The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 22, 1919, Page 6

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That AICNUALION neans na BANK PRESIDENT HAD RAPID RISE After completing a Commerce and Banking course at. Dakota Business College, Fargo, N. D., Mr. Hilmer Carlson became bookkeeper for a bank and later assistant cashier. Next he went to the State Bank of Karnak as cashier. He has recently been elected president. H. R. Skarrar went from D. B. C, to the Farmers and Mer- chants Bank, Iroquois, S. D.C. of the devoted, sters ithful type of mu The FMeming § They have won thelr way fre examples to throw convention aside and weave only happy ending around the thre? isi-|cornered domestie relation. In his to}latest stage offering, “Tea For ‘Thres” i i olan. Ee Halbert is with the Farmers fae entire their own unceasing|to be seen at the Auditorium, Friday, National Bank of Ellendale. |oqorts. y dollar expended for|the twenty-eighth, under direction of Nearly 700 hanks employ D, B.|their musical education they earned |the Selwyn, this miracle has heea C. graduates. themselves, performed. He has taken an_ordi- ae HT he 3: ful.” Writ These young girls haye been ap-|nary business man with jealous incli- oro the successful.” Write in concert work eyer since|nations, an up-to-date “bored thorugh F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front |ijey were ten years old, and from the] deeply loyal and a most interesting St., Fargo, stast their playing attracted the no-;male person whom he calls th: ft musical critics. 'To-| friend, and caused them to go through day they ar nowledged as preemi-|twenty-four hours planning, fearing i nent in their field. doubting and finally torturing life, Coming to | They appear Tuesday evening at the} with an extremely probable and hum- BISMARCK DR. MELLENTHIN SPECIALIST The ever-delightful thrill and charn: ore of delicious romance is not alway’ © found in the modern jazz comedy 0 For His Seventh Year In |tocay ana especiany in a comeay built upon the foun ation of a triangular North Dakota qover afta And by triangular, is meant of course the complications of the love of a man, his wife-and his Does Not Us Use Surgery friend. A eeestion of sordidness and unpleasantness hovers rather Will b bea at around the situation, It has remain- McKENZIE HOTEL Wednesday and Thursday, December 10 and 11 Office Hours, 9 a. m. to 4 p. m TWO DAYS ONLY No Charge for Examination Dr. Mellenthin is a regular graduate in medicine and sur- gery and is licensed by the state of North Dakota. He visits pro- fessionally the more important towns and cities and offers to all who call on this trip consultation ; 3 and examination free, except the ig expense of treatment when de-! sired. According to his method of treatment he does not operate for chronic appendicitis, gall stones, uléers of the stomach, tonsils or adenoids. He has, to his credit many wonderful results in diseases of the stomach, liver, bowels, blood, skin, nerves, heart, kidney, blad- der, bed wetting, catarrh, weak lungs, rheumatism, sciatica, leg ulcers and rectal ailments. Tf you -have been ailing for any length of time and do not get any better, do not fail to call, as improper measures rather |, than disease are very often the cause of your long standing trouble. Remember above date, that examination on the trip will be free and that, his treatment is different. Address: 336 Boston Block, Minneapolis, Minnesota. J. H. Johnson Accounting Auditing Systematizing ANNEX. HOTEL Phone 573 or 655 THA FOR “THR > COMING TO AUDITORIUM ed however, Poo. Auditorium in a joint recital with Miss Amy Ellerman, the noted concert Soprano, for Roi Cooper Megrv OTHERS Reduce your doctor's bills by keeping always on hand— ICKS VAP “YOUR BODYGUARD” - ORT 60r 120 NOOR OO LOC OC RT ICCLOLELEEL OSE LIOS MOTHERS POC CR COLLOID ERIC LDL OL ELL ED We can save you money. No doubt your husband has an old suit or overcoat which is past his use—so bring your garments and we will make the little boy or girl a suit, overcoat or coat from this material. Come in—let’s talk it over, KLEIN Tailor and Cleaner | MIDWINTER SALE at the Capital City Cloth- ing and Shoe Store, on Fifth street, opposite Roop’s Grocery. 