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Peg a |, ‘ ” W a . . ( y" . ‘ é ( w oo \ 4 i ‘ t : : & ¢ hae qh Classified Advertising Rates. . Werms Strictly Cash—No copy without remittance attached will be inserted. . First insertion, 35 cents; additional insertions without change of copy, 15 vents. Advertisements containing more than 25 words will be charged at the gate of two cents a word for each additional word, Copy for Classified Advertisements, to insure proper insertion, must be in this office before 10 a. m. of day of publication. HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—A teamster to drive a team Apply Bismarck Bottling Works. 204 Main St. 7-15-3t WANTED—We want a boy to learn pressfeeding; pay while learning. Call at Tribune office. 7-15-3t WANTED—A_ boy to wash bottles at 204° Main 7-14-3t pismarck Bottling Works. Write Los Angeles Y. M. C. School. Get started right. WANTED—Four good carpenters, come * prepared to work. Mandan Mercantile Co., Baldwin, N. D. To14-8t MEN AND WOMEN learn barber trade and earn $25 a week up. Positions guar- vanteed. Few weeks completes by our method, Constant practice. Low sum- mer rates. Write for catalog. Moler Barber college, 27K Nicollet Ave., Min- meapolis. Est, 1893. E imo HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Good dish washer at Broadway Cafe. Phone 722. 7-15-lwk. WANTED—Strong girl or middle-aged Woman to do housework, Apply Dohn’s Meat Market. 2-12-tf WAN‘LHED— two dining room girls. Amer- ican Cafe. Broadway and ai a WANTED—Chambermaid at the vgn Horn_Hotel. 7212-10 WANTED—Waitress at Homans Cafe. 7-10-1wk WANTED—Competent girl or woman for house work, small modern: houge,: Mrs. G. D. Mann, sribuae ort ite WANTED—Girl for housework, Perma- nent_position, at lgneat wages, Call for W. E. Lahr at Lahr Motor Sales Co. 7-10-10t WANTED—Housekeeper on farm * for widower with. tliree children;- good wages. - Write F. H. Bobzein, McKen- zie, N. D. 7-9-8t WANTED—Pantry gifl at Grand Pacific Hotel. 6-28-t WANTED—Chambermalds; apply Grand "Pacific, $-27-tt WANTED—At Bismarck Hospital, cook and dining room girl. 6-25-3wks POSITIONS WANTED WANTED—Position as general clerk eight years’ experience, timekeeper, cost clerk, etc. Address No. 6 _care_ Tribune. 7-12-1wk A MALE NURSE of 15 years experience wishes care of an invalid or private case; best of references, Address F. E. Lynn, Annex Hotel. Will be at the hotel until Saturday morning. _7-14-4t POSITION WANTED—By young man running gas or kerosene engine. —Has had six years experience. «Write No. 4 care Tribune Co. 7-9-1mo. AGENTS ONE of the most important discoveries of the age, Millions are suffering with Rheumatism. An Herb that actually drives the most stubborn case of Rheu- matism entirely out of the system. Many people have written us and say they are astounded at the results. The effect on the kidneys is simply marvelous. You bathe your feet in it for 15 minutes a day for 10 days. Agents are coining money. Price 72c pound postpaid. Rheumatism Herb Co., Santa Monica, Californie: e ———_— <= FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE--At a bargain, a four room house in fair condition to be moved off of lot. Geo. M. Register. 1 wk. FOR SALE—Nice six room home with hot water heat, well located. Geo. M. Register. 7-14-1wk FOR SALE—Modern five room bungalow. |SOLDIERS & SAILORS We will run your Want- ed-a-Job for one month FREE of charge. SALESMAN SALESMEN—Need two young :men of good appearance and habits to travel with manager for old established cor- poration and learn line. Experience not necessary. Must have the work Position is well paid and offers od _ future. Apply McKenzie Hotel. r, Langford, room 307. 2-4t LANDS FOR SALE—Thre well improved farms, consisting of 640 acres in Burleigh County will be sold in one-half or one- quarter sections to guit. Will accept elty property with bungalow in ex- change as part payment, or part cash and ‘balance reasonable terms. — Call J. H. Jensen,’ Phone 523. or 346K, 7-14-1wk FOR SALE_OR_ TRADE—160 Improved Burnett County Wisconsin farm for eer or Dake fora ens. me and let's mal a jo} oortinga, Renville, Minn. 7-9-ligwks. LOST AND FOUND LOST—A gold Cameo broach between Van Horn and the Grand Pacific Hotel. lease pune and Finder pl return ‘to zeceiye_rewand, cor 4-35 -2t LOST—Will the party who, picked up the gitk umbrella* with gold “handle at-tbe general onivery window in the. poet: ‘office on Friday, -1ith,: A. M., ‘please return to Mra, BR. H, Thistlethwaite, 102 Ave. B. 7214-3 LOsT—Blue ‘apring coat north of town between M. Breen and Bis- Jaarck. Also white slipper. Finder please- Teave at Tribune. Fred Robinson. “7 15. 