The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 31, 1921, Page 7

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| 4 egies \ 7“ ¥OR SALE—Immediate possession, 7- __FOR REST—# ¢ “WANTED—Tyo furnished Fooms for WANTED—Coal min by by sy Baa lah Coal Mining Co., at Beulah, N.D. Steady work... Apply at mine or at- Bismarck office rie Haggart Bldg. WAN’! PED—Man for ‘spare time -Worl must have augo or horse and wagon. Work ‘consid of inspect ye and repairing signs on public roads running a short dintenes | out of Bismarck. No experience neces- sary. Position requires a few hours time every 90 days. Liberal pay and yearly contract to’ responsible party. State age, occupation, and whether you have .auto or rig. . Ap-| plications considered ' confidential. Address Manager Maintenance De- partment, 141-149 West Ohio Streei, Chicago, _Ilinois. 1-31-3¢ LEARN BARBER TRADE~At the Moler Barber College, Oldest. institution of ita kind. Established’ 1893. Tire and ex- pense saved by our methods. Catalog Sipe. Moler Barber. College 107 ‘R. Nieallet Ave., Minneapolis. — 12-30-1mo | HELP WANTED—FEMALE - WANTED—Dining room girl, kitchen ) girl and chamber maid. Apply Gar- _rison, Hotel, Gatrison, N. D. 1 Mesieeugany girl or middle-aged woman sfeneral housework. Phone ue B25 -f WANTED—A girl for general. house- work, O. H. Leruny 121 W. Thayer. f ~ 1-2 POSITION WAN | “unimproved land for -sale. - MONDAY, JA VARY ‘31, 1924- i AND FOUND LOST—Two white rosaries. One white pearl ‘and: one/Sacred Heart rosary. Lost between Catholic church and Finder return to Bri- 1, Monday A. ™M., be- street, or at the . Finder please rezurn to. Mrs, D, McDonald, 211 Phone 634-1. LOST—A_ gold ‘wat on back. ‘Phone’ 512: _ Hedrick. a AND i FOR SALE—The Teachout grain and stogk farm, the whole of section 30, North Dakota,-well, improved, about 400 acres of cultivatéd jand, about all fenced, comparatively new howse of seven rooms, including four bed- rooms,- full basement, hard wood ftoors ‘down stairs, Jargé barn, sta- ble and hay room, good frame gran- ary, good frame chicken house, fine well of water, pamp and windmill. for $26 per acre on terms, GEO. M. REGISTER. Saar 1-20-3w FOR SALE—200 acres So. Dak. irri- gated valley. land in the Great .Al- falfa Seed helt." 25 acres seeded to alfalfa last year. Will consider | smill property or car on first. n-y- ment, 56 Hannifin | B. ma Cowie, ‘0 Nea from owner of cash. price,. full particulars. Bush, Minneapolis, Minn. WANTED—Position by young Jady as stenographer or typist, experienced, state salary offered. Address 186, Tribune. 1-31-2t PRIMARY TEACHER WITH. 2FIVE a yeats experience desires position in yemall town public schools. Write No, 185 Tribune. 1-28-1wk FOR SALE OR RENT Ss HOUSES AND*FLATS room modern bungalow, including 3 bedrooms; well located; east front; desirable;, immediate posses- sion; on terms, Geo. M. Register, p 1-26-1wk FOR SALE—House with six rooms and bath, full basement, garage connection. Owner 10 East’ Main St. phone 212K. “ 1-29-1wk SALESMAN WANTED—10 salesmen for North Da- kota. Excellent opportunity. Men} capable of earning from $18 tb $50 per day, Write Box 693, Bismarck, N. D. 1-25-lw * WISCONSIN FARM: LANDS DOLOGY SPECIAL. NUMBER—Just out, containing 1921 facts of clover land in Marinette County, Wisconsin. If for a home or ag an. investment, you are thinking of buying good faim 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., 425. Skidmore- Riehle Bldg., Marinette, ) Wisconsin, 1-3-3mos it “ROOMS FOR nT . \FURNISHED\ MOBERN ROOM FOR| RENT—Suitable for two if desired. Gentlemen: preferred Phone 485X, “722. 5th Street. oe “1-28-8t FOR RENT—One, modern furnished room, Suitable for one or two. 1008 ‘Avenue C. iPhone -Z. -3t Furnished room for light housekeeping, Phone -L. 1-28-3t | FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT, 862 t Ave. 1-13-tt LARGE MODERN, FOOM FOR RENT. —522 2nd St. ~~ 1-31-3t WANTED TO RENT * > light hous@keeping. Write P. 0. box} Henry Deede., — _1-28-lwk 243. 1-31-31] FOR SALE—2,000 shares Idawa Min- WANTED—To rent. for several _ing stock. Box 633. Fargo. 1-25-7t months or }ear a furnished house} FOR SALE—Spring Valley coal. or apartment. Box 310. 