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rae ee WANTED—MALE ~*_, ROOMS. FOR RENT, y FOR RENT— 0 AL MINERS WANTED By |i it housckesniug.. Atco. one, single > Beulah Coal Mining Co. at Beu- |... 700m... Call at 219.24 street. _11-30-3t “lab, ND. Steady work, Apply | "S32 MORERN FURNISHED, ROOM a at mine or at Bismarck office in | Phone 538L..__ 505 3d street__11-20-1wk H Fh Haggart Building. 7-94-tf FOR seating Two. pode. for Ment 4 ‘ 7 a at RS Mss ousekeofing... Ca Or LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Molér| en atrast. if 1-2-3. rber College, Oldest institution of its kind. ~Established 1893. Time and ex- pense sa@d by our methods.\ Catalog , free. Moler Barber College 107 R. _ Nicollet Ave., Ngnnepaolis. 11-29-1mo0, _. HELP WANTED—FEMALE HBLPER IN BAKE SHOP—With éxperte ence: preferred, but not necessary, Ap- Jply, Manager, McKenzie Cafeterias ach epee ibaa Side Acta SERN gE WANTED—Good cook and other ‘help in te small hotel. Box 93, Medora, No. Dak. Os Bayes ck cu, 11-26-6t R WANTED Competent “girl. for, general housework. Mrs. Burt Finney, 411.Ave. -26-t1 ‘ RB SALE OR baie : == OUSES AND FLATS - WHO WANTS THIS BARGAIN—Sale by owner. Efght room house, ‘partly mod- ern, -full basement, ‘garage, barr, chiekén house and ten lots, . trees, shfubbery. A fine garden spot, three blocks from new school. Located 930 lith street. Just the place for a fam- ily. to. have a nice home. For terms, call or ‘write 930, 11th street. .A, F. Marquitt, P> O, Box 675, Bismarck, je Pec. *11-30-1WK FOR RENT Strictly new modern bunga- < low, 5 ‘rooms and bath, hot water “heat, _—, EEE on ee <r ee ee SS A; |W. Welgenborn,: 118. West. Thayer. Phone 459K, 11-30-1wk4 t FOR SALE — Nine room. modern house, strictly modern, also 50 foot lot and and garage in Basement. For terms, see]. FOR RENT—Furnished rooms in modern house, 38 Rosser street. '” 11-30-5t FOR RENT — Room in modern house. ‘Call 622°24 street. . WORK WANTED WANTED—Any kind of stenographic or clerical work. ‘Address, 169 ribune, t 12-2-2%: MISCELLANEOUS =~ FOR SALE: - For Saté:' House and Barn. In- quire Mrs. Eppinger, Grand Pa- cific. Hotel. FOR SALE#-OR\TRADE—Drug store for land. ‘Stdck ‘and fixtures worth about $4,600.00 to $5,500.90. Will sell for half cash. “Good businesg: with only soda fountain itown, Rott-Drug Co., Lehr, N.D. f 12-1-lwk HONRY FOR, SALE—A No. 10. pail of Montana Honey. delivered at any Post Office in:North Dakota, $3.00 Cash with order. B, Smith, Jr: Fromberg) Montaria. mee 11-15-1m0 FOR. SALE--One: large iron’ safe: _ child’s large: iron bed and springs and one large bed spri Inquire of H. F, O'Hare in Littl lg. Tel. pa ‘1-1 FOR SALE—A ‘fumed: oak dining room: suite, 6 chairs Spanish leather sets, table and buffet. Call 114 Ave, A. ) large barn. Call.4@-7th street, Phone} _ West, or phane. 169L. 1251 ee G44, __J3__. + 11-16:1mo | FOR"SALE—A beautiful new piano ata FOR nished “apartment in | . sacrifice, on. account of leaving for the Rose“Mpartments, Dec. OMS. J. 1..| © West. Phone’ 308, or call at.824 Main Waters. Phone 563. 11-29-1wk | ‘street, Mandan, >’: — Ya1-30-1wk FOR SALE—A 3 room cottage, all ‘mod- | FOR SALP—Small Edison phonograph, « "ern! Call 164 Tribune. 11:24-1wk | record cabinet, and records. Also = hard coal, base burner, and Duo-fola. WANTED TO RENT ngs ee aa LEC aterette WANTED — To. rent furnished tight | "OR SALE" House, parn and corntiyeh a ke ROR Ce TOO oan, | from 10:80 to 4:30 Dem e 1B-2-8t Anal family. Write Be: TMOst| WANTED TO .-BUY—Small "hardware, Si : s implement or, tire, business. Write futl wae “SALESMAN - particulars, 168 Tribune. | __ = z WANTED—Board and room near capitol. ° SRDGESMBN WANTRD—By old reliable |" Would like to. kngw charge. Der Week firme pee centinely. tow, baspales or month. Write ‘Box. 706. 