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i Bg ole ibs oh e ee ! FRIDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1919 [ WANT COLUMN , HELP WANTED—MALB WANTED—Roy_or man to clean rugs. «Call at 1030 6th’ St. or- phone’ 230x, 211-lwk YOUNG MEN—18 to 35, for Railway Mail Clerks. — $1300-$1900. Experience. un- necessary. Examinations, Bismarck, jan. 17° For free particulars, write R. Terry (former Civil. Seryice Examiner) oe "Continental Bldg., peeenineton ret) -11-4t DEAT ACT ACTUALY AUTO Tary TE. hale td HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTHD—School girl to work for board and room. 621\Sixth. Phone 619-W. 12-11-3t. WANTED—A College or school girl to work for board and room, Call 871K, : 12-6-1wk WANTED—By an attorney: Stenogra- pher. State age, experience and salary expected. Box 295, Golden Valley,..N. Dai 12-9-1wk WANTED—Girl for general housework, 10,005 per week, N, W. Duffey, 112 12-10-3t wi NrEo2 ona for general housework, Apply_at_ Tribune. 12-9-tf, WANTED—Housekeeper_ or eu for gen- , eral housework, Mrs, W. F. Steele, Cor, “Ave. Brand ist St, Phone Bae arte g *_ AGENTS AGENTS WANTED to sell the Premier | kerosene ol] gas burner, the simplest burner made; will not carbonize; can be installed by anyone in any cook or}. heating stove, parts, Call or write for description. Premier Burner Co;, 519 2nd Avel N., Fargo, N. D. 12-6-1wk ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT:—Modern furnished room, suitable for two. Breakfast served if desried. Phone 581-K ‘or call 902 ‘Sixth street. 12-11-3t. FOR RENT—Large good rooms, unfur- nished, for light housekeeping or oth- erwise In warm modern house, .Save Goal billa and: trouble. Inquire” €38 Third 12-10- without removing any oes rent, Men preferred, 619 6th St. Phone 6191. 12. FOR RENT—Modern furnished roon sor Sth St, Phone 782. - 12-9-1wk WANTED TO RENT—Four or five moa- ern unfurnished rooms, or small house, Call 60 and, ask for Barth, 12-8-1wk u POSITIONS WANTED POSITIONS J“ WANTED—During holidays by teachers experienced in clerking, in- ! voicing, housekeeping, cooking, moth- er’s_helper, trained nursing. . Answer G. L. W.,\ care Tribune. 11-28-2wks MISCELLANEOUS 2 WANTED—We do expert dry cleaning, Woressing, repalting and. dyeing. - Kien _the tailor 12-11-1lwk FOR RENT—Piano in first class condi- tion.. Can be taken at once. Phoi call 10-: AMERICAN Adding and chine, Brand new and guar ible printing, red totals, and all iatest features, remarkably low price, $10.00 cash and balance small monthly pay- ments, . Write 114, care Tribune. 12-8-2wks %_GOOD THRIVING Ladies’ Ready-to- wear stock for sale in North Dakota town of twenty-five thousand, Splendid Jocation.. Reason, for’ selling, pyor health. Write 115, care Tribune : : ‘12-8-1wk BRAND NEW? Rex: Visible Typewriter equipped with every modern feature and.fully. guaranteed Will sell for threer dollars per month. Write 113. are Tribune. 12-8-2wks. MRS... FRED” PEPPER—Formerly resid- ing ‘at 48 Lowall St., Andover, Mass: ‘Write! me‘at once, Mrs. Jos. Williams, No, 97 Cowper St., Ie epeton d i D—A few table, boarder: 22, Inquire at 104 A’ AL ND- YOUR NEMSTITCHIN ind cot. edging to Mrs. N. W. Kelley. P, O, Bok .212. ‘Bergeson Fae . Gul WR -FOR SALE CHPAP—One burner ga ; _line .stove. Apply Tribune. 12-1 PHONE 722—8. 8. Clifford for “coal. eas idence phone 214%, 12-9-1wk FOR’ SALE—Very. high grade violin. | In- quire of Claytoni Rudd at B, K, Electric_Shop. FOR SALE=Completé set “of batcher tools and shop fixtures at a bargain. JM Wirth, Braddock, N.B. Fae WISCONSIN BULLETINS—Boll, climate, crops, Immigration Bureau, ‘Wisconsin Dept. of Agriculture, ep icok 71, Madison, Wis, 11-24-60 _———————__ BIDS WANTED. Coal wanted to be delivered at Bis- marck Hospital as needed. Send_ bid on or-before December 26th to Rev. Wm. .Suckow, Sul Ave. Cc. erat As far back as the first winter of the war, the Red Cross sent to Serbia a sanitary commission that eéffective- ly checked the scourge of typhus, but after the United States entered the conflict, the Red Cross was able, a August, 1917, to send a full commis- sion that carried on extensive