3t LOST—Iady'’s gold ring, set with ruby. ‘Lost on Broadway between Second and Fourth streets. Finder please leave at Tribune office. J. 0. Brown. 7-16-1t LIGHT BAY two-year-old stallion with black marks; wire mark on both front legs above the knee. Same HERE-HERE-HERE- Nov KiDs- NOT SO Much Nose Ste RUN NTO ME AND KNlocKeD GREAT WAR WORK LAND AND SEA in 1914. — can be had by applying to City Poundmaster Geo, P. Strohl, 101 Main St. 9-15-1t AUTOMOBILES—MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—Five passenger Stude- ‘baker touring car, with one extra rim and tire complete. Price $350. Is worth more money. Phone 67X. FOR SALE—Second hand car in running order, for sale cheep, (. W. Henzler, 812 Rosser street. 7171 wk FOR SALE—One cycle car in good condition, $70.00. Call at Dodge Bros. garage. 7-16-2t. FOR SALE—Buick touring car in ex- cellent condition. Ask to see Cole’s car at Corwin’s garage, Bismarck, N. D. 7:11 6t FOR SALE—1919 Oldsmobile, for a quick deal to be sold at once for $1325. Extra new tires included. ‘Write No. 669 ‘Tribune. 6-2-tt ———— MISCELLANEOUS «| HEMSTITCHING, Picoting, Pleeting. Mrs. C. P. Larson, 400 4th street. Write No. 8 ‘Tribune. T-14-1wk 7171 wk. WANTED—Clean white rags. Appl. ROOMS FOR RENT ‘Tribune. ee Tet ROOM OR BOARD at 311 4th St.|FOR SALE—Dining room set.” Phone NeW__ management, oA ake Foe SLES Tishine grocery aes FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room in|" in 9 progressive farming and railroad modern house, suitable for ene or two lemen, 202 8th St. Phone 656. ne 7-14-3t FOR RENT—Five rooms, all strictly modern; single and double rooms. Nice place for summer, $6 and $7 a month. 30c_per_night. 713 3rd_St. T-11-6t FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. 419 7th St. . Phone 4S0R. WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT—6 or 8 room house by permanent renter. Must be well located and modern. Phone 562R or 354X. T-A¢-Iwk WANTED TO RENT — Furnished roonis or flat for light house keeping. Write No. 9 Tribune. 7-16-3t. community; doing business of over $100 er day in @ North Dakota town of ,500; best town in three counties; three railroads, good crops, excellent opportunity; must sell on account ,of health. Stands investigation. Address 7 Tribune. T-12-4t FOR SALE—Rabbits, all colors. Lee * ‘Wilson, 501 South -Ninth. Phone 446. : 7-16-1wk. FOR SALE—Round oak kitchen range good as new; used only 3 months. Will sell cheap. Phone 827 ‘or call at 517 Second St. 1-16-1wk. FOR SALE—Circassian walnut chif- fonier, single vernis martin bed with spring and mattress, ‘Reed: rocker: and gig. Phone 730. 9-15-3t; WANTHED—To buy or rent 5 or 6 room modern house. Will, rent furnished house, for three months or longer. Box 310 City. 717 +tt Shop in The Tribune Before You Shop in the Store. FOR SALE—Cheap. Fumed oak piano new. Phone 836U or call at Apt. 2, Pearson Court. 7-16-1_ wk. FOR SALE—Lewellyn sette, four. years old, well bred and trained good yanger. “Address E. P. Adams, Little Falls, Minn. 7-16-1t TED—To buy good second hand hand single driving buggy, must ‘be in good condition. Phone 442L° or call at 808 7th st. 7-16-2t. UBUAT is TRAPPED BY BIRD News From Trenches Taken at Full Speed to Headquarters and Supply Lines—Information Gained From Captured Pigeons. Paris—At the Ternes gate of Paris tay be seen a memorial, the work of Bartholdi, on which is inscribed: “Monument to the Balloonists and Car- rier Pigeons of 1870.”. What memorial will acknowledge the services of car- rier pigeons in the world’s war cf 1914- 1918 remains to be seen, but their work amid barrage fire, bursting shrapnel, the zip-zip of machine-gun bullets and the death destroying gases was of enormous value. Carrier pigeons were used on all the battlefronts but their best work was on the western front, from the chan- nel to the ‘Swiss border and from the Alps to the Adriatic gulf. They car- ried messages at the Marne, when the Huns were driven back by Marshal Joffre. Hundreds weré used in the battle of the Yser, in Flanders, when the Belgians and the French halted the German advance; and they made many and frequent trips in the first battle of Ypres, in the drive on the channel ports when the British, French ‘and