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wy i THURSDAY, DECEMBER 23,'1920. / HELP WANTED—MALE LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institutionof its kind. Established. 1893. Time and ‘ex- pense saved by. our methods. Cataiog free. Moler Barber College 107 R. I Nicollet|Ave., Minnepaolis. 11-29-1mo ——— . ____HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Competent girl or woman for general housework. ‘Three \adults in family. Phone'751, or call at‘ 117'Main street. 12-15-tf WANTED—Competent girl for general house work by dan, 1st. Mrs. Stack- ui EG 5 tr W Gi ' general housework. Inquire A, M. Landgren, 515 4th street. 8 SS 12-92-1wk WANTED — Waitress with experience. Write No. 175, ‘Tribune Co. 12-23-3t WANTED—Experienced Pantry Girl Grand Pacific. en panay. Sr LOST AND FOUND CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS monthly payments; immediate posses- sion given, owner leaving city. Geo. M. Register. 12-17-1wik HONEY FOR SALE—A_No._10 pail’ of Montana Honey delivered at any Post Office in North Naketa, $3.00 order. B. F, Smith; Montana, 2-15. FOR RENT—A’ modern four room” fat, + with bath, or will rent two rooms. for light housekeeping to two partie: quire ‘at 516 Hannnfin Ave. 1 FOR RENT—-Modern six room bungalow, Call 300, 9th street.” Phone 377K. @ a 12-22-3t FOR RENT—Modern,home of Avenue A. Phone Corwin Motor Co.) 12-20-1wk —— ___._, ROOMS WANTED. LARGE FURNISHED ROOMS—In mod- ern_home. Suitable for two gentlemen. _46 Main. Phone_672R. 12-21-1wk FOR RENT—Nicely. furnished, well heat- ed room in modern home.” 320 Mandan Ave. Phone 262L. 1 LOST—Watch fob charm’ of 32d Degree Masonic Emblem, Finder please re- - turn to ‘Masonic Temple and get re- ward. RBA WK LOST—A bracelet of a wrist watch in front of McGray's- residence. .. Finder return to E. V. Lahr, and receive, re- “ ward, 12-17-lwk WORK WANTED Ne WANTED—Steady position or odd jobs by young married man: belonging «10 local Sulvation Army, Phone 439X. i 12-21-lwk WANTED An OKs: WANTED—Two furnished rooms for 3 gentlemen. Must be centrally Jocated and rooms ‘must be warm. (dress Hox 424, Bismarck, \ 1222-2 AUTUMQBILES — MOTORCYCLES OVERLAND CAR FOR SALE—Model"79, good condition, four good tires and in- ner tubes. First offer for+$100 cash takes it. Call room 13 Van Horn Hotel. ot, cts = 2 12-21-tf SALE OR RENT nutses AND FLATS | FOR SAL—Immediate possession, Bic | room modern house, cast front, full basement, %0 foot lot, for $3,000, on reasonable down payment and balance ———— | LEGAL NOTICES Notice to Credifors , State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh.—ss. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. | Davies, Juage, In the Matfer of the Estate of Mar- tin Bosch, Deceased. _ Katharina Bosch, Petitioner, vs. \ The Right Reverend’ Father Wherle, Bishop of the Roman Katholic Dio- cese of Bismarck, N. D., Katharina Bosch, Simon Bosch, Regina Hess, formerly Regina Bosch and Chris- tina Bosch, now known as, Sister Blonda, O. S. B., Respondents. Notice is hereby given by the under- signed Katharina Bosch, the adminis- tratrix with the will annexed of the Estate of Martin Bosch, late of the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having «claims against, said y decedent, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the: first publication of this notice, tovsaid Administratrix at her residence at 223, 14th street, north, in the City of Bismarck, in said Burleigh County, North Dakota. Dated December 8th, 1920. her KATHARINA X BOSCH, — mark Administratrix with the’ will an- FOR RENT—Modern room for lady. Also Garage for auto, Phones 907 or 91 12-20-lwk _\) BALESMAN | _ SALESMAN — Represent — Philadelphia's largest silk waist house. Strictly com- mission basis. State full particulars, references, experienc: Address,’ Bron- ner Manufacturing 7-189 North 1ath St., Philadelphi: 12-22-1wk “MISCELLANEOUS _ MOVING INTO SMALLER QUARTERS —And wiil sell cheap for