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PAGE EIGHT BISMARCK DAILY TRIBU: WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1920 “TT WAS A BLESSING” SHS. ST, 2 a Mrs. Josephine Buschman Gains | JOSEP WOMAN WEATHER REPORT Twenty Pounds by Taking |* % 4 eae | |For twent our hours ending at noon, Tanlac and-Is, Now Enjoying | °°" “\7, * the Best of Health ‘Temperatur 48 ae Temperature 69 —— % Highest 70 i ttle 1 Lowest terday 57 “A short time ago I had little hopes |)’ é be of ever getting any better, but today | ee ere night. a I weigh twenty pounds more than {Highest wind avaloe 39-NW did and haven’t fel in many years,” well and strong Supe rs. Josephine | yo yong eure t Buschman, 911 North Fourth street,|, For North Dakota St. Joseph, Mo. , tonight and Thursday; : - _jer in the extreme northwest port ealth began to fail about two} i ory. | tonight. My Lowest Temperatures and 1 had | FATE +--+ ; Ff | Williston . a continual pe small vt! Grand Fork my back, and at times rdly able | Paul to get up or down. My liver was | Winnipeg sluggish, my circulation was So poor) yiajen, pau that my hands and feet stayed cold | Gy iog, and numb nearly all the time and | owitt often swelled up terri had ine iss digestion and ate so little 1 fell oft | *""** in weight a great deal. Gas would| form on my stomach and bloat me up | sito eee and often I had spells of d ness. [ | = wee just dragged myself around the house | CITY BUILDERS und often had to stop and lie down HOLD NATIONAL I could never sleep well at night and in spite of everything I could do 1 was gradually growing weaker. “T will always bless the started taking Tanlac. and liver are both in splendid con-| dition now d my back no longer |{ pains me. 1 have a fine appetite and | can eat just whatever I please with- | out any of suffering afterwards. I'm not troubled with diz spells; The summer s: now, my lost weight and. strength, leadershi S have returned and I feel so much bet-j wan City ter in every way I can do my house-) 3 work with as much ease as I could} jy, years ago.” Tanla old in Bismarck by Jos. Breslow in Driscoll by N. D. and J. H. Barertte in Wing by H. P. Homan and, in Strausburg by Strausburg Drug Co. : (Adv.) | ————————— | 8 hit . Over 300 live-wire chamber of co! day I Annual Session at Madi- Keniston, se ck Commer al club recently The school is conducted annua! for ten days each summer at for the purpose of training comm h degree of efficiency. Seotland Yard has an ingenious in-| merce men and commu strument, known a “metal detec-! gathered there to ex tor,” which detects arms in ships al-; periences and learn tempting gun-running operations. B hat | Yendering of greater service to thi ‘home towns and cities. The American City Bureau is PHONE 909 ducted by the Amer Bureau, from which George etary of the Bis- Generally fair lightly warm- ion 60 60 56 Meteorologist. SUMMER SCHOOL My kidneys; G, N, Keniston Attended Sixth re- turned is of more than usual interest. ly the Univérsity of Wisconsin at ,Madisoa er: m- ity workers ange @X- the staff of the American City Bureau, j combined with that of the Wisconsin school, could teach them about the! vin pe taken immediately on receipt ein an j organization which spends its time jand energy studying and improving 40644 Broadway civic procedure and commer elubd 4 5 operations. The magazine, “Ameri- The Bismarck Sign Co. |} ¢™ City,” is published under their j supervision. —— ———$— ——————————————————————— ese WANTED Furnished flat for short time, two to four months or longer, by responsible party.— 8. E. Bergeson & Son. Litt eet att ttt nt nttetemeenfe AUDITORIUM, MONDAY, Sept. 13 SEAT SALE OPENS Tomorrow at 10 A. M. IN milin Throug. A DRAMATIC TRIUMPH PRICES—Nights: Lower floor, $3.30; Balcony, first two rows, $2.75; next three rows, $2.20; four, $1. Gallery, first five rows, $1.10; balance, 50c.