The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 5, 1917, Page 6

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as an REPEC eat SCOOP DEVERE WAKING THINGS HOT FOR THE “HEAVES” Exits From Match With Jim Flynn, Former Master, With- out a Cut or Scratch FIGHT FANS SEE BIG FUTURE FOR THE ‘ KID" | BY H.C. HAMILTON (United Press Staff Correspondent.) THE CUB REPORTER Sou GAN ELIAS— DONT You KNow TSHOOT CRAPS IN THIS OFFICE -THAT 15 WITHOUT ME (N TH ‘Game!C gy et The where the ‘best water in the city is obtained. to be taken on long journeys into the surrounding deserts, TAL SCENE HL | Well of Life in Jerusalem, Note the water bags “about New York, Apri. o.—Seve years | ago a young electrician crawled thru | the ropes of a ring in Kansas City, | Mo., wid went through the motions of | a serap with Sailor Grando | Previous to the battle, the youthtukt electrician had been al week a celsior Spri hy | acting as a punching = 1 y Jim] the Pueblo F lynn | pending his : om battering the electrician’s face, nd the most en- joyable part of the day was the fact that he youthful opponeni’s ¢ noon. But Devere, the youthful ele di hung around Kansas City for a long time fighting now and then, and then picking up a little money. One night an old time fight fan him in ac- tion and, pointing his finger at the uth, declared that there stood » heavyweight champion of the world. “It he takes the right sort of care of himself and is given the right sort of management, he will be on top be- fore many years have passed. Re- member what I told you.” Maybe the old fight fan made it a little strong, but it is interesting to note the climb of the youth. He came to New York and had ai’ few alleged fights around te small clubs in the metropolis, and then one} day they matched him with Ji Flynn. Flynn grinned when he hea of the match, “Tha the k Excelsior Springs, got a stout heart, sure.” Devere was carefully conditioned for T used to spar at ” he said. “He's but I'll béat him iGreat Opvortunities Will Open this bout. He went into it with in structions to use his left hand at ey-' ed by publication in the Bismarck Daily Tribune once each week for three successive weeks. H. C. BRADLEY, Judge of the County Court. (4—5, 12, 19) CITY ORDINANCE. An ordinance ‘prohibiting the mov- ten tons in weight, over the ‘streets of the City of Bismarck on vehicles or trucks unless wheels of a certain size are ‘used, or ‘unless ‘the ‘streets are properly protected from injury: Be it ordained bythe Board of City Commissioners’ of ‘the: City of Bis- margk, North ‘Dakota: Secilon:1.' BRTIS MAY SPEND EASTER I JERSLEN AND BRING BACK PROSPERITY TO HOLY LA two centuries ago, and British mer. . # chants have for more than two cen- to Americans When English turies been prominent in Bagdad and Rule Is Extended From Persian | Basra. = Twenty years ago they laid plans Gulf to Mediterranean Sea, for increasing their interests in Mes- opotamia. Plans were drawn up for the irrigation of the upper Tigris valley. The town and district of Ko- weit, at the head of the Persian gulf, With from rapid the |Br Jerusalem retreat, the second stage 40 miles Turks in of h army and the ery opportunity on the fireman. It the Allies’ campaign in Asiatic Tur-| Were acquired, and mining operations was the first time he had ever at- ems about to end with the Holy; Were started in many localities. tempted to do any damaging punch- City in Christian hands on Easter; One of the most extensive oil fields ing with that hand. He used his left with a jab, and he hooked with it. Between times he rammed home his right with an upper- cut that had Flynn's face split from his forehead to his chin. In all h ‘battles it is probable the Pueblo iron man never took a more thorough beat- ing—and Devere, the former pupil of the formidable Flynn, left the ring without a scratch. Gasoline Field Kitchen. Among the useful and interesting de | 2d his 'in the world is situated in southern Mesopotamia. This has been devel- oped and is operated by the British government for fuel for the British In the northern parts of the province valuable deposits of cop- ', iron, coal and other commercial Sunday. Bagdad and Masul have fallen be- fore the British advance up the Ti- gris; the Russians are threatening the Bagdad r: id; and the expe- ditionary force from Egypt is com- pleting the trinity of defeat that threatens to end Turkish rule over ur. » the garden land of ancient history. | >} activities in these rich dis- Believing this to be one of the tricts attracted German competition, greatest developments of the world- #24 a railroad was projected by the war the Tribune has asked Dr, Ar- | German government to run through thur Sclwyn-Brown, famous traveler | the length of Arabia from Constanti- istorian, to discuss the meaning ,NoPle to Bagdad. This road is al- 3 ic hind ¢i "sg recon. {most completed. On a surveyed vices of which the origin Is directly | (hat Ts Hess soln! Mets length of 1500 miles between Con- traceable to the war, suys a contem- |e noted student's article follov jstantinople and Bagdad, the — rails porary, the autumobile field kitchen is the most complete kind, is revealed, Fotir high-pressure burners furnish the heat; cleverly eonce: ed jnecs. pumps | from Basra to Antioch, or Antaki been laid over 1200 mi The By Dr. Arthur Selwyn-Brown. oue that is made nece: by the An event. of immense importance L} and Amanus mountains were swiftness with which armies in the! tg Americans. is transpiring in the! ‘unneled, and from Jerablus, where field ave transported and by the! Holy Land, following closely upon te read crosses the Euphrates, river Promptness with which these armies the conquest of Bagdad. It will connec One eek mous pid Basted must be supplied with food. In this) mean the redemption of onc of the | ain iio\dti Ane Mosopolatila ‘and fleld kitchen the army cook raises the Tichest and fairest provinces in the | convert teuCIntG: Ps TOLIGe Egypt. In . canopy on the rear end. Behold! a | World, once t ene of great COM "the next fow years we will witness Kitchen of the most compact, yet of e, now mos howling wilder | coat industrial and commercial de- yelopments. there. As soon as the military defen: Jad are secured, the city w the hands of the British Great Britain intends to hold and develop the whole of Mesopotamia, i, on of be force water from the 50-gallon tank in| the Mediterranean. ‘The rich. cities | eS uliGritinat are hats aacleen front of the car to the enameled sink} ou the ancient trade route to. Tdia Syaternd aii Be inblalied. It in the kitchen; and a variety of uten-|and Pe Bagdad, Mosul. | ity then be opened for commercial sils, such ns jugs, plates, ment-chop- | Bab or Palr dam- Amiécigan ‘iherchants ; Purposes again. pers and fish-slicers are provided for | ®S¢ and Beyreut, will vit he enabled to trade there, as the rapid and clean preparation of food, | °° former import-| veil as others. There is no reason Like most modern kitchens, too, thi§ aa comm unieal will pe {for them not ring a large share one boasts of ventilators, both at the} made between them, roads will be ,the city’s foreign commerce. sides and in the roof of the car. In-! built, and irrigation works construct-|, Te imports are oenly pean deed, it would seem as if the English |ed. ‘All the resources of modern civ-| 0008, machinery. paper and Amer firm which invented this motor-kitchen simply. made a practical, miniature edi- | tion of a most approved and modern type of hotel kitchen. Drop Use of Card. Thomas Edisen advises young peopl to work to avoid temptation. Will some of our readers kindly try this and let us know whether it’s worth at- tempting?—Macon Telegraph. He’s Dead Right. | ilization will be placed at their d A witty Frenchman said: to apologize for him.” True. “This thing of being so much in love} tion of happy people. and flocks and you can’t eat,” observed the man knows, “is not infrequently caused of flowers andi theater “Only | ¢ death is an excuse for not keeping a) conquerors. dinner engagement, and even then a] peoples were robbed and impoverish- * polite man would send the undertaker | ed, their irrigation works were neg- can novelties. But when the fertility of the Mesopotamia soil is restored and good government and transporta- eonetnucden \tion facilities are assured, this half- This will stimulate an extensive) yay dominion between Europe and trade, of which Ameri hare will | 4 depend alone upon the efforts made) b: chatits it. They | Commerce. y our merchants to secure it. They! “iphe department of commerce al can get all they want of it. i | Washington is arranging to have an The climate of the central parts isi Mad trade cotuthfeciones ronort tropical. and sub-tropical. When | American, tri po Ps on the American trade outlook a farming settlements are made there Bagdad. will be large populations in the cities if along the rich valleys of the Tigris and Euphrates. The checkered history of Mesopo- tamia and its renowned cities is due 0 the rashness and neglect of its When the cities and posal and there will be a great re- CITY ORDINANCE. An ordinance prohibiting the op- leration of vehicles equipped with lugs or similar devices on, paved {streets of the city of Bismarck. Be it ordained by the Board of City Commissioners or the City of Bis- marck, North Dakota: tien 1. It shall be and hereby is made un- lawful for any person, firm or cor- poration to operate over or upon any paved streets of the City of Bis- marck, any traction engine or other lected and the “Garden.of the World” quickly turned under the scorching suns to a parched wilderness. In- stead of supporting a large popula- herds, it became the prowling ground of robber bands of Kurds and Bedou- ins, of wild boars and asses. vehicle, the wheels of which ~ are England’s attention was attracted | equipped with metal