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LEARN BARBER the: Barber College, Oldest institution o Kind. Established. 1893. pense saved by our methods. free. Moler Barber College 107 Nicollet Ave., Minnepaolis. SPE—Y M © A Auto School, Los. Ani None better, ; _—— HELP WANTED—FEMALE ° ‘TED—Com, \ general housework, rompetent gil el fab 8 _phouse work by. Jan, 1st. “house. Phone_594 NTED—Girl_for_gener: nee A, M. Landgren, swith te No. 173, Tribune Co. ee wane TO REN Time and ex- Catalog 11-29-1mo | Beles, | 12-24-14 tent girl or womai for. ‘Three adults in Phone Ph or Call at 117 Main tf experience, ANTED SNT—Two furnished rooms by Y ust be centrally located and” warm. Sidney Cohen. Phone 333. 2-24-2t LOST AND FOU! f—Watch fob charm of sonic Emblem, “tin to Masonic ward, nda pl Temple-and ‘ 1 ROOMS WANTED Sih Snod- pntlemens 12-21-1wk shee f oR REN'P=Modern roonr garage for auto. Phone for. lady 907 or f ~~ FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES. AND FLATS HONEY FOR SALE=A_ No. 10" pail. of Montana Honey delivered at any DICE TO CREDITORS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUNTY OF BURLEIGH: eo In county Gourt before, Hon,’ I. Davies, Judge. Jy: the matter of the estate of Nell llopkins, Perras,, deceased. Lee Perrag, Petitioner, Post CG. All. persons Interested, Respondents, Notice is hereby, given by the under- i, Dullam, administrator of the estate Of Nell Hopkins. Perras, late ,of the city of Bismarck,,in the county of Burleigh, and state of Nort Dakota, deceased, to the creditors. of, and all persons having claims. against, said decedent, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six months after the first publication‘of this no- tice, to Said administrator’ at his of- fice’ in the City National Bank build- ing, in the city of Bismarck, in said signed. G.. F. Burleigh: county, North Dakota. Dated December ith, 1920. » F, DULLAM, Administra ‘First publication on. the twentieth day of December, 1920. 12-20-27-Jan-3-10. tor. tt NOLICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Default having occurred. in the con- dition of.the mortgage hereinafter de- scribed, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, ‘That, that certain mortgage executed and Cora to In- vestors. Mortgage Security Company, Ing,, dated the 4th day of May, 1916, and filed for record in the’ office of Burleign county, North, Dakota, on the 3rd day of, June, 1916, and recorded in Book: 108 of, Mortgages, at page 727) and assigned by said mortgagee to Edna m, by an instrument in writ- ing dated the 24th~day of January, 1920,, which assignment was filed for record in the office of the register. of deeds of Burleigh’ county, North Da- kota, on the 15th day of October, 1920, and duly. recorded in Book 155 ‘of As- signments, on page 207, will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises. in hereinafter de- scribed, at the front door of the court- Marck, county Da- M., on the 29th ‘day of January,.1921, to satisfy the amount due upon sucn and deliyered by S. K. Hi Hood,’ his .wife, mortgagors, the. register of deeds, of. W: Dull such mortgage and houge in the city of Bit of Burleigh and stat kota, at the hour of ten o’clo of North ck A. Oftice in. Sees a, $3. 00 Gash with Rose apartme: Phone oder hotie on AW Phone Corwin Motor Co; 12-20- Iwi WORE WANTED ment. pi x or odd jobs aby Young an ied man belonging to local vation Army, Phone 439X. 12-21-1wk SALESMAN ~ N + Represent ~ Philadelphia's Ik waist house. Strietly com- SA eer is basis. State full particulars, ferences, eX Ad Bron- ner, Manufacturing: Co, North 12th St, Philadelphia, P 12-22-1Wwk MISCELLANEGES FOR SALE—Ivory Minished bedroom set; three beds complete; a cases; Music. cabi cang and tank; Buf ern bungalow. — C, Ave, — ‘Thome “gai 2-24-3t, “One good Yfaip ee delivery hield glasse is from “if taken at once. Phone 4561. oF