Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
y fi : F FRIDAY, JANUARY 21, 1921 a ___ HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—Coal miners by Beu- lah Coal Mining’ Co., at Beulah, N..D. Steady work.. Apply ily at mine or at Bismarck ies a -12-t: __Haggart Bidg. LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its kind. Established 1893. Time and ex- pense saved by our methods. talog free. Moler Barber College R. Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis. 12-30-1mo \__ HELP WANTED—FEMALE EADIES—We clean and, press accord- ian pleated skirts. Klein. the ‘tai- lor. 1-17-lwk WANTED—Experienced girl for house work. Mrs. Burt Finney, 411 Avenue A, - 1-20-tf 1 FOR WOMEN. 3 Hemstitching and picoting attach- ment, works on all sewing machines; price $2; personal checks 10c extra. Light’s. Mail Order House, Box 127. Birmingham, Ala. + 1-18-7t a eh FOR SALE OR RENT . HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE— A modern 7 room house, three bed rooms, nice’ porch en: closed full basement east front nice lot, well located, comparatively new, with garage, on terms. If you. are looking for .a-cozy home, see me at on Geo. M. Register. 1-17-1w ROUMS FUR RENT cry ard ‘WOMAN. WANTS .WORK—By day. ot hour, washing. cleaning or sewing. Phone 507-X 1-21-1w WISCONSIN FARM LANDS LANDOLOGY SPECIAL NUMBER—Just ‘out, contatning:2921 facts of clover land in Marinette County, Wisconsin. If for @ 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 freeon request. Address Skid- Mmore-Riehle Land Co., -435 Skidmore- Rfehle Bldg., Marinette, Wisconsjn. 1-3-3mos RALESMAN 3 SALESMEN WANTED—On a prop- josition that will net you from $10 to $50.a day. Look'this over. O. J. Larson, McKenzie hotel, call morn- ings. 1-18-1w MISCELLANEOUS $8,000 LAND CONTRACT—Will pay out in six years, secured by 640 acres and 160 acres improved north of Bismarck, to trade for a good ho- tel. For particulars, write Louis Wang; Box 255, Billings, Mont. | [ \1-20-1w | FOR SALE—$20 takes 8 S. C. white | leghorn hens and one rooster, from ! prize winning stock. Forced to sell. | lack of room. Call evenings:or Sun- days, 925 8th street, or write Hox 113 Bismarck. 1-20-1w BANNER HOUSE—Room and board, $10 per week. Rooms 50 and 75 cents per day; steam heated. Meals 85c. Phone 231. 1-20-lw FOR RENT—Room odern home. Call at 416 12th street, or phone 441-X, 1-20-5t FOR . RENT—Two rooms for light housekeeping. Call ut 713 3rd. woe Ds Sls 1-18-6t FOR RENT—Modern furnished room. 505 3rd street. Phone 538-L. z 1-20-3t TWO ROOMS—With board’ for three __sentlemen. Dunraven. \ _1-17-5t FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT, 802 Ave. B. _ x 1-13-tf FOR RENT—Room at 407 First street. : 1-20-3t D son LOST AND LO} n the. vicinity zh scl a ladies silver wrist watch. C 54-A_ Suitable yeward, 1-19- WANTED TO RENT YOUNG man and sister want to rent furnished house or apartment dur- ing February, longer if possible. Call Mr. Nickerson at 485 X be- tween 5:30 and 6 P. M. or write him _at 722 Fifth street. 1-15-1w WANTED TO RENT—Five or_ six . room modern house. Write P. O. + box 548, 1-17-1lwk 2AND WOR SALE—TheTeachout grain and stock farm, the whole of section 30, near Stewartsdale, Burleigh county, North Dakota, well improved, about 400 acres of cultivated land, about all fenced, comparatively new house of seven rooms; including four bed- rooms, full basement, hard wood floors down stairs, large barn, sta- ble and hay room, good frame gran- ary, good frame chicken house, fine well of water, pump and windmill. | for $26 per acre on terms. = GEO. M. REGISTER. * 1-20-3w ————S—SE__EEEE—S__ \ district, in-accordance with plans and —uwiqoe—— . LEGAL NOTICES —————_________—_+ SUMMONS State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh. In District, Court, Fourth Judicial, District. First State Bank of Regan, a corpor- ation, Plaintiff, vs. < cs J. A. Worden, Defendant. \ The State of North Dakota to the above named defendant: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this action.) which will be filed in the office of! the clerk of the district ‘court of the ‘fourth judicial district, in and for the county of Burieigh and State of North Dakota, and to serve a copy of ‘your answer upon the subscriber ‘within thirty days after the service of this. summons: upon you, exclusive of ‘the day of such service, and in case of your failure- to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in the complaint. Dated November 13th, 1920. H,C. BRADLEY, | . Plaintiff’s Attorney. | Residence and postoffice address, | Wilton, North Dakota. i 12-30 Jan. 7-14-21-28 Feb. 4 NOTICE TO ‘CREDITORS State gf North Dakota, County of Burleigh. In County Court, Davies, Judge. In the Matter of the Estate of John L., Baker, Deceased. Sarah E. Baker, Petitioner, vs. Geneva Durfee, Susie Lash, James E.