The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 21, 1917, Page 6

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SCOOP THE CUB REPORTER THE FIRST DROP SPLASHING— ON NOUR Nose MEANS TWO THOUSAND MOREL ON NouR. CLOTHES S0\F No ID LIKE. TO GET IN SERVICE WAERE U PLEASE _— I. DONT MIND SERVICE. IN THE RAIN ANDNET FROM GETTING WET REERAIN — ON THE KIND OF RAINY WORK T MEAN \3 SAILOR STUER Se. GOLE OR TENNIS AND OUR VILLAGE SO Oe SSE Eee ee gees oo NATIONAL LEAGUE. ° SHSSHOSHSCH SHH OOS Club— ‘New York . Philadelphia St. Louis ‘Chicago .. Cincinnati Boston .. Brooklyn Pittsburgh . GAMES \WEDNESDAY. Boston, 7-0 w York, 44. Cincinnati, 5; Chicago, 4. Philadelphia, 7-9; Brooklyn, 3-2. St. Louis, 4; Pittsburgh, 4 GAMES FRIDAY. Cincinnati at St. Louis. Chicago at Boston. New York at Boston. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. New York at Boston. First game— Club— R.A.E. Boston -7 61 New York Oe ae Batteries—Tyler and Gowdy; Kru- ger, Anderson, Sallec, Middleton and} Rariden. New York at Boston. Second game—, Club-— Boston iNew York Batteri Gowdy; Perritt and Rariden. Chicago at. Cincinnati. Club— RY. B. Cincinnati oe FBO Chicago .. -411 2 Batteries — Mitchell and Wingo; Douglas, Seaton and Wilson, Elliott. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. First game— Club— R.H.E. Philadelphia -TT71 Brooklyn ... 23.7 34 Batteries — Rixey and \ Killifer; Smith, Cheney, Dell and Snyder. Brooklyn at Philadelphia. Second game— Club— RHE Philadelphia ePIt 2 Brooklyn . . 2 Batteries Burns; ‘Coombs, Cheney, ‘Dell and Miller. Pittsburgh at St. Louis. Club— R.H.E St. Louis - 47 2 Pittsburgh ia Called at end of sixth inning to catch train. Batteries — Doak, Horstman, Pack- ard and Gonzales; Carlson, Steelo and W. Wagner. SCHSSCHHEOOOSOOOOD ¢ AMERICAN LEAGUE. od OF SFHOFSFHEHOH OD Club— Chicago Boston ... ‘New York . ‘Cleveland Detroit St. Louis ‘Washington Philadelphia . WEDNESDAY. Cleveland, 2. Detroit, 2. New York, 3 ; Boston, 2-3. ‘Washington, 5; Philadelphia, 3. GAMES FRIDAY. Philadelphia at Washington. ‘Boston at ‘New York. Cleveland at Chicago. St. Louis at Detroit. Cleveland at Chicago. Club— Chicago ... Cleveland Batteries—Williams and Schalk; Co- valeskie, Klepfer and Billings, O'Neill. St. Louis at Detroit. Club— Detroit St. Lonis 8 1 Batteries — Mitchell, and} Spencer; Plank and Severeid, Hale. Boston at New York: First: game— Club— R.H.E. New York . 3.8 1) Boston 92 Batterie: Russell and Alexander; Leonard and Thomas, Ag-} new. Boston at New York. oe Boston .. 3 Ratteries—Cullop, Russell ‘and W: ‘ault- | your failure to appear or answe OLOFIELD, By PAUL PURMAN. Yes, il's our old friend, Barncy Old- field, back again. Same cigar, same goggles, same grin, same Barney, but a new car, by the way, which will look like a real streak without hu- man agency to guide it. For when Barney's new car is in AFTER NEW RECORD, INVENTS NEW | SUBMARINE CAR TO BURN THE SPEEDWAYS ITH action he and his mechanician are inside the covered top. Barney calls the racer, “The Sub- marine,” on account of its peculiar construction, The torpedo body is built high enough to. permit the occu- pants to sit comfortably inside, hield- a {eq from the rushing wind as Barney jtakes the turns. at breakneck speed. In early trials Oldfield has driven his car a little faster than 107 miles an hour and expects’to cop some of the big speedway evénts this season with “The Submarie.” Alexander McKen sons unknown claiming any estate| or interest in, or lien or in in the complaint, Defendants. The State of North Dakota to the Above Named Defendants: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this action | and all other per- brance upon the property described ie James Lick, a California millionaire, | who died in 1876, bequeathed the sum ~ [of $60,000 for the erection of a bronze ment in Golden Gate park, San ancisco, in honor of Francis Scott y, anthor of “The Star-Spangled | Banner.” The monument is 50 feet high, in the form of a double arch, u d h a bronze statue of Ke: which is filed in the office of the