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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12,1921 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE SEvEN CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT ___ HELP. WANTED—MALE LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber college, Oldest institution of its kind. Established. 1893. Time and ex- pense saved by our methods. Catalog ‘ree, Moler Barber College 107. R. Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis. ,12-30-1mo HELP WANTED—FEMALE _ ALL FAMILY OF ADULTS—wWiil pay geud wages to girl competent to. cook and do general housework. ~ Young. in- experienced girls need not apply. _ Mrs. QO, W. Roberts, 117° Main St. Phone (3 Paes SRA RI WANTED—Two waiters, | Homan’s cafe. 1-8-lw POSITION WANTED Stenographer desires position. Capa- ble and accurate. Eight years ex- perience in law work, Address P. —0._box_ 210, Fargo,_1 N,_D. 1-12-5¢ FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Brand new. bungalow in Riverview on Rosser street at a bargain. Six rooms and bath, Fur- nished. in hardwvod, strictly mod- ern. Place in basement for’ two cars, will be sold at sacrifice price. Also house on North 13th street with six lots, well and windmill, barn for eight head of stock. Suit- able for persons wanting to ‘keep chickens and stock. Will be sold for cash at sacrificing price. Write P. O. box 169 or call 119 1-2 3rd street after 7 o’clock in evening. 1-10-1w FOR SALE—Furniture and band horn. Cheap if taken at once. 1 ladies’ writing desk, 1 French Horen :Mel- ephone, 1 four section Macey book case, 1 large flat top Fischer grand piano, 2 auto bodies, 1 ton express and roadster box. All articles in first class “condition... Call 1700 Bowan St. S. EB. Phone 699 1-10-1w “For Rent—Furnished house, 6 rooms, 413 Raymond St., Phone 822X. J. C. Swelt. 1-10-twk. FOR SALE—7 room bungalow, inclu- ding 3 °bed rooms, east front, 60 3 foot lot, most of the floors are oak and balance hard wood, and garage If you are looking for a home, see. me.—Geo, M. Register. 1-7-lwk, A BARGAIN—4-room house with fur. ‘ur- niture, 75x150 ft. lot for . $2,000. Good location, ‘Riverview. Phone _ 689X. 1-11-1wk HONEY FOR SALE--A No. 10 pall of Montana Honey delivered at any Post Office in North Dakota, $3.00 Cash with Sontans 1: Mth drs Bombers, —_—_—_————_—— TS ___. WISCONSIN FARM LANDS LANDOLOGY SPECIAL NUMBER—Just out, containing 1921 facts of clover land in Marinette County, Wisconsin, If for a home or as an ‘investment you are thinking of buying good farm lands where farmers grow rich, send at once for this special number ‘of Landology. It is freg on request. Address Skid- more-Riehle Land Ci 435 Skidmore- Riehle Bldg.,, Marinette,., Wisconsin. } jl 1-3-3mos -__ MISCELLANEOUS __. FOR SALE—One music cabinet, two beds, one rug and one cot. . Modern bungalow. cl car, goes for $300. -C. E.. Vermillya, 316 Park _Ave._ Phone 679L. 1-12-t¢ FOK sALE—$5,000, in Village Warrants at 10% discount. Warrants draw 6%. Will furnish bank guarantee that they will be taken up within a-year. Will sell all or part, Address Number 181, Tribung, an a Hee FOR SALE—New No. il Remington Typewriter and movable stand. Cost $148.00, for sale cheap, cash or bank-,” able paper. Inquire Room. 8, First National Bank Building. Phone 708. ah be pe egilwie Dressmaking, up to date work, © re- modeling, convert out of date gown in up-to date Bown, coats, hats. 423 2nd St. Ave. A. Phone 772U. . rea aN 1-10 OFFICE SPACE FOR DESK FOR RENT—Heat, light, telephone and janitor service furnished. ,Inquire a at City Insurance Agency. f-12-1wk WANT BANK STOCK—Iin exchange for Ex. improved -farm ch perienced: bunk ly fidenttal. Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, iwk FOR SALE—One Reed baby buggy. Practically new. , $50.00 buggy at _low price._ Phone 347K. -11-3t FOR SALH—Gas range, steel top, in ood condition. . Phone 626 or call at 516, 9th. street. 1 FOR RENT—A garage. Central. cated. Inquire 523, 6th’St.,or Phone gat. e : 1-7-1wk FOR SALE—Potatoes. $1.00 per bushel in bushels [i more. tL st AS Db: FOR [ Phone_532L. _ROUMS FOR RENT __ FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod ern house, suitable for one or two gentlemen, close in. 202 8th St. or Phone 656. __ 1-11-1wk WANTED—Koomers and boarders in modern home, Can take care of legis- lative people. Will do their washing, also. Phone 777R, or Call at 1306 Ave. oe 12431-2wks FOR RPNT—A furnished room in modern house. Phone 441X or call 416 12th street. 1-11-3t FOR RENT—Modern partly furnished rooms. Suite of 4 or will rent sin- gly. 422 12th, 1-10-8¢ FOR RENT — Rooms in modern house. Gentlemen only. _St__ Phone 692. 1-12-1wk FOR RENT--Rooms in modern house. Gentlemen preferred. 300 9th St. Phone 377K. ___ 2-10-1w —4 furnis! rooms for housekeeping. Write No. 183, Tri- a) _ 1-10-83 FOR RENT—Room at 810 Rosser St East. Phone 603X. 1-12-3t —_—_———————————————_———=—Baa]|S|S=S=S=S=S=S=S=—=—=—=—== i LEGAL NOTICES + oo ee ee ra ROrIve TO CREDITORS ate of North D: Hitech, akota, County ot In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In the Matter: of ‘the Estate of Benja- min Liming, Deceased. Charles Liming, Petitioner, vs. All persons interested, Respondents. _Notice is hereby given by the under- signed J. A. Graham, administrator with the will annexed, of the’ Estate of |. Benjamin Liming, 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 decedent, to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within four months after the first publication of this notice, to said Administrator with the will annexed, tional Bank, in the City in said Burleigh County, Dated January 5th, 1921. dg. A. GRAHAM, Administrator with the Will Annexed. Jan. 5-12-19-26 No, 921 Report of the condition of THE ARENA STATE BANK at Arena, in the e of North Dakota at. the close of business December 1920, ‘ RESOURCES Loans and discounts Warrants, stocks, cater, claims, ete. Government issues. oe Banking house, furniture and fixtures ... Current. expenses, taxes over undivided profits... Due from other banks.$ Checks and other cash dtems Cash . Total $ 34,886.65 tax certifi- “ 138,05 187.56 3,552.90 $ 40,609.17 -$ 10,000.00 + 1,900.00 LIABILIT! Capital stock paid in Surplus fund........ Individual deposits subject to check....$ 8,448.60 Guaranty fund deposit Demand certificates of deposit ... “ Time certificate: deposit ... Due to other ba Bills payable 14,065.57 Is payable. Total... STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh—ss, C.Isaminger, Cashier of the above 1 AL name@ bank, do solemnly swear that the | BUSINESS DIRECTORY | WEBB BROTHERS . Undertakers émbalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge DAY eHONE 50 . NIGHT PHONES 65—887 BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY _ istributors of STUDEBAKER — and — CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmers in Day Phone 100 Charge —iy Night Phone 100 or 687 BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN STREET Uphelstered Furniture Made to Order CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Southwestern North Dakota and * Southeastern Montana BISMARCK, N, D, SHOE FITTERS MAIN STREET =—_——_ A 50-cent piece, worth 2 dollar, 10 celebrate te tercentenary of the land- ing of the Mayflower, is now being minted. 222 3rdj DOINGS OF THE DUFFS YJA\ OW Nees, | Tun our NEICUBOR. 1? | MRS BAILEY ISComMG OVER WERE Can You Bear Thar! Jusy WHEN WANT WORK ON ee! Tus * You CAN Go FAsTER! ! 1 CAN MAKE ONE IA DAY IF WAY PVE above statement is true, to the knowledge and bel acai ees C. ISAMINGER, Cashier. rn to before me this 1921. ee “Walter Subscribed and 10th day of Janua: (SEAL) My commission expires Jan. is, Correct, Attest: sear ‘A. M, Isaminger, A. C. Isaming vir H | FROM LOWLY TOIL TO FAME 1 Edwin Dallin, Ranked as Great Sculp- tor, Was Once Wheelbarrow Boy in Mine in Utah. One of America’s greatest sculp- tors, Edwin Dallin, was ance a wheel- barrow boyyin a mine in Utah, where be toiled all day for Jess than a dollar. The miners uncovered a stratum of white clay one moruing, and Dallin, forgetting his work, sat down and be- gan to model a likeness of one of the workmen, So lifelike was it that his teacher, when he returned (o school in the fall, sent it and some of his drawings to a state fair being held in Salt Lake Cit: A rich mine owner had his attention called to the little clay bust and he offered to furnish the boy transportation to Boston where he could enter an art school. The boy worked long and hard, and by the time he was twenty-one he had a studié of his own, the Detroit News recalls, He went to Paris shortly afterward and began a series of In- dian poses, using the Indians from the Buffalo Bill show at that time in France. His first masterpiece, “The Signal of Peace,” was finished at that time and hé was recognized there- after as one of the world's greatest sculptors. His “Ann Hutchinson,” made for the Boston. state house; “The Medicine Man” in Fairmount park; Philadelphia, and the great golden an- gel on the Mormon temple in Salt Lake City are among his best known works, Formerly