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of the city’s children this year are greater than ever before,” Super intendent Martin Says. Three add. tional teach have been secured and the new), H. Richhold building will be ready for occupancy about’ Oc- | tober 15. Buildings Renovated The school buildings have been gone over and all necessary repairs made during the summer. The rooms have been thoroughty cleaned and ; some of them painted. As a sanitary measure the tops of all the desks yhave been varnished during the sum- mer. The F. H..Richholt school building, named in honor of a Bismarck sol- dier killed in the late war, is now nearing completion. It has been er- ected at a cost of over $90,000 and when completed will accommodate about 200 students. Who Will Attend It. A careful survey of the district 1 been made by. J. M. 3 i ¢ tendent of schools, and the. decisiou reached that for the present it seem- ; ed advisable to use as a dividing line. CITY SCHOOLS — # Enrollment of 1650 Probable This Fall; Three Additional. Teachers on Force Wh i ~NEW BUILDING OPENS More Boys Than Girls Now En- rolled; Make the Bismarck Schools Unique The Bismarck schools will ope®}.. jine rauning from the’ Capita Monday morning, September 6,, wiih srounds south on Ninth strect ts probably 1650 hoys and girls enrolled.! \\venue A, then east on Aventte A te All teacher's positions | have been | yenth street. and south to the North- filleg and the school buildings place] orn Pacific tracks. in réadiness for the coming year. This ans tha h children of “The educational facilities ‘at 'thé ‘dis- leh aeane that inane grade school age, living in that dis- ¢ will be included as the future w Richholt sc zhoo|. i vill do imuch tov? lieve the congestion in the Will aie Wiliiem | Moore s spools, according to Mr. TERRIBLE ACCIDENT It was a terrible accident when John Brown, Jr:, of Rich- ' mond, Va., chopped off. his lit- tle finger on his left hand the first time he made American _ Chop-suey. In regard to. acci- dents, I was going to say, in sixty or ninety days from now it will be almost an accident if ‘person can buy a home.with- out paying a sky-high price for it, say nothing of renting. How- ever, I have a strictly modern house of 6 rooms and bath; east ‘front; large lot; centrally locat- Bi This property is really forth $6,500, but for quick. sale, + $4,700.00. One-half ‘cash. Per- tudents attending require the sery- thing for there to be more girls th boys in a ¢ity’s schools,” Mr. Martin uite like-) job some- said today. “The boys a ly to go out and secure where and quit school. “But Bismarck is unique in this re- spect. Last year we had 773 boys en- rolled and only 748 girls. The boys ning too, because in the », 1918-1919, the number of boy enre ed was euual, there “There must ‘ther be more boys shan gifs nere or else they are ing in school,” Mr. Martin conclud ne ceoSas suoWws-—that there are 1770 children of school age in the ¥. Some of these will, of cour end parochial Last year wn hools. .sonal interview. only. here were 1516 students enrolled in p 4 he public schools. The gain over Ist door east of post office. he yeat Def was 120. Superin- rtin states that he expects year will be about would bring the ‘endent he incre the same, _J: Hy HOLHIAN, which 1920-1921 enrollment up to 16356 stu dents. The Teachers. It is impossible as yet to secure a | complete of the teachers: who wi have places year, but news has been received from some ef them. Principal C. F. s in the city. schools this Bolt, with his w ind. daughte Louise, will n Bismarck Tuesday “noon ieme at the corner of Ninth street and Avenue D, which was occupied by Mrs. Stratton during the summer Ss vacunt now, the Strattons having moved one door south. Prof. R. Neff and family have been spending the summer with his ather ov his farm near-Wikhart, Ina Vhe Neffs started for Bismarck by motor car on August 26. Harry. E.. Aseltine, .who has for 3ome years successfully coached the basket ball team at Casselton, will NN SEE WHAT YOU’VE urrive next week with his bride of 2 SAVED few months to take up his work as commercial teacher and director of uhletics. having us