cl of this cow aut the court house, | the city of | North Dakota, your ansy upon the within thirty days after the !of this summons upon you, excl of the day of service; and in udg- mnent will be taken against you by de- {fault for the relief demanded in the | complaint. ‘Dated June 13, 1917. MILLER, ZUGER & TILLUTSON, Attorneys for Plaintiff Office and post office address: marck, North Dakota. Notice to Said Defendants. Please take notice that the above ers; Ruth and Thomas. action relates to, and the object. there- of is to quiet title in the estate of Nina | Bis- | enting America, with an Key died in Baltimore, 11, 1813, RESOLUTION. ioner Bertsch introduced j the following resolution and moved | its ado tion: | RESOLVED, By the Board y Commissioners of the City of | Bismarck, North Dakota, that the City | Auditor be instructed to advertise for j bids for the construction of a main sewer on Broadway from Fourteenth to Fifteenth street, and a lateral sew- er on Fifteenth street from Broadway to Avenue B, in Sewer Improyement District Number Four, said bids to | be opened at eight o'clock p.m. July 9, 1917. 6-14-21-2t Philadelphia at Washington. e Club— RHE L g Is t avaanineton cin Lunge is ‘xercise ac. Philadelphia . 310 2 Hi 1 ‘ e 'o Batteries—Gillia, and Henry; t t y Shauer and Schang. (<1 ps e n wre Gees By JIM RICE. muscles of the shoulders, a well, as SPPSHHSSHHSSEOO OS hysical | those of the back. It also gives plen- 4 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION, | | (Famous College Coach and Physical! "Cr “work for the muscles of the SHHSH THOS SSSEO OOS < ‘ thighs. F | When performed with a rifle this Don't forget to do ‘this every time Club— Ww. LL. -|is one of the setting-up exercises at é Indianapolis 40 23 West Point. you lunge forward. Take a good Jong Columbus Stand with your feet about 14 inch-] breath as you step out, and exhale St. Paul . 4)es apart. Then shoot the hands for-| #5 you gre recovering. Louisville 30 4} ward and upward as far as you can 1 might mention that it is necessary Kansas City 29 3) at the same time stepping out brisk-|in all of these exercises to: breathe Minneapolis . of 4|ly with your right foot. Having per-| regularly and deeply Unless Milwaukee 34 424] formed this operation, say, six times,/ you take plenty of good, fresh Toledo .... 34 A24 go through the arm movements again,|air into your lungs these exercises this time stepping out with your left} are worse than, useless. Instead of GAMES WEDNESDAY. foot helping you to build up your body, Toledo, 4; Minneapolis, 0. T exercise loosens up the} they will only wear you down. St. Paul, 4; Indiandpolis = r: re sat Milwaukee, Louisville } q ites i Gi i | Downey, deceased, to the following Eyeglasses for Diver. Kansas City, 5; Columbus, | ri sae “ described real property, to-wit: Lot} , A new eyegliss has been Patented GAMES FRIDAY. six (6) and the north ten feet of lot for the use of submarinedivers. It is Louisville at Milwaukee. taoven (7), in block-elghty-nine : (99), well known that the human eye does Indianapolis at St. Paul. Seven rit Con see ay *| not function properly under water, Columbus at Kan: City. McKenzie & Coflin’s addition to the)! objects appearing badly. blurred and Toledo at Minneapo city of Bismarck, Burleigh county,| distorted. This is due to the fact that Ree ere North Dakota; and that no personal] the speed of light in water is differ- SUMMONS. claim is made against you or any of ve from ve aie of, light fp a Burleigh. In district court, Sixth jue; MILLER, ZUGER & TILLOTSON, ie 1 aie aie dicial district. GeL4-21-28: 7-5-1219 tion. The eye, being designed for fo- B. F. Tillotson, as administrator, with Attorneys for Plaintiff. cused coming through the air the will annexed of the estate of pee aa We thé toa a bt focus rays coming Nii . . PCEASE! Mai) ‘ough the water, Nina Downey, deceased, Plainbift | Memorial to Key. ‘ er Famous for Date Palms. Bagdad is famous for especially fla- vored date paluts, here are several famous date-forests about the delta of d Euphrates. One