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= THURSDAY, OCT. 28, 1919. Meet Your Employer in Our Classified Columns Classified Advertising Rates. Werma Btrietly Cash—No copy without remittance attached will be inserted. First insertion, $5 cents; additional insertions without change of copy, 15 bents., Advertisements containing more than 25 words will be charged at the tate of two cents a word for each additional word, Copy for Classified Advertisements, to insure proper Insertion, mand be tn (Wiis office before 10 a, m. of day of publication. — BELP WANTED--MALE ~ LEARN THE BARBER TRADE—Wages $: per week up, Positions guaranteed, Few weeks completes by our ‘methods.’ Little expense. Catalog free. Moler Barber Col- lege, 107K. Nicollet. Ave., Minneapolis, Est. 1893. 10-2-1mo LEARN ACTUAL AUTO REPAIR, VUL- CANIZING. Los Angeles Y, M. C. A. Auto-School. 9: WELP WANTED—FEMAL WANTED—Pantry girl. at Grand Pa- «cific hotel. e 10-22-tf WANTED—Dishwasher at the Dunrayen. <F 10-31-1wk WANTED—Girl or. woman for general Pousewer PSs. i. W. MeGray, 613 _ 3rd St. bai a *10si7-1wk’ WANTED—Cofipetent maid for getieral housework. Mrs..A. W. Lucas, 48 Ave. _ A. West. * 40-17-tt WANTED—Cook, dishwasher and ch: bermaid in small hotel,~ good’ w: _ Box $3, Medora, N. D.’_” 10-15 fy WANTED—Experienced .clerk at, Well! _ worth “Store, *, 10-10-t¢ WANT! perlenced ‘girl for general housework, Permanent position at $40 per month. Mrs. W. Lahr, 504 Mandan. Ave, WANTED TO RENT ~ WANTED TO RENT—With a view to!) purchase in the near future, house of ive or six room, preferably modern, Address 51 care Tribune. 9-23-tf eee SE AUTOMOBILES—MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—Ford automobile, good as new, cheap. Phone 366R. Ae 10-21-1wk \FOR SALE—Winter top for Dodge roadster. Write M. B. Finseth. + 10-22-3t FOR SALE--Ford runabout in first class condition, 7 model; Welles No. 73, SALE—1919 good as new. 98 or call at Crewsky Shoe 6-cylinder Cheap for cash. Shop, 10: st. oat - 5 = FOR SAEE=40 (hevrolet= automobile ~in good shape. ‘Price $325.00: “Write: 161, Baldwin, N.D. 10-17-1wk. 10-20-1wk __BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES ‘ABSOLUTELY FREE Sc AERO MAP OF OIL. FIELDS | Attractive and Interesting relief map, size -18x24,.. Hang-it in your home or of: fice, See the amazing development work -|in the largest producing oil fields in the world ata glance. Limited q edition; write immediately for free copy before supply is exhausted, a UNIQN TRUST: CO. Dept. 325, Hoffman Bullding Houston, Texas MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Reagonable, three-burner electric stave. Phone 575-K or call 1116 Avenue A West. A0-22-1t FOR SALE—Baby go-cart, white wicker, first class. Phone 673. *10-22-3t WANTED—A ‘place to keep two orses during the winter. State price and condition. August Baulke, 6 Main St., Bismarck, N. D. 10-21-1wk | WANTED—To buy, rug and dresser; must be in good condition. Phone 442-L, _10-21-3t FOR SALE—Cheap, one gray -Astrak- han coat and muff. Phone 312-K. 10-22-1wk | | FOR SALE—Higfi grade piano, sewing machine, sectional bookcase, bed springs and mattress; girls’ coats, /furs, etc. 827. Sixth St. WANTED—Plain sewing. Call 615 An- -derson street. , Ave. B. Phone 6771t ea = FOR RENT—A few offices, second floor, Call 307-R. .conyeniently located; steam heat, elec: | | hetric Hght,“‘elevator~ and janitor ser= vice. Bismarck Realty Company, Bi marck Bank Bldg. i FOR SALE—i916 Overland Roadster for sale , very reasonable. Phone, S001, WORK WANTED EXPERIENCED Hana for washing putting on storm windows. Phone 627X POR SALE OR RENT— < HOUSES AND FLATS WILL RENT 6-room apartment and bath to right party, furnished first class, for 6 or 7 months. Phone 673. 10-22-3t HOUSE FOR SAJ E—House of six rooms and bath, modern throughout, this is one the best built and best located’ houses in the River View Addition. Price $5,700 00, half cash. 1 also have a house af six rooms, »tnodern except heat, well located. A bargain at $2150.00. Easy terms. J. H, HOLIHAN Telephone 745 » Lucas Black 10-22.2t. Modern 6 room house arage.and plenty of .-for $3500, on-rea- 10-22-1wk “REGISTER . FOR” SALE- FOR SALE—To close an estate am in- structed. to offer an eighty acre tract 12 miles. north of Driscoll. far. sale cheap ~and-on easy terms, E. T. Burke, 'Trib- ‘une Block. 