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i} 4 ' ; ; | TUESDAY, FEBRUARY ‘15, 192 _. HELP WANTED—MALE LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its kind. Established 1893. Time and ex- Penge saved by our inethods, Catalog free. Moler Barber College 107° R. Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis,’ Minn. es 2-1-1mo 5 —— OO, DOCTOR WANTED—Must -be regis- tered in South Dakota and Nebras- ka. Elderly man preferred. Good paying permanent. office : position. Address at once J. §. Russell, Sher- wil Hotel, 4557:Sheridan Road, Chi- cago, Ill, 4 2-12-2t MARRIED MAN WANTED ON FARM by bachelor, $75.00 per month un- til first: of November, : Must under- stand farming. E. S..Coffrey, Na- poleon, N. D. 2-15-lwk HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTHD—Competent girl-for genera housework.” Small: family... Apply Mrs. Al. RoSen, . corner Mandan Ave. A. Phone 906. 2-7-1wk WANTED—A compeient girl for gen. eral housework. Apply Mrs, C. C. Wattam, 612-5th St. 2-14-20 WANTED—Second ‘cook: Apply Ho- man’s cafe. 2-14-lwk ROOMS FOR BEN’ FOR RENT—Modern room 2: blocks from P. O., suitable far two, gentle- men preferred. 311 Second St. __Phone _832-L, us 2-11-3t ROOM FOR RENT—Genflemen pre- ferred, 3 blocks from McKenzie ho~ tel, modern house. Address Tri- bune, 199. 2-14-3t BOARD AND ROOM—Suitabie for one or two. Reasonable price. _Phone 834-K.. 407,8th St. 2-14-21 FOR RENT—One farge room for light housekeeping, also’ single room. 423 Front St. 2-12-28 FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms in , modern house, 723 3rd St. Phone G12. i te. | BME FOR RENT—One large furnished . room, suitable for two. 608 3rd St. Se 1 1 2-12-3t ‘FURNISHED ROOM:..FOR RENT— 621 6th St, Phone 619-R, 2-11-3t ROOM AND BOARD FOR GENTLE- __men. Dunraven. 2-14-5t FOR RENT—Furnished room, 409 5th St. 2-14-2t <a WANTED TO RENT WANTED—By March 1,-two or three ™~ rooms for light housekeeping, fur- nished or unfurnished, by young married couple, no children. Phone 3i7-L. 2-10-4t WANTED—2 furnished rooms for gentlemen, by March 1st or sooner. Must be close to town. Write 200, care Bismarck Tribune. * 2-14-3t WANTED TO RENT—8 or 6 room|~ house by March 1. Phone 671-K. Klein’s Taylor Shop. 2-2-lwk WANTED TO RENT—5 or 6 room house by March 1st. Phone 671-K. Klein’s Taylor Sho} 2-14-lwk OR SALE OR BENT 4 (OUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—6-room ..modern -.-bunga- low, well located, south front, for $3,700, on terms; 7-room modern bungalow, east front, would mak2 a nice home for $4,300, on terms; partly modern 6-room house, well! located for $2,500, on terms; 5- room modern bungalow, with fine garage, for $2,350, on terms; part- ly modern 6-room bungalow for $3,150. Geo. M. Register. 2-14-1wk ——_—$—$—$———— CLASSIFIED ADVERTIS ' atreet or between Rosser and Broad- 1. way. Return to 206 Ist street for __Teward, — 2-11-3¢ LOST—Conklin “fountain pen, without cap. Return to Tribune for reward, we 2-14-3t LOST—Bunch of: keys. Finder kindly return to Tribune office and receive reward. 2-12-Lwi | arr a RR RECA IP ELOeT ___ SALESMAN a WANTED—Five salesmen with Ford cars, energetic. men: willing to work. Experience not necessary. A real opening for the, right men. . Suc- cessful applicants must he ready to go to work at once, Address 197, Tribune. 2-12-2t ____- WISCONSIN FARM LANDS. LANDOLOGY SPECIAL NUMBER—Just out, containing 1921 facts of clover land In Marinette County, Wisconsin. If for @ home’ or as an inveatment you are thinking of buying .. good : fi 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, ‘Wisconal hee x 8-3moa _.__ MISCELLANEOUS ___| FOR~SALE—A-~half one: tot in Lin- | coln additionson:,whictt Twill build) you a. smajl modern cottage ready. for you_to move into by April lst. and sell it.to you on easy terms. This lot has a fine view of the city. and is.only four blocks from Wach- ter school. Taxes are very low oii this lot. This place will enable you to: have a large garden or raise poultry, and something to put your spare time into, <A larger lot can} be had if’ desired.. Thomas Jen- nings, Bismarck. _ 2-12-2t FOR SALE—Hotel and restaurant in A-1 condition in county seat town 140 miles from’ P¥&marck,. $1,000.00 | cash will handle,, balance on easy terms. Good lease on the building. __Write No. 198, Tribune. 