Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BISMARCK EVENING TRIBUNE MONDAY, JANUARY 7, 1918. Good HEAVENS FRECKLES? WHAT ON EARTH ARE You DOING. To WHY, | AM RINSING A WANDKERCHIEF IN BLUING Yo MAKE Tv wuire! WHAT YA DOIN’ THAT FoR, MA~ HUH 3 ('M_RINSIN' TAGBY T MAKE WIM WHITE! CONE KITTY, MITTY ~ Kitry MATTVRITTVRNTY FRECKLES AND HIS \FRIENDS HE’S TIRED OF SEEKING BLACK CATS. By Blosser Soe ry y WELL — WHATS nen You PooR BO0B— IT DOESNT THE WEA 2 seE—- SAY DUEL = THATS AINT V0.2 ‘Due T — MEANS. : : AN’ ON TH’ OUTSIDE : DUE ONE CENT } : iT Says ovet | : q SQUIRREL FOOD id AT THAT THE MAIL MAN WILL HAVE TO FIGHT TO GET IT. had oe erat By Ahern 4 : 1 DREAMED | WAS ‘ KEEP A HALTER ON Lund A cages | EATING FLANNEL ME BED POST IN CASE Sree eur! i You GET A NIGHT- MARE - 4 i USTEN- STOP. | \RHAT IS THE ONLY | OF WHICH EVERY ) GINE UP, 5 WINDOW - PANE Look !! Ana | ONE MAKES LIGAT EVERY BODY a raat CHESTNUT CHARLIE er ae | sate S By Bl. Ne y Blosser - ‘ r) ‘ = : Ly s 1 n mT f\ : 1 reserve the right to reject any or A Commuter's. Ambition. ~ SAWTOOTH HORSESHOE MADE FOR ICE RACING IN RUSSIAT0 | [INTERESTING INDUSTRIAL re were tn pt i : % ° Dated at Minot, N. Dak., this 22nd] tion when we take a.meal out, as we piper as ~ - pp. | ¥ day of December, 1917. do once every two. or.-three months ae be bog ae Ee WD: R ‘AN RS MEN T 1§ Wi ‘i j STA NS | R. W. KENNARD, with all the regularity of. clockwork, noe as slide 3S daladadld ay | 12 24 10t~ County Auditor. | + go to some place where “fruits in , . US TLS z 7 i 3 eo as season” on the.menu doesn’t mean By Paul Purman. © =‘ * ‘ Figures (Time, of Falling Stone. chiefly bananas.—Ohio. State Journal. Horsemen who contemplate rac- | MR FS AE We The time a stone would require te Saas \ 4 ‘ A 3 5 | ‘ ‘ ii is fall tKe 4,000 miles to tae center of Too Particular. i ing theit horses -on the ice ths hig Conte iad Riis are bet Aleks eee tau eieaaeetres the earth has been calculated for the The girl who thinks more ot her N i year are beginning to shoe .the state, it planted an unusual acreage] i917 5,155 cows—an average of one Paris Academy of Sciences, by aM georgette crepe Waist fbn shes does ot } 4 é é | of flax. a new land crop, in 1917, when| animal to every three persons in the Sanger. Considering the influence of | her beau and refuses to pel j i animals with saw-tooth shoes, a ctcatding to the annual report of|county—were used for milking. | the varying density ,of the earth, he | get mussed wil noe manne fo, the ; a Z y whi vi its firs County Auditor .T. E. Flaherty, 28,248! ‘The sheep industry is waning, as in- finds the time would be 19 minutes 15 | well-known tune of Mr. Mendelsso! 4 ee relioreah millyeke oe fins | aeres were sown. | dicated by the fact that only 356 wool’ seconds, but if the mean density is as- | —Floridh Times-Union. et f 4 appearance on the American ice | Less than fifty per cent of the coun-| ies were sheared durirfg the year, the eae tne coe the time icles SEN Sah, i : 4 ss v1 | ty’s acreage under cultivation was de-| total clip being but 3038 pounds. The| would be 79 seconds grea er. Results. courses this year. | voted to wheat. To hard spring wheat county reported 1060 fruit trees as Ns Tribune “Want Ads Evins een 2 The shoe is the invention of \ 74,547 acres were devoted; 17,887 | bearing and 1369 trees as not bearing - ‘ } acres went into durum, and 218 into| Artificial forest, one year old or old- a 4 ? Frnak Caton, a Cleveland horse- winter wheat, which, thanks to the) er, abundant snows of last winter, was , Was reported on 301 acres. Burleigh reports 10,583 horses of man, who might have made a for- tune of it had he patented it. :The invention of the saw-tooth shoe takes one back to the Ro- manoft days of Petrograd and Moscow when the Russian nobil- ity patronized horse racing both on the turf and on the ice. For several years Caton trained cw. horses for one of the Russian grand dukes, who owned one of .; the greatest stables in Russia. He won over a million in purses in Russia. : At that. time both in Russia and in America, no change was made a in the type of shoes worn by horses in ice racing. The ordi- nary shge wit hheavy calks was = used, D es Caton devised a shoe, the model : of whieh is shown in the accom- ARDS panying picture, with teeth to ey in the ice and give a,better) Last year Caton sent one of the = hold. i ate : shoes to an American horseman, is Eevee 1s shoe has added almost four| who turned it over to Nat Ray, a seconds: to the: mile in horses’) Canadian horseman, who used it speed over the ice, With the aid) on the ice tracks of Canada last of the.saw-tooth some horses have| year. Other Canadian horsemen been able to travel over-the ice as adopted the shoe last year and fast ag over the turf. this year it will be seen on prae- The shoes were such a success tically all American ice courses. one of the year's best crops. Oats was wn on39.271 acres; bar- all ages; 869 mules and 