reliet operations among the suffering ref- ugees of the tortured nation, Hospi- tals were established, the refugees fed, clothed and given medical attention, the army supplied with much needed dental treatment, farm machinery, and seeds provided to help. the Serbs re- deem their land to productivity, and, not least, measures undertaken for the succor of the children, The terrible condition {nto which these helpless vic- tims of the war had fallen is well| portrayed by this photograph of a little Serbian girl wearing the rags and expression. of hopeless dismay that were all she possessed when the Red Cross came. ‘MARKETS |{ MINNEAPOLIS Flour unchanged. Shipments 62,262 barrels, Barley, ‘$1.28 to $1.50. Rye No. 2, $1.57 1-4 to $1.57 3-4. Bran, ‘ CHICAGO LIVESTOCK Hog receipts, -25,000. Steady. Bulk, $12.85 to'$1 Top, $13.40. Heavyweight, $12.85 to $13.25. Mediumweight, $: Lightweight, $ Lightlight, $12.75 . Hea packing “sows, “smooth; $12:25, to $12. Heavy packing sOWS, Tough, $11.75 to $12.20 Pigs, $12 to $13. Cattle receipts, 10,000. Slow. Beef ‘steers, medium and_heavy- welents choice and price, $18.75 to $21.25. Medium and good, stat 25 to $18.75. Common, $9 to $11.25, Lightweight, good ‘ana choice, $13.75 to $20.50. Common and medium, $8 to $13.75. Butcher cattle heifers, §6.50, to $15.25. Cows, $6.35 to $14. Canners and cutters, $5.25 to $6.25. Veal calves, light and handyweight: $16.75 to $17.75. Feeder steers, $7 to $12.50, Stocker steers, $6 to $10.75. Western range steers. $7.50 to. $15. Cows and heifers, $6.50 to $12.50, Sheep receipts, 17,000. Unsettled. on!” Yes! ‘SOHNSON’S: for Hosiery.’ . ‘ ‘ The’ Spring “of 1920 is going to see the biggest lot movement. witnessed _in. Bismarck during the Jast thirty years, . There should be 200 houses built. next: year. Even that will not take care of those who want them. We have about three thousand vacant lots on all-sides of the city which we can offer at. all sorts of prices and terms. Get! your home for yourself, It is lots cheaper than to rent. F.E. Young. - ‘Real'Estate. Co. Sole agents for Riverview Addition, Lincoln: Addition ahd three thousand lots ‘in other parts of the city. NES- TELL WaTHET =. B~? Nou 1 WANT To BoRRow HIS You A.DENAY IF Lams, $14.25 to $17. Culls and common, $11 to $14.50. Ewes, medium, good and: choice, $8 to $10. Gulls and common, $4.50. to $7.75. SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK Hog receipts, 10,000. 25c, higher. Range, $12.70. to $12.90. Ik, $12.80 to. $12.90, * Cattle receipts, 4,700. Killers weak. Fat steers, $ to $17.50. Cows and heifers, $6.25 to $11.25, Calves slow, 25¢ lower, $6.50 to $16.50, Stockers and feeders slow, $5.50 to $12. Sheep. receipts, 3,000. 10e higher. Lambs, $5 to $16.35, Wethers, $8 to $11. x Ewes, $3. to; $9.25. ‘NOTICE OF SCHOOL MEETING School District—Special Meeting of VOTERS 1 Notice is’ Hereby Given, That on tike A LoT OF MONEY FOR A WAT- LeT me see : SOMETHING ELSE BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE DOINGS OF THE DUFFS. "TEN Douars pee Just A Momencr, This Was Too Much For Tom. This 13 THE BEST WAT WE CARRY ‘Some Tune FOR VERN Becomung ! “The PRICE IS “TaENTY Five DOLLARS marck Special School District No, 1 will be held at Will School, in the County of Burleigh, State of North Dakota, for the purpose of determin- ing upon the question of issuing bonds seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,- 000.00), said bonds to ibe made pay- able in 20 years from date df issue, and to bear interest at the rate of four (4) percent per anfum, payable semi-annually. Which proposed bonds are to be issued’ for the ‘purpose of raising money to build an eight room brick school building to be construct- ed on Blk, No. 23 in the Flannery and Weatherby Addition to the City of Bismarck, .