The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 19, 1920, Page 2

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PAGE TWO SRNR It Is Now Time for Planting - k of Geran- 6f your beds and setting out of vegetable plants. Our s iums, Heliotropes. rguerites, Petunia, Pansies, cic, js the ever had and at prices that are right. In. vegetable 7.59 2.30 AD 8 well ready attention rooted | to set to t 2.75 2.25 he -pot-grown nee on your crop. Doz. Very ve Ponderosa. early, 100 so i fe but pro- $0.25 even eenny, Best: No ‘so See ee aNd ct ease NG PE ee HOSKINS, Bismarck Greenhouses, Bismarck, N. D. Nigga oy) AMERICAN HEROES WHO DIED JN FRANCE WANT BODIES TO LIE THERE, NURSE SAYS The American soldiers who fell in bat- tle in France want their bodies to lie where they fell, Mrs. Margaret! eat Shipman Scott, of Los Angeles, Calit, | yoo sai, known as = Nurse Jean, dis-| | ing etnies g tinuished nurse with the Canadian Aa Roath miath cathe army, told the Fort. Lincoln chapter | “!8¢0 Was named: correspor of the American War Mothers, at al meeting held yesterday afternoon inj the Commercial club rooms. | During Derexperience of Tous year 0. This committee composed of A committee was até with other 'ving Memorial » May oper: and two months on «the battle-fields a yin i af sacties she nursed many American wounded ; Me a Merhee, ire: Will Webb and and received the last message ef) As" Conctinution aaa oaawa many who died, she told the moth-| sacpked th y ers, Whenever one expressed a wish pied as to where his body lay, it was that} it lay in France, she said. “Ido not believe that the mothers | of American dead would want the} ’ bodies of their sons brought back if| Colorado Springs.—Roscoe C, Hill, they knew the wishes of their boys,” | Superintendent of schools, refuses to she said. e - take the responsibility for girls and Mrs. Scott, who stopped in Bis-| boys dancing together. “You can't marck for a brief visit, while en route| hold a dance in the school’s name,” to Los Angeles, was personally dec-| he says. “If your parents want yon orated with’ the gold Distinguished | to dance, I can’t stop you.” He also Service cross by King George‘on June; bans “h t night about the school 26, 1918, and she received the Rosette | grounds. League cross for bravery in bringing | were | PUTS BAN ON DANCING AND HIKES AT NIGHT Foreign aatries are using only half as much petroleum as the United States, but have seven times as much oil in ‘the ground. in a truck load of wounded soldiers. She told the war mothers she would be glad to hear from any of them and answer any questions. 6e BATTERY Get honest, conscientious service ‘demonstrate to your satisfaction weomnake ng your bette RELIABLE REPAIRS We are now permite Nesta lmpregnated Mi of Batteries, ‘Let ‘us explain what this tse you. \ LAHR MOTOR SALES CO. Phone 490. Free inspection and dis- tilled water We will statement ANT f in Sr SUTALINSEF D1 gy Paint for Permanence It costs ‘too ninth nowadays to experiment with paint, You can’t afford to take a chance, Don’t use cheap paints, Remember—about 75% of the cost of a painting job is paid for the work in applying the paint. ‘And it costs just as much to apply poor paint as it does good paint, The use of poor paints may; cost you years of dissatisfac- tion as they do not leave a surface that is fit to repaint. The use of good paint pays, not only in wearing qualities, but will leave a surface fit to repaint. ~ Use good paints, Use— 2: : =) Minnesota Paints They're just as good as the best materials and 5O years’ paint-making experience can produce, Fnere’s © cpectal Minnesors, Paint for, every palatedle auriace- > ‘ FOR SALE BY LOMAS HARDWAREICO. 9 and 99 | churches, but no railroads. | ats nS e? {at connection is maintained by a | baths! BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PERSHING, IN SPOTLESS WHIT CANAT, OPENED AGAINST CITY SPEE Chief of Police Martineson Also!) Warns Motorists to Burn is after moto withovt headli and those. w sre the ce sts in street, intersections and cu’ rom now on ¥ not hts showing and not turn co: said the chief of po- many little s and si nt, sunshir ently are found in the streets. parents snould---and, neariy ail yarents do their children g in the streets, the| motorist ould also remember that 1 little child’ may suddenly dart in re street and if his automobile is twenty-five miles an hour it{ may be impossible to avoid the child. We have had no serious automo- bile accidents in the last two weeks, and we don’t want to have any. Ev- ery member of the police force is in- structed to enforce the law without favor in an effort to curb the few reckless drivers,” EX-KAISER MOVES TWO TRUCKS OF BOOZE AND \ ‘60 VANS OF FURNITURE Continned Prom Poge Omer ing than Amerongen, 10 kilometers to the east. Whereas Amerongen is dull and grubby, with one street, one church and one inn, Doorn is several times as large and is a village of neat villas and fine homes. Doorn’s curving main street, clean as a whistle, has a brick-paved road- way flanked by big trees and little shops. There are two hotels three Doorn’s and ‘stoom-tram” (two passenger coaches drawn by a steam engine), which grunts and clangs and puffs and wob- bles its way through the village sev- eral times each’ day between Driezerg- en and Arnheim, From Saturday noon to Sunday night Doorn is at its gayest, which isn’t terribly gay. Then the inns wake up, Wicycles, automobiles and motor- cycles come up. Fattish Dutch ladies emerge with very pink faces and hats | too high on’ their heads. ‘They ~sit about, sipping and chatting, but never of Mr. and M Ex-Kaiser, whose im- minent moving in will soon make Doorn a Mecea of the curious. Dutch Don’t Even Notice Him. The tables were quite full today when Herr Hohenzollern, returning from his limited three-hour ‘permis- sion” at Doorn. House, cut round the “hotel porch in his olive green car wita his chin-strapped chauffeur. No one so much as glanced up! In America the olive