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MONDAY, JUNE:7.-1920 “WANT COLUMN ; HELP WANTED-MALE- WANTED—Reliable parties to sell stock in farmers’ company to farmers on lib- eral commission: basis. Addvess . Box _'342, Bigmarek, N._D. 5-29-2w! BARBER “WANTED—Steady job. Ground floor, J, W. Murphy, Bisma N. D. i FLYING IN -8 WERKS—Auto courses i ¥.M.C. 4. Auto Schools, Los Angeles. }-3-1mo j HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Housekeeper by young man, Lutheran, honest girl preferred. State age and particulars, Write No. y NTED—Ginl for general housework. three adults, Good 1 or apply 117 Main str .Phone ED—Experienced girl or woman to at the Eagle Tailoring und 6-1 tw Al rks, Phone 48, WANTED—Girl_ or woman f housework, Mrs. C. W. M ie Phone 746, WANTED—High school, git! to do, light housekeeping and to stay with girl. Phone 698K. ve 6-7-tf WANTED—LExperienced stenographer for permanent position, Lahr Motor Sales Co. 6-4-1wk 8 room and bath house, two blocks north of court house, on 6th street; large trees on property. Price $4200. Terms, $1200 cash;. balance 6 years 8% 6 . B..E. Young Real: Estate Co. 1st National Bank* Bldg. Phone 78R » the-Pathfinder and Orange Cherry King, Strain, Inquire of. Beathols & Lind, Baldwin, N. D. 6-3-1wk WANTED—Competent girl for. general housework, Mrs. A. W. Lucas. 48 Ave. ‘ RS Re a ge SS 1At ‘TED-—One experienced waitress at Annex Cafe, 510 Broadway. 6-5-3t WANTED--Girl for general housework, Phone 698K. 6-7-tf } SA BULL—Pure bred fifteen. months old, Aberdeen-Angus Pride fam A good individual and good beef ty Corre pond. with Cauvel, Federal Dam, Minn. 6-5-5t POR SALI igh county W. Flin . e per bushel $3.00, | Call at H. Pherrill, 10th St., south, Bismarck; N._D. 6-3-1wk 40 bushels. of “select” Early SALESMAN W. house to sell something entirely new. in punch boards to merchants in small towns and country stores, either reg- ular or sideline “salesman, UNRE. STRICTED TERRITORY, BIG COM. MISSIONS: Write for selling supplles. Empire Manufacturing Co., 5 a Plume St., Norfolk, Va. '§-22-1m0 pee OL tel + ! _ DAND: | 1 FOR SALE—At bargain, 200 acre partly improved potato and cattle farm, 8 mi. from Cloverton, Pine Co.;.Minn., close to, post office and store... Running .wat- er through farm, Harry Duncan, Own- er, Duxbury; Minn, 6-4-7. f LOST. AND - FOUND ff LOST—Down town Friday afternoon large cameo.. brouch, Finder please notify 4h Mrs. W. A. Falsoner, and receive re- v ward. Phone 62R. 6-5-3t LOST—Pocketbook. containing. $22 cas and a gold watch. $10.00 REWARD for return of same to. the Bismarck Tri- bune vffice.. 6-7-1wk __._. WORK WANTED, AMBITIOUS” young. man would like to get some work to do’ evenings, Will- ing to, do. anything if treated: right. | Write 93. Tribune. 1 6-8-4 H 7m ROOMS FOR RENT. 2 FOR RENT—Nice.room in modern home. Close in. One or two ladies only. Call _{17 Ist St., or phone 241X.____6-2-lwk FOR RENT—Furnished room suitable for two gentlemen, 202 8th St. enone 656, -7-4¢ \ ROOM FOR RENT—Gentleman preferred. ‘ Call 517 Seventh St. after six o'clock, S 6-4-1wk FOR RENT—Two rooms, all, modern, a nice place for summer, 713 3rd St. 6-5-1wk family. 6-4-3 FOR RENT—Room_in_ private _ Write 92 care ‘Tribune. FOR RENT—Newly furnished rooms. 300 9th St. Phone 377K. _6-2-1wk ROOMS. FOR _RENT—Inquire of clerk at Wellworth Store. 6-7-3t FOR RENT—Furnished room, G19. 6th Bt ——— FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS “OR SALE—6 room modern house, east ront, well located, for $3250, on terms; 7 room modern house, including 3 bed rooms, for_ $4500, on. liberal. terms; 9 roorh..modérn: house, including. 6. bed rooms, well “located ‘on good terms; 5 rgom partly: modern ‘house: with 50 foot lot located close in for $1800;.5 robm modern house, including 2 bed rooms, well located,: for ,$2500,- Geo, M.. Reg- . ister. 6-4-1wk FOR. SALE—Two “strictly modern houses in first class condition, hot water heat. Call 16L or 282 Ror see T. E. F. Salurty. 64-1wk. ‘FOR’ RENT—Two. furnished” apartments for light housekeeping. Call 620 6th __St._or phone 329R. 6-5-3t, FOR” RENT—Seven bungalow. Phone_179X. 6-7-2 ‘OMOBILES — MOTO! clos good condition. Call Mr, room Bargain if “tak Du Voll at Van Horn a aS _ 6-7-3 FOR, SAI. r $450 Overland 90 road- ster, looks and runs like new. For parieular: ie __6-4-1wk Ford 1920 Starter Coupe, lit- Write or wire Ernest Wick. _Center, N._D. 6-2-1wk FOR SAL ‘Overland, model 90, excel- lent “condition. Sell." cheap. Address _76 Tribune, 5-22-tf FOR SALE—Ford Form-a-Truck, good condition, Price very reasonable. ‘Tribune. 5. FOR SALE. tle. used. 7 22-tf WANTED TO RENT’ WANTED—To rent strictly modern furn- ished home-of:nine rooms to reaponsible party without small children for-six or eight. weeks, Owner's family will, be ab- sent. Call 710 Fourth St. or phone 335, G43 ____ MISCELLANEOUS: FOR. SALE—One. complete _three-chair barber outfit, consisting of three chairs, white enameled mirror case, 3 Kochs. ’ one lever hydraulic porcelain enameled chairs, one porcelain enameled — lav- atory, one clock revolving barber pole, almost_ new, if interested write me. leck Box 199, Bismarck, N. -D. 4-1mo. FOR SALE—Pure Extracted Sweet Clov- er Honey. 10 Ib, pail, $3.65; 5 Ib. pail. $1.90, by: mail prepaid to any post office % in» North Dakota, Case of 24 sections of choice comb ,honey $7.95, by mail. € 5 Cash with ‘order. Clark W. Allen, Big: . z ‘Timber, Mont. 5-28-I1mo-lwk FOR SALP—One typewriter, new; one large-ice box, one MayTag Electrict Washer, roll.top writing desk and chair. Several pieces of household goods. New Starck Player piano at a batgain. ‘One roadster Buick;car. Call at 930 4th St. _or phone 824 6-7-1wk FOR SALE—Northeast corner of. Ave. A, and 2nd Street, 100 x 150 ft, The finest loeation-in the city for an apartment or,.,.three- or. four. bungalows. $2850, i small payment down. and liberal. terms. See Fred Peterson, G. P. Hotel. 4-26-tf YOU wont~need to pay. $1.00 per doz. for eggs this winter if -you buy eggs for hatching from pelkere 8. C. Wo: Leg- horns. Eggs, at half price, $2:00 per setting of 15. Call 777L or come ind see them at.513 13th Bt: 6-3-1wk 9R SALE—Barber shop and pool hall, tine business, no competition. Will give possession July Ist. Interested in oth- er business, Will take Dodge touring car in. trade. . Write 94-care- of: Tri- bune. s 8-3-9t HTONEY—No. 10 Pail Fine Alfalfa Swe Clover Honey delivered : to» any post office in North Dakota, $2.98; No.5 pail, $1.54. Cash’ wi iF. Smith, Jr, Fromberg, a ith. order Mont. LLS. FOR, RENT. ame iTALLS, FOR, RENT—One lan smail hall for dances, bangueses one yentlons, ete, For rates inquire M. “If Cook, room 2 Commercial < 4 or, Western Union. Tel, Co. CMe Bide. FOR SALE—Registered Duroc, Jersey Pigs, six and_eight_weeks old: King, | % CITY LOTS Monthly Terms Desirable locations near the new school. which -is being. built-in the East part of the city. x ’ HEDDEN: AGENCY. Phone 78R ‘ Room 15, Ist, Natl.. Bank. Bldg. Ji oa ea ene orn al | =|) 6920: FOR “SALE ‘Ohio. seed potatoes, at. Menoken: Farmers Menoken,..N.’ D. FOR’ SA’ cellent... busines wanting to -s Minot, Ner. Dak. 160 ACRES of good miles from. Bismarc Price, Decorah, la. FOR SALE—Seed corn, Holland Nursery, Jas, Holland, Bis: _marek,N. D. 6-2-1wk FOR: SALB—Confectionery, lunch room, and grocery Box. 122, Stanton, N. es __5+22-1me WAN?ED_TO BUY—Modern house. of or 6 rooms, Phone 827 or write P, Box 614,” \ WANTED To tent small saddle horse, evenings and Sundays. Call 95 care Tribune 6-7-1t FORSALE—RKitehen_ cabinet, ice, box, sewing machine, béds, dishes, Call 6-3. at $6.00. State Inquire Bank; tf kind for rent, 5 Inquire R.'G, EE _ O+8-15t millet, grass seed. 5 Oo. 2nd. St. FOR SALE—Elect fireless cooker, ° vacuum cleaner and Good condition, Phone veep PBReth almost new. piano, 6-7-tf FOR" SAL r ren Apply F. A. Knowles. WANTED—Washing. Phone 437X. \Underground: Workers Are Superstitious Underground workers tn. coal and other mines are full of superstitions. some of. which are extremely weird. Darkness means mystery, and: Imag: ination has created various hobgoblins that are commonly believed to lurk in such subterranean places. For instance, there Is the “ladder dwarf,” a hunchbacked demon with a large head and enormously long and powerful arm. His favorite trick Is to climb the Indders in mines and, as he passes the rungs; to kick them out one by one, 'In Germany the mines are haunted by two supernatural beings called Nick- el and Kobold—the former being he- nevolently disposed and the latter evil- ly mischievous, They-are the gnomes who fill. or empty the lodes. . Nickel, if properly propitiated, will reproduce metal-bearing ores.as:fast as they are removed. Kobold, on the other hand, will steal away the metal from the lodes. He blows out. the- miners’: lamps -and,: If he catches a man alone he may drag him about by the nose or hair. If he has a‘special grouch against ‘an indi- vidual miner he will throw him down @ lddder or ‘crush: him beneath a down- fall of-rock. To. gain the. good-will of: these formidable -goblins. the miners leave bread, cake and even money In. odd places, And as a special means of ap. peasing them, two metals. nickel and cobalt, have been named after them. ‘HAVE NO BUSINESS SCRUPLES ‘Why Firme That Have Dealings With the Wily Jap Must Be Keenly : Alert and Watchful. A British firm once contracted to de-|- liver a piece of machinery In Tokyo. but ‘because .of.some unavoidable de- ‘lay-was unable to live-up'to {ts con tract. Fearing lest the Japanese con- ‘signees should make: efforts to collect the money’ indemnity due’ them for nondelivery, according to the Living Age, the Japanese agent of the British firm sent. to the home office a sugges- tion for avoiding payment. Mr, E—— is the.English agent of the same firm. also stationed:in Japan: “Regarding-the matter:of escaping penalty’for nontelivery of machine. there is 'a way 'to creep around same by diplomat. We must makea state. ment of big strike occur in our factory (of course big untrue). “Please ad- dress my firm tn inclosed form of let- ter and believe. this . will. avoid. ‘pen- alty of case. As Mr, E—— Is a most religious and ‘competent: man and flso \ heavily upright and godly. it fears me: that -useless_ apply for his ‘sienature.; rope. i‘. DOINGS OF THE.DUFFS isee You BovcnT A NEW. STRAW WAT, TOM = GOOD LooKInG HAT= HOW LET METRN IT FUNKY ON Pa. Ive Please attach name by Yokohama of- fice making forge, but no. cause to fear prison happening, as this is often oper- ated by other merchants of highest in- tegrity. | “It Is highest unfortunate Mr. E—— so godlike and excessive awkward for business purpose, I think much hetter| add little serpentike wisdom to up-! right manhood and: so found a good business ‘edifice.” In these few sentences, concludes the Living Age, Hes all the wisdom.of the East applied to all the wisdom of the West. Why. Few: Travel In Afghanistan. Even {!n. recent years there have; Never averaged annually more than five to ten Europeans in Afghanistan. A European or American who wishes! to enter the country must have a per- mit, or firman, signed by the army, as- serting that the bearer he allowed to; proceed through the country unmolest- ed, and that a hodyguards pack ant-j mals and tents will be supplied for the road, Upon the presentation of this firman to’ the secretary” of “state for’ India, a permit -is granted allowing | the bearer to pass the frontier, but at! the same time.the recipient Is re- quired to sign:a paper stating that he understands that the British Indian government ' takes - no responsibility elther for him or his business, A Brit- ish subject receives no more protec: tion than any other national, A. C. Jewett writes in Asia, Why Introspection Is Good. When you build to endure you must do It in the light of your limitations. Only the few are sutisfied that they know ft all. There are more who! need the prod of circumstances to force them into a use of their pow- ers. The wise man knows better tlian anyone else the limits of his power Accordingly he hushands his resources and measures well. his possibilities be- fore he attempts the Impossible. Yet he Is ever rendy to acknowledge the great when he sees It, It’s better far to acknowledge your own shortcom- ings-and thea: strive: to rise above them.—Grit. — How Merchant Marine. Has Grown. According to figures made public by the National Marine league. the American merchant marine has ex- panded from four ships in deep-sea commerce before the war to a fleet of 9,773,000 tons In ocean service, says the Nation’s Business. Flow Electricity May be Used, South African gold mines are expe timenting .with blasting by electricity, with. a, view to minimizing the fine dust, which Is thought to be the chief | cause of miners’ phthisis. " How Distance-Camera Works. » With a French inventor's camar& lens for long distance work it is pos- sible to get a picture of a man 600 yards away large enough to fill a plate. An attachment for alarm. clocks to awaken deaf persons by jarring | their beds has been invented in Eu- FRECKLES AND. HIS FRIENDS A]\, WERE CONES: TaG— if WBLL LET ON Tae “THESE EGGS ACE. ] CAND a ES AAS | bottled-in-bond BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE SEVEN jat a Straw -H. mucut Tom Was the First Man to.Come With New STRAW HAT? CAN! WEAR This KIND OF A RATS BY ALLMAN 18. IT BECOMING To MEP Iv Loos LOCKS WHISKY IN A SAFE Professor Knows Friends Are Honest, but Isn’t Taking Any Chances. Westfield, Mass—Twenty quarts of whisky, owned by Prof. Lewis B. Allyn, the noted pure food expert, has been kept in his safe since Jan. 16. “I know my. friends are honest,” he says, “but 1 am taking no chances.” The whisky is required from time , to time in the professor's research and experimental work, and he laid in a Hberal supply before constitu- Uonal prohibition went into effect Prof. Allyn is working overtime try ing to keep pace with the demand for anulysis of home-made beverages. One small bottle of home-made wine, which the owner do him possessed a real kick, proved to be 28 per cent alcohol, or from two to three times the alcoholic content of wines formerly offered for sale, Ethyl alco- helmay ave been added. to.the,,con- ction, Prof. Allyn thinks. At any rate, it is the most remitkable of the hundreds of “harmless home-made drinks” he has yet analyzed. $3,000 HIS EXPENSE ACCOUNT Boy, Twelve, With Income of $20,000 a Year, Gets Increase From Pro- bate Court. St. Louis—The. monthly allowance for the support of James Newton Lam- bert, twelve years old, son of the late Jordan W. Lambert, was increased from $100 a month to $250 a month on application of his curator, Arthur W. Lambert, 6470 Forsythe boulevard, un- cle of the boy. In addition the sum of $100 a month fs being received by the ininor’s moth- er, Mrs. Bernice Lambert, for services rendered to him. The money.is paid from James’ in- terest in the estate of his grandmoth- er, Mrs. Lily Lambert. The curator 40ld Probate Judge Holteamp that the Income, consisting principally of div- idends from stock in the Lambert Pharmaceutical company, —approx!- mates $20,000 a year, and that the ad- ditfonal allowance was needed to keep the child in. accordance with: the pres- ent mode of living and his station in life. veh fo HUNT FOR INDIAN WEALTH aa é Convict’s Story of Bérled Millions Starts a Gojd Rush in Mipsouri. Eminence, Mo.—A hunt for sup- posed burtea treasure has started on Jack's (fork .of Current. river, near here, as a result of a story told by. Howard D. Bolling, recently convict- ed of the murder of: Roy Sitton, city marshal of Winona, and sentenced to thi years in the state penitentiary. After the capture ‘Yn West Plains for |the murder of the marshal, Bol- ling said ‘he first came to this section in. 1916 looking for hidden treasure claimed: to. -have been buried. In-the ; "OW, WHATCHA Got? FRECKLES-CANDY? { GIMME SOME | Some Hen!! Now! THAT You're. THROUGH WITH IT TLL Take IT OVER. AND, HAVE PIrCLEANeD.| Ozark mountains Dy Tndians ~wiio came from Virginia. Bolling claimed that he heard back In his old home In Virginia, that the: Indians were pald $3,000,000 In gold by the State of Vir- ginia when they started west In search of new hunting grounds. Their trail led through this section, and, so the story goes, they buried thelr treasure on Jack's fork, not far from the present village of Monteer. OCOD OC COL OO OOOO LEDOODIONING Peeeping Frogs Sing in Nepaug Swamps Winstead, Conn. — Peeping frogs were heard in the cowslip swamps at the. base of Yellow Mountain in Nepaug. “two more hard freezes and they'll be out for good,” said Deacon Riley Munsted of Ne- paug. John Scanlon of New Hart- ford, rural malt carrier, while travers his route over Lake Wonksunkmonk hills this win- ter scattered grain for a flock of partridges,’ with the result that the game birds now await hjs arrival and follow his rig for a considerable distance. One of the. partridges tagged Scanlon a distance of a ‘halt mile, he said. sococecoveccocaccorsoooeoqosooo® PARROT BARES LIQUOR PLOT Bird’s Chatter Gives Ship's Captain Clew to Hiding Place of 374 Bottles. San Francisco, Cal.