1-31-lwk Phone 270. } 1-29-3t Undertakers f PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS ; Licensed Embalmers in Charge ee Day Phone 100° ‘BISMARCK FURN 220 MAIN STREET ~ Upholstered Furniture Made to Order CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, _ Southwestert\North Dakota and , Southeastern Montana (eu BISMARCK, N, D. | BUSINESS DIRECTORY | WEBB BROTHERS | ~ Gmbalmers Licetised Embalmer in Charge DAY rHONE 50. NIGHT PHONES barman - BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Y. (Distributors, of STUDEBAKER CADILLAC AUTOMOBILES ~ FOR Sai OR WENT—320 acres of | good hay land... -Anquire of R. G. \ Prices Decorah. Iowa. 1-25-14t | _WORK WANTED _ 1. i wk | Ne MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Hardware, Furniture and | undertaker store, in good fively| 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 for’ stock. fixtures and building, $16,900. For further details address Lock Box _277, Elgin, N. D. ____1-26-1wk $50.00- FIVE — THOUSAND BARREL WELL—Five acres 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. 1-25-, THREE STRAY horses at my far One bay. geldingy one ,dark steel gray mare and bay colt. Owner may have same by paying damages' and paying for this ad. M. J. Wildes, Menoken. N..D. 1-25- 1-25-1wKT FEBRUARY ‘AND MARCH BABa chicks. Purebred. Eleven varie- ties. Catalog ~ free. | Murray Mc: Murray, hox 113, Webster. City,/ Towa. oe 1-29-1t FIRST; CLASS | WCRK—Cleaning. pressing, repairing, dyeing, ladies’ and‘men’s clothing, Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works, phone 58, opposite! postoffice. 1-18-tf LPRE W, WAR PRI PRICES ‘on cleaning, re- blocking and remodeling men’s hats, Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works, Phone 58, opposite Postoffice. 1-18-tf ANO iCPAIL of Pure Montana. Honey delivered at any post office in North Dakota for $2.50 cash with. order. / B. F. Smith, Jr. Fromberg, Mont. Siete Lys Wot Mao 1A mo POSTOFFICE FIXTURES _FOR SALE—64 lock boxes. General de- livery. Address box 864, Yucca, N. D. ___1-27-1wk| FOR” SALE—35 ton bailed Upland hay, $19 per ton f. 0. b. Woodworth. Funeral Directors Night Phone 100 or 681 ITURE COMPANY «4 ichmond Whitney My ais 8 _ SHOE FITTERS —- MAIN STREET Alfalfa-was grown last year on more near Stewartsdale, Burleigh. gounty, | BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE LATE TONIGHT BUT) MORMING ! MM rr, \N Wi , VK v4 Vai fs Tall eek . LEGAL AL NOTICES | OO NOTICE TO‘ CREDITORS. In thd Matter of the Estate of Olaus B. Olson, also. known as O. Br,Olson, deceased, Notice ig hereby given by the under- signed, F. E. McCurdy, administrator of the estate of Olaus B. Olson, als) known as 0. B. Olson, late of the City of Willmar in the County of Kandoyohi, in the State of. Minnesota, deceased, to the creditors of, all per- sons having claims against said de- ceased to exhibit them with the nec- essary vouchers, within six months tice to, the said administrator at his office in the City of Bismarck in said Burleigh county, North Dakota. Dated January 10, 1921. F. E. MeCURDY, Administrator. First publication on the 10th day of January, 19: Jan. 10-17-24-31 | States District Court, Tict of North Dakota. United States of America, vs.’ One Buick Roadster, 119 Model, » Engine No. 495,059. In obedience to a Warrant of Seiz- ure to me directed in the atove en- titled cauge, I have seized and taken into my) Possession tie following de- scribed automobile, one Buick road- ster, 1919 model, engine No. 495,059, at Bismarck North Dakota, on the 2nd day of January, 1921, for the’ causes set forth in the libel now pending in thé United’ States District Court. fo. the District of North Dakota, at ar- go, North Dakota, for violation of the Act of October 28, 1910 (unlawfuljy} transporting intoxicating liquor). I hereby give notice to all persons claiming the said des¢ribed’ avtomo-| bile, or knowing or having anything) to say why the same should not be condenined and the proceds there- of distributed according to the prayer of the libel; that they be and appear before the said Court, to be held in and for the District of North Dakota, in the United,’States Court Rooms, in the city of Fargo, and make such claim within. thirty days from/the ‘date of the, first publication of this notice, if that be a day of