2-12-lwi FOR SALE—One i920 Modeltwo-ton - G. M. C. truck equipped with cab, commercial body and pnenmatic tires. Truck is in A-1 condition. Write 191, Tribtne. 2-14-lwk 2-14-Iwk FOR SALE—Second hand U. 8. weld- ing outfit complete, without tanks. Good as new and will sell cheap if taken at once. Address 193 Tri- bune. 2-8-1wk FIRST CLASS WORK—Cleaning. pressing, repairing, dyeing, ladies! and men’s clothing, Kagle Tailoring | & Hat Works, phone 58, opposite postoffice. 1-18-tf ; PRE WAR PRICES on cleaning, re- blocking and remodeling men's hats, Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works, Phone 58, opposite Postoffice. : 1-18-tf 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. ° | perio 1-15-1 mo. FOR SALE—Forty tons No. 1 upland hay. Baled dry. Ready to’ load. $10.00, -F. 0. B..Woodworth. S. W. _Melzer, Woodworth, N. D, 2-11-lwk FOR SALE—General store in good locality. Will sell on easy terms. Owner must go west. for health. Write No. 196, Tribune. 2-12-lwk PAINTING, PAPERHANGING, DEC- orating autos. Wagons and buggies refinished; union shop. Phone 534-X. J. R, Bryan. 210-1w FOR SALE OR .EXCHANGE—Eight- room house, barn, garage and chicken house. Also horses for sale. Vena Pauley, 114 11th St. hs eocthe 2-14-1t FOR RENT—Four room modern house, Phone 843 or 28-R, _2-9-6-t —————————— LOST AND FOUND see LOST—While at the river bridge Sunday afternoon my little black and white bobbed tail dog, followed someone off- Answers to name of FOR RENT—Farm eight ‘miles east of .Bismarck, 100 acres in corn last year. Call at Brown & Jones. | 2-11-lwk FOR SALE—One registered Holstein «bull, 3 years old. Write or call A. E. Peterson. Phone 592-X. elles ele Sk ee ee ee W ONE DOUBLE BED FOR SALE— Practically new. Price $15.00. 321 _8th_St._Phone 855. at FOR SALE—Drop head Wheeler & Wilson sewing machine, 411 5th St. Phone _ 273. 2-14-3t Spider. He was wearing a red co)- 2-14-3t lar. Reward offered. Miss Frankie | FOR SALE—Reed baby carriage in Davis, 45 Thayer St, Bismarck.| good condition. Inquire at North- Phone 440-K. é 2-14-2t} west hotel. 2-9-1w LOST—A_ bar pin © of © violets.| WANNED—To buy second-hand desk Finder return to First Guaranty} and typewriter. Call 887 evenings. bank for suitable reward. -2-12-8t| __ 2-11-1w LOST—A small Fitch fur, between} FOR SA! Household furniture. Mandan and 1st street on Rosser f LEGAL NOTICES |, o—___—________———_* NOTICE TO CREDITORS. 4n the Matter of the Estate of Eva Boat, Deceased. : Notice is hereby given by the un- dersigned Linda E. Boat, the execu- trix of the last will and testament of Eva Boat, late of the township of Ecklund, in the county of Burleigh, and state of North Dakota, deceased. to the creditors of, and all persons having claims against, said deceased. to exhibit them with the necessary vouchers, within six months after the first publication of this notice, to said executrix at her residence at the home of Simon Jahr, in Wilton, in McLean county, North Dakota Dated January 5th, A. D. 1921. LINDA E. BOAT, The executrix of the last will and testament of Eva Boat, deceased. 1-25-2-8-15, NOTICE OF REAL GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE. Notice is hereby given that that cer- tain mortgage executed and delivered by Laurwell Skeels and Nellie Skeels, his wife, mortgagors, to the City Na- tional Bank of Bismarck, North Da- kota, a. corporation, mortgagee, and dated the 7th day of November, 1914; filed for record in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh ‘county, state of North Dakota on the 24th of February) 1915, at 9 o'clock A. M. and recorded in Book 127 of Mortgages at page 135,-will be foreclosed by sale of the premises in such mortgage anid hereinafter described at the front door of the court house in the city of Bismarck, county of Burleigh, state of North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock P. M., on the 5th day of March, A. D. 1921, to satisfy the amount due on such mortgage at the date of sale. . The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to