lugs or other me- to the prospects of Mesopotamia over , tal projections or corrugations on the sia will haveran extensive and rich | pi norted Will and Testament will be outer rim thereof, unless the part of the strect or alley over which such engine or othcr vehiqe is moved is! adequately planked -with at least planks of sufficient thickness to pro- tect same. , Section 2. Any person violating any of the provisions of the ordinance shall up- on conviction thereof be subject to a! fine of not more than One Hundred Dollars or by imprisonment for not}! more than ninety days. Section 3. This ordinance shall take effect and be in force immediately after its} passage and publication. That hereafter it’ shall’ be unlawful to move any house or building, ex- ceeding ten tons ‘in weight, upon oi over any of the public streets or al-: leys which are paved of the City of Bismarck upon any vehicle or truck unless the whecls thereof be at least thirty inches in width, or if narrow- er wheels are used, ‘unless the’ par of the ‘street or alley over ‘which |“hall” three decks (or what would be! such vehicle or truck, carrying such house ‘or ‘building “is moved, is ade- quately planked with at least three- inch planks to protect same from in- jury. : Section 2. Any person violating any of the Provisions of the ordinance shall, up- on conviction thereof be subject to a fine of not more than Oné Hundred Dollars or by imprisonment for not ing of houses or’ buildings exceeding | Al hat with the reputation for quality such as Lanpher en- joys simply must maintain it. The Lanpher Hat $3” ‘ons Are STATE ranches OF the Mutual Welfare league outside the prisons. In anothe: ea new relief society has been organized by a man formerly in prison. In Kansas the prisoners are planning a co-operative bureau. Many other instances might be cited, Immense Floating Workshop. | A floating worshop has been launched iat Calcutta, The “Abydos,” however, ties ; she is a workshop with some boat qualities, Only in the leading iron foundries in Great Britain would any- | thing bigger or better be seen than her ; machinery hall, All sense of being ‘ramped on board a ship is lost in the ‘midst of this spacious and lofty cham- er, With. its steel shafting running from end to end on either side and pro- pelling by numerous connections of belting every imaginable kind of metal- working machine. To: produce this ‘three decks in.an ordinary ship) have; been thrown into one, two decks for the body space of the hall, and one deck for the dome space. swinging crane capable of lifting 30 jtons, Her complement consists of a j crew of 100, about 150 unskilled Jabor- jefs, and 800 skilled Chinese. artisans, ;each man individually picked. ‘These is not a boat with some workshop quall- | She carries ,a! | North Dakota, this 2nd day of April, Passed by the Board of City Com- missioners of the City of Bismarck, North Dakota, this 2nd day of April, A. D, 1917. Approved April 2, 1917. A. W. LUCAS, President City Commission. Attest: R. H. THISTLETHWAITE, (City Seal) City Auditor. CITATION HEARING PROOF OF WILL, State of ‘North Dakota, County of Burleigh, ss. In_County Court, Before Hon. ‘H. C. Bradley, Judge. In_the Matter of the Estate of Daniel Williams, Deccased. Erastus A, Williams, Petitioner, a neces Ford, Nettie Morgan, Frank W. Murphy, Odessa M. Remington, ‘Herbert ‘Murphy, Loyal W. Murphy, William FE. Williams, John A. W jiams, Respondents. The State cf North Dakota, To the Above Named Respondents and All Persons Interested in the Estate of Daniel Will Deceased: You, and e: of you, are hereby: notified that Krastus A, Williams, the Petitioner herein, has filed in. this Court. a document in writing, purport- ing to’#e the Last Will and Testa- ment of Daniel Williams, deceased. late of the Township of Painted Woods, in thesCounty of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, deceased. with his petition, praying for the ad- mission to provate of said decument jas the Last Wilf and Testament of | deceased, and for the, issuance ito Frastus A. Willidms of letters test- , amen thereom, and that the said jPe‘iticn ond the proofs of said pur- heard and duly considered ‘bythe. Court on Monda;, the 4th day of June, A. D. 1917, at ten o’clock ‘in the fore- noon of that day, at the court rooms of this Court, in the Coiity’ Court House, in the City of Bistiarck, Coun- ty of Burleigh and State: of North Dakota; and as You, and each of you, are hereby cited to be and appear before this Court at said time and place and an- swer said petition and show cause. if any there be, why the prayer of said petition should not be granted. By the Court. ° Judge of the County Court. Dated the 4tH “day of April, “A. D. Let the foreg ing ¢ are controlled by a staff of English en- | gineers, and each officer is a mechan-} ical or electrical engineer of high status | in his own line of work. more than ninety days. : Section 