Belgians stopped the Germans de- cisively in the final battle at the close jof 1914. They aided in the eapture of Neuve Chapelle ‘by the British and they died in numbers with the British Tommies at the second battle of Ypres, ‘when the Germans advanced toward the Yser canal using for the first time poisonous gas. Again the birds did valiant service when the French tried to break through in the Champagne in the fall of 1915, and in the’ whole ‘series’ ofthe Verdun attacks lasting through July, oftentimes the only com- munications with men in advanced sta- tions were the dogs that crept through ‘the barrages and the carrier pigeons ihat returned with messages. Where telephone. and wireless broke down, and men ‘could not survive the storm of shell fire, it is recorded that 97 per cent of the messages carried by carrier pigeons came safely through. -Unof- FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS: OIMNY CHRISMYS ! WUAT'S THA MATTER: WITH Nou, TAG =~ GEE Now 4 ] RET. YA €or SORE STHROAT. FRUM GOUs IN, THA WATER “YESTERDAY = ABS SEE. PTY 7 Té6éoT A DIECE OF CANDY \N MY WIND: Freckles Shows Promise as a Red Cross Nurse ' HeRE, Tie Aclal figures pines the number of car- rier pigeons used in the war at half a million birds. Told of German Retreat, When the Germans retired to the “Hindenburg line,” it was carrier pig- eons carried forward into the -front advance lines that brought back the news of the retirement long before telephonic communication could be es- tablished. Through the whole area, 1,800 square miles, on a front of 100 miles from Arras to Soissons, carrier pigeons did their work effectively. And wherever “the Americans fought, at Cantigny, Chateau-Thierry, Torcy, Bouresches, Belleau wood, Conde-en- Brie, Buzancy, Jaulgonne, Fere-en-Tar- denots, Bligne, Cierges, Villers-Argron, Fismes, Frapelle, Bazoches, Juvigny, St. Mihiel, Argonne forest—carrier pigeons were likewise on the job. As carrier pigeons were used on |land, they did similar duty in the air from airplanes and on and over the sea. It was estimated that close to 2.- 000 messages passed through the head- quarters of the British naval pigeon service—which has been used for send- ing information since medieval days. In the war which brought Germany to her knees the work of carrier pigeons has not been fully told. Here are some of the things they did: A carrier pigeon aided in capturing a U-boat and her crew. A coast watch- er on one of the loneliest parts of the west coast at sundown saw the tip of ‘a periscope arise and then the conning tower of a U-boat. The underwater ‘boat stopped, and the officers and crew ‘were seen on deck. The lookout man tied a note bearing the information to | the leg of a carrier pigeon and released it from his basket. The next morning a German submarine, which had run out of gasoline, and its officers and crew were taken to a naval sub-base. Wounded; Carries Message. A British patrol boat was discov- ered by a German submarine and tor- | pedoed and shelled. The skipper, hav- ing on board a carrier pigeon, wrote a ‘brief message, telling his position and what had happened. As the boat sank, the skipper began swimming for some wreckage to cling to. The pigeon went up gradually in a spiral, and the ‘Germans, seeing it, began shooting at the bird. The skipper, drifting on the ‘wreckage, gave up hope when he saw the bird had been hit. Twenty miles away, however, it lighted on a patrol- Ving destroyer, its silver-gray plumage epecked with blood, its tail feathers shot away, and one of its wings wound- ed. The commanding officer read the message, the destroyer was rushed at full speed to the place indicated, and within three-quarters of én hour from the time that the pigeon was sent off, the officers and crew of the patrol were ‘SAY, WHAT Do You THINK. Tuls PLACE 18, A RACE TRAcK ? DOWN AND BEHAVE Nour seives ! Vit GIVE. You kiDs SOME Money AND You CAN GET OUT OF HERE AND GO DowN AND GET Some ICE CREAM— AND ‘TAKE YourR. ; the number of messages carried back picked up where they clung to’ the wreckage... - Look HERE TAG ! SEE! THIS'LL GET \T ov? ~ JES! SEE IF IT WONT! WHAT IS THEM THINGS, PAGE 7 Now, GO Sir EATING IT “= -Spy With Rigeons, An American at Liege, in writing of the German advance, told this inci- dent: “As I returned to the elty, walking along the River Meuse, I saw one who, oblivious of war and its alarms, was dangling his legs over the water and peacefully fishing. The battle