The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 21, 1918, Page 2

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N esenevANNe SF kecaameress eee» y BISMARCK DAILY. TRIBUNE ~ St ioe WESTERN SALES C0, EXPANDING - BIG BUSINESS, Concern Moves Into More Com-| modious and Better Lo- cated Quafters TO OFFER MODERN SERVICE | Popular and Established Lines’ of Cars, Trucks, and JYhe Wester! paring to mov s company is pre: | s plan from the old | Northwest hotel building to more com- | _—_———— | THE WAR AND AGENCIES OF MERCY Bismarck, No. Dak., December 20th, 1918. Iam judt in receipt of a photograph of my nine-year-old | French War Orphan assigned to me through the M. W. A. of Fargo, together with a letter from her mother written in very good English by her foruteen-year-old cousin. The simple pathos as well as the gratitude t6 the Amer- ican soldiers, the American people and to me for even what little I am doing, is indeed very touching and ought to arouse every American with red blood in his body to forgo a 10c made orphans by such heroic if | pleasure each day to care for an orphan of such a people, liable to ha 's, acciden first calls ve wre Our the Red “place to live in. ; making the in| . | tinuation of ampere > West- ve one of the most Daca. Mechanics and Machine Shop The only school of its kind ine the West. Selected by the U. G soldiers ‘or Squiped School of: Auto- mobile Engineering and machine shop work west of Chicago, Expert instructors, actual ve in overhauling and re- pairing cars. Over $30,000 in equipment in shops, laboratories and garages. A chance to earn board and lodging while attending college. | New term beginning Jan. 6th. SBISMARCKS arranged display, vice plants in the punces the diseon- department it will he ‘ute itself entirely " for, which it is fully equipped. tinue to baudle its pont has made truck bu: section | brane | 1 to an season | future. pie your old hat) lmade like new at the! \Eagle Tailoring Co. | Phone 75, City Fuel Co. | i For the Beulah Coal You Can Enroll at This Livtsd OCKEGLY MODEL OFFICE PRACTICE |" ‘school under guarantee of a sat-; isfactory position a8 soon as competent or your tuition re- funded. Send for particulars. When you know more about this college and what it has done for iF hundreds of the most successful business men and women, you'll jaftend. Write G. M. LANGUM, Pres, Bismarck, 'N. D. Of course we should not forget the Red Cross for, the ambulance trains of wounded soldiers being carried to the rear have been met heroically, hope are now scenes of the past, we e never for checks nor even food, but for med- e and Red Cross nurses. have made the world safe for Democracy, “ONE TRAVELING MAN” a BASKET SEASON rters Will he ae) sacrifice. ough by the Red Cross and I still have “Flu” and are ts and catastrophies where the world sanitary and a healthy MANDAN TAKES _-FIRSTGAMEOF Friends From Across the Creek! Outplay Bismarck High | * School Team 'GLENDIVE IS NEXT YICKET — | | Montana Aggregation Will Meet | | Local Quint Here Next i ynasium floor t night. when the visitors took the | lGrst local game of the season by af jscore of 26 to 12, Half of the | crowd was from Mandan, and after-} the game they celebrated on the streets until the North Coast limit teamed The gate recat | a Y It. has a team composed of vetera) vhile it was the first game for all of the Bis- Within the next 60 days ihe Bismarck quint is expected to |, show marked improvement under the coaching of E. B, Cox. Mr. Taylor of rthern School Supply company the game alone last night and isfaction. ‘ck’s next game will be on the oor next Friday night when Glendive comes to Bismarck for its first appearance here. The Montanans are an unknown quantity in Bismarck and much interest is being shown in ithe approaching contest, which prob- q ly will draw an even bigger crowd than lust night's game, HOW SCORES WERE MADE Bismarck Goals Cook sa George. Kilmers .... \ Vhat Britan Wa At the Peace ‘Table The leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST this week presents an eon? summary of the demands that Britain may make at the peace conference as rev! ealed in the editorial pages of the great English newspapers; 2lso the most significant editorial comment in this country regarding them. While German sympathizers and propagandists, we. are told by Judson C. Welliver, in the New York Globe, are blowing assiduously upon every spark of anti-British feeling that is stillNalive in this ‘ ~ country and are magnifying every suggestion of divergence between President Wilson and the British government, we find the American press discussing in an entirely dispassionate vein the outspoken words of Winston Churchill and Lloyd George concerning Britain’s naval policy and other questions that will surely come up for discussion at the peace conference. Other articles of great interest in this number of “The Digest” are: ae} ~ Holland’s Unwelcome Guest ‘Translations from the Dutch Press Which. Throw a Clear Light Upon the Present Condition of the Kaiser i in His Retreat in Holland. Germany Not Starving i Our Share-in Winning the War A Critical Moment for. Jugo-Slavia Ninety-nine Per ( Cent Peary AHO... - Substitutes for War. . aie ee Rostand,.. >, > Sowing Seeds in Shipyards White eld.on,the Penpaylvania j j Ga ; The Shipyard f Religion News of Finance and Commerce _ he pete * War-Taxes for Peace Years The Peru-Chile Tiff Wireless Emancipated by an pape can Inventor ‘ Whale Steaks How the “Flu” Mask Traps the Germ Democracy in the Berlin Opera Where Women Do Not Lead .. Bolshevism Challenging the Church _ Personal Glimpses,of Men and Events ‘ Best of the Current Poetry Many Striking Ilustrations, Including Maps, and Cartoons * The Digest Your Best Mirror of World Events The outcome of the ‘epoch-making ‘visit: of the President of the United States to'Europe to take part in the peace deliberations, and of the great task that lies before him and the Allied leaders as- sociated