Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“o 4, 4 o LY i TY \ : ; be s Be } WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1918. BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE 7 THREE The | Trading Center of the Missouri Slope SH UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS A. W.-LUCAS. CO. : UNDERTAKING PARLORS Day Phone 645 Night Phone 100 A. W. CRAIG Licensed Embalmer in-Charge WEBB. BROS. Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge | | _ Day Phone 50 Night Phone 687 —— OOOO - DAIRY—MILK—CREAM SAFETY FIRST —Buy Only— PASTEURIZED - MILK BISMARCK’ DAIRY CO. 210'Broadway Phone 348 LE ELECTRICAL —THE— ELECTRIC SHOP, 3B. K. SEEELS Everything Electrical Wiring Fixtures:and Snpplies ‘Delco Fatm Light Plants Willard Service Battery Station Phone 370 @8 Broadway Have You Heard the Latest Music? at— $ STEIN’S Folsom’s Jewelry Store 414 Main St. Phone 562R HAT CLEANING HOOVERIZE! Don’t buy a new hat—let us.clean your.old.one. You will thus save $4 or $5 to buy Thrift Stamps with. EAGLE HAT WORKS 313 ‘Broadway CLEANING and DYING BARBIE’S | DRY CLEANING AND DYE WORKS Phone 394—409 Front St. We call for and deliver. Mail orders promptly filled. TAXI SERVICE Phone 57 FOR A TAXI Fine Cars Always at Your Service DAY AND NIGHT Lambert’s Livery eee TRANSFER and STORAGE Frame TRANSFER AND STORAGE We have unequalled facili- ties for moving storage and shipping of household goods. Careful, experienced men. We/also handle ice. WACHTER TRANSFER COMPANY 202 Fifth St.. Phone 62 . KLEIN'S ‘ My Tailor Expert Dry Cleaning Phone 770 SHOE FITTERS Richmond Whitney MAIN STREET HEMSTITCHING HEMSTITCHING AND PICOT- ING Mail Orders Filled. MRS. M. C. HUNT {| 114 Broadway. Phone 849. 4 WHERE TO DINE When thirsty drink— HAMM’S EXCELSO Nothing is. more refreshing than a cold glass of good old '! Hamm’s Excelso on a hot day. C.M. Rosson C. R. Downing Agents ° Phone 895 l UNITED STATES PLANS NEW Reduction of Postage Rate to 16 Cents Is ‘Lobked for ‘When Service ‘Is 'Extended by the Postoffice (By' Newspaper Enterprise Ass'n.) New York, July 24—The perform- ance of the air mail carriers between New York and Washington has been such as to justify further develop- ment of this service in other parts of the country. A volume of business large enough to warrant will bring other air routes into operation and at the same time airpost rates will drop. If 100,000 people in the United States would send a'letter a day by air mail the result would not only permit extend- ing the service east, west and south, but would provide continuous train- ing for at least 300 aviators. Letters can be ‘sent to any city south of Washington by airpost from New York. They ‘make connections with regular postal routes and arrive many hours ‘before mail sent all the way by rail. The same is true of mail sent v® Philadelphia to points west and-also to points in New Eng- land via Washington. The following new routes are under consideration now: Washington to Chicago via Wheel- ing, W. Va., and Lima, 0. One dav AIR MAIL ROUTES FOR THE WEST downi still more by establishing routes from New York ‘to Boston; Philadel- phia ‘to Pjtts.urgh and :Cleveland to Detroit. The cost for service by airplane at| present is 11 cents per ounce. Ten cents 'is added for special delivery service and 3 cents for regular post- age, a total of 4 cents. | A reduction of the rate is now un- der consideration by Postmaster Gen- | eral Burleson, who hopes to lower it to 16 cents for the first two ounces and 8 cents for every additional At present a special delivery letter requirés 13 cents postage. When the airpost rate is cut it will be only 3 more than service by rail, and letters will be delivered from one to'two days sooner. word was received from Washington on Friday afternoon that the work or fight order applied to ball players, | baseball fans in this city were of the opinion that this order would mean an exodus of baseball players from! the major leagues and the American Association to the shipyards at Du- luth and Superior. It is known that these concerns have made attractive offers to various ball players, contin- tan be saved in the delivery of mail by this route. The time will be cut gent upon the enforcement of the work or fight order. 1G | antee.” literature. particular bit. of copy. work. But if you say: help it. ises. promises. another matter to pass off Tis a fine thing to be able to look ‘a man, in the eye when he says to you: gain, and we stand back of it with our guar-, » One often reads this promise in mail order ’Tis seldom that one ever gets’ a glimpse of the boy or girl who wrote the»< With: the compiler of the mail order catalog, ’tis all in the day’s With the man who says it to your face, it means something, for he knows that if he doesn’t make good you'll come back, and he knows that if he does make good you’re most likely to come back, and ’tis the lat- ter contingency that. he’s counting’ on. For the man who does business with you, face to face, has to rely upon come back or-, . ders and he needs: your good will, because