The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 27, 1919, Page 2

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Bacgwme = ee MONDAY, JAN. 27, 1919. BISMARCK DAILY TRIB You Can Enroll_at:This * ry ct 3 DO BIG WORK IN © |ffwonrs scent wiste |" BUSINESS BEFORE PLEASURE LEON VS ee ee ! Can Be Heard 12 Miles 4| WA 3 ie NG i MODEL OFFICE PRACTICE me eas) | < : i OSTENB DISTRICT Djttsburgh, Pa.—What ts sald esse AS school under guarantee of a sate = ; : to be ie largest whistle in the A saeeaty pei mee one) isfactory position as soon as bars worl as been placed on one of to the maze of the cathedral, where rye neers Speedily. Reconstruct ||] the smokestacks of the Home- in 1914 tho” Germang‘uuring their competent or your. tuition ; re- R ad a Bri stead Steel works. ‘The whistle, short occupation of the city placed funded. Send for particulars. Roads and. Bridges 200 fect above the ground, 1s their wounded. | 4 When you know more about this Wrecked by. Shell. See) G28t lobe and ona! Toobin aVitwe Wrecked Cathedral. || By Seer ewmeme | college and what it has done for k éted. w! over the flagstones worn- by Foe . € : a threeinch stenm pipe, It re- mililons of fect was piled debris. As { hundreds of the most successful HERS WORK IN THE RAIN GuireaAR), pounds of steam’ to the president and the cardinal stood 3 48 business men and women, you'll blow the whistle, whi ogether looking upward, the prelate |j@ F haa iS eee e, Which can be rotated briefly four years of destruc-| F + attend. Write | 5 # ! . ion J s A na i he chalky stone of which the ca- : 5 bs E G. M. LANGUM Pres. Correspondent Describes Trip to Os thedial is built is scaliag off due to _ Bismarck, N. D, . 5 ¢ Bad| ' mt daa te Sal rar ere ee | Be ee cited ae 7. ARE DEVILISH T0 FINISH rene betore tag “cruclthe: and Eat r i e paintings of the virgin, Mr, Wi ° .. Good as New, son viewed the destruction wrought Special Meeting wastient thels ratieegian 4 ce tot aces — by the Germans. Ruins of statues lie t the Salvati lam- ‘American Press Headquarters, Brit. about the doors. The Rose window a e Salvation Drenetaticn for making ho pebeate , - iti H » * ation, to make the amendment ¢ffect- fe ene We lad an Impressive i (German Atrocities Continue to fald: to Ue the most beautiful ia the Army Tonight ive Was made carly in. the day. lastration today of the accomplish: the End. it Touks like camouflage’ Here Couiit There wi as ere 4 ‘e will be a special meeting in ments” of the engineers ‘tn this war von Molke, in 1870, watched-tho sut-| the Salvation Army Hall tonjeht a8. Phone 453 Washburn: when we drove into Ostend. set, ; dclock. The Rev. H. Npoutlothwalne Coal € ah f e. Wil The chief of the americta misdlon Retreating Huns Show Ingenulty In . Fricoleas Flemish tapestries ara ja will preach on the theme: “The Power oal Company, for ile at Belgian headquarters had warne: Devisi Inf Ma- uins. @ was shown where Shells|of God unto Salvation.” Solos, quar- ioni g as dramatically against an attempt to Ce att 7 burst about the butresses which sup-|tcttes, live congregational singing. ton Lignite at $4.75 per make the trip. At least three days ae port: the structure. “Very few of the|Special speakers each evening tus ton: delivered. This coal would be required, he said. ‘The roads | yy. WEE shells. reached the vault. Part of tae/ week. Dgn't fail to be on hand ty- ersttnrn uD by shells and mines and | With the’ British-American Armies. vaults however, is a heap of twisted night. , does not clinker. and con- —German di ‘med to know no wreckage. congested with troops. Yesterday A | hounds in the kist f fighting on Cardinal Lucon took Mr. Wilson out | WW7j ll I Dry. tains less sulphur and in Ught car had taken twelve