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. a —— PAGE FOUR BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE, WED. DAY, DECEMBER 29, 1920 | { THE NEW ELTINGE BISMARCK The Theatre Beautiful THEATRE = - Tomorrow Enid Bennett in “HAIRPINS” “Don’t mind your husband,” laughed their ‘flip’ little friend. “Come get acquainted with some real man.” And Husband, never dream- ing that his “home-body” wife had learned of his escapades, was taught a lesson that tamed him, for good. A Zippy Domestic Romance of Love, Life and Fashion. Tonight and Tomorrow Matinee Daily at 2:30 Ethel Clayton In “THE LADDER OF LIES” Hoping to save another’s home and love from wreck, she took on herself the blame for a false wife's es- capades. Then love came to her, and— You'll want to see what happened after that. Charlie Chaplin Friday in “THE IMMIGRS Wallace Reid in “WHAT’S YOUR HURRY” ~ Friday “The Son of Tarzan” LIBERAL TO ITS HIRED M $42,500 _ _$20000 DIGKINSON IN CLASH TONIGHT Hight School Basket Ball Teams Play Bismarck and Dickinson — high school meet tonight at 8:30 o'clock in the high school gymnasium. The game, which will be refereed by C. L. Robertson, state high school inspector, will be called promptly on schedule time. The game ought to be close, based on indications of comparative scores. Dickinson beat Glendive, Montana, 24 to 19 and Bismarck beat Glendive 28 to 15. “UDGE KML K.M.LANDIS. TRIS SPEAKER $500 POO $20000 Cleveland to Start New Ball Year With About Same Taiieup) Cleveland, O., Dec. 29.—The Cle’ land American Leegue team, winne of the world’s championship, will pro- bably start the 1921 season with sU)~ stantially the same line up as they wound up the 1920 race. James C. Dunn, president of the club is satisfied with the team just as it is and will stand pat on the lineup for} next year’s campaign without looking for a single addition to his regulars or substitutes. “They were strong enough to win’ the world’s pennant and look good enough to me to be able to repeat.” pas said President Dunn, “so why should I Jook for new material? BABE RUTH By Dean Snyder y pre 1 sas a home-run hitter. il p its hired men well. ; worth more When President Navin of the De-| at the salary whieh the “Our battery men showed them- (oil club said “Siem here.” Ty Coy selves to be the best in either league) became Jast season; our outfielders, both in’ baseball. fielding ald hitting, were the class’) His serv of the season. Joe Sewell, who took er and ma Ray Chapman's place at shortstop has per. Ty and Cuba have netted him over all the necessary qualifications to fil dust one of the boys in the lineup last | 900. Profit trom the Babe Ruth ci; that position, making our infield, both yea. will add another $5,000, His lite in defense and offense, as good as any He ranks am story sald for $3,009, Honuses for ine in the game.” mar now, Johtj dorsing icles brought him another eae McGri is id to r : stipend |iump of $2,000, APPLAUSE CAUSED 2%, fm ime cater, of tel | Ram & KNOCKOUT IS ALIBI", | whose earnings ¢ 1905, Cobb came to De- | ring champions shy "A e es troit frem Augusta. ‘The price paid! Contracts by the score were waiting Chicago, Dec. 29.-Whenever a ring a ‘ eH H i 8 slay is begten, an alibi ig offered in hig 208 the Georgia jewel was $700 for lim to sigh when he, finished the s aten, and s © E a a Tie ¢ cason wilh the Yankees 4 defense, Jt remained for Stanley sn mts pay Hs Dis wed aa en the Yankees: a puld Everett, a featherweight of Pekin, I1., ae nga Ile is Yankee their star is mer money What he has made ins the highest paid player in) line ptalizing his reputation as home-run hitter $50,000, tshibition sto the Tiger are valucd at $18,000" for best pai bu ing Tncome tostar in baseball ud the incomes of ‘ See tir Cost, of Judging Jitat he wis to Bive un eNtirely new and distinctive ing on ih fae Ho frome the I ‘on a h ; r om sale ngle is Judge Kenesi foun- | die Collir elt sshos tno bis Ue ik Witl yy midis; the -pnesman. hascball (eid ik Harry Bamer of Kansas City, TiSvenE ai aUTioSacts| ae Springfield, IL, was knocked out in} oe pank roll is $42,500 with $10,006) the $1 the first thirty seconds, declares that | an adm perched in a gallery seat, was responsible for his quick defeat. | The Pekin boxer asserts he had just| started to squ ay when the gal-| 5, wih s his money the r fraveling expenses I retains his seat on which he 7.500 g his pay envelope ic in the thick of minute he holds will he The judge brawls ever base lery god yelled: the only oth {his job. Cobb and Speaker are re- Tear his head off, Stanley big leagues | sponsible for the standing of their re-| As Everett, glanced towards the |} gallery for a second to acknowledge | the greeting, Bamer crashed ov punch to the chin that knocked h clubs in addition to their duties. But all Babe has to ep into one and knock it io he is given credit for a; ork. ere all smart fellows. If they t be baseball's $20,000 for hi se winning a world ¢ hip for the fn check will probably | be Ruth gets a the New Yor © vaudeville or anything k SOTA U. TO. [fort as HAVE