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; , _FRIDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1920 HELP WANTED—MALE RBER TRADE—At the Moler legey Established 1893. pense saved by our methods, free. Moler Barber College | 107 Nicollet Ave., Minnepaolis, 11-2971 SEE—Y M C A Auto Scnool,, Los’ 4 None better, Oldest institution of its ‘Time ‘and ex- Catalog R . HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Competent girl or woman for in housework. Three adults Phone: 751, or call-at 117 Mi general family. mpetent é! r genera house work by Jan. 1s tack Phone! 594 _house. itress W » Tribune AGENTS WANTED 3 AGENTS—\Wanted to advertise our goods and distribute Free \Samples to Con- sumer, 90¢ per hour, Write for) full particulars. — American Products. Cox 922 American Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. rs nid js cl oo ge Oe Fs AGENTS—Make_ $7 weekly selling guaranteed; ‘hosiery, We.» guarantee $36.00 weekly full time. 75¢c an hour pare time, experience. unnecessary. Perfectwear Hosiery, Darby, Pa. _12-24-1t HOME WORK—$20.00 weekly, up. | Ex- perience unnecessary. Everything fur- nished. Send. self addressed. stamped envelope for free particulars.’ Candy- makers Co., 18th St., Philadelphi H 1 _____ WANTED TQ RENT WANTED TO” RENT=Two rooms by. Jan. Ist. * located and. warm. _Phone_333, furnished Must be centrally Cohen. Sidney LOST AND FOUND CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS rn NS | FoR RI ce in. North Daketa, Smith, .00 Cash with Fromberg, 12-15-Imo furnished apart- apartment... F, ment. phy. e Phone Call FC T—Modern home on Avenue A. Thong Korwin. Motor C 12-20-Lwik fst a eb i eS ly WORK WANTED WANTRD—S pgition or Vv young married man local Salvation Army, odd jobs belonging _ to- Phone 4 -1wk sf ROOMS WANTED ° LARGE FURNISHED ROOM! Tn “mod- ern_ heme. Suitabl fein’ gentlemen, Main, __Phone 21-lwk nr T—Modern room for. ‘ae garage for auto. Phones 907 or __SALESMAN MAN — Represent Philadelphi: t silk waist house. mission references, experience. ner Manufacturing, C s *hiladel phi: é, bedroom s three beds ‘complete; Sectional book. Music gabjnet; Tent; ry finishe Gasoline DOINGS OF ALTRINK VEL Just Go AND BUY A.HEW HAT WITH THAT TEN Spor | Wow AT POKER Before MY WIFE ASKS ME THIRTEEN Foie A CRUMMY Lt BONNET LIKE THAT -)- IT'S Too MUCH - d. tank;/ Buick ‘auto, bungalo: 1. Vermilya, Ave. Phone 6®. 12+ Y— io books. popular fiction, 1 clock, 1 oil heater, 1 library lamp, dishes, 6 quilts, 6-pillows, Inquire after’ 'p. m., 307) MeKenzle Hotel, 12-24-8t wagon. Alsa mod- 318 tt ern Park FOR sALE CHE. FOR *SALE—One good delivery “Miso auto shield glasses. All sizes from EOST—Watclr fob charm of 32d Degree Masonic Emblem. -Finder please re- turn to Masonic Temple and get re- ward: 12-21-1wk FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS. two-fifty upwards. See Faunce, 802 _First’ street. ~ Sas 12-20-1wk WA rrom,owner of good farm for sale. description. D. Min State cash price, full F, Bush, Minneapoils, eh 2-24-1t FoR SALE GHEAP—Cow if taken” at once. Also some hay. Phone 436L, or call. at 310 Souttr Highth street, FOR RENT—A modern four room flat, with bath, or will rent two rooms for light housekeeping to two parties. | In- quire at 516 Haannfin ye 12-22-3t HONEY FOR SALE—A . 10 of Montana Honey delivered at any Post FANTED TO BUY—Two filing cabinets, four-drawers. Apply this office, | Phone 32, si 24-tf ladies’ new fur coat, af a Phone 400L, or 395R, = 12-23-3t 7 Ante cic RRR tee Tx eae EARSLIE ' LEGAL NOTICES | > Meeting of Stockholders \ The regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the First National bank of Bismarck for the election of directors for tHe ensuing year willfe | held at the bank, between the hours of 11 and 12 o’elock a. day, Jam.11, 1921. Cc. B. LITTLE, President. i 12-17\ to IQ. m., on Tues- Notice to Creditors In the Matter of the Estate of Hattie ura Cohen, Deceased. Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned G.-F.‘Dullam, Administra- tor, with the will annexed, of. Hattie Laura-Cohen, late of the City of Bis- marck, in the County of: Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, deceased, to the creditots of, and all persons, hav- ipg claims against, said deceased, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within’ six months after the first publication of this notice, to said Administrator, G. F. Dullam, at his office in the City National Bank Build- ing, in the City of Bismarck, in said Burleigh county, North Dakota. Dated this 9th day of December. 