Casi, Hard- ware / stock “and sectional Hardware cabinets; Harness and Repairs; 6 floor cases; linoleum and rack; Bowser gaso- line under ground tani and punp; Large Bank Safe; Typewriter; Roll tep desk etc, Write or call, Halvor Langs- let, Glen Ulin, N. Dak’: 12-17-1Wk FOR SALE—One good delivery “wagon. Also auto shield giasses. All sizes from two-fitty upwards. Sce Faunce, 802 First street. _ 1826-10k FOR SALE CHEAP—Cow if taken at . onee. Also some hay. Phone 4561, or call at 310 South Eighth street 13 Pa, FOR SALE—One large /records; one davenpor WANTED—A’ soft” coal rent or buy. Phone 8 eating stove to 2-21-38 signed Albin Spangberg, Administrator of the Estate of Aleck Lundbuist, late of the Town of Sibley Butte, in. the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditors of, and all persons haying claims against, said decedent, to exhibit them with ‘the necesary vouchers, within four (4) months after the first publication of this notice, to said Administrator at office of E. T. Burke, Tribune Build- ing. City of Bismarck, in Said Bur- leigh County, North Dakota. Dated December 7, 1920; - ALBIN SPANGBERG, ¥ Administrator. First publication on the Ninth day of. December, 1920. 9-16-23-30 NOTICE TO THE CREDITORS OF THE AUTOMOBILE MUTUAL I SURANCE COMPANY, OF BIS. MARCK, N. D. You, and each of you, wll take no- ti¢e that on the 22nd day of January. 1921, the time for filing claims agani: the ‘said corporation, will be terminat- ed, and that all claims must be filed on or before that date or/be forever barred. The claims may be mailed to the receiver E. H. Myler, at. Bis- marck, North Dakota or may be’ de- livered to him personally, or may be filed with F./E. McCurdy, Attorney at Law, at the First Natiohal Bank build- ing, in Bismarck, North Dakota. Dated December 16th, 1920. _ AY BALL ROLLED here } Hoa Litchfield, ‘in the County of and Statesof Minnesota, deceased, to the creditor of, and all persons having claims against, said deced exhibit them with the necessary’ vouch- ers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to inistrator at his residence north west quarter of section six (26) in township one hung forty-tthree (143) north, of eighty-four (84) west of the fif cipal meridian in Oliver County, } Dakota, at the post office add the undersigned administrator said is ‘Stanton, North Dakota, Number 1. Dated December 8th, 1920. / “ WILLIAM, L, HA Administrator. with the will an- Nnexed of the estate of Jo Hagan, deceased Geo. M. Register, Att’y for said Admini 12-9-16-23-30 rator. ‘Sell your cream and poultry to our agent,-or ship direct to €0., Bis- marck. Write us for prices on cream and 'poultry.—Northern Northern. Produce Produce, Co.» Meeker, ent, to Port Au Prince, Dec. id ad-| © : + on the| is @ hotel in Port au Princ spread the mosquito net, almost drops the best, that charges-onl, to her knees for the same fee weekly. twenty- sf 5 id for a room and_three are meals.| The boy who fétches the water aid redyand > é A % : ranwe | True, the rooms are small, with the] fixes the ‘shoes gladly slips a man th’ prin- ancient wash-bowl, and unlockau! extra towels for three gorudes a with concrete {floors and rugless, feweek. th dress of | r afore- |- R, F. D. but they are clean and comfortw! The seme meals could no: be ob- tained anywhere else in the United States at douvle the pric Lunch- eon is a regular dinner and ner is N much like an eight-course — feast. 