The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 26, 1921, Page 7

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a miners by Beu- lah SE ee On at erage teady work. al mine or at Bismarck: am e in laggart Bldg. 1-12-tf LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its Kind, Established 1893. Time and ex- pense saved by our inethods, Catalog, free. Moler Barber College | 10’ Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis.“ 12-30- ane ‘ HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Strong girl or middle-aged woman for gpneral housework. Phone 177. 1-25-tf SALESMAN WANTED—10 salesmen for North Da- kota. Excellent opportunity. Men capable of earning from $18 to $50 per day. Write Box 693, Hiomaioh: D. \ 1-25-1w IDs Ngo ee WORK WANYED WOMAN WANTS WORK—By day or * hour, washing, cleaning or sewing. Phone 570-X 1-22-1w GIRL WANTS work by day or hou Call 917. 1-2 WISCONSIN FA LANDQLOGY SPHCH M Just out, containing 1921 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 free on request~ Address Skid- more-Riehle Land Co., 435 Skidmore- Riehle Bldg., Marinette, Wise: FOR SALE OR RENT - HOUSES AND FLATS FOR*SALE—Immediate possession, 7-) room modern bungalow...including | 3 bedrooms; well located; eart front; desirable; immediate posses- ‘sion; on terms, Geo. M. Register. 1-26-1wk. —_—_—_— BOOMS FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Two rooms; one single. one double; rates reasonable. No children in this house. Inquire at Al4 7th, St. __1.-24-3t | PRE BANNER HOUSE—Room and board, $10 per week. Rooms 50 and 75 cents per day; steam heated. Meals _/35c._Phone 231. 1-20-1w FOR RENT—Room with hoard for two girls; $35 per month; three blocks from street car line.. Write 18¢ Tri- dune. 1-25-5t FOR RENT—Two modern forgone rooms. 418 Fifth s' -3t FOR RENT—Furnishéd rooms, a So. is mer Wa! WANTED TO RENT — “All -are questions on whieh “tas att in modern house or sma apartment. Call’ 329X, or Tribune. 1-24-3¢ LOST AND FOUND LOST—One four buckle overshoe. Finder return to Tribune. 1-25-1t MUSCELLANEOES FOR SALE—Hardware, Furniture and undertaker store, in good yely town of 600 population, electric light and water works. Will take in.trade good land for part of it and. the balance cash. Total price tor stock. fixtures and building, $16,900. For further details address Lock Box 277, Elgin, N. D. 1-26- wk $50.90 FIVE THOUSAND BARREL WELL—Five aéres for $50.00, new lease, completely surrounded by production or wells drilling. An in- vestment of $50.00 may mean riche: to you, it has to-others. Reference First National Bank. 0. J. Green & Co. Pecos, Texas. 1-26-10 $8,000 LAND CONTRACT—Will pay out in six years, secured by 640 acres &nd 160 acres improved yorth | 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 9. C. white; Jeghorn hens and one rooster. from prize winnipg stock. Forced to sell, lack of room., Call evenings or Sun- days. 5 Sth street, or write Box 113. Bismarck. 1-20-1w | THREE STRAY ‘horses at-my farm; One bay gelding, one dark steel | gray mare and bay cojt. Owner may} have same by paying damages and) paying for this ad. M. J. Wildes, Menoken, N. D. 1-26-1wk FIRST CLASS WCRK—Cleaning. pressing, repairing, dyeing, ladies’ and men’s clothing, Eagle Tailoring | & Hat Works, phone 58, opposite _poatoffice. 1-18-tf PRE WAR PRICES on cleaning, re- blocking and remodeling, men’ hats, Eagle Tailoring & Hat wane Phone 58, opposite Postoffice. _ 1-18-t¢ A NO 10 PAIL of Pure Montana Honey delivered at any post’ office in North Dakota for $250 ‘cash with order. B, F. Smith, Jr. Fromberg, Mont. NAL mo. PAINTING, PAPER HANGING, decor- ating @nd auto finishing; first.class work ‘guaranteed. Geo. Ker. 6th street. Phone 936-R. 1-24-5t} Phone 5 3 oie FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms.) FOR SALE—Brass bed, very best sag- Gall 154, 1-24-3t/ Jess spring and cotton felt mattresa. FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT, 802! ‘Ave. B. 2 1-13-tf FOR SALE- 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 FOR SALE OR RENT—320 acres of! good hay land. Inquire of, RB. G. Price, Decorah, Iowa. 1+25-14t} ——ooaaaS—S—S—S]=—=—=—=—————SSS—===—— 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 re; dence, Wing, N. D., for the erection of a one class room school and teachage frame building, within the said schoo! ‘district, in accordance with plans and specifications by Van Horn & Ritter- 7 ei WEBB BROTHERS cmbalmers Licensed Embalmer in Charge NIGHT PHONES 65—887 Undertakers DAY HONE 50 BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY |. Distribut PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embaimers in Charge Day Phone 100 if ‘BISMARCK Sa COMPANY. 