satisfy the same are deacribed as fol- There will be due on such mortgage ‘ATE MORT- 924 7th 2-8-tf Call 548-K. | ty-seven (S% of Sec. 27), and the Southeast quartef of Section Twenty- eight (SE% of Sec. 28), all in Town- ship one hundred forty-four (Twp. 144) north of Range seventy-seven (Range_37), west of the Fifth Prin- cipal Meredian, in Burleigh county, North Dakota, containing four hundred twenty (420) acres, more or less, ac- cording to the government survey thereof. ‘on date of sale the sum of three thou- sand, two hundred sixty-four dollars and fifty-five cents ($3,264.55), togeth- er with the costs of this foreclosure.) Dated this 25th day of January, A. Ds 1921. | THE CITY NATIONAL BANK OF BISMARCK, N. D. Mortgagee. CAMERON & WATTAM, 7 Attorney for Mortgagee, Bismarck, N._D. 1-25-2. 15-22-3-1 Unreasonable Man. “As your husband,” protested Mr. Meekton, “I think. you ought to show me some respectful consideration.” “I do,” replied his wife. “If you wereh’t my husband I shouldn't think of invit- ing you to my parties."—Town Top- ies, —$$—$$——— Sensit!ve Squabs. French scientists believe that car- rier pigeons are influenced by mag- netism, and that with the spread of wireless telegraphy mucle less depend- ence can be placed on them. Maybe You Knew Him. “The senator who never knows the mo- tion before the house {fs the kind of EMENTS |PPomese”: Said Senator Squash of Squeegee: | 4 _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE OH,HELEN: ‘ WHERE )IS {THe BvTTER? FARMERS WARNED T0 ERADICATE CHICORY It. Has Become Troublesome Weed in Many Sections. of Plant Usually Distributed In Gress or Clover Seed in Which It Occurs as an Impurity— Readily Identified. . ae One man’s meat is another man’s table in Europe, is likely to become a pest over here, says the United States Department of Agrieulture. ie Chicory is grown as a vegetable and forage crop in Europe and to a lesser extent: as a vegetable in the United States. In. some sections, notably ‘In Michigan, there is a considerable pro- duction of the root for use as a coffee Rubstitute. It readily runs’ wild, and the wild form has become in recent years a troublesome weed from the State ‘of Virginia . northward. Its spread has increased from year to year until the Department of Agricul- ture finds it sufficiently disturbing to The seeds of the wild forms are usually distributed in grass and clover seed in which it occurs as an impurity. Farmers should watch for the appear- ance of the plants, readily identified by the blue flowers and thick roots, and eradicate it by cutting an inch or sq below the soil surface. After cut- ting, drop a pinch of salt on the sev- ered root, which will prevent sprout- ing. During the morning hours the bright, blue flowers are very conspicu- ous and it, is easy to locate the plants and either pull or cut them, When It Appears in quantity it may be eradl- eated Ay growing an intertilled crop, such as potatoes or corn, for at least two years, Continuous grazing by sheep or goats will also help destroy a DOINGS OF THE DUFF ALL INTHE ICE BOX HELEN, WHE! Onna COFFEE poison; atid chicory, grown as a vege- jf justify a warning to farmers, oN AN IN FiesT ? Helen Had a Fine Chance of Sleeping BY ALLMAN WTAE BUTTER, THE EGES || OH,HELEN, D0 You AND THE CREAM ARE || BOIL THE WATER BEFORE You PUT THE Be6S IN OR PUT °EM ’ GIVE ME THAT COFFEE POT, WELRLESS! ONE MORNING. OUT OF ANYEAR THAT - | | WANTED ‘To SLEER! CAN'T EVEN GET Chicory was brought into Massachue setts from Holland fn 1785. The prine cipal use of the pjant is 2s a coffee substitute and adulterant, for which the roasted dried root is used. Im- proved varieties of chicory are used as salads and greens, The young, tener der roots are also edible, One variety produces witloof, a vegetah that Is becoming increasingly important, As a forage plant cory little es- teemed in the United Europe it is regarded element in sheep pasture Information regarding the contrat and eradication of chicory is contained in Circular 108, United, States Depart: cment of Agriculture. , but in a valuable ! SELF-LOADING GRAIN TRUCK Particularly Useful on Farms and Can Be