—“Smilin’ Through” brings a tender, optimistic message which runs like a thread of gold through a love story which has never had its equal in sweetness and power on any stage. SUTINTAVAOEAUESOANALAEAUAOEGRARARCUAEATEGEUOUECEAU UGA ire Advice HEN a customer asks our advice on tire equipment we recommend GOODYEARS. We know GOODYEARS will bring him back—not for an adjustment, but for more Goodyears. We maintain a complete stock of Good- year Clincher tires for light cars— sizes 30x3—80x314—31x4—Anti-Skid and All-Weather Tread. Let us start you on the road to real tire economy with a Goodyear. CORWIN MOTOR CO. ELECTRIC SERVICE AND TIRE C JUQUEGNOREEQEUEUGEROAGEROUESOOSAEAGSLOOGOREUUOGREUCGEROGOEROOGEUOUGAERGAGLUOAALUUAL UA EI IUAALUUGAGOUUAGSUONOEQGUOEUUUUOGLSSTUAGLAEUUAOUSUGAAEAUUANEGEUUOAGRUOUOAOAUEAEL UA hi \BISMARCK MEN'S | NAMES WILL BB} ON HONOR ROLL, Army and Navy Club Plans 4 Build Great Structure in New York City RELATIVES’ AID ASKED New York, Sept. 8—Delieving that the official casualty report issued ‘at Washington by the adjutant general can be supplemented to a great ex- tent by friends, next of kin and organ- izations with which the deceased were identified, the Army and Navy club of America is endeavoring through correspondence to compile a complete authentic list of the officers who died in the world war. The names, with other data bear- ing on the civil and military life of the men who made the supreme sacri- fice, will be preserved in a $3,000,000 memorial hall and officers clubhouse to be erected in New York City. Pla.s for the memorial, which ‘will be in the nature of a great patriotic center were announced a few days ugo by Rear Admiral Bradley A. Fis- ke, U. S. N., retired, president of the club. mong the men who will be memor- ialized in the beautiful building to be erected in New York, ‘are the fol- lowing: ‘ Capt. Addison B. Falconer,. Capt. John Wallace Murphy, and Major Frank L. Shuman of Bismarck; ‘ht. Howard R. Huston, Deering; Lewis, B. Thune, de: Lamere; Jo Hunt Reaney, Devils Lake; Lt. Ralph Dryden, Drayton; Lt. John G. Hubertz, and Lt. Thos. T. Russell, Fargo; Lt. Grant Andrew McDonald, Grafton; Lt. Lester M. Smith, Grand Forks; Lt. James Lester Cole, Ken- mare, and Lt. Edgar A. Fisher, Mi- not. The cooperation of the families of civic and community workers tO} tng deceased and of organizations in- cluding clubs, lodges, fraternities, business concerns and churches is re- quested in order to make the file i accurate as possible. Questionaires have been mailed to the next of kin of all officers whose names are now on the club file, and similar action of additions to the list. In this way it is hoped to secure sufficient mate- rial to compile a complete record of the service of each officer. Admiral Fiske earnestly desires that all persons who lost sons, broth ers or relatives who were officers in the war, ‘communicate with him at 261 Madison Avenue, New York. Leading architects of the country, working in competition will submit TAKE AC ‘TION TO i the plans for the building. The struc- ture probably will be erected around a central court or hall with bronze paneled walls, where the names and records of the 3,500 officers who died will be engraved. CROP ESTIMATE _ FOR YEAR MADE BY GOVERNMENT Capt. re be shipped ‘tonight to St. Paul for dren survive him, oe ———+. REVIVED NINE TIMES; | > M REVOLT AGAINST SOVIET’S RULE London, ' Se Several seri- ous revolts against the Russian soviet government have vroken out in the neighborhood of Mos- cow and have been surpressed with much bloodshed, says a dis- pateh to the Exchange Telegraph company, filed in Copenhagen yesterday, It quotes telegrams received ‘vom Riga. ASK ATTORNEY TO APPEAR FOR RAIL BODY IN LAWSUIT The majority members of the rail- road commission have asked Attor- ney-General William Langer to rep- resent the commission at the hearing before the supreme court on Sept. 10, when William Lemke asks that the railroads be enjoined from putting in- to effect the intrastate rates granted by the commission. The Attorney General was asked to designate F. EB. Packard to defend the commission in the matter. Railroad lines are charging the in- creased rates, but are keeping a sep- arate fund of the increases, as direct- ed by the supreme court, so that re- bates can be granted in the event a permanent restraining order is grant- ed. KICK IS FATAL TO TUTTLE MAN Ira Anderson, of Tuttle, died in a local hospital last night as the result of an injury received from a horse’s kick. Some time ago Anderson was work- ing on his farm, using a pitch fork. A horse standing near kicked the fork, and the handie of it struck And- son, puncturing the abdomen and piercing the intestine. He>yas taken to the hospital here, but leaRage from the pierced intestine slowly pokgoned him. The, body will burial. \ Mr. Anderson, was a farmer, about 36 years old. A\wife;and three chil- ] IS ‘OFFICIALLY’ DEAD =) Houston, Texas, Sept.; 8.