keep’ your ‘shoes Other Changes, by . Pp yo Miss Isabelle Campbell, for ten in repair this year? Just figure how much you save in not buy- ing a new pair, every time we re-sole and re-heel your old shoes.: It’s surprising how those years a successful teacher at Ken- re, has been employed to succ Miss: Rosewaall in the fourth gra of the William Moore schook Miss Uampbell’s home is at Sheldon, Iowa. Miss MabelA. Knudson, of San Di- savings accumulate. Best of it] ego, Calif, will be a teacher in the is, shoes repaired by us look’and| new F. H. Richholt school, She ar- 4 i rived recently and is visiting an wear as well as shoes fresh- uncie, Arthur Knudson, who lives fromthe shoe factory. JOE CREWSKY SHOE SHOP 109 3rd St. near here. Coming Later. The many friends of Miss Mary A. Boyson, supervisor of music in the Bismarck schools, will be sorry to jJearn that she underwent a serious ‘operation at the Mayo brothers hos- Phone 898 pital early in August. The operation A DELICIOUS, finely flavored drink that really satisfies. A glass of “Glix’ with meals, be- tween meals on scrved with that “late lunch” is ideal. It pleases the eye, has snap and sparkle and it’s pure, that’s sure. es in an hea light and dar Keep a case on hand. Order it now. Made by THE .GLUEK CO... Minneapolis. =” Dealers 4 sui pplied by CAPITOL CITY BOTTLING WORKS | i i »{ Vienna and is | Stutsman Towner | provea successful and Miss Boyson has gone to her sister's home at Shel- don N..D., to recover her health. She will be able to return to her workithe | latter part. of October and ‘her posi- tion here’ will be held open ‘pending her return. Miss, Dorothy Skeeles, assistant in the kindergarten during the past year, will have for the state normal | school-at La Crosse, Wisconsin, soon, where she willistudy physical educa- tion in preparation for teaching that subject. Ne lember on Board, The departure of Cecil Burton for the east will leave a vacancy on the board of education. This will be filled by the board at. their’ next meeting, as they have the power appoint a member to fill a Vacancy: Richard Penwarden, clerk of the board, stated today. that the board would probably meet sometime next veek, though the exact date was un- certain. “Many of, the board ,mem- hers are out of town,” Mr, (Peuwardety }. said? VIENNA CENTER FOR AIR ROUTE ACROSS EUROPE Allied Air Navigation Firms Us- irig Field Near City for Great Traffic Center in. 6 minutes and 380 secnds. iuSe WAR AERO FIELD) icc. should the. Rumanians have back their homes. At the end of the twelfth Me about! Was photographed, as well as some lifficulty with the Russjan bolsheviki; “So a new war will inevitably come; 120 miles, he was leading, with an| oat fields on the Angrus Falconer Vienna, Aug. 28.—If plans now over the old province. of Bes-| out. of this homelessness and hatred ayerage speed of 78 miles ‘per hour,| farm, which will run around‘ 100. iakine’ oxo "ec elea’ outcV ‘i sarabia, “this will be’ a. sig-!and poverty. In Slovakia the Czechs] Milton was second, Murphy was| bushels to the acre, aking are carried out Vienna will} pal for the Hungarians to get bac {have tried. to. rule, by arms but the|third, Milford) was’ fourth, and O'- become one of the great centers at European air. navigation. When soon after the conclusion of hostilities England, France and Italy prepared to girdle and criss-cross Surope with air routes, it looked as f Austria Were to be left out alto- zether in favor of friendly countries, the lanes being laid out via Prague in the north and south over Italy, Lai- bach and Agram. With the arrival here or various missions and an un- i geographical location of Vienna but j This field is only a few miles from derstanding not only of the favorable also of its existing ~ facilities, the scheme has been changed to center many of the lanes here. trol in Austria, takes this view and vors the use of the great Aspern wiation field as a central station. abundantly equipped with hangars and repair shops, gaso- line tanks and all the paraphernalia of a great war pla Companies subsidized by the Bri sh government are ‘arranging for an air line from London by way of