of the sting and useful relics of the Moorish civilization that remains n is the most wonderful palm ieréve in the world, It might be called ‘a fitting monument. to the foresight ,And careful husbandry of those unfor- jfunate people, | ee Natural Curiosity. “What are they going to do with all the schools after all the children grow up and go to work?” asked -six-year- old Teddy. Surgery in Stone Age. ‘ A flint knife has recently been found in Fraserburgh, ‘Aberdéenshire, which had been used in performing surgical operations in the Stone Age. It is al- most identical with the operating knife adopted by surgeons within the past few years, AZTECS’ FEAST OF THE DEAD Custom of Burning Up an Image of the Departed ‘Is Still Common Among Indians of California. The religion of ‘the ancient Mexi- cans seems to have been character- Ized throughout by a peculiar blood- thirstiness, involving constant human sucrifice, The feast of the dead was celebrated after this fashion: “They took a faggot of ocotl, which in Spain would be called pitch wood, . and they dressed it up in blanket or Idress. If the dead person had been a woman, they dressed the faggot in her petticoats and put it in front of cook- ing pots and other househotd utensils. If the dead person had been a chief and a valiant man, they dressed the faggot in a rich mantle and waist- cloth and labret and gave it a hand- fulxof pitch wood. The labret was made of a piece of amber or crystal. This, which they were accustomed to wear when they drank or danced in their native ceremonies, hung down from a hole pierced through the lip. They seated the image on a sleeping mat and they put there much food and they invited the principal men there, Then they put fire to the pitch wood and everything which they had put there burned up.” ‘The custom of burning up an image, togéther with offerings fer the dead, was not only found among the Aztees but fs also common among the Indians of California today—The Southern Workman, MANY GREAT MEN DIED POOR Burns’ Last Hours Were Tortured With Thought of Paltry Debt He Could Not Pay. It was old Sam Johnson of diction- ary fame—was it not?—who once wore boots so full of holes that they freely admitted the pebbles! Burns died with hardly a copper in the house, his last hours _ tortured with the thought of a paltry debt he could not pay, while among the musi- cal geniuses who have suffered most severely at the hands of Dame For- tune a conspicuous place must be ac- corded’ to Mozart and Hayden, both of whom at one period of their lives were on the verge of starvation. Though in their early manhood Wel- Nngton and Disraeli were both gravely handicapped by debt, neither of these great men ever suffered anything like the privations that President Lincoln and President Garfield did. Most men can at least declare there were four walls around them when they were born into the world, but even this poor Lincoln- hardly could boast. General Grant is known in history, of course, as the commander-in-chief of the Northern armies in the Civil war and eventually as president of the United States, but it may not be equal- ly widely known that, in spite of the great offices he so ably filled, he died with hardly a copper in his posses- sion. One of War's Tragedies. The closing of Robert college Is not the least of the small tragedies of the war. Founded tn 1863, it has for half a century steadily increased its influ- ence over the life and thought of, the near East. Although situated in Con- stantinople, it has drawn most of its students from neighboring countries— Bulgarta, Serbia, Greece and Armenia. While its consistent policy has been to leave politics strictly alone, not a little of the Liberal movement in the near East may be traced to its doors. It is asserted that Bulgaria won her inde- pendence through men educated at Robert college; and a number of the Greek and Serbian high officials owe to {t their early training. Even the Young Turk party, which. brought about the revolution of some years ago and so nearly succeeded in its