The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 23, 1918, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Detroit, ord toda om the 1 Co. € | the con mn Edsel) Mr. For ike the eekly nm etween | wr indus’ OW K London ibutes ritish mat Wil erman } 3 far as yrmed a omethin “The | ial said, has not he alliet Ig us ¢ , almos on had ave bee d State: 000 T Great t-the € ay esti OO me tation. > prive ake se) ions fo e those r thos wn wh 20, 1UNS N.E Paris, eae catlage etratin fade t he Ger ors thi ccomp le the ut pity ew pet ind ‘lef he hop One fa lwo od their c pany t ately @ family’ lived f lers.”” NOT ., Def ach scribed EN, tt cuted z son an gacors gagee, 1912, ¢ of the ty of : ta, on and rt gages said m iV. Ss. writin, 1917, record Assigi tlds: signe: Vv. S. writin 1918, record Deeds kota, and w Mortg morte iv. g.* Know dated which in the of Bu the 1 corde page the 7 herei: door in th. Nort] o’cloc cemb due u the ¢ said to se the Nort lows. Sout (2), eight eight Tt gage Two eigh: 138.4 ike BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE | Today’s Weather = Seer a irs | For Twenty-four hours ending at} Sete eres JOIN HUSBAND | ngon,, Nov. | The great need of ent {Temperature at 7 a. m 2) our soldi 8 j i WA | asc and at tho front is nd the camps, Temperature at noon . K, Mussey, secre! of the music| Scarcely a letter comes back from ov- Hi sterday ... mittee of the War Camp Commun-;erseas but makes some mention of : | Low te} y ervice who that} nned} music, and usually it is of the phono- ¢ —=—_ | Lowest night .”-as the phonograph is called, graph they speak. Capital Loses Much Respected Bractoltaiion depended upon to promote morale} “And this need is by no means con-| sf e among our armed forces, fired to overseas camps. 10-NW | this time o' pow ord air and warm | peor ;machine and a few reco; {cient equipment for a’ c and Universally Beloved | Hig Family Today | hest wind veloc aid Mr. Mu em. to have the ide: | For North Dakot ‘er tonight and Sunda Mrs. Afirew A. B Minneapolis to join he » left today for husband, Chief » commun: |} had. Justice Bruce, who his seat Pargo ... i ab house or a Y. M..C. A. hut. As/theso letters, and scores of similar! on the North Dakota supreme t Williston... a ter of fact each building should| ones, that we are urging the public December 1 toa St. Paul | three or four machines and an}to give phonographs and records, es- at the Uni Winnipeg j riment of records that will meet| pecially records, for our club houses. Bruce former! in the Unive Clee gO b65.08%: Swift Current Kansas City .. ORRIS W. ROBERTS, - Meteorologist. | mental song. 1 cannot emphasize t00/ords.” y of North Dakota before coming to North Dakota he s on the law faculty of the University of Wisconsin, He has won national fecog: | nition as an author a constitutional law, hs | } kota he has exercised a wholesome in- | mnn fluence on the legal fraternity of the | entire state, | In women's work Mrs. Brace has} been equally prominent. She is known the state o as un unusually brilliant writer and a sound thinker on poltti |for the purpose. ‘There are three such ‘ — 1, sociological and economic subjects. . enc actives aes ! colo: already laid out, ont of which | | Sara rere at eae ma Plan For Co}, {contains 50 farms and the other two} ! { akota Federation of Women's; Canadians Have a Plan For Col- 125 each—sufficient numbers to insure | ? ada a OWA A: choo! adn church’ facilities. for | | symphonic poems | whore dearest delight is the latest!do an‘ equally | ARARRRRR eee | mediately. The plan contemplates a community onization | social, "loved by those whe know atdn ol : Sian a Stal 2 | the families living in them. In two of} EN N IN : Miss Glenn and), Muster —} - ithe colonies the Tand is irrigable, and | Bruce, son and danghter of Chief Jus- } thee and Mrs. Brace, a N. E. A. Special to The Tribune. [the farm units are of acres each tending Minnesota — schools, Montreal. Que., Nov. 23.—Settlement | the other is on non-irrigable land, wit family will be reunited in Minneapolis, |of returned soldiers on “ready-made” | f@rm units ae aoe ene: 1 in! : y General H. A.| farms, cleared, fenced, planted with | athe 7 tires «colonies, are locatet in n, recently elected associate j jfarws. cle irs tae ay southern Alberta, and are all within | tice to succeed Judge Bruce, who was | Hou and burn built, and horses, cows, easy distance of the railw not a candidate for re-election, having | DP! announced his acceptance of the Minne- ; nished. U_ professorship several months | cessfully by it Governor | Way company in western Cans At the outbrerk of the war plan being worked out su | competent agriculturist, where advice; | and ‘assistance is available for the oc-/ | cupants of the farms. This also serves 1 a demonstration farm and social ! s railway company planned to offer center. The colony sugerintendent