Our Superiors. She was angry about the bill—in- sisted she had paid it: The credit man stood listening attentively, at- SWE MATTER You SEE IF You HOLD IT THs MADE LOTS OF SHAaDES- iL ista RIGHT a (T- Ihe « “To MAKE "EM Jn AWAY WHY WHATS OW.GEE, PL HAVE, To. Run OVER Home, FOR A MINUTE, IVE GOT A eS ‘at intervals to break in on her flow of conversation, “You men want to understand right. now. that. you can't hoodwink the women any longer,” she blurted, “Little things, like , this—like send- ing out statements for bills already paid—won’t get you a thing, It won't get you a thing.” s, madam, but I—” ey: “And bear that in mind, will you? The old days are done. Women are men’s equals now,” “Yes, madam,” finally got in.“ are men's equ: superiors.” Just what she said after that— well, the chronicler sayeth not,—Indi- the credit. man es, madam, women $s now—formerly’ our Is Capital’s Best Speller. Frank B. Willis, Ohlo’s successor to Warren G. Harding in the’ United States senate, qualified as Washing- ton’s champion speller during his term the house. ~The» National: Press club staged an’ old-fashioned? spelling bee at the Willard, hoté?, with the na- tion’s famous statesmen anid rising young journalists as Gonteriders for first honors. Senator Miles Poindex- ter of Washington, then, like Willis, a member of the: house, stood: to the end, groggy but dogged. “Ogee” was the word on which he. finally w down. He thought it meant somet! like “ouch” and Ke couldn't define nor spell it. Willis’ years at Ada had taught him much, among other things how to spell “ogee.” He bowled Poindexter out and ytood alone.—Gus J. Karger in the Cincinnati Star. owe ee Relicf in Pictures. Following an idea which first de- veloped in France, pictures hi been printed which, when viewed through spectacles, appear in stereoscopic re- Hef. The object pictured is first pho- fographed from two points like an or- dinary stereoscopic view, two féetures are printed in two com- plementary colors nearly but not quit overtenping. The classes of the vi | Freckles and His Friends j | | i Then the} Shade Is in Helen’s Fayor. OH. MRS: DUFE, ARE You, MAKING A LAMP SHADE? How ARE You GETTING ALONG WITH IT? yy {| deavgr to tun them to a e}| little more. res BY ALLMAN oe Vm Nor } GETTING ON VERY ate KEVER MIND. mao BANEY, VLE Rua OVER ASB: spectacles are also”of complemen. H colors corresponding tu those | used in the printing, ane’ whengthe pieture is seen through these. glasses, ly stands forth with starit:g appear- ance of sclidity, Two Remarkable Rides, 'Acremarkable achievement Anglish rider dates back to arin days. Robert Carey is ridden from Whitehall to E burgh, 400 miles, in three days, ¢: ing the news of the death of Queen Elizabeth to James VI. He made an- other noted ride from London to the Netherlands, with the news of Cardin- al Wolsey's death, traveling by boat from London to Gravesend and riding the intermediate distances. He left London, according to the aceounts, at 4° o'clock one afternoon and back in London at sunset the second day thereafter. of an hakes- iled With Books, Books ‘ihitul society, He you 0 into a room filled with boc eV eR without taking them down from their shelves, they seem to speak to you. seem to Wweleume you, seem to tell you that they have something inside their covers: that will be good for, you, and that they are willing and desirous to impart to you. Value them, and. en- count—W, A Room FE. Gladstone, Pertinent Query. “Gentlemen, 1 ‘t sit still without saying a word and so T rise, Twill k what lies close, to my heart. vbody debates the futare of the di are erected for posterity. x that is done. built, planted, mply for the henefit of posterity, Y, What in Heaven's name has posterity done for y _ Kasper, Steckholn, sper Daily Thought. mores 4 of § few more tender words, a raint on temper may rence in our lives, A few pathy, ent sym- make all the d 1 DON'T KNOW YET, BUT TA LOOWIA! SEE IF TAS MADE WAY INTO SACRED. CITY Englishman Claims to Be the Only Living European Who Has Set ~ Foct in Holy Shefshaon, The Morocco correspondent of the London ‘Times claims to be Imost with certainty” the only living Euro- peat, who has hitherto visited She- shaWan, the mysterious “secret” Mo- rocean inland city which ig offi stated to be occupied by a fpanish exped nity force, Sheshawan, or more correctly Shef- shaon, he writes, is a smail town of a few thousand inhabitants situaied in the tribeland of the Beni Zejel. about 40 miles to the sduth of Tetuan. The ‘Times man si he visited it in Moorish disguise in 1888 and only es: caped with difficulty. He adds that the town is) small, duilt along a sort of terrace on the high mountain side, and fs renowned for. its springs and strerms, With the exception of its picturesque situ- ation among mountiips, its aloofness: and. ity surroundit dons, She- shawan presents no very particular teatures, Ijs inhabitants ar dustries are the g of furniture in. painted wood— Kets and tables —and the weaving of woolen stuffs They ave renowned for thetr mean: ne and a native proverb states “If you see-a Moslem merchant from Tex weeping, Ils only a Moor of She- shawan who could have got the bet- ter of him.” PARODIES ALWAYS IN ORDER Omar Khayyam and the Ever-Delight- ful Pepys Have by No Means Ex- hausted the List. Does your: memory go back to the time when everyone was writing par- odies of the Rubajyat of Omar Khay- yam? When it wae considered. very literary, to know all about Omar, and when all the-aveiters, both would-be nnd professional, » reducing the hypnotie quatrains. to modern terms? The newspapers were full of COmars Up-to-date,” and quite a lot of them got into the mag: es before the craze died down, , After that paredists sought other inspiration, but found no material that ed them. quite. so well, until a few age, one of them chanced on the y of Samuel Pepys. What a rich mn ‘The parod went mad over it, and have been cig there ever since. ‘Almost anybody can fill up a column with ehronicles in the Pepys @ the clever writer, by this 1 make hinself entertaining. ne orher eriginal genius will soon co of Mr. Pepys in the re- ard of the cap s, fer the populur- ity of the creative ma ture is more or les peneent upen time or elremnsiances, -poor, Their in- [white the work of the paradist goes on forever.—Ohio State Journal. British Warsh: sit admiralty has decided de every British warship in uiture with its own distinctive badge. ve being designed by Maj. Woulkes, heraldic adviser to who has already in- s. Considerable in- been exercised, as the amples will show: Ven- ive, a butting cnight; Ln Watchful, an eye; Viva- Ir, Lloyd Geor, , head of went, Britisher smash'ng a Hun. ch badge will be carved in) wood and then @st in br colored, and fitted on the quarterdeck, as well as on either bow of the boat, Pwo plaques » fo be used, the smailer one the boats beng about eight hes square, and the one for the muarterdeck about 18 inches square. Kaeh badge is designed In some way ty represent Uie nume of the boat pie forially, or avhen -tlit is) impossible, embodying some» Gevice connected with its history, ‘Lhe designs will be used also on note paper, and probably on the brass muzzle-caps of guns, whieh are privately bought by officers of battles! Flat Feet Treatment Successful. War experiences huve chan; ed our views about flat feet. 6 was at one ssumed. that individuals so af- were destined to lead sedentary ey were disqualified from partaking in vovations requiring the constant use of the feet, such as military servi ‘This erroneous idew is still universal in Europe and io a large extent In America, It is in weak fect that the bones of the arch drop to the ground, :the muscles and ligaments being so weak and flabby that they cannot hold up the arch bones. After a seMes of treatments in the most chronie cases, the pro- lapsed bones will gradually rise until they reach their normal height. Sterling, cious, head “Flivver” Airplanes, From time to time a photograph ap: pears, depicting a new airplane of com. pact dimensions and equipped with @ low-power engine, Such airplanes are: generally hafled as “everybody's” air. plan d the coming “flivvers” of the Yet an ‘examination of these ma shines soon discloses the fact that they are of little practical value. They are too small to be steady in flight ately adverse conditigns, too flimsy te last long a solutely worthle any kind. should general treated as novelties, except in instances.—Scientifie American, rare Lizard’s Eyelid Transparent. There lizard living in the Tri aspian desert (iu has the lower eye- fd fused with the upper; it is trans- ft, and like a window, lets too low-powered to fly under moder-| HAVE BRIEF SPAN OF, LIFE Most Placer Mining Camps Flourish for a Little While and Then Pass Into Oblivion. 1 Exceptions to the rule governing mining camps, hectic activity and quick deciy, are Helena, site of a one-time noted placer camp, and the fine-city of Denver, where, in the sum- mer of 1853, James H. Pierce panned out a little ‘gold from a sandbar near the mouth of Cherry creek, a discov- ery that fired the expectations of thousands and’ started the historic rush to Pike’s peak country. The fine and progressive, city of Lewiston, Idaho, ig another exception to the rule of oblivion that has been the almost unfailing fate of placer camps. While, strictly speaking, Lew- iston was not a placer camp, but the outfitting point, at the head of steam- boat navigation, for the stampede into the clear-water- region, in the early ‘60s, it was a placer camp in other respects, and in the wild spirit of early- day gold hunting. With the sailing away of the steam- ship Victoria, bearing 350 Nome regi- dents, most of whom announced their purpose never to return, the brooding spirit of melancholy came in with the long, long winter. Again the “wolf's long howl is heard on Ounalaska’s lonely shore,” and the little remnant of population ts left with memories and disappointed hopes. Yet a few will cling to the deserted beach to the last breath of life, for such is the unfailing record of every famous camp, to live over again in memory, through the long arctic nights, the stirring scenes of 20 years. ago.—Spo- kane Spokesman-Review. ee EFFECT OF MIND ON BODY Worry, Doubt, Fear and Apprehension Make the Physical Organism Sus- ceptible to Disease. . Since all of the cells of the body are more or less intelligent and we think not only with the brain but with the entire physical organism, we can read- fly see that our thoughts and convic- tions must affect, according to their nature, all of these cells, We can. think health into them or we can think disease, i) What have you been telling these little cell minds in your body, my friend? Have you been filling them with worry and anxiety regarding your health, with fear, with dread, with ap- prehension? Have you been filling them with doubts, with uncertainties, doubt of your ability, lack of faith, lack of self-confidence? When they are apparently sick, perhaps the vic- tims of your negative thoughts, your discouraging moods, your despondency, are you going to think into them more despondency, more discourage- ment, more hopele: or are you going to stimulate them with hope, faith, confidence, expectancy of better things to come? Are you going to inte health into them, optimism, —Orison Swett Marden, In Chi- cago Daily News. —_____——- Holland's Day of State. Although the Dutch are very. demo- cratic they still cling to the pageantry that surrounds the movements of their queen on days of state. A case in point being the opening day of their parliament, which is quaintly ceremo- nious. The queen rides in a gilded car- riage through the strects of The Hague to the old Knights’ hall in Par- Nament square, and with crown on her head and her gold-braided prince consort at her side sits on the throne. At this ceremony the Dutch cabinet minister's are compelled by tradition to wear giddy uniforms resembling an old-time: minstrel man in an adimiral’s hat. After this one day of pomp the ministers and members of parliament put on their working clothes and get down to business, while the queen, who prides herself on being a typical Dutch woman with domestic tastes, lays her crown aside for another year. —_—— Just Where He Had Left. It. Uncle Billy is getting old and ab- gont-tninded. One day Aunt Sally, his wife, noticed that he was roaming round from room to room. Presently to her from the kitchen, rou seen my pipe?” * she answered. “Can't you find i “No, I can't!” be replied rather “Lye looked upstairs and all and I can't find it.” nt? yon leave it in the bath- * asked Aunt Sally. 1 didn't, I've looked there. Come and look yourself.” As Aunt Sally laid down ber paper fhe heard him laugh. “Have you found arked, Q “Yes,” he replied. “It was im my mouth,”—Youth's Companion. it, Bil?’ she A Miner of Bullets. F. H. Lamley, an ore specialist, is removing lead and copper-nickel from the hill back of the target range at Camp Lewis, near Tacoma, Wash. By means of a “jig” operated by water power, he shakes the heavy metal from the earth which he is excavating. In three months’ time, he expects to get 100 tons of metal valued approxi- mately at $200 a ton, and having cleaned up at Camp Lewis, he will take his apparatus to other camp cites, All of the metal he mines was shot into the hillside by the boys of Uncle Sam's army two years ago. Lamley works on a commission basis. ‘irst man to mine a target range,” says Lanley of himself.—Leslie's Weekly. ——————————————— R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor In light, but excludes sand, : | Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Luecas Block—Phone 260