1920. G. F. DULLAM, Administrator ,with the Will Annexed. First publigation on the 10th day of December, A. D. 1920. 12-10-17-24-31. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the matter of the estate of Frank H.. Smith, deceased. Notice is hereby given by the under+ signed F. E. Young, administrator of the estate of frank E. Smith, late of the city of Augusta, in the county of Kennebec, and State of Maine, de- ceased, to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against said deceased, to exhibit them, with the necessary; vouchers, within four months after the first~publication of this notice, to said\ administrator at, his office in the First National Bank BuiMling, in the the city of Bismarck, in said Burleigh county. Dated December 10, A. D. 1920. F. E. YOUNG, Administrator with the will annexed of “the estate of Frank H. Smith, deceased. H. F.. O'HARE, Attorney for Administrator, Bismarck, N. D. First publication/on the 11th day of December, A. D. 1920. 12.-11-18-25-JantT o UMMONS State of North Dakota, county of Burleigh, in District Court, Fourta Judicial District. Zolla\ Jennings, Plaintiff, ys. Martin Jennings, Defendant. The State of North Dakota to the above named defendant: t Youvare hereby summoned and re- quired to answer the complaint of the plaintiff in this action, a scopy of which is hereto annexed ‘and“herewith served upon you, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the subscriber at his office in the city of Bismarck, Burleigh county, North Dakota with- in thirty days after the service ct this summons upon you, exclusive ot the day of such“Service and in. case of your failure so‘to appear and an- swer judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demand- ed in the complaint. Dated November 19, 1920. F,. E. McCURDY, Attorney for Plaintiff. Residence and P. O. Address, Bismarck, North Dakota The defendant will please take no- tice that the complaint in the above ‘entitled action is on file in the ‘of- fice of the-clerk of the District Court of Burleigh County, North..Dakota F. E. McCURDY, Plaintiff's Attorney, Bismarck, North Dakota. 10-17-24-31-1-7. BUSINESS DIRECTORY \ Undertakers DAY PHONE 50 WEBB BROTHERS Emhalmers . Licensed: Embalmer in Charge NIGHT. PHONES 65—887 h “Funeral Directors _, BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distributors of ~ STUDEBAKER CADILLAC aa AUTOMOBILES Zhe PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmers in Charge - Day Phone 100 Night Phone 100 or 687 < BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN STREET ) Upholstered Furniture Made to Order CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Southwestern North Dakota and. Southeastern Montana BISMARCK, N. D. SHOE FITTERS MAIN STREET The exclamation, “Oh, dear me: is a corruption of “Oh, Deus meus, NOTICE TO SLOCKHOLDERS The annual election of the Board of Directors of the’ Bismarck Build- ing & Loan association will be held at the office of the Secretary in Room 11, First National Bank Building, on January 10th, 1921, from 7:3! im o'clock p- m- until 9:900 o'clock p. ROBERT onr, President. 12-17-24-31-Jan 7.4 EMPRESS GOW. SOLD AT AUCTION Paris, Dec. 24.—The, beautiful dress ‘worn by Empress Martie Louise, sec- ond wife of Napoleon, on the day of her coronation as Empress of the French will’ be sold at auction short- The dress is made of exquisite lace, made by the French lace workers of Calvados, to whom Napoteon himselt sent the design. It was stolen fromthe Tuileries during the riot of the revolution of 1848 and found its way to the Gal- liera museum. The Empress was (as daughter of Emperor Francis I, Austria-Hungaria Touching Scenes at Unknown Soldier Tomb London, Dec. cores of touch: Ning instances have been witnessed at the tomb of Britain’s “Unknown War- rior” in Westminster Avbey as long lines of men, women and children have passed the black marble slab in the hope perhaps that the body is that of a missing son. The mother warriors any one of whom might be reposing in Westminster Abbey, laid three war’ medals, the ‘Mons Star, the Victory Medal and the British War Medal on the grave as she passed in the line. They had been awarded to her only son who was wounded three THE DUFF {1 SAT UP UMTIL FOUR ocLock IM THE. MORNING WINNING THAT “Ten Bucks AND THEY WANT” of one of the thousands of unknown} The Clerk Compromises: Pz PAGE SEVE.S BY ALLMAN | ITTLE, times and aftcrwards reported miss- ing. A soldier's, modest of flowers bore . the in “In loving memory of my two pals and all the other pals.” offering The epitaph plaged on the — slab reads: “For King da Countr Greater ove Hath No Man Than This,” LYNCH, BANTAM CHAMP,RISES IN QUICK TIME New York,, Dae 24.