The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 16, 1926, Page 11

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"Tribune ¢ Clase Advertisements ‘GOVERNMENT PATROL INSPECT- woo needed frequently, for Canadian and. other borders.| oe ere Mo. immediate! s TED—Men wages. Few week: jetes. 8. Ww we 8 com} log and offer Trees Barber Farmo. N. <- FEMALE HELP WANTRD _ WANTED — Competent girl who derstands house work and cooking. Highest wages. Ay 209 W. BR ser St. Phone 92 oe WANTE! jompet (aig for eral housework. ‘Apply at 112 iW. Rosser. FOR REN’ iy nished eae 13 rooms, fee. Lense ten . bet ag wv Roberts, anita “Telephones 751 and Once ‘ROOM FoR Wi RENT rT ovcupied Dr. Ke: a . clea for any tie ofan office: | Inquire Citys National -Sank, Bis- FARM _LAN! 9 FOR SALE CANADIAN FARN—Owing to illness, amust sell my 321 acre farm in Al- berts. ‘Goud for wheat, ae, Good house, $9,000. Soe tecte, P Eitscots, Alberta, Canada . woer COST Wale oper, Veinliy ot Bee ing mostly Fa ey with orange be ~ ored ears. ani ” gellar: Mewardts tb wheresbout bss infutnished. Two family. — Write Tribune SALE—One @ate table, 2 windsor chairs, 2 beds com- te, 1 good birdaeye maple chif- ‘oni 1 bird eye neapl 3 TE sesietty modern 4 room house with barn and garage on back of lot. Also Ford car with truck body. cheep. if.taken at once. ct ie FOR rage. Small m m, m bungalow. sayeunt ‘down, & FOR SALE—A 1906 model 22 Win pats press at oh very rea-' chester repeating in good condition. je story 36x46 hous 34x54 barn and 4 acres of land lo-|iF YOU want to sell your cated northeast of the country club.| home or city lot at a r Michael Hilscher, ismarck, N. D.] _ price; tet me know. ‘Pribune Ni Li FOR SALE—Baby carriage, G 9x12 Velvet rug, kerosene heater. 308 Tenth St. Phone 749. 411 First St. APARTMENTS - FOR RENT—A very nicely farnished modern apartment including piano and all electrical conveniences. Clean and warm. Always hot wa- ter, Will sub-let for two months WANTED—To buy from owner. Lot on or near paving. Write Tribune No. FOR SALE—Underwood Rebuilt. State price. 12 inch carriage. New and Price. $16. aa closet, wrought mirror, 519 Fourth street. mplete, $25.00. Lioyd buggy, $10.00 Ma- hogany davenport table, $15.00. Would like to hear from someone} with office space for rent, Phone | 1195. FOR SALE—Studebaker Duplex Pha ton, standard, in good shape. Fred Brodl, G. P. Barber shop. 'ypewriter. Phone and may be permanent to good couple. 807 Fourth. St. FOR RENT—A_ fur ‘apartment. Also an unfurnished modern apartment. A 7 room part- ly_ modern house, close in. For} saie a bed dufold. Phone 906 after 4 p.m. : FOR RENT—A very nicely furnished small modern apartment for one) lady. Clean, warm, and always hot}* water. 807 Fourth street. =i ts.4 J FOR RENT—Furnished apertm . F. Flanaga: P- Furnishell apt. Aisd . Call 434 during the érv and 960LI evenings. the Plain: The soldi tie: in| be suspected, ate the I private home. Good care. Also man wants janitor work. Can fur- nish ~teferences. 604 Ninth St. Phane 477-W. -ALMIST AND Phrenologis; sau. auevemoreiieé Durand, here 416 Fourth street. Reading hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 10. uae find’ lost are ticles. See her today. thas given several years to the col- lection and pr reparation of of the ma terial c~ntained in the work, lished by Minton, Balch & Oo. insurance salesman. keyi—A large sible he has room in a new modern in. $10.00 ~ month. Fifth street after 5 p. m. o52W. Call 417 wide acquaintance among t! Phone ru KENI—rfhree parti light housekeeping room: in modern home. Phot 223 Twelfth street north. FOR RENT—Two nice light House Keepihg rooms fully furnished. Fully modern, Facing street. 