11-30-1wk y ~ 1e} — mS” AN] ") anal towns and country\stores, umlim-. SWITCHES AND BEDE Made trom \ ited territory, big commbasions. Write |\ YOUR enn combinge, | ETices are wk H for, Salesmen's Outfit, Empire Mai of able. Call 713 3d street. _11-29-1wk Ke facturing Co., 114 West City Hall Aveb|FOR SALE—All furniture in the Star | nue, Norfolk, Va, 11-8-1mo,| Restaurant.” Caltphone 353. ~ 11-30-5t ( . found several skeletons, but ft was i: } — USE FILM IN SURGERY possible to identify them. We coulk j Hee * aon i oe even-see wheffit they had beer . rf men or wonen. “ Preparation For and Carrying “But,” he added naively. “you tive ‘ Out: of Operation Shown. .. | to “say something to, \your visitors * i ‘ Now, have you not, sir?” | \ __ fe Especially Useful for Students a8 | FIND NEW RUSS GOLD FIELDS i z a instructor Can Explain Every va nts | : Move Made. | Prospectora Report Rich Placer anc New York,—Many: prominent physl- clans end the student body of the New York Homeopathic Medical College at- tended the unique celebration of Na- tlonal Homeopathic day at the New “York.-Homeopathic Medical College and Flower Hospital, Avenue A; be- tween .Sixty-third and. Sixty-fourth stréets, Interest centered around the exhibitions of herniotomy under local ahesthesic. by Dr. Fred. A. Kelly. of” troit, surgeon of the Grace hospital of that city and President of the Mich-~ fgan State Homeopathic society. ‘The application of local anesthesia, which means the deadening of the herve centers in the region of the op- eration without causing the patient to tose consciousness, to herniotomy, which included operetions for hernia and rupture, is something entirely new tr in:medical science. The first demon-/ stratioix was a four-reel moving ple- ture showing every detail of prepara- tion and actual carrying out of the op- ération as performed by Doctor Kelly and his assistant8 in the Grece hos- pital in Detroit. This moving picture réel is especially useful in that one who understands’ the operation can stand and explain every move made to | students and surgeons’ interested and also in that it has the advantage over the actual operation Itself in that the | entire operation or any part of it can be:reviewed as many times as is de- stred by the instructor or student. The picture was followed by a dem- onstration by Dr. George F.Laidlew and Dr. Milton J. Raisbeck of the elec- tro-cardiagraph, an electrical instru- menfused for the purpose of detect- ing and diagramming irregularities in the heart. The advantege of this ap-} paratus fs that the part attached to the patient may .be attached in his bed at home, and'by means of con- rietting wires, the results of the test may be recorded/on the machine In the hospital. miles away. This does away with the necessity of carrying about the entire apparatus, ft. being oe - necessary to have on hand only the part attached to the patient’s arms ayd legs. The final demonstration: wes the performance in the operating room ot the Flower hospital of an actual op- eration by Doctor Kelly after the man- ner described in the motion picture shown earlier in the afternoon. The Operation was successfully performed upon an inmate of the hospital, who hed recently been brought into the hos- pital suffering from rupture. Sune SHOW GRAVE AS PILGRIMS Ditch Guides Admit There Are Doubts About’ Pastor Robinson's 4 Burial Place. Leyden, Holland.—American ists) wAo come here are frequently shown by the guides in St, Peter's i church, where the Pilgrim fathers.wor- g . shiped before going to. America, 9 stone, under which, the guides say, Ifes the body of Pastor John! Robinson, the Pilgrims’ leader. ‘The correspondent the other day) took one of the guides aside and ex-) pressed doubts about it, whereupon the guide opened his heart and sald: “As a matter, pf fact, sir, we do not really know ourselves. We had all the }——___—— - tour-| 3 Quartz Deposits .in Different yo Parts of, Russia. Berlin.