enterprise of liberalization, was largely inspired. by men trained there. Whether its work is now finally ended, hinges on the re- sult of the war. Paper-Covered Novels. Paper-covered novels have lost none of their attractiveness through the half-century since they were written. The cholce of titles is not their least alluring feature. Admirers of Ned Buntline, who did not like his title of “The White Cruiser” ag-being too col- orless, might purchase it on account of its more mysterious alternative designation, or, “The Fate of the Un- heard-Of.” Almost anybody would like to know the fate of the Unheard- of. Most of the dime novels were pub- lished in square twelvemos, but this was an octavo issued in New Yerk in 1853. They filled a want, if not a long- felt one. Their resurrection comes at 2 time most opportune, for these nov- els were. In many cases the “literature | and‘when trench warfare, in the mod- of the trenches” daring the Civil war, if the term can properly be applied to writings which were not literature ‘Exchange. ern term; was unknow! BURBOT IS FRESH-WATER COD Species Which Inhabits Northern Part of Western Hemisphere H Voracious Appetite. The burbot has the distinction of being the only fresh-water member of the cod family, all of its relatives Ilv- Ing in the sea. Its habitat circles the earth, two almost indistinguishable species being found, one each, in the lakes and larger streame of the north- ern parts of the two hemispheres, In North ‘America it occurs from the Arc- tle circle, and perhaps beyond it, to the ‘Ohio and Missouri rivers, being particularly abundant in the Great Cakes and the larger waters of New England, New York, Canada and Alaska. It is sald to spawn in the winter and early spring and like most of its fam- lly is exceedingly prolific, estimates of the number of eggs ranging from 160,- 000 in a medium-sized fish to 670,000 in a large one. Its voracity is notori- ous,, By day it hides in the holes and crannies of the bottom or in the deep- er waters, but at night it goes forth to prey on other fishes, crawfishes, and, at least in early life, on aquatic insects and fish eggs. Its highly dis- tensible stomach-is. as elastic as its appetite and-it takes a heavy toll of Its' neighbors, the: particular trait whichhas brought it into disfavor with the fishermen who brook no rivalry in their calling, PROMOTION GASED ON THRIFT Great. Bank Has Rule Not to Advance Employee Who Has Not Saved Part of His Salary. Extravagance and Jack of thrift are ;at the bottom of practically every employees and officials. In a certain international:bank, known all over the world, a rule established by one of its shrewd founders is rigidly, though al- most secretly, enforced. Every young man who enters its service is closely watched. He must not only bear him- self properly at all times, but he must save part of his salary. He is not urged or even advised to do so. It is left to himself. If he makes no pro- vision for the future he never occu- ples a position of trust, handles money, securities or negotiable paper, or is au- thorized to sign bank obligations of any character. An employee of this bank once sta- tioned in New York city who spoke seyeral Ianguages and displayed great ability found out while here the ex- istence of this secret rule when he ap- plied for a vacancy which he was ip evéry way capable of filling. He was told in the kindest way that advance: ment along that line was not for him because they know that he had not saved a dollar in the 22 years of his service. The principle underlying this rule fs that the man who cannot take care of his own money is tempera: mentally unfit to sake care of other People’s. Experience has taught more than one great financial institution that the man who lays up a compe tence for himself will not risk disgrace and ruin by stealing from those who trust him.