—After coming to life nine times in the last year after he was thought dead, Granberry, unknown, except to the police, record, ; died here yesterday—and. was ' officially pronounced ) dead jthe physi- cians at the munigipal hospital. He has been almost buried a number of times, but in each case revived just before' being interred. STOP STILL SALE \ Washington, “Sept. 8.—In an effort. to end illicit distilling, of intoxicating liquér the treasury decided today to! tighten regula. tions around the sale of stills add another check to its means of tracing down jtheir users. EXPENSIVE “CUSTOMER” Ryder, N.. D., Sept. 8.—A salesman Western Electric Company Dear Sirs: “The only place where I know that perfection exists is in heaven and in patent medicine claims. I, will say though that most of the many farm light plants admit they're the best. Maybe I’m foolish, but I didn’t buy, any of these ‘best’ ones—I bought a ‘Western Electric. “I don’t believe a sane man would point to any one automobile made in America and call it ‘best.’ And doesn’t that apply to power plants too? Price enters, so do looks, pride and the purpose w you want;the plant for. “It seems to me that a farmer’s main purpose in getting a plant ought to be power, plenty of power. Any man knows what excess power in a motor car means on hills—but that: isn’t half as important as ample power in a farm plant. You cangoup a hill on second, but your farm work goes down hill un- sdess you have enough power to run the machinery. That's the kind of testimonial we like. It is part of a letter written us by Willis Cornell, of Baldwins- ville, N. ¥. Mr. Cornell bought one of our Power and Light Outfits about a year ago and writes some plain facts about it. Read his interesting letter below. Western § Ekettie Power & Light ‘No, this Outfit isn’t perfect— but it’s pretty darn near it”’ “with your Western Electric Power and Light Outfit you get an engine that runs smooth when you want it to run— and develops power a-plenty to operate all the machinery you’ve had to turn by hand. Byt an outfit is only as strong as the batteries “Nobody knows just how a. battery works. We don’t any more know what goes on inside a human being, but we do know what’s good for us and what hurts. It’s the same with cows or with batteries. If a battery takes current too fast it stalls on its food—a kind of electrical indigestion, I argue—and it’s a pretty expensive dyspepsia when you have to buy a new battery. “So I think the Western Electric method of regulating the charge is great. I should say I know it is, because my battery is standing up in fine shape. “So when you think of electrici 3»don’t think of light and stop there. Of course, the light is mighty handy, but it is The extra powerful outfit that saves time and money “With its extra capacity engine and ample generator the Western. Electric Outfit is an economy because it will do all the big and little chores around the place. “If you have a gas or kerosene engine on your place you know what a valve-in-head moter does to give more power, and how important it is to have an oiling 3: tem that works for sure. (That last is the difference between 20c a quart and burned out bearings at: $2.00 4 “J wouldn’t say any- body’s plant is the best, but I will say that if any man thinks he can find on my farm a better piece of machinery than the Western Electric Power and Light Outfit, why I’ll help him hunt. No this outfit. isn’t perfect — but it’s pretty darn near it.” Western Electric Power and Light pound.) . Owrfi—A Sirens drm on the Farm Are you interested in Power and Lisb! the:.can handle your heaviest work?, . Some good territory stil avaitable for live wire representatives. Lahr Motor Sales Co. . PHONE 490 DISTRIBUTORS 300 Fourth Street, North === URING the month of May, 1920 (latest figures obtainable), the gasoline production in the United States was 381,079,291 gallons, a daily average of 12,292,- Washington, D. C., Sept. 8.