0-17-1Wk FOR SALE—An improved combined farm ‘and. ranch of about 960 acres, has running wter, in Burleigh coun- ty, at-a bargain. This shquid be a fine place. for stock raising.10-22-lwk in GE REGISTER REAL ESTATE FOR ‘SALE LOTS-FOR SALE—Southeast corner 100. by 150 feet, in eastern River View Addition,.all-improvements in and paid for, lots surrounding sell- ing for-$400 to $600. Price for the entire. corner $550.00, cash. If you want to: buy a lot speak now or hold your peace forever. 10-22-2t pero’ JH, HOLIHAN i ‘Lucas Block Telephone, 745. FOR RENT—Basement 46x65 entrance; suitable for storage: Turkish bath or barber shop; low rental. Bis- || marck Realty Company, Bismar Bank_Bldg. modern house, well located in Bismarck. Emerson Brantingham Big 4, 30-60 ‘Tractor, thoroughly overhauled; stubble bottom, six breaker self-lift plows; one new wagon and_500 gallon tank and ane new packer. Write Lock Box 137, Turtle Lake, N. D,_10-10-1mo- FOR SALE—Butcher's tools,, shop” and sausage fixtures at a bargain) Braddock, N. D., Emmons County. 10-17-1lwk FOR SALE—In good condition for cash or bankable paper one 32 Avery Separator complete with band cutter, feeder, weigher and stacker ; one Avery 25 h\p. ps ‘Tractor, one 15 bbl. mounted gas tank; one Avery 6 bottom engine plow with breaker attachment. Apply to “Regan State Bank, Regan, N. D. 9-25-tf SWINDLE RELATIYV! OF DEAD SOLDIERS Philadelphia, Oct, 23.—Relatives of dead soldiers are indignant over a series of swindles just bared. Investi- gations show that young men, daim- ing to be overseas veterans, have been working the photo enlargement game overtime, They not only make off with the only, existing photo of the dead soldier in many eases but also the jnitig] payment, LIGHT SENTENCE FOR TAR AND) FEATHERS London, Oct. 23.—Lieut. F. T. Wright received a light. reprimand but no Joss. of pay. or demotign on his plea of guilty in’a-tar and feather pase. He said. the whole affair ha cost him only twelve pounds and he had great satisfaction for the amount of money spent. also some! 10-22-5t | | Bank BE AI es A BAHE | | WILL TRADEfor about 5 or 6 room || J. Wirth, } {| whose chairman is Mr. Ross :W. Weir, DOINGS. OF THE DUFES, TOUR DANAY HAS BEEN A VERY | DISQDEDIENT POY TODAY AND 17010 isla HIM THAT | WOULD HAVE To CAN WE DO WITHOUT COFFEE? Stop drinking coffee for sixty days! One of the leading coffee deal- ers of this city says that a boy- cott is the only certain remedy of American consumers against the carefully planned coup by food gamblers backed by the Brazilian government. Coffee at one dollar a pound is, the. prospect unless the ap- petite for America’s favorite beverage can be suspended for two months. The 390,000,000 pounds held in Brazil are out of reach of-the United States department of justice. An embargo on coffee impor-' | j| tation would be the one other i| drastic measure possible. . But a master raid on the household purse is being pre- pared. BY FREDERICK M. KERBY New York, Oct. 23.—The Brazilian ; government is holding back 390,000,- 000 pounds of coffee for higher prices in the United States. Certain American coffee men.are aiding the holdup. Coffee at a dollar probable result. | A fund of $1,000,000 has been turned over by Brazilian coffee gro ers to the Joint Coffee Trade Commit- tee for propaganda. g The plan is to send coffee prices} ‘way up, and to make the people of jthis country “like’ it. Here are ‘the facts, as I gather them in the’ “coffee district” of Wall and Front Streets, from men who 'know the coffee situation thorough! The National Coffee Roasters’ As- sociation of which Mr. Carl Brand of Cleveland, O., is president, is doing nothing to stop the holdup. The green coffee men are doing nothing.’ And_members of both branches of the trade—green and roasted coffee men —have joined in what is known as the Joint Coffee Trade Committee, a pound is al and have accepted the sum of $1,000,-) 000 from the Brazilian coffee planters to use in advertising . coffee in the You WHEN Nov GoT Home - 7% oUNG MAM Nou com RIGNT IN The OER (| Room WITH ME! Howl, Yourtc MAN, LET “Tuts BE. A Lesson “DOLLAR-A-POUND” COFFEE PLOT — BACKED BY BRAZIL GOVERNMENT It’s Price That May Result From Hoarding of 390,000,000 Pounds in South America | jplan, by which in collusion with the! | has been freely indulged in by certain DAILY TRIBUNE ny AW DADDY, Won" Do \T AGAIN WELL, IGAVE him A GooD SPANKING ! cents on June 30, 1919. Retail coffee | of good grade has risen as much as 55} and 60. cents a pound, in some cases. | And_in spite of the fact that since July 30 of this year, the wholesale price has fallen off between 5 and 6 cents, there has been no lowering in price to the consumer. Talk of coffee at one dollar a pound | coffee speculators. We. are the largest consumers of coffee in.the world; Brazil is the lar; a HO ra ae wWHa-ooP~ ¢ GOL GOOSENECK - WI THERE. rr? BIRD WITH TH’ HICCOUGHS \ZO'CLOCK- HEW-HEH: ——— Tom Isa Very Severe Father.” There WAS.No NEED OF | maintained. WITH SOME DOPE IN IT BY TH’ ENDE OF “TH ROAD WHERE THAT SLICKER OTTO AUTO WILL SEE AN’ STOP: TAKE © SWIG OF IT, AN THEN - AH: HAA -—~ C'MON MEH, LETS Go DovIN ERTS TIME T” {= S LIN —_—— CONSTABLE YOUR PLUG HYACINTH HERE GOT © His SNOTT WRAPPED AROUND ATUG OF £ MPIN BACK UP TH “THATS MAKIN’ HIM ACT LIKE A COOKOO CLO You ‘come RIGHT HERE Avo LAY OVER MY KNEE PLt SAY You TO- | HEARD IT SMACK CLEAR ovT HERE + DONG Tuat! output comes to the United States, and 75 per cent of all the coffee con- jan, POUNDS of coffee a year. The purchase and storage by the Brazilian government of 3,000,000 bags of coffee follows the lines of the ization” scheme, started Herman Sielcken, a German coffee speculator, was the originator 0: Brazilian government, enormous quan- tities of coffee were stored at_ dif- ferent centers, including New York, Hamburg, Havre, etc., financed by bankers in New York, Germany, France, Belgium and England. National City Bank of New York backed the scheme here. Under the plan the price of coffee»was doubled in two years, notwithstanding that the average production was_ fully Senator George W. Nor- of Nebraska forced a government investigation; the United States De- partment of Justice proceeded agai: WAA- 1 SET A JUG OF CIDE! ‘2 AN, SEE, WHUTS ALL cK SN ar 2a WS : ——--—— ‘ | United. States at the present high CONVICTS SEE VAUDEVILLE | prices! % Honolulu, 23, —‘Eyery .six} The American and Brazilian specu- months :the prisoners ‘of Oahu are en-|lators together have forced. up the tertained at a vaudeville show. Much] price of coffee to levels unreached time and pains are expended to. give | since: 1871. During thé, past year the the: prisoners a. good® entertainment. | wholesale price of coffee has-been ad- | ‘The Honolulu Elks take a prominent | vanced about 170 per cent, rising from part’ in’ producing ‘the -shows. 11 1-4 cents on June 30, 1918, to 80 1-2 F ECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS “OMRd= Valo SAID “FoR APMBS 2 jsumed in the United States is Brazil- | We drink over ONE BILLION | | world hold-up. known as the “Valor-| little section, charge in 1908.) man a shove—a f this | the ch: The! ling the hold-up game on its own ac- BY ALLILAN| Dadmun of Harvard, All-American Guard 716. GUARD SHOULD KNOW AS MANY TRICKS IN HIS POSITION AS ANY OTHER MAN \for the opponents to know just wig Most Famous Football Coach. spot to find you at the instant _ thi On offense the guard should learn ball goes. While never knifing an Losec ere “7 | through the guard should carry his how many possible ways there are to|charge home, lifting his opponent and |} block .and interfere. He should try | then running him back. A guard must. new ones, trying a new stunt every !never be drawn out of his position by day, to see how it works. He should|a double pass or fake, but always always take care of his quarter. In| watch over his own section with a interference he should alw hit al! certainty, and he should always be on man so hard—y surely—that he|the’ alert to prevent a quarterback will spend_all his effort in looking out! plunge. for you the next time and so have! A guard must be taught to play as little agtention to spend on the runner | low as he can o nthe line, as his chief or interfering backfield men. | means of protection on the offense is On defense, a guard should, work- | to get beneath his opponent with his* ing close locked with his center, block | shoulder, and lift as