hours to | ino writish front, after the Hinden- side and they picked their way uptil| VW 1 ssue ry ash than any other Lig- « make twenty milcs. But we started rz Ine had been shattered. They \ the could trace out the beautiful Proclamation Soon hy ig: : out and had us smooth a rond ns any iacciat the. balsa Ge a a wa, _| paintings on the outside and the works nite mined in North Da- boulevard in the niiddle West for the 1 Huns left behind in the German | , 4: H. Woods. producer of “Business | three of his New York plays reached of art:which are badly mutilated. The] washington, Jan. 27.—Thirty-six k ta. entire distance. ‘There were several Fon ie eice were {Before Pdeasure,” the sensational |theird 200th < performance within a| cardinal gave’ the president a panel! states-had certified to the. state de. MQ laces where we had to make detours when the bodies were | potash and Perlmutter comedy suc-; few days of one another an unpreced- from one of the pindows which escap- p eillices ae: ¢ s exploded, Killing | cess, coming to the Auditorium ented record. They were “Business| ¢d the destruct It shows a figure through yillnges, and as the dozens o: the bearers, day, Jan. 31) has long been conside Vefore pleastire, at the Eltinge ‘Thea-| Of the Saviour, an is of vari-colored bridges across the ‘canal near Ostend e town of Le Cateau, anum- | the’ most suc il producing tman-| ter, “Parlor, Bedroom aud Bath’ at the| glass of the middle age. ——_—s = were all blown up we had to drive oD | her of Australian stretcher bearers | ager in the coun H “lepublic Theater,” and “Eyes of| President Wilson then drove to view ARDY : about five miles to a temporary bridge. | yore killed hy these grenades in at- | this fact several weeks Youth” at the Maxine Elliote Theater.|the town hall and the Palais, Royex COWAN’S DRUG STORE We averaged about thirty miles ap | tempting te >m0ve 4 Ane ea Be two. Wi 6 cathedral. com- ¥ Nenana H PL a RR 2 =~ “222="|prise the. most celebrated historical! e Exclusive Selling Agent for the. : dead’ from the field from tn. fron | as the~ motor “mowers” aTé Eae==./emblems in “Rheims none of which ZOLUMBIA GRAFANOLA AND RECORDS , Soldiers Work.In Rain. of an American. machine-gun position. | Seret. Williams: designed’ the msa-/ has escaped. for Bismarck and’ Vicinity Moat of the’rond was kept up by | Thereafter, no Australlan would put | chines and “Corporal McFarland: con- ——_—_—_—__—_——_ i Easy Terms. When. Desired, British iabor battalions, excepting the | and on a dead German, In some | , — structed them from the discarded ma- Lanter Gan shone sold by Finch ry, SErMs, :¥ By section near Christel, through the aw- the bedies were dragged to their | chinery, disabled motors -and spare. i G ful Flanders swamps, where Belgian by means of a long | Red Cross Worker Tells Fortunes parts that accumulated from tho alr soldiers worked incessantly in a driv- Nowed the stretcher for Boys. planes. t Ing rain. We heard they had worked 4 a i ep out af range of any \ = all night without rest, and so auto- | ¢Sploding hand grenades, $ matic had their operations with pick | The Am , on the other hand, | Retieves the Monotony for Wounded) BOOTBLACK IS REAL PATRIOT and shovel become that they did not | hit upon plan of making the Ger- pean ae stop to look up when our speeding car | man prisoners bury their own dead. a tans Sects tothe Every Dollar of Subscription to War fi threw slimy mire all over them. For | In one ins Boche prisoner was Hospitals. aia 's| a Work Fund Means Be a camp they used the long lines of | summaril, use he refused to aes ree ee | Sacrifice. Fe German pWl-box forts, At one place | remove the body of one of his dead By GERTRUDE ORR. — we saw about twenty of these squat | com An examination of the “You will receive a letter in a few| Sandusky, O.