SKI TRYOU | soon as weather permits in course planned will . constricted in such y be extended later CAPSULES 24 HOURS MIDY Aiassero) fi) name aa ‘Berare of counterfeits j Helena Minneapolis, Minn. Dec -Wi » of the holiday rec at th f Minnesota will come the outs of the year. vented much run- mas. 1 rs interested in Lientenant G. E. Par- wn and Country club, Paul, and Colonel A. W.t commandant When the playing season arrives ! the will be forty offic at the -|fort. An inside putting green has | been co structed for winter use stad, sufficient promis he arranged with the Unive For Sale—Three full dress suits, one for aud other instittion s sport in their curricula. rent, size 40. = params s Phone 153 for the famous Wil- uineen FORT SNELLING TO jon Screened Lump Lignite Coal Kl in Tailor and 2 aes = a ton Screened Lump Lignite Coal. ein, | HAVE GOLF COURSE The coal that is all coal, no clink- | Cleaner | eate eee any ers, no soot, no dirt. $6 per ton { Snelling have amounced that» Gelivered. | Washburn Lignite’ golt course will be laid out at the! Coal Co. Phone 453. y | | 4 No’ Rain Sticks for Marines. Did you ever see a United States marine in uniform carrying an um- brella? Pedestrians on Sands street, Brook- lyn, caught a glimpse of a marine re- cruit carrying a contraband “bumber- shoot” during yesterday's rain storm, At the very outset of the recruit's journey two older marines met him, took the umbrella away from him, broke it up before his horrified gaze and gave him a severe lecture on mil- itary proprieties, There is no service regulation ta | prevent the carrying of umbrellas by uniformed men, but there is an un- written law of the marine corps which puts the taboo on the umbrella, | Her Preference. A few years ago Merom college had a young Japanese student, who after the fashion of all Japanese students, was very polite. He always spoke of his teachers as the “Hon. Professor S$." ete. One day the music teacher's sister came to visit her, and in time met the young Japanese, They grew to be friends, but he alwi her as the “Hon, Miss M.'s sister.” One day the young visitor grew a bit peeved over the title, “Just for a change I would be glad if you would say ‘M M.'s honorable sister,'” she retorted. “I would at least like to see how it would soun Donkey Gave “Ha-Ha.” I was strolling along a shady lane with the giri of my choice, On the other side ofthe fence was a donkey in a pasture. I hardly noticed him, for I was trying to frame a proper pro- posal, Just then an automobile load of our acquaintances sped along the highway a short distance from us, and knowing they must have noticed my endearing manner toward my compan jon, 1 became embarrassed. However, J managed to blurt out a proposal of marriage; Whereupon the donke: standing there so dejectedly, suddenly woke up enough to lift his head and bray, to the amusement of our friends, who were still near cnough to hear it. To cap the elimax, the girl also gave me the ha-ha—-Exchange. Began to Battle in April, 1918. American combat divisions were in battle in Europe for 200 d from the twenty-fifth of April, 1918, when the first regular division, after long (rain Ing In quiet sectors, entered an active sector on the Picardy front, until the signing of the armistice. During these 200 days ther were engaged In 13 ma- for operations, of which 11 were Joint! enterprises with the French, British and Italians, and two were distinctly American, The Fourth Trial. “1 admit,” said the district attor- ney in summing up, “that a man is held to be innocent until proved guilty. However, when he has been found guilty three times it kind of puts a crimp in his amateur standing. Gen- tlemen of the jury, T thank you.’— Louisville Courier-Journal, Origin of “A pitched baltl days of knight-errant called then because boiling pitch was used by the defenders of a feudal castle to repel the attacking force. The battles, whieh usually took place outside the castle walls, would soon end when the boiling pitch began to flow from a tapk on top of the walls, This originated the teri “a pitched battle.” See Beauty In tong Neck. The aim of every woman of the Bus mese tribe of Padung is to elongate the neck as much as possible, and to effect this a female child has a brass wire fitted around her neck, to which additional rings sre added as the years go by until she fs fifteen years of age, when she fs valned by the length of her collar and purchased as a wife. Girls with necks over a foot long are bot common, veteran Americans, of his teammate. following the Catcher as entered the uuto- ines the here for ident of Cle home here. land, Davin purchased WEATHER REPORT For twenty-four hours ending at noon, Wednesday December 29. ‘Temperature at 7 Highest yesterday Lowest yesterday t last night. Precipitation Highest wind velocity Forecast For North Dakota: tonight and Thursday change in temperature. Lowest Tempe! Pare 45 , Williston st. Paul... Winnipeg . Partly cloudy ; not much ratures 18 Ch Kansas C Roberts. Meteorologist. WANTED TO BUY Two filing cabinets, | four-drawer. Apply Bis- marck Tribune.. Phone 32. Fewer persons were killed ol rail-| roads during 1919 than in any year since 1898. s spoke of | j SOUTH DAKOTA ; BEHIND RIVER § BRIDGE PROJECT Estimated Cost of Structure. Will Be Approximately | $1,480,000 Specials Irish Cobbler Potatoes, very fine, Elegant. $1.50 ver bu., 10 bu. for $14.50 $1.50 per bu. $1.00 per bu. ...for Baking, Parsni, Isify, Vegetable Oyster .... Yankton, 8. D., Dee. 29-—-Backed by Rutabagas ..............00. 