Transported From Place to Place With Load. —_ The Scientific American in illustrate ing and describing. ‘a -self-loading truck, the invention of J. A. Klovstad of Hope, N. D., says: The invention has reference more particularly to that type -of hand trucks that gre designed to be self: loading and useful on farms, in cars, and warehouses, its main object being to provide a hand truck that will A‘Side Elevation of the Truck in Posi, tion for Beginning to Load, quickly load itself, and can be trans- ported from place to place with and the weed. NOW, TAG, TWAT Nou To! SOME MEDICINE 4 WERE Y'Ane- feller who always has to ask ‘What's trumps?” lows: The South half of Section twen- Freckles and His Friends without its toad. rn Go To “ME! DRUG STORE FoR } ND TVE WRITTEN IT ON A PIECE LUITTLE PRESCRIPTION Yo BE Filed =— ZA Eimer? OUR OWN BREAKFAST. TUBERCULOSIS ‘OF CHICKENS Affected Fowils Squat in’ Secluded Places and Gradually Become Quite Emaciated. Tubercfilosis of chickens is quite common and is caused by a type of tubercle pacillus, which has become adapted to birds, ‘Transmission of tuberculosis from poultry to mam- mals, including man, is rare except in case of hogs. Hogs contract tuber- culosis from poultry, antl are more susceptible-to cattle tuberculosis than are cattle themselves, Chickens, when affected, squat in secluded gradually begome ng a diseased chi are usually wasted and the re most likely to be found in pleen and — intestines, n any of these organs is always suspicious. The disease may be detected by meang of the intrader- mal tuberculin test—George TH. Glov- er, Colorado Agricultural College. XN a HAIRY VETCH IS EXCELLENT Superior as Feed, Either Green or in Hay, and Exceedingly Useful as Cover Crop. The United States Department of Agriculture finds hairy vetch the best winter legume for all lacalities in the enstern half of the United States, where red clover fails or where crim- son clover is not a success. Vétches make excellent food, either green or as hay, and are exceedingly useful as cover and green-manure crops, —_—————— New Source of Fat. Scientists claim to have discovered that a fat resembling coconut ofl can be obtained from plants that grow &bundantly on waste lands. ° ———_—— Dally Thought. In general, pride is'at the bottom of Wout A ACTE PAGE SEVEN .jthe 20,000 now In hospitals, 4,500 are C (Coy for This Department Supplied by py the American Legion News Service.) IN PLEA FOR NEGLECTED MEN _—_— Three Thousand Veterans From: Le- gion Ranks Are Explaining Sit- uation to American People. Three thousand volunteer spenkers from the ranks of the American Le- gion in every state are now carrying’ by word- of-mouth to the American people the Legion's sto- ry of the “suffer- neglect and = in- Justice” in the government's ad- ministration of the nation’s debt to the disabled, which was con- tained in the for- mal mewortat which the Legion John Thomas Taylor, President-elect Harding, before in the history of the country has such an army of orators been mobilized to speak at the same time upon a single text, The Legion aims to present to the people of the United States the facts language as they were presented to the officials of the government. The Legion’s memorial wag carried to the | President at the White House by John Thomas Taylor, vice chairman of the Legion National Legislative commit- tee. National Commander F. W. Gal- brgith, Jr, gave it to Senator Harding at Marion, where he had a long and important conference on the disabled situation with the next President. The Legion denounces the present method of caring for the disabled as a “failure” which only can be rem- edied by the entire reconstruction of the federal machinery dealing with the problem. ‘ The functions of the three agencies, which deal with the problems of the disabled, the bureau of war risk in- surance, the federal board for voca- tional education, and the United Stateg public health service, “must be co-ordinated, their machinery decen- tralized and all three. placed under common control,” the memorial states. As an equally essential remedy for existing conditions, the memorial l urges the mmediate appropriation