in the uir, which he must have witnessed, had not moved him. The certainty that the Germans were only a few miles away had not concerned him. He smoked his pipe and placidly cast his line. It was soothing to overstrained nerves to see that chap, but it was only a few hours later that I learned a German spy had been arrested as he Posed as a fisherman, with a creel full) of carrier pigeons.” Another story reads: “Tn the cowl, habit and tonsure that mark the monk a young man told his beads aboard the train bound for Ant- werp. And a woman, hardly more than a girl, kept her eyes fastened on the man of prayers. She studied on the devotion with which his fingers slipped from decade to decade of the Jong, well-worn rosary that hung from the cincture about his waist. But, al- though his lips appeared to move in humble supplication, the woman saw that he had failed to kiss the cross. The lapse was significant. “ ‘Spy!’ the girl hissed into the face of the alleged ascetic. In an instant two guards had seized the man and rushed him down the train corridor. The woman examined the small wicker basket behind in the seat. Lifting the lid, she found three pigeons. As a member of the field intelligence staff of the French war ministry she knew that at least three ‘homers’ would fail to return with military information to the lofts of the German posts.” Get German Pigeons. A news dispatch briefly summarized such a find thus: “A German trawler was captured by a British warship near the Orkney islands to the north of Scotland. She is believed to have been engaged in spying, as carrier pigeons were found on board.” Reference has already been made to to the French lines by carrier pigeons in the defense of Verdun. A pigeon captured by the French conveyed this information: “The rolling fire of the enemy with guns of the heaviest caliber is such that sectors S., C., and H. are toa great extent leveled. The garrison, in- cluding that of sector V., is disorgan- ized completely. Some of it has been obliged to fall back on the Eighty-third and Ninety-eighth regiments, which also had to retife. “Sector V..(von Raun’s) was sub- jected to such fire that its observation post was put out of order. All sorties Pop's PIPE spose !! * CLEANERS, WHADDVA are being bombarded and one Is occu- pled constantly in replacing them. “The battalion asks Its immediate relief this evening by fresh troops. It can fight no longer. “(Signed) “FIRST LIEUTENANT . STEIN- BRECHT.” Carrier pigeons tell headquarters of the progress of a battle. Here is a typical report when the French army fought along the Aisne: “Tt immediately appeared that the destruction of the German defense had been accomplished with as much success as could be hoped for in so difficult a country. By 7:30 a. m. we learned by carrier pigeon and other means that the Chateau de la Motte on the French left near Allemant had been. carried, and that at the center Malmaison Fort was taken, At 8:45 Allemant village had been occupled, the prisoners numbered a thousand, and the French assault troops were ad- vancing across the central plateau to- ward Vaudesson and Mont Parnasse quarry, At 10:30 the news was that they were at the north of Hill 173, the further spur of Malmaison plateau, and in a quarry 220 yards west of the fort. By 2:45 p. m. the villages of Chavignon and Vaudesson, with sev- eral neighboring quarries lying on the northern edge of the Aisne hills, had been occupied. Chavignon was the furthest point contemplated in the plan and represented an advance of one and one-half miles made in the face of the best remaining troops of the German empire.” Aided by ‘Camouflage. While many carrier pigeons changed their habits of spiraling, finding it a dangerous practice and learned to fly back and then forward at an altitude comparatively low, camouflage aided birds considerably in getting back to their loft carrying with them messages from troops in front. ‘At Fort Vaux, in the battle of Verdun, the crown prince’s army had a special group of men shooting down carrier pigeons as they left the fort. ‘And another story of Verdun. It was at Thiaumont, sixteen times taken, lost and retaken. Wireless and telephones had long ceased to exist. No human being could cross the ter- rain, The commandant was in des- perate need of communicating with the rear. Suddenly the glasses re- vealed a dog, crouching on its belly, crawling through the flashes, and in a moment of temporary lull