—Andy Mahon, pa- chambers, with walls three feet thick | body later led to the discovery that days which will bring you good news | triot, shce-shine stand philosopher and ki and made of concrete, re-enforced | it was mined. The German was aware . Um! Yes, and you are going} philanthropist, feels sorry, for the peo- i with steel pipes. Direct shell hits ap- is fact and‘refused to touch it. to receive a present, from a lady—| ple of Sandusky because of the poor parently bounced harmlessly off these 1 town evacuated by the | blonde, whom you are going to meet. ‘| showing in the war work fund drive, 4 forts. The twenty pill boxes in sight | Germans, ‘many of the beds werd “Trust Hefty, there, to meet the| and what he feels toward those who ae were in a straight row, and bebind | found to be mined, An American offi. | blondes,” drawled a lanky Southerner, | could give, -but who did not, is not them were a half-dozen larger ones to | cer, tired and worn by hard fightmg, | and the group, of interested soldiers good newspaper English. But Andy ‘i protect the rear. cht rest on_a lounge In a room pre- | clustered about the fortune teller subscribed $50 and then another $12 i When we had passed the desolate | viously occupled by a German officer. shouted in chorus, “Oh, oul! He’s| to be paid on the instalment plan. and rt waste of water, mud and swamp reeds | ‘The lounge blew up and he was in- there with the blondes!” | when the committee faced a shortage 4 and got into other lowlands that had | stantly killed, Hefty looked embarrassed, but | at the last miaute Andy dug down and i been drained and tiled we saw more | Another officer picked up a pair of | Pleased. s subscribed another_$20. Every dollar i pill boxes in a reserve line. A Bel- | ficld glasses, left by the Germans, and | “Tell me some more!” he urged, and of Andy's subscription means a sac Al Jolso nS ‘SI anish fans Densant was using one eas a justing the focus when’ the | the fortune teller, conning the cards, | rifice‘and it means lots of shoc shines. ——_ pi 7s chicken house, and the low apertures exploded in his hands and | read for the wounded soldier a coming Hi fi “Si I »} da”. , f for machine gun§ lent themselves | blew away part of his face. day of good luck when muddy trenches, Pigeons Even Patriotic. it rom in rol i readily as entrances and exits for th The Huns had bécome adept in the | shivering nights under bombardment | Wilton, N. “H.—Three pigeons, one me j oe ei of these chickens ous business of making infernal and aching-shrapnel wounds would be| red, one white ‘and one blue, soared na | Wonder Why She Kept on Sayity : oul ein the old family home for s, mines and time fuses, and | forgotten except as a hale of hard|over a hill here the other day, the 3 . thousand years hence, or, say, & mil- carcely an area where the | work well done to crown the days of | white pigeonyifiying in the center of ‘Si-Si-Si-Senor”’ — that’ § the title. of a Hs Mees Pill boxes are something } el cal and engineering experts of | peace with content. | the group. As they flew into the:rays ‘ Al Jolson’ s latest, biggest “Sinbad’’ hit. i will stand almost everlasting age. | {he allies did not find some new form The gipsy, in her scarlet kerchief, | of the sun their colors were very pro- a ‘The scores of drainage sluices across | of their fiendish ingenuity. : When you hear this ditty of the Senor- i inorrouds! hadatibeen “covered with igenulty, has always plied her trade profitably. | nounced. d h bol 1 . a F Vv vit An American Red Cross worker, in a ita an er bolero, as Jolson sings 4 temporary bridges by the Belgian en- TOOK 375 HUNS