25 per cent discount on all goods in stock. Harry Rosen orous climax, a brentinessly interest- ed audience looking on meanwhile and thoroughly inderstanding each emo- tion and its result. Ie has caused the delightful friend to Jose under 2 seemingly blase: the most ro- mantic and Qu ic ideas and feel- ings, the young wife to achieve a beau- tiful affection for the friend and lover of her girlhood which has nothing in 1, ved MARTE NEWKIRK lit of disloyalty to her adored .hus- band; and that husband to emerge from a selftish, complacent view of life in general and his wife in partie- ular to a hroad, generous plane of though which spells happiness for him- self and contentment for that wife. Norman Hacket in the role of the lov- er who presented his sweetheart witn PRE E oc pocapay secede vnnaneesvaniakass yellow roses and’ her first kiss, and who, althou nos the a sen one, re- s i love de lightfully. torch of deep feeling and pathos in his devotion as Mr. Hackett discloses it, which the al little wife torn between her s of conjugal staunchness and friendly affection, finds quite disurb- ing, it well done. Mildred Evans while the inconsiderate Imsband. Newkirk and S$, Sydney Chon are ey cellent ir .. There are three acts pa . and a prologue, = Miss Alice Linkfield | Teacher of Violin. Graduate of the MacPhail School of Music, Minneapolis, Minn. Five years’ successful teaching. BISMARCK CONSERVATORY OF MUSIC a most delightful loye story with tho]: WILLIAM S. HART is the at- traction at the Bismarck theater tonight in “Blue-Blazes Rauden.” DENEKINE SIMPLE EN TASTES AND AN ABLE COMMANDER Custodian of Herbert Hoover’s First Food Ship Tells ‘of Chief La Crosse, Wis., Nov. 22.—Captain Rheingold Schultz, who recently re- turned to his home here ‘after’ an in- teresting expérience in the: American Expeditionary Force, was in chatge of the first relief ship sent to Russia by Herbert Hodver and said to have been tha first vessel that-sailed the Black Sea for five years. Captain Schultz has been “loaned” to Mr. Hoover by the army. It was on this trip that he came in personal touch with General Deni- kine whom he met at Rostoh, Russia, then: the headquarters of the leader of the. anti-Bolsheviki forces. The visit was in the nature of a mission from the United States army for the purpose -of impressing the nature of the relief mission on the Russians. “Denikine,” said Captain Schultz, “Gs the most patriotic Russian I met. He is a man of ‘great personal’ mag- netism, and the: officers and men I saw appeared to adore him. His army, ch is well equipped and, disciplined, is entirely a volunteer force and the men._are good ‘fighters. “The Russians admire the Ameri- cans. Their .ideal,so.far-as I, could learn from General Denikine and his officers, is. to.set up a_ United States of Ru ” Capt. Schultz’ said. The captain saw .only° one. incident of Bolshevik tactics although he was informed they were common, he said. “While I was: at Denikizie’s head- quarters a pavtol brought in the body of a peasan the Bolsheviki.a few kilometers from the army’s front, he said. evidently had died in‘ horrible agony. The skin about his wrists -had been circled with a sharp knife and pulled down over the fingers’ like-a glove. Then the finger tips had béen fastened together with. wooden pegs. That is not hearsay... saw the body three hours after the man had died.” The.captain for a time was the as- sistant chief of the legal department of the army, with headquarters at Treves in the: American section of occupied Germany. He has had a flu- “J ent-and: colloquial knowledge of Ger- man and has fifteen years of service in the Wisconsin national guard. HOUSING CONDITIONS ? IN GERMANY ARE BAD Gloomy. View of Situation Is Painted By Teutonic Press Cologne, Nov. 1—(By The Asso- ciated Press.) Newspapers. from the interior of Germany paint.a gloomy picture of housing conditions in Ger- man cities. They say that families expelled fron the occupied’ areas, for one reason ‘or another, and from Sile- sia and East Prussia, wander inland i= z At this time testimony will be taken covering the charges filed against the Bismarck Water Supply Company by the Bismarck City Commission. Expert accountants, engineers and other witnesses will testify, giving the facts to back these charges. You as a citizen should hear as much of this testimony as possible. . This notice is simply to ad- vise you of the time and place of above hearing. STRATA TL NOTICE This Is A P Citizens Water Consumer Committee NERA occ ‘ The hearing