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“ ‘3 Meet Your Employer in , Copy for Classified Advertisements, this office before 10 a. m. of day of publication. Classified Advertising Rates. Terms Strictly Cash—No copy without remittance attached will be inserted. First insertion, 85 cents; additional insertions without change of copy, 15 vents. Advertisements containing more than 25 words will be charged at the rate of two cents a word for each additional word, Our Classified Columns to insure proper insertion, must be in HELP WANTED—MALE DELIVERY MAN wanted at Gussner's store. 718 3t COOK FOR SMALL HOTEL, man preferred. Fifty dollars per month. Box 93, Medora, N. Dak. 718 1 wk Write Los Angeles Y. M. C. A. Auto School. Get started ‘right. "_7-1-1mo. MEN AND WOMEN learn barber trade and earn $25 a week up. Posttions guar- anteed. Few weeks completes by our method, Constant practice. Low sum- mer rates. Write for catalog. Moler Barber college, 27K Nicollet Ave., Min- neapolis, Est. 1893, 7-2-1mo HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Girl for oftice. Drs. Quain & Ramstad. 7:18 wk WANTED—Good dish washer at Broadway Cafe. Phone 722, 7-15-1wk. WANTED—Strong girl or middle-aged ‘woman ‘to do housework, Apply Dohn’s Meat Market. 2-12-tf WANTED—Two dining room girls. Amer- ican Cafe. Broadway and Fifth (-12-1wk WWANTHD—Chambermaid at the Van ‘Horn Hotel. 4-12-1W! SOLDIERS & SAILORS We will run your Want- ed-a-Job for one month FREE of charge. LANDS 640 ACRES HAY land for sale, E.V. Lahr. 7 18 3t FOR SALE—Thre well improved farms, consisting of 640 acres in Burleigh County will be sold in one-half or one- quarter sections to suit. Will accept city property with bungalow in ex- change as part payment, or part cash and balance reasonable terms. Call J. H. Jensen, Phone 623 or 346K. 1-M-1wk FOR SALE_OR TRADE—160 Improvea Burnett County Wisconsin farm for tractor or. Dakota farm. Write me and let's make a deal, John Poortinga, Renville, Minn, 7-9-L44wks, AUTOMOBILES—MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—Buick “six” nearly new. E. V. Lahr. 7 18 3t WANTED—Competent girl or woman for house work, small modern house. See Mrs. G. D.. Mann, Tribune office. ‘ —— WANTED—Pantry girl at Grand Pacific Hotel. 6-28-tf WANTED—Chambermaids; apply Grand Pacific. 6-27-tf WANTED—At Bismarck Hospital, cook and dining room girl. 6-25-3wks POSITIONS WANTED EXPERIENCED man would like to have job running threshing rig and wife. would’ like to cook on cook car or on farm. E. A. Danford, 193 13th street, Portland Oregon. 718.1 wk COMPETENT BOOKKEEPER and stenographer wishes position .in North or South Dakota. Address No. 10 Tribune. 718 1 wk WANTED—Position as general clerk eight years’ experience, timekeeper, cost clerk, etc. Address No. 6 care Tribune. 7-12-1wk 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. ——__ FOR SALE OR RENT— HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Modern four room bung- alow, practically new; also furni- ture almost new or will sell fur- niture and rent house. Address 11 Tribune. 7:18 1 wk FOR SALE—At a bargain, a four room house in fair condition to be moved off of lot. Geo. M. Register. 716 1 wk FOR SALE—Nice six room home with hot water heat, well located, Geo. Register. 7-14-1wk FOR SALE—Modern five room bungalow, Write No. 8 Tribune. 7-14-1wk ROOMS FOR RENT ROOM OR BOARD at 311 4th St. New management. 7-16-2wks FOR RENT—Five rooms, all strictly modern; single and double rooms, Nice lace for summer. $6 and $7 a month. 0c per night. 713 3rd St. T-11-6t WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT—6 or 8 room house by permanent renter. Must be well located and modern. Phone 562R or 354X. 7-16-1wk WANTED TO RENT — Furnished rooms or flat for light house keeping. Write No. 9 Tribune. 7-16-3t. WANTED—To buy or rent 5 or 6 room modern house. Will rent furnished house for three months or longer. Box 310 City. 717 tf LOST AND FOUND LOST—A pair of glasses in case on Monday. Finder please return to .