you're his advertiser and his mail order cata- log. If you go: home and say: that coulter I got from Jones is all right, all right,” then your neighbor thinks of Jones ° the next time he comes.to town, figuring on. a bit of an electric washer for the missus: “Be dad, that dones feller, now, ain’t he the skinner,” Jonés”knows he can never expect to repair the damage that’s done him, and bein’ as Jones is in business here for life, he isn’t likely to give you a chance to say bad things of him if he can That’s the whole idea of trading at home. You see the article, you see the man who stands behind it; you ‘know, next time you come to town you'll see\him again, and he knows it too. thing to make long distance conversation and to sit beside a-‘mahogany top desk, drawing | on a 25-cent perfecto and dictate pretty prom- ‘Tis another thing quite to-sit right here under the gun and stare a'man in the eye and make promises and know by all that’s holy that’ you’ve got to make good those One hates like thunder to sell a neighbor a blind horse, for he knows that sooner or later Mr. Naybur will get hep. TIS MIGHTY COMFORTABLE TO LOOK YOURMANIN THE EYE WHEN HE SYS “IT’S'A BARGAIN FOR YOU Sband of roving Ugive you worse “Ti’s a bar- ‘family. fair profit’ on awho accomplish .iness. That. is “By yimminy, grandaddy trad children you g a mere matter sense. He kno haven’t any of most likely the ‘Tis an easy. have you dissa' The biggest the part of his Tis quite a bad one on a_ gound gospel. BUSINESS ' TRAINING isiness man is in the same position that you’ are when a neighbor comes to you and awants a gentle, You are not liable to sell him a skit- tish bag of bones that’s going to kick the whole family into kingdom’ come, for, like s not, you have an idea that Mr. Naybur Shay want a horse again some time, and a bigger and more satisfactory generally than ‘an unfair profit on one bad one. When a man’s selling merchandise as a business, the first thing he does or seeks to do is to build up good will and a reputa- ction for honesty and fair-dealing. The man aness is advertised in these columns are here; ‘that’s why they were here last year, and year before last. With. some of them your a prairie schooner ; with some of their.grand- | a long time hence. A square deal with the home merchant is clined—and we’ marck—he couldn’t hook you today and ex- pect to catch your neighbor tomorrow. And when ‘he says “bring it back if it isn’t satis- factory,” he means that, for he can much better afford to take a loss on you than to has is his good will. out a reputation for playing fair and doing business on the square, without a belief on adn sincere and a man who wants to see his neighbors do well, the goods .on his shelf wouldn’t be worth to him 75 cents on the dol- lar on the purchase price. Think it over, and see if it isn’t pretty horse traders who probably than they get. The home lady-broke driver for the two good horses usually is es these results stays in bus- why the men whose busi- led when he came out here in randchildren will be trading of, ordinary business good ws that, even were he so in- re proud to believe that we that brand. in business in Bis- tisfied. capital the average merchant Without good will, with- community that he’s honest IRON and JUNK BISMARCK ——$_— You Can Enroll at This : , MODEL OFFICE PRACTICE school under guarantee of a sat- isfactory position as soon as competent or your tuition re- funded. Send for particulars. When you know more about this college and what it has done for hundreds of the most successful business men-and women, you’ll attend. Write G. M. LANGUM, Pres., Bismarck, N. D. HIGHEST PRICES PAID For Men's cast off Suits, Coats and Shoes. WE ALSO BUY JUNK OF ALL KINDS IN HANDFUL OR CARLOAD LOTS, We have accepted the agency for the Fargo Iron & Metal Co. Inc., with a capital of $50,000.00 | and we can pay the highest prices. Don't leave old iron G@ound to rust but ‘bring it to us or Phone 358 and we will call for it and pay you the high- est price. COLEMAN’S NEW AND 2ND HAND STORE 109 5th St. Opposite McKenzie Clothes Cleaned ‘and Pressed. Hats Blocked and Cleaned. By PAUL PURMAN. Running 15 miles: in less than 15 minutes Miss Detroit Il in a regatta at Put-in-Bay, O., has again establisn- ed her supremacy as the queen of all speed water crafts. Miss Detroit If is a hydroplane built by a Detroit millionaire on plans The other day tue Bailey brothers, -——ay w. §, =~ prosperous farmers in the northern « part of Burleigh county, bought some Baseball Men To jife insurance. The agent who Duluth Shipyards |mate the sale was ‘so ‘tickled | about signing up the whole family St. Paul,- Minn. July 24—When/|that he invited hig ‘clients, ten of ; them, in to Bismarck to a feed. The ten Bailey brothers accepted, and when they sat down to a spread in the private dining room of the Grand Pacific, the ten of them for the first time shoved these twenty Bailey feet under the same board. They made a remarkable group. ‘The eld- est is 48 and the youngest 25. All are more than six feet tall and “built