517 _Second St. Phone 812J. NEWLY I it ern light ‘housekeeping room, ingle or counected. College ter was governor. The Caster Disaster Thebook conterns itself, r disaster, aitheual Byrne evidertt effort to ICE! sleeping, i P rooms in first block east of Bank! situation as it a of N. D. on Main St. Apply at 822 diany A 4 ster and hi: | RENT—Nicely furnished rooms] “gallant and intrepid” Mise nite suitable for oo uaales only. Calljertheless jieaves the et. OR RENT—Four room: over Knowist, caused the Jewelry store. Apply to F. the Seventh pasted Fags Knowle: to their .doom. slose in. Call Taking an unusual if not entire- |v new viewpoint of the numerous tegen Prop. one) indian wars which resulted in the winning of the west by the white men, P. E. Byrne, Bismarck, has written a book on the “Soldiers of ‘s in this case, as may indians who}. lived here when the white men came—and Byrne makes an effort to see things from their angle. He New York, during the odd hours left him by his usual occunation | fa Where to the source for data and information and-his the Tn-| fa eq dians has given him an opportini- ty to make reseatch for himself It aretul ster hough to impression. that a desire for ve titary glory dashing sopmander of mpgs makes sR Cade eae Fe aa pointed reference | to the ag Py that | ‘ at in their wars adalant the white men wea) mort often than not, that the fi latter was fully as a soldier as his white opponent, lacking only the leadership to con- trol them when massed in large numbers. and J of the Nez Perce Indian: cag as able as any. white leader ae against them, Byrne contends, and cites the re- treat of the Nez Perce tribe from pab-{the Idaho-Oregon border to north- Je stern Montana, as vee to eo: pare favorably with Kewvephor ‘ous retreat of the 10, hte of 1, jailes. wasmai iy er children ‘of the their ‘household pment, in 70 days. Numerous. Pattles were fought en route and Joseph eluded three separate col umns of soldier, all sf whom out- numbered him, to reach i fie thought was. Canada. ‘i fact, ‘that he miscalculated his The sation! | With reference to the internation- al border enabled the white troops |“ to attack him and, ly force > i? tri; th do|his surrender, Byrne relates, any eit the history OF the Cob: some ith the of 4 makes prosive i A Great Foeman’ In his account of the feats oe Crazy Horse, whom he izes as the greatest.war ot e held Sioux, B; vers h he Sion Bs bap tn dane, 1876, jan & week before the Custer mia ‘and forced that veteran fighter to fall back 9 on his. base without. continuing ‘Hee 65 paign. into. The author Sion the a cal lations to 8! that: ee Horse had fewer effective: fighting: wien ‘as assistant hostesses. he nation’s crack hog-callers “started something” m™ Omaha city by milk bottle with his 4 ae available and that they were ly armed in comp&rison. witlt troopers. The Indian in his native habitat, | he claims, was the greatest mount- ‘ed soldier the world has ever ‘seen and was in every way: a :foeman worthy the steel of his white an- tagonists. He quotes freely from the official reports of veteran In- dian fighters to prove his asser- tion and alleges that the contempt. which many white men held the Indian’s fighting ability was by no means justified by the facts. a chapter dealing with the ite man’s treatment of the In- dian, Byrne deals harshly with al- ' Crazy ieee? ve Oglala’ Sioux, ve unfaithfulness by the whites ' and cites numerous instances in, which trenties, were made with théFviicre she Indians {ely be broken by the whites. Whent it. Unalarjs chn-! fended for their rights they compelled by force to accept the werehet well patroni: favorable we six childre od ing brought There ix ene reasury to The club wi who helped. Mrs, iz, Bower, which Kk was. the un-| Twenty- d. a nice sum of push money now in the help pay for the well shes to thank all those BALDWIN Fulton Nelson of Cromwell township, accompanted by her gue Mesdames Mullenberg and Speph son, ‘Frid, ‘alke . t ister. pute man’s view of his own pera idy. With regard to a specifi treaty Byrne quotes General Sher. man.of civil war famg as sayin “The treaty was broken, but not by the savage. If the savage (4 sists, civilization, ‘with the Ten Commandments in cne hand ‘and the sword in the othe lemand~ immediate exterminat: (Continued: regret to have } wish him sue his new field Mr. J. A.. Allensworth retu home Saturday afternopn from Paul where he: Has, been with Mr Allensworth who, underw successfuk-operation there. ports her as getting along fine aan expects that cim the course of # couplo of weeks she will be able .to return. to her home ‘here. Mra, E. W. Baker entertained the Braddock Study and Civic club at her home Wednesday evening. Mrs. Allensworth and Mrs. Barton Ele bere. were present. ‘Th was base@ on the Ame: with an interesting discus leayé them, but nd happiness in THNS IG NONE OF MY DISINESS, DOT, Bur MOM TELLS AE, Yuu AND KEN Wi MARRIED NOW ‘AND. YOULL HAVE ‘To WATCH MOUR EXPENSES CL47 GUESS Wow -tosow A MAN'S: CoMIN: 70 . 