has A soldier: nds owned by | at his disposal additional machinery ona made” basis. | to lend to farmers in the colonies as o previde a farm home dtired, at a fixed charge per day. ' No payment is required from soldiers | taking up these farms until the end of | li the third year of occupation, and dur-| cost than a major Preliminary Bxpense on> Highways Is Shown r on the su preme bench, and he will add) ow month to his regular term as associate | to return justice. Bronson is also a former Uni- | the comp y of North Dakota professor, |The idea is honers in this respect with tinte Justice Birdzell, who was “i to the bench by the league two xo. In addition to having been nt attorney general for the last years, Judge Bronson served. s eral terms in the set Forks county. NAGEL IN HOSPITAL The North Dakota highway commi ;Sion has just completed a sumumariz: tien of engineering ¢ races that this si a much low YOUR OPPORTUNITY earried on with the advice and ap-/s! e trom Grand available for investment, answer jgarm is a tenant at will, At the ex- this advertisement and learn of | piration of this period he is required to one of the best money-making | pay rental equal to 6 per cent per an- opportunities in America today. | "0 on the t of the permanent in- Address, Chapman & King, 624 | coc advances he may roesiced | Plymouth Building, Minneapolis, | from the company. At N ime, if hen Minn. |tenancy has been satisfactory, a eoi- scale. < the first year the surve, At the pace of the state high s the ayerngt ile. The cost gf maki: 44 per mile. the surv isance work and supplies brir Shnou J. Na of control is re hospital from anu a fluenza |THE BOLSHEVIKI! Must We Fight Another War To Save the World From Its Menace? h the Western nations a rehy, and pub ts beg: hey watch the millions of Central. Europe plunge to ask if we must fight agdin—against the new = : \ : anareh, is On every lip and the fact that such questions.ag these: <> of enough that “the war does not end when the ene:ty surrenders,” “ On the other hand, we find the Hartford Courant convinced that the i 1 y can never develop the disorder that was bound to accompany the Bolshe- m inherited from the old Russian nihilism. And'the Boston Globe reminds us that “whereas Rus- . sia was predominately illiterate, in Germany illiteracy is less than one per cent.” The leading arti ‘le in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week deals with the greatest menace that threatens the conclusion of world peace—the Bolsheviki. Other news-features in this particularly inter- esting number of “The Digest” are: : Records of American and British Navies in the. War - The Veil of Silence Is Lifted and in This Article Tribute Is Paid to the Wonderful Work That Both Navies Have Performed An “Unconditional Surrender” Mr. Wilson’s Idealiam at the Peace The Specter of Famine Over Europe Table Denmark Wants Schleswig When the Tanks Were Gassed The Oil-can as a Globe-Trotter America: First in Farm Tractors ~ Fire as a Weapon When the Breweries Go Dry Art Thefts in France and Italy Barrie Putting Wilhelm in His Place The London Theatre’s Prosperity Turning French Light on Our Music < Shall Soldiers Pay for Comforts from | Christianity’s Victory Y. M. C. A. and K. of C.? Germany’s Moral Defeat 5 ie spate Lack ae Best of the Current Poetry sonal Glimpses of Men and Event: I New i ¢ : ~ The Republican Opportunity maa em eee A Fine Coilection of Half-tone [llustr@tions. Cartoons and,Maps > bef . re > a ; How “The Digest” Will. Serve You in the Future aa as THE, LITERARY DIGEST has provided disbanding the various units and restoring their uring the long years of war that have just ended members to civil life, the great readjustments that the most authoritative and dependable of news will become necessary in the worlds of finance, articles from week to week, so now, in the wonder- commierce, and industry, the rehabilitation of the ful period of reconstruction that lies before us, it wounded and crippled, fhe méans-by which they will furnish the vital news upon all th fe ane ie made sets SUpportne, See ee ae and “af the day i re a) the great ques- many more allied topics in the social, political, and : h te day in a similarly interesting and economic fields, will be treated without bias and comprehensive way. \It will cover fully the move- with the simple aim of presenting the facts for ments of our troops in Europe, the return of our your consideration and\judgment. Study them armies to their native land, the arrangements for each week in “The Digest.” wePiss $ . November 23th Namber on Sale Today--All News-dealers—10 Cents’ * _FUNK& WAGNALLS COMPANY Pentaioe of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK antes ongly this need for phonographs 1 records both for community work here and abroad. In a recent “\We are in the greatest need at! letier