leaping forward. On its back was a pannier. Nearer and nearer the dog came, and prayers were involuntarily offered as the beast flattened out here and there in the debris for shelter. Another lull and the dog leaped forward and at Jast it scampered into Thiaumont with the pigeons safe in the pannier. On the dog’s collar was this message: “We relieve you by attack on Froid- terre, 3 p. m.” “Stop the German battery on our left. Here are the clements for point- ing,” was the written message of the commandant sent back by one of the pigeons. Another momentary lull and the pigeon is released. Dog and pig- eon, faithful and distinguished friends of man, have done their work to save civilization. ——$____— Learn to Talk. All very well, to quote the ol say- ing -about speech being silvern, but silence golden. Learn to talk, if you want to get on in the world. Theco are some folk who talk too much, it’s true, but they are better than those who are mute and wrapped up in them- selves, A wall of reserve isn’t at all a pleasant thing to come up against. Minneboohoo. Governor Saunders of Nebraska once spoke at Lincoln of a little set- tlement on a stream called Weeping Water. Lincoln chuckled: “\Well, they say that Minnehaha means laughing water, so Minneboohoo must be Indian for weeping water.” NOTICE OF CHATTEL MORTGAGE SALE, WHEREAS, nk Blake , Joe Donerty, A. J. Wiest, Hermaa Ncit- ers, mortgagors, made, exec delivered to the J. I. CASE THR ING MACHINE COMPANY (Ine.: mortgagee, their certain chattel mor. gage, dated October 15, 1915, where- in and whereby said mortgagors mortgaged to said mortgagee the fol- lowing descrived personal property, to-wit: One 75 horse power S-T engine, No. 32,186, CFB. One 40-62 Separator No. 70664. One 62 inch stacker Ni 211. One 40 inch fe 379, One No. 2 wei r 36,719 and One 62 inch flax sieve to secure the payment of the sum of Three Thousand Three Hundred Dollars which mortgage was duly filed in the office of the Register of BY BLOSSER Deeds of Burleigh county, North Da- kota, on October 26, 1915. And whereas, default has been made in the terms of said mortgage by rea- son of non-paymen: and the amount claimed to ibe due thereon at this date is Two Thousand Wight Hundres Ninety-six and 90-100 ($2,896.90) Dol- lars. Now, therefore, notice is hereby given, that by virtue of said mort- gage and by order of said J. I. Case Threshing Machine Company (Inc.), the present owne; ereof, | will sell the above des Southeast tion er (§ (18) Township One y-four (144) Range Sev enty-sii ) County of Burleigh, state of North Dakota, at the hour of 2:00 o'clock p.m, on the 25th day of 1919, JAS. J. July, A. D. postof ies address, Dakota Residence and Devils Lake, North FOR SALE 3 good violins, one mandolin, banjo, slide trombone, alto, and other instruments. PHONE 550 or M. J. O°; CONNOR | BIGGEST BARGAINS During the past six weeks not a day has passed that we have not had letters from South Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa, telling us of the tremendous land business and advance in values in those states. This is going to increase our busi- ness and raise our values. Our Mr. Young is now down there looking up business and our ad- vice is for you to buy now before local prices advance as they sure- ly will by Fall. —- @, E. YOUNG REAL ESTATS CO. -Phones———+ @. F. O'Hare, 78M. ‘FF. E. Hedden, @ F. E, Young, 78R, ! CHIROPRACTORS E. E. HOARD, D. C., Ph. C. Licensed Doctor of Chiropractie Gentleman Assistant, Phone 327 119 Fourth St. Bismarek, N. D. E. T. BURKE LAWYER Tribune Block Bismarck, N. Phone 752. R. S. ENGE, D. C. PH. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free. Suite 9-11, Lucas Block Phone 260 Bismarck, N. D. Fine Interior Decorating and painting is my specialty. If you want a real job— one that you will be proud of— I make a Specialty of Wood Finishing Phone 855 and I will call and make you an estimate. J. GOLDEN 518 Third St. ‘| TYPEWRITERS & SERVICE REMINGTON Typewriter Co. GEO. C. KETTNER, Rep. Phone 258. Bismarck. ————————— Hedden Agency, Every man would like to own a lot or two so that sometime he may be able to have his own home and stop paying out money, with nothing to show for it but rent receipts. This agency can help you get-the lots you want. Webb Block. Phone 0. BISMARCK FURNITURE CO. 220 Main St. Furniture Upholstery Repaired, Ba finished and Packed. THE HURLEYS TRAPS AND PIANO Up-to-the-Minute Music 10 Main St. Phone 130-K