The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 14, 1918, Page 2

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BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Ruth: Knatvold Jensen | Teacher of Voice and Artistic Singing, A limited number of will be proud of it. with odd and mismated knives and forks. ing sets. PHONE: 576 ANOOSNOUUUNOGUGOUARUEOEOQOUSUEODLOSUUGRDOOUUISSUUEOGSSUCESSSNSECUEOUBOSSOOUOSOOUOUOUUOUOUOUSOEOUIERD UUUDEOEOUAOUOUOUOUOEUOEAEQUOEOOCEOOUNOOUEDOUSOAUGUUOOONUEOOUEDUEOOOLOUGQEUGUEESEOCEOLOQOCEDOOVERUUDOESEEEUOOUSOSENOUSUOUGDOESOOESUOQESOCHSEOUOEEROOSOD The Kind You Have wate Sonik and which has been in use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of ! and has been made under his per4 ANE, sonal supervision since its infancy. oA ds Allow,no one to deceive you in this, All Counterfeits, Imitaticns and “ Just-cs-good”” are but Experiments that trifle h and endanger the health of dnfants and Chijdren-—E: ‘yerience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its ege is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has Deen in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids assimilation of Food; giving healthy aud natura! sleep, The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA Atways Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEWYORK CITY, i ate een | HIGHWAY BOARD Next Week pupils Phone 679R I next week AUANESUASUUUICUBUURHPOUGELVQUUEOQOUEUSSSECSSTVTUUCTSTEOUECUTOCEUURE EERO TED EEE UDO E LOR OOU ESTHET EOE Com pan ys Coming! Getsome new Ta es Cutlery for Thanksgwving and ae E Ornament your table with bright new cutlery and you You cannot have a nice looking table Don’t you need new cutlery ? Carve your bird with our hand-forged, razor-edged carv- You can do the job better and quicker. Our fine cutlery is high in quality and low in price. Use our hardware; it stands hard wear. JOHN BORTELL 300 MAIN STREET THE VALUE OF OUR MONEY depends principally upon what you do with it. ~ When you deposit your - spare dollars in our-Sav- , ings Department they are not only always worth one hundred cents each, but they also accu- mulate compound inter- ,est at the rate of 4% each year. . Take no chances with risky in- vestments. Place your funds in-this strong bank where you know they will be safe. “ | Largest Bank inthis sectionof + the State 4 iState Meeting Deferred Until ed meeting of the North Da- commission scheduled has been adjourned to CURODEUBEUUGUESEOUESCORIOOGECLODCUCUUEGOUDUEEOOCES OUUSERUUOCUENOOCCORENDERCUROEOOASECEDOSTETEUNNES jJed to Germany. CUUUEURGEERAUTERUgeEatReszocegus Cunereotoctan 1 DOZENS OF USES FOR MILITARY _ ‘AIRPLANES AFTER THE WAR, SAYS NOTED UNITED STATES EXPERT BY A. E. GELDHDF. used after the war as they are now N. £, A. Washington Bureau, _| Pefne used at the front. 1 | 1128-1184 Muneey “Bldg, | Patrol Coast and,Lakes Washington, 'D. C. Pe *raacl : i | ‘On the Great Lakes, airplanes can What will America*do with her im-|be used for coast guard work, as on mense airplane fleet and her army of|the seacoast, and they can also be aviators after the war? used for patroling the lakes them- Will the machines be junked andjselves. Think how many” wrecked the past ha er pursuits? is the an-jnear by to carry. its. message of dis- “Most assuredly not,” of-the division of military Aeronautic: rene, one of America’s greatest aviator “Forest patrol is still another open- Captain Francis, who was one of the!/ing for the use of expert aviators. country’s first airmen, having flown very year, almost, our great forest a Curtis airplane in 1908, has a record of between 00 and 4,000 hours in|that our present methods of preven- the air; an achievement in which he; tion of forest fires are not discovered has but two or three equals | While.they are still smoldering. Con- As 4in army eviator he is attached{stant airplanes patrol over er great ‘structor, and féw aviators are as well) thing of the past. qualified tham he to discuss this suo-| “Then ‘there are any number of ject. commercial uses to which. airplanes Air ‘Mail Service to Be Common. jcan be put. “America cannot afford to junk the;bombs, a commercial airplane could airplane fleet which has cost her sojcarry a cargo of small package many millions of dollars,” said Cap-} freight for which immediate delivery tain Francis. “I do not believe that|is necessary. any other nation will do so. | Passenger-Carrying Being Developed. “Even if the peace congress should; “The use of tbe airplane for pas- decide on universal disarmament, | senger-carrying is now being develop- there are still any number of uses to!ed. The huge Caproni and Handley- which airplanes can be put in time of} Page machines will be used for. this peace, | purpose in the future... Thousands of “Take the air mail service, for in-Lpersons will want to fly just for the stance. This is now only 4n its in-jnovelty, and