The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 15, 1919, Page 7

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Y, DECEMBER 15, 1919 [ WANT COLUMN { 4 ——_—__¢ SELP WANTED—MALB WANTHD—Experlenced grain elevator YOUNG MEN—I8 to 3, EARN ACTUAL AUTO REPAIR, vul AMERICAN Adding and _ Apply room 221, Grand ‘Pacitic 12-13-28, for Railway Mail Clerks, $1300-$1900. Experience une necessary. Iixaminations Bismarck, #an. 17. For tree particulars, ‘write R. ‘Terry (former Civil Service Examiner) 187 Continental Bldg., Washington, D, Cc, 2 12-11-4¢ man, hotel, CANIZING. . ‘Auto School. HELP WANTED--FEMALE HOUSEKEEPER WANTED—Ry wid= oWer on farm, nO ehildren,« permanent place for right one. Give partleulars in, first letter, Address H. _marck Tribune, t. WANTED—Lady to demonstrate The Nu- anes Corsets in Bismarck and. other Le CA. L AUTO REPAIR, Los Angeles Y. M. 41529-1m6 Call room 413, McKenzie, 3-2¢. oo. mole WANTED—Gi for general housework on a farm near Braddock. For particulars __Phone 488 Bismarck. 12-13-1wk, WANTED—By an “attorney: Stenogra- pher. State age, experience and salary expected. - Box bob, Golden: Valley, N, Wakinp » upg 12-9-1Wwk —Girl. for general housework. Apply at Tribune. © 1d tt WANTED—Housekeeper_or inl for gene efal housework. Mrs, W. F. Steele, Cor, Ave. B and ist St. Phone 867. E tf ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Modern furnished room, suitable for two. Breakfast served it-desried. Phone 581-K or call 90% ‘Sixth street. 12-11-8t. ROOM OR BOARD—At ail 4th St. Phone 292, 3-1wk, FOR RENT—Two or three furnished rooms. 1100 Broadway. Phone 645R. 12-13-1wk FOR RENT—Large good rooms, unfur- nished, for light housekeeping’ or oth- erwise in. warm’ ;modern house, Save Goal bills’ and trouble, Inquire » 622 _Third street. 12-10-1w FOR RENT—Furni rooms,, Call 322 __ist_Street_or phone 12-10-1w FOR RENT—Modern furnished room. 607 6th St. Phone 782. 12-9-1wk POSITIONS WANTED POSITIONS WANTED—During holidays by teachers experienced in olerking, in- voicing, housekeeping, cooking, moth- er's helper, trained nursing. Answer * G. Li Wi, care Tribune. 11-28-2wks AUTOMOBILES—-MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE CHEAP—One ton Maxwell truck, “Sinclair Oil Co,,, Bismarck, | N. x 12-1 MISCELLANEOUS FOR SA $2.00 each. bar Hop. 12-13-1wk AVANTED—We do expert dry cleaning, pressing, repairing and dyeing. Klein the tailor, 2-11-lwk isting Ma- few 5 The Chocolate chine, Brand new and guaranteed, vis- ible printing, red totals, and all latest features, remarkably low price, $ cash and balance small monthly ments. Write 114, care Tribune. 12-8-2wks BRAND NEW. Rex. Visible. Typewriter equipped with every modern feature and fully,.guaranteed | Will_sell for three dollars per month, Write 113, care Tribune. 0 12-8-2wks FOR SALE CHIAP—One bumer gas. __line. stove. Apply Tribune, __12-10-tf PHONE 721 . 8. Clifford for coal. Res- _ idence phone 2141. _12-$-lwk FOR SALE—Very high grade violin. In= quire of ‘Clayton Rud@ at B, K, Skeels Electric Shop. 12-9-1wk FOR SALE—Complete set of butcher tools and shop fixtures at a bargain. <M. Wirth, Braddock, N, D.. | "12-2-2wks FREE WISCONSIN: BULLETINS—Soll, climate, crops, Immigration Bureau, ‘Wisconsin Dept::of Agriculture, Capitol 71, Madison, | Whi. 11-24-60t ——— SSS NOTICE OF SCHOOL MEETING School District=Special Meeting of VOTERS Notice is Hereby Given, That on Tuesday the 23d! day of Dec, A. D. 1919, a meeting of the voters of Bis- marck Spécial School District No. 1 will be held “at “Will School, In the County of Burleigh, State “of North Dakota, for the purpose of determin- ing upon the question of issuing bonds of said School district in the sum of seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,- 00000), said bonds to be made pay- abié'in 20 years from date of issue, and to bear interest at the rate of four (4) percent per annum, payable ee eee eeeeeeeeenemeeerseereeeced The Spring of 1920 is going to’ see the biggest lot movement witnessed in Bismarck during the last- thirty years, There