220 MAIN STREET ge Upholstered Furniture Made to Order BUSINESS DIRECTORY | STUDEBAKER, . CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES _ CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Southwestern North Dakota and t Southeastern Montana Ge BISMARCK, N. D Phone 282-K, between 7 and 9:30 _P.M. 1-25-3t. FOR SALE—Two 4-8 pool tables, complete; very reasonable. Inquire _120 Gth street. _1-24-5t FOR SAILE—Two 4x8 pool tables com- plete. Very - reasonable. Inquire, 12) 6th St. 1-24-8¢ LADIES——We clean ang press accord- fan pleated skirts. Klein, the tailor. a 122-1 FOR SALE—Five-room house, to be moved off the lot, $400. Call 714-X 1-20-1w BARGAINS on used sewing machines. Singer Sewing Machine Store. sie 1-25-5t ‘OR SALE—2.000 shares Idawa Min- ing stock. -Box 533, Fargo. 1-25-7t | WANTED TO BUY—Baby buggy. Call 154. 1-24-3t bush, architects 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 per cent of the amount of the tende: must accompany each proposal. Plans will be on file ou and after’ Jan. 26th, 1921, with O. F. Pesonen, clerk, Wing, N. D. Burleigh County Funeral .Directots ‘ors of © Night Phone 100 or 687 (EE MAIN STREET The pigmy swine of Australia are the smallest known species of the hog. No largef than a good-sized house rat. sician, | {as eainen WITH ‘THR BOSS ToDAV! WHAT. WAS is AWPULIN TiGHT! © BISMARCK DAILY -TRIBUNE TS AW, THE BOSS TieeT ABOUT GETTING / HB STARTED LAYING DOWN A - LOT OF RULES FOR ME SO 1, UP AND ‘TOLD HIM I'D TAKE THAT? WHAT AND He oo ? © ORDERS FROM NO MAN! State bank of Wing, N. D.. and at the peice of the. architects. Bismarck. , Dated at Wing, N. D., Jan, 20th, 1921, ‘OSCAR KAVONIUS, Pres. Wing, N. D. O. F. PESONEN, Clerk. Wing, N. D. Jan, 22-26-29 Feb. 2-5-9-12-16-19 NOTIC E TO CREDITORS | State of North | Dakota, County of Burleigh. In County Court, Before Hon. I. ¢. Dayies, Judge. ~ Th the Matter of the Estate ‘of ‘Benja- min Liming, Deceased. Chases Liming, Petitioner, An 29n8 interested, Respondents. Ni ic da Kereby 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, at The City National Bank, in the City of Bismarck, in said Burleigh County, | North Dakota. Dated January 5th, 1921. mae H 2 J. A, GRAHAM, | >: ‘Administrator with the! 0. Will ‘Annexed, Jan. 5-12-39-26 | Need Rest Period. a ry osehediide fort permanent sorker,stiould. have some kind ‘of re period in the afterncon when she \ be free to go to her roam, to dress or | to go out If she wants te without ques: ton. If such a definite period is x signed to her she will he mere fi ty get her work dene in tit Dr. Sophia Herzog Huntington sof Brazoria. is the only woman railroad surgeon in Texas. Caste and customs of India forbid women being attended by a male phy. Freckles and His Friends Wilbur Is a Man of His Word. BY ALLMAN . HE BAWLED ME OUT ABOUT MY EXPENSE ACCOUNT ON MY LAST, ‘TRIP OUT ON “the RAD! HE WADA WEAK DID ) come BACK - HE SAID, HE NOTICED THAT BY THE AMOUNT OF BUSINESS iseny INE ORGANIZATION OF STATE FEDERATION OF WOMEN’S CLUBS IS COMPLETED; SEVERAL BISMARCK, WOMEN HONORED Reorganization of the departmental ‘vork of North Dakota Federation of Women’s clubs to correspond with the six departments of the General Federation is just completed by Mrs. Lyman N. Cary of Mandan, N..D., the new president. The new committees, with tneir chairmen, are to be pub- lished in the state year book, which is to be issued this week. Some of these have been announced prévfous- y. {In each of the ‘departments elgnt tivisions,;” in order representative from distr in the depart! are nt. The legis- lative and prea edep: nents Arelexs: ceptions, . One le; i tee, the district