with him of effecting a just redistribution of nationalities and establishing stable govern- - ments in the new states to be created, is of vital moment: to us in this country no less than to our brothers overseas. The best way. to inform your- self upon the attitudes in which the various dele- gates approach the peace conference is to study the real issues, the actual conditions that lie: be- neath the'surface, that are every day making his- tory at a-rate that is simply amazing. ‘To get these facts, stripped of unessential details, clean- cut, and up te: the minute, you have only to turn each week to THE LITERARY DIGEST, which provides you with world ‘news of the first ‘im- portance in instantly accessible form. ‘December ist mY Sale Today—-All News-dealers- Distinotlen to FUNK & WAGNALLS* COMPANY (Publisher of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK KNIGHTS ATTENTION. Instalation of officers will take ‘place at a special conclave of Tan- o {crea comamndery called for Saturday Call C: A. Finch Lum* | evening, Dec. 21. at 8 o'clock. ber Co., phone 17, for; Have your old hat Old Hickory Li Lignite. imade like new at the ‘Tribune Want Ads Bring. Results! |Eagle Tailoring Co. Christmas gift to the men who have ‘been wounded in our service than to give books.” draw on for the pressing need of the{ moment, which is in the hosj‘tals and the demobilization camps. “Every good recent book that can spared from anyone's yersonal book shelf will find its way quicky into the | i hands of some soldier or sailor who} needs mental relaxation and yrecrca- tion if it is taken or sent at dhce to! the nearest pjublic library. very | public library in the United States is class of reading matter. These books have to be bought, and aimost all of) the funds available for the associa- tion's library war service-are required for this purpose and for the mainte- nance of the service. “For fiction and general literature we have to depend largely on gifts from the public. Since last spring more than three million gift books have been paced in the hands of our ( son Peters In the second and Mandan arnered 5. | Tismar k substituted Burke for |Cook and Vetter for Holta and Man- dan played Barth for Tavis. Will there be a Victrola in your home this Christmas ? Will-Santa Claus be good enough to bring you the instrument of supreme usefulness this year—to cheer, to inspire, to impart comfort and hope in these try- ing times? Surely you need the ministry of music as never before; and the Victrola will bring it right into your home—for Christmas day, and every day that follows. Come and tell us your Victrola wants. ‘We are Santa Claus’s messenger. EASY TERMS IF DESIRED Hoskins Exclusive VICTOR _ EQUAL BENEFIT Patients are always clothes when taking Chiropractic adjustments, In no case is the treatment too severe, but is always adopted to the condi- tion of the patient. Invalids and ath- letes take the treatment with the same pleasure and equal benefit. R. S, Enge, the Chiropractor, is located in- the Lucas Block. A lady attendant is al- ways in charge. —Advt, BOOKS NBEDED ~-FORMENLYING IN HOSPITALS, | American iia Association | Issues Calt for More | Literature H | ' eae | “There are tens of thousands of | wounded men in our army hospitals {and every returning transport and | hospital ship brings more thousands. | Many of these men will be in hospitals for months. some of them for a year jor more, before they are sufficiently |Yecovered to be discharged from the jarniy’. “These men need books. bool They need more than they need almost anything else except surgical care-and | nursing.’? gress, Who is general director of the | Library War Service of the American | LAbrary association, thus directs at- tention to ah oportunity for service that is open to everyone. For the books that are needed for our men hospitals and those in camps await- jing demobilization are the books that are on the book shelveg of almost every American home. “What these men need in reading “|matter is good current fiction.” said Dr, Putnam. “The American Library Association hag supplted and is sup- plying technical and educational boxs ; by thousands to meet the insistent de- mands of our men in uniform for that PEO ae 7: soldiers and sailors. and these catered among side and overseas, so now'we have no reserve supply of good fiction to = eSSSSESES8SSSSam™m ho Can’t Rub It Away; Rheumatism is in the Blood Herbert Putnam, Hbrarian of Con-4 - Books wear out, books have been widely the camps on this Liniments Will Never Cure. If you are afflicted with Rheuma- tism, why: waste time with liniments, | b! lotions and other local applications that paver 4 dig.cure Rheumatism, and ; “Do not try to rub the pain away, for sensible plan of fi rd the cause of pain, and go that. Remove the cause, and there can be no pain. You will never be rid of Rheuma- a, receiving station for Library War Service and ‘books received are for- | warded as speedily as possible to the | hospitals and demobilization. camps. “There is no better way to make.e | a will never succeed. Try the|d: tism until you your blood of the. getnte’ et eaasi’ the alveaan, 5 oe S. bas hever had an equal as @ - ood purifier and scores sof sufferers say that it has cleansed their blood of RBheumatism,. and removed all trace of the disea-e.from their.system. Get a bottle of S.:‘S. nee your rug sture, and get..on the right treatment to-day. If you want spe- cial medical advice, you can obtain 3 it free by ete g deaest Director, 23 Swift Lal * | | | MAKE SOME ONE RESPONSIBLE. If your valuables are lost-when you keep them at home, you alone are to blame. Keep them here jn a safe deposit. vault where no one can ever get at them but you. ything should happen to them heré you will full value. The charge for a box is very Always on the ies” SOLD BY ALL FIRST CLASS DEALERS IN AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES °

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