jurisdiction, other- j SEE ALL TW TINY ANIMALS 1N TH WATER, TAG+ SEE! than‘one million acres of land in Kan- gas alone. is E We ci te SAY Tom asic OUT SCOLD -HIM AS | WANT TO BREAK ThE NEWS OF MY NEW DRESS Uy) THE Yj COME. TOTHE FRONT Y ‘Door Te LeT You after the first publication of. this no- iy WON'T DARE o- pons! Nou Don" LURE ME INTO wis! on the nextday of jurisdiction thereafter... - o 8. J. DOYLE Jnited States Marshal. notice published, January 21, Jan, gl, Feb. 7 Asbestos Ropes? - To lagsen the amount of metal used in. fire gscapes a Hungarian living in Cahada’ has patented one, the chief features of which is a basket to be lowered by ropes from bracket fas- tened to a window frame. \ Pirst 1921, Ancients Made Bricks to taken from the buildtmgs in Nineveh and Bal ylon, which show uo signs of lisintegration, althongh the nts did not burn or bike them, but dried them in the sun. ‘ ” Can, but Don’t. German experimenters haye found that explosions eon be caused In gas works by sparl.. frem telephones, al- though nothing of the kind has been known to occur. i ‘ New Lighthouse Mechanism. Mechanism in 2 lighthouse/that uses electric light automatically switch! on a new lamp and moveg It into foe should the original lamp be extin- guished. What Suez Canal Does. Although the Suez canal is only, 99 miles slong, it reduces the distance from England to India by sea wneurly 4,000 infles. Too Generous, The trouble with the fellow who bor- rows troubl@ is that he wants to loan some of it to everyone he meets, aera, = N Optimistic Thought. The feeling of shame at what is wrong !s the commencement of ‘virtae. NES -T SEE ‘EM ARE THEY NSH! WATER, WE DRINK? Helen Nas a Miduight Caller a In the British museum ‘are. bricks: ; ly comedian, STEA KETTLE WHEN “THE, BY a a HEAR ‘MIM Now! He usr HAV. FORGOTTEN WS KEV! TRYING TO GET, IN THE WINDOW: 7 He's aN WHAT TIME, | WOULD STEER SHY SHY OF CAMERA “Colonel Whittlesey, feats (Caadde of “Lost Battalion,” Backs Off From Mo tion Picture: Machine. * Although’€olonel Whittlesey, an ac- tive meinber of the American Legion, led -the famous “lost battalion” through the Ar- gonne - and = was one of the 54 Americans who won the blue ro- sette of the con- gressional medal of honor, he told “Fatty” Arbuckle that he would be “scared to death if placed motion picture camera, ou can starve a aman;- you can wound him with bullets,” sald Colonel Whittlesey during a recent visit to a Hollywood movie studio with the port- “put you can't dim his love for the movies. Just a few hours after my boys of the Three fundred and Eighth infantry{had landed in a] safe billeting area on being relieved j from their perilous position, the whole bunch were in a ‘Y’ hut. watching a! five-reel comedy.” hE In These Days. “Who's the boss here?” asked, a traveling salesman as he stopped at a farm with a set of the World’s Best Literature in 12 volumes, “He is,” replied the man at the door wearlly, poigting fo the hired man lonfing hard in a field. “I'm only bis employer.”—American Legion Weekly. It has been estimated that it, would cost more than $1,000,000 to improve New York harbor. A steamship line fs now running, ! from Halifax to South American ports. The price of'raw cotton has dropped GO per cent in the last eight months, x OW, OWT KNOW \WHAY MAYES TH! SINGING INTHE WATER BEGINS TO ~—— eee Bo” VEE, Al, . ~ _| ing. by. perini Nseite 9. 11—Lycas Block—Phone 26¢ PRISON OFTEN LURES FLEEING , OONVICT BACK it) Whe Eses Escape’ Hint to * Peace-and Quiet of, Cell. HARD TO DODGE THE LAW MW Cables, the Telephone, Railroads, Even Airplanes, if Nec ry, Cans Now Be,,Called on to Speed in Pursuit of Escaped Convict—Manner Be- trays: Him, gs He Becomes Wary of Everyone He Meets—Average Numa) ber of Escapes a Year Is, 500. Prison escapes: seem to be-unusually numerous of late. One mun imiracu- lously departs from jail with three fel- tow $ feud to the suspicion that w ke renlited among the inmates, And stories in the pu- thing isa writes Frederic J. Haskin ago Maily News. x up te Kart Dud- aners’ Relief so- Urn wus Wel gest that J eceurrence, in ihe Chi We pit the questi head of the d end got this rea here is no gl ce ErOM es. cuped convicts, 4,000,000 innaites iy penal institutions in this di countiy. Tal