of the charges against the BSMARCK WATER SUP- PLY COMPANY will be held Saturday, Nov. 29th, at 10 a. m., in the old Supreme Court chambers on the third floor of the Capitol bande ublic Hearing a a AAA APLTGOAAUVAOANAEDEOUHEDUD ESSERE 1 who had been killed by f “The man | 5 and have greatly increased the con- gestion in the cities. Steps have al- ready been taken in several cities to introduce compulsory quartering. Un- less the housing situation improves immediately, the newspapers say that this method of housing the homeless will have to be resorted to. The lack of housing facilities, par- ticularly, in the occupied areas where the troops are quartered, has been critical for months. In Holstein, and Frankfurt on Main. and even Berlin the shortage of buildings. is com- plained of by the newspapers writers. In Cassel, just beyond the British oc- eupied zone, six thousand families. are reported .in need. of proper housing for the winter. In Cologne arted last summer to build ns for the poorer people and, owing to, this fact, the require- ments here are not so great as in other cities of the occupied territory. In Goblenz, - headquarters of the American Forces. in Germany, the shortage of dwellings has reached such‘a stage that the city government recently appealed. to Berlin. for aid. It-is proposed to build three hundred frame houses as soon as possible to care for Coblenz residents whose homes have been requisitioned or peo- ple who have’ otherwise virtually been made homeless. Coblenz is -particwarly crowded owingi to the fact that it is the seat of the Interallied Rhineland High Commission which is to be the govern- ing body when the treaty of peace becomes effective. Hundreds of civilians connected with the various. Allied missions hav> ing brought their families to the city. For months the city officials have been cooperating with the American billeting officers'in an effort to utilize every available. room, apartment, house or hotel in Coblenz and its. su- burbs. ASKS FREEDOM Nek York—Pauline Frederick isask- wright, ine F. McLaughlin and’Charles W. McLaughlin, Bey 4A lane aes ell lg 6 ing a divorce from Willard Mack, play- In private life they are Paul- «We have sold our Bismarck Plant and will handle our clients in this field from the Fargo Branch. A\ll orders will be handled prompt- * ly from Fargo. HE Marshall Oil Company de- sire to announce that they have withdrawn from the Kerosene and Gasoline business at Bismarck. Marshall Oil Company WALE. “SEYMOUR, District Manager Fargo, N. D. It has been shown that pigeons fly almost as fast as a seaplane or fly- ing boat. Traveling by night, the hassar, a sort of catfish, will go several days EEE 16799 DIED in New York City alone from kid- ney trouble last year. Don’t allow yourself to become a victim by Neglecting pains and aches, Guard against this trouble by taking ‘GOLD MEDAL a ‘The world’s standard: remegy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid. troubles. ‘Holland’s: ni All druggists, three sizes. over land from a diminishing pond to another, or from river to river. Tyee seinem Lotlea—My nese, Soreness, Granule: G “¥ tion; Itching and. poral Youn Eve YES ot Sal or Braid rope’® After the Mor at er aor will win your confidence. for Murine when your Eyes Murine Eve Remedy « ‘Co., Chicago SESS Miss Ruth Quigley Teacher of Violin: and Piano ] _ 407 SIXTH STREET ‘For a TAXI ‘—Phone 27 or 57— LAMBERT Admission 50c LEARN TO DANCE Social Dancing Class every other week,. beginning. Thursday evening, November 20, at K of C. Hall, to 10 p.m. C. ROHERTY Phone 329-K re HAY. FOR SALE ~ Phone 354 De reo ssalors prat Consistent saving‘ of a will do it. Come in and let some Bismarck Both had been married i divorced previous to’ their mar- V4 . Coleman - ai 109 Fifth Street cted under Steie Law THE MARK OF SUCCESS ¢ The young man who can save money on a salary ' of eighty or a hundred dollars is—in most cases— destined to greater. success than the one who spends every bitof a larger salary. Successful men everywhere are the men: who were able to save in proportion to their income. - 'Phis Bank is more than glad to-help any young man to brand himself. with the mark of success. portion of your salary officer of this Bank ex- plain the advantages of a Savings Account to you. The Bismarck Bank North Dakota

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