call at” 23-3t ing cabinets, office. Phone ew ett \ ladies’ new fur coat, at a Phone 400L, or & | a i The [premises described in said mortghge | i mortgage on the date 6f sale. and: which will-be.sold: to satisfy the in. the county of ute. of North. Dakota, and described as follows towit: The Northeast Quarter (N%4) and tne North Hult of the Southeast’ Quarter (N% of. SE%), of Section ‘Thirty- three “(83), Township One Hundred Forty (140) North, of Range Seventy- eight (#8) West of the Sth P. M. taining 240 acres more or less a ing to the United States Government survey thereof. There will he ‘due on such mortgage at the date of sale the sum of $1181.6 (which sum includes interest paid upon a prior mortgage) besides the. costs, disbursements and expenses of this foreclosure. Dated this 18th day of December, 1920. ® same are siti Burleigh anjl s EDNA W. DULLAM, 5 Assignee of Mortgagee G._F. Dullam, Bismarck, North Dakota. Attorney for Assignee of Mortgagec- 12-20-27-Jan-3-10-17-24. NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- { CLOSURE SALE. Default having occurred in the con- ditions of the: mortgage. hereinafter de- scribed, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That that certain mortgage executed and delivered by S. K. Hood and Cora Hood,. his wife, mortgagors, to In- vestors Mortgage Security Company, Inc. mortgagee dated the 5th day of June 1915, and. filed forsrecord in the office of the register of deeds of thy county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota on \the 13th. day of July! 1915, and recorded in Book 108 of Mort- gages, off page 718, and assigned by said mortgagee, to.-Edna,.W.- Dalla, by. an instrument in writing, dated the 24th day of January,-1920, and filed for record in the office of the register of deeds ,f Burleigh county, North Dakota, on the 15th day of October, 1920,, and. recorded in’ Book 155 of Assigiments, on page 206, will be foreclosed by.a Sale.of the premises in such ‘mortgage and_ hereinafter , de- scribed, at.the front door of the court- house’ in.the city-of Bismarck, Bur- leigh county, North Dakota, at the hour of ten o’clock A. M., on‘the 29th day of} January, 1921, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage ou the date of sale. ‘The premises de- scribed in sich mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are situate in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, and, degcribed y \ BUSINESS DIRECTORY | WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers Embalmers. _ Funeral Directors, Licensed: Embalmer. in. Charge DAY PHONE 50. NIGHT PHONES. 65—887 SMARC. \ OTOR COMPANY ributors of E B AK E. R-- — and —— CADILLAC” | AUTOMOBILES PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS ~ - ¥ Licensed Embalmers in Charge : Day Phone 100 Night Phone‘100: or-687 BISMARCK: FURNITURE: ‘COMPANY 220 MAIN STREET + ‘Cart PEDERSON FACFORY: DIS' Southwestern North’' Dakota ; Southeastern Montana i =». BISMARCK, N.-D, ' Upholstered Furniture Made to Order IBUTOR, ind “ato” FITTERS MAIN STREET The -exclamation, “Oh, dear in is a corruption of “Oh, Deus meus, and ec.ivalent to the French “Oh, mon Dieu,” ee scemmnmmenameemereian q Forty (140). Nor 450.82, (this sum includes interest paid 1920. G.-F. Dullam, delivered by 1). W. Wilsey and Nora B. . Wilsey, the German State at the front door of the county court xf rg BE CAREFUL Now!