-Tribune, and receive reward. a 18 73t FRECKLES AND HIS i FOR SALE—or trade 1918 model Studebaker “six” roadster, as good | as new. Address Ed Wolf, Wishek, N. Dak. 178 3t FOR SALE—Rebuilt Ford roadster with all weather top, 28 gal. gas tank, Five demountable white wire wheels and carrier. Trimming is like new. An exceptionally good motor. Can be ceen at Corwin gar- OLIVIA, | WONDER, \F WE Couid Get You To STAN Home WITH THE THOSE Dip You SAY THEY WERE ASLEEP? Went, be TAKE age. 718 .2t FOR SALE—Five passenger Stude- ‘baker touring car, with one extra rim and tire complete, Price $350. Is worth more money. Phone 67X. 7 FOR SALE—Second hand car in running order, for sale cheep, 0. W. ‘Henzler, 812 Rosser street. 7171 wk FOR SALE—Buick touring car in ex- cellent condition. Ask to see Cole’s car at Corwin’s garage, Bismarck, N. D. 711 6t FOR SALE—1919 Oldsmobile, for a quick deal to be'sold at once ter ag tre, new tires included. . Tribune. ee Ne MISCELLANEOUS HEMSTITCHING, Picoting, Pleeting. Mrs. C. P. Larson, 400 4th street. 7171 wk. WANTED—Clean = whit «= Appl ‘Tribune, Gieceee ay FOR SALE—Dining room set. Phone 262-R, 7-12-1kw FOR SALE—Rabbits, all colors. Lee Wilson, 501 South Ninth. Phone 446. 7-16-1wk. t| FOR SALE—Round oak kitchen range good as new; used only 3 months. Will sell cheap. Phone 827 or call _at_517 Second St. 4-16-1wk. FOR SALE—Cheap. Fumed oak piano new. Phone 836U or call at Apt. 2, Pearson Court. 7-16-1 wk. Beware of Compromises, One temptation in making difficult decisions is to compromise. You aren’t sure which way is the best, you seek to combine.the advantages of both, and ‘M.| Many a time merely combine all the disadvantages. To be sure, there are times when a compromise is the wisest course, but there are just as many times when it is cowardice and weak- ness. How can one tell which times are which? Well, that is simply an- other decision for you. Winter Reading. Books of. natural bistory make the most cheerful winter reading. I read in Audubon with a thrill of delight, when the snow covers the ground, of the magnolia, and the Florida keys, and their warm sea breezes; of the tence rail, and the, cotton’ tree, and the migrations of the rice bird; of the breaking up of winter in Labrador, and the melting of the snow on the forks of the Missourl.—Thoreau, Law of Life. A thought, good'or evil; an act, in time a habit, so runs life’s law; what you live in your thought world, that, sooner or later, you will find objecti- AT AIN'T Gow’ OVER THERE — TIM GOINTA Go AN LooK at LU aca fied in your life—Ralph Waldo Trine, 18 1 wk]! . Are Royally By WILBUR FORREST. (in the New York Tribune.) Neuwied, Germany.—In many wytys the American ’soldter.: forced to main- tain a “Wacht am Rhein” here in Ger- many is to be envied by those who. have hurried back through the French winter-months to home and fireside} oo" burning. He is assigned a place The homegoers are possibly. well pleased with thelr lot, but the “stay- abroads” are beginning to come into their own. The American army and the Y. M. C. A. have combined into @ harmonious partnership here at Neuwied-on-the- Rhine, which gives full compensation for enforced foreign service, It is called the Third Corps Recreation Cen- ter and {!s today operating full blast for the benefit of morale of some 85,- 000 of Uncle Sam’s boys cymposing the Third American army corps, command- ed by Major General Hines. Eleven hundred from the First, See- ond and Thirty-second divisions come from their prescribed villages ‘and towns of the occupied area into Neu- wied every three days to rest, recre- ate and see the sights of the Rhine. “The Third Corps Recreation Center, made possible by the folks at home through the Y. M. C. A.,” is the slogan you may read in Neuwied today. And the doughboys are beginning to appre- ciate it and talk about It. ; American army engineers have built the largest Y. M. C. A. chib and recre- ation hall in Europe—the home of the recreating doughboy, in which he neither worries about revellle nor sa- luting. It is here that he first goes when he arrives from the area, and he is told to make himself comfortable by one or all of six comely American girls who hare come from home to cater to John Doughboy and he alone, natty