The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 10, 1921, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THURSDAY, FEB. 10, (hal SUAS WANTED=—Coal miners by Beu- lah Coah. Mining Co., at Beulah, N.D. Steady work. Apply at mine or at Bismarck office in Haggart Bi 1-12-tf WANTED—100 men to do the light fantastic to real peppy music by the N. D. Novelty orchestra at Bur- leigh, February 11th. Mgr. N. D. Novelty: orche: 2-10-9+ LEARN BARBER TRADE—At tne alu.cs Barber ‘College, Oldest institution of its kind. Established 1893. Tire and ex- pense saved by- our. methods; free, Moler Barber College Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis, Minn, > g--tmo WANTED—A live wire promoter who can guarantee twenty’ percent divi dend to shareholders first ‘year. F M.\Lee, 11119 100th Avenue, Ed- monton, Alberta. SEE-Y. M. C. A. AUTO SCHOOL, LOS Angeles. > Noné better. Start 2-10-1t WORK WANTED .- WORK WANTED BY YOUNG MAN. As assistant bookkeeper or clerk. or any other work available. Write No. 189, Tribune. 2-5-1wk, ‘WOMAN WANTS WORK BY HOUR KOOMS YOR RENT FOR RENT—One large ‘oom, suitable for two, in modern house, Garage also for rent. Phone -322. FOR RE ae 2-10-3t ‘Large modern furnished room. Close to high school and capitol. Phone 628-X. 812 7th St. 2-10-3t FOR RENT—Modern furnished room 619 6th St. 2.93¢ FOR: SALE‘OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Cheap/ or trade, for prop- erty in Idaho, - 6-room plastered house in goorr shape, lot 4 and.5, block 15, lot 14, block 9, suitable for garage, black- smith shop in Fullerton, all clear, you can get a fine trade on this. Ad dress C. Robinson, Pendleton, Ore~ gon. 2-4-lwk FOR SALE—Modern 5-room house and fine garage for $3,350, on terms; modern 6-room house well located for $3,700; modern 7-room bungalow, with garage, well locat- ed for $4,350, on terms. Geo. M. Register. 2-5-lwk FOR SALE—House, modern bungalow of ‘five rooms and bath. A bargain at $3,400; $1,200 cash. J. H. Holi- han, Ist door east of Post Office. 2-10-3t ¢ Phone FOR ‘—Four house. Phone 843 or 28. R OR RENT—Five-room house. Inquire 214 Oth street. ie 210-38 FOR SALE—The Teachout grain aid stock farm, the whole of section 30, near Stewartsdale, Burleigh county, North Dakota, well improved, about 400 acres.of cultivated land, abou 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 windmillJ for $26 per acre on terms. GEO. M. REGISTER. 1-20-3w FOR SALE—200 acres So, Dak. sub- irrigated valley Jand in the Great Alfalfa Seed*helt. 25 acres seeded to alfalfa last year. Will consider small property or car on first pay: ment. B. G. Cowie, 516 Hannifin _Ave. Phone 169. 2-4-1wk FOR SALE OR RENT—320 acres of good hay land. Inquire of R. G. Price, Decorah, Towa. _) 1-26-14 = 4 | BUSINESS DIRECTORY | WEBB BROTHERS émbalmers Undertakers ; i Licensed Emba' DAY HONE 50 BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distributors of STUDEBAKER. Sand ‘CADI AUTOMOBILES PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed’ Embalmers in Charge Day Phone 100 ‘BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN STREET Upholstered Furniture Made to Order CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Seuthwestern North Dakota and Southeastern Montana BISMARCK, N, D, Apply 419 3rd: street. | fashington, Oregon.4 ___HELP .P WANTED. ‘EMALE | WANTED—Experienced girl or. “Woe man for light. housework in small apartment. Electric appliances. Good wages. Must be first class. Telejhone 113. ite bS 2-5-1Wwk WANTED—Competent girl for general housework. Small family. “Apply Mrs. Al. Rosen, corner Mandan Ave. A. Phone 906. 2-7-1wk WANTED—Strong., girl or middle- -aged woman tor general housework. Phone 177, 2-8-tt _ WANTED TORENT WANTED—By young lady, board and room together or separately. Write _ 194, Tribune. 2-9-3. WANTED TO RENT—S or 6 room house by March 1. Phone 671,K. Klein’s Taylor Shop. 2-7-1wk _WISCONSIN FARMLANDS _ CANDOLOGY 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 ig free on request. Address Skid- more-Riehle Land Co., 435 Skidmore- Riehle Bidg., Marinette, Wisconsin. 1 ¥-8-3mos | MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—Furniture, sitting oor set; 4° pieces, four dining chairs, 2 double beds, 3 coal oil stoves, 1 is a heater, 1 baby hed, 1 kitchen table, leaving town, will be sold at @ bargain. 