should be 200 houses built next year. Even that will not take care of those who want them. We have about three thousand vacant lots on all sides of the city which we can offer ‘at all sorts of prices and |- terms. Get your home for yourself, It is lots cheaper_than torent. F. E. Young Real-Estate Co. - Sole agents for Riverview Addition, Lincoln Addition and three thousand lots in other parts of the city. semi-annually, Which proposed bonds are to be issued for the purpose of raising money to build an eight room brick school building to be construct: ed on Blk, No. 23 in the Flannery and Weatherby Addition to ‘the Gity of Bismarck, 'N. D, . This meeting wil begin at 9 o'clock A. M. and*close at 4 o'clock P, M., of said day, / Dated at Bismarck, N, D., this 8th day of Dec, A. D,, 1919, By order of Board of Edueation, RICHARD PRNWARDEN, Clerk. MORGENTHAU PLEADS FOR HELPING HAND IN THE NEAR EAST Former Ambassador to Turkey Says America Should Not Let Armenian Allies Starve, By HENRY MORGENTHAU, Former Ambassador to Turkey and Leader in Near East Relief, It they were good enough to fight and die for us when we needed their help so sorely, they are good enough ow to share some meager = Ifttle crumbs from our plenty when ‘they have nothing, when hundreds of thou: sands of them are homeless, unclad, foorless and threatened with extermi- nation by thelr enemies and our own, Not far from a million Christians have been murdered by their ‘Turkish oppressors. Hungry, terror stricken hundreds of thousands of refugees now look ‘to the United States for sue. cor. Have Trust in America. We cannot refuse. Next to thelr faith in God ts their trast in the dis interested good will nnd generosity of Copyright by Underwood & Underwood, HENRY MORGENTHAU. the American people. They look to us as the human agency to extricate them from the frightful situation in which they have been Jeft as a conse quence of the war, If we should fall to aid them, starva- ton and the winter's cold_would go far to completing the work done by the unspeakable Turk. { have not seen with my own eyes the misery in which the Armenians now exist, J have heen spared that. But the reports Which have been brought tn by Agents of the Near Hast Relief and “by “representatives of the Peace Conference paint a picture of wretchedness inconcelvable to those of the savagery of the Mussulman, Exiled From ‘Homes. Since the beginning of the war’ the Turkish Armenians have been largely refugees from their homes, A simple fgricultural people, they have been exiles from their farins, deprived of all opportunity to support themselves. Year by year their sufferings have in- creased. Now, a year after tighting bas ceased, they are still living the life of nomads, able,to continue to keew alive only by virtue of American philanthropy. These homeless people—“filthy infl- dels” to the Turk—were good enough to exert their poor might in oli: be- half while the war was still in the balance. _Massacres of a half. century had not. so“broken their spirit. that they dared not fight for right and for democracy when justice was the issue. We accepted their aid then, Surely we shail not pass them by without who have pot; first hnhd impression}. SS WHAT. SEEMS TO BE YouR TRovBLE) | Neu Novit, HAVE, TO GO ON A DIET- KOTUING Bur THE PLANEST KIND OF ThAve A SORT - oF DistReSsED FEELING AFTER FooD witt HELP Now. Take. A Deep BREATH - WAY DOWN Now - ME Doctor P MARCK. DAILY TRIBUN: DOINGS OF THE DUFFS The Doctor Was Making It Easy Went, (T Witt AT LEAST. HeLp You To PAN MY Bie WHEN You Ger IT. [4 For Ton BY ALLMAN TRYING TO FIND ODT How MUCH Money I've Got Il Your wtf eee clude” céiisideraifon of his neighbor's well being. No honorable man can knowingly allow his neighbor to hun- ger or to go unclothed, The Christian peoplés of the Near East are our neighbors. The money needed to re- lieve them can be spared without causing any. man, woman or child in the United States to suffer. Must Not Rest on Past. In Other years of our own free will we sent missionaries to Turkey. Our schools