=NoT so HaRD> NOT ae ale or a mas Pony— Look ovr! cat You'l. Go OVER (oneAD ONT “Vos KNEW. You'd: Rui HIS TREE FoR HM Berore THE DAY Sonal WAS OVER! ° COURSE HE weicxeD Northwest n, of. Range Seventy- smMerC and state to the er having cl: Dated this 18th day of December, | EDNA W. DULLAM, |; Assignee of Mortgagee- City National Bank Building, his \Wife;“mortgagors, to bank of Wing, .a | |by a sale of the premises in such ‘mortgage and hereinafter described, ne: house, in the city of Bismarck, unty, (SyMabu of Burleigh, and state of North Da-| 1. In a kota at the hour of two o'clock p. m, OR the 22nd day of January, 1921, to satisty the amount due upon such | mortgage and demanded foreclogure| Comparison of Earth and Moon. mortgage on the day of sale. Default nd where, persuant to stipu-| + ‘The surface of the earth is has occurred in the terms and condi- ctor tide has been in- | mated at 108580 squa tions o! id mortgage, the Said mort- | troduced showing such mortgage and| while that of the moon is: plac gagors having failed and refused to | also proofs of the’ indebtedness for | 14,685,000 square miles, pay the principa tof said | which the mortgaged secu » Md] the earth Is approximately 256,01 debt. The premises desi din such | where mortgage, and which will be sold to satisfy the same, are Lot One (1) of Block Five (5) of the town of Wing, cording to the plat thereof on file and of record in, the office of the Register of Deeds in and for s4id county. There will be due on puch question morte; Freckles and His Friends attorney. has answer, it is held, | Teasons stated. in the county of North Dakota, deceased r editofa “OF and all persons | the “tive wine cme a nst, said decedent oe a ee with the recess modern literature—Chaties to exhibit them vouchers, within six months after the First publication on the 20th day of | December, 1920. A. J. More and John More, co-p; . a8 More: Brothers, Respondents. US.) an the possessionvof the power of not been alleged in the! the appellant is inno postition to} of the age nor the absence of p or. proof concer ning, the posses: r to German, State action verse Claims where the fendant has. asserted th WHO 1S THE KID IN THs wor dlas “STwar's A VERN WILD (esses noasie Neer eno on we TRieo To RUN AWAY, MOTHER. ¢ as follows, itowit: ‘The \ mortgage on the day pt suid. the sam] , Quarter (NW'4) Lot Section Thirt | of thirteen) Inindudd ‘eigthy dolla Action of =D Lrict Court. four (3 Township One Hundred | bu 1 COED DY ATK B. ite County, Crawtor of Burleigh | the greatest Ahat the world has That great writer cnav for Agate eae first. publication of this notice,to said | the inheritors of that time—an eeeuey SN amare uce. oF Mortage: executor at his dence on the north: | ae the inheritors of that : 20-27 tae 9-10-17-21, Ott quarter of section ten, township | their origin In ‘the appalling cl ayer tight aes ee one ating Wo north ef rangé in which the working f NOTICE . TGAGE FORE. | S°venty-n. in said Burleigh | no London, of “course, NOTICE ee crosunts AGE FORE county, North Da Sita, rs | Rie tee ey aa ft Notice Is Hereby Given, ‘That~that i HELMGR! in EOL GND | degree all over the country. certain mortgage made, executed and ea Hxecutor. ) Burnham. t As the farin where we st re 7-Jan-3-10. | corporation, mortgagee, dated the ti —~— sumniner was outvof the beaten day of October 1912 and fifed for rec- DECSIONS OF SUPREME COURT Of automobiles, Bobby hoth ord-in the office of the Register of From Dun County “Faus and) drei of Sour’ « Deeds. in and for Burleigh county, Vn abeth Fendvick, sometime: | known | cate there. At first nothi state of North Dakota, on the 11th day | as Beartes’ or Beta Fendrich, and } » haride | of November, 1912 at 10 o’clock a. m-,} Anna Tuhy, Plaintiff-Appellants, | athe Inihste a "ride ah fs and recorded, in Book 111. of Mort vs. 1 otig.f out: ursiogy to Just sit-tp gages at Page 82, will be foreclosed | Buffalo Pitts Company, a corporation intl ie ee a cortuinly: uid of the | 4 etendant | down to hime and avhispered ina J serious: smanuer: Pell those f ; when T° yget older and tuner Ub to determine ad-} with: them.” wering. de- | —— lien of its + Has cubic miles, while the volume. ¢ moon is. shone one-forty-ninth as upon appeal, the opinion, for | in. » ENGE, D.C. Ph. Chiropractor Donsultation Kree the é ding jan of due excaition Krom a judgment in favor of the q Dunn ever one of of Dickens, points out that all owe time--had reume eople which but in like Wasn't Quite Ready for Ride. ' 1 Tact track curi- rowhen we would in- After it, he (who cur) most reople j ! ride | miles, ed AE ‘The mass of 1.000 ot the great, that Tar oe * ze data ©, H—bieas Block Phone Se He ‘Don’t Take Stock in Pop Anymore! By Blosser WERE! Nou AND JUMBO Quit MIS RACKET AND Nou Ger ofF UAT TABLE, AS Nov ARE SURE TolFA! Pop, WHY DIDNT | Nou KETCH ME? You SS. WAewl T wuz GONNA {FAW FoR You ae - 7 Notice is hereby given by the un- cies pee upon a, prioy mortgage upon said | dersigned Helmer C. Asphind, exec- | Biekens as Social Reformer. fend): mere she eee Alera utor of the last. will and estate oN, To my mind the greatest social re jments and expenses of this foreclos- | Wenlg ? tls cat E Bre tant: Social Te ep I Wenla Asplund, laté of the city of | former that we ever had, end one of | | bestde the stream, the girl disp: “; Why | tFoduced to their glass Tommy ’ By MOLLIE MATHER ®. Wegtern Newspaper Union.) When Dean Wallace agreed to visit at his brother's home in the little town of Wolcott it was with the understand; ing that, Nellie should have no girls about for him to play the cavalier to. H ster-in-law was a born match: maker, and Dean had been subjected to her intrigues before. It was not conceit jupon his part which made hiny war, though there was no denying Dean's charm where women concerned, It w st that the successfil young business man, absorbed. in work, re- fused unsettling complications. But | when Nellie in her own pretty room read her brother-in-law’s: letter, she pursed her lips and turned to a dark- eyed girl seated near, é i “Our handsome bachelor Dean ac- j cepts our hospitality,” she said, “upon condition, that no annoying female crosses his: path, Well, Vil. write him frankly. that a you are here, and that he “You will do nothing retorted (he dar can't cout of the sort,” | yed person, “But, dei Nellie objected, “you | | came to stay a month with me, and | | now—”, | “Now,” added the young person firm- | ly, “I shall go down the street to Wol- i cott Inn, until the week or ten days of your detightful brother's yisit is at an end—then T'll come back.” » Dean arriving one beautiful fall, evening, found a solicitous brother and } sister-in-law only for company, As he started with pipe and book for the glories of the ravine next morning, | Nellie, from the doorway, ventured a request, “If you should meet Tommy in the | Woods, she sald, “do, be nice—won' ia you, Dean?” ighingly Dean shook his head, | i zs eight (78) West of the,5th P. M., and BEE Wine ladiie dotenili Main Ettie [oj Cha hhe bothsredsvith bova.":he vee ius! Northwest OnareeeeeNWI) at ’ : nicrGasen pene defefidant, the plaintiff 2 eet (be bothered with boys,” he ve Section Two (2), Township One Hun- |G. OLGEIRSON, Aftirini ‘h 3 dred” Thirty-nine: (139) “North, “ot PESTS ; _ Attirmed. When he had opened the book and * Attorpgy, for Mortgages, qe. Opinion of the Court by Bronson, J. | lighted his pipe beneath the shade of Range Seventy-wight (78) West of the | Wing! Ne D. f hey aed Be Sie ate my ihe i ‘ . ; 4 ; th P. M., containing 320 acres more 1 0-27 Jan. 3-10-17. | J. P. Cai iki : aioe | Cee ee cece re: MUR ESEY ECE Me or less accordifig to the government ue js aN.\ 210-17. née he Caine Dia inaons 8 D., attor-} uriantly upon his bed of dry leaves, survey thereof, NOTICE TO. CREDITORS Le McBride and’ 'T, Murtha, | 0 through the pipe smoke he save | There will be due on such mortgage |. In the matter of the estate of, WeyJa on, N. D., attornéys for re_| # Second figure lnsuriating close by, a | on the date of sale the sum of $1,-| Asplund, decéased. ? os ee (| Small, red-caped . figure who arose | igvily at his approach and glared at him as she shook the. brown leaves | from her still browner hair, “Well,” theygirl exclaimed, her tone } showed exasperation, “I suppose I'm | to move away from here, too. Is this all part of the king's domain?” “Tam sure,” said Dean, confusedly, “chat Ido not know what you mean.” The girl faced him, “You are: Mr. Dean Wallace, aren't you?” she said dryly. | “T had to cnt short my ¥ at your brother's home and go down to the Inn. just because | you happen to dislike’ having young women about. Now. that you choose to sclect my favorite reading spot for yours;\I suppose I must leave that, too! Bx | t Dean regarded the indignant, flushed | frve will nile, the whole situation was interesting: ey Well,” .he remarked calmly “there | ; are other pretty s sj T loented one on my way down, could hardly choose | between; you might go there. I would be glad to direct you." The girl drew a long breath. “Thanks,” she sarcastically replied, but Dean preferred to take the remark In good faith, “und courteously arose | to lend the way. i After.a moment's hesitation the/girl | followed. When they came to a spat | ed ot | her guide with a curt nod of dismissal. | “This will do very well," she said. “Might 1,” asked the man, with be-' coming humility, “learn your name?” “Thomasine It nolds,” the girl an- swered briskly. ‘The Thomasine a fliction,: bestowed to please a great- | aunts T have shortened it to Tommy” Dean grinned boyishly. “If you are the Tommy that Nell | asked me to be nice to,” he said, opt an willing to begin,” i Contemptuously Tommy ignored the olive branch of pe Somg’ thre peaks later Mrs, Tack Wallace spo! rously to her broib- | er-in-law sitting near, | “Dean,” she said, “we are awfully ad to have you prolong your visit, a friend of mine has’ been sto; ping over at the inn, because of our request to me-+to have no young women , about ; I must not keep her there long er, although she does seem strangely | | i | sl content and happy, Tommy is x dear girl * x i “She is!” the brother-in-law en: | phatically agreed, ful ‘smile, “I ought to know,” Dean said, cause ‘Temmy and I are going to be. taarried.” He smiled a bliss- mackerel should swim in a tank from left to right, and never oth- erwise, is a problem which the united | | intelligence of all members of the Sus (Eng.) committee | has failed to solv known as the great mackerel ‘ye For more than thirty years Buighton aqui jum has kept mackerel. When first i fank they pc slaged in trying to swine through the | glass, to their grievous bodily harm, Presently an islind was set up in the middle of th lak Accidents at | once ceased. for 20 years and | swim: | { Mackerel Peculiarity. : | And more, the mac! 1 have been ming. steadfastly round that island, hy dey and by night, in season and | out of season, and never once have | thoy been observed to swim from right to left. _ WOMEN ENROLLED Minneapolis, D veral wo- men are 1 in the engineering end architectural «departments of the University of esota. In the architectural college, nine women of a class of more than 100 are vegist- ered, according to the dean of archi- * ; Why. And when she had heard bin through from her seat behind white « pill the unknown young woman | gone, “The clergyman bowed, | | the title Countess alone, | when they showed imal | wants Lo live her own Ife in her own iT don't know,” Olivia said tremu- ' hand closed over hers. me: tas in days of settlement. in’ the Colonies, Indian plantain is not tt plantain, and > so far as anybody knoWs Indi: no use for it. There is also ~ pipe.” common in-rich woods in June and September, The flower in_ its ry form sugge’ a pipe but looks no more like an Indian pipe than. any other kind of tobacco pipe. “Indian | pink” grows from Virginia to Texas, belongs to the logania family, is not a pink, and it fs not known Het In- Se dians had any more to do with this wie than any other wild flower,’ TRIBUNE WANTS — FOR RESULTS. en are. Students, The chemical and mechanical engin- + eering colleges haye yet to get their. first woman student of the year, heads of this department declare, \ The Little Countess By MILDRED WHITE (©, TH20, Western Newspaper Union.) People wonder why the Reverend Philip Forrester ‘does «not ma L, alone, could tell them. Love stories find their way to we without seeking, and even the awe-inspiring Reverend. 4 Philip has 1 love story, But the end of it? Perhaps: that 1 may not a fell you t, who knows? a It was not. strange that a young woman who had heard him preach should come every week thereafter to listen to his brilliant addresses, 'Throngs came to hear Philip. The young woman who came faith- fully and unobtrusively, was alsg un- like other women of the vast) con- gregation, yet one could scarcely. tell would slip out into darkness—and be Friendly. ush endeavoring to give her welcome, failed‘in their purpo: It was-on a night of, unexpected summer storm that she came unan- nounced inte the Reverend Philip's’ study. “You knew, did you not,” she asked = removing Aer wet hat, “that I would come sometime?” The sympathetie quality of her voice thrilled the great * man, Without reply he pushed for: ward a chair, “TE am—well) Olivia,” ou call you may me Bre said. ave noticed me at service.” And when Lo was not at church,” she went ou—“you inissed me, fF know, “Prom the gallery I have watehed your searching eyes, and their disap- pointment, and: it made me glad. I haye known that same d{sappointment, when I could not come—to see you.” ~~ “But that Olivia waved the sub- Jec “Is not what T came to say. I want your advice for a friend. we “Yours will be wise advice and just. My friends is in ned of council. She has made a misttke of her life, ‘and all at once the realization comes to her. She lives, poor lovely soul—across the big ocean, among people who though kind will always be st , speak- ing another language of life, if not of speec She married, you see, into for nobility, and it was not for that she did so, nor for the jewels and honors that went with it, But just,” Olivia smiled wistfully—“for an acre of flowers,” she said. you underst su nd the impulse? But, of course, you cannot, She had been obdurate to her fam plead- ing during a trip abroad, that she ac- cept the count’s ‘offer of marriage— flattering offer, in that my poor friend possessed no money, But at last her his acres. of gazed meditatively gloss hands : wrried the flow- flowers,” | Olivia down on her small ri “I think the girl ers,” she added. sadly, “f can only explain it that. way.” Phillp spoke his first’ word. “And now,” he asked tensely. poor friend wishes to be ied,” she answered him; un- “she way.” ae “But the man, this count,” clergyman asked, “has he di desertion? Is he unworthy Olivia shook her lread. + “That is the great trouble,” she told]. him, “The count has been in every way kind, a good and indulgent husband.” “Yet she would leave him. She would make ‘him, sufter for the whim, Yhe desire of uu momeni, What sort of woman-~ rienc?” “ lously. don't know. Perhaps. love has ford her, perhaps, she would seek her own.” Silently waited, looking into. Philip Forrester’s eyes; firmly his “Childe he said gently, “Love now, fs not of her King. You hav sked, my advice. Your povr little friend must keép her troth. If she is brave and teue, she will keep her acre of flowers blooming—his life rden, and her picked up ber wet hat. she rournnred, “You would send ine back.” “It is right that you should go bai Countess Olivia,” Philip ans steadily. From the door she smiled at ‘him. “In my garden there will be always a whése flower of, remembrance for you,” she said. Philip Forrester is not a melancholy, man. His happy laughter is well known. ‘The little countess smiles when I assure her of this, as we stand faraway garden. her Had. No Indian Connection. The plantain i European plant, introduced without intent in the e