\'N. D. This meeting will begin at 9 o'clock A,“M. and’ close at'4 o'clock P.M., of. said day Dated at EApniirck N. D., this 8th fay of Hee, A. D, 19, By order ‘of ‘toarh of Education, RICHARD PENWARDEN, Clerk BEAVERS WILL BE ~ HUNTED BECAUSE OF BIG DAMAGES By Building Dams Imprisoned Waters Overflow Valuable Farm, Lands Edmonton, Alta:, Dec.'12—The busy beaver has been getting too active in open for a colony of disabled soldiers and their families, it is, officially an- nounced. on other land. %: Coincident with this news comes an re-! Hudson Bay Country Will Have Communication in Winter of said school district in the sum of]? establishment headquarters here that arrangements. have been made with British Columbia $0,000 former impe- rial soldiers, shock, asthnvt and nervous troubles and ‘especially chest troubl We. can save you money by getting your cylinders reground, fitted with rings. marck Foundry & Welding Co. OO —————————_— Nazimova in “Toys of Fate” will thrill‘your very soul tonight at the Orpheum theater. The Indians will be placed tion ‘from the — soldier British government to place in 7 Winnipeg, Man., Dec. men disabled by shell isolated northern ments~ near. Iludson brought into touch through the: long cold wirleess those . afflicted with new pistons and rc A Edward ‘Brown, Write for prices. Bis-| says the project | will mens value to r ed police authoriti BY ALLMAN Wireless to Bring Northerners Cheer |" 12—Churchill, Norway House, Grand Rapids and all | », Manitoba \ bay With civilization telegraph ‘system to be stalled by. the provincial government. province: cover square miles and will prove of im- ‘al northwest mount- Tribune Want Ads bring results. SEVEN FREE LOVE BILL OF LAST SESSION FINALLY AT REST The “free lovg” bill of the last ses- sion, introduced by Representative J. A, Harris as a joke, and so considered by every member of the house at that time, but to which league house lead- ers had attempted. to attach consid- erable importance in the session, was finally put to rest Thursday with a resolution from O, B. Burtness, defin- Ing the nacure of this joke measure, stating the ‘attitude of the house toward it, and condemning any par- son or faction who endeavored to make political! capital of this bill. Burtness’ motion was adopted al- Most unanimously after the following Statement had been read into the journal from the author of the bill: TO THE PRESIDENT: Because of many conflicting state- jments from the floor of the House and because of the many false state ments by the Non-Partisan League pa- pers concerning House BIll 183, in- troduced by me in the last regular Session, I feel it my duty to ‘make the following statement ; On the last day for the Itroduc- tion of bills, at the suggestion of a Christian Church woman I introduced a freak bill, as a joke only, and stand Sponsor for same. The suggestion came in these words as a postscript in a business letter: “Uncle Jim, I wish that yon, wome get a law passed com- pelling the returning soldiers t6 stop long enough to get acquainted with us girls before going elsewhere.” Free- lovism neyer entered my head and I challenge anyone to produce a man within the bounds of the State that would spurn it more than 1, Every one in the House passed it fs a good joke—even the blond from Ts and yet he stated i xplain- ling his vote, on Touse Bil , that it introduced for “politi s “Gag rule”, “Rule of the ete, There is an old say Meable here; think evil’, a g that is ap- those who to the Blond t vole to pre d have him come smuirck to “Te like a d—— horse I think not. I came here as dia a Republican and for stand and now Feononie and find that. prac managing stand the League been ra Font the pr n to a | they med that because of var interests being so closely “dovs tailed” into the program so that it to make a few hence we find the will of the people abridged. ave have men elected by ds of the Are they head: ul sancti 07 seitle- | will be the peo- by a in- winter nent: torney gener clipped. K clipped, and our choot “Superintend- ent of Public Institutions, has placed over her, a man as Director General, who has been prosecuting and per- secuting her, and by some of the gang and for the purpose of extending Rad- ical socialistic propagands al treasurer, 175,000 OTTO AUTO. some parts of Alberta, and to pay him for the mischief he has been causing to farm property and live stock, he is to be legally hunted’ and trapped in all the country south of the fifty-fifth