} Baker, Roy Baker, John Baker, and { Ester Baker, Respondents. , i Notice is hereby given by the under- | signed James E. Baker Administrator | of the Estate of John L. Baker, late of the town of Sterling, 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 six months after the first publication of this notice, to said Administrator at the office of F. E. McCurdy, in the City of Bismarck, in said Burleigh County, North Dakota. i ses aa x d December 20, 1920. ee JAMES E. BAKER, Administrator. First rablication on the Thirty-first day of December, 1920. 12-31-1-7-14-21 Sea ete PROPOSALS. The board of directors of Lyman School District No. 18, of Wing: Bur leigh county, N. D., will receive sealed | proposals.until two o'clock P. M.. Feb. 21st, 1921, at Oscar Kovonius_ resi-' dence, Wing, N. D., for the erection of a one class room school and teachage! frame building, within the said schoo! - | Before Hon. I. C. | service of this summons upon you, ex- ' swer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demand- FIRST CLASS WORK—Cleaning. pressing, repairing, dyeing, ladies’ and men’s clothing, Eagle ‘Tailoring & Hat Works, phone 58, épposite __postoffice- 1-18-tf ELK TEETH-—Highest cash pr paid for genuine elk teeth. lrous € ussell Co, 95 Chestnut St..| Providence. It. I. References, your | local bank. 117-6 PRE WAR PRICES on cl blocking and remodeling men’s hats, Eagle Tailormg & Hat Works, Phone 58, opposite Postoffice, : 1-18-tf FOR SALE—One music cabinet, two beds, one rug and one cot. Modern bungalow. Buick car goes ‘or $300. C. E. Vermillya, -316- Park _Ave._ Phone 679L._ ___ 11 2-tt A NO 10 PAIL of Pure Montana Honey delivered at any post office in North Dakota for $2.50 cash with order. B.-F. Smith, Jr... Fromberg, Mont. eT a tan, Dressmaking, up to date work, re- modeling, convert out of date gown in up to date gown, coats, _ hats. 423 2nd St, Ave. A. Phone 772U. 1-10-2w FOR SALE—One roll top desk, one} flat top desk, one Remmington type- writer, typewriter table, several of- fice chairs. Phone 457-R. _1-19-3t LEARN TO PLAY drums or xylo- phones. Apply at McKenzie hotel between 6 and 8 evenings. Lessons at all hours, 1-18-1W PAINTING, PAPER HANGING, decor- ating and guto finishing; first class Phone 534-X. 1-20-1w ‘WANTED. TO ‘BUY—Six_or ‘seven- room modern house. Write P. 0. box 507. 1-17-1wk FOR’ SALE—Five-room house, to be moved off the lot, $400. Call 714-X 1-20-1w Dressmaking and remodeling up-to- date. Room 223 Northwest Hotel. 1-15-lw specifications by Van Horn & Ritter- bush, architectg of Bismarck, N. D. Separate proposals are desired on the heating system. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids. A certified check -for not less than 5 per cent of the amount of the tender must accompany each proposal. Plans will be on file on and after Jan. 26th, 1921, with O. F. Pesonen. vlerk, Wing, N. D. Burleigh County State bank of Wing: N. D., and at the onlce of the architects, Bismarck, Dated at Wing, N. D., Jan. 20th, 1921. OSCAR KAVONIUS, Pres. Wing. N. D. i O. F. PESONEN, Clerk, ‘Wing, N. D. Jan, 22-26-29 Feb. 2-5-9-12-16-19 SUMMONS _ State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh. In District Court, Fourth Judicial District. i Farmers State Bank of Wing, North Dakota, ‘a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. J. J. Mueller, Sr., Defendant State of North Dakota to the above named defendant: You are hereby summoned to an- swer the complaint in this action, which has been filed in the office of the clerk of said court, and to serve a copy ‘of your answer upon the sub- scribers within thirty days after the clusive of the day of service; and in case of your failure to appear or an- ed in the complaint. Dated this 15th day of November,+ 1920. NEWTON DULLAM & YOUNG, Attorneys for Plaintiff, Bismarck, North Dakota. . City National Bank Building. 1-14-21-28 Feb. 4-11-18 NOTICE TO CREDITORS | State of North Dakota, County of Burleigh. In County Court, Before Hon. I. C. Davies, Judge. In’'the Matter of the Estate of Rose McCormick, Deceased. F. J. McCormick, Petitioner, ‘Vs. Catherine Jager, James McCormick, John McCormick, Respondents. Notice is hereby given by the under- signed F. J. McCormick Administrator of the Estate of Rose McCormick late of the City of Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Da-| kota, 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 at the office of the Washburn -Lignite Coal Co. in the City of Bismarck, in ee : BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE OW, 1 DONT WANT TO 1 -WANT ‘To SELLYOu one! You A Bue LATER! ~ > BoRROw ONe- WE HAVE ONE. WS HANDLE THEM AT OUR STORE- Whe LEAVE THIS ONE AND MAIL ‘So Business Has Come To This! TheN’RE A NICE THNG “To HAVE - MaKe OF ALL Tue CRustT OF THAT Guy! Goes AWAY AND LEAVES 1T- A RecuLaR Jesse James! “TheN Tak ABOUT BuswESsS BEING Poor Bur Ib. SAY THAT GUY Wike NEVER STARVE I! BY ALLMAN Yes, we've TwovenT, ‘Apour CeTTING one! (sorry, IF WE HAD - | ONE |'D BE GLAD TO LET You TAKE IT: said Burleigh County, Dated December 30, B F. J. McCORMICK, Administrator, Firstspublication on the Thirty-first day of December. 12-31-: CE OF CH FORECLOS oR. Miller, of Klgin, Graut county, North Dakota, mortgagor, did make, execute and deliver to St. Paul ttle Loan Co. a corporation, of Sec. mortgagee. his certain | chattel mortguge. dated October 18th, 1920, and filed in the office of the reg- ister of deeds in and for Burleist: county, North Dakota, cn October 20t). 1920,-at 9 o'clock A. M., and numbered 42487 of chattel mortgzges; and which Said mortgage was upon the following described personal property, situated on the so-called Geo. Gussner farm. located: about one mile from Bismarck. in the county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota, to-wit: Five jundred ‘work: guaraliteed’” “Geo. Baker-Thead of cattle, more particularly de- scribed as follows: 65 head three-year pld steers; 150 cows; 175 two-year- olds, mixed; 110 coming yearlings, mixed; the above cattle being Here- fords and Black Aberdeen Angus, and branded Cross V Cross on the left ribs and EB on left hips; the intention.ci the mortgagor being to include there- in all cattle then owned or to be ac- quired by him until the debt described therein is fully paid; and which sai! mortgage was given to secure the pay- ment of the sum of $34,583.80. and in- terest thereon from October 18th, 1920, at the vate of ten per cent per annum. evidenced ‘by ‘one ‘certain promissory note in said mortgage described; And whereas the mortgagee afore- said has in good faith deemed itself in- secure, and whereas reasomible ‘ari proper care has not been taken cf such property. and whereas, by reason thereof. the mortgagee aforesaid has. in accordance with the terms of such mortgage, ‘elected ‘to ‘declare ‘the en- tire amount secured by such mortgage due and payable; Now, therefore, notice is hereby giv- en that under and by virtue of the power of sale contained in said mort- gage, the undersigned will sell the above described personal property, to- Freckles and His Friends gether with all cattle acquired by the it mortgagor after the 18th day of October, 1920, at public auction to the highest bidder for cash at the so-call- cd Geo, Gussnor farm, about 1% miles southeast of -the-city of Bismarck in jthe county of Burleigh and state of North Dakota,on the 28th day of Jan- uary, 1921, at the hour of two o’cloek in the afternoon of said czy to satisty the amount duc on the mortgage, all costs, charges and expen: t ing. 1emoveng, keeping, st= property, and the costs of sa veing duc on the said mortgage on the date of, this notice the five thousand four hundr and 63-100 dollars ($35,46' Dated January 20th, 192 ST. PAUL CATTI,E LOAN CO, So, St. Paul, Minn., & corporation, : Wortgagee. 1 sixty-seven J, A. HEDER, Attorney for Mortgagee, Mandan, North Dakota. ¢ itty veka Bi, naa Booey gp, 1-21-1t Long Thumb—Strong Wilt. If the top joint of your thumb ts long, it shows that you have good will power, Well-developed reasoning fac- ulties are possessed by those. people who have thumbs the second joints of which are long. Thumbs that work easily are owned by eless, happy go-lucky, spendthrift individuals. A stiff, tirm-jointed thumb, however, shows that the person is keen, tact- ful, self-possessed, sort of man who will get on in the world: ‘Chinese Nervous System Best. The Chinese have the most perfect nervous system of any people in the world, ‘. The Finest Language. The findst language Is-chiefly made up of unimposing words.