that most of the U. S. Veter- ans’ Bureau tfaineces have been out of school for years and had. grown unaccustomed to habits of study; that many of them lacked the full number of credits for entrance and are obliged to do a work to make. up the deficiencies which in some t to tWo years of high school work; that they are séverely | disabled and have con tly to con: tend against their phys:eal conditi Besides their regular work many of these vocational men have distin~'handicaps resulting from guished themselves in such universt | wounds. They were awardéd ‘vocation- | guished themselves in such university a} training by the U. 8, Veterans’! served overseas as a corporal in Company L,’362nd Infantry. Un Octo- | ber 31, 1918, at Lys-Scheidt in, Bel- | gium he’ received a severe wound in his left jaw and neck, and also in his | np, when he wss struck by a high | explosive-shell, besides. being. gassed. | Mr, Andreason mer. ‘He was a pri D, 59th Infantry. He, received a! wound in action which resulted in| the loss of an eye, Both of these young ‘soldiers we Hq \ recurned to the United States quality of leadership. A number of them have also been elected to men. bership in fraternities and honorary; societies which honors are bestowed , ‘opportunities and “upon completin Five of the seventy men won places their training formed a partnership | on the honor roll of the university und with the money they have saved | while learning the trade, bought out ‘the owner of one of the beat estab- | lished battery shops in the city, | which is very favorably located for | this work, as it is at the eastern en- trance to the Yellowstone Park and many thousands of cars pass through | it each se 5 3 These battle-scarred veterans are already.‘making good in their busi- ness venture, Receipts arc steadily increasing and they feel that they are firmly established jn an entcr-! prise made possible through the | training received through the U. S. Veterans’ Bureau. FORM NEW PARTNERSHIP Montana Disabled Veterans Use Vocational Training in Business Ruhr Disturbances Cause Depression Livingston, Mont., Sept. 13—Living- ston, Mont., boasts a battery and auto accessory shop owned and conducted | by two rehabilitated ex-service men. |Phey are Hans F. Andreason and Grover C. Smart. Before the war, Mr. Smart was a He “The unsettled condition of the Ruhr has much to do-with the el pression felt in Scan&\navia,” said Henry Tatley who with Mrs. Tatley has just returned after spending el months in Norway and Sweden. “Norway and Sweden: have spond. | ed upon the Ruhr as a market for} their reproducts to supply. them with | ja large quantity of coal iin. porn. | As a result of the shutting down of ‘the mines in Norway and + Sweden| | many people have been thrown out of | work, and this in turn has led to [the migration of the better class: of these two countries to the United as never before in ‘their his-| declared Mr, Tatley. “They | ;are making up for the years in which they did not take advantage of their, quotas of immigrants to the, states.” While away the Tatleys visited their old homes, Mr. Tatley’s being at Thorndhjem, in northern Nor and Mrs. Tatley’s being at C scrona, southern Sweden. They attended the exposition at Got! burg and visited many other places of interest, This is the fipst time Mr. Tatley has been in Norway for 14 years, He said that he found Seandinavia to have developed about the same mo” ‘dern methods as the United States - that the age of old methods {n living nd farming and industry bad passed | away. ; ‘= Tpo, Late To Classify |FOR SALE—Table, four chajrs, buf- | fet, two rockers, Fumed !Oak, in good condition. One handj painted pictute and rug. CallSat 113 Thayer, after 5 p. m, 9-13-8u FOR RENT—Three-room furnished apartment, city heated; with bath. Five-room partly modern house on 2nd St., four rooms ion first floor, with bath, Furnished room, with bath, suitable for two. Phone 905. 