Brus- sels, Coblenz, Munich, Vienna, Buda- pest, Belgrade and Sofia to Constan- tinople. Vienna is exactly in the cen- ter of this route, which is 2,400 ItHo- ‘meters long. . One of the officials of the British Vickers concern has been here per- fecting an arrangement with the Vi- enna Aircraft Navigation Company | to*care for the service between Mu- vich and Vienna and Vienna and Bud- apest. This contemplates care of planes at Agspern, their repair, tran- shipment of cargo when» necessary and looking after passengers, Who will be brought by-motor to Vienna hotels and back to the Aspern field. Service Now Opened. While the London-Vienna-Constan- tinople route represents the great West-East line, the North-South route planned from Berlin by way of Graz, Klagenfurt or Trieste, Udine and Padua,, connecting there with Milan, to Rome. Both Graz and Klag- enfurt have first rate aviation fields. In Germany it is reported the Lloyd Air Service has pooled ihterests with the North German Lloyd and is un- derstood te~have concluded arange- ments with the Vienna Aircraft Na- vigation Company for the latter to take entire charge of its interests on Austrian territory. Offices: already have been opened here and regular airplane trips to nearby points of interest have been inaugurated. CITY PROPERTY VALUE BOOSTED BY STATE BOARD (Continued from Page One) The action of the ‘board’ on) farm lands was as follows: aa Car Jom 2 iy g2 . 88° 88 gp NURS? “ Ong iper bo] Bo oy we ma og a ce fs Bs Re tel, as so 18 Bo Pts paul Bs Bg aay Ss :® 4 Adams on crease crease @ increase $% decrease decrease increase % decrease decrease decrease ~ @ decreasé decrease @ decrease 'o Change Ransom. Renville 13% Fo decrease Richland 3% decrease Rolette 5% decrease Sargent Jp decrease Sheri decrease Siow. 3% increase No Change 6% increase 2% decrease 81% increase 1% decreas 2% decrea: 2% decipase 3%, decrease 2% decrease... fo dggrease gary NEW WARS WILL STRIKE EUROPE IS CLAIM MADE Former President of Solvakian Republic Says Wars Are GERMANY STORM CENTER ‘zechs ‘zechs, will join the Saxons, while the Austrians will join the Bavarians, per- haps. Hopé tor Taian Action “There will be a, war between the Poles and the Czechs, as the latter lave an understanding with the »ios- “OW gov wi) help the Poles, ,in ofder ‘o get back Slovakia, one Transylvania. well that the Allies can’t help the ‘zechs in a military. way, and per- haps wouldn’t if they could. “The point that troubles’ the Hun- garians most is the possible attitude of the Serbs should the Hungarians engage in a_new war. They hope that ‘taly_in the Serbs. first strengthen themselves by helj- | ing the monarchists in Austria to oy- erthrow that republic, and then both be joined anew under Emperor Char- helped. les, the case with Serbia might be, it is possible that Hungarian sol-| gradual lessening of energy, the|general tonic.and system builder. diers lately mobilized at Miskolez will] system becomes weaker day by Tt improves. the. appetite. and gives New War Inevitable cross over and then the Czechs will; day, until you feel yourself oa the|new strength and vitality to hoth War Plant Used. “Hungary isin such*a. condition “t| be driven out.” verge of a breakdown. old and young. It__is understood that. Colonel present that she can't abide by the! — This whole condition is but the} Full information and valuable 3arres, chief of Allied aviation con- Two-|' Karly races were result of impurities in the blood | literature can be had by writing to frontiers of ‘the peace treaty. i 8 Budapest, Aug. 28.—Central Europe ind Germany will surely, be war and politieal opinion of Victor Dvorcak, resident of the Slovakian ‘or a period of a few weeks previous othe annexation of Slovakia by the in j n, the United States invited him to | ii isit them this summer. “I have just completed a tour of ul Europe,” hese storms nany will break up into the small | EATR F BISMARCK —- THEATRE —— TONIGHT ONLY Douglas Fairbanks BUCKEROO ELMO LINCOLN “ELMO THE FEARLESS.” —— THE NEW.