2 BA OUR MOUSE =CAN'T GUESS Mow T CAN Wy xe by} ¥ evening, Moe: nday? al of edar Rapids, le Was accom ister}: Mrs. Ww Friday Lie on business, returning home Saturday Mrs, Cecil Mount Jébp Monroe and family and M ‘visited at th ‘ty short The litt kicked by a end. Mr. Jame: ing to atte’ being held |the Presbyt Mr. and M rs. C. H. Berger of Bi e eir respective homes for ime, son of Mr. and horse. Miss Ruth Hanson, teachen of the Herbert Little school, visit nds in Washburn over the week- 3 McAvoy and nd the revival by Rev. Matteson ian_churgh. at Richard Borner were when they held their championship contest in Omaha. firemen even quit their checker games to learn the pork-persuading art. Hi | Hyatt one of the firemen, demonstrating that he can lure a pig just nine weeks old right a “pope” At the upper left is Mrs. ‘ of the best of the women Iowa, werg visitors at the home of Ira jFa in and family. recently-returned from Cedar Rapids, ik called by the death o Mr. Nelson Mullenberg, and uughter, Mrs. Stephenson. “Hanson and were | 'ternoon guests at the home) Mrs. George Cadle is in a Bismarck hospi- tal suffering with a broken leg which he sustained when one of the older children shut a screen door upon him. Mr. Cadle has been most unfortunate this year, as another son, George, in the hospital suffering with a broken leg which he sustained when dd with family motored to Wilton Wednesday ev services “ New York, Sept. 16.—(@)—There here is] profens a new Item’ among, major expenses an American t ence was brought out by it which me Pacific North- jon took in ‘ornell Agri- ultural which gave the ual expenses of t succeeding tion of the 8 family. In © the famil: umbered six, hildren and three adults. Both lived on the same_ farm Increase Eight-fold The budget of this family for the a 1. a while for the The dif- » ix not all accounted for in asod living expenses. The com- parison brought out many good things of life which the 1924 family joyed, that were unknown to the 1880 family. In the earlier, simpler generation the major expenses were four; fo n and chui cost in th h ar rd out ax a major item, — even 1924 more money was pat, yeur food, clothing mained three of the major items, but the fourth was the new major and it fopped all the others. In the Cornell budget this item was de- nominated eral operation.” 1880 it cost $14.96 and in $691.65. Papers and books jumped $2.50 to $161.70, far passing: the church and showing one of the greatest percentag: cases of any, although not the largest total, The figures were gathered by Pro- fessor Ralpp A. Felton, extension In the mode pd children 1y24, rom re ere 1. Mies ent Sunday with her friend, hel Little. Mr. and Mrs. pent a few days of the past ‘Neb., one| Week with Mrs. Caplin’s sister, Mrs. i Carl Johnson and family. Alex Parsnyk is in the Bismarck Charley from its Howard Caplin of . Warner of Warnersville, . whieh night nsen, teacher of | to th the Schroeder school, spent the week- | # end at her home in Regan, Light frost was reported north of h tter part of the week, but st has been reported in in territory. Local farm- rg busy this week selecting their before it freezes. id Orville Monroe » Bismarck, where they had their foals removed. M orge Rosenbeck Sunday ests at the home of their and daughter, Mr. and r Ryberg. n ONG oLeae: and family will jon visitors at the John he sustained vhen he returned unexpectedly George Montgomery home from al weeks’ visit with friends itsall, Mont. Mr, Parsnyk ade the trip by motor, and on leav- ing his car stepped dircetly into a cistern which was being dug at the Montgomery place. The hole