fos the use of the untfied organization of a sum ample to build or rent u soflicient number of liospitals to take care of the 16,900 ex-service men who are unable to receive treatment at ‘present because of luck of beds and | sheiter. ‘The “failure” of the government to afford justice to the sick and wounded veterans is attributed by the Legion to “an astonishing state of divided re- sponsibility and wasted effort among | the government agencies with which , the problem rests.” | The break In the chain of respons|- bility accurs, according to the me- morial, as a result of the fact that the war risk bureau is under and re- sponsible to an <asistant secreta- ry of the treas- ury, an officer of the executive branch of the gov- ernment, while the federal board for vocational ed- ueation is respon- alble only to con- gress, and {fs un- der none of the executive depart- ments of the gov- ernment, The memorial asserts that the | United States has been more Iberal than any otherynation in its provisions for the disabled soldiers, but that it has fulled in large measure to maxe these provisions available in spite of the benefit of the experience of other nations in the recent war and the ex- perience of this nation in previous wars. “In the re-habilitation of a disabled man there are three needs—medical treatment, vocational training and financial support,” the memorial states. “The government has recoz- nized the three needs, but overlooks the fact that they are the simultane- ous needs of one man, not of three different men or of one man at three different times. It makes three. prob- lems out of what really is one problem. “Continuing this faulty conception, ‘it has given the problem over to three agencies.’ All, by force of circumstan- ces, are exercising functions they were not intended to %sxercise. This pre- senis an amazing spectacle of admin- istrative chaos, duplication, wasted en- ergy and conflict, which is the key to the. present condition. F..W. Galbraith, Je | “The result is the suffering of the disabled veterans. Thousands are waiting and have waited for months for compensation for their injuries. Thousands have for an opportunity to re-establish themselves as self-sustaining members of society by vocational training: 'yhousunds are in need of hospitaliza- tion, and the government has no hos- pital facilities allable for them, Of R. 8. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9. 11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 ing, shameful! has. presented to President Wilson, ; and to all! members of congress. Probably never | regarding the disabled in the same | waited for months ——————————— quartéred in’ institutions’ unsiited to thé needs of the men, quartered there. New hospital cases are developing at the rate of 1,500 a month in excess of the number‘ discharged. Sixteen , thousand beds are needed now. Hun- dreds of veterans are the object of public. and private cliarity. Afflicted and penniless veterans have been driv- en to refuge in almshouses and jails. ; Many-have died, and if immediate re- lief is not forthcoming, more will die destitute; without proper medi- cal care, without compensation with | which to obtain it, abandoned by the | country they yerved, -All this is at- | tributable directly to the manner in which the government has adminis- tered the affairs of the disabled. * “The bureau of war risk insurance is responsible for the payment of com- | pensation and for medical and hos- | pital care of the man, Logically, this would involve establishing contact | with the men at the time of their ; discharge from the military or naval service... It should then determine the | existence and degree of disability and compensation on this basis, “Due to the centralization of the ; bureau’s forces in Washington, It 1s practically impossible under the pres- ent law to establish contact. with the ; man entitled to these benefits. The | disabled man {gs placed in the position of a man injured tn industry who must sue the company. He must car- ry on an involved and technical corre | spondence. It is usually-months af- ter he is dropped from the pay rolls of the army or navy