—— ELTIN Last Time ‘To Katherme ie “PASSION’S PLAYGROUND” Monday Super-special, “The Copperhead” t Inevitable’ a, storm .centers. soon, in the who, was republic November 1918. Slovaks said. Mr. Dvor are in the “and | & Ger- |" hundred, years ago. The ans now held by the 55 seconds between the first and fifth { men. DE PALMA LEADS FIELD STARTING The crowd officially estimated at ELGIN RO AD RACE! history ot the’ coe, wn it istart of the races. hy the Czechs, Serbs, and Rumanians, ; the, latter getting nearly one-third. der population has been cut from 2Q- 400.000 to 8,000,000. These 12,000,000 under’ new domination are being rob-' bed and mistreated by their new ma ters, until many flee to Hungary prop- er, “This has made.a big, dissatisfied population. which has. noSmoney or| work, or any future unless they win} 2 Elgin, Il. ee — Ralph de Pal- ma, the firs tto start in the Eighth] G. W. Gustafson and George wit Elgin National road racos, made, Je! Were out yesterday supervising. the first lap of eight and one-half miles; Photographing of some of Burleigh county’s best harvest scenes.’ »Cotn ernment. In this war Hun- her prov locally enrolled soldiers are pe is to the forests. Communism hag been declared by workmen in the centers about Kaschau. The peasants who used each year to go to the plains wry, to fill the soil gather the harvests are not now allowed to cross the frontiers. So they must starve this winter, Already they have but two pounds of bread per month. | Czech speculators and carpet-baggers are cutting down the magnificient forests. | “Should disorders break out there, The Hungarians know Donnell was fifth. USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS There was only if You Are Easily Tired Out, Your Blood Needs Purifying si:tance in giving the system. & general housecleaning. Nearly everybody just now, needs a few Bottles of S.S,.5. to cleanse the system of impurities. S. §. S. is without an equal:as a such case. would threaten Shauld. the Hungarians Clogged-up Impurities Will Under- mine Your Health. The first symptoms are usually a loss of appetite, followed by a Swift Specific Co. Atlanta, Ga. indicate numbers by their fingers, | that show that nature needs as- r teritory peen taken The “Reds” Are ' i On The Run . The gallant struggle of the Poles to save their capital from capture has at last been crowned with success, and the Bolshevist reverse bids fair to become a rout, according to an arresting article in this week’s number of THE LITERARY DIGEST, dated August 28th, on this spectacular turning of the tide of war. The Minneapolis Journal is quoted as saying that “the Bolshevik, menace to Western civilization, if any, is now political,” while an Eastern paper is sure that “Bolshevism .has. shot? its bolt.” The Newark Evening News asserts that the “lowering of Bolshevism’s prestige will naturally be followed by reactions within Russia,” and the New York World declares that “it was-not merely a battle that Poland won in front of Warsaw, but the right to assume a position of equality at the peace table.” Other articles of more than usual interest in this number of THE DIGEST ARE: THE AMERICAN WOMAN VOTER ARRIVES A Summary of Opinions From Friends and Foes of the Suffrage Amendment Called Forth by the Recent Decisive Action,of the Tennesse Legislature Topics of the Day Who Will Build Five Million Homes?- Paying Moré for Expressage France’s New Ally © Fishing in the Salton Sea Health on Tiptoe The Commercial Value of Sunshine Putting Argon to Work Recalling the Romantic Drama British Labor’s War on War ‘Bursting of the Ponzi Bubble How Will the Turkish Treaty Work? Canada’s Care for Her Veterans | France’s Terrible Black Troops Sizing Up the ‘American Musical | Invasion of London " The Work of the Junior.Red Cross Canada’s Labor Church Bolshevism, “Aristocratic” and “Mili- | Medical Literary Criticism xs ee tance ; | Wilbur Wright in France Villa, Subdued Bandit, Devotes Him- | The Church’s Duty to the Leper self to Ranching | A Convict’s Defense of Prison William Marion Reedy’s Last Story; Cruelty, Trees as Home-Makers and Canada’s Absent-Mindéd Premier Memorials Best of the Current Poetry Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Maps and Humorous Cartoons August 28th Number on Sale Today—News-dealers, 10 Cents—$4.00 a Year