4 They never servé ‘less than two or three meats; when ne, according’ to the American habit would be cnough. There is fruit in abundance in Hayci, und a boy standing on the front porch overlooking the sea, often picks the Ki seph T. G is, the chicken, served 865 days in the yeur witnout the least variation. Nobody ever Wants to see a chicken ,afte> staying ‘three we in Hayti. A Haytian boy,’ waiting‘ faithfully on a guest for 21 meals beams his delight when tipned The STRIKING DEMONSTRATION OF DEVOTION TO’ D’ANNUNZIO GIVEN BY HIS TROOPS Ea MI aA You CAN PLAY LABOR AND LIVING CHEAP IN HAYTI; FAVORITE DISH OF NATIVES CHICKEN nexed of the estate of Martin E. H. MYLLER, ’ Fiumé, Dec: 232-A striking demon-| rained upon d'Annunzjo from all Bosch, Deceased. Receiver. ‘stration of the devotion oi d’Annun-| sides. ‘ Geo. M. Register, 12-16-23-30 Jan 6. zio's troops to their leader was given| Though his proclamations usually Witness to the mark h. in a poetical and some- of Katharina Bosch. style, his speech con- plest words. He de- cared that ‘Fiume alone really cel-| cbrated the Italian victory while Rome celaprated the “assassination of are wri.ten what. bombastic sisted of the si here on the occasion of the ‘celebra- tion of the second anniversary: of the victory of Italian arms in the war. The poet “commander” as everyone calls d’Annunzig here, occupied a ‘90x in the Fenice theater where the 24,9-16;25;80 Notice to Creditors State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh—ss. “ y In County Court, Before, Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. Notice to Creditors State of North Dakota, , County of Burleigh.—ss. ~~ In County Court, Before Hon. I. D.| “tn the Matter of the Estate of Joseph | celebration was held. His arrival was | victory.” He asked his men to kgep | Davies, Judge. ri T. Hagan, Deceased. heralded by bugle call and his appear-| reed; as, sooner than was generally In the Matter of thé Estate of Aleck | winiam L. Hagan, Petitioner, ance was a signal for a thunderstorm| expected he would take them with| Luhdquist, Deceased. Lundquist, Petiti him to Rome. At these words the en-| Elmer Lundquist, Petitioner, thusiasm was renewed, the people | waved handkerchiefs, hats, sticks and weapons’ in the air amid cries of “To Rome, to Rome, Kja, Eja, Alala, Rome “while the ‘yombard- s was redoubled. exit from the theater | ion for fresh demon- | strations of loyalty. His motor; car, wes surrounded by the crowd and! obliged toprocced at a foot pace whi his men fought among themselves to appraoch and touch him. He was es- of applause and cries of “Viva il andante.” When two others had addressed the Fiumians who crowded the theater, another /ylare of bugles made every- one turn to the box where d’Annunzio stood in the uniform of an Italian cavalry officer. Jt would be a hope- S less task to attempt to give a pale idea of the enthusiasm of the crowd. Everyone rose to his feet and the theater resounded with, the d'Annun- zian cry of “Eja; Eja, Alala,” from thousands of throats while flowers vs. Alenzo E. Hagan, Joseph M._ Hagan and Jessie Maher, Respondents. Notice is hereby given by the under- signed William L. Hagan, the admin- istrator with the will annexed of the estate of Joseph T. Hagan, late of Com- vs. Aleck Lundquist, Edgar Lundquist, Florence Spangberg, Alphie Lund- quist, and Russell Lundquist, Re- spondents. : Notice is hereby given by the under- ‘D’Afnunzio’: was the occas USINESS DIRECTORY nee ‘EBB BROTHERS Undertakers | forward CE SEVEN Don'T OPEN “THAT CABINET, DANY | You must opel three gourdes, which ‘is sixty ceuts. The maid, whose chief Laundry at American rates would, cost more than room and board in/! Hayti if there were laundries. There is much to go out from ¢@ room. daily to washerwomen, and it comes back spick and span at nominalrcost. But Hayti has not reached. the point where it may bid fof tourist travel, A man stopping at the best hotel here for the first time, feels rather foolish when he asks for room and path and is conducted to a little how 0 feet away where he may get a shower, It’s a hard life for women. ‘The ast, however, is in-sharp con- trast with the worst, tor the ldborer gets twenty cents @ day, and thou- sands of natives live only on fruit that\grows wild everywhere, the year round, like the roses. corted all the way back to his r dence by an admiring multitude aa-; der a continuous fire of flowers and emid cheers’ for him, for Italy, Fiume and ‘Dalmatia. D'Annunzio