—Discoverles of new gol fields in dlffer a Nuarte of Russia ar. reported by a German trade journal, + In-Bachara: (Aighan frontier) onthe) uppef waters of the Amu .Dar mune its tributaries, rjch placer gold dé posits’ are reported to have heen te cated and’ further successful prospect ‘ing. has been made on the: Safety arya and Yutthan, 5 4 Placer, gold’ has algo, been discov! ered in the Ussuri distriet In the Iné basin. (eastern, Siberia). CS ‘Im sseveral ‘other parts ‘of Sibert: prospectors have lately found not onl; Placer gold, but rich | gold-bearin, quartz, say the reports, , Indian Sells Land for | Plane; Heap Big. Chief Hiawatha, Kan:—Chiet Harri- son Connell, an Indian, bought ‘airplane in Kansas City sev- eral months ago to give exhibl- tion flights). He brdught the plane to hfs -homd here. ivhere scores of redskins assembled to see their chief fly. Chief Con- nell had sold his last eighty acres of Indian land and was prepar- ing to fig, high when the plane ‘came: dawn with a sickening thud. Chief Connell had $2,700 invested in the.machine, but sold it for $100 to an ofl man from ‘Texas, —— SSS WILD BEAST PUZZLES EXPERT StéangeAnimal Found in New Jersey . Has the Head of a Raccoon and Cat's Tail. ao .Cohansey, N. J.—A strange animal that has made even the oldest river- men and natives pinch themselves in this dry. era is puzzling trappers and hunters as to its species since its cap- ture in the Cohansey river. The ani- mal Has the head: of ‘a raccoon, the tall of a cat qnd its bodst of a little more than a foot long is covered with gray and reddish brown fur. ‘Its feet are black. It was captured In a scoop net at the edge of the river by Clar-. ence Cheesnian, who lives: in a boat house colony near the shore, eer men Qe eereneneene Drunken Cow Exposes ° Still, Freed From Arrest Denver. Colo. — A drunken cow, reeling. unsteadily along the” road, ‘stopped and looked with a glazed eye at Sheriff E. 12-1-3t | $50°° - OWNER CALL AT Po! | BEnEve LL GO DQWN AND eaceiay! INeED A MITTEE CHRISTMAS | MONEN® y How Are You Gone TO PROVE d FOUND= POCKETBOOK CONTAINING STATION AND IDENTIEN — ~ PUT gorsiro WORK, THEN PAY T MORE MONEY, SAYS “CLEAN-UP-CHIEF” BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE SEVEN | See BY AN LICE ) LosT EM Charles’ C. Fitzmorris, Who Is Leading War on Crime, Tells His | Ideas, of Making Force Effective—Probably Youngest Police Chief in Barge City BY EDWARD M. THIERRY N.. E. A. Staff Correspondent Chicago, Dec. 2—The new fashion of putting newspaper men in places of ower—f’rinstance, President-elect arding—is being tried in the Chicago police department. Chicago Has had chiefs of police who were pcliticians, professional po- licemen and soldiers, Now a news- paper man, Charles C. Fitzmorris, at the age of 36, has the job of doing what the others failed to do—clean up crime. v “Absolute Authority” “If things aren’t rubberstamped and Charlie Fitgmorris starts to clean up on crime,” saida newspaper man who knew him when he. started as a copy boy, 20 years ago, “he’ll make a thor- ough. job. of it.” Mayor Thompson says Fitz is not a rubber ‘stamp. In naming him, the mayor conferred “absolute authority” and added: - “No’ one 1s authorized to speak for me or ask you anything in my name.” Fitz is going ahead on that basis. He has~started tobe a “go-getter.” Fitst he “got’ a few men on the force by transferring 500 to new fields. Eight days after he took office he per- Sonally went out with a gun, captured two bank robbery suspects and recov- ered $8,687 in loot. Lines of Action Here are some other things he did before he was a month old as chief: Deposed Detective Chief J. L. Moon- y and made Lieutenant Michael ‘ughes chief. ¢ Started to draft new anti-crook laws chief. of which is a law making rob- bery- with a gun punishable by im- prisonment for life. _ Started sugpending , delinquent po- licemen \iffsPddd ing the red tape and whitewash of trial board charges. Punished six, policemen who let a wounded bandit-escipe from a” hos- SS pital by suspending them so each loses $160 pay. i Initiated. gambling raids brought 562 arrests in one night. Planned motorcycle squad to check clockwork regularity cf Saturday ‘ payrool robberies... 