23,688 cattle in 1917. Of this whole number of cat: | ley on 233,6 spring e on 3,885] tle, but 275 were listed as pure bred. and winter rye on 9,582 acres. Speltz; Of 5307 hogs reported on . Burleigh was the crop on 16,807 acres; and| county farms, 2981, or more than fifty corn was planted on 11,278 acres, aj per cent, were purebred. fairly satisfactory increase, consider-| Animals of a value of $84,227 were ing the relatively few years in which| ta:tened and killed for home use, and corn has been considered a Burleigh | 967,959 was received for cattle, hogs county crop. Millet and timothy with and sheep markets. In stocks of all 1725 and 2402 acres, respectively,’ kinds of $75,931 were sold, and $216, were planted to clover and but 552 to, 569 was invested. alfalfa. ‘ The county had 232,121, or slightly less than 25 per cent of. its million acres, in crop in 1907. It sold poultry re ea and eggs to the value off -$24,551,) Notice is hereby given that the which is one of the most hopeful de-| hoard of county comsnissioners of yelopments shown in the report, but Ward county, North Dakota, will re- sales of garden produce reported ag-; ceive sealed proposals at the office of gregated only $3,247. the county auditor, of Ward county, On the farms 156,831 pounds of but-' North Dakota, up to until 9 o'clock a. ter ‘were manufactured during the m., January 9, 1918. for the purchase year, and 293,6652 pounds of butter of $250,000 seed grain bonds, in de- fat, at prices around 40 cents the nominations of $500.00 each, due in pound, were sold to creameries. The five years, bearing interest at the rate total paid by creameries, cheese fac-, of $6 per cent per annum; payable tories and stations for milk and cream’ semi-annually. during the year was $69,869, while, The board of county commissioners = to buy a No. 1 Mergenthaler Linotype at a very reason- | Handsome Wall War Map Price Is Very Reasonable Including maps of North Daketa and:United States, Up-té-the- ,"! . * minute statistical matter in this fine war chart. Be OR S E P ee | on You can follow the bays “over there” better if you have this Also— Al A | map . your home or a8 e Heh ' ote a o ADANDY CAM PBELL pane. PRESS, i. : nly a few of them left but as ong as they last only NO J_AND INTHE FINEST BUNNING Cc ae ORDER. ulation Department Country | Printers. HERE IS A CHANCE FOR SOME, "COUNTRY PRINTER. “Bonds for Seed Grain.” NOTICE FOR BIDS, FRANK | CATON = ‘ SAW TOOTH HORSESHOE © that they were adopted by other Russian horsemen. ed NOER Oe ROS GASE FORE- leigh and state of North Dakota, at sition eee jE SALE. the hour of ten o'clock in the fore- Abate is hereby gtven that the cer-| noon on the 31st day of January, 1918, bse ordi executed and delivered! to satisfy the amount due upon such 3 iy ne Ape be and H. C. Weigert, mortgage on the day of 3ale. behead 5 TORLEBEOTS, to Gerhard] ‘The premises described’ in’ such Petraes mor' apy ated the 26th| mortgage and which will be sold to - of ree gtd 14, and filed for satisfy the same are described as fol- pai in ice’ of. the register of tows, to-wit. The southwest quarter | js of the county of Burleigh and (SW) of section nine (9), in town- ane of North Dakota, on the 1st day| ship one hundred thirty-eight (138) a ols 1915, and recorded in book] north, of range seventy-eight (78) a a gildea He at west of the fifth principal meridian. jgned hy’ said There will be due on such mort- - 3 Harris on the 14th, gage at the date of sale the sum of aes a he : SPECIAL WAR MAP OFFER TO TRIBUNE 1915, which said was, thirteen hundred ninety-three and 75- - READERS: ; a ‘nesigument for record inthe office of the register| 100 doll 1393.76), . besid ie deeds of ‘ght coaney, of Burleigh, | costs a earer enced ee foreslatita: Pe Enclosed please find Fifty Cents in stamps for which mail to my ad- dress War Map. tite : : ber, 1915, Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, » Name ...... ° December 24, 1917. GERHARD LUDEMANN, Postoffice .. . gale ‘of the: premises jn such mortgage] employed to sell papers. For any (If you are not a reader. of the Tribune you should be) and hereinafter described, at the front| ambitious boy this is an excellent i ried Maer a Assignee of Assignee of Mortgagee,- door gf the. court house at the city), ition, Apply, Circulation Dept. “ Dismareh, the ar Pe ee : woo : fee to Gerhard) Newton Dullam & Young, AE STYOL EEL NNT NOLEN ST AN We will pay fare both ways within a radius of one hun- dred miles to any printer who purchases any one of these machines. “See these machines in operation before purchasing. Fill Out Coupon and, Mail ‘to WIRE YOUR ARRIVAL as these machines cannot last long unsold at the Price we are asking. The Bismarck Tribe “<BISMARCK, NO; DAK i ismarck, North Dakota, . _ Attorneys for Assignee ‘of As- “signee of Mortgagee. Dec. 24-31; “Jan. 7-14-21-2! " BOYS WANTED, 1300f a , ‘be: Not going to school or otherwise berssauneil “¢ pintiona a yoemeereenmcat