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NT TUESDAY, NOV. 16, 1920. HELP WANTED—MALE COAL MINERS WANTED—By Beulah Coal Mining Oo. at Beu- lab, N. D, Steady works-Apply| “work in private tami Wike Bow ae at mine or at Bismarck office in Haggart Building. y ; nj 7-24-t£ VED — Men experienced in_ seljing| Road ‘machinery. You can. earn’ at Jeast $5,000 a year gelling culvert pipe and highway builders supplies. Con- tracts being. made for 1921. Light, pleasant work, Lfberal commission wsive territory. Irl W. Rose, 1406 _ Broadway, New York Cit UABeIt LikARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its kind. Hstaplished 1893. ‘Time and ex- pense saved by. our, methods. Catalog free. Moler Barber College 107. R. _Nicollet_Ave., Minneapolis, "-11-1-1m WANTED—A man to work on st in Hettinger county. If married wi can have reom and board, German pre- ferred) Write or call at Room 2, Annex ai Hotel, NING-MAN WAD miontl Steady job. kowhak HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTE) High school or business col- to tvork for board’ and room. o small children. Small home. Call No, 159, Tribune AL = tt | Thoroughly competent girl! ‘i Corner Thayer ral housework, and Park Streets. Phone 930, 11-12-1wk mpelent girl For house- BY. Lahr, 15° Ave B 1 GIRL WANTRD—For_ housework. G. H. Russ, 305 3destreet. 11- WANTED—At ef FOR SALE OR RENT . HOUSES AND FLATS ALE—Byfowner, one §-room house, | full basemenf, 3. clothes closets, east front, porch screened in. Barn, garago, hen house. ‘This vroperty is located at 1014-11th Stree: Will take in cattle or horses,“ WIN! sell on easy terms ata on Le CnC ent AW LEAVING CITY AND MUST SELI— = colbaGpliace: suite LF a ice, Ice box, bed, rugs, din- FOR SALE—Modern six room house for” ing room table and. chair se 50, on terms; modern 7. room “house for $3000, on terms; partly modern’ 5 room house for \$1900 on terms, Geo, M. Regis’ 11-15-1wk FR SAL—Seven room modern house, Complete. with — furniture, including piano. “Phone_ 05, U1-15-1Wk FoR” RENT letely furnished, ac- ‘able five=room flat, 615 Sixth street. pone 214K. 1-5-2 WANTED—To rent furnished apartm or house. Write161 Tribune, 11-1 __ > POSITION WANTED ] ‘WANT POSITION—Have had 7 experience in hardware with one f ahd plumber experience. Call 423 2 11 Phone & treet. -15-1Wk LADY TYPIST—Wishes employment full or part time. Telephone 300R._11-16-3t aorpart.time._ Telephone 300R._ 11-163 AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES LIBERTY BONDS AT PAR — Will be} accepted in payment of 1921 Ford Touring car run about six hundred miles. Good..as,new and price, $600.00 includes license, ains, extra tube and} top dust hoog. © At present price of | bonds you can save almost a hundred dollars. Address, 158 Tribune \ ae \_11-8-3wks | FOR SALE—Practically new Ford; also; two 490 Chevrolets, at great bargain for quick sale, ©. K, Garage. hs CNS Re Se? — Tt-16-1wk | FOR SALE+Ford Coupe, A-1 condition. Complete /accessory, $700. No. trade considered. Apply Van Horn Hotel. ee a19e _.., . WANTED TO REN? WANTHN—Furnished. room. for “man .andwife or firnished light housekeep- H. M. Peterson, McKenzie “pig rooms. FOR, FoR FOR, RENT BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE SEVEN VERTISEMENTS WORK WANTED ACTIVE BOY—Wishes employment af- ter school hours or Saturdays. Ad- dress Box_121, Bismarck 11-16-3t , 11-13-3t =uAND FOR SALE OR RENT=-80 acres up land. Produce good fruit ‘and other crops, 300 bearing fruit trees. Fuel on place. Fair set of buildings, water to irrigate if needed. 4 miles from R, R. Close to school. Good climate and neighbors. Open water-power site on piace. No swamp, alkali, or biizzards, At a bar- gain. Terms, by owner. Alva Hall, Porthill, Idaho. 10-25-1mo WANTED—To trade my equity in 160 acre’ farm for cattle and horses. Will take all horses if they are good ones and weigh 1400 or over. G. N. Leathers, Box 105 McKenz! D. 11-8-10t ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT —Two rooms.for light house- dnd, one single room, u 1 ‘oom in_modern from Post. Oftice. Room in modern house, from postoffite. Phone 11-11-Iwk ished room in n 54Z. 528 10th s REN four. blocks ATK, T—A fu Call ern house. “urnished room in mode th street or phone 242R. FOR RENT. house, 801, Small bedroom, furnished. eet. Phone 273 11-15-31 pom mm modern et 11-16-2t TRNISHBD ROOM FOR RENT — For lady: 619, 6th street. 11-12-3t rnished room in modern 1 h-8t fodern roan for on Ave A. a VT—Modern furnished room, A1-16-tf eel MISCELLANEOUS sera, kitchen other buffet, davenport, parlor de 00 takes it 1L-12-4t FOR SALE —Restaurant and Confection- ery in connection, Town of 800. Fix: tures and stock will invoice about $1,> 400, Monthly sales $1,500, Good money r. Reason for selling have other business, . Write or see owner, Bernt & Meyer, McClusky, N. D. 19-1mo FOR. SALE — Barber Shop for sale in county seat of 1100 population. Two chairs, good business. Have account of receipts for last four years. Other rea- ing. Call or write Emil F. D., Box 115, ; sons for sel Klipfie, Ashle BIG SNAT taken c leaving town, Walnut dressing table, chifforette and bed to match. Sagless spring, good mattress. Used only months. Rocker, high chair, two cha and table, 102’ West Ave’ C. Phon! 169X. W1-i5-1 FOR “SALE—Implement_ bi nual busifess $40,000. farming community. ‘Coal mine employ: ing 100 men. Stock $19,000, can be re- duced, Good reason for selling. Num- ber 185 Tribune. Ti-4-2wks FOR SALU/OR RENT—Two story build- ing. /First floor contains fixtures_ for Pool Hall. Opera Ho! second floor. Good opening for Write Aig Kautzman, Brei on barber, n, N, D: 11-12-3t FOR SALE—Duroe-Jersey gilts. Sired by Mammot turber, Weight 900, Ibs. Also a few tried sows bred or open. Patterson Land Company, Bismarc! Ay Dak, pail of HONEY FOR SALB—A No. 10 delivered at any Post Hotels’ > el Se: Montana Honey es — aa Office in Ngtth Datot . an ‘Ssh wath 3 ‘AN order. B. ¥, th,.’ Jr., Fromberg, __ SALESMAN Montana, 11-15-1mo SALESMAN WANTRD—By old eliable| forks SALE — Ono: Favorite cook stove, house to sell our:new be punch boards to merthantssinramall towns and eoun- try. stores, \either regular or sideline” salesman. | UNRESTRICTED TERRI- TORY, BIG COMMISSIONS. Write for salesman outfit, EMPIRE MANUFAC- | TURING CO.," 125 W, PLUME. ST, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. 10-4-1m0 SHIN WANTED—By old~ firnixto sell an entirely new Woard proposition to _ mere! small towns and country stores, unlim-1 itedterritory, pig commissions. Write for. Salesmen’§ Outfit. “Empire Man’ facturing Co., 114 West City Hall Ave-} nue, Norfolk, Va, 11-8-imo SALESMAN WANTED—To sell our line of salegboards (on entirely new plan) to merchants in small tows and country} stores, Unrestricted tévatory, double | mmissions, prompt pay. ~ Write for selling supplies NOVELTY SALES CO., IBUNE BUILDING, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. 10-25-1mo Se Eee EFFECTIVE TRAP FOR RATS Probably Nothing Better Has Been Devised in the War Against De- structive Rodent, It fs a pretty well settled fact that the rat, in addition to being a distrib- utor-of:several terrible diseases, is a thief of no trifling consideration. Be- cause of their roving. propensities and their predilection; for ocean voyages, they have been known to carry dis- ese germs from one part of the world to another. , In addition to this;the amount, of food\ devoured and. dle- stroyed by rats in the course of a year totals, something enormoas, There must a war on ‘the rat, it is ar- gued, in order to combat the H. C. of L., for the price of feeding the rats. in this country alone represents the | work of a large nymber of farms and an army of farmers. a The best way of getting the rat is ; to poison him. Trapping is generally a slow procedure, but the objection to poisoh is that the death-dealing ‘drug that’is scattered around for the ro- dents is likely to reach other animals for which it is not intended. The poi- son holder and decoy shown herewith | is a device which will especially at- Rat Tra > Ls. * | from its native haunts, presumably Laeveral one large Stewart heater, one kitchen cabinet, one large cupboar& 608 10th _street. "Phone 812K. 11:13-7t IN THE MARKIEP—And want prices on car of western breeding ewes. 8. S. Sutherland, Sotith Heart, N. D. Sore eel 1e6t § MAKING — Remodeling | suits, Mrs. J. J. Dehne, 423, 2d Street. Phone 772-U: 11-9-2wks FOR SALE—Chiffonier, dresser, ice box, i am freezer and othey articles DR coats, hats. 1.333 11-16-2t WaNTED—200 bushels dats; 7 bushel fotatoes, 421 12th street. F. das kowiak. i1-16-2t ‘Mattress and one round din- FOR SAL 411 5th street. Phone ing table. Cheap. at Lomas Hardware Co. For SALHN—New warm overcoat. See