a inition mer, women, Npvs and girls are convicted of some offense eve: eur, and ws many more pin prisons. Compare res with the average capes a year, which is al w freed these bys atinber of most S00 Hard to Dodge Law Now. Five hundred convicts! break away, but Doctor Dudding pl that where ever yeurs vo they might have stoe fair SU ft permanent freecon, offen retaken few to ined gitely wratively covey bis tha inthe time it took to notify she and sprend) word of The eserpe vables, the: telephone, alphines: Hf necessa onte speed in pursiit, rhe is got taken at once, the con. vies menner betrays hin, Public: may have um, he fears, and sa he 1s one he meets Th amu aekoss the tunel roo table whe inqineds, beryeen where he works, bites of: at he may bea detebtive A lpeticennin too! Wn he ots Thbeswn dite at penn Eventually die gives tinsel aw his eforis to be imeonspicnaus, Getting Back In “Nearly every diag. gf Doctor Dring wer mere of his type came foie for helps te the ion is too much for then a oUMptent ease just few The oman ¢ md asked ak with me. H fooking at here Me trying to decide whether he could ‘ me trast ne with) hits “Well? Esiid to tin, escape? “The blow nearly Knecked him over seeret, ‘when did you plaint talked the nuttler aver and 2st hin that the only thing: to do kM and finish bis term. "Ph versa free a Vol him, go back he could watk the st cut tree now,’ ware talk to Phats true, he said. ‘Brit if t go baek PH be putin irons, and: Caves a told hime cE will write t tendent and explain that o voluntarily aud i yo your old) place,” The4uan agreed, and here ts the sire prising part of the sta to one who doe: yt understiaid: pt and: pris- bhers as Doctor Dudding does, Placed on His Honor, nowas not pul under guard or handeyted.. Doctor Dudding told him to come back ata certain tine, When he came he was given a teket lo the Jail town and a letter which Wad been, vitiined from the superintendent of the prison, saying that he wa. sion of the prison thorities, ‘Phe convier was ,to carry this letter with him, for he was want: e pollee and night have been ted on his way. ‘This man did not muke any attempt to use either the letter or the ticket to escape. ‘The adventure was over for hit, fare Com kK him to The { Something like this happens about |, a hundred tines a year, Escaped prise oners from all parts -of the country come into an office of the Prisoners’ Relief society or write to Doctor Dud- -ding to know what to do, | He teils them, as he teld the man just men- tloned. that they cannot expect to live honorably or in peace until they have been freed by the state, amd theo, when he las their permission he does what he can to make the return to prison easy for them, He s that he has never failed to: convine y one who appealed to him of th dom of, this course-—-even in case: escapes from life imprisonment. He Lost His Nerve. Such.an instance occurred when Doc- tor Dudding was on a fern trip some time Aman r in the newspa- pet of the work of this Dottor Pud- who had been a prisoner him- ame to see him. plained that 15 years befo: fy a fit of 3 r, killed a refused 10 marry him. given life imprisonment, Wis- of The man he had, who He but R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Sy RB a ESS SEES TESST only a few months, when friends, who were indignant at what they felt was an unjust sentence, helped him te escape, “He went West and built up € business and a name for himself. the shadow of fear was afways worry: ing hin, After consulling Doctor Dud: ding, he went back to tht\prisoi, He served four years a ydoned. As Doctor Dudding ‘. escapes uf any kind are rare, and the romantic! eseupe, from prikon at feast, 1s %sel- dom heard of any more, William Ho- henzollern, interned in a] Dutch cas: tle, apparently never thinks of pul- ting poisonlin the guards’ afternoun teu or bur ing his way out of the grounds of his « as any high- spirited moni rd todo in bike cis. CUMSTances apoteon wot out simiar awkward situation quite ly by strotli out of prison disguised in’ workun clothes, fn carrying a plank on his shoulder, The Ingenious Casanova. Still more ingenious was the famous! 