616 Ave. F. 2-8-4t ing outlit complete, without tanks. | \/ Good as new and will sell cheap if faken at once. Address 193° Tri- bune. 2-8-1wk FIRST CLASS WCRK—Cleaning. | pressing, répairing,~ dyeing, ladies’ and men’s clothing, Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works, phone 58, opposite __postoff 118-4 PRE WAR PRICES. on cleaning, re- blocking and remodeling men’s hats, Kagle Tailoring & Hat Works, Phone 58, opposite Postoffice. 7. 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. 1-15-1 mo. PAINTING, PA PAPERHA? Sain DEC- - Orating autos, Wagons and buggies refinished; union shop. Phone 534-X. J. Re . Bryan. 2-10-lw THE PARTY 18 NOW KNOWN WHO ttok the two saws from in front of the Tribune. building. They mus: | __be, brought_back. 2-T-lwk FOR SALE—Pool. hall fixtures {n town: 1,200: population, only one in town. Write No. 190, Tribune’ of- __ tice. 2-5-1wk} For SALE—One registered Holstein bu, 3 years old.. Write or call A. E. Peterson. -Phone 592-X. <_2-9-Iwk FOR SALE—Garland range, Itbrary table and dining*room set. “Phone '1-L, or call 618 Avenue F. 10-3 FOR SALE—Reed baby ‘carriage in good condition. Inquire! at North- west hotel. 2-9-1w FOR | RENT—Desk: room in best ie FOR SALI foawehatd 924 7th St. “Call 548-K. nies ome 2-8-3 FURNITURE FOR SALE—6i6 Ave. RF. 2-5-lwk = X It is said Yellowstofe Park contains more geysers than are on the rest of the earth’s surface. Mine timbers covered with a coat- ing of magnesia cement are insured | against fire. “Because of the absence of crime in Huntington, Utah, the jail is now a public library. Buenos Aires has nearly 9,000 chil- dren under 16 employed at an average wage of 46 cents a day.” ! Funera} Directors Imer in Charge | NIGHT PHONES 65—887 LLAC Night Phone 100 or 687 Richmond sWhitney na aman 4 MAIN STREET —_—_—_—————_———— The huts of eskimos are so hot that the natives undress entirely while in FOR SALE—Second hané U. 8. weld-|: 1-18-tf | THE “pur EM uP! PUT 2eMm UP! STEERED | LEGAL NOTICES _ | SECOND SUMMONS. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. : In Justice court, before H. C. W. Ohde, Justice of the Peace. R. C. Thompson, Plaintiff, vs. Peter Gronhoy, Defendant. The State of North Dakota to Peter Gronhoy, said defendant: By this second summons herein you are directed to appear before me at my offiee.in Estherville township, in the county of Burleigh, and, stata: of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m..on the §th day, of March, 1921, there to answer to the complaint of R. C. Thompson against you alleging‘ that; you are indebted to him in the sum of Forty-one Dollars and Thirty Cents, with interest at the rate of 6 percent per annum from_.Sent.. 11, 1919, for professiontl services rendered by plaintiff to you between July 4, 1917 and Sept. 11- 1919 inclusive, by said plaintiff as a duly licensed physician and surgeon. and demanding judgment against vou for the sum of. $41.30 and interest as above stated; and further demanding that certain chattel property, goods, wares/ and _ merchandise, herein; described, attached by Oscar ‘ Kail man, constable in and for Buzleigh county, North Dakota, on February 8rd. 1921, in said county of ‘Lurleigh be applied to the satisfaction of said indebtedness. and costs of this action. Said property so levied upoit as the property of defendant and attached ag aforesaid is described as follows, to-wit: Attached in the hands of the Northern Pacific Railway Company at Regan, North Dakota, eight boxes of household goods, one cil stove crat ed, one table, one sewing machine one dresser, one wash boiler, one li- brary table, one mattress, one hed. one bed spring, four bundles 8 chairs, one baby buggy: one box. carpenter. tools, one brooder, total’ weight 1,409 pounds. Mickelson, Regan, North Dakota, one red cow, with horns, one small white | spot between horns on forehead. || Freckles and His Friends VES YES, MAVBE WELL Sty SOME CowRoys-~ CHANCE ‘To WORK IN AND HERE & them. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS Attached in the hands of Joseph, Sot CANE UP HET COWBOY BUSINESS BISMARCK TRIBUNE WHAT ARE You BuTTIN’ IN HERE FOR? “DEEN LAVIN’ || ULL LEARN Even Here, Business Is Bad You, WORKIN”: | MN ‘TERRITORY. And you are hereby notified that unless you so appear and answer, the plaintiff will take judgment against you accordingly. Given this 8th 1921, day of February, H. C. W. UHDE, Justice of the \Peace. H. C, BRADLEY, Attorney for Plaintiff, Wilton, N. Dak. (Feb. 10-17-24) “JUSTICE” HAS Si SIX FINGERS The Thousand. Kronen f Note of Czecho- Slovak Currency. Takes Rank: asa Currency. world has inflated its currency, Czecho- Slovakia ds liad the courage td de- flate hers. Shortly after the found- ing of the republic in October, 1918, all the former Austro-Jlupgarian, ¢ur- rency was called, in by the govern- ment and for every two krohen of the old money one kronen of the new Czecho-Slovak currency was given, with the result that, while the Czecho- Slovak kronets deprec inted in value and forms one cause of the economic distress it is nothing as comparent with the depreciation in neighboring states, ‘The gold reserve on which that cur: rency rests hes a unique history. Part of the money was printed in the United States. Indeed, the 1,000- kronen note printed in the United States Is the most artistic issue the Ozecho-Sldvaks possess, In spite of the fact that the artist gave the symbolic figure of Justice six fingers. But the government was confronted by the faet that there was no gold reserve on which to base the currency and the nation was called on to give the coun- try its gold possessions to be melted up by the government. x An American who was there at the. time told me that the amount of gold articles brought In, from plate to bracelets, was remarkable—another in- stance of the intense patriotism. of the Czechs, And GOL CC Sel idler erento that gold re- ES While almost.‘every country in the: He Sounded Like a Freak Serve anil Hotes Tor Thélr Share of the gold of the old Austro-Hungarian em- pire, still held in the vaults at Vi- enna, rests the currency of the new republic, To remedy the depreciation of the currency by increase of exports the government has encouraged the farm- ers to plane sugar beets for sale abroad, and It is another indication of the devoted patriotism of this peo- ple that in « country seriously in need of foodstuffs hundreds of thousands of hectares were planted to sugar beets for export instead.—Eleanor. Markell in the Outlook. ‘World Using More Coconut Fat. For many years past the world's pro- duction of animal fats has heen. stead- ily diminishing, «Lack of such fats spelled .famine in Europe during the when great quantities of -them make glycerin for high explosives. Even now, and in this country, there is an‘ insufficiency of animal fats: (as Indicated by the price of butter), and to make good the shortage coconut ofl is being imported in enormous quar ties.. During the last year 345,737,9 pounds of this oil were brought into the United States, ‘Phe oil is largely used as a cooking fat, but also in the manufacture of nut butter, candles, soap and cosmetics. It is suid to be an excellent substitute for cod liver oil, being highly digestl- ble and with the advantage of, an agrecable flavor, At ordinary temper- atures coconut oli Is a white, butter- like solid. ‘The raw “meats” are dried In the sun before shipment from the tropical countries where coconuts are grown. In this shape the material ts called copra, The oil is extracted by power- ful hydraulic presses, the yield being 65 to 70 per cent of the weight of the copra. Ten states. have shown their in- difference or hostility to- prohibition hy failing to enact. laws enforcing the eighteenth amendment. By Blosser VEG 1 UERDED ome rs ARIZONA, BRANDED STEERS \M TEXAS: AND LIVED ON THE DESERT FoR WHEN ALONG CAME A MOVIES, CHURCH A REFUGE BY ALLMAN | were withdvawn from human use toy -_| Pews of London Edifice Made In- to Sleeping Places, All. Who Faced Night in the. Streets Made Welcome at Old St. Mar- tin's-in-the-Fields, St. . Martin’s-in-the-Fields — always during the last war years, and now, a place of midnight shelter for people stranded in Londgn streets—was a ha- ven to some of the mothers who had come from distant towns to attend the ceremonies in memory of the unknown soldier dead, and to soldfers who oth- erwise must have tramped the streets, says a writer‘in the Manchestér Guard- fan, Long before midnight they began to come. In the light of the flickering candles on the white altar and the few lights shining on the white ceiling of the gallery one saw two or three well-dressed women sitting in the pews. ow one side and