9-18-tf FURNISHED rooms for rent. Apply. at 613 8rd St. 9-13-1W ROOM AND BOARD—Two rooms in * modern home, each suitable for two, within two blocks of postof- fice. Gentlemen preferred. 316 4rd | St. or telephone 589R, Special Bargain for Monday 17th | Men’ s Libe Handsome patterns, styl- ish. Fur ear laps. Values up to $2.75. Your choice 9-13-8t WANTED AT ONCE—10 sales ladies. Guaranteed $18.00 per week, com- mission, all expenses. Splendid op- portunity to make good money. Mrs, Kénnedy, G. P. Hotel. 9-13-26 FOR RENT—Neat, clean, furnished room in modern home, lose in. Phone 790-X. 506 2nd St. 9-13-3t Red Cross Relief: i Fund Oversubscribed Ghicago, Sept, 18—Over subscrip- tion of the Japangse relief fund of the American Red Cross contingen continued to mount today, totalling | $5,563,000 with Washington, Centrai. j and New England division all in ex- | cess of thejr quota in the five million ; dollar campaign fund. John Barton Men’ s ‘Shirts Dress, flannel and heavy woolen shirts. All pop- ular patterns. _ MONDAY ONLY. Fancy Dress Shirts.. $1 95 Wool Flannel Shirts Payne, president of the Red Cross, Staple $2. 79 ‘emphasized that none of the money colors :..... i being collected for Japanese relief |. Indian Blankets. ywould be used for administrative Beautiful $ 4. 7 5 PAREN eet colors .... ° DANCE At Baldwin, ‘Friday, tember 14. Music by ‘the Joy, | Jenerators. Men’s Army Field Shoes. Men’s Dregs Shoes. Boy’s School Shoes. A Big Line of Army and Navy _Goods — Breeches, Blankets, O. D. Wool | ; NOTICE! y | Continue boiling city water. \ City-Health Officer. Beulah Lignite Coal is Best. -Etc. Extra Special. | Men’s Suits and Overcoats To introduce our. new 'spe- cial line of »men’s: all wool suits. and overcoats, we have marked them dow’ to $25.00 for Monday's Sale, Capital Army & Navy Store G. P- HOTEL BLOCK. | Wachter Transfer Co. Phone op, Walker, ‘Mo. says: tim; of “Asthma -for years. and after taking two bottles. of MgMullin’s, Formule’ 1 felt like anew man... It's the medicine for Asthma I, ever used.” If you suffer from\Asthma or Hay Fever try-McMullin’s Formula end ‘you'll ‘know why. -o many people ‘praise it. Just fine for building: up) run down’ people, ‘for colds, bron- chial: troubles, weak lungs, coughs. i) Used as°m. germacide aid preventive | more directed to localities where they | | who has been in charge of the office | Brocopp. |of la |sionally a farmer has not been j sires them but th In Norse Countries |! according to Mr. Brocopp. | joie about Oc! $4.75 per ton. Order now.| st | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘EMPLOYMENT | NISPLACING MANY MEN ‘Over Four ‘Hundred Have | Been Given Jobs Since | Opening of Employ- ment Office | | activities asathle y oratory, musical Bureau and decided to learn battery | editorials and class howing and ignition work. By chance place- - talent and initiative, and a good found for them, Approximately four hundred men j have been-given jobs and as: many | were enabled to secure work by the | State-Federal Free Employment of- | fice according to Herman Brocopp, since its opening August first. While there has been no labor | shortage every man applying for work | jhas been placed acco! The labor sit about the same as that) aid Mr. Brocopp. Oc ble at the time he de- wants are uswal- ly supplied within a day or two. Most of the difficulty right now is in placing men in jobs which are paid by the month and are good for all winter according to Mr. Brocopp. All the jobs for temporary or day work- are being taken care of at the to get men just lay. There has been no difficulty with I. W. W.'s in this locality this The local employment office wil: 1, U. 8. SHIPS ARE SOLD T0 -DOLLAR LINE Is New Shipping Service Unique as it Sails Around Globe Under One Flag Washington,’ Sept. of two important ship | trons were announced yesterday by | the shipping board. Seven combina: | tion freight and passenger ships were | an | iI | turned over to the Dollar Ling, San Francisco, for operation in a round-} the-world service through’ the Pon ama canal, and twb cargo stcam: were sold to the Grace Line, for 1 in the west t to South Ar trades Continustion of both services s guaranteed under the sale conttact. declared Starting: touch hina, the ines, | Settlements, pore, | India, Suez, Egypt. Mediterranean ports thence to New York and through the canal to the home port. There are no other ships now j tinyous service around the wo: der one flag, according -to officials of the board, who predicted the new service would be of.great value to American commerce. The operators will have the full support of the board, the announcement said, in their effort to develop this new ac- tivity. Vhe new Dollar service i unique in shipping Will Be Increased The seven ships pur¢hased by the ‘Autumn: Apparel. of Unusual Charm > The Autumn Footwear New fall footwear is bound to merit your approval, the new ways of straps, the new ingenuity of combining leathers, the new lasts, all go to make you enthusi- astic over these displays. We cordially invite your inspection. ed when the Republic, formerly the President Grant, is commissioned af- ter reconditioning. RUMMAGE SALE Dollar Line are of the “502 type,” : each of 10,553 gross and 6,195 net| Methodist Church Base- tons, The initial equipment is to be| ment ‘Saturday, Sept. 15, at* supplemented later, under the agree-| 9 9, m, ment by other fast freighters. Five similar vessels are now in service, from New York to London and these, too, are to be supplement- BIRTHDAY * BARGAINS . TONIGHT—Thuriday THOMAS. MEIGHAN: “Ina PETER B.KYNE rd ‘Mom ewan OS CHATS SEE “GOOSE‘HUNTIN 7 On Tie Lower ekg MISSISSIPPI” And Get:A Real f “Thrill, _A Movie Star? CAPITOL THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT POLA NEGRI in her latest and best “Mad Love” Coming Coming Do You Want To Be —Thousands of young girls have dreamed of fame and fortune on the screen. —Rupert Hughes has written the thrilling story of just one girl out of the countless numbers who thought the:road to fame was easy. - t7Here is the most amaz- ing revelation of motion picture life that has ever been told. Daring but'|’' truthful. A metion pic- | ture of absorbing, inter- es! Z A Rupert. Hughes - Picture, | “Souls For Sale” ' —with— 3 Eleanor Boardman, Mae. Busch, Frank Mayo, | Richard Dix. 5 ae, Autumn Frocks There’s no mistaking their Autumn ten- dencies. Circular panels and godets that flare in the breeze; gay plaids and shiny fabtics. Whether you ‘need -a silk frock, sports frock, or a street ‘frock, yow'll find selection here from our varied displays very interesting, indeed. Prices range from - $19.50 . New Coats Must you have a new coat? This is a good time to select one. You're sure to be enthusiastic about the new deep piled ribbed fabrics that go into their fashion- ing, to say nothing of jaunty striped and plaided topcoats. They’re all here. Priced at from $19.50 New Fall Hats The gayest notes of ‘the season seem to have answered the call when you view the handsome array of New Fall Hats now on in our millinery section. Of course most every one is choosing her fall hat now and you will find just the right one here—a model becoming to your indi- vidual type, The Prices range frary $5.00 SPECIAL VALUES SATURDAY AND MONDAY Tire Boots and Blow owW Patches. - (One tube of Cement free).... GUARANTEED TIRES FISK, MILLER. GOODYEAR AND MICHELIN. Prices reduced for immediate sale. Lockwood Aone Co. 800: Main St. ‘ . Phone 187 Quality, “Honesty and Service. ‘ - Monday Specials ""* MONDAY SPECIAL <:‘ ON GROCERIES Monday, Sept. 17, we. offer many bargains in good -things to Eat. A few are mentioned here. KARO CORN SYRUP hee ean aaa le ie Oe ey vos, 60C He Ses eas on BBO —o— : Grae Cr. a Smee ‘2c PEACHES FOR CANNING -AT-LOWEST PRICES.