young officers notwithstanding. ‘The boys are invited to make them- selves “right at home” and they lose no time in doing so. How the Idea Works. Follow Mr. John Doughboy through a three-day leave in the Neuwied Rec- reation Center. He packs up his blan- kets, towels, toothbrush and safety razor and departs from the scene of duty. He arrives in Neuwied by vari- ous routes—1,100 of him—and is greet- ed by a brass band at the railway sta- ME STAY HOME WITH RAISIN? WLDCATS P DOUGHBOYS’ THREE DAYS OFF IN NEUWIED IS ONE RIOT OF JOY Smiles of Six Jolly American Girls and Ice Cream and Cake Galore Give Homesick Soldiers New Spirit to Keep the “Wacht ‘am Rhein’—Visit Points of Interest and BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE WELL, WHAT ARE WE GOING To Do? QhIVIA. REFUSES “To STAY WITH THe! CHILDREA - “THREE CANE Entertained, tion.7A guide conducts him to the big recreation hall and turns him loose among-potted palms, and deep uphol- stered easy chairs, divans and “lazy- backs”. set tastily in a great room fianked on two sides by big red brick fireplaces, in. which cheery log fires in a double-deck bunk and he throws his blankets aboard and returns to the ‘big room to loaf, Perhaps he sits down at a table and ‘writes a line or two to the folks back home. Then he meets a friend and plays a game of billiards or pool on the overhanging balcony at one end of the room. Or he just lolls around on those easy chairs and sofas until lunch time. . Then some one suggests that he stroll down to “Uncle Sam’s Hotel” the place that used to be the “Hohen- zollern house.” Here the Uncle Sam- Y, M. C, A. combination serves a meal for him and his 1,099 companions that he has never seen equaled in the Crockery Suffers Sadly. This “crockery,” as the, doughboys call it, is in reality an excellent grade or German china, and as Sergeant J. W. Seidenfelt, “commander in chief” of Uncle Sam's hotel, explained, breakages at the hands of some scores of. German waitresses run up to 1 per cent a meal, or nearly 100 per cent a month, But it is Uncle Sam's party, and the boys enjoy it. Sergeant Seidenfelt was head wait- er at 0 hotel’in Cleveland when Uncle Sam drafted him, His home, however, is Hartford, Conn. and -he never dreamed the armistice would bring him here to run “the biggest army ho- tél in Germany,” where nearly 800 doughboys can “sit” simultaneously at a single meal and 1,600 if necessary, drop in at two alttings for any meal of the day. From the hotel the recreating soldier wanders back to the recreation hall, ; which now becomes his principal point | of orientation. Here he chats with| American girls who make him feel at | home and point out the afternoon's en- tertainment. There is “Uncle Sam's) theater,” a pretentious German play: house, with a good bill showing at two Peeping Tom ‘Plays It Safe. NEP There SOUND ASLEEP Sh-H-H-H- UNE Got 7EM Ali To SLEEP— MAYBE WE AN GET AWAY WITHOUT THEIR, KNOWING | 4 There is the Mittelstrasse theater—continuous movies both afternoon and evening— and when all this does not appeal there are athletics of almost every charac- o'clock ‘an. agaifi at Seven. ter on a nearby field. From 3:30 to 4:30 there is‘music and tea or choco- late and cakes in the recreation hall, and from that time onward there are music and games inside or outside, winding up with ice creani and cake at 9 p.m. Thus ends in brief outline the first of a three-day leave for the “stay- abroads” here in Neuwied. - In addi- tion there is a large swimming pool and plenty of baths for those who wish to take the time. Saloons Lack Popularity. There are open saloons in Neuwled. Soldiers are not barred from drinking and the saloons are open until 10 p. m. There is.also here an ice cream, cake and pie factory running full blast for the exclusive benefit of American sol- diers, Neuwied’s open saloons are not pat- ronized much by. American - soldiers, Drunkenness has been practically nil, and the conduct generally of the 30,- 000 is one of the greatest tributes to American youth and the wholesome in- fluence of fine young Ameriean women, who have inspired with their surround- ings, association and conversation and general wholesomeness a desire to make the periodical three-day leave granted the American, soldier. in Neu- wied a memory that leaves nothing but clean thought in the minds of the boys. The second day of John Doughboy’s three-day leave begins just after break- fast at “Uncle Sam’s Hotel”—from 7:30 to 9 a, m.