Riley, 5 tract rats, while the poison of its in- terior cammot be reached by any other animals. The under side of the over- hang shown contains several holes through which a rat would find its way, but once inside the box it has not the wisdom to find its way out, even if St should escape the effects of the poison feast spread for it—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Deer, Visits City. ‘As & reminder to the 250,000 inhab- |’ {tants of this rapidly growing city that Winnipeg sfill is an outpost of civili- zation, a deer wandered into town the other day and cavorted through the main streets of-the retail business dis- trict. It wasn’t a fugitive from any of the park zoos, nor from the menag- erie 6f a circus that happened to be in town—it was, a wild animal, fresh the bush country that lies to the north- east of the city. . Whether the deer was more surprised to find itself surround- ed by trolley cars, automobiles, high buildings and gaping crowds than the people down towrl were to see it there, is a matter of conjecture. There is no uncertainty,( however, as to who had the most fun. The deer crowded enough experiencés into one afternoon to last it the rest of its life. Nias eg United States Gets Manuscripts. Rare manuscripts said to have a market value of 000 were brought to this country on the steamship Lap- land by Charles Sessler, a dealer of Philadelphia, who had been. abroad months in search of such treasures, says the New York Trib- une. Although he bought much on his own account, Mr. Sessler is said to have acted as agent for several pri- vate collectors and museums, “His purchases, which amounted to $32,000, included a group of 12 let- ters exchanged between Samuel T. Coleridge, the, poet, and Charles Lamb. This item is Said to have cost $25,000. The Gatling gun, the first rapid- DOINGS OF THE DUFFS < ” HELLO,Nes This (Ss MR.DUFEI |” OW, WELLO THERE MRS PETERS, How ARE You? No- NOT A PLACE -| WE INTENDED STAYING Home - FINE - YES SHES HERE - PLL CALL WER- JUST A MINUTE ! IT WAS MRS, PETERS, AND THEY WERE COMING OVER “NIGHT BUT ! TOLD ; HER WE WERE GOING To THE THEATER. \VE GOT ALOT OF THINGS I Interrupting a Quiet Evening. , HELLO - OH, MRS, PETERS How ARE _Q You= | WAS JUST UP STAIRS GETTING DRESSED ~ WERE GOING To THE BY ALLMA THEATER - Hetco- HAVE. TO Do TONIGHT! x Ves, buT I woLp Nee TO come OVER MAT WE WERE! Goins To STAY Home! ie | “| WOULD HAVE WOMEN PROPOSE Writer Assails Old Idea That She Must Wait Unit! She Is Sought in Marriage. More and more it becomes evident ‘that a great and sdlemn referendum is needed .to settle the question: Shall women propose? This matter—it is a leap year—has been agitating men and women for more than six months. When 1920 opened, this newspapér called attention to the fact that it was a leap year and suggested and even advised women toxtackle men who were hanging back, and see that they did their cuby and assumed the bur- den of marriage. We told women to boldly propose to men and see that they gave the right answer—an affirm- ative. There is no person quite so much of a slacker as “a _ smuggish bachelor, and if he possesses not the nerve to ask a woman to marry him, then it is the right of the woman to demand that he marry her and see that he does, Weak arguments have been offered against women proposing; fofk say it is unwomanly, that it be Httles the girl, and a lot of nonsense like that. If persons will look at the matter reasonably and realize that. it igs the duty of every healthy person to have a mate through life, they will un- derstand that it is as much a woman's right to request a man to marry her as it fg the man’s right to put the ques- tion to her. Wherefore we repeat what we have said before, that women should do the proposing in cases where men show an inclination to hang back or are bashful. If left to a referen- dum we feel sure the woman's right to propose will be sanctioned.