60¢ Per Bu. practically every ‘business firm in », ‘ , Yankton, Sioux Falls and southeast- Beets .........0... cheasacasyou seas rate $1.00 per. bu. ern South Dakota and the object of - ; on expressed interest from firms as far Carrots 6.06... cee eee ee ee eee ees $1.25 per bu. and as far. White Rice Pop Corn ....11¢ ner Ib., 5 Ibs for 50¢ , the Meridian | tual proportions dtring 192 plans announced” by the executive , building committee. if ¥ + Oscar H. Will & Co. Phone 163 324 4th Connecting South Dakota with the great Northwest, the immense project! now under way and slowly but; rding to bridgemen, ' estimated cost of the struc-! ture will be approximately $1,480,000 , >= based on a report made by engineers | Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days ee ee ee ee ek oD | btind, vleeding or protruding piles. July. It is expected here that Instanth reli ; i Saar nstantl relieves itching piles, and tors may Tet the steel contract! Draggists refund money if PAZO| you ean wot westlul slocy latter tat soon to be delivered in 1923 OUNTMED fails to cure Itching | application, Guc. At the recent annual meeting held! se recently, 1459 shareholders were ing more than is | subscriber. P. cally every community within a ra-! dius of 100 miles of Yankton was ren-! | i | ay “MOW-A-DAYS” says the Good Judge resented at the conference. FOUR TAKING BAR EXAMINATION: Four men are taking the examination here under th ion of the bar db iH. Newton, of B of the stpreme . Seit- | gren. of Robinson; Donovan R. Diver, ! of Fargo, and Burton S. Wilcox. of Hensler. i Members of the board, all of whom | are present, are R. Goer, of Devils | Lake; Geo, Hl. Moellring, of Ray; |S. E. Ellsworth of Jamestown. DENY LIQUOR VIOLATIONS. Pleas of not! al today in the} United States dis rt court by six of) the eleven men arrested late Monday ; jon charges of violation of the Volstead | act returned by the grand jury. A] plea of guilty was entered and ar-j raignment of the other four defendants i was deferred, A man can get a heap more » satisfaction fromasmall chew of this class of tobacco, than he ever could get from a big chew of the old kind. He finds it costsless, too. The good tobacco taste lasts so much longer he doesn’t need to have a fresh chew neariy as often. Any man who uses the Real Tobacco Chew will tell you that. Put up in tvo styles i ite bar | supervis- | John; clerk | Milwau guilty wi W-3B CUT is a jong fine-cut tobacco RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco HAUUUAUAUAGUAUCUAUCUUCUCEAUAUAOUAEUL ULNA BASKET BALL i i ] 1 i li You Need a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you e topped to reason why it is that so many products that Jare extensively advertised, all at once }drop out .of sight and soon for- gotten? The reason is plain—th licle did not fulfil the prom of the manufacturer, ‘This applic more particularly to a medici ’ inal preparation that ha ve yalue almost sells like an endless ¢ rem- edly is recommended by those ‘who have been benefited, to those who are jin need of i A prominent. druggist for example Dr. Kilme Root, a preparation I have many years and never h recommend, for in alme it shows excellent results, as of my customers testity, No other Kidney remedy i Ro a i According to sworn statem verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the suc- of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-loot, is due to the fact, so many people ¢ that it fulfil ilinost: every wish in overcoming kidney, liver and blad- der ailments, rinary troubles and neut 7 the urie acid whica callses rheumatism, } You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp Root. by Parcel Post. Address | Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y and enclose ten cents; also mention this pape: Large and medium s bottles for sale at all drug store Bismarck High vs. Dickinson High at the High School Gymnasium on Wednesday Evening, Dec. 29 at 8:30 P. M. Admission, 10 and 25 Cents “Take Swamp- old for titate to Mandan, Jan. 14th, 1921 TMM = HIAUULNNNNNUUUUANSUNQUOAGAQQUANUOEGAQGQUOOUETAQEUURLAUOLEGUQUULOUULAEAUOTAUEGNORUUUEESEQEROUUEAAELUAL Baled Paper and Old Newspapers For Sale at This Office We have on hand baled paper, suitable for packing as a sabstitute for excelsior. 50c per hundred pounds. Old Newspapers for sale cheap. is the Genuine and Only Laxative Bromo ~w Quinine tablets The first and original Cold and Grip tablet, the merit of which is recognized by ail civilized natior +. Be careful to avoid imitations. Be sure its Bromo | EDS The genuine bears this signature 30c. For Information Phone 32