the possivility of acci-| fancy, but it is destined to become] dents will be reduced to the mini- as common as the railway mail serv-| mum, A ice. It will employ hundreds of air-} “Again, there is the need for scien- nes and aviators all over the coun- | tifte research. and improvement of . | the airplane, which wil keep scores of! “Then there is the possibility of! men and machines busy for years. your machines being used for seaco |. “It will not ‘be necessary, of course, patrol work, a valuable addition 'to maintain the numerous govern- our coast guard fortes which save; ment training fields for aviators, but many ocean vessels from disaster ev-} some of the best of them should be ery year. |retained. I do not believe it will be “They will be arge ly dispatch work. Insi ficial messages from post to post byja single undamaged. airplane after the} the present methods, airmen will bey war.” try RECONSTRUCTION OF EUROPE WILL FURNISH JOBS FOR EVERYONE NOW| TU. Ss. IS BANKER, WORKSHOP, Estimated wealth of the United States .......... Number of workers in U. S. Agriculture (1914). bes 560,000 | Machinery shops, iron industry factories, ‘transportation 8,265,426 + OOD STORE FOR THE WORLD. ! ». ) =$228,900,000,000 BY J. H. DUCKWORTH. City Bank, maintains that the United N. E. A. Staff Correspondent. Stat will pass out of he war per- e asking in the period of the|s ed dvefore s regeystruc tion. no slump ia*the demand for labor. Ir has been estimated that,no few-ihas been stimulated‘as never before. | er than 10,000,000 men have Been kill-! ed in Europe. The United States, | Readjustment Only Obstacle. which has not lost 15,000 men, must, There is no obstacle, he thin make good this huge labor loss. ja continuance of business ac Devastated Europe will look to the} cept the difficulty of readjusting bus!- United State for help to rebuild. We! Ness to a peace basis. This obstacle must finance this vig job and supply |! great but surmountable. \the materials and tools. The extent. too, to which our nor- According to, M. Tardieu, high commissioner, -it will take twoithe war has not»beem realized. Gov years to get the French coal mines in|ernment figures for the nine months} working order and ten: years to put them in pre-war condition. To re-(the 27 p consiruct private homes alone will re-|the United States -doés business, ex- quire the work of 109,000 men for 20] ports to 14 fell off. This is explained years. by the fact that our factories have Belgium's Losses $4,090,000,00. concentrated on war work, our. ship- Professor Van den Ven of Louvain,| Ping has been used for war use ‘and now in the United States, says the war| neutrals, and that even our allies, le | losses of Relgiam total approximately| Pendent upon us for goods, have had j $4,00,000,000.* Before the drive more{to~go on short rations. than 45,009 buildings had been de-| This means that as soon as war stroyed. Practically all the important|Teleases shipping and men, this un- factories have been robbed of their| filled demand from allies and neutfals machinery, and, in many cases, not|Can be met and a vast new export] only the walls razed but the very| business developed: 2.28 foundations destroyed. The machmery was shtpped to Ger- many. Towns and villages have been wrecked. Farms have ‘been robbed | \ of all live stock. Miles of interurban | MUST NOW BE o CONQUERED railroads have been torn up and #hip-; | The problem is first to keep alive| the population released by Germany; | second to reconstruct: industrial ma- chine so-the people can make a liv- ing. England also will want food. manu-} London, factured goods, raw material and ma-j visioning chinery in great quantities. So will/allied powers hinges immediately upon Italy and the Scandinavian countries.{the disarmament of the German and} George E. Roberts of the National} Russian fleets. Bolsheviks must be put otit of com- S=S=_e—"——"°——o—S[jS—> | mission. Ayithout freedom of. move- Hooray for Banana ment on the,Baltic and Black seas the 1 ‘ 1 99 entente powers will have great diffi- culty. Consequently the attitude of i Pee Gets- t the revolutionary navy is“watched by the entente allies with great inter- Onty Real way, ‘To Ge Get Rid of Corns. | ost. Speedy..action is necessary for Which do you prefer—a corn that the regions adjacent to the Baltic sea, pulls or a corn that peels? Butchery |°% Many ot ts Le mat pe Jeehound or blessedness? Only “Gets-It” can get| Within two months, and the condition rid of your corn the peel-off way, the| 0! me railway y’ males Teliet py lan blessed way. You don't need a pull.| Toutes uncortaln The United States and the entante have shown no disposition to deal| with the Bolshevik _, government. | | While Russia remains.in the power of jthe soviets therefore there seems Jit- possibility of feeding Moscow, Petro- grad and other r large | cities. WASHBURN HAD VICTORY FETE | Old-Glory Illuminated by Search-; | light During Day |. Washburn, N. D. Nov. 14.