3, This ordinance’ shall take effect and be in force immediately after its Passage and publication. Passed by the Board of City Com- missioners of the City of Bismarck, How to Test Diamond. The frequent deception of the pub- ‘Ne in regard to the sale of jewelry and genuine stones in Great Britain has induced the authorities to issue a statement upon the accurate testing jof diamonds, A number of instrue- tions ‘is given,’ including the follow- ing formula: When a diamond is quite clean. and gry carry out the following experiment: Place on the surface a tiny drop of water. Now take a needle or pin and try to move the drop about. If the diamond is genuine the drop canbe rolled nbout A. D. 1917, Approved April 2, 1917. % A. W. LUCAS, President City Commission. Attest: R. H. THISTLETHWAITE, (City Seal) City, a MANY JOBS FOR EX-CONVICTS Eastern Writer Finds Remarkable Change Has Taken Place in Employers’ Attitude. A sear ago hardly anyone seemed to want to give the released prisoner a Job. A year followed of Mr. Osborne and goud times, and the great change has come. Today the special employ- ment secretary of the Prison: Associa- tion of New: York says he-is able to refute the statement frequently made that discharged prisoners are return- ing’ to crime becduse nobody ‘will hire them, 0. F. Lewis writes in the Amer+]~ ican Review of Reviews. In July, 1916, he reported that every. able- bodied man that applied during the month of June, and was willifig to work and take what was found for him, was placed within a féw days, Wages ran from $9 to $20 a week. One ex-prisoner. writes that he is setting $18 a week as bookkeeper and gegeral clerk, and is going to repay the expenses’ “defrayed in-my behalf.” |” Another of the gray brotherhood says that he has “suffered” on increase in salary and’ that he is not “kicking about the Saturday afternoon holiday that has becn dispensed with.”. Good-will toward the released pris- oner is’ Spreading. Hundreds‘of New York merchants were asked last win- ter to give employment to men just out of “prison.” “A ‘manufacturer, having taken fivé'men, télephoned into the of- fice, saying that'the men were doing so well that he wondered if they had not tiven false statements as to ‘having had a prison record for the purpose of securing positions. ‘The surge in the prisoner's bebalf is not confined to any one state, Henry Ford has at least’ 600 released prison- ers in his’ works at Detroit. Miss eTHI Anything that a $1500 one-fon with: the Ford- Dearborn ‘Onc- (combination of Dearborn Unit one-third the expe: The Dearborn Unit i3 so ments. that it. will carry. 1! Sempcg al the epenne SS of rear wheels is Gasrentect” Menutactured by Dearborn Bismarck, a little more than enc-third as much and than - CORWIN MOTOR COMPANY, *” intact.” On the other hand, where the gem is an imitation the water spreads directly it is touched with the needle- point. Another very good test may be curried out with a tumbler of water. Into this put the suspected article and examine its appearance. <A real dia- mond will show up in the water with a startling clearness, and it can never be confounded with the water. On the other hand, the imitation looks indefi- ! nite, and it is sometimes difficult to see fit clearly at all, Red Tape in War Time. From time to time, a story comes along from “Somewhere in England,” cr “Somewhere in France,”. or some: where elsewhere, which shows that “the official routine of the official de- partment” is receiving much buffeting in these times, A certain commander | on a certain front decided, after care- ful thought; that he needed. certain | things and needed them very much. He sent his list to headquarters, and, after !a long deley, came a shenf of official | forms full of detailed inquiry as to why he wanted each thing ‘he had asked for. The commander thought over the matter for a day or two. Final- | ly he took his, courage in both hands, | and a blue pencil in one of them, and, 30 the story goes, wrote ncross‘each of ‘the forms the legend, “I want these | things because there is 2 war on over here.” He got them, without iurther question. Both Ways. bs “When the police reached the stolen deserted ‘automobile the engine was { still running.” . “Yes, and so are the thieves.” Ample Time. ‘ His Dad—“If you don’t devote some time te study I- don't: know. what kind of a lawyer’ youexpect: to be.” The Caw Student—"There’s plenty of time; Cather. I understand you never get case that requires any knowledge, of law until about five years after you are admitted.”—Boston Transcript, S ONE-TON TRUCK CARRIES 30% OVERLOAD SAFELY truck will do you ‘can duplicate -Ton Truck, “Yet thi and Ford Chassis) costs onie Operates at less $350 One Ton Truck Truck gives 8 you a'| the economy of the Ford, standard, 56 inches, same ~s Ford front wheels, or ar bent ces Motor Truck Co.. Chicago N. Dak.

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