two or three men on the other, and Wondered, whether !t were worth while keeping the church open and two policewomen in attend- ance for so few wanderers. But the sound of heavy breathing, so loud in the silence, did not come from them, nor was the lad in khaki who lay asleep in the bottom of a pew, his head resting on a hassock, responsible. Tiptoeing down the long aisle. to the end, where a man knelt in, prayer be- fore the wreath of palms entwined with crimson ribbon, which was to go to the cenotaph, one found that there were sleepers on the seats of nearly every pew. Occasionally they wak- ened and peered sleeptly over the back of the pews a& a newcomer entered. Then they sank to rest again, while the stranger, after.a few hesitant min- utes sitting bolt upright as if at a serv- ice, disappeared from sight and soon was fast asleep. The policewomen kept unobtrusive watch. Wheré they saw a man sleep- ing on the floor they woke him, remind- ing him that he must li¢ on the seat. | The man in shirtsleeves was told to put on his coat; the man who for a second time had disregarded the order to put on his boots and who had rolled under the seat had to leave the church. ~The discipline of the shelter is slight, but Jt must be obeyed. After midnight a young woman from Lancashire came in, carrying a heavy child. She said that all day she had sought in vain for lodgings. No one would take her in because of the baby, and at last a kindly policeman had sent her here.. As she sat there hold- ing the child her shoulders moved un- easily. Qne saw that she had come to the end of her enduranee, and a po- Mcewoman, folding a thick coat, made up-a bed on the pew for the preternat- urally well-behaved, child. ‘Then, the mother went to sleep, secure of shelter till five in the morning, when the wait- ing rooms at Charing Cross would be open to her. The older women, the mothers. of. soldiers, glanced around from time to time, but were evidently determined: not ‘to yield to their fa- tizue. They would through. The rules are simple, Peo- ple are allowed to make use of the church for one night. In case of emer- gency a second! visit may be allowed, ‘but no more. Buckwheat and Cakes. Even though there is great satisfac. tion at the breaking of five crop records in the United States this year, many an American must heave a sigh as he reads that the: buckwheat crop has never exceeded the pro@uction of 1866, and that this seasda It. is 8,000,000 bushels below. the top yleld of: that year. Who does not know @hyt the de- cline: of the buckwheat ‘cake as the backbone of a hearty: breakfast is the cause of the falling off? Tlie buckwheat cake was once an American ipstitution. It followed the pioneer from the Atlantic coast Inte the depths of the Middle West. Its allies were home-made sausages and sugar-house syrup. It held the lines from early November until the sap be. gan to run in the spring. Then there followed plentiful doses of suiphur and molasses to rid the blood of in- purities supposed to be the. result of buckwheat's heating qualities, But who cared? Wasn't the kind of cake: that mother used to bake on the soup. stone griddle worth even such a pricei —Providence Journal. Catch Salmon at Sea. Fishing for salmon is prohibited at the present time in nearly all, the rivers of Alaska and altogether in the southeastern part of the territory. Meanwhile the fishery goes on; but {t fs a marine fishery. The , salmon are caught on \their feeding grounds out at sea with purse seines, gill nets, floating traps and fish lines. Trolling for salmon is great sport and is particularly fine off the strAit of: San Juan de Fuca. Unfortunately, very many of the salmon captured at sea-are not yel full’ grown. . That they should be tak en before they aré mature means few. er to run up the rivers to spawn ir coming years. It helps to make the outlook for the future of the fishery a bad one. > Electricity on Farms. ~- Out of 6,362,502 farms in the Unit: ¢ States, only 340,000, or 5.3 per cert are electrically equipped, according :¢ government census figures. More thir 42,000,000 people live on these farts indicating that farming folk constitute almost one-third of the populatica ia the bation There are 500,000 college s.udents, about one to eve,"y 212 persous, in the United States. ‘An average of 95 tons of soil, peb- bles