presidents will act under the clfairman, Mrs: Blewett, Jamestéwn, The six departmentiheads*with' vice- chairmen are: Mrs, Albert Strand, El- lendale, American Citizenship chi man; Miss Anna Tibbetts, Fargo, vic chairman. Miss Minnie /Njelson of Valley City, is chairman of the depart- ment of applied education with Mrs. M. O'Neil of Hettinger as vice-chair- man., Heading the public welfare de- partment is Mrs. Arthur Peterson of Mandan, and Mrs. E. O. Dickinson of Minot, is vice-chairman. ‘Thompson of Fargo is chairman of fine arts, to be a A.G Jackson of Bismar rs. A. Ble rman of | Smyth of Andrew y Bismarck, Voalitor of ‘artment. Heading the standing committees under the department eitizenship are the folowing swe American government, Mrs. , Wanpeton; American ideals, Ss A, Finch, LaMoure; tion, Mrs. K. B. Page, Loed: Mis; Shirley M. Fox. school attendance, : Dawsan; supervised play, Mrs. George Keup, Columbus; recréation foy adults, Mrs. Henrietta Haagenson, Grand Forks. Be choos. om pulsor’ Mrs. Frank | Bulletin, is chairman of the pregs | Ja Mrs. R. J. Olson, Sanborn; | In the eight standing committees of the applied education department are: Kindergarten, Mrs. B. EF. Bald- win, Devils Lake; parent and teach- ers -associations, s Martha Emry, Dickinson; food, Miss Mary A. Cant- well, Minot; clothing, Miss Alba Bales, Fargo; library extension, Miss Ida Caldwel!, Monango; state h tory, Mfs. Marshall H, Jewell, Bisma ; natural resourcés,;Mrs. J. B. Meyer, Valley City; *(eiritt, Mrs. W. A. McIntyre, ¢| Grand Firks. Under the public. welfare depart- ment are the following committee heads: Parental and infant care, Mrs. W. B. Wanner, Wimbledon; health and school children, Mrs. P. H. But- ler, Lisbon; control of contagious dis- eases, Mrs, Fi. H.’Maerchlein, Ashley; social hygiene, Mrs L. Richmond, Minnewaukan; housing, Mrs. J. H. Davidson, Mercer; water supply, Mrs. Blanche L.. Whittemore, Bowman; in- dustrial] conditions, Mrs, C. H. Chris- tensen, Ryder; state institutions, pen- al and charitable, Mrs. A. R. T. Wylie, Grafton. To turther the w: kof the fine arts department. cominittee chairmen hayvg been chosen as follow! Arts: and in home and 5 Bertha Williston; art and com-4 slides, Mrs. . Dickinson, eae: Mrs. school muste . Don Nierling, in folk songs, Mrs. nh; poe! Devil Lak . N. Putnam, aaa pageantry . Fargo. urd, erumg: girls between the a 48 in the Girls’ Re- erve Corps of the Y. M.\C. A. in the nited States and Honolulu. ; A wedding in Morroco is celebrated i by the bride’s friends at her home and by the bridegroom’s friends ati his | home, They Have to Carry Him. Blosser | WAVHELLO TAG = ARE You WANG 4 Good nN LIGHT ON ANCIENT HISTORY Some Interesting Data Bearing on the Strange People Known to Fame as thi efs.” Evidently some one who had eaten a great deal of army corned beef in Europe wrote this amusing skit In the “Watch on the Rhine,” remarks the Youth's Companion, The piece Is “Documents Published inthe wave just been journeying along the Rhine gathering data on the an- cient tribe of men’ known as the Aefs, ‘The origin of this strange people 18 Likewise their sudden extinction been just as baffling. The Aets appeared In- western,Eu- rope very suddenly about the time of the beginning of the Teutonic dark ages—the latter part of the’ second decade of the Twentleth ceniury, Fer a short perlod they flooded in great numbers the entire territory of Gaul frém the Pyrenees‘to the Rhine. Then they suddenly vanished. It was recently thought that a clue had been found to the kind of food eaten by these nomads, In an old cellar In Andernach ‘there were found what at first looked like peculiarly shaped bricks, but what later proved to be cans of a strange sort of meat. Cortain investigators soon decidedythat this could be nothing other than ele’ phant meat, and students were about to make trips to Africa in search of further evidence, when the result of some chemical tests was published. This showed that the meat was at least 1007 years old, if not very much older; and ax the Aéfs were in Gaul about 550 years ago, it is folly to be- Neve thut this store of food betonged to them, It is wach more probable that it was left there at the tine Han- nibal and his soldiers and elephant supply crains made thelr long expedl- tion against Rome. It is probubly @ good shing for “Amer: fea that the mysterious disappearance of the Aefs came about, for there {8 gienty of evidence that this barbdrie race wax planning to migrate to North America and establish itself on that continent: permanently, — HISTORIC TREE NEARING END Elm at Washington, Closely Associated With Gamuel F.,B. Morse, Will Soon Be Gone. Another: landmark in Washington ts near destruction, The old “Morse Elm," under whose shade Samuel F. B. Morse used to spend his lelsure hours while working on his invention of the telegraph, will soon be removed, The tree was planted in 1820, In the early fortics the future Inventor of the telegruph used to foreguther with his cronies and newspaper men and Jokes about the “impossible” and “cruzy”, invention of the magnetic telegraph on which he was working. ‘The wee was in front of the old Wil lard hotel. . Since those days the old hotel has heen repliced | by story hostelry, Morse, whose inven- tion came true in 1844. died int Bur the wee remained, But ii is yew in its death hour in splie of many, operations of “tr sur- gery" and all known applieat “tree medicine” practiced by W: ton’s superintendent of city parks. Houses of Mud. Women in California ar ses with their own f is more, they are making jthe : } The Hhs, however, spoken of in the Bible a people of Isreel in 6 clayey earth anise with hinder, ‘The straw ds: indisy and ft will be remembered how the israelites ked" ecause it was not provided. Such bric Missi ra sof the kind are merely sun baked. sip California tn the pr varly days used tuem for building chy coveres soine, These ‘dobe u substantia, weatherproof and endure tng, as is testified by many that still atand, uaimpared by jhe: weur of cen- furfes, With Jebor so nit and muerlals Mkewlse, the idea of a mud d elling which one can put up for onese:f, even the children helping, has its wttrac- tons The Dress Problem in the Orient. The Yokohuma Reform association recently sent a vonununication to the mayor requesting his co-operation in} endeavoring to prevent coolles “and workmen appearing in public places with Jasufficlent clothing to conform with western ideas of propriety. The association’s spokesman stated that the reason for the request is the pres- ence of a large number of foreigners im the city, and the sight of the scant- ily clothed persons on the streets and i the tramears will fend to give them an epfuvorable opinion of the city— From the Japan Advertiser. “Knocking a Tradition. Turkey is a tradition, Because the Pilgrim parents were rotten shots and couldn't Kill a quail on a bet, turkey was all they could find for meat on that memorable day. They had been on a diet of clams so Jong that mayhap even turkey tasted like food to them. Bur that is no excuse for wishing the ; blamed thing onto posterity and mak- Ing it a sacred duty to gnaw a bundle of concentrated fiddlestrings on the of every November ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. « Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, }1—Lucas Block—Phone 260 a a modern efeven- ‘| North, ‘ PAGE SEVEN THIS A “WOMAN'S COUNTRY” English Writer Gives an Interesting Impression of Her Sister Over the Seas. As an English woman, who went about America for nearly three years, making friends, East, West, South and ‘North, I ought to be able to contrast the women of the two countries, but the more one travels the more one re- alizes that “folks is just folks” all the world over, Amefican women are quicker at the uptake as regards friendliness and kindnesses; but tlie tongue-tied Eng- lish do jugt as much jn. the long run. The American’s manpers are more cosmopolitan, her clothes are better put on, she has more good stories in her after-dinner speeches. But if you compare corresponding types—as most travelers, omit to do—they are “both the same color under their skin.” America is a woman's country, The boy belongs to his mother, and most women give their own opinions on all subjects—quite curiously well ex- pressed—without any suggestion of having gone to a nfan for help, The Englishwoman speaks more shortly and with a suggestion of hav- Ing “asked her husband at home”; but 1 doubt if the Englishwoman is worse nee England is the home of the “As the good man saith, so but as the good wife saith 4) so must it be.” One very noticeable charm. in the American man is ber quickness in starting conversation with a stranger and her aptnexs in saying something pleasant at once. I cannot help think- Ing that, if English nurseries and school rooms taught this, It would have widely international results and put more reality into the League of Natl —Lucy H. Soulsby in the Woman's Supplement of the London ‘Times, VAST EMPIRE N SOUTH SEAS Extent of Australasian Group Under British Rule Is Hardly Real. +» ized by Americans. Judson C. Welliver writes in the Country Magazine that our impres- slons ubout the Australasian empire of the future are rather vague, be- cause we are unable to realize its mere bigness. Thus-the island of New Guinea, the greatest Island in the woy)d, if we classify Australia as a continent, was, before the war, divided between the British, Dutch and Ger- mans. The British have now taken over, in the name of Australia, the German claims. We .think of New Guinea as a con- siderable patch of dry land in the ex- panse of the southern ocean, but lave difficulty realizing: that if it could be laid down on the United States, one end would be at Portland, Me. the other near Omaha, and that it would blot out an area about twice the size of the German empire, and including something like a quarter of the popula- tion of these United States. It con- taing vastly greater Forources than Germany, also about a thousand white , people and 500,000 aborigines, fargely | cannibals, Half of it yet remains Dutch, ,but’ its predestingtion to be essentially British is quite obvious. s at leadership in uth temperate zone, on lines cu- parallel “to those by whieh Britaih has become Jeader tn the With inexhaustitle coal and iron, she is creating iron and steel and shipbuiiding industries and a navy of her own., The war era has been mark- ed by the completion of Australia’s first transcontinental rail , SURES. tive reuiinder of the beginning of-our own Union Paci Mt. Washington 6,293 Feet High. Many persons believe that) Mount Washington, in New Hampshire, is she highest mountain in the eastern part of the tates. Mount: Wash- ington } feet. above sea level, according to the Unffed States geological survey, devartment of the interior, but many peuks in the south- erm Appalachians are several hundred feet higher than. New Hampshire's’ fumous mountain, ~The highest nroun- tujy ip the Appalach a highest point in the Uutted States east of the Rockies~-is Mount Mitchell, in North Carolina, which stands at an elevation of 6.711 feet. ‘The highest mountain in Tennessee, Mount. Guyot, stands 6,686 fect above sea level. Ivory Does Not Rust. One cold afternoon several school- girls were standing on a corner watt ing for a car, A man invited them to con nto his office to wait for the car, They accepted, ‘The conversation soon turned to the ¢ of a certain givl’s hair, ‘One it ed it was red, vnother that it was auburn, and an- other that ft was brown. At the height of the discussion two children entered the office. As soon fe they understood the r re of the argument, one of the youngsters ¢x-- claimed: “Oh, shucks! Her hair ain’t red. Ivory don’t rust.”—Indlanapolis News. Great California Industry. . Nearly a million acres are planted to the fruit trees that supply the can- nerjes of California, according to Elten R. Shaw in an article in the Old Col- ony Magazine, the organ of the Oldy Colony club. Statistics tell us that of the 100,000,000 acres of land in the state of California, about 900,000 are devoted to fruit trees; so it is easily conceivable that the fruit-canning in- dustry is no small part of the genéral industrial activities of she “Gulden State.” 1 GIRL § New York.—Mary Martin is recover- ing from a bullet wound at Reception Hospital. She jumped in front of her fiance and took a bullet intended for him, oo tte | f

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