—with a steamboat. excursion up the Rhine. It ends with’a grand costume ball in the evening at the recreation hall. The river excursion, with plenty of food, music and refresh- ments aboard, begins with especial at- tention first called through a mega- phone to the village of Weissenthurm, just across the river, the point where the French General Hoche crossed the Rhine on April 18, 1797. Immediately behind Neuwied, as the steamboat takes the Rhine mid-channel, loom forth the Krupp gun works. ‘Soon the island Urmitz Worth, on which the Romans once camped during the period when bronze was first used by these ancients, appears. Next comes En- gers, a Rhine village of 3,000 people, the home of a famous Prussian mill- tary school. Then Bendorf, a manu- facturing city of 5,000 people, and soon the giant fortress of Ehrenbreitstein looms up around a bend In the river. The bally-hoo man explains that “once upon a time,” the sheer rock cliffs, which rise abruptly from the water, supported a Roman fortress. ‘As he remarks that the French cap- tured Ehrenbreitstein in 1799 some doughboy remarks “some job.” Look- ing acrogs the river they see Coblenz. PAGE 7 ‘une boat passes up. ‘the river through the Coblenz pontoon bridge to Oberlahnstein, scene of thirteenth century ruins, and glides below Stol- zenfels castle at Capellen, built in 1252, destroyed by the French in 1833, rebuilt by King Frederick Wilhelm Iv, and owned up to November 11, 1911,| by the ex-kaiser. Again upstream is the very ancient and picturesque vil- Inge of Rhems with well-preserved fortifications 700 years old. Braubach, a town first mentioned just 1197 years ago, and Maksburg castle, the most imposing castle on the Rhine peaks, are next. Lorelei Rock Passed. Past Bornhofen, a village of legend and pilgrimage; Salzig, a small town, surrounded by a forest of cherry trees; Ehrenthal, of lead mine fime; Well- mich, with its famous Gothic church; St. Goar, a village of 1,600 inhabitants, containing a church built in 558 by} Frankish kings, and eventually the famous Lorelei is reached, that impos- ing rock overhanging treacherous Rhine rapids, on which the beautiful woman of legend used to sit enshroud- ed in a veil of mist, sometimes comb- ing her golden hair, and, more often, enticing lovelorn Rhine sailors onto the rocks as they drew near to hear the strains of her golden harp. Passing many other points of inter- est, the doughboy {s shown the little chureh at Clemenscapelle marking the spov where Kaiser Rudolph von Haps- burg beheaded 30 robber knights in 1282, And there is usually doughboy comment, “Some kaiser.” Finally, he passes the Mouse Tower, built on an island, and reaches Bingen-on-the- Rhine, that famous Roman town said to have been built by Drusus thirteen years before Christ. A trip beyond Bingen to Rudesheim and the excursion boat turns its prow homeward, racing with the swift Rhine current back to Neuwied, More Ice Cream and Cake. There still remains time for Uncle Sam’s theater and the movies before supper time at Uncle Sam’s hotel. where ice cream and cake wind up the evening repast. Then back to the rec- reation hall for the big dance. Ice cream and cake comes again at 9:30 p.m. The third and last day there are all the features of the first and second and a boat trip down the Rhine to-| ward Cologne for those who care to £0. Historical sightseeing is repeated, in- cluding the beautiful city of Bonn, seat of Germany’s most famous unt- versity and once home of Beethoven. Then back up the river to entertain- ment, ice cream and cake, athletics, sports, games and recreation, winding up with the grand tug-of-war in Re creation hall between picked teams. Then more ice cream and cake and to bed, ready for duty again back some- where in the Coblenz bridgehead. Clean recreation has beaten the Ger man open saloons in Neuwied, and tn addition to that the ice cream, pie and eake factory, now producing 100 gal lons of cream and 300 cakes of various kinds: each “day, soon will double its present output. As one doughboy re marked at the end of his leave here to- day, “Some leave!” Wild Goose Hides Eggs. The domestic goose is derived from Wild species. The pioneer settlers saw their domestic geese run wild in bushes and’ almost revert to their primitive state. Now, the goose con- structs a very pretentious nest on the ground. The eggs are so large and white that they would attract un- Sriendly notice at a considerable dis- tance. To avoid this dangerous pub- licity' the eggs are carefully covered over when the owner leaves them even for a-short time. It Couldn’t Be Done. There was a hard boiled sergeant who delighted. in “picking on” the men Just from civilian life. One day he was giving the command “Right dress,” and one of the fellows was napping and did not do as commanded, after the sergeant had called it out several times. Then the sergeant was furious and shouted to the fellow; “Hey, you, dress right!” And somebody else hol- Jered: “How can you dress right on $30 a month?” The Order of the Bath. ‘A very youthful British tourist, am rived at an old-fashioned hostelry, had the imprudence to order a'bath in his room for the next morning. Very early he was awakened by sounds of hammering somewhere overhead. Then followed much bumping on the stairs; evidently a large and cumbrous weight was being brought down. The noise ceased outside his own door, which flew open, and in staggered two Strong men bearing the big bath from the public bathroom, dismounted for his morning ablutions! FRIENDS LOOKIE, FRECKLES = ’ Tag’s First Visit to a Zoo. OH, FRECKLES! »% FRECKLES! C'MERE A NOTE 22 Q000000? EATIN’ STRAW Look “AT THAT RIG COW WITH HIS HORNS IN HIG MOUTH, HIS TAIL BY BLOSSER WITH SS, SS Sy STATEMENT OF THE of the Bismarcx Building & Loan Association for the period ending June 30, 1919. Assets. Cash on hand $13,881.19 Stock loans 310.00 First mortgage loans » 164,145.94 Real estate owned . 93 Furniture & Fixtures . Liberty bonds 2,499. 0. $183,287.11 Liabilities. ‘Stockholders dues 7.63 rplus . 83. Net 8,410.65 Le re $183,287.11 We hereby certify that the fore- going is a true and correct statement of the affairs of the Bismarck Build- ing & Loan Association for the perion ending June 30, 1919. A. HUGHES, Vice-President. CONKLIN, Secretary. FL. Personally appeared before me E. A. Hughes, vice-president, and F, L. Conklin, secretary, of the Bismarck Building and Loan Association, and who being duly sworn depose and say that the statement above is true and correct to the best of their knowledge and belief. E, A. HUGHES, F. L, CONKLIN. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 17th day of July, 1919. H. B. BEACH, Notary Public. My commission expires March 13, 23. 7 18.25, That Much Assured. A somewhat impecunious young fel- low rashly engaged himself to a charm- ing young thing, who shortly after the excitement 1 subsided began to evince doubts. Said “How long, dearie, do you think we shall have to be engaged?” “Well, sweetheart,” said the young man cheerily, “I have enough money to last for six months, I think.” letra ca ee ena] FOR SALE '8 good violins, one mandolin, banjo, slide trombone, alto, and other instruments. PHONE 550 or M. J. O°;CONNOR ar ee ee —————_———— 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. —y ®, E. YOUNG REAL ESTATB CO. Phones———= & F. O'Hare, 78M. ‘FE. Hedden, @ F. E, Young, 78R, od SOOO CHIROPRACTORS E. E. HOARD, D. C., Ph. C. Licensed Doctor of Chirovractle Gentleman Assistant, Phone 327 119 Fourth St. Bismarek, N. D. =————————————— E. T. BURKE LAWYER Tribune Block Bismarck, N. D. Phone 752. R..S. ENGE, D. C. PH. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free. Suite 9-11,; Lucas Block Phone 260 Bismarck, N. D. 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, Re finished and Packed. ————————————_—__——___) THE HURLEYS TRAPS AND PIANO Up-to-the-Minute Musie 10 Main St. Phone 130-K