—Chi- | cago Evening Post. PROLIFIC BREEDER IS BEETLE Enemy of Pine Timber Only Kept in Check by Strenuous Natural and Artificial Control. “ Special study has been made of the number of all stages of the\western Pine beetle In 830 square feet of in- fested bark selected from 67 trees, SMIRTY DAS HAS SEPTEMBER, EXCEDT SUE SECOND MONTH, ALONE WHICH WAS? TWEATY- ElcHTs LEAD YEAR GINING fire machine gun, was patented by Richard Jordan Gatling in’ 1862. FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS HA be kD al aac APRIL, JUNE AND NOVEMBER, > WALT REST WAVE “THIET. ONE which represented .an ayeragé infésta- tlon within an ‘areff, of! ayproximately 86 square miles, §iys the American Forestry Magazine. It fs shown there is a large percentage of mortality be- tween the young and matured stages in the geveloping broods, hut that nor- mally an average‘ of ahout 150 beetles to the square foot .of :bark developi@i to the adult, or reproductive, stage; which would be 50,000 beetles to the average infested itree, or, say 30,000 beetles to 1,000\board feet of timber. Since it requires an fiverage of about ten beetles ‘to the squate foot to at- tack and kill a vigorous, healthy tree, it will’ be seens: thedinerican Forestry association, which {fs cam- paigning for a national forest policy, that all the pine timtfr of the western forests would soon be destroyed were it not for natural and artificial con- trol. Patestine’s Forests. “What do you consider Palestine’s greatest need?” “Miss Nathan, a Red Cross. worke, whsyasked D Inent Zionist, says. the Amer estry ‘Magazine of Washington. &.0. th were returning froi the: Holy Land, where their duties” had taken ther. “Forests,” stant replys, ‘What, before the much-needed In- dustries are brought {n?” exclaimed the Zionist incredulously. “Don’t you think industrial rehabilitation should come before reforestation?” “Doesn't. the country's Industrial life depend paramountly upon refor- estation?” countered the Red Cross woman, means Palestine ever. the prey of jfloeds and famine; doomed to un- arable lands and to poverty. Even the industries must be assured fuel and power, and without means to produce these they must langish.” was Miss Nathan's in- Uncovered Ancient Grave. While excavations were being made on’a sinall conical-shaped hill near Dolphinton station, England, in prep- aration for the foundation for a monu- ment, the wal “Palestine, without forests, ; There’s One for You, Pop! SU SECOND MONTH MUS? BE FEBRUARY’ SWEN = IS FEBRUARY! SH SHORTEST MONTH, NO WONDER SHE CUT ME SHorr! WHAT Wh SHE THINK ? 1 LOW MINAT WILL SHE SAY! OW, WHAT WILL We DO? ¢ sf "mM So- + | AT AND WE'LL ‘Co To A Move‘ THEATER AND KEEP 4)” OUR CONCIENCE CLEAR. regularly shaped stone measuring about four feet four inches square and six Inches thick, whichtwas found to be covering ancient human remains In their place of sepulcher. Flagstones about four inches thick line the grave, which mensures three fect nine inches by two'tect by two feet. The stones are recognized as having been quarried locally. The grave was situated only about two feet six inches from the surface, and the dectased person had evidently been Interred with legs drawn up. The stones have been re- placed. te + Purpose of Fly’s Existence. The fly is the Judas of animal cre- ation, hated, loathed, Westroyed, the very re n for its existence ques- tioned by querulous mankind. Yet the fly, despised Insect that it fs, must serve a purpose, for nature makes few mistakes in bér creationg ‘That pur- pose is not hird to find. The fly ts nature’s agent to remove -filth, Filth breeds the fly, so nature decrec§ It a sign, in ofder, to provide for ‘the re- moval of that? filth,’The, fly, like the headache, ts a result, not a cause, Where: there are flies there Is filth; remove the filth and the fly will cease to exist. - Nothing Left to Eat. “A telegram from your husband. What's the matter?” “Nothing much, He simply wired me: ‘Come home. I’ve run out of sar- dines.’” = New Submarine} Cables. Despite the great development of wirel telography, submarine kables are still being constructed, and with the great increase In commercial and journalistic messages, are still regard- ed as a necessary alternative to wire- less,-and by no means obsolete or like- ly to fall into di In fact, a new cable to the far East from Great Brit- ain through the Mediterranean, involv- ing a length, of AOD gpiles, is being laid soetiag fy arth, Ae sony, while the possibility of ,a ngs cable from Vancouver to!Panning island is now being discussed. cientific American. BY BLOSSER COE DAYS OF TH! NEAR ARE IN DECEMBER How CN FEBRUARY BE TH’ | IRISH JUSTICE WITHOUT JAILS SinnFein Courts Return Most Un- ‘usual Findings in Some of the | Civil Cases, |. Dublin—Some of the decisions of the recently organized yn ein 4 courts disregard all precedent of court’ procedure, ~ - ‘They must result to subterfuge in criminal sentences beenuse they h ho prisons, but their findings in civil eases sometimes are most unusual. A will case was recently tried in a district court, © Two brothers were to operate their father’s farm jointly after his death until: one of them | should decide to marry. “PHen it vas fo be divided between them. One of the brothers became engaged and maintained that as he the first {fo set up atiew home of his own he should divide the estate’to suit hin- self. The other objected, The Sinn Fein jury decided that the enguged should be allowed to divide the but that his brother should have the right to select tye division he wanted, X man who sinle something from a farmer we utenced to work 80 days | for the’ farmer and return. the: cle, Another who stole a set of harness was paraded through the — village streets with the! harness tied about him. then taken to the owner and nade to apologize as he’ returned the harness, i ———— Invokes‘Law 500 Years ‘ Old to Isolate Woman Chieago--An English law ap- proximately 500) years old) has heen fnvoked by the corporation counsev’s office here in a legal battle to uphold the right of the city to isolate a woman, deelured by the depurtment of-héalth to ben typhoid carrier. ~ | The p dent is contained in an ancient writ, known as the writ de lepreso amovendo, and incorporated In (he common law ud. ‘ woman is a boarding house keeper. About six.months: ago she was taken into custody on orders, from the health de- partment fon the ground_ that, as a typhoid: carrier, she endangering the health of the community. While nof a victim of the disease herself, she wis, according te the health officers, a walking plague spot. She protested against forcible isolation, ——— 50,020 IN MILLIONAIRE GROUP Select Circle. Is Increased by 34,000 in Two Years—War Profits the Cause. Washington. thousand per- sons how may, classify themselves as members of the “millionaire group,” federal Income tax returns indicate. ‘The ‘group, #8 unoflicially computed here, ‘includeS the members of the families of 20,000 persons who in their returns confessed\each to an Income of at least $50,000 in 1919. War profits, However, fre known to have increased considerably the quil- Hionaire group. In 1917 Tt numbered only slightly more than 16,000. Returns showing incomes of § to $750,000 a year were filed by 917 heads of families, while 90 con- fessed fa annual incomes ranging from 1,000. to $1,000,000, fersons with incomes of more than $1,000,000 in the 1919 returns are esti- muted to have increased to 162 from M41. | AUSTRIA ENDS GRAIN CONTBOL Socialists Are Beaten by Big Vote on Food Measure by Com. bination. Vienna:—Austria has abolished gov- ernment control of her domestic grain fupply after a bitter political fight in Which tle advanced parties avere de- feated by an overwhelming vote of the combined Christian socialist-yrosse Deutsche parties, Government control, it was aliesed,! was.a “farce.” | The economic experts of the saci ist wing declared the control act al reactionary measure in faver of the | agrariay element and predicted thet} Scrap Book FRENCH VINEYARD FOR YANK Grateful Father Remembers American | Doughboy Who Once Saved His | Daughter's Life. A former American doughboy who has gone back to his~home in New York city and who is probably think- #— The—e | ing of the long, cool drinks that could be had in France, is going to hear good news, says a Bordeaux dispatch to the Stars and Stripes. According to the will of Leon Ponce, a wealthy vine- yard owner who recently died, the for- mer doughboy is given, the ownership of one of the vineyards, Think of that. In a dry country, and probably longing for a drink of something besides water—to be made owner of a-vinéyard. ‘The lucky sol- dier is Sergt. Harry Turk, who lives | at 945 Tiffany street, New York city. According to the story told here, Turk, who was a member of the For- ty venth Coast Artillery corps, wits stationed in a camp on the Gironde, During the celabration of the armis- ! tice, a girl fell into the river and Turk with ditiiculty saved her life. WKen he brought the girl’ to the shore the populace surrounded him and bestowed ki upon the cheeks of the blushing sergeant of artillery. He managed to escape the barrage and a few days later refused the offer of a large cash award) His outfit re- turned ‘to the States?! but: thes! deed lived in the mind of Leon’ Ponce, whose daughter, Lily Ponce, was the one saved from the Gironde, When he died and. his will was read, the act was rewarded. M. Louis Signanon, @ lawyer of Bordeaux, has sailed for the United States to inform Turk of, the” bequest. The vineyard is ‘valued at $10,000. REPORTS RICH GOLD STRIKE Prospector in Wyoming Declares He Has Discovered One of Richest Prospects on Record, If the story told by a man named Don, who has been working three cop- per ore claims in the hills north of here, proves to have y foundation in fact, this section promises to be rocked with a gold excitement which will duplicate that of 50 years ago, when hundreds poured in from the outside, led by the tale of ancient Spanish dig- xings, according to a Guernsey (Wyo.) correspondent ~of the New York World. Don lreeently appeared in Guernsey with shecimens of ore that was later found to run $1,000 to the ton. His story was, that while prospecting on one of his‘claims he ran across) one of a number of holes left by tinsuccess- ful prospectors of years ago. In the hope of finding a copper “stain” he proceeded to dear away the rubbish. He was surprised’ to find that he had uncovered a drift tunnel. Inside he -} found the bones of three men and a vein of schist 18 inches in. thickness, in which, he says, he secured his, sam- ples of gold. tigated. Copper and iron ores were found in plenty by the mine:s of early days, but the fleld was abandoned because too far from a railroad. Later the Rockefeller interests cpened up in that section the Sunrise, one of the greatest fron mines in the world. No Porcelain Coinage. The proposal to’manufacture porce- Jain coin to the amount of 60,000,000 marks for the German republic has heen abandoned. Some already had heen produced at the Meissen manu- factory and were disk} of terra cotta color unglazed and unmilled but of faultl artistic imprint. « Experts of the reichsbank, however, advised the government against their adoption, mainly on the ground that they would be unwieldy in the pocket or purse, could not he easily distin- guished by touch and could\ not be: éounted witi existing counting ma- chinery. ‘3 One of the most important points raised in opposition to their use was that they might be imitated without particular difficulty except for a de- reg ‘or hardness which could only be tained by tests by experts in por- celain, bread prices would. rise be eof it, Advocates of the measure, en the | other hand, insisted that in spite « laws the farmer withheld his fi stuffs fromthe government rec | ion and sold to the “left-hand” t ade. | ! yee eS Leon eetcoe HY Rat Attacks Child. Shenandoah, [a.—Victor, fot snths-old son’ of Prof.sand Mr: teen- A, Guimes, was attacked by large rat as he iay asleep in his crib in a see- | ond-story flat at 1:30 o'clock one | morning, and bitten a number of times on the arms dnd hands. cries awokeg the parents and as they approathed the crib a large rat jumped outand disappeared in a hole near the radiator. Doctors treated the wounds and no serious results are feared. Hair Saved Him. | Los Angeles, Cal.—Charles W. Bates life was saved by a hair—or by several} hairs—when he stumbled in front of 2 street car 6n Hill street. Witnesses said the front car wheels struck Mr. Rates on top of the head, grinding his hair into the track, They were sur: prised, however, to see Bates yank his | head back and leave the hair there It was a wig. iG ; The boof and mouth disease in the Norfolk area of England killed 7000 animals, it is estimated. ~ Tne first was started Blish village. known Sunday schoot in 1812 in a little -En- The child's} - HER VOCATION Miss Prymme: 0 you consider Mr. Gaysport entirely sound men- tally? Mrs. Broadly: Why yes, | always - thought he was. Why do you ask? Miss Prymme: Because he insists that | am-running a chicken farm : and |. am certain that he knows | am principal of a young ladies’ boarding school. Foy A Good Match. “The new residence that promcter is building for himself is standing ‘on a biuff.” “So is he.” Promises. “Haye you kept all the promises _ you have made?” “Kept 'em!” exclaimed Senator Sor- ghum. “I haven't even kept count.” ees B. 8S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 2908 His story is being inves- .