seems to radiate mag- nitism. He has worked his men’ up to such a pitch of patriotic fervor and devotion to himself that he seems to have them almost hypnotized. AMERICA’S AID HELD NECESSARY FOR THE LEAGUE 23 London, Dec. — David Lloyd Georze, the prime minister, presiding at a luncheon given today in the House of Commons to the Domidion end British de'egates to the recent league of nations assembly in Geneva, | declared the league would never achieve~real progress until all the nations were represented, Mr. Lloyd George said he looked hopefully to the United coming into the league. Th sserted, was essential. Stat he a: «By Blosser Embalmers, Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in.Charge..-. ; DAY PHONE 50 NIGHT PHONES 65—88' Cake ge Veauecd DOES V4 WANNASEEZ PIMEM ON MY SomeTMING=2 ane BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY capac \ Distributors of STUDEBAKER |, CADILLAC / ‘ AUTOMOBILES __ a | ee _________—____—_—__—s PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS | Licensed Embelmers in Charge Night’ DAISTES*? hone 100 or 687 Day Phone 100 - BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY hh 220 MAIN STREET a WELL eR NERV AEAT JoB You've MADE=— ol-ho= JUNIOR, EN? \NERE You NAMED AFTER YouR. FATHER, ALES \ Upholstered Furniture Made to Order MAIN STREET CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Southwestern North Dakota and ~ Southeastern Montana BISMARCK, N. D, The exclamation, “Oh, dear me:" is a corruption of “Oh, Deus meus,’ and ee.ivalent to the French “On | % mon Dieu.” AIN'T SEY ANEW EST ~ YOU, GEE- PRINT AE SOME, WILL HAVE SEA FLAVOR Nautical Expressions Common in Old Nantucket. May Seeny Somewhat Odd to the Vis- itor, but Are Used by the Natives, Without Thought of Any ~ incongruity. ~ The widow of a Newburyport sea captain—she had once brought his ship to port herself, when he was incapaci- tated by injuries received in a typhoon | —was long the joy of an old-fashioned boarding house whose other residents were chiefly quiet maiden ladies, be- cause of her breezy manner, loud voice and oddly nautical turns of éxpres- sion. She would invite a fellow board- | er across the narrow table to pass the | butter in tones suited rather to hail- ing the masthead in'a gale. Every spring her store of foreign sweet- meats, and jams and jellies compound: ; ed of quéer tropical fruits, provoke an -irruption of small, red — ants, which would emerge in endless proces- sion from the crevices in her closet; ! and- every spring she would— shout | aloud at breakfast her intention to “swab the hull place with fle of ptn- nyr'val and then calk every, dratted crack.” Judge John C. Crosby of the Massa- chusetts Supreme court, an authority on the history and custoins of quain Nantucket, has recently given some | interesting instances of the adaptation there of nautical terms to Jandward | uses, Whether or not the inhabitants of the island are the salt of the earth, their manners and speech are enjoya- bly seasoned by\the salt of the sea. When a man goes to the mainland he Is said to “go to-America” or to “the continent.” This form of exprés- sion is in everyday use without any consciousness of its peculiarity. In Nantucket you don’t raise an um- brella; you “set it” like a jib. A house blind does not work loose; it gets adrift. “Everything is drawing” means mak- ing the most progress During the last phase of the .ar you Apard that “the allies have got everythk g draw, ing.” “o al re af he) end i When one is prepared t where he is said to be “hi (that is, on his anchor “ready to trip” (the ‘anchor).QJ: ~ be- fore the kniser’s flight 1 wasbi. that } he was “hove short and aboat i -ady | to trip.” Instead of saying that a man ig used up or “all in,”-they say that he is “fin “] out” (like a dying whale) early fin out with the influenza. 