--Joseph Lynch, the new world’s bantamweight champ- ion, was born in New York ago. He entered the ring as teur five years ago, He he the Ameritan Exp Forces in the twenty-seventh div abroad lost decisions two contests with Ji in npmie Wilde, the English flyweight. Lynch earned ‘the right to meet Peter Hermah ,by knocking out Jack Sharkeg of ‘New York recently. The new title-holder gained consid- erable notice ‘by knocking out Kid Williams in 1918. Adthough Lynch has accumulated a small fortune with his fists, ho still drives a truck occasionally and con! siders“it “a pleas a day “working for Lynch won /his ‘ title beating Pete Herman in 15'rounds“it Madison Square garden on™ Wednesday night, being awarded a decision. Alberta Builds Up Its Cattle Reser e| by ! covering the grave, for several days Edmonton, Alta De Rie In con- since the burial there of the uniden-| trast with | the severe conditions of tified soldier. last winter, livestock on: the range The fact that no one knows the | of southern Alberta is benefitting th GALLEY SIX NEWS DOHERTY. season with the finest weather ant name of the man who lies beneath | the Dest feeding conditions s: n in| the slabs leads many to offer tributes | man: years, according to Hon. A. J. MoLean, minister of . public works, who has been spending a few days in| the south. -In spite of tie somewhat | serious depletion of the uthern | herds last winter and spring jas a re- sult of feed scarcity the ranchers | were able to carry over the bulk of} the breeding stock and with the | prices holding low at present cattle | 10 NEVER PAY THIRTEEN DOLLARS} | CAN DU SOMETHING Fork A WAT! dy FOURTEEN DOLLARS * ; Ga —' reserves are being built up again. WELL-WELL~— N WHATS™ THE LITTLE FELLOW CRYING SO PITIFULLY FoR and equivalent mon Dieu.” — et to the French | \ Freckles and His Friends Just Any Old Thing to Take Him Over | Twereen \ DOLLARS - _—__——¢. de Youre THAT Supeesririous MAY BE Foe You ON “THE { pRIce- I'LL MAKEIT yp: GERMAN CIVIL SERVICE’ ASK SALARY RAISE Hamburg, Dec. —Ten thousand civil service employes here have un- animously adopted a petition to the Berlin government for wage increases amounting to 70 per cent dating frown October 1, for a minimum salary of 7,000 Ynarks a-year and 100 per cent increase in tamily allowances. All other Getman government em- ployes have been urged to. unite and fot the granting of the demands by a strike if necess The petition says that the need is urgeiit not only for an increase of salartes but for a general revision by the government of the cost of li ing which is endangering the nation ic existence. nd ourselves in the predice ment where we must either have gov- rument aid or try to endure the ims possiblbe living conditions,” the peti- tion states. The Civil Service Employes Lex, has#several millions of members. | BLOCK ADE STOPS COAL IMPORTS TO CITY: OF FIUME et ines Fiume, Dec. fiume has been ; compelled to dispense with virtually ay lights except those of candles ve- the Italian Hlockade has the importation of coal. the, Associated’ Press corres: here h> found the city in absolute darkness. Railway employes «bearing a few lighted can- dies met the travelers as they alighted from thé train from Trieste and es- corted them to a small room where the offic by the light of a candle, examined their passports. Outside the railroad station ther were neither porters or cabs nor was w hen | pondent .at¥ived A }a light to be seen in the streets any where. Weighed down with their 0: | gage, the travelers grouped their way to the uotel only to find that also in darkness. By Blosser | AW, WE wants) YToTake Tu? j HA 7 CALLS FOR WAR ON RATS United States Department of Agricul- ture Gives Figures of Depreda- tions That Are Astonishing. The rat fs the worst animal pest in dwellings and store rooms to pollute and destroy human food, It carries bubonic plague and many other dis heen responsible for more untimely deaths among human beings thao all the wars of history. and wasted by rats and mice could be sold, the proceeds would more than ay all the farmer's taxes The common brown rat breeds average of ten young at a litter, Young! “females breed when-only three or four months old, At this rate a pair of rats, breeding uninterruptedly and without would at the end of three ye generations) be increased to ¢ 482 individuals, For. centuries the world has been} fighting