and colleges and hospitals have ‘played a worderful role in hu- manizing that dark spot in the world. Our ideas, our educational resources, our taterlal equipment, ‘have been leaven in thé Near East. Because we have done well\in. times past we have ‘The Armenians have been treated as perhaps bo people in history have been treated bécadse they are the spiritual brothers of westérn races, Will America help them? There ‘can be but one answer. Their neces- sity ts dire, but our power Is great. We are wealthy. Weare a member of the famlly of bations, Our brothers call us. ‘Food, clothes, money, are {im- mediately wanted. If ever unmeritea suffering called for succor the plight of the Armenians shottd be heeded now. A fet months ittore and It may be relief will be too fate for those mytads whom only we ca save, We shall not fall them, RALPH WORKS PANS HUGGINS Scrappy Little Manager of New York Yankees Is Blamed for Poor Showing of Team. Ralph T. Works, who has-a large following in St. Louis as a writer on baseball from the “inside” angle of a player, has some sharp criticism of Miler Huggins in his daily column in St. Louis Republic, in the course of which he says: | A few weeks ago I wrote an article in which I stated the New York Yan- kees were not playing smart enough baseball to win the pennant in the American league and would not stay up in the e@ unless they changed their style. That 17-inning ganie Thursday surel: ment. There | one man respon- sible-for that defeat and in my mind that person is Miller Huggins. Huggins is no doubt a fine fellow personally, but. when it comes to man- aging a ball club in the American league he appears to be in a position too big for him, Bo ag ¢ STOCKHOLDERS MEETING compassion now. 3 ‘The day has passed when any self respecting man‘ dares permit absorp- fRECKLES 6 YES GRE LYS LoS OF FON TY COME OVER, ON TH WEST SIDE, ANT IT ALEK SEE THAT? THATS TH WATER WORKS») tlon in his own personal affairs to.ex, Gosh = LocKir TU! SMOKESTACK WouLDIA! PAST HERE QuieT—~" SUH THATS AN The annual election of the Board of Directors of the Bismarck Building and Loan Association, will be held at the office of. the Se ‘y in the this great opportunity for the present. | vindicated the ‘state- |’ First Nati 12th day of J o'clock, p. m. BIDS W Coal wanted to be delivered at Bis- marck Hospital as needed. Send bid on or, before December 26th to Rey Wm. Snekow, 811 Ave, ©. Phone 12. Spanish Literature. While literary Spain sank Into a deep slumber after the day of Cer- vantes and\Lope de Vega, it awoke bril- Naintly ih the latter half ‘of the nine- teenth century, presenting to the world Palnelo Valdes, Perez Galdos, Jose de j Pereda, Juan Valera, Echegaray and | other distinguished writers, Tribune Want Ads bring results. Emeralds of the Aztecs. Among the Aztec treasures of Mex- ico, besides other precious stones, tely cut emeralds were s from this source that the magnificent emeralds now formirg part of the foyal collection of Spain were supposed (o e come. United States Korean Treaty. wt was in 1882 that the first treaty wi.t Korea was signed by the United States, and foreigners took up their wesidence with officlal sanction at Chemuipo, the seaport of the capital, Seoul. Even with this foothold in the new country, the unwelcome visitors pushed their way but slowly into other parts of the kingdom, and as late ns 1897 only a relatively small Portion had been visited by white men.—National Geographic Magazine. OTTO AUTO ; ar A= THE GREAT EGG FOO NUNG (S GOING TO DO SOME AIC wl i ! - BY AHERN OUT OF SMOKE HE PRODUCES OBJECTS. WITH MYSTIC SKILL ye TW’ WELL KNOWN Bowl OF GOLDFISH - Wed -HEH | offer, | to the Phillics immediately. Never in the history nized baseball has I rhoan ; offer for a pl It is more than was 1 for nk Baker, the home- ron king, when he wa member of the Reading ‘Tri-State club in 1908, and more than paid for Maurice Episcopal Church Seeks Five “Ships” to Win Its Nation-Wide Campaign e —— Rev. George Cralg Stewart, D, D., rector of St. Luke’s Epts- copal church, Evanston, Ill, for- merly a chaplain in the A. BF, says the nation-wide campaign of the Eptscopai church Is a cam- paign for “ships.” They mean “winning the war, he sald, just as much as the ships asked for py the United States shipping poard or by Lloyd George. The “snips,” Doctor Stewart sug- gests, are ihe following: 1, MEMBER-SHIP, "We are members of His body. 2, DISCIPLE-SHIP, It ts one thing to be a Christian, another to be a devoted Christian dis- ciple, 3, FELLOW-SHIP. Whe cam- palgn lays emphasis on Holy Comminion together with God to Christ. 4, STEWARD-SHIP, It tn- eludes a campalgn for money. St. Poul said, “It Is not the money Lam anxious for, but for the interest that accumulates In thls way to your divine credit.” 5. LEADER-SHIP. Not mere- ipaign for more candl- es for holy orders, but for teaders among our laity also, soeneocers. REFUSE $5,000 FOR PITCHER Reading of International Won’t Ac- cept Big Bid of Philadelphia’ for Twirler Brown. Reading’ International league club has received an offer of $5,000 from the Philadelphia for Piteh- er Brown, the been doing such ¥ hurling this season, ager Dooin and the Read- j ing ation have turned down the s Brown was to be delivered Jack WLelivelt, Mike Lyne Pi Jake Northrop and other star play Jors. FOIL BIG GAMBLING CLIQUE Secretary Bobby Quinn Uses Novel Plan to Break Up Noisy Crowd in Wing of Grandstand. Bobby Quinn, secretary of the St. Louis Browns, found a way to break up groups of gamblers who were wont to congregate along the .right fleld wing of the grandstand and ply their nefarious trade in open detlance of the Police. Quinn called In the munici- pal authorities, but got no satisfac- tion, He employed private agencies, but still the wagering went on. Fin- ally he went among the men himself and tried to break up the groups that obstructed the passageway. Finally he hit upon a plan that caused the gamblers to howl to heaven. He strung a series-af signs along the gir- ders, utterly blocking the view of the playing field from the rear of the stand. ‘That did more than all the cops in the Mound City. One may walk in comfort through the St. Louis stand now without hearing the hoots and howls of the short enders. Uptimletic Toought. Titles worn by the sweat of the ain may be wot without 2 blush, BISMARCK FURNITURE CO. 220 Main St. Farniture Upholstery Repaired, Refinished and Packed, 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 DR. W. H. PEWE, D. C. 2 Doctor of Chiropractic Lucas Block WE GOTTA “Go ASYLUM; WAY, THATS. WHERE- ALL TH BLIND S YEOPLE LIVE - BY BLOSSER ; who were sold frem there to the ma- Whither We Are Flying. ‘The point in space toward which the sun with’ {ts planets Is ¥eyaging at the rate,of a million miles a day now lles directly overhead early in the eve- ning. The exact location of this point has nut been finally determined, but It lies somewhere in the neighborhood - of the brilliant star Vega, Do you feel that you are shooting upward, head first, about 26 times as fast as a can- nonball? Business Directory SHOE FITTERS | chon Whine MAL we TREET | PRGFESGRA ori Foe: AMATEUR PrtovoenarneRd nHaT SCE pl ne Hehe C al Al * BISMARCK -NorTH DAKOTA’ Bring or Mail in Your Films for Expert Developing FINNEY’S DRUG STORE Bismarck, N. D. WEBB BROS. Undertakers — Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 65 PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Day Phone 100-M Night Phones 687 or 100 ' Licensed Embalmer in Charge Bismarck Construction Company GENERAL CONTRACTORS Western Sales Bldg. Phone 35 Bismarck oda o PRINTING —— FINISHING DEVELOPING AND ENLARGING MAIL US YOUR FILM Orders Filled Promptly by Experts HOSKINS Bismarck DE LAVAL 2 Cream Separators The World’s Standard FRENCH & WELCH Hardware Implements Harness re an BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY- Distributors of STUDEBAKER —and— CADILLAC Automobiles BUICK and - Valve-in-Head Motors CORWIN. MOTOR CO. Bismarek, N. D. - ACTORY seRVick Corwin Motor Co OAKLAND | ’

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