1 once heard it said of an extrava- gant man on the island, who spent more than his income, that he had “two lamps Wurning and no ship at sea.” When. Obed Macy, who wrote the history of whaling in 1885, drafted his will In the year 1841, he Inserted the following clauses, which are chifadter- istie of the nutical expressions of the natives: “Item. I have eruised with tuy wife, Huldy Jane, since 1811. We Jigned articles in town before the preacher on Independence day, I want her and my son, Jotham, to be captain and wate in bringing to port whatever I leave and st at every one of the crew gets the lay as writ down on this paper. I put mother in coimmand, I know sheel be captain anyway, for six months after we started on our life cruise I found out that I was mate | and she ‘was master, 1 don’t mean that she ever mutinied, but I know that whenever we didn't agree she al- ways manoovred to windard. “Item. [want mother to have the house on Union street till she goes aloft. children in equal lays, ete.” Not long ago the folowing notice Was published in the loch Nantucket newspaper: “The thief who stole a,jug of oil from the life-saving statioh on Great Point on Sunday last is requested to return the jug to the place which he took it and he may keep the oil to light his crime-stained steps through purgatory. And no questions will be ked. by Caleb Cushman, superinten- dent.”—Youth’s Companion. To Strengthen Steci. Cincinnati is one of six plises in the, world where steel is strengthened by being boiled in oil, Recently at a plant in Carthage, a steel shaft we ing $0,000 pounds, the largest p ever subjected to the new method. went through the process of bei strengthened, It was a “hollow-bored tumbier shsft" for use in dredging gote in California, costing about $17.- 000, The great shaft was first sus- pended in an upright furnace until heated to just below the melting point, A crane then picked it up and dropped it Into ‘a huge well of oil, where it boiled and = sputtered, throwing out clouds of vily mist. Some of the Rind. An. Indianapolis man says that re- cently he took home some honey with qnite a bit of comb in it. ANaturally the smallest boy desired some bread and butter and honey, but in asking for it, sai “I want some bread and butter and some honey, and I want some of the rind, too.” ‘ World’s .Currend§. | From ofticial data: supplied by the director .of the mint the monetary stocks of tif of the principal countries. of the world have been esti-| mated in terms of American dollars. | The computation shows the thoney of the world was approximately $50,636,- 558,000. Phone 453 for the famous Wil-| ton Screened Lump Lignite Coal. The ceal that is all coal, no clink- ers, no soot, no dirt. $6 per ton delivered. Washburn Lignite i Coal Co. Phone 453. | wireless, telephones will carry an at- @ { in part: | ion—that | in which scientific discoveries and ex- ‘tes.anid inventtous which are only j is going on every day even now Then I want it to go to the: { Aairyland | As each guest comes in-sight Sir Auck- = AS SCIENTIST SEES FUTURE .. Advances of 500 Vears Will Make the Year 1920 Seem Like a Pree historic Age. Those unimaginative people who he- lieve the high pitch of inventive genius” was reached ,vith the advent of ¢lec-~ tricity, talking machines, airplanes and the X-ray will be interested to know that civilization on this planet has < really just begun, Dr. A. M. Low, a “London engineer with many inventions. to his credit, says five hundred year: hence four descendants will look back upon conditions fn 1920 with just such feelings of amused pity as we show for the state’ of ‘the savages of pre- listopic times, The scientist, predicts among other.:?