4 ol Drafted ;plan-for merit ,system— merit marks: fpr. good work and de- merits for every crime committed, that man. 4 The youn; chief is short, stocky, boyishl: roung apd has a smile and a twinkling eye, 4nd a firm hand with a kid glove touch. Interested in Cops “I don’t believe in talking much,” she says. ‘@ believe’in doing things. I’m willing to co-opetate with any- body who can help , the police de- partment. “My policy iy First,’ get the pélice to work; second, see they are better paid; third. demonstrate. the need of more polié In 1900 Fitzmorris; in @ newspaper contest for*boys, broke the world’s xecord on a trip around the world. He showed such pbdlitical strategy in Carter Harriscn’s campaign for may- or that Harrison made him his secre- tary in 1911. Though a Democrat, he was retained when Thompson be- came mayor in 1915. Chief Fitzmorris has a wige and ‘three children. His salary is $8000. | | Mayor Thompson says he is “a bird of a chief’—sure to be disliked in other ies because “crooks are getting cut of Chicago while the going is good.” LEGION MEMBERS Regular meeting, Legion Hall, & from district captain down to patrol-) 7 . AD IN THE. PAPE THAT You HAVE A PocKeT - Book CONTAINING 502° THAT Ger AWAY wird tT! HomeTow SHOULD ALL BE NEIGHBORLY ( Spirit Is of Immense Importance to the Upbuilding of Community, Small or. Large. , Rent nods have a social value rath- er ‘overlooked in the turmoil. Though hardly attaining eminence as a moral force they remain a ‘persuasive fact for axfity_neighborhoed. They have made a social whole of. many a four- walled community that had been mere- Ty an accidental aggregation. Common oppression makes. humanity kin, in- cluding even the inmates of an apart ment jiouse. Neighborliness, in short, has begun to mean something. Neighborliness is at once the kind- Nest and the most powerful organiza- tion in our tradition, Neighborhood organizations, {if not captured by schemers with private ends to serve, is the best basis for consumers’ or- ganizations in’ general. That Amer- ican class called neighbors, the great unwieldy, battered "90 per ‘cent, has suffered much of late through lack of organized effort in its own behalf. Neighborhood associations will ame- Morate the, predatory ethics of urban life. When neighbors meet in public school ‘assembly halls for commynity association in economic study, in pol- itics, in music, in drama, in edycation- al problems, good government and good living are likely to be furthered. Better neighborhood understandings leading to intelligent co-operative ef- fort are“one of outstanding needs.— Chicago Daily sNews!" over Rex Theatre, Dee. 2. Tripune Want-Ads Bring Results. OU, DoP- WiLL ‘VA ANSWER ME A.-Cormley.: The sheriff rec- ognized the symptoms, got out of his. car and grasped the cow’s halter. The cow led the wayacross John Connor's farm to a haystack and the sheriff found a large portion. of hay saturated with whisky from a broken two-gallon jug. Further investigation showed a complete distilling outfit and ten gallons of liquor. 088 eer engi ere: gtones up some years ago, and we 5 ee ee ceeemmmmeniemaiettd Bi bienbieiceeze-sseronereinidiae-l Freckles and His Friends - The Big Question! By Blosser WELL, WHERE IS WIAD WHEN f° we WAR CHAPLAINS ARE. HONORED Given Medallions Commemora- tive of Their Service to Their Fellows on Land and Sea, . PRESIDENT GETS FIRST OWE Token Is Intended to Convey In Tan- gible Form the Appreciation of the Churches Whose Chaplain Sone Served in the War. Washington.