from Wato, Tex., one soldier { 310 phonographs and 15,-| told of having only six entertainments “Some)in their camp in eight months. They that one| had to depend almost entirely on the is is suffi-) phonograph for such music as they. Do you wonder in the face of y taste—including the man who/ The musicians are giving freely of ants to hear operatic records and| their time’and talents in entertaining well as the one;the men. The non-musical public can valuable service if hit of syncopation or the last senti-| thay, will contribute machines and rec- ‘into which a settler might move im-|of the land, and at the end of the fourth yeah, 5 per. cent of the total purchase price, together with interest | zs at 6 per cent for the year begomes ‘or colony, land being specially selected | dye, GOST 1S LOW doing its pr . Fach! chiekens and farni machinery fur-| colony has a central farm, under a/Percentage and Aggregate of} Py { | of the American ; ing this period their operations are; commonwealths which are engaging in te and federal highway building on} ost reported | es represented there was Around i ate cost of completed | jtract is entered into for the purchase | plans, preliminary to the -aetual. be-} | ginning of construction, up to $56.15 per mile. : In Wisconsin, which engages in a = much qore espensipe type of highway | -INSTANTLY RELIEVED WITH construction, the $90 per mile. been agreeably surprised by the. low gost of engineering work in this state, which is but three per cent on the ex- peuse of building dirt roads, which averages in North Dakota $1,900 per { mile. ‘ The proportion of preliminary en- gineering expense to the whole cost of} e * » broken lenses, we f compe an of tierwes in Get the Habit 2332 them the same day state is higher because of the com- | can replace them the hah? paratively low grade of road-building which is being done. states are doing, the preliminary ex- f pensé would be less thin three-tenths price. of one per'cent of the whole cost. On five federal. aid projects which'|* ¥ have been completed the total engineer-|and postage on furs. ing cost, including thoroug! ied during construction, has/ayeraged 9.2;-;BISMARCK HIDE & FUR CO.! per cent of the total. oo Z (4 TELEGRAPH COLLEGE. WIRELESS 608 First Avenue North, Minneapolis, Mint. MORSE ernment is using thousand: fraph service. ASTHMA reliminary cose is Federal engineers have ASTHMADOR ORMONEY REFUNDED ASK ANY DRUGGIST t OPTICAL. SPECIALISTS. Ie Noudbuilding| Get the ‘habit to ship your |as we grind and fit them in our were building highways costing $20-jhides, furs and junk to the firm|shop. A Graduate Optician in 000" per mile, as some of her sister | that pays. the highest market charge. F. A. KNOWLES, Jeweler and Optician. Bismarck. Send ‘for’ our price list and tags. We pay the express |\ inspection. Bismarck, N. D.. | Zz MOTT z eS . We are’ closing out our entire’ Stock of Clothing, vinanniit eenuneneauaanenenenaaguguatil - r~nareof counterfeits Overcoats and Men’s Fur- ‘a nishings. ‘ Prices way below cost. Going Out of Business N id COLEMAN’S .i%1 Siu STORE Opposite Hotel McKenzie, Bismarck = :AODUNAAESAUENOOSUEOUAAUUAUUUEELUERULETOUADEEOUUEGUEOUEGUOLODEEADUEUULOEASOUOEUUGULUO AUREL LNCS WIND IT LIKE A SHAVE IN WATCH—PRESS BUTTON ACTUAL SIZE - Rotary Self-Shaving - Safety Razor Is the talk of the world today. This m echanical razor, with its revolving blade cut- ting off the beard instead of pulling or chopping it, is the first and only razor appjying the correct cutting principle. . Invented and patented by a South Dakota man after years of experimenting and ex- pense of thousands of dollars. This invention is destined to revolutionize the old fash- ioned and unsatisfactory way of shaving. Past. generations have scraped their , faces with so-called safety razors. Present and future generations will use the Collins Self- Shaving Safety Razor. ~ Screg es Do You Realize’what that Means? Every man in the civilized world is a prospective: purchaser ofa Collins Self-Shaving MB Razor. -There are millions of prospects. | : -$5,320 Annual Dividend oh Every $100. Invested00 Is the Fecord of one old style Safety Razor. Millions of profit are made annually in the Safety Razor business. : * The Collins Rotary Self-Shaving Safety Razor - is Financed by Over 2,500... Bankers, Merchants, Farmers and Professional Men in North and South Dakota ' A TEN be ating Segoe se RAZOR FREE:—If ypu ste ihr lp in learning more about our proposition jow you can Secure a razor free r t of the original Jot manufactured for sale, call of write to SHALES ORE OF She ee The Collins Rotary Safety Razor Sales Company , ADDRESS, FARGO, N. D.. WALDORF HOTEL " Incorporated Under Laws af South Dakota Capital Stock $350,000 Factory 122 South Clark Street, Chicago” i. : NAAADAOUVOCONGEUDUCOGCCOUCGUCEUCUEANECLIUE! aria mcs

Other pages from this issue: