Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
q [WANT COLUMN | : HELP WANTED—MALE x D—Rellable parties to sell stock in farmers’ company to farmers on Ilb- eral commission basis, Address Box __ 342, Bismarck, N. 5-29-2wks BARBER WANTED Stag job, 5, Ground joor, J. W. Murphy, Bismarck, ELYING | IN 8 WEEKS—Auto courses . A, Auto Schools, Los Angel _ HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED-Girl_ for general housework. family, three adults, Good wages. Phone 751 or apply 117 Main asc) t 5-28-t! WANTED—Assistant bookkeeper with experience. Lahr Motor Sales Co. 6-8-3t or woman for general housework, Mrs. C. WW. MeGray 3o13 __3rd. Phone 746. WANTED—Experienced_stenogra permanent position. — WANTED—Girl “o P er tor Lahr Motor Sales _6-4-1Wwk WANTED—Dining room giris to wait on tables. American Cafe, 123 5th St. SALESMAN SALESMAN WANTED-<«By old reliable house to sell something entirely new in punch boards to inerchants in small towns and country stores, elther reg- any ular or__ sideline salus isman. UNRE: STRICTED TERRITORY, BIG M- MISSIONS. poll Write for selling supplies. Empire Manufacturing Co., Wf Boe St., Norfolk, Va. 125 5-22- imo Stop! Look! Listen BARGAIN 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%. F. E. Young Real Estate Co. 1st National Bank Bldg. Phone 78R wanting to sell. Address Minot, Nor. Dak. iy, FOR RENT—Unturnis also thrég other rooms. or_H, J. Strolke. ley ACRES ot od hi miles from Bismarck. Price, Decorah, la. FOR SALE—Confectioner; Sta grocer, Box be ‘ call 132W Inquire 6 _ lunch room, Will sell cheap. Box 122! 5-22-1me uAND FOR SALE—At bargain, 200 acte partly improved potato and: cattle farm, 8 mi. from Cloverton, Pine Co., Minn., close tu post office and store. Running wat- er through farm, Hargy Duncan, Own- er, Duxbury, Minn, 6-4-7t LOST AND FOUND LusT—Pocketbook comaining 922 cash anda gold watch. $10.00 RIESWARD for return of same to the Bismarck Tri- bune office. 6-7-1Wwk ___ ROOMS FOR RENT at Ist St. FOR RENT-“Furnished room n suitable for, two gentlemen. 206 8th or phone 79. 6-7-4 RQOM FOR RENT—Gentleman preferred. ‘Sal 517 Seventh St. after six o'clock. 6-4-1Wwk FOR -RENT—Two rooms, all modern} a nice place for summer, 713 3rd & 5. wk ROOMS FOR RENT—Inquire of clerk” at Wellworth Stor FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS HOUSE of 7 rooms and bath; full base- base ment; sleeping | porch; east front; well: located. This is a home that any one can be proud of. It cannot be replaced today for $12,000. Possession given in 30 days. Price $7800; one-half cash. Iam also offering a very beautiful sub- urban home consisting of about 5 acres. of land; well built 5 room house and small barn. This is one of the prettiest little homes in the state of North Dako- ta. Possession given at once, J: H. Holihan, 1st door east of Post Office. 6-8-2t FOR SALE—6 room modern house, east front, well located, for $3250, on terms: 7, room modern house, including 3 bed rooms, for $4500, on liberal terms; 9 room modern house, including, 6 hed rooms, well located on good terms; 5 room partly modern house with lot located close in for $1800; 5 room mmodern house, including 2 bed rooms, Well located, for $2500. Geo. ister. FOR SALE—Two strictly modern houses in first class condition, hot water heat. ,Call 16L or 282R or see T. E. Flaherty. 6-8-1wk IRCYCLES /TOMOBILES — FOR SALE—Enciosed Overland. Car in good condition. Bargain if. taken at once. Call Mr, Du Voll at Van Horn) = __, 6-7-3t ror $450 Overland 90 road- ks and runs like new. car. For Pariculars call 196. 6-4-1Wwk FOR SALE—1 Overland, model 90, excel- t lent condition. Sell cheap. Addre: _16 Tribune. p Agere FOR SALE—Vord Form-a-Truck, | g000 - { condition, Price very. reasonab! 7 Tribune. 2-tf MISCELLANEOUS _ ‘ALE—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. Lock Box. 199, ‘Bismarck, N._D. 4-1mo WE_COLLECT CLAT “NOTES AND ACCOUNTS anywhere. No charge un- less we collect. Our continuous, skll- ful, systematic, intelligent and per- Sistent service gets you the cash, you need in your business, American Mercantile Agency, Room No. Phone Write or call. 8 City National Bank Bldg. ORE “SALE—Pure 6: xtranted, Sw er Honey. 10 Ib, pail, $3. Tb, pall, $1.90, by mail prepaid to Aue post office in North Dakota. -Case of 4 sections of choice comb honey $7. Cash with order, Clark V ‘Timber, Mont. FOR SALE—One typewriter, new; one large ice box, one MayTag Flectrict Washer, roll top writing desk and chair. Several pieces of household goods. New Starck Player piano at a bargain. One roadster Falk car. Call at 930 4th St. or’ phone wk FOR_SALE—Northenst corner of Ave. A, and 2nd Street, 106 x 150 ft. -The. finest location ‘in the ‘city for an apartment or three or four bungalows. — $2850, gmall payment down and liberal terms. See Fred Peterson, G. ' YOU wont need to pay $1.00 per doz. for eges this winter if fou buy” hatching from Telkey's S. C, Leg- horns, Eggs -at. half price, $2.00 per siting. of 15. Call 777L or come and them at 513 13th St. 6-3-1wk FOR SALE—Barber “shop and pool hall, fine business, no competition. Will give possession July ist. Interested in ote } ex Dusingss, - Will take Dodge touring | car in trade, Write 94 cate of | bune. een HONEY—No. 10 Pail Fine Alfalfa Sweet Clover Honey delivered to any ‘post } office in--North Dakota, $2.98; No.5. pall, $1.54. Cash with order. B. F. th, Jz., Fromberg, Mont. 5-24 1mo HALLS FOR RENT—One large and one smail hall for dances, banquets, con- ventions, etc. For rates inguire M. H. Cook, room 2 Commercial Club Bidg., or Western Union Tel. Co. FOR SALE Registered Duroc Jersey \ Pigs, six and eight weeks old. King. ee the Pathfinder and Orange, Cherry. King, i Strain, Inquire of .Beathols \ _ Baldwin, NvD. Sesclwk BULL—Pure bred fifteen months jolt Aberdeen-Angus Pride family. individual and good beef type. Cone ’ t pond with M. Cauvel, Federal Dam, t Minn. -5-5t WANTED—AIll_kinds of fancy or plain sewing. Prices reasonable. Satisfac- / tion guaranteed, Phone 659R. 615 And- _erson St. _C. West. 6-7-5t est. 6. it FOR | Sau ul W. Cait ate. south, t Bismarek;_N. 6-3-1wk i FOR SALE—40 ‘bushels of select, Early : Olio seed potatoes, at $6.0. Inquire SRS sae Burleigh county Gebu. Price per bushel! $3.00. wD 10th St., & at Menoken Kariners State oe ‘ Menoken, 'N._D. 5-19-tf i ‘OR SALE—First Class Cate doing ex- eZ cellent busin: est _of reasons for ~~” CITY LOTS Monthly Terms Desirable locations near the new school which is being built in the East part of the city. HEDDEN AGENCY Phone 78R Room 15, 1st “Natl. Bank Bldg. WAN A: Nz. D TO BUYS jodern hor mh house of Phone 827 or write PO SALE—Kitchen cabinet, sewing machine, beds, ‘dishes, SALE—Wlectric vacuum cleaner ‘and less cooker. Goud condition, FOR SALE or ‘rent almost new piario. ly FA. Knowles. 6-7-tf b—Washing. Phone 437X. 6-1-3wk POSITIONS WAN! TE: D AMBITIOUS young iady” desires office ‘work or “any kind Of clerical work. Call 6531 6-7-1wk C— June 9.—The te sitaution in the United States, accord- ing to Gifford Pinchot, is serious. “Briefly,” he says, “It is this”: “We are cutting and ‘wasting four times what is growing; we are al- ready spending nearly $200,000,000 a year for freight on lumver shipped | long distances because the original fcrests have been devastated; and there is no place in the world from which we can get adequate supplies upless we raise them ourselves. “It is one of the biggest ques- tions, as I see it, before the people of America, and as yet very little at tention is. given to it. Perhaps ‘you have seen the report of a committee of the Society of American Foresters which contains the main facts. The remedy is embodied in the Capper J. il. “Now that the coal and oil bill has been passed and the -water power bill will pass unless the senate refuses to do its obvious duty at this session, here is the greatest of all conservation questions, What it means to the pewspapers I don’t have to tell you. It is well to remember, however, that’ you can’t grow pulp wood; alone, that wood pulp comes from mixed forests, and that the newsprint problem can’t be settled except as a part of the whole forest problem of the nation. “I don’t néed to tell you that onty the nation can handle this question. A few people think it “can be done by the states. You have seen enough of state legislatures to know that the lumbermen are strongest where the lumber is still uncut, while the need to prevent forest devastation tn its results ‘affects more particularly the unforested and deforested states. To throw this problem to the states would be merely to throw it away.’ ‘Bids will be received by the Sterling Rural Telephone company up to 8 p. m. June 12, at which time they will be opened for consideration by the Board, for. the construction of tele- phone lines between ‘the towns of Sterling and Moffit. Bids will be re- ceived either for the digging of holes and setting of poles or digging holes, setting of poles, stringing of wire and installing the. telephones complete. Detail specifications may be had at the Sterling State Bank, Sterling, N. Dak, By order of the Board, H. E. Wildfang, Secretary. 6-8-9 Spain irrigates only 6 per cent of its cultivated land, but the irrigate? sections produce about one-fourth of the country’s crops. An English. medical scientist. rec- ommends a visit to a museum as an 1 excotent remedy for scholars’ brain 1 - ‘Peasants jn thé Swiss mountains use horns often eight feet long, to converse with one another from a distance. Crows, when at rest in the tree- tops or when foraging in the fields, invariably have sentinels. gut’ to warning of danger. ‘ FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS | | | AND L WANT TO Look Tw! IE THAT GUN CAN GET IN THE MOVIES = ive STILL GOT A CHANCE! «| NO MORE ‘GROUCH Why Mr. Parker Has Permanently Reformed, Something Providential in the Fact That He Should Step on That Broken Needle and Draw His Own Conclusion. painful, but in the following story, written by a contributor in the At lantic Monthly, it brought salvation to a map who was very much in need of it. Parker was a “sorehead"— sullen at breakfast, surly at. dinner, quarrelsome in the office, crusty on the street, a bear at the party, a hog on the road, a fly in the ointment. His wife was afraid of him, his chil- dren. were afraid of him, his clerks were afraid of him. He was a “grouch.” One night, about two in the morn- ing, he rose, grumbling, to fasten a flapping shutter. On the way to the window he emitted a yelp of distress. When they turned on the lights, Park- er was sitting on the floor, tugging at something embedded in the sole of his left foot. Presently be held up half of a oeedie! It was evident, they thought, that the other half had re- mained In his foot. The family was drowsily sympa- thetic, but confident that. the ‘doctor would find the broken needle in the morning with a magnet. Parker, how: ever, slept Ittle during the remainder of the night; he feared blood poison- ing. Immediately after the breakfast he sought the family physician, who, af- ter patient investigation, assured him that he must have stepped on an al- ready broken ncedle, for there was no fragment of the steel to be found. But Parker knew that he was carry- ing In his body a deadly thing that undoubtedly had started upon its fatal mission. He left the office early that afternoon and -wen€ home to sur- prise Mrs. Parker with a display of more tenderness than she had ever observed in him since their honey- moon, which had long ago passed into total eclipse. At dinner he appeared greatly interested in the conversation of Bill and Susie about the high school party. He patted Rags, the “dog, who ‘surveyed him for some mo- ments with an expression of undie- guised incredulity befare retiring to the hearth to reflect upon the relation- ship of humanity afd caninity. All that night Parker lay awake pee- paring for the speedy wind-up of his terrestrial affairs, and at breakfast he bew!ldered the household by encourag- {ng. a Conversation concerning other interests than his ows. At the office curiosity reigned supreme and. un- sated. The clerks asked’ one another what, in the world had come over the old aan: and when -he went out’ for lunch, Parker gave a blind man a quarter and bought a War Cry of a ‘Salvation army lassie, - 4 needle in the sole of a foot Is / REMEMBER NOW, THIS i GES IN THE Hews PAPER / NA ASS AN’ WATS" MORE, T _AINT GOING To | tion in manner heroic. _ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE La PAGE SEVEN ‘ontest x Photo ‘Taken for the DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Olivia Mas Mer, BY ALLMAN He’S GONWA CHARGE ME. M\ |-tWENTy FIVE DOLLARS FoR A DOZEN PicTuRES- Wow f | GVESS LL HAVE TO | RANG fg RIGHT ONTO THIS ‘JoB IN THE DEPACTMEN ‘SToRE FOR A WHILE Tuis 1S A GAY LIFE BUT Walt UNTIL MAKE MY SUCCESS INTHE. Momes-The PAPERS WILL SAV- mM THE POTS. AND THe PANS "Feo! To A STAR INTHE LiresT UFEATURE! | The shadow never lifted. Every; night when he went to sleep he bade himself good-by, for the chances of his | being alive In the morning were just | as remote as they would ever be. But it was not a morbid shadow. It forced him to generate more Nght. Sometimes his eyes grew moist and bis throat ached when he reflected upon the deeply sympathetic under- standing of his wife, who studiously | avoided any reference to the impend- { ing tragedy, and/who, in spite of her secret sorrow, acted up to the situa- The fact that Mrs, Parker, while moving the rug In her hushand's room ; on the morning following the accident, discovered half a needie—the point ‘ driven firmly Into the floor—may also have given her courage to see the ter- rible thing through with cheerful resignation. HO TO PREVENT BARK , FLAKING OFF LOGS IN “RUSTIC” STRUCTURES. ¢ —To prevent the bark from flaking off logs §p rustic struc tures, the forestry products lab- oratory, Madison, Wis, recom: mends the following different methods of seasoning: 1,.Cut timbers. late in summer and score on two sides; that Is, cut‘ off narrow strips of bark for the ehtire length. Pile in shade in open pile and allow thorough circulation of air, Allow tim- bers to season until following spring or summer before using. 2. Proceed as in (1) and in ad- dition coat ends, stripped por- tions, and knots with coal-tar creosote, using one coat a few days after timber Is cut and an-” other just. before using the tim- bers. 3. Proceed as in , but do not score bark. When timbers are in place, tack back on with large beaded nails, placing. one to every square foot of surface. Paint‘heads of nails to resemble color of bark. 4. Tack or nail the bark with- particular attention to, time of jeutting or other treatment. The nailing method has been used: successfully by one West- ern company which maintains numerous rustic hotels, and also on a large rustic building erect- ed for exposition purposes, Fa meewnrecnncneccncccnnccn ec wnwn cc ccc wenn nnccccccwcncncccccce: Wreeweweeweweancwnwceucccewcswes aweccccne ’ ‘ ‘ menees DONE WITH ELECTRIC NEEDLE How Expert Tattooists Create a Per- manent Blush on Women Not Afraid of Pain. We have always been under the Im- pression that the English women were | blest with one of the- finest complex- fons in. the world, says the Electrical | Experimenter, but here comes a cable from London telling of the popularity accorded to a new fad fn the English city—that of electrically tattooing a permanent complexion or blush on the face. The report goes on to say that | the pallid and sallow faces of Londen | Tag Is Good at Expressing Himself women are being permanently bright- ened and given a rosy tint by expert ; tattooists, whose electric needle appli- cations can be graduated to suit any physiognoniy, and further, that the tat- tooists report they have never done such a thriving and profitable business among women ag now. How Egypt Is Prospering. In an interesting paper recently read before the Cairo Geographical society by William Willocks is de- | scribed how many of the fellaheens’ | wives have profited by the rising tide of agricultural prosperity, to start @ little money lending on their own ac- ; count, and not infrequently to their husbands, In one thriving village where the value of the land held by the fellaheens amounted to about $1,- 000,000, mostly in small holdings, they had cleared off their indebtedness ex- cept for $125,000. In this community 80 per cent of the women had money out on loan, and their husbands were found to have borrowed from them al- together no less than $30,0Q), usually at very high rates of interest, The profits at least remain in the family in- stead of going to the Greek and Coptic money lenders, and certainly strength- ens the woman's hold upon her hus- band, in a country where, according to Mohammedan customs, he can divorce her by a mere word. How Dike Was Wrecked. For most people the dikes of Hol- land have held. a romantic suggestion of peril ever since mother read. them the story..of the boy who stopped the leak With bis arm. Some time ago a dike near Amsterdam was undermined, ‘not by the seepage of the sea, but by heavy rains, The disintegration of the earthen embankment destroyed a rail- road line along the top and completely wrecked a londed passenger train, kill- ing at least 50 and injuring 160 travel- ers. The cars were rolled to the bot- tom of the bank in a tangled mass.— Popular Science. . Dig for Egyptian Temples. An appeal for funds to carry on the excavation of Egyptian antiquities on a larger scale -than ever before con- templated was sent out by the Egyp- tian Exploration Fund from its Amer- fean headquarters at Boston, the New York Times states. About $10,000 is necded to reopen the excavation of ancient civilization where many relics were found before the war stopped the work. The appeal say “Two monumental undertakings are the clearance of the eleventh and eighteenth dynasty temples of Deir el Banari, visited by every tourist at Thebes, and at. Abydos, the Osireion, the temple of the underworld, dedi- cated by Merenptah, Pharaoh of the Exodus, and richly decorated by. him with texts from the ‘Book of the Dead.’ This great excavation, halted by the war, employed 683 fellahcen (native workmen) and awaits comple: | tion. It is the one tectural puzzle of Egypt.” Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. SAY WY 1S I TuaT You CAN'T GET ALONG WH remaining archi- | DOG'S GREAT LOVE! Death Could Not Separate Rags , From His Master. With the Man He Worshiped Gone, Life Had No Charms for His Dumb Companion, and He Quickly Followed, A professional man in a New Jersey town was the owner of a Skye terrier named Rags, which was regarded as an unusually fntelligent dog, the New York Times states. His master com- muted regularly to the city. Rags, no matter how bad the weather might be, | always accompanied him to the sta- tion, saw him safely aboard the train, i and waited until it was out of sight before he could be persuaded to re- | turn home. Rags was then quite dis- consolate for the rest of the day, but late in the afternoon when his mas- ter's homebound train was due his ! spirits revived and he was sure to! be at the station to meet him. When the train lumbered into the town and came to a stop, Rags would ; run along the platform from car to | ear, scanning the passengers engerly as they alighted. At sight of his mas- ter he would hark delightedly, wag his tall and jump about with joy. His | pleasure was sometimes dimmed by his master missing the train. When this happened the ttle dog remained at the station long enough to convince himself that his owner was not there, and then, tucking his tall between his legs, he- repaired to a nearby cafe. which his master customarily visited before returning home. If necessary, Rags would remain in the bar room for an hour or more, knowing well that in the natural course of events his master would call for him. On such occasions he rebuked his master by exhibiting toward him a certain shy canine indifference, which he mai tained until he was regaled with dain- ties from the free-lunch counter. For years the dog accompanied his master to and from the station, and their loyalty and devotion to each other was the talk of the town. Then one day the master was taken {I and died, and was duly laid to rest in the town’s quiet and peaceful little cemetery. Rags never recovered from the shock of his death, Although neighbors did their best to make life pleasant for him, he refused to be com- forted. He began to visit the ceme- tery and haunt the plot where his master was buried. There have been stories of dogs dying from grief, and some such stories have been doubted and exploded by certain naturalists, but be that as it may, one day the sexton and caretaker of the cemetery, in mak- fng his morning rounds, discovered Rags cold and lifeless beside his mas: ter’s grave. This sexton, an unreman- tle old fellow, said he guessed the dog just died naturally from old age, but Rags’ friends, and they were many, were sure it was from loneliness and grief. In this same town there was an- other dog which delighted to frolle about the station with Rags. He was owned by a local hackman who pi- loted, town folk to and from the sta- tion and their homes. This dog, as though he were an integral part of {t, followed the hack wherever It went. Negro pantrymen on the Pennsylvania express “Nellie Bly,” which made a brief stop daily, took a fancy: to the dog, and used to throw him bones from the window of the dining car. It mattered not where the hackman might be when driving a fare home. his dog knew by instinet the hour at which the express was due, and, rath- er than be late, he would desert his master and run to the station for dear Nfe. If his master left the station a short time before the express was due, his pet refused to accompany him, fearing evidently he might miss the train with {ts treat from the pantry- men. Surveying by Alrplans. The airplane in Tasmania has been used to survey‘a route for the erection of a transmission line capable of de- Mvering 10,000 horsepower of electric current from the Great Lake works to Launceston, a distance of 50 miles. No man had ever been through this part of the country. The airplane. which carried an engineer of the gov- ernment hydro-electric department. traveled 180 miles, and flew over wild mountain peaks, rising to an altitude of 6,000 feet, over very, heavily tim- pered country, numerous lakes, tn- goons and rivers. Information, which In the ordinary way would have taken some months to obtain, owing to the forbidding nature of the country, was gained in a couple of hours. That's All. The fashionable physician had been giving instructions to the young man who was acting for him during a holl- day. “] hope everything will be all right,” | | j will stammered the nervous Wne: “only [ve had so little expe nce.” “You dan't need. experience with’ my patients.” said the great man, as he grabbed hts, hat. CG “They're as simple Ask them what theyre them where going for a holiday—and send them somewhere el Lusitania’s Gold. Efforts will he started soon to re- cover the treasure. in the Lusitania, Tt ts believed that the septh of the water forbid raising the ship or any ef her cargo, but some valuables can be recovered, und she carried much gold. Fishing in Hawail. The beat which the Hawaillans use for fishing and porpoise hunting: is) very long and narrow, pointed, and curved upwards at either end, and capable of holding five or six men. By un fiZenious system of “outrigger.” the terrific surf is rendered almost powe to upset the craft; for standing out from one -side of the boat are two ‘light poles, across the ends of which fs lashed a beam similar in shape and length to the boat's keel, so that ata distance you might think you saw two boats fixed parallel to exeh other, The sutrigger forms a to the beat on the side wherever it is fixed, and the other side:is equal- ly osnpported because only YW very great strain could possibly weigh up stteh a contrivance. The paddling is done from the stern, and fishing begins as soon as the Ht- tle vessel is clear of the reefs; and in uw very few hours she has as many fish as she can hold, The catch ts taken ashore alive in pots, and skin buckets. and disposed of at the pub- He market, iy of the islanders con- suniing it not only uncooked, but. still living —New England heries, The Isle of Dogs. The Isle of Dogs, facing Grev i} hospital. as flat a bit of land as one could we to see, is to be made to blossom again, if not as the rose, at any rate as much as it lies within the power of a garden city to make it. In the days when Greenwich was the royal residence, the kings of England ferried across to the north shore to visit their farms, or, as with Henry VIH, the kennels in which his hounds were kept. Since then the face of the land has been covered with wharves and warehouses, while the West India docks have severed it from Poplar and mainland. The new garden city is to cover nine acres by the old Mill- wall football ground. The houses and flats will have gardens of their own, the roads are to be lined with trees, and the number of modern appliances is to make the Isle of Dogs’ ‘new resi- dential quarter the envy of the whole of the east end. On the west of the isle is Limehouse reach, with its fla-; vor of Rogue Riderhood and. the uni- dentifiablé Mill Pond bank, Chink's basin, and the Old Green Copper rope} walk. It Stops Them. In the western part of Brown coun- ty a farmer has found a plan to keep autoists from speeding. by his home. Last summer several of. his chickens! were killed by automohiles, and when one of his pigs, weighing almost 100 pounds, was crushed under the wheels of an auto, he decided ft was time to do something to stop them. He did. He dug small ditches, one foot wide and eight inches deep, across the road about ten feet apart, and this plan proved successful. He says that after a machine going at 35 miles, an hour strikes one of these ditches and the occupants of the machine are almost thrown out, the machine always slows down to a very slow gait.—Indl- anapolis News. Filipinos Want Motors, American motor vehicles continue to predominate in the Philippine mar- ket. The total number of trucks reg- istered in 1918 was 567, sith a ton- nage capacity of 1,052 and a passen- ger capacity of 6,345. Due to the lack of railroads and the need to transport agricultural products, motor trucks are beginning to play an Important part in the country’s commerce. Wait Return. Somebody says the old-fashtoned pa- per collar ts coming back. We doubt it—the cost of white paper will pre- vent it—Houston Post. R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas block—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