—Every one of the great and devoted company of chaplains in the army and nuvy during the World war, who represented the 27 Protes- tant denominations united for service in the general war-time commission, recet¥ed a commemorative medallion recently. This beautiful token {s in- tended to convey in tangible form the message of grateful appreciation from the churehes to: their chaplain sons | who were ready to give up everything, even life itself, for their fellows fight- ing on land ang sea. To President Wilson went the first “one, and this was followed by presen- tations to the secretary of war, the secretary of the navy, Bishop C. H. Brent, chief chaplain of the A. E. F., Col, John T, Axton, chief chaplain of the’army, and Capt. John G. Frazier, chief of the chaplain’s corps of the navy. Symbolizes Service. This medallion is of bronze, 2% inches In diameter, It is the reallza- tion of a suggestion made soon after the armistice to the executive commit- tee of the general war-time commis- sion of the churches. The committee approved the proposal and made it one of the tasks committed to the general committee on army and navy chaplains when the general war-time commission dissolved. ‘The design is by Mrs, Laura Gardin Fraser of New York, one of the best-known of American medalists. The task given to Mrs, Fraser was to produce a design expressing the spirit of the men who served as chaplains, which would represent both branches of the service. ‘ One side commemorates in symbol the service of the army chaplain, and the other side the navy chaplain, In | showing his service in the army @ chaplain is presented in the act ot ministering to a wounded soldier. In the center of the design the gas ‘mask is seen ready for immediate adjust- ment. The suggestion is that the: chap- Jain has removed it the better to .suc- cor the wounded man. Strength and sympathy are expressed If the finely modeled figure. The stricken soldier represents an, artilleryman serving the big guns, stripped to the walst. On the reverse sjde the fine record of the men who served as chaplaiys in the navy is symbolized by the repre- sentation of a battleship, with the r.s8 as the central feature, and the inseription at the top, “Awarded to the Chaplains 6f the American Army and Navy.” Below is the inscription “The General War-Time Commission of the Churches, Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America.” On the obverse 1s inscribed 1917-1918,” the name of the designer and the date of the award. Complimentary medallions. will be presented to various museums of this country, and to representatives of the chaplains In France, England and Can- ada, in appreciation of their servive to American boys. Praise for Designer. The subcommittee of the general committee on army and navy chap- lains having charge of the designing of the medaljion, was composed of Dr. Gaylord .8. White of New York, Dr. Lauritz Larsen of New York, Dr. B. B. Bagby of Washington, Dr.\ Forest J. Prettyman of Washington, ‘Prof. John R. Hawkins of Washington, Dr. W. Stu- art Cramer of Lancaster, Pa., Bishop William F, McDowell of Washington and Dr. &. O. Watson of Washington. In announcing the presentation Maj. eral of the army, says: “Mrs. Fraser ‘has achieved notable success in producing a mec:llion of judgment of competent artists and critics is unanimous in this. he. gift will be sent out froin the“offices of the general committee of army and navy chaplains in Washington to all the chaplains in Protestant churches en- titled to recetve it at once.” Farmer Needs Step Ladder to Harvest His Corn Crop. When C. B. Haukenberry, who has 2 farm on.bottom land near Topeka, Kan., goes to harvest | his corn this autumn he will | have to take a step ladder along in order to get the ears. Vaukenberry has a four-acre\ oh on two-thirds of which the ef of corn are higher on the Ninety stalks than his head. per cent of the corn ts 10 feet - high and the average is\12 feet. | The Privileged Outdoor Sport. Huntington, W. Va.