—New York Commercial. * 0000000000000 OCCOOOO® BRITAIN IN STRAITS H FOR MORE SURGEONS e e OER: e Manchester, Eng—The drain $ : e e which the war has made upon the British medical profession is shown by the fact that more than 250 physicians and = sur- geons from the Manchester dis- : trict are serving in the army. @ The insistent demands for + more army surgeons will ct @ slight response from this district 9 because it has already hecn @ combed out, says the Manches: 4 ter Guardian, ' Use Schools as Canneries. Fond du Lac, Wis.—Every school} building in the city this summer will! be converted into a canning factory. Pressure cookers for canning fruits and vegetables will be installed and niay be uséd gratuitously by house wives and schoolgirls for the preser- vation of foodstuffs during the canning season. Competent instructors from the State ee will be on band te give ald. breach of trust committed by trusted]: Brooklyn woman sentenced to stay away from Brooklyn for five years, which wouldn’t-be reggrded as punish- ment by most people. Jawn McGraw, well known for his violet-like “modesty, has’ written # story on “Why I Ant Worth ‘$40,000 a Year.”, His’ stenographer. refuses to tell whether the capital “I” on the ma- chine was worn out. MEANING WHAT, HARRY? Freddy Welsh is the greatest long distance fighter in the world, com- ments our friend, Harry Pollok. ‘Pittsburgh fans want to have.Jim Callahan fired. They have to find a goat somewhere in -Pittsburgh and it might as well ‘be Jim. Hilinois senate kills boxing bill. As it was modeled on the well known New York bill, the senate showed al- most human intelligence: N.Y. SCHOOLBOYS ARE SHARPSHOOTERS ‘New York school boys are becom- ing expert: marksmen, the result of rifle drill held daily in all the public schools. A report of the Public School Ath- letic league shows that 510 boys qua- lified as marksmen and 363 as sharp- shooters. The sharpshooters made the marksmen hit the ‘bullseye . 45 times out of a possible 50. ADVERTISEMENT. Sealed bids for the construction of a lateral sewer on Broadway from Fourteenth street to Fifteenth street, and on Fifteenth street from Broad- ment District No. Four, City of Bis- marck, North Dakota, will be received by the Board of City Commissioners of said city until eight o'clock p. m., July 9, 1917, Certified check for five hundred ($500) dollars, drawn to the order of A. W. Lacas, president of the . City.. commission, -must- accom- pany each id. Each bid must also be accompanied ‘bya bidder's bond in a sum equal to the full amount-bid. Plans and specifications are on file with the City Auditor and the City Engineer. The City Commission re- serves the right to reject any or all bids. Cc. L. BURTON, 6-14-21-2t ty Auditor. Good Advice. Speak of your happiness to the man who is less happy than you are after you have done something to make him happier than he is.—Exchange. Repartee of a Bishop. A good story of Canon Adderley concerns Wilberforce, Bishop of Ox- | ford, whose official designation was “Samuel Oxon,” made up of his bap- tismal name, followed by the Latin name for his see. Wilberforce was one day addressing a meeting—writes Mr. Adderley—and I suppose he coughed or cleared his ! throat in the midst of his speech. “Try Thorley’s food for cattle,” said a voice. “Thank you,” said the bishop, “it may be good for asses, for it does not suit Samuel Oxon.” On another occasion his audience | hissed. Said Wilberforce, “Remember, gentlemen, that is not an excessively human utterance.” Homes for Foreign Diplomats. For many years the foreign head- quarters of the United States diplo- matic, corps have been exceedingly in- adequate. Any residence was consid- ered good enough for consular and dip- lomatic duties until the war began, when the importance of such duties had occasion to be emphasized. Now a bil has been introduced into con- gress providing an appropriation of $200,000 a year for the rent of suitable buildings in foreign countries for the use of the diplomatic service, both as residences of diplomatic officials and @8 offices of the diplomatic establish mants, _ way to Avenue B in Sewer Improve-, perfect. scores on the rifle range and ~

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