he charges, thus long and tight on kicks. “ He should | bearing him cleanly out of ‘the open- not knife through. In the modern; ing, and leaving.it clear for his back- game it is too dangerous. | field to come through. An ideal guard A guard must take e of his own! will sometimes pile his opponent upon p and give his! the backfield defense, thus killing ard one, but then|two birds with one stone, . but it is Immediately after | rare that a man has the power or the ead | lift to do that. with his arms and hands ready and; On the defense, the guard should | looking for what is coming. In driv | not hesitate to use his hands, to pull jing his man, tha guard should shove ; this opponent out of the way, for just so that he | as much may be imagined by pulling nopponent through you, and passing |him on the side, as shoving him out and expending timé and ch might be better used. | | | i BY WALTER CAMP, | keeping his feet. ge he should {him back and diag fills up one opening while his feet fill the other. i A guard must not be too stationary | of the w so as to give a mark. Make it harder | energy, the profiteers—the stored coffee wai Northerner and living in seized and sold, and a federal lav passed making, “valorization” im-j' possible so far as this country is con- | ¢ cerned. | But it was impossible to reach the Brazilian government, which is work- dolonial type in a ty ation, setting at Ros ‘The old mansion was Roosevelt, always popular in devotion to his South- mother had much to do with this of | sentiment toward him. but his prin- rose | Ciples of Ameri ism made him many | those who did not be- = TILM TOWN FOUN ON London, Oct. rival the famou: count. A frost occured in the sp 1518 in Brazil, and when pri to unheard-of heights in the States, belated efforts were m: certain coffee men to explain it to the “frost.” W. H. Aborn, one of the largest | coffee dealers in New York, has sug; ted a way to bring down the price n government LISH ESTATE What is planned moyie colony near eles is being’ established on peste » near here. Two big Representative Igoe of co-operating, has introduced a_resoluti House directing the Federal | Commission to inquire into the high cost of coffee. The resolution sleeps! in the committee on interstate and, foreign commerce. Southerners Join In Movement to Preserve T. R. Home; New Soutberne Senators, haye joined in an org: rovement to make the birthplace of | Theodore Roosevelt's mother, the mous old Bulloch homestead at Ros- | well, Gay. a permanent Rooseyelt | memorial, i Both the Smith and Wi as former Se a wick, all of whom were acti E. T. BURKE LAWYER | Tribune Block | Bismarck, N. D. Phone 752 Dr. W. H. Pewe, D. C. Doctor of Chiropractic Lucas Block R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C, Chiropractor Consultation Free vell A - | Suite 9,11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 leaders in the movement. H The Bulloch committee, is composed | of one member from each Southern | e and is headed by Dr. Floyd W. Race of Atlanta. It-has the coope- i f C, W. McClure. a Roosevelt who is State chairman in the Roosevelt Memorial | ociation. and of Y. Clarke, di- { for of the Georgia campaign of the ‘ociation. | The birthplace of Martha Bulloch, 2} Southern ‘gentlewoman famous for her BISMARCK FURNITURE CO. 220 Main St. Furniture Upholstery Repaired, Refinished and Packed. Now WHAT WANE? Nov: BEEN” INTO 3 Som’ DEVILTRY, ws TREE! No, vop= F WULTNT J es INNO: DEVI TREE <~ INA. ADDL. beauty and charm, who supported the “Southern cause ‘in the sixties, although ! BY BLOSSER| | | FOR SALE—One of the very best apartment building corners in the city—150 feet square—close in, fac- ing south and west and cheaper than anything else in the neighborhood— $6500.00; $3000.00 cash. There are now buildings on it which pay the taxes and interest.on the invest- { ment. This is really a bargain. FOR TRADE—We have two or three very desirable farms we can trade | for Bismarck city property and the prices are right. We will make no trade when’ the prices are swelled. F. E. YOUNG REAL ESTATE s COMPANY J Offices in First National Bank Bldg. -PHONES———. F. E. Hedden, 0. H. F. O'Hare, 78M. F. E, Young, 78R. Our Biggest Bargains | | | Ssigncappeeenotevepeneegeenn’ ceo cngEy®