—Capt. Fred Brooks of the steamer Curacoa, arriv- ing from southern Pacific ports, credits Wis pet parrot, Jimmie, with dis ing a plan to bring 374 bottles of liquor into the United States. Jimmy’s repe- titlon of remarks attributed "to sailors onthe ship ted officers to search the cages of several hundred parrots and monke; The search disclosed’ the Heaor, which was cast overboard be- fore the ship entered the three-mile Umit. Seek B'g City Strongholds. Cinclinatl, O.—Big city banks are ecelving unregistered securities from smaller hank: depositors of Kentucky, as eleven successive bank robberies, in whi¢h over $100,000 worth of bonds were stolen from smaller town banks, have seared the farmer depositors. Or- ganized bands are sald to he operating in automobiles out of Cinciunati, Lou- {eville and Nashville, How About the Price? i The British government has estab- | lished a research station to determine the fucl value of coal and its products and especially to ascertain the extent to which low grade coal and: colliery waste can be ‘utilized. How to Remove White Spot: A little wood alcohol will remove white spots from varnished furniture. but rub it quickly to prevent the alco- hol having time to act on the varnish, (FAINT CANDY ATAU, TAG - ITS AUST EGGS, WILL AGAIN-HONOR- MAGELLAN, Quadricentennial of His Famous Voy. | age Likely to Be Appropriately | Observed in 1921. — | March, 1921, will be a good time to visit the Philippines, for it will then be an even 400 years sincé Fernando de Magalhaes, as he was named Inv his native Portuguese, although better known, as English usage afterward | changed it, by the name of Ferdinand | Magellan, first visited the tslands, dis- | covering and taking possession of them for the crown of Spain. And | plans-are now under consideration to celebrate that anniversary in a way | to outdo any celebration ever held: in the Orient. One will hear, no doubt, | A grentdeal about Magellan fn the next 12 months, and-the first naviga- tor of the Pacific will reappear in newsprper columns and magazine ar- | ticles; ,nor is {ft unlikely: that his counterfeit presentment will redis: cover the Philippines In a pageant. The celebration, Indeed, comes at an appropriate time, for the Pueitie ocean is only just assuming reality in the thoughts of the great majority of Americans, and it provides historic backgrougd against which the modern Islands can display their prod- ucts, their development, and their op- portunities for the Investment of ! American capital. ‘Like Columbus, Magellan was not seeking new lands for Spnin. . He set out to find a pas- sage from the Atlantic to the ocean that Balboa had seen some years earlier on the other side of the con- tinent, and having passed through the straits of Magellan; he believed that he was steering for the Moluccas, or Spice islands, And so, Incidentally, he: found the Philippines. COMES OF ANCIENT FAMILY Danish Minister to Iceland Traces Origin to First White Man Born in America, Information has been received from Copenhagen that the Danish consul- general in:London, J. B, Boeggild, has been appointed Danish minister to Tce- land. Mr. Boeggild is widely known in America, having been Danish con- sul in San Francisco and. Chicago, consul-general in New York and com- mercial adviser to the Danish legation in. Washington, Mr. Boeggild seems especially fitted for this post, as he has Icelandic blood in his veins. On the maternal side he fs descended ‘from the Tulinius family of Iceland, which traces its origin back to Thortinn Karlsefni, one of the fa- mous Norsenen who discovered Amer- fea nearly one thousand ‘years ago. Karlsefni, of whom a statue was re- cently erected In Philadelphia, was the first white man to settle in America, spending two years in “Wineland,” where his wife, Gutrid, gave birth to a boy, who was called Snorri, From Snorri descended a numerous and dis- tinguished lineage, among whom. is numbered the Tulintus family, and the new. minister to Iceland can. thus. lay claim of being descended from the first white man born.in America.—De- troit News. ae Cook With Oil on Warship. The Hood, the monster mystery bat- " tleship, Inunched from the Clyde the other day, fs fitted out with a large oll-fuel cooking galley. For several years past the use of oil fuel has been common in the British navy for pro- ‘ pulsion purposes, but its employment for cooking fs quite an innovation. The galley referred to is capable of cooking for 1,200 men, The heat Is obtained by means of special burners. which consume the of] under pressure, compressed air being used to atomlze the fuel. The result is n white flame of extraordinary heat and cleanliness, which leaves no residue whatever and 14 ensily controlled, There fs an 6n- tire absence of smell—a usual disad- vantage in cooking by means of oll— and ‘there s no chance of the food being contaminated. How Fear Affects Mankind. Man has been oppressed by Influ- fences making for fear for ages, and he frequently and erroneously thinks it difficult tu rid himself of his reac- tionary heritage. His salvation de- pends upon an understanding of his plight—upon a plight-consciousness— and upon successful revolt. Fearless- ness must dominate instead of fear; mental freedom must put psychic au- tocracy to rout; the entire mental at- titude must be altered; it Is just as easy to cultivate a wholesome attitude as a vicious one. Why Superstition Lingers. Man’s curiosity is in excess of his power to interpret and_ understand; consequently he guesses, and when ne| guesses wildly and inaccurately others of a later date call his guess super- stition. Long after people have clear- ly seen that there is no rational evi- | dence for the thing believed the super- | stition lingers. | 4 proper | § EGes! Ol-Look! “W CuICKEN HAYS LAID THESE EGas” SWALLOWED 4 DusBERStanp! GETS Photo shows Felix M. Warburg, lead- ing Jewish banker of New. York, who has just heen formally: presented with the anclent degree of the Jewish faith, “Haber.” Th the highest honor ever ac- corded ‘an Jew. It was give en to Mr, Warburg by a delegation of rabbis from the First Hungarian con- gregution, Ohab Zedek: The degree dates back to Talmudic times, It was given the banker and philanthropist. in’ recognition of hu- manitarian services, benefactions, and charitable activities performed during recent yea The last time the hon- or was conferred was upon Sir Moses Montefiore for saving the Jewish pop- ulation of Damascus in 1848, GIRL FIGHTS MEAN BANDITS Twelve-Year-Old Child Knocked Dowr in Battle Over Penny Bank in New York, New York.—This 1s the story of a little gir brave fight against the two meanest burglars in New York: Margaret Hagney, twelve years old, was asleep in her home in West Twen- ty-fifth street when she was awakened by a noise in-an adjoining room. Her parents being~ absent, she called: “Who's there?” and, receiving no an- swer, turned on a Hght to discover. two men rattling her bank, containing 75 pennies, The men sprang for the doorway, with the girl giving chase, screaming at the top of her voice. She caught the man with the bank, ’ smeantime fighting. off his: companton, who was endeavoring to ‘stifle her sereams, nnd finally was knocked un- conscious with a blow on the forée head with her own bank. F The men escaped, taking the bank with them, and neighbors a few mo- ments later broke in the house and found Margaret insensible on. the fluor. * eeneceorerseererees: Man With “Ingrowing Grouch” Is Divorced Los Angeles.—A man with an “ingrowing grouch”—so he dub- bed himself—was divorced by Judge Crail, L. E. Ross, ‘statis- ticlan employed by the state de- partment of labor, is the man, Helen Ross, who was represent- ed by Attorney Gri..th Jones, secured a divorce on the ground of cruelty. Ross had brought the suit, but failed to appear in court. He charged his wife with cruelty and atnong his grievances was that his wife kept too many cats. Her main grievance against him was disclosed In a batch of let- ters from a woman who signed herself. “Your Baby.” peesccccccscccoocoococsosooooooed Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. RS. GE, D. C. Ph. C. Uhiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas Btock—Phone 260 FOR SALE New Dodge Touring Car equipped with Cord Tires and shock absorb- ers. ‘Phone 672K or write P, O. Box 298, Bismarck, N. D. BY BLOSSER