and loose rock for every square mile of the United States is carried annually to the sea by our rivers. sit the night) PAGE SEVEN LEGION (Copy for ftis Department Supplied dy the American Legion News Service.) WELL KNOWN IN HOME STATE - James T. Duane, Commander of Massa- Chusetts Department, Known to Many of His Buddies, «James T. Duane, commander of the Massachusetts ‘department of ~ the American Legion, is perhaps better known to the Le gionnaires in his state than any oth- er Legion official. He is said to have met more than 50,- 000 former service men and women during the time he was head of the military division of, the Massachusetts state treasury de- partment, which had charge of the distribution of the state bonus, When Mr. Duane sailed for France with the Twenty-sixth division, he was a private; when he returned to Ameri- ch after participation in almost every major offensive of the war, he was the captain in command of the company with which he went overseas a8 a private. He had also served as a bat- talion comwander for a, time during the Argonne-Meuse drive. Mr. Duane has been. a retail sales- man in Massachusetts and New York, a member of the theatrical profession and assistant manager for an electric. and gas company. During his career, as a state official, he was in charge of the. disbursement: of $20,000,000 in gratuities to veterans of the war. As a meniber of the state welfare and post activities and state executive committees of the Massachusetts de- partment of the Legion, Mr. Duane was instrumental in blocking the pro- posed transfer of ex-service mental patients to the old State Insane asylum at Worcester, Mass. and In the es- tablishment of a permanent staff of teachers in the various Public Health Service hospitals. RULES. IN ‘SOUTH CAROLINA G, Howard Mahon, aOR IF Elevated .to Department Commander of Legion in Home State. Although G. Howard Mahon, Jr., of Greenville, S.C. commander of. the South Carolina de- partment of the American Legion, was severely wounded in. action, spent long months in French, . English and American hos- pitals and was dis- charged with dis- ability, he has tak- en a prominent part in the organ- A izution of the ‘i Legion and in civic affairs of his state. Mr, Mahon fs now president of the Young Men's Business league of Greenville. Following his discharge from the hospital, which did not occur until April 3, 1920, he was elected commander of his home-towy post and later department commander of the Legion. Having attended the “Citadel” mill- tary school, Mr. -Bfahon developed an Interest in military. affairs at,an early age. He was in command of the First battalion, 118th infantry from the Ume it-was organized until he was wounded when the ‘Thirtieth division routed the Boches at Rellicourt. TO HOLD CORDIAL RELATIONS Legicn Reprecentatives in Attendance at Recent Formation of Inter-Al- lied Veterans’ Association. _ American Legion representatives took an active purt in the formation of the Inter-Allied Veterans’ association in Paris recently. The association {s composed of delegates from the Unton ‘Nationale des Combattants of France, the Comrades of the Great War of Creat Britain, the Federation Nation- ale des Combattants of Belgium, the Associzone Nationalé Coibattentt. of, Italy, Druzinn of Czecho-Slovakia and the American Legion.” fue primary purpose of the organi- zation is to/preserve the cordial rela- tions between the--nations associated if the war on the afied side. As one means of accomplishing thig !t,1s pro- posed th:it the membership card of each society shall be recognized by the so- cleties in all the nations represented fn the association. The delegates who attended the; Paris conference have been Instructed! to report back’ to their respective or-} ganizations the details of the amalga- mation. «Paris was merely the’starting point, from which ,veterans of the World war may form their own League of Natlons> tfte committee which represented the American Legion at.the Paris con- ference included Cabot War@and Ar- thur W. Kipling of Paris Post No. 1; Norman C. Coste! department adju- tant of France ; adler and W. H. A. Coleriam of London p edmond L. Gros, George A. Dunagin and BE. J. Seligman. EE R.-S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9. 11—Lucas Block—Phone 26@

Other pages from this issue: