The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 25, 1920, Page 7

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Ae, ete tye " | WANT COLUMN | HELP WANTED —RALE ; K LIVE SALESMAN IN your ¥icinity with a car to sell our established, line of. oil and paints, Can offer d very attractive proposi- tion to the right man. Give age, pegsent occupation and ‘phone mum: INTERSTATE OIL & PAINT 0, ' East Hennepin & 33d Avenues. ‘Minneapolis, Minnesota 6-15-2weeks. $$$ WANTED_—A mine foreman, one why im: Ld a license from state:~ Also an. ch: gine combination and blacksmith. Several good miners and coal shovelers. Good. wages at Coalbank, N..D. On Mil. Ry. Steady employment. Good ac-) comodations, State ‘salary wantee: Cannon Ball Coal Con, Coalbank, N. _Main_ office, Mellette, te, 'S. I D. 6-21-; ‘awk BANK STENOGRAPHER—Good chance for, young man to learn ‘banking busi- neds. Former experience preferred. Location southwestern part of state. Minot Employment Service, Minot, N. D. 6-22-5¢ ALL AROUND BUTCHER ante at .once, Communicate with J. E. - Hoff- _man, Beulah, No, Dak. FLYING IN 8 Ron Dal col LC. AL Auto Schools, Los Angeles. 6-3-1mo HELP WANTED—FEMALE °_ WANTED—By July 1 good reliable wom- an as housekeeper on farm. Wages $10 per week. Steady position year round. J. A. Erickson, Blackwater, N. D. 6-22-1wk WANTED-—Girl for general: house work. Mrs. Sam-H, Clark, 36 Ave, A. 6-23-1lwk P i POSITION. WANTED W. onan tor Pista a as Lacaar et oct Phone 5: 2e-5t ee 2 ae ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Furnished or ‘unfurnished 4 room apt. in all modern house. Call at 801 7th St. or phone 300X. 6-1g-tf FOR RENT—Modeyn furnished rooms suitable for light housekeeping, good location. Phone 4421. FOR RENT—Modern_ furnished race Gentleman preferred. Phone 538% or ., call at, 505 3rd. 191 Wk FOR "RENT—Two rooms, all_modern. Suitable for light housekeeping. Cait 713 3rd. 6-23-1wk FOR RENT—Six room modern furnished house. F. H, Adams, 313 Ave. A. Phone _ 621K, s_ 6-28-3t FOR RENT—Two rooms suitable for light house Keeping. Call 767K or % 10th 6-21-lwk furnished 9 24-3t ¥OR REN ENT—Two modern. + rooms, Call at 218 2nd St. 6-2 FOR RENT—Newly furnished roms. Call 300 9th_St.\ Phone 377K. 6-25-1wk FOR RBNT—Modern room at 522 2nd St. : 6-24-3t' _AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—1919 Ford touring ca¥, good condition; run 3500 miles. Price $550. Call for Smith, Independent Garage FOR SALE—1 Overland, model 90, lent condition. Sell cheap. Address _16 Tribune. 5-22-tf FOR SALE—Ford Form-a-Truck, good conditiot Price very reasonable. 77 5-22-tf car.. Good con- City. 6-23-4t FOR SALE—One new “Auto Kamp” trail- er; equipped with beds and tent. Bar- gain. J. H, Brower, Pavgtiall, N’-Dak: = 25-6: ROOMS WANTED WANTED—Young man_ wants. one large unfurnished room in modern house with private family, suitable for'den. Best of references. Address P. O: Box 415. 6-24-1wk FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Nice house, chicken house, well and -5 acres of land, known as the Ferry place; situate about 22nd St. and Avenue terms. Geo. M. Register. a, ww 621-1 WK FOR REN’ ompletely furnished | 5- room*~modern house for six weeks. Write 102 care Tribune. 6-23-3t FOR RENT-—House 5 rooms and bath furnished. Phone 916 or Room 20 City Natl. Bk. Bldg. 6-25-2t FOR RENT—July ist, 4 rooms and bath, unfurntshed modern apartment, Phone 2793 6-25-2t FOR RENT—Furnished 1 rouse for two months at 211 Thayer St. Phone Sal FOR T—F Paiste SPerEMGnE for two months, one 8 LAND :—320 acre farm, 16 miles 8. E. ck. Good location. Well im- |. Nice grove of trees. New eight room house. 175 A. in crop. If sold at once crop include@ at $40.00 per acre. Will also sell horses, cattle and machin- ery. G, Buckley, Glencoe, N. Dak. 6-23-1wk FOR ¢_SALE_At AT $10 PER ACR 705 acres southeastern Saskatchewan prai- srie land. This land is crossed by run- ping water, and is located three miles from good railroad town. Terms cash. . Hanson Bros. Co., ‘Ashland, Wis. 6-i8 > }-18-10 ________MISCELLANE®US _ WE_COLLECT CLAIMS, NOTES / AND ACC! OYNTS anywhere. No charge un less We collect, Our ‘continuous, ‘skil- ful, systematic, intelligent and per- sistent service gets you the cash, you need in your business. Write or call American Mercantile Agency, Roo HA City National Bank Bidg. * 6. Phone 6. -7-1m0 For SALE—Pure Extracted Sweet Clov- er Honey. -10 {b, pail, $3.65; 5 Ib. pail, 2 90, by mail prepaid to any post office in North Dakota. Case of 94 sections of choice som. honey $7.95, by mail. Cash with order. Clark W. Allen, Bi Timber, Mont. 8-1mo-1w! FOR SALF—We will give you.a bargain ‘on one Oliver and one Remington type- writer; also on twelve reels of Motion Pieture Rembrandt Studio, 131 _ Fifth St FOR SALE—40_ bushels. of select Ohio. seed potatoes, at $6.00... 1 cares at “Menoken "Farmers Bias Menoken, N.. D. f WANTED TO: RENT—Five or six room house,. modern or partly modern, by re- sponsible Feople. “Write Box, No. ahh lemargk; N. Bt FoR SALE One pale White cunees Geese; reasonable if taken now. ° Prize winners, Address 104 care Tribune ims. FOR SALE—Packard Piano, washing ma- chine, household furniture. Phone 230K. Call at 1024 Sth St. R. M. Halliday. 6-21-1wk FOR SALE—A small electric range guar- anteed to be in good congiron & 109 Washi n_ A’ 6-24-3t L Toll top. office desk. Call'619 2nd St, or Phone 510U. -24-2t FOR SALE—Practically new 3 Bactot electric stove. Call at 617 7th St. or phone 877. 6-24-Iwk FOR SALE—One perfection oil stove. two burner, Call 509 Eighth St. or phone 834R. 5-25-3t 4E—Second hand bicycle in good FOR S. condition. Call 558K after six o'clock. WANTED TO BUY—Four burner gas stove with oven. Call No, 103 Tribune: 6-24-t1 FOR SALE—New Perfection oil stove. Call 417, Mandan Ave. or phone £58. = 23-3t FOR SALE—Home bakery in Bismarck Call at 214 6th St. 517 9th St. 6-25-3t doing fine business, FOR SALE—Furniture. ee ee eee W. ‘D—Washing. Call 498R. —_—_—_—————————SS————=—==== A Paris physician says premature baldness is due to teeth trouble. No senator holding office was ever elected to the presidency. TONNAGE LACK CUTS NUMBER OF IMMIGRANTS “|More Than "10,000, However, /Come Into Unitéd States in One Week New York, June 25.—At the present. rate of immigration about 500,000 new citizens will arrive this year; ‘accord- ing:to the statistics given out at tho immigration station on Ellis Island. This is less than half the immigration during the pre-war years, the total for 1914 being 4.218,480. During the week ‘just closed: 10.527 aliens arrived. The number of arrivals, it was said, is being kept down by lack of. ton- nage. The steamship Battic, trom Liver: pool and Queenstown, landed 1,385 t] steerage passengers at the immigra- 8! tion station this: morning and the full force of -inspectors is putting them through the various tests. The great majority of the passen- gers on the Baltic were young girls from Ireland. Most of them stoutly denied that. they had come to: help solve the servant girl problem. “It used to be true that most Irish girls came to America to be domestics; but we are all stenographers today,’ re- marked one of-the girls while wait- ing ‘her turn-at the inspection desk. The overtopping proportion of wo- men aboard the Baltic was more than offset during the week by the ar- vival of nearly 2,000 reservists. Nearly 1.500 of these’ men were Poles who quit ‘the mining districts of America two years ago to fight with the Polish army. They were inspected and sent to Camp Dix,:where they were dis- charged. WAR MOTHERS OF STATE CONDEMN O'HARE RELEASE (Continued from Page One) ‘Mrs. Arthur C. McLane, Kenmare and Mrs. W..D.. McClintock of Rugby. Mrs. Jones President It.was 4lso decided that the third annual convention of ‘North Dakota chapter will be held at Lisbon, on June 23, 1921. Mrs. W. C. Cashman, of Bismarck. was the acting secretary of yester- day's convention in the absence uf Mrs. C. C.» Manning of Sheyenne. Officers elected for the ensuing year are as follows. State war mother, Mrs. Albert J. Jones, Lisbon; first vice War mother, Mrs. Arthur C. Mc. Lane, of Kenmare; second. vice war motver, Mrs. W. L. McClintock; rec ording secretary,, Mrs. W. C.-Cash- man, of Bismarck; corresponding sec- ‘retary, ‘Mrs. Frank Smith, of Lisbon; treasurer, Mrs. C. C. (Manning, of Sheyenné; historian, Mrs. 'E. B. Page, of Leeds, ‘and. auditors, Mrs. 0. /C. Serumgard, of Devils Lake; Mrs. O. W. Roberts of Bismarck, and a war mother of the Mandan chapter, not yet chosen. Mrs. B. F..Reese, of Devils Lake, retiring’ president of the war mothers, was given~a beautiful pin’ in token pf the members appreciation of her excellent. service. A number. of the war mothers ac- companied Mrs. French to Mandan today where a chapter of war mothers is being instituted. One of the features during the meet- ing was a luncheon tendered the war mothers at,the Country club. The decorations were unique and approp- riate. That Americanism’ is not a place, but a condition of mind and an ideal for which our boys fought, bled ‘And died, was the substance of the speech by Mrs. Alice French, of Indianapolis | and National War Mother. Always Ready “American War Mothers are the most patriotic organization of its class and thegstate and nation can at any time fan upon us and find us most loyal. I:am proud of the organization of War Mothers and that I am one of them. “I have an ambition to organize or help in the organization of Wer Mothers of the world. I hope taat we will be. the ‘strong force in peace, and\help put the world out of danger of: another war’ From the time we rocked the cradle we expected our boys to be American citizens and we cannot afford them to be taken. “We want our boys ourselves. This should bind us together-more closely both politically and socially. My blood often boils: the way we use the word Americanization. It is not a place, but a state of mind, a condition and an ideal and it is an ideal for which our boys, fought, bled and died.” Speaking of soldiers in the last war Who were of foreign .extraction, she added “and it is that ideal that; brought, these. people from over the seas. ‘0 come to our country and to realize that idezl. “We have. contributed not a little that these. people have not realized the ideal: for which they came.” Mrs. ‘Frefich spoke of the common tie ‘between war. mothers: of foreigd born soldiers in the United States army and.American-born- soldiers: In; her.opinion to little has been done to secure the friendship of these foreign born mothers and meet them-in their homes. The way to get a better un- derstanding with the war mothers of foreign-born soldiers and in a way settle the unrest is to get in closer touch with: them and the way. to do that she said is “because we like to talk of our boys.” “I conceived the idea of having foreign-born war mothers come into our organization and I found that was difficult as many of the husbands of these women would not allow them to, go into public.” Spread American Ideals I am sure that it woud be a good thing for us to feel that we can do a great deal more in keeping up Amer- icanism in our home and through these ideals and through our mother- hood make'the homes so pleasant that our sons and husbands would love to stay there and would rather stay here than anywhere else,” she said. “I want to say that I am a great admirer of the domestic-women who has stayed at home and raised a family. Some of the finest women, ; the very best women are some we? have not known until the war began drawing us more closer together with a.common tie. _“She-is the woman whose judg- quiet down this unrest and bring us \ ance ei oar homes. J think that the pega ‘swhtch ‘now confront th9; ater States are going to be: settled inthe Aimerican homes,” she said. Mirs. French told of her belief that when thé.men place the baHot in the hands of the women it was safe and; youd. neguaed to serve the country eip select men who do the ay feat for théir country and coun- try’s hohor @nd'who have the world's ‘peace. at heart. _ Mrs. Albert E. Jones, of Lisbon, who was elected state war ‘mother, also gave a short address. ‘ fe eee aes Ee i “WE'RE OUT TO WIN,” IS | SLOGAN OF LANGER- FOR-GOVERNOR CLUB (Continued from Page Oné) “Down in Mexico there are a lot of conscientions objectors right “now, who are the most hated of all men,” he said. “They are consid- sted lower than the lowly peon. y failed to accept thsir duty a a citizen, Must not the con- | jience of men who now are afraid for fear of the loss of a few dol- lars to fight this red-radicalism burn them? _They, too, are fail- ing to accept their duty as citi- zens.” Richard Tracy, city chairman. called the meeting to order and H. P. God- dard, county chairman, presided. BASEBALL | VERGE sober eensh scm AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Won Lost Pet St. Paul... 45-- 20 692 Minneapol 36 31 537 Milwaukee . 35 31 530 Toledo.. .. 33 30 524 Louisville .. 30 31 484 Columbus... 29 32 ATS Indianapolis.. .. .. 27 33 450 Kansas City... .... 19 45 297 NATIONAL LEAGUE V Pet. Cincinnati .. .. .. 582 Brooklyn BG Chicago 526 St. Louis. . 523 Pittsburgh. . 490 Boston.. .. 460 New York .. .. .. 439 Philadelphia.. .. AML AMERICAN LEAGUE Pet. Cleveland. 672 New York . 639 | Chicago .. 569 Washington 519 Boston... 500 St. Louis. . 483 Detroit... . 1345 Philadelphia. . 267 NATIONAL LEAGUE Brooklyn Leads Brooklyn, June 26. — Brooklyn bunched six hits for five zuns off Adams in the fifth and won, 6 to 2. Olson was hit over the left ear by a pitched ball and was knocked out for)‘ a minute. He was forced tg retire. Pittsburgh made 14 hits off Mam- maux, but he tightened in the pinches, the bases being full in three innings. Score: R. HE. Pittsburgh .. ..100 000 010—2 14 3 Brooklyn... .. [031 050 00x—6 13 2 Batteries: Adams, Meador, Ponder and; Schmidt; Mammaux and Miller. Giants Beat Vaughn New York, June 25.—New York made two out of three from Chicago, winning 3 to 1. The Giants broke ‘Vaughn’s winning streak of eight straight by driving him out in the first. Score: R. H.E. Chicago ,.... ..000-100 000—1 6 2 New York .. ..300 000 00x—3 10 1 Batteriés: Vaughn, Martin, Bailey and O'Farrell; Nehf and Snyder. Infield Defeates Boston Boston, June 25.—Poor infield work by Boston gave St. Louis a victory, 7 to 4. Boston knocked Schupp off_the mound, but Goodwin held the game safe’ Score: R. HE. St. Louis +030 000 301-7 9 0 Boston. 201 001 000—4 13 3 Batteries: Schupp, Goodwin and Clemenos; McQuillan, Eayres and Gowdy, O'Neill. Reds Beat Phillies . Philadelphia, June 25.—Philadelphia dropped to last place when Cincinnati evened the series by taking the final game, 5 to 3. Spectators surged on the field after te game and Neale is said to have spiked one of them, pre- cipitating a free for all fight. Score: R. HE. Cincinnati. --301 000 010-5 7 2 Philadelph ..100 011 000-3 9 2 Bafteries: Sallee and Wingo; Smith, Gallia and Wheat. 6 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION Knabe on Job Kansas .City, June 25.—With Otto Knabe. the new manager ofthe Kan- sas.City team at the helm and “Red” Ames ‘on the mound for Kansas City the téam broke a long losing streak that had cost the last hine games, and defeated St. Paul, 3 to 2. Score: - R. HE. St. Paul... .. ..000 000 200—2 7 3 Kansas City .. ..000 000 021-3 -9 1 Batteries: - Merrit, Halland Har- grave; Ames-and Brock. t Louisville Gets One Louisville, June 25.—By defeating Columbus, 5 to 2, yesterday, Louisville made it 3 out of 4 in the series. The game was called at 4 o’clock by agrée- ment to allow both teams to catch trains. Score: R.,H.E, Colunibus .. .. ..000 000 11-2 9 5 Louisville ,. .« ..110 011 1x—5 10 0 (Called at end of the eighth.) Batteries: McQuillan, Mulrennan, afid Hartley; Long and Kocher. i Hits in 15 Straight Indianapolis, June 25.—Whitehouse ‘was invincible in each inning except the rst and Indianapolis defeated To- ledo, 6 to 1. Zwilling and Smith hit homers off Brady. When Rehg hit safely off Brady in the third it marked the fifteenth game in which he had hhit safely. R. H.E. Score: Toledo.. .. .. ..100 008 000-1 4 2 Indianapoli: .002 012 10x—6 10 0 Brady and Murphy, Mc- Batteries: Neill; Whitehouse and Gossett. Northrop Beats Millers =>Milwaukee, June. 25. — Northrop pitched in excellent form and Mfl- waukee took the last game of the series from Minneapoils, 11 to 24 BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUNE ment can be relied upon and who can I Repu titan Candidate for U.S. rey WILL SPEAK AT. Tuesday Senator BISMARCK June 29th AUDITORIUM (POLITICAL ADVERTISEMENT) Everybody Welcome ‘ Lowdermilk and Hovlik were his, hard with men on the bases. «Fat steers, $7 fe: $16. R. HE! Score: { Calv. s steady, $5 to | Minneapolis.. ..020 000 000— 2 8 4, Stockers ,and feeders, slow and | Milwaukee .. ..200 010 26x—11 11 1 weak, $ $14. Batteries: Lowdermilk, Hovlik and, Sheep receipts, 800, Steady. Lambs, $6 to $15.50, Mayer; Northrop and Gaston. | | Wethers, $4 to $8. i | i} | f” MARKETS a > Ewes, $2 to $7. MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Minneapols, June 25.—-Flour un. | changed. Shipments, 60,501 barrels. Barley, $1.18 to $1.45. i Rye No. 2, $2.11% to $2.14%. 3ran, CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Chicago, June 25—Cattle receipts, 7,000; beef steers strong to higher; | bulk desirable kind at about season’ | high point, medium to choice selling! Wheat receipts 269 cars compared at $14 to $16.50. Veal calves slow. | with 118 cars a year ago. Hog receipts. 30,000. 10 to 15 cents! lower than yesterday; top, $15.90; bulk light butchers, $15.50. to $15.80; | 250 pounds ‘and over, $14.40 to $15.50; | Pigs, steady to lower, Oa Flax, Sheep receipt 5,000, bulk direct ; NOTICE To Pl PUBLIC to packers; fairly active, steady to) The City Commission will sit as an strong; choice native ‘lambs, $17} equalization board Monday ‘ evéning, bulk, $15 to $17; top ewes, $8.50; $6.50 to 8. bulk, | 28th,.1920. At this time any one d with thei essment may ae before them and make com- | plaint concerning same, Jun SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK South St. Paul, June: 25.—Hog re- ceipts, 5,500. 25 cents lower. | Range, $13 to $14.80. | Bulk, $14.50 to $14.65. | | Cc. L. BURTON, City Auditor. June 22, 23, 24, 25, 26. and 28. Cattle receipts, 2,000. AUDITORIUM “The Season’s Greatest Dramatic Event One Night Only suLy JULY Biss la ing Success Ten Years A-H-Woops presents LOUIS MANS IN THE SENSATIONAL ‘AMERICAN PLAY FRIENDLY ENEMIES a Samuel Shipman. end Aaron Hoffman Mr. Mann and his New York company come direct to Bismarck following a sensational run of 69 capacity weeks in New York city. Since leaving New York Mr. Mann and “Friendly Enemies” have piled one triumph upon another. y CURTAIN at 8:30 Prices 55¢ to $2.75 Published by order City Commission. THRIFTY PEASANTS R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph, C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 200 Trench have The law bans huge absinthe What to do Paris—The fig abt si thrifty red the thing out. nthe but there in the untr with absinthe? FE y are go- ing to blend it with-fruit and liqueurs. woe Sang EERE ‘Have you little secret in your cellar? Si fhe Six Best Cellars” | tonight. If you want a good bargain come and get ‘(CATTLE SALT at $20.00 per ton || DAKOTA HIDE & FUR Co. 9th and Main St. BISMARCK, N. D. at the Kltinge Canada wheat sur plus, this year is estimated at 150,000,000 bughels, FOR SALE-OR TRADE Quarter: section in north- eastern part of county for house in: city. Write 105, care Tribune. EA BROWN) Quality Grocer | 114 Fifth Street . * . WE DELIVER BY TRUCK Fresh Strawberries, Cocoanuts, Cantaloupes Bananas, Oranges, Grapefruit \ Head Lettuce, Néw Peas, Spinach, Tomatoes . Cucumbers, Radishes, Green Onions New Potatoes Fancy small grapefruit, per dozen Ivory Flakes. 8 packages for .... Swift Pride Laund Special, 10 bars for Ri Li Washing Powder. Special, 5 packages for .... Rhubarb, put up in No. 3 cans. Special,.2 cans fors.2 5.0 acti Seana ¢ saceen ait Ee Bulk pop corn. Special, ! * 2 pounds for .. 10 quart fiber pails. r Special, each 2c hocncescunsrts weso we ele aes ta 60c King wash boards. Fancy canned apples, No. 3. can. Special Imported Stewing Figs, per pound PURE HIGH TEST SWEET CREAM OEE HEE EERE HEE EEEL HEHEHE

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