—Because he was chasing a hootlegger, Motorcycle Cop Jonson was freed of a charge of vio- lating a city ordinance In passing a street car on the wrong side. Anything goes, the court ruled, when an dficep tg chasing aman with whisky. —_— Goat Brings $750, Sioux City, Ia.—What is Believed to be the world's“ record* price for a six-months-old goat has been received} by Dehaan & Co., of? Sioux City, for a | Saanen buck, bought by k; L. Bonham of Los Angeles tor $750, cu | aes Gen. P. C. Harris, the adjutant gen- 1 such rare distinction and betuuty; the | EX-KING LAVISH WITH CASH = Ferdinand of Bulgaria: Défies' Tax Col. lector by Spending Wealth With > Lavish Hand, $ Berlin, Germany.—Former King Fev- dinand of Bulgaria, fearing the inroads= of the tax gatherer is enjoyifig his wealth by spending It, At Mergentheim, which he is visit- Ing for the sake of the magnesia}- springs, he leads a jovial and uncon-} . cerned existence, Under the name off: Count von Muranny, says a writer in the, Zwoelf-Uhrblatt, Ferdinand is re- siding at the Kurhatis together, with his suite composed of chaplain, chim- berlain, chauffeur, footman, Valet and private secretary. His lavish expendl- ture has made him popular in the (wa) and surrounding country, where the; village see in him an_emblem of the “good old tines” and greét hin, with cheers as he drives past in a auto mobile, ‘The fact that the British govern- ment has releared ‘the former king's sequestrated property is known to all and has earned for him the reputation, frequently embarrassing, of being fab- nlously rich, His secretary has @ difficult task in, keeping off the host of people who want private ‘audiences on business. For instance, some one has Invented ane burning match and wants money from the king to convert his theory into practice, SMALLEST DOG IN PARIS MeManus of New, York York from Enrope re- tite” the smallest dog McManus bought “Pe- nd brought hin home to Americanize him, PRISER RRNA : Punching Bay by Day _ and Footoall at Night. SAVilliam «Sole omon, a fruit deal had a tale of marital cruelty to tell Judge Jackson and it wou 8 handsome diverce decree, During the day, he said, his wife, Gussie, made him a target for crockery. and a punching for her S. During the night, when he sought the solace of sleep, she kicked him out of bed and threw pillows at him-as he rose wt the count of nine. Los Angeles LEYDEN ‘LIXE PILGRIM DAYS Visitors Celebrating Tercentenary in Holland Find Ancient Condi- tions Unchanged, Leyden, Ho!and.—-Pilgrims — who eame to Leyden to attend the tereen- tenary celebration of the departure of the Pitgrinas fathers for America, found | y conditions the same ime, of the T as’ resi- iles Macfiirtamd of New York: delivered a sermon from the { same pul frou which Robinson used ro preach, In the beautiful gothie church of St. Peters, where Robinson is buried, ev erything is piact 1 and | bowh'eh el » fathers pe! wo We for their { who atten the twemo- [hal servic ays Po A wreath with calprs of three na: 1 otions hung over obinsen’s tombs: | inthe chapel, which was or baptistery of the chur RABBIT LEAPS INTO - OVEN. Running a Lesing Race With Three . Hounds Scared Animal Takes Refuge in Kitchen. Montgomery ville, Pa.—A_ frightened rabbit that was running a tosin with three hounds that had been tak- en out by the’ owner ‘for training dashed into the kitchen of Mrs, Sam- uel Koffel and leaped into the oven of the range. Thefe was no fire in the range at the time and Mrs. Koffel quickly shut the door, The hounds did not follow the rabbit inta the house. She chased the dogs away and in a few minutes-opened the range door and the rabbit scampered out and dis- appéared Mm a nearby thicket, B. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C, Chiropractor Consultation Free Galte 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 260