/ things that in 2420 A, D, all public thoroughfares and parks will be wit- derground, vehicles willbe run by tachment enabling the speakers to see each other, and all roads will be as smooth as billiard balls. Dr. Low, who invented a’ motor scooter and produced an apparat- us for seeing simple objects by wire, in a recent interview in London said “ “When a man sets out for business he will not proceed, as he does now, by tramway car or train; he will pass along delightful avenues underneath the surface of the earth, Parks and all other places of public resort and beauty will be roofed in, “Motor cars and all motor yehicles ill proceed by wireless power wnd-not by the crude method of using petrol They will be fitted up like luxuriously appointed drawing rooms and will be driven at a rate of one. hundred miles an hour. . Wireless telephones will be Installed in the cars, as well as every kind of appointment making for luxury and comfort. Many people will own these cars. YPeople will live in a condition of splendid physical isolation. , Televis- the abitity to see your absent friend over a distance of/many miles—and wireless telephony will lead to this condition, “This vision is not extravagant or a wild set of theories. It is the direction perMents tend. Many ntific men have come face to face with disco ‘aratem. from actual realization by a simple little difficulty, which will cer- tainly. be overcome in time.” Giving Up Fairy Stories. Do you remember when you had to give up reading fairy stories? Of cour you didn't have to give ‘em up if you didn’t want to, but ‘teacher and father and mother and all the rest of the grown folks said you must. read grown-up books and so the falr- fes were cast aside and— Oh, well, the same tragedy of youth at the public library, say the attendants in the children’s room. One of the many duties of these at- tendants is to lead the children grad- ually away from fairy stories to real life stories. It is no e: job because the children struggle against giving up their fairies, Never, It is said, has there been such a run on the fairy tale shelf In the children’s room as there has been recently, In time, however, the fairies make! way for “Treasure Island,” the “Bears of Bthe River,” “Tom Sawyer" or “Lit- tle Women,” and then the spell of is more or less broken. “Tt fie be so much easier to help the liftle folks,” lamented one of the ottendants, “if we only had morel of the books that childreg so quickly learn to love after they leave their fairies.”—bxchange. ‘ Unique Style of Greeting. Sir Au nd Geddes, who is evi- dently expected to do a great deal of entertaining when he goes to the United States, is a notable athlete, but it may be doubtful whether his physi- eal endurance will be equal to the handshaking which will be involved unless he reforms his methods, re-. marks the Manchester Guardian, It is most interestitgN? rather exhaust- % 10 watch him receive atumber of as he did recently at Olympia, for he has an athletic style all his own, land advances one foot, plants It firmly and balances himself as if for a trial of strength. Then his long arm shoots ~. out to full length, he smiles the guest straight in the eye like a boxer, selzes hh and and dr him de- terminedly areund in a semiciréle to gecet the hostess, Tle will neéd fe develop a less ex- pensive muscular action. for the so- cial tasks before him in’ America, ' Weaving Mills of Bielefeld. In a review of the Bielefeld tax and linen market’ the Rheinisch-Westfal- isch Zeitung says that the weayfhig mills cannot undertake operatjon on a, large scale for Jack of cotton and lin- en yarns. Cotton in particular is al- most wholly lacking, as it has to be imported, and a revival of the Biele- feld industry ts impossible without cot- ton. It is impossible to compete in the world markets with cloth of paper yarn, which was manufactured during the latt@ years of the although its quality has been improved cons:d- erably. se A Little Variety. “You seem very much tnterested in the coming campaign.” “Tam.” said the musician, “Cl he glad to hear the bands playing some- thing that keeps people marching straight ahead for awhile instead of dancing.” 2 TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS B. 8. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Sulte & 11—Lucas Block—Pkone 90@