rats. without organization and; at the same time has been feeding} them and building for them fortresses for concealment, as 709,- If we are to fight them on equal) | terms, say specialists of the biological | survey of the United States depart- nient, of agriculture, we must deny then’ food and hiding places and must organize to. rid communities of them. Me department has devoted a great} deal of study to the problem and is/ anxious to help in rat extermination, | not only by supplying bulletins and other printed matter, but by supply- ing the advice of specialists in specific cases, Built an Insulated House. With a house built’ on the prince! ple of ,a_ refrigerator, its walls’ in- sulated to keep the cold out, a new idea in construction of residences is being tested in the cold Canada, the Olio State Journal re- ma The residence has been used ; for a year, being occupied by the de- | signer and his family. severely during the past winter, when | temperatures ran to 40 below zero, but ; it stood the test and was throughout with electric heat during the hardest winter, The walls were designed to keep the cold out and ap- pear to have done so, | The walls are hollow, walls being cement plaster on. metal lath, with a top coat of stucco, Back plaster is/placed between the metal lath and the studding. The outey wall Is a sheet of! concrete one ani one- half inches thick, The inner wall ts of two layers of asphalt paper with weod lath and plaster on top. The air tight space in the wall ts filled with insulating material, granulated cork with 2 mixture of planer’ shavings. The theory on whieh it is built is to prevent the movement of warmed air tuward a cold surface, The cost of construction was given ag 10 per cent above ordinary methods. Britain’s Oldest Possessions. The Channel islands (Jersey, Guern- Alderney and Sar the oldest posse Britain. ‘They were formerly an ap. panage of the duchy of Normandy and were united to the English crown aft- | er the Norman conquest of England by Willfam of Normandy, in 1066, The inhabitants of the Channel islands pre- ferred to remain subjects of King John | at the period of the conquest of Nor. mandy by Vhilip Augustus, 11 To King John it has been us ascribe a document at one time ret | verted to by the Channel island péople | as their Magna Charta; but modern ties have cast very grave doubts on its authenticit Almost every war with France in Channel islands, but all to no avail. The people, about 96,000 in number, adhere to their old customs, and with- in well-defined limits make their own laws. They are not bound by aecis of the imperial parliament unless special: | ly named in them, Good Sportsmansh:>. If anything were needed at once both the British love of « door sports and the number of ygi Englishmen who were crippled by the i \ fo show ate ! war, it could be found in the setion of the British National Layn ‘Temis association in so modifying) the rules of the game that a one-armed player when he serves, may toss the Ii | from his racket instead of with his hand. ‘To put a disabled player on an equality with competitors who are whole is the very flower, of sports manship.—Youth’s Compagion, Telephone Faets, / The telephone Industry in 1917 gave employment to ypersons, of whom 171,119, or over 65 per cent were women, The sum paid out in salaries and wages amounted to $1 Those employees operated plan equipment valued at $1,492 which yielded operating and entting revenues of $391, nonop- London’s Fight on Prohibition. The remodeling of London saloons to make them attractive forms part of the scheme evolved as 4 counter moye to thé prohtbitionists who have sworn to make London dr, Brewers and i ed vietualers have hired ar- to plan iry * public foe s well as drink Bismarck “Hospital ‘bids for coal for 1921. fan average of 140 tons per month. All bids must be in by Jan. 1. if invites any or Bismarck Hospital. the world, | From its home among filth At visits; ases fatal to man and has; to ten times a year and produces an; deaths. | plished nothing and the fourth country in) ¢ It was tested | heated | the outer } are the chief) | ions of Great | uded a descent on the; We need | NOT DESERT LAND: | Lower California Has Much Fere tile Soil. Really a Region of Great Resources That Only Await Development, Ac- cording to Writer in Los Angeles Newspaper. California Lover is an ansive In the United States rats and mice [Ai that has never heen well each year destroy crops and other, KNAW arid has tong been misander- property falued at over $200,000,000. | stood, Even