ac- cording.” They are big-chested, broad-shouldered Cumberland moun- tain men from West Virginia. Thomas I. Bailey, the first-born, reached man’s; Their ancestors pioneered in Virginia, | j decided onvafter half a-dozen designs TEN BIG BAILEY BROTHERS SIT AT SAME TABLE FOR FIRST TIME had been’tried and found wanting. - The first five miles of the course was covered in 4.41, a-rate of a mile inl 56 4-5 seconds, believed to be a record for speed boats. It is not so long ago that a mile a minute was considered impossible for estate and moved west to Missourt. Then, George C. left the family roof to seek fortune in the west. One by one as the remaining eight reached man’s estate they followed in the footsteps of their older brothers, and finally all of them brought up with- in a few miles of one gnother in Northern Burleigh county. ‘Tt ghanced that each of them had been:so busy taming the wild prairie that the whole} family had never gotten together at one time until they ate dinner here asgguests of the agent. omas I. Bailey, 48; George C., 47; Humphre: ; Ira, 43; Frank Ot- way Bail Fert, ; Romeo, 34; Herbert, Orva, 29; and Burbie B. Pailey, are the ten big Baileys. They are of typical pioneering stock: SPEED! SPEED! SPEED! ‘after the dinner was over they all water craft and it was not until the | hydroplane type was invented that it | was proved that this extreme speed was attainable. The boats are built to emilinate practically all water resistance, the | body of. the boat leaving the water | when extreme speed is reathec. and the bene and brawn they devel- oped: then-has been handed down to} the present generation, which pre- sents about as handsome a spectacle of upstanding, stalwart American manhood as one could find in ten states. The Bailey boys enjoyed the feed; they enjoyed getting together for the first time in their lives, and went to a movie show and then ad- journed to the Butler studio and had their pictures taken in-a group. Mother Lailey, who is still alive and hale-and hearty, will be mighty proud of that picture Buy a Serles ¢° Life ts one lon: ~2ries ot choosings. This way or ti? Shall we do or leave undone? Tle questions fli cvery hour of every day, and by our ‘wise or foolish answers we write our his- PIN BISMARCK «=: The anes Trading Center of’ © the Missouri the Missouri ‘Slope AUTOMOBILES, ACCESSORIES AND euler Western Sales Co. Distributors of MAXWELL, CHALMERS, REO AUTOMOBILES PORTAGE TIRES GREEN DRAGON SPARK PLUGS Automobile Acces- sories of All Kinds FILTERED ’ GASOLINE Free Air and Water BATTERY SERVICE STATION BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distributors of STUDEBAKER - and CADILLAC Automobiles PAINTING and DECORATING MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR CO. Factory Distributors of CHEVROLET AUTOMOBILES Smith Form-a-Trucks Smith Tractors Kelly-Springfield and Firestone © Tires Everything for the Automobile ii || OSGOOD LENS Within the law—More Hight than plain ‘glass. MOTOR CAR SUPPLY CO. ' Automobile Trimming and Top Work BISMARCK FURNITURE CO. Phone 669. 220 Main St. HARDWARE—IMPLEMENTS WALL PAPER , PAINTS & OILS Varnishes—Kalsomine Brushes and Supplies CHRIS ENGEN CO. Bismarck, N. D. turn out. Nothing but, the plant. state and are in a position RELELOSCUUNSUQUUDOENQUGUOOOESOOOUUNEGREOQUNERELSQO0001 Meadow Trials South Dakota’s Newest Offering Meadow y popular Mobridge, S. D., Jw trials may come distil Kin South Di Several weeks ago, it was an- ‘nounced that the heavy demand for F labor and the absolute neces- farmers to remain on the job made it neces- things—to exempt or to hold the ¢: 5 plan is being tested. One took place this week may be held. A case is to be Lake. The‘attorney: found that the judge w near that city. The delegation then went to the home of Judge Raymond L, Dillman. of the Twelfth circuit and found him shocking rye. “\Why not try the case here,” one suggested. “Suits me,” ried at Timber ent there and some- said the judge. We have the largest union printing office in the BISMARCK: TRIBUNE ‘as on his farm, | Ens glish Women. guarantecin FINE BUGGIES If you are thinking of buying ‘a new carriage or wagon it will pay you to get our prices, FRENCH & WELCH Hardware — Tools — Implements arness — Carriages — Wagons SQUUUUe Oe UeeaaneUanUueuuueuaauauasuuuaaceceeaenee este cUaUU UTE Are You Particular About Your Printing? ' We are very particular about the kind of printing we : best workmanship leaves our a E 2 F 5 : to give you goodjservice, © & & = = ‘3 ! PHOTO DEVELOPING Ee ed Preece * BISMARCK -NoaTH Daxora: Bring or mail in your films for Expert Developing FINNEY’S DRUG STORE Bismarck, N. D. “court room” was built’ among haystacks. The judge's rostrum was made of rye. Grasshoppers frisked about but the case was disposéd ot without incident, in about half the time us! y given to a. minor clvil matter in uit court. ——— avy we. 8 Shipping the Burden. “Plubdub's wife is helping him to write his novels now.” “He always was lazy. After he gets her trained, I s'pose he'll let her do it all.” A Ng | tory. next “Year's ‘Food Supply