parellel. ‘Notice is being sent out, by the ‘game guardian’s of- fice to ‘that effect, In tha Cardston country, along the Blind Man river and in other sections of central nad southern Alberta, the beaver have been at their old. tricks ob building dams, with the result that wated levels have’ been raised and numbers of cattle and‘ horses. have been rowned in crossing streams thus swollen beyond their usual — propor- tions. The complaint is also made tha tthey are destroying the brush along the rivers, which is wanted for shelter. (Last year, with a similar open séa- son, some 1,500 skins were brought in. These were sent to the. govern- ment and sold at an average of $20 per skin, 75 per cent of the proceeds going back to the trappers, WOUNDED SOLDIERS GET INDIAN LANDS Canada Turns Over Large Tract to Disabled Men Vancouver, B. C., loops Indian’ reserve, covering a large tract-of fine land at the outskirts of Tuesday the 23d day of Dec. A. D. 1919, a meeting of the voters ‘of Bis- MR, WILLIAMS THAT'S & 600d MGUT GIVE Murry ! the ‘city of Kamloops, is to be thrown ott 7 et Dec. 12—Kam- | J DIDN'T Go IN TH NARD~THEIR DOG CAME RUNNING DOWN "T! TH! GATE AN' WE WAS BARKING ANT WieGING CUM TeLuNe tH WORLD AND SUBURBS THAT A HPN — re -ENEN TH’ PALM: TREES START “TO HULA-SHIMMY WHEN THEY HEAR “THANKS For TH’ FEED~- AWERE'S A DIME — REMINDS ME OF BACK HOME “TPPING TH’ PALM - WHY, WE ONLY MEANT Yo RE FRIENDLY WITH WIS TAIL AT MB. ___ BY AHERN WAIT UKE PLAYED IN ITS NATIVE COMPLE KION WOULD WIGGLE A ZEBRA'S ere): ot RIPES INTO KNOTS > Prax} 7 « oo oT KNOW WHICH END OF cludes. freelovism, atheis: dq many Americans. are against decéncy, morality or goo.1 | government. The Department. of Education was {not originally Included in the Non- Partisan League program and subse- quent events show 9 great wrong has been done this department and will be corrected only by the ballot, T hold a membership certificate in the League, good till 1921 and believe that we were all caught with the same bait, Non-Partisan bait, with a radical socialist hook, ‘we hit with our yote and they landed the offices of thes State—J. A, Harris. THOUSANDS SLAIN. Peseta Mont., Dee, 12.—The eaten r big game, which, with the excep- tion of a few isolated sectors. where elk may be hunted until Dee. 25, closed Dee, 1, was the most disastrous in_the annals of the states. It is believed thousands—literally— BISMARCK FURNITURE CO. 220 Main St. Furniture Upholstery Repaired, Refinished and Packed, E. T. BURKE LAWYER Tribune Block Bismarck, N. D. Phone 752 | B.S. ENGE, D..C. Ph. C Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9,11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 DR. W. H. PEWE, D. C. Doctor of Chiropractic Lucas Block BY BLOSSER YES, BUT T DIDNT HIM T' RELIEVE! of elk were slain and there is certain ot be concerted movements by sports- mne, before the regular session of the assembly opens in January, 1921, to amend the game laws. The ‘ban on elk which, had been protected for a long time, was difted \this fall and the result was indiscriminate slaugh- ten, It is said three years of Such ruth- less work would wipe away big game from all but a few short inaccessible patches of mountainland. SHOE FITTERS Richmond. f SWh a) MAIN STREET eeu eds * BISMARCK -NowtHt Daxota’’ Bring or Mail in Your Films for Expert Developing FINNEY’S DRUG STORE Bismarck, N. D. WEBB BROS. Undertakers — Embalmers \ Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge Day Phone 50 Night Phone 65 PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Day Phone 100-M Night Phones 687 or 100 } Licensed Embalmer in Charge ‘is Bismarck Construction Company GENERAL CONTRACTORS Western Sales Bldg. Phone 35 Bismarck oda so PRINTING —— FINISHING DEVELOPING AND ENLARGING MAIL US YOUR FILM Orders Filled Promptly by Experts HOSKINS Bismarck DE LAVAL Cream Separators 5 The World’s Standard FRENCH & WELCH Hardware Implements Harness BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distributors of STUDEBAKER —and—— CADILLAC Automobiles BUICK and OAKLAND Valve-in-Head Motors CORWIN. MOTOR CO. Bismarck, N. D. “ok TORY srryice STAT Corwin Motor Co