we of, Upper California, This destruction is equivalent to the, “@espite our close proximity, know gross earnings of an army of. over; Hittle of the peninsula except its ex- 200,000 men. | treme northern part, write: Arthur On many a farm, if the grain eaten! Berg, inthe Los Angeles Times, Few of us realize that it is not an utterly barren waste; that it is a “tropical country with a salubrious climate and many regions of luxuriant vegetation; that ifs northern and southern parts utterly unlike one another, .and that rich resources abound that are only waiting to be developed, Despite its jagged, barren heights and caetus-clad mesas, which glow in the fiery rays of an unobseured sun, it was a land rich in history when the timbers of the Mayflower were yet trees in the forest. Once sought and gmarded for her ores and her jev this peninsula, which to the Sp conquistadores ing in the azure web, of romance, a lend for which, the padres gave. their lives in fanatic devotion to the cro: now ally unnoticed, ifs ro- mane y forgotten, and its possibilities, if not overlooked, at least, neglected. Between 1527 and. 1 Hernando Cortez sent four expeditions on ve ages of discovery up the west coast of Mexico, but the first three accom- failed Lower | are nish san island glitter- 582 to return, Finally, in’ 15 California was discovered nez, who anchored in the hay Cruz (now La P: Later Cortes himself visited Santa Cruz ang cured a quantity of pearls and Fndian ves, In 1539 Francisco de Ulloa led up the Gulf of California and nvered the mouth of the Colorado river In spite of this discovery, Lower California was known as an island for more than 100 years and an isl peared on European maps a up to as late as 1748. All attempts of Spain to colonize the California peninsula ended in dis- strous failures until the k was del- ed to! the \Jesuits, or Com- ny of Jesus, in 1697, These Jesuit missionary. priests were pos: the tact of the French explorer istency of the English colonial set- ind the bravery of the American | frontiersman, | Padre Salvatlerra made the first i settlement / in Lower Call- on October 15, 1697, at the -bay of San Bruno, onthe east coast. For 70 years thereafter the Jesuits con- | trolled=he peninsula, and those 70. years represented the era of Lower | CaJitornia’s greatest activity and greatest prosperi | During their sojourn the Jesuit charted the east coast, explored in east and west coasts the islands adja- i leent thereto and the interior in +a | manner that has never been excelled ; founded 28. sions, of, which 14 formulated a} r thereafter ructed the In- iA proved to be siecessful; system of mission life 1 surpassed; not only ins lians in religious matters, but taught them many useful arts as well; cul- tivated and planted the arable lands and inaugurated ystem of irrigation which, had they been given time for amore northerly advance, wduld have given Upper Califoptin. a marvelous | agricultural development eurly in the nineteenth century. The establishment of the mission in Upper California was a much easier | as than that which the hardy’ ; Jesuit pri ced and conquered in ‘Lower Califo a. Brown on Cuddling: , Bugland, during an justice for application.to the liven cinema licenses, it suited that i when the justices visited the Palla- i dium they sw some yeing couples Gerald Standing, the «he had not seen it. The able asked him if he knew settees in one part ef ted two people the “cuddling said he had not ul seen no kiss and cue The license was ed on the court's being given to “stand that more lights would be onddtin: chief con: that loc the build erch we cha wailed und the settees divided to yveat en Balieve It or Not. He was a siranger to ti ways of a city and made his waty about with dif- fieulty. He entered a large depart- ment sto nd was standing near the “elevator when he heard the man _di- ing the running of the elevators “Take the elevator to the right, it will take you anywhere.” So the stranger entered the elevator with the assertion: “I wish to go to j-the terminal station.” “Take the next car,” came the quick } rejoinder. That’s More Than Some Do, “Whoever told you you could play golf?” sneered the expert. “Who? Me?” asked the novice. “Tm playing just’ as well aS any of the others, am T not?” “Why, man alive, you took 14 strok to make the first hole! Is that what you call good playing?” “Well hit the ball every time, didn’t 17’—Stray Stores. TRIBUNE WANTS — FOR RESULTS B.S. ENGE, D, C. Ph. C | Chiropractor Consultation Free Sulte 9 11—Lucas Block—Pkone a