was fully twelve feet deep, and it re- quired the assistance of 2 neighbor to extricate Alex from his perilous He was hurried to Bis- marck, where it was found he had broken his leg at the ankle and also suffered a number of bruises. Harry Anstrom has returned from Fort Snelling, where he had been in training the past month. Harry re- ports a fine time and plenty of good cats at the camp. Friends of Miss Beatrice Burch of last spring from r the fore part of Octobe she has enrolled ing staff of the St. Alexii -Jand left for her new d the week. Miss Burch ix the daugh- Otto “Hogue fe" yot, Mr and Mes. FL, Small rained: & and Mrs. Andrew Bertch and y of near Arnold were recent at the home of Mr. Bertch's Mrs. Johmn Rinehart, and her Mrs, ly. who reside south of Bismarck, | Were recent visitors at the home of Mrs. Small's brother, ‘and his family. M |fine lot of v | wax selling some to the folks around jh i Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Nordstrom and |, family motored to Bismarck Sunday, where they were the ee here the past. week buying up. stock, a Miller of Still is spend- he es few days here as the guest of | ter, Mrs. Carl Johnson, and has been yy nfternoon, ‘argo, where he going se turned into the Fargo fatten before contin: to the Twin City market: . Mrs. her home a few days’ this communi Lester Falkenstein has returned from a short business trip to Bis- marek, Harold Swairn is doing some re- pair work on the farm residence belonging to Mrs. Fred Rupp. A new basement is being dug out and other improvement being made on. the building. » SE Ds eee Le Library Notes 5 Eighteen new books for saiieel tiris will be laced on the shalvcs of the Bismarck public library today, ‘according to Miss Lillian Rich, city ibe ‘ian. re also a few books of biography to be ready for distribution today | The lists follow Blogra; Dorr. “A Were Fifty.” The autobiography of a woman who h taken part in virtually every even that marks her generation; she was the only woman correspondent with the famous Russian “Women’s tialion of Death,” spent three years in after-war Europe and is to- day in the thick of things in this country. Papini. biography of Christ ‘has _ attracted ae attention both in Italy and merica, and has had a remarkable feception by painking people. Before the World War Pi 3. i after his conversion he wrote w ““The Story of a Pioneer.” Anna Howard Shaw. wri a thoroughly interesting _ biography with many humorous touches. The book fol her pioneer struggles. in Michigan. s. the first woman elergy- man in.the Methodist church, and as a suffrage leader in the early days ‘| of the movement. “Barnuni. Everyone knows of as T, Barnum and his Be y By Blowser| Fak ny know that ona farm several miles east of Bald. win, will move to town for the winter. Arnold Rupp and son, Ernest, left some time ago for Devils Lake, where ployment on a threshing the capital city after it with friends in iam Gierke Laverne, of Bis: is jones ona Naakiag ig near the Canadian boundary in Fhe north- ern part vf the state. We understand that when Mr. Gierke returns he and Be family will move to South Da- A. Fricke has returned froma week's business trip to the ‘Twin € s and other points in Minnesota. Miss Marie Jacobsen of Bismarck 3 and “THAT WAS A SWELL HUNCH L HADI Nt. the first eheasieal ee country, that hi great cier, a friend of the foremost Hh of the time, and an Americad rv onal (By left. his bean a on yeara of America’s “gro' ‘Werner's. hook is filled ith yimatsae. anges that. have. become bad in h California ‘ebscurity, to I pte revolution for with a bit of- mystery hospital, suffering with a broken leg | late Tuesday | | ders.” Bureh | Mary Pinks has returned to|* “The Life of Christ.” This| su professor of. rural school organiza- tion, who wrote W. G. Hooker, sec- retaty of ‘the Pacifie Northwest Newspaper association: Items Compared _ “The father's family bowght cloth y the yard, but the son's femity wht ready made clothes. The education of the son's children ix costing over twice as much as his own, due to the fact that teachers’ salaries have rly trebled. The father took t) pers only; the son, during the year, bought a set of Havard Classics. The’ father's light bill for the year was fine gallons of kerosene, $1.08; sfx lamp chimneys, 59 cents, and one Wick, six cents, a total of $1.73. The son spends two dollars a month for fuel for his lighting system, while the upkeep and depreciation is §75 a year.” The professor further explained that the son has 1 sorts of modern conventences."" Als son's doctor bill for ti 924 “is bapectally large ing this year his wife rather serious operation at a hose pital.” The figures of the follows: 1880 two budgets 1924 Light, Including up- keep 5 Food ... Clothing Three children Chareh .... Doctor and Medici Papers and Books... Trips and Vacations, Amusements General 0 (coal, gasoline, auto Tabor) issues Miscellancous 3 1 $2,668.76 Chase. “Virginia of ‘Blk Creek Valley.” This ‘isn story of the ad- ventures of Virginia, Who, with a party started out on: trip in-the Big Horn country. It tells of the exper- iences, advenfures and’: riding» the range by the young folks of the par- ty, many of whom had never been in the great West. De la Ramee. “A Dog of Flan- ‘A. story, of old “Litmeig: OE strange little Nello, who loved the pictures of Rubens, and his fuith- ‘ul dog Patrasche. Dodge. “Hans Brinker, or Silver Skates.” An old favorite, giv- ing a picture of life in Holland, - Fisher. “Understood Betsy.’ the story starts, Betsy is a worried little girl of nine. stances suddenly sct her down on a Vermont farm in the midst of a‘sim- ple natural life. The experiences of little Elizabeth Ann in the first year at her new life make up the ‘narra- tive. French. “The Lance of Kanana.” The stor ells how the brave Red- ouin boy, Kanana, gave his life to save the Arabians from the hand of their enemies. Hale. “Peterkin Papers.” Twenty- two funny stories of the unsuccoss- ful cfforts of the Peterkin family to become wise. Haskell. “Katrinka.” This story describes life _in @ snow-bound Rus- sian village. When the little heroine makes her way to Petrograd end gtows up there, we sce that great city, too. ’ Masefield. “Jim Davis.” A story for boys of the Devonshire coast and smugglers a hundreds years ago. Melville. “Typee.” A yarn of the South Seas, giving the actual exper- fences of two Amerigan sailors. Paine. “The Arkansaw Bear.” In this book a little boy and a big black bear become companions in adven- ures. Pollock. “Wilderness Honey.” -A story. telling of bee-keeping on a Canadian farm Complicated by adven- tures with fire, water, bears, and a thieving naiahbor. of the two plucky boys and their sister who had to suc- ceed with their inheritance of $1,000. Sewell. “Black Beauty.” The popu. lar story of the horse whose name Black Beauty. Wiggin. “Polly Oliver's Problem.” A California story of a irl whose problem was how to take care of her- self and her invalid mother. Zollinger. “Widow O’Callaghan’s Boys.” The story of the brave strug- gle of an Irish widow and her seven sons for a living. Zwilgmeyer. “What Haprened to Inger Johanne; Told by Herself.” Everybody in her town in. Norway knew her, for she was the Judge’s daughter.’ A story of her adventures and her frolics. The New Internation Encyclopac- dia, the latest edition to be published by Dodd Meade and Co., has been secured by the Bismarck public li- brary for references purposes. . The volumes of the encyclopaedia will not be checked out but may be used by all i patrons. at the library building, 1@ edition of the anevelopaedin is in 25 volumes, in addition to two sup- plementary volumes that contain ref- erences concerning the World War events of the past ten years. The ments also contain an outtine pg. material. EY set of books is“bdund=in uckram with gold lettering. Tee make an attractive as -well-as ae 'ul addition ¢o the shelved of the library. The reference section of the lib: ‘f now includes the New Internationa the Americana ‘the Brittanica. ‘the World Book and the Catholic Exgy. clopaedia a very complete reference library, accordi to Miss Lilian Rich, city lbs = the

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