—Wash- iburn’celebrated the signing of the jarmistice with Germany ‘with high en- | | | oy \cracker@e-were kept sputtering and a ‘Corns Newor deariaes 1Use ‘Getslt’" 1! fewnned Fourth of ay hekl. The great num- ping from.pain, jerk and gouge .and| band also cut your corns? ‘Why irritate your | thedpamis py setiuense. “fe apa als toes with some.salve or wrap your toey ‘The chief event was the bonfire. A into a big painful bundle with some | parrel ef oil was lit, and-an effigy o sticky tape or plaster. s,1fe is too short- ihe Sthoe’ ininie sof aris old: gait sot Use “Gets-It"—it takes a few seconds overalls oT uffed Sith weeds, was 5 to apply it and there's no fussing.| to<sed into the flames. It quickly went Corn pains go. Wear new shoes if Vi up in smoke. One of the features, you want. | Peel off the com with aiso, was the floatingiof “Old ‘Glory” your fingers—the whole thing, root! Gn the tall iron pole above the court house grounds, which all evening was and all, clear and clean. and it’s gone’ Ne es ean do this. Take oh illumifated by a sea "searchlight ght. “Gets-It,” the guaranteed, money-! VISIT! ING G HUSBAND back corn-remover, the only sure pis C. G. Boise. of Fargo is here way, costs but a‘trifle at any drug store. Mt'd by E. Lawrence & Go.,| visiting her husband, Secreta on e will Chicago, fil. Sold in Bismarck and rec-! of the state board_of | ‘control. ommended, as the world’s best corn! establish her home here sstehaas Janu- { remedy ‘by Finney’s Drug Store. fary 1. Seid Safeguards | . the aviators turned loose to. seek oth-j Jake vessels Fiabe have been saved inj there’ been an airplane swer given by Captain Roy N. Francis} tress and guide rescue ships to the! |fires in \the northwest demonstrate |, to the executive section as an in-jforests would make forest fires. a} Instead of a cargo of, used for army, necessary td discharge a single pilot! d of sending of-| or observer from the-army or to junk; Popular Bisma 1 i DD. New York.-—Jobs for all will be hadjiod with more wealth than she pos-| | the conflict began. | There's to be; There has been much scientific aevel-| opment of imdustry,..and agriculture! to} ty ex-| French | {mal exports have been curtailed by| ending with September show that ot! 7 principal countries with which | = i Nov. 14.—Prodlems ‘df pro-| nd policing Russia by the|, Warships held y the}, | thugiasm, and. during’ the. day fire-} and with your jajws set and eyes pop-/ up ‘for about a any ate ‘on account of| WHURSDAY, NOV. 14, 1918, R SURGERY ART TO HIM CHAS D. JARRETT Daulas, T | “Charles ‘D. Jarrett, a young French} Americanr oly St: Louis, whose father, Dallhs, is in} France making drawings illustrating | the extraordinary necessary by the inhuman w: arfare of] the Germans. “The drawings are for | medical research institufféis of the: allied countries. Jarrett studied art at the St. Louis; School of High Arts, connected with the Washington University, and stud. ied anatomy. and microscopic draw ings at John Hopkins Hospital, in \Baltimore, and at L'arnes Hospital, at) E. Jarrett, is in operations ington University, St. Louis. en the call first a fe rvice | Washington Univers! tal. unit num May 17, 19 . He found his field of service very far! from the great battlefields near Rouen near which city his unit is stationed | with the brits ings he has made will -be used by surgeons to illust tributed to. 8¢ , leaving St, h hospital. The dre aw te articles con- jentific :, journals. REV. OTT TO. ODENSE . k Priest Assign- ed New Post ‘onre time past aihedral, tev. John Ott, assistant at, St. Ma mads! has taken the charge at Odense re- | Rev. cently made vacant by Boy’s Clothes of Real Helpfulness and z You can feel certain of service:in what you get in the vast assortment here. Sam W. Peck’s Boys’ Clothes featured here are'the best mode. ; Boys’ Suits, Overcoats and’ Mackinaws BOYS’ HOLLAND SHOES... Very strong line from $3.50 to $5.00 HAND PRESSING DRY. CLEANING ii CUSTOM. TAILORING ~ EXPERT REPAIRING 5.E.HERGESON & SON ‘ather Rau, who was a victim of the death of {Spanish influei A reception was jheld at the parish house this week in JOS, BRESLOW Prescription for , Hc Z em a for 18 years the standard skin remedy--a @ jeune externally--instant relict from itch. the mildest of cleansers ~ keeps AP) the stinaiwayscteanandnealthy. Come in and ask us about both honor of the popular young priest who | will leave soon for hi 3 FARMERS ATTENTION! ‘ We pay cash for corn or will you oats or barley at a right. pr will pay you to look into this. and see us.\ The Missouri Co = We will win this war— Nothing else really matters until we do! HILL grea ararsaaaa 2 Waictey SL LFuIcy FRUIT) CHEWING GUM Tag Be patient here—Our Bove are getting WRIGLEYS over there! =

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