before he is tak- en upon the pay roll of the bureau, even though his service discharge shows a definite degree of disability. | On November 26, 1920, 83,000 cases | were pending in the bureau awaiting ! definite adjustment of compensation. | Thousands are suffering and many ; have died as a result of this neglect. “The federal board for vodational | training will accept the evidence of the bureau's zmedical files granting compensation as proof that a man is entitled to vocational training. The bureau, dowevey, will not accept the evidence that the board: has awarded tralning as proof that a man is en- | titled to compensation. “It the veteran is receiving com- pensation and wants training, usually he must take another physical exau- | ination, administered by the board to determine whether the claimant has a vocational handicap entitling him to training pay, or merely a compens- able disability granting him training only, If the veteran is not receiving compensation, due to delay by the Dureau, he must be examined by the / board, to determine his eligibility for training, as well. i “When a man enters training with training pay, his compensation. stops | and he is shifted fyom the pay roll of the bureau to the pay roll of the board. The board, which was created as a training agency only, hag be- come @ compensating agency as: well. Many sep have been kept oh the pay roll of the board, not as a training measure solely, but as a measure of financial relief which they were en- titled to, but unuble to obtain from | the bureau. “When a man is dropped from train- | ing he is supposed to be dropped from the pay roll of the board and taken | up by the bureau. On both ghifts there is delay. The average length -| of time for a man. to be dropped from the bureau pay roll and taken up on the bourd pay roll is about three | weeks, The average time required | for the second shift back to the bu- | feau pay roll is two months. No pro- | vision is made for the man’s main- | tenance during these iMerims. In the | majority of cases a man wust under- | go a new physical examination before the bureau will again pay him com- pensaton. In other words, he must again proye his claim. “The position of the United States public health service is pecullar, It | took its place in the re-habilitation scheme poorly equipped for the work it was to perform, but was appurent- ly the best medical governmental~ | agency then available. It ucts as an | agent both of the. bureau and the | board, but is respunsibic to no au- thority common to both board and bureau, because there is no such au- | thority. “In view of this condition the re markable thing ‘about the present re- habilitation program is that it has accomplished what little it hag, Such progress as has been made is a tribute to the sincerity of the men in the bu- reau, the board ail the public health service Who generally have made the, best of an impossible situation. “The best of this impossible situa- tion, however, has been insufficient F ae erticularly true re- 20,000 men now in hospitals, in institutions which are un- aitable hospital facilities are not available.” The Legion avers that 16,900 beds are needed at once. Of this number, 1,500 are necessary for trangfer of tu- bercular patients from pre: unsat- isfactory hospitals, and 3,000 for | transfer of neuro-psychiatric patients | from the inadequate lodgings which | they occupy now. The number of tu: | bercular cases in need of immediate hospitalization is estimated to be 6,500 and the neuro-psychiatric cages ut 5,000. Beds are also required for about 900 general, medical and sur- gical cases. The statistics above are based on statements from the ~ following sources: Public health service, De Thomas W. Salmdn of New York, med- feal director national committee for mental hygiene; bureau of war risk insurance, Dr. T, Victor Keene of In- dianapolis, member, American Legion hospitalization committe. The automobile trade uses half the annual output of 100,000,000 feet of plate glass produced in the United States. ( ee ee Some 109,900,000 feet of logs, chiet- | ly gum and pine, are cut up yearly ‘into veneer for produce packages,