2 Casanova. nde was not of royal blood, but Ms exit front a prison cell over the reom where the dreaded tnquisi- tion met is one of the most famous es- cae in histot cape has been spread volumes, ‘The Most amus neident is that in which he desires to send a erowhar ton fellow prisover. He planned to conceal the crowbar in a big Bible, but it -stuck outa few tiches beyond the covers, so he arranged with the jailer—who was either naturally or intentionally half: jwitted—ta carry a dish of macaront and the Bible to his friend. The plat- fer was very large and very ful). The crowbar was placed in the Bile and the dish was Iald on top of the book, ‘The idea was that the jatler would have to! walk so cautiously to avoid spilling the sauce that he would not notice MWe crowhar projecting» trout the book below the dish. Wild Ruse Succeeded, You can imagine a modern prisoner ebolving such a wild plan or a modern warden guilelessly bearing unexam- ined gifts from one cell to another. Yer the ruse succeeded, and with many more breathless adventures, Casa- nova and a fellow prisoner battered ther way out of one of the best: pris- ons of Kighteenth-century Italy, In C prisoner was shut up ina fortress six feet thiek and then deft alone (o get out any way he Niked. Ouee a day somebody came around to see that he was ‘there, and after this interruption, digging, rope- making and other prep: luns went on undisturbed, Now watchful guards in the corridors and wills too thin to shut cut the noise from pounding se- riously int with the traditional wethods of a dramatie escape. Hoodwinking the Guard: Once inva great while stil hoodwinked th Some ye iJ guards: mulaich ious Com, ay parture from prison occurred, A grisover had died and his body lying ina pine box in the chapel, y for burial. A ¢olored prisoner it the dinner table, the neg! “ro was wermitted 16 leave the room and yo to his Vell unattended, Ins\ 1. he went to the chapel, ved the body from the box and hid it in a corner, Then he fixed the nails in the lid so that the box would open eusity and got inside, After dinner three Trish prisoners ant a guard were sent to get the box. The four got into the prison wagon with their burden and drove off to the vemetery. As they. set the-box down hy the gra au moun came from it. faring at it with bulg- a loader groan arose, Hed the Irish convicts, “The corpse is alive.” And they tore back to the h(i, the guard only one step behind then Left Wagon for Him. The “corpse” lost no time coming our of his hiding place, The guard's gl jay where he liad dropped It in his flight, and the prison. wazou was also conventently left. With these to help him, the, fleein-s: convict had s good. start before the pursuit began, and he got away. This is un escape after the pattern of medieval afta There is adven- ture in it. But such tricks are rarely planned, let alone executed. Mostly, prisoners who depart unofficially from jail do so DY collusion with a guard, by force (in small jails, not strongly policed), or 4 fonaly by breaking their word when given liberties under the honor system. And when the pris- aner does carefully break out of jail | by one of these methods he usually ends by coming to Doctor Dudding to help him break in auatn, POLICE USE A AIRPLANE Force Machine Oechnledh by Alleged Confidence Men to Land. Machine guns of an airplane manned by members of the Royal Canadian Mounted police and private detectives riddled a plane piloted hy Joseph I. Gadbury, alleged confidence map, fore: ing him to land near Winnipeg and resulting in his capture, Gadbury, waated in Britt, Towa, on a charge of for and obtaining money undai Ise prete Ss, formerly was an aviator, serving in the World war. Pri- vate detectives.” who followed him when he left Britt In an airplane. ob- tained the co-operation of the Cana- dian police in the case, Soviets Plan to Abolish Private Books, The Rus: soviet vernment has decided to abolish the right of private ownership of books, according to Mos- cow newspapers. All existing libraries are to be appropriated by the state, it is sald. Negroes ai are gradually returning to the southern plantations from which ‘they had been drawn to the cities by high wages. There.are almost 2,000 farmers’ mu- | tal fire insurance companies in the United States. feneees But,

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