— The} made a deal,to supply a man who was corn prospects improved during Aug-| in the market for a quantity of Cana- ust and promised a yield of 3,131,000,-| dian , whiskey. * He delivered it, but 000 bushels, according to the report} the customer: proved to be a federal 880 gallons, the highest on record. of the Department of Agriculture} agent, made public today. The estimates of the crop yields for the year are based upon conditions prevailing on Sep- tember 1, or at the harvest time. The estimate of the other more im- portant crops are as follows: Spring wheat, 237,000,000 bushels, 64 percent of normal. ‘All wheat, 700,000,000 bushels, 74.1 per cent of normal. Corn, 3,131,000,000 bushels. Oats, 1,- 420,000,000 bushels. Barley, 195,000,- 000 bushels, 82.5 per cent normal. White potatoes, 413,000,000 bushels, 84.3 per cent normal. Flax, 11,800,- 000 bushels. Tame hay, 82,000,000 tons. 4 HUNTERS READY FOR THE SEASON Burleigh county sportsmen are pre- paring for the opening of the season next week. Already over 150 hunting licenses have been issued by the coun- ty auditor. Many people are purchasing new guns, despite the increased cost of all fire arms. A number of local hardware firms report that their stocks are practically cleaned out, | but that they have wired for express shipments, which will arrive this week, “700 LATE TO CLASSIFY | ° - —» FOR SALE—Dodge Touring Car, 1918 model, Cord Tires, first class condi- tion. Only $900.00. Northwestern Automotive Co. 9-8-1t FOR SALE—Ford Roadster and Ford Touring Car, in good condition, 1918 model, cheap. Northwestern Auto- motive Co. 9-8-1t FOR SALE—Overland Touring Car, Model 90 in perfect condition, with Bumpers and Spotlight. Call 305 North 6th Street. Phone 529R. 9-8-4t. WANTED—Two or three rooms for light housekeeping. Call 241U. 9-8-3t. WANTED — Two rooms, by married couple, no children. Call or write 0. B. Tewes, McKenzie hotel. 9--lwk. WANTED—Two rooms by married couple, no children. Call or write D, E. Stewart, McKenzie hotel. 9-8-1lwk. WANTED — Girl for general house- work. Mrs. F. A. Knowles, 16 Ave. A West. Phone 169R. 9-8-lwk FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- ern house, 921 5th St. Telephone 5. 9-8-3t FOR SALE—Hupmobile Model R 1919 in first class condition, run only about 5000 miles, must be sold at once. A bargain. Inquire O. K. « Garage. 9-8-4t FOR SALE—Large refrigerator, beds, chairs, dressing tables, etc. Phone 308K. 38 Ave A. 9-8-2t | FOR SALE—240 acre improved farm. | , Manager. | Address 138 care Tribune. 9-8-2wks, The man was fined $1,000. The forests of Western Siberia are stated to be 200,000,000 acres in ex- tent. o ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” is genu- ine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an unbrok- en “Bayer package” which contains proper directions to relieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism, Colds and ain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger “Bayer pack- ages.” Aspirin is trade mark: Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Business Chance AT WILTON, N. D. Restaurant doing a business of $50.00 a day with good prof- Its. Other business reasons for selling.” Will sell for $650.00 for quick sale. If you are. look- ing for a good business propo- sition this is your chance. Phone or wire; do not write. Address JAMES W. MAREK, Wilton Cafe, Wilton, N. D. ° NOTICE TO TYPEWRITER USERS Harry Herschleb, expert’ service man for the Rem- ington Typewriter Co., will be at the McKenzie Hotel all week, where he will be glad to take care of your typewriter troubles. Just phone 258. All work guar- anteed.—Remington Type- writer Co., Geo. C. Kettner, ~ Makes the Battery last longer (Bureau of Mines.) The rising tide of petroleum consumption may be taken as an indication of increased in- dustrial activity and of the ex- tension of power farming. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana), serving eleven Middle Western States where both agricultural and industrial production are high, is bending every effort of its vast and ex- perienced organization to pro- duce sufficient gasoline to meet the rapidly rising demand. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) refineries are working intensively to obtain the maxi- mum of gasoline from every gallon of crude oil. Not only are the methods in use by the Company the most modern known, but they are carried on with that maximum of economy attendant upon large- scale operations. Distribution of petroleum products by the Standard Oil mpany (Indiana) is both comprehensive in development and economical in practice. The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) offers its highly developed efficiency as a serv- 7 ‘9 the people of the Middle Siandard Oil Company (indiana) 910 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago, Ill. “”