Paris hospital, has discovered that the | Home, Sweet, Home. " , * J , ; e German de- scarlet kerchief ii : i Ee § peoarinat sata Va oa sate as net ge OE 8 Deceneary Home is the one place in all this OUONS wonder onl poets Aes . i Pee aetees aoe carers requisite for drawing clientele, She! worid where hearts are sure of each Jolson at his very best. “On the back 4 4 the ones: the British and Americans just to while away an hour for A bey other. It is the place of confidence; “Oh! Susie Behave.” build,: but’ they hold the traffic, and wo Pad beshuiete loss interest tu weteh tice utes eee nere: we tone Off that A 2671—85¢ q that is the Importsnt ‘thing just now. ting well. He was restless and weary, } mask of guarded and suspicious coid- * 4 Through the. suburbs of Ostend we For four months he had been lying in| 2S", Wich this world forces us to \) id passed cheering Belgians dressed for the same bed; @ther patients had come ‘yer, i selt- detente, ang: “whete’ We ma GN i ~ church. The people were so prayer- and gone, until he began to feel as it} Boe out the; tnbegerved communica: a 5 fully grateful to the British: that they ho “bad just grown” in (hat hospital | ios % salad congding hearts. Tt He q did'not-seem to min’ the mud we spat- ward Hee = the spot where expressions of ten- : tered“all over them. Many of them “you's i ‘i tine | Ccrness gush out without any sensa- ; rai: ofthe ‘road ‘behind trees, and You're going to have an interesting | tion of awkwardness. and without apy i trdintheir iniid ‘sereen shoutea ‘Greet adventure tomorrow,” predicted the! dread of-ridicule.—-Exchange. - ” / Ings“to the-Englisk As the extraar. Red Cross lady, and the following day : dinary--Flanders mud would even eee tee ences / 1 squirt up to first floors-of houses many i “WICKEDEST Y” I D 4 of the people, learning from experi- EDEST CIT s DEA : ence, had taken-to second stories, from i < } i which they clappetl ‘their hands and Hopewell, Va., Which Sprung Up Like 4 . apace \ z * a Klondike Town, Dies p Lad q waved flags. The only dumage we saw ‘Sudden. Death. (4 se {o) n's y d | In Ostend was th® wreckage of the : ea ad ; a7 ; marine ind railway stations and the f Hopewell, Va.—Hopewell, the “‘wicke q Cee ey a bullings on the sea edest city,” which aroge out of nothing Among. all the beautiful ballads that : British monitors pounding the retreat- like a town of the Klondite three and immortalize in song the heroism and Cate! } ing enemy. exumple of the supremacy of a half years ago, has died a sudden. Ruined by Shell and Bomb American valor over that of the Hun death. a sacrifice of ,the great war, none has a. 7 2 showh by the féat ‘of this Yank, The great powder mills of the The'plers leading out Into the cea | Sorat. Harry ‘I. Adame, who distin. | spante- Chie orieided-nlnewe'st- wits truer heart appeal than thissong which trae Gis hachor basin showed effects éd ‘himself’ a cléanup in the, | are being Gienaiiee Forty thousand Blorifies the Red. Cross Nurse — the x is ells and bombs, and near ent’ of St. Mihiel by capturing inhabitants of ‘the ‘town have begun \ee , bie end ise the pier was the gallant old an prisoners with only firing | an'exodus. In & few months the corn ‘Rose of. No Man’ s Land.’ "Hugh Dono- ee ¥ t, | doubt wWere'so frightened by the Amer- wi e restored: ly stories of Ge } where the served as a boarding ship jican manner of fighting, that of stop- great fires’ of unbelievable vice and “back i Is ‘Over Yonder Where the Lilies F and carried the great superstructure to | ping for nothing, that they all surren- pistol duels will survive. if Grow.” wf : permit British marines to climb on the | dered in a bunch. ‘The H. 1. du'Pont de Nemours Pow. a ‘ A 2670—85. Zeebrugse mole, had been filled with with st Heres hate 4 der company built a $75,000,000 pow- IC concrete and sent In to block Ostend | -), a pal with whom Hefty had trained in| ger plant and Hopewell grew-up with : as Usboat.and deStroyer base. ‘The |FUEL OIL KILLS SEAGULLS | the States nha whom ‘he hadn't seen’ jt! N afew eee? Destroyed by / Vindictive made it impossible for siz- — for six months, was carried into the! fire once, it was rebuilt. Cornflelis able ships“to get into Ostend, and the | Stick Fast in Fluid From Wrecked | Ward and placed in the bed besitle him. | <61d’for $20,000 an ‘acre. Dance ‘halls, r) Germans; just before the retreat, tried Steamer and Starve to “She's a wiz,” abnounced Hefty, to} gambling rooms ‘tind saloons brought to complete the work by sinking a Death. the ward, ‘and the Red Cross’ Tady | desperate men Into the town. “Ré-| mail ship alongside the Vindictive. ; — found Herself swatnped with demands | yoivers weré a part of every’ man’s , £ - Hosyever, there is still room at high | Seattle, Wash.—Thousands of dead for seances. “She Sees only happiness quipment. A woman did not dare go tide-for small relief ships ‘and barges. | Seagufls sonkéd with fuel ofl strew the |224 good fortune ahead and ‘the con-| on the streets ‘unescorted. The old sage In ‘fact, we saw a converted trawler | waters of Lynn canal near the wreck | Valescetts, with a new ‘interest in life, | ‘strong-arm law of the aid We ‘West days @ auti 1i0~ -a ream fi | of the American Red Cross already in | of the steamship Princess Sophia, ac- find the days go less slowly when! prevailed. ‘And now inhabitants /, i the farbor; as well as many‘ similar| cording to steamship captains arriv- | Something’ gobd awaits them just Ape ‘scattering tothe. ‘four comers ot ~ peace it Waltz British ships, ing lire. ‘When fhe Princess Sophia | #To#nd the corner. 7 |-the country. sty Locus poe Tae sent on the ‘rocks ‘of’ Vanderbitt Paired Pit it, good luck pe se oy Gre Valuable Books Found. reet her fuel off tanks burst, releasing | “The Ked Cross lady says so—she saw ; Sharon; Pa=In’ moving Thiel cot- | tHe oll, which soon covered the water it In the ‘cards.7 . "Uncle: Eben.’ : A moonlight ‘aight on. the lege“library at Greenville to ‘another | £°F 2 sreat distance. The gulls alight- ATEN t's _Wwrong,*'sald Uncle nel het #0 broad, rippling Ohio—a river . bufiding many rare and almost’ price- ing in the water were instantly made PLANE. Pi RTS MAt MAKE MOWERS et crap “under; Say ‘clttam steamer. gli 4 along between Jess books of Latin and Greek’ text | helpless and soon starved to death. Eero” oii ao Sess Yoh cote wooded banks—the soft strains ' were found. ‘One book was printed by + | motor rior fachines Constructed selene." |S fd apes je Zell at Cologne in. 1473, a Virgil’s Kisses at : cme at - URGES FEDERAL CONTROL. © of dreamy- southern music—all = : ‘Aeneid ‘was printed in 4501 and one in ‘Macon, GaA. C, Freeman paid $85 these are suggested in ‘‘Beautiful 1508. A history of Rome, printed by for a kiss from Miss Hallie Manning § Ohio,” 7 1 : -\andrew Welcher in 1586 at Frankfort | #04 declared the osculation was'worth |" Fort os = aie Is io,” a new waltz of wonder- and a Germati relfgtous work, prisited |it- Freenian-and ‘an artpy officer’ bid salvage in. thi ful fascination. On the back, fm 1594, are in a good state of preser- | for the kissing privilege and the price “My Belgian Rose.” wation: “Among the other volumes is| ¥®* given to’ the United War Work Z wasiron-bogod. Bible. : A6081 $1 25 . SN Celambia Records on Sale the 10th and “20th of Every Month ' eo COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY E 3 New York |

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