car would have been trailed by a hundred newspaper- men and panting cameramen. I was the only one who‘stared, ‘and the two guards on bicycles, riding ‘be- hind the olive tar, stared back forbid- dingly. The day I surprised him at the gate of his new place, the surprise and the consciousness of being looked at, lent a certain sprightliness to the fallen monarch’s ‘bearing. Today, unawarg of any eye upon him, he made me think of an old, faded-gray wolf I once saw behind the bats of a red-and-gold circus wagon. His new place at Doorn has 60 hec- tares of ground and more than 50: rooms. It has a private chapel on the place. It date svom,the twelfth century. He bought it from the wid- owed Baroness van Heemstra for 500,- 000 gulden—that’s $200,000— and he has astuonded his Dutch workmex vy putting baths in the house and build- ing servants’ quarters, also with Remodeling Costs Huge Sum. It is costing a fabulous sum to en- large and remodel the place. Wilhelm is having a hard struggle to ensure privacy, The “church path” has ex- isted for hundreds of years, and is now the public's acknowledged right. One road that flanks an end of the Property has likewise become ‘com- mon.” And he has had to build a bi- cycle path for Doornites on a certain | WRITING HIS BOOK? { HE SEES PUBLISHERS | N. E. A. Staff Special. | Amerongen, Holland, May 18.— | | Tt is reliably stated that the-ex- | kaiser‘has recently received at the’ | Bentinck castle, the heads of two | large printing works.. This has:|j} | revived the reports that he is | working on a book, defending his | course before and during the war. | Some reports say the book is to be | | | {published soon; others say it is to | | be published only after his death. | + & gPERFECT Santi. WITS REAL BMEANING ¢ ‘AND HOW TO” ATTAIN IT / This wonderful bookwill be sent ies ftoany mah upon re- que: CUMBERLAND CHEMICAL (0, Fenn fg ‘7 DERS| Panama—General Pershing looked the picture of real summer- time, in his white uniform, when snapped on the balcony of the| presidential palace in Panama City, while conversing with Presi- dent LeFevie of Panama: Pershing is making an extensive study of the fortifications in the canal zone. : part of a road upon which his fence. where without permission from. the slightly encroached. on his own tand, for he dare go no- — ZONE THE {government. He is a man without a ance. ©1000 7 ‘ambassadorial pay would seem to be | emphasized by this advertisement | trial conference board‘ of Boston, tlie Also, he will be literally a prisoner country, in Holland ‘only on suffer: | Which appears in a ‘London ‘paper. j cost of living has increased 95 per “Privy councillor’s, or ‘first class dip-| cent from July, 1914, to March, 1920. How to Keep Baby “‘* See that the daily functions are regular and normal ‘OU can’t’ expect the little \) Y ones to be happy and play- ful when the head feels dull and the ‘stomach bloated. The normal habit of children is to be happy and when you notice them . cross and fretful you will usually find constipation is responsible. Perhaps they have missed that daily function so necessary to comfort and health. Look at the tongue and see if the breath is bad. Watch for belching. These are the tell-tale symptoms of con- stipation. Tonight give a little of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, which you can buy at any drug store, and it will act in the morn- ing and the troublesome symp- toms promptly disappear. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is ” of being without a bottle in the house for the emergency arises 4 almost daily when it is needed. In spite of the ‘fact that Dr. Cald- a combination of simple laxative well’s Syrup Pepsin is the largest selling herbs with pepsin. Unlike the liquid laxative in ehe world, there harsher physics it acts gently and being over 6 million bottles sold each without griping so that while 47, many who need its benefits have grownups can use it freely it can ot yet used it. If you have not, send also be given to a tiny baby with your name and: 8 for a free trial perfect safety. Thousands of to ‘Dr. W. B. Caldwell, srr American families would not think _ Washington St, Monticello, Illinois. GOOD BUY FOR ANY | lomatie, rich gold-embroidered: POOR AMBASSADOR | dress coatee in good condition. Coda be converted into ambassador's.’ London.—Te plea ‘for an increase in| They used to calla man a‘sport” when he bought an automobile HAT was before the days when pretty nearly everybody owned one—or could, if he wanted to. There was a lot of waste about motoring in those days. A man spent a lot of money on his car and never thought very much about what he was getting in return. r ‘When a man-buys a tire nowadays he has a pretty definite idea of what he ex- pects to get out of it. The dealer who sells him one that gives him Jess than he expects isn’t likely to get any more of his business. That's one of the reasons why we handle U.S. Tires— and recommend them to the Select your tires ace cording to the roads they have to travel: Insandy or hillycountry; wherever the going isapt to be heavy—The U.S Nobby. ROYAL CORD-NOBBY-CHAIN-LISCO-PLAIA ‘motorists of this community. Ml The U.S. reputation for quality is not built on any one tire. ; There is not one standard for large U.S. Tires and anoth- ‘er standard for small on Every tire that bears the name “U.S.” is_built. the best way its makers know how to build it. The oldest and Jargest rubber concern in the world cannot afford to play favorites in secking its public. . Iv. Come in and tell us what you are looking for in tires. We can probably tell. you whether you need aU. S. Nobby, Chain, Usco, Plain, or a Royal Cord. : For ordinary country roads—Phe U. S. Chain or Usco. For front wheels— The U.S. Plain. For test results—every- where — U. S. Royal Cords. 2 United States Tires | C. W. HENZLER BISMARCK, N. D. Smiling and Well J According to the ‘National Indus- ys fult-

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