—George Eliot. , \ Londoners Fond of Tea. Something like 560,000 gallons of tea are consumed by Londoners every day. WELL, BOYS REVEALS IT “To BE dd cautious—the | 1 Anyway, It Feels Like One Curious Masterpieces. Literary masterpieces have heen written on strange mediums. Smart's ngeto David.” was written y Bn the wa'ls of a mad house, Coleridge once wrote & son net on a scrap of seaweed, The One Thing That Really Counts. No man can afford to work for mon- ey alone. Simply accumurating wealth adds nothing permanent to human wel- fare. Wealth fs only a means to an end. It ig the purpose of life -that counts most.—Grit. Most Men Will Remember That. Boys know nearly as many untrue things as grown folk. Does anyone remember their saying that, “ff a tur- tle got hold of a boy's toe it wouldn't let go until the sun goes down?"—~ Exchange. On As Ye‘fteap; He Re Interviewer—“And did you work Your way through college?” Prominent Old Party—“No, “I didn’t; but I’m working my son's way through, May- he the Lord will forgive me."—Life. “Snow Trout” of India. India is not famous for its fish, yet oné which ranks as a great dainty. is is the “snow trout” of the Hima- layas. It caught only in the cold mountain streams. To Dream of Mackerel. Mackerel, especially if eaten, signt- fies that you will make the aequain- tance of one of the opposite sex who will become very useful to you, Or Some Fancy Duds. Another thing that causes a chicken to cross the road. is a show window with a good mirror in ft- (S. C.) Record, Slberian Bread Substantial. The small ringed bread of Siberia is decla to be the most substaritial of all the hardtack breads of the unt- verse. By Blosser STONE AUTHIN's Fy, TRE NUTS ANS 3 ig 7 MEMORIAL TO CLARA BARTON School in Which Great Woman Taught Is to Be Preserved as Education- al Landmark. “A public school is Impossible,” the ggod folk of~Bordentown, N. J. told Clara Barton, the greatest won teacher of her time, and one of the best friends to children in all time, “It has been tried and always it has failed.” ' She .had taught at Hightstown In 1853, and the fame of her conquests of expertly bad boys had spread. Her pupils were her champions, and wher- ever thelr enthusiasm could reach some of the general prejudices against publie schools were shaken, But Bor- deniown was ten miles aw The new teacher took a tumble- down, unoccupied building, with six pup but in six weeks the p'ace was too small to hold half of the little Bor- dentowners who wanted, at last, to go to school, It had become—though no one knew it) theu—an educational jandma The old structure where she proved that there was life in pub- lie schools will be taken care of for the future, Since Chuva Barton the founder that or- jon took the respor lity of g the school when it was in dan- of destruction, bur they could not the site. Now the building has deen moved and the land on whieh It tands las heen donated. Burlingion county terchers have re- stored the interior so skillfully that tt is almost exactly as it was when wht there, 4S A FRENCHMIN SEES US. Americens Are Gamblers in Business and Careless in THrift, Is Verdict Ne Renders, Half. dozen British writers having woked us over this summer aud record- 4a) their impressions, a Frenchman, Louis ‘Thomas, is now doing the sane hing for the Freneh Capper’s Weekly, ihe Opinion. Americnn wastefulness isn stupety- thing to Frenchmen,” ‘tomas, We ure thrifty aud even we must whit. avaricious, -Our experts, who cooperated with whem in wir enter- prines, wind thems ubominably wastes ful, indifferent ‘to costs and hniprovi- dent To the last degree.” ‘Yhe reason is simple, sa Americans are 2 “They do not want to make a med- erate pi _ uo stendy, regular, perhaps: anediocre income, but, on the contrary, lw make a great deal of money in a very rt time, to ‘get rich quick." “They gamble at business--not at roulette or bacearet; but it is gam- bling all the same.” a As for wastefuiness + “So muny people here have made thelr money by chance, -by. good luck, Thomas, atebyor Nysh-of driagination,-and not by the sweat of their brow, that they are naturally an extent which we can hardly Imagine in Europe. Everyone wastes, even {he poor, \, marticuhity the women, who, for economical the habits of housekeeping possessed by women of | the old world.” Grain Sown From Airplane, Through an invention 10 sow grain | by airphine, aircraft may be listed agricultural implements. ‘The u “fying grain sewer,” says the New York Sun, will plant a strip of 86 feet wide traveling at the rate of 40 niles an hour, ‘The seeds are expelled by wir pressure from a perforated metal tube with sufficient velocity to drive them deep inte the ground: At the end of each wing ao thin’ str white lime or fertilizer is releas outline the planted area, The plane is. constructed to nfake a lunding on a | plowed flold without damage. norinal conditions the “flying sa cupacity of 640 4 ahout six hours, The same area ed with an elght-foot drill traveling at the rate of three miles ‘an hour would take a niin twenty-two and a half tiys of ten hours, It is estimated that 1,000 neres could be covered in one day by the of the Nations. The tax burden in importa: t coun- tries was computed for the financial conference ‘held at Brussels. pressed in dollars at the rate of e) change current in the summer, the Nation's Business ‘states, It is show that per capita the United Kingd vs the highest taxes of $87.9 ted States is second, with $ France, th with $34.60; and > way. fourth, with $28.80, With the Income per capita, the economists comparéd the present gov- ernment revenue of the latter to the former—which comes nearest to show- ing the relative burdens of taxes today —ts lowest In the United States at 8 per cent and highest in the United Kingdom at 27 per cent. The other comntries come in between. The Coot Colonel Roosevelt told ‘a war story at an Albany reception, “A doughboy,” he said, “had gust got hack home from the war, and he was lunching in a cafeteria when a dear old lady in the next chair ‘to his own leaned over across her pie and said: “I, too, have a soldier son, young man, and a lu one at that, Would you believe it?) My boy wert through the war without a serateh,” “Gee, lady, said) the doughboy, ‘snill us the name of his insect powder, will ye?" \ ‘ Rope Symbol of Good Luck. A singular feature to be seen in! Japan on New Year's day is a grass rope running from house to house, with symbolical decorations, Tt is be- jieved to ward off evil spirits during the year. memes mE wasteful and spendthrift to | tost part do not seer to have time | PAGE'SEVEN | HOPE. HAMPTON Here the charming “movie” star, Hope Hampton, is seen posing as a fashion model. She dons one of her latest importations, cf which she has contracted ‘to purchase 104 during the year at a tctal cost of $50,000. This is on account cf the demands made upon her in the dressing of her pro- ductions: The gown is made of sil- ver_cioth, which is buiit to give a mier- maid figure. aoe HOW DO YOU SAY IT? * By C.N, Lurie Common Errors in English and How to Avoid Them we Weeeerrerereeererrrerrererere NAN advertisement published re- “OFTEN” AS AN ADJECTIVE. I cently in a New York newspaper, the writer spokevof “the often elabe- fateness of the dress Seen in’ seme ups of men.” The use of the word “often” in this manner is incorrect; the dictionaries mention it, but they call such use “arehaic, which means outworn, or antiquated. “Often” is an adverb, or modifier of a verb, and means “on frequent or numerous ve: easions; many a time; frequently” (Standard Dictionary). It should not bé used as an adjective, or a modifier of.a noun, as in the phrase quoted. Ps For “often,” as used there, substitute } “frequent,” the only adj that linay be 1 correctly in this sense. In this connection it may be well to note that the word “often” is fre- quently—perhaps — even generally— lnispronounced, ‘The “tv” should not be sounded; the co: pronunciation is not “of-ten,” but “ofn,” (Copyright) O0—— ey ALINE 0° CHEER By John Kendrick Bangs. “TICK-TOCK! TICK-TOCK!" “Lm ticling off time,” said the old Clock, ds never rest, but they run Around, and around, and around my face, With never a pause of a second or two Because there's no end to the work Ido, But now and then, In the manver of men, I strike, and I strile, and I strike again But whether I'm striking or not, my friend, I work, and L work, for the came old end, In: The endless ta: do.” «to iaat is mine to (Copyright) R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9. 1i—Lucas Block>-Phone 260