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} \ tee THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17,1921 __HELP WANTED—MALE LUMBER YARD MANAGER WANT- ed for a good South Dakota point, German-Russian tommunity, prefer a man of that nationality who can make out material lists and under- stands construction). Party must have at least five years experience running a yard. Attractive salary to right man. Address ‘Auditor. Jock box 347, Aberdeen, S. D. 2-17-2wk LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler - Barber College, Oldest institution of its Kind. Established 1893. Time and ex- pense saved by our methods. Catalog 2 free. Moler Barber College 107 R. Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis, Minn. 7 2-Lb1mo 2 Pa MARRIED MAN WANTED ON FARM by bachelor, $75.00 per month uy til first of November. Must und stand farming. E. S. Coffrey, Na- poleon, N. D. 2-15-lwk SEE Y. M. C. A. AUTO SCHOOL, LOS Angeles. None better. Start right: ae _ ee 2A7-At WANTED—Qualified stock salesman, Phone 250 or 434-R. -16-1w ___HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED—Kitchen. gitls and two ex- perienced waitresses. Ajinex cafe. Bt WANTED—Second cook. Apply Ho- man’s cafe. 2-14-1wk ROOMS FUR RENT ROOM TO RENT-—Suitable for two gentlemen, mod: _ 113 Mandan Phone 637: 2-16-1wk 2-14-5t WANTED 10 REN? WANTED—A nicg two-reom ment or housekeeping rooms, apart- or ( - nice room in, private family where j 5 1 can take two meals a day. , Call room Mrs. _ 333. rnished or unfur- nished rooms for. iight housekeep- ing. Phone 183, Bismarck Business College. 1-17-1wk WANTED TO RENT—5, or 6 room ‘house by March tst. Phone 671-K. Klein’s Taylor Shor. 2-14-Iwk LOST AND FOUND FOUND—One dollar bill in basement near wash basin in Masonic Tem- } ple. Owner gall at Tribune Co. i 2-47-1t i LOST—Bunch of keys. Finder kindly return to Tribune office and receive , reward. 2-12-1lwk FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLA’ FOR.SALE OR EXCHANGE—KEight- room house, barn, garage and chicken house., “Also horses {or salé. Vena Pauley; 1014.11th St. 4 “7 2-14- It Crane#at G: P. hotel, $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 Barage. for .$3,350, on. terms; . part: ly modern 6-room bungalow for $3,150. “Geo. M. Register. 2-14-1wh __WORK WANTED WANTED—Work, by. the day or | or hour. Phone 672-X. 2-17-Iwk AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—Ford Sedan, 1928 model, with starter, demountable rims, five new tires in excellent condition. Owner must have the money. $600.00 cash takes it: ‘Write No. 201, Tri- —bune- 2-17-1w { U out, containing 1921 facts of clover land Jo ‘Marinette Coynty, Wisconsin. If for +@ home or on an Investment You ave thinking of buying. good farm lands where farmers’ grow rich, send at once for this special number of Landolo; it free on request. Address Ski more-Riehle Land Co., 434 Skidmore- Riehle Bldg.;’ Marinette, Wisconsi MISCELLANEOUS | FOR SALE—Hotel and restaurant in| A-1 condition in county seat town | 140 miles from Bismarck, $1,000.00 cash will handle, balance on easy erms. Good lease on the building. Write No. 198, Tribune. 2-12-1wi: HAVE $5,000 IN VILLAGE WAR- rants for sale at 10 percent dis- count. Will secure guarantee that they will be taken up within a year.! Will sell all or part. J. B. Field. | _Zap, D. 2-17-3wk FOR SALE—One 1920 Model two-ton } G. M. C. truck equipped with cab; commercial “body — and. pheumatic tires. Truck ‘is ‘in A-1 condition. _Write 191, Tribune. _ 2-14-1wk FIRST CLASS WORK—Cleaning. pressing, repairing, dyeing, ladies’ and men’s clothing, Eagle 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 Postoffite. 1-18-tf FOR SALE OR ‘EXCHANGE Eight- | room’, house, barn, garage ‘and! chicken house. Also horses for sale. ‘Vena Pauley, 1014 11th St. 2-17-4t FOR SALE—Forty tons No. 1 upland hay. Baled dry. Ready to load. $10.00, F. O. B. Woodworth. -S. W. Melzer, Woodworth, N. D. 2-11-1wk ONE DOUBLE BED FOR SALE— Practically new. Price $15.00. 321 8th_ St. Phone_855. 2. HEMSTITCHING, PICOTING AND novelty pleating. “Mrs. C. P. Lar- son, 400 4th St. FOR SALE—6-room modern bunga- f LEGAL NOTICES | SECOND SUMMONS. STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, County of Burleigh. In Justice court, before H. C. W- Uhde, Justice’ of tha 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 nte at my office’in Estherville townsKip in the county of Burleigh, and ‘state of North Dakota, at the hour of © 2 o'clock p. ms on thé 8th @ay of March, 1921, there to answer to the complaint of R. 'C. Thompson against you alleging” that you, are indebted tu \ him in the sum of Forty-one Dapprs and Thirty Cents, with interest at the rate of 6 percent per annum from Sept. 11, 1919. for professional 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 you for the sum of $41.30 and interest as above stated; and farther demanding that certain chattel property, goods, i 4 \ wares, and merchandise, hetginatter |, * described, attached by ‘Qscar Back- man, constable in and for Burleigh : county,’ North Dakota, on February 3rd, 1921, in said county of Murleigh be. applied to the satisfaction of said indebtedness and costs of this action. Said property so levied upon as the property of defendant and attached q as aforesaid is described as follows, . to-wit: ‘Attached in the hands of the Northern Pacific Railway Company at 5 Regan, North Dakota, eight boxes of household goods, one oil stove crat- edi one table, one sewing machine, one dresser, one wash boiler, one li- brary table, one mattress, one bed. one bed spring, four bundles 8 chairs, one baby buggy, one box carpenter a tools; one brooder, total. weight 1,609 pounds. Attached in’ “the hands of Joseph Mickelson: Regan, North Dakota, ong red cow; with horns, one small white spot between horns on forehead. And you are hereby notified that unless you so appear and answer, the plaintiff will take- judgment against you; accordingly. ~ Given this Sth 2 1921. H. C. W. UHDE,, Justice of the Peace. H. C. BRADLEY, Attorney for Plaintiff, Wilton, N. Dak. (Feb. 10-17-24) day of February, Standardization. “What Crimson Guich ought to do,” \ temarked Cactus Joe, “is to send east and yet a good singin’ teacher.” “You bogs surely have enough to in- terest you without music.” “Too much, There's no use of a3xin’ men not to use their voices. Nobody: can make an observation on any sub- ject of general interest without startin’ @ quarrel. What we need is to have somethin’ on hand that’s cyt an’.dried an’ set to music.” low, well located, south front, for | ee FOR SALE—Household 924 7th St. Call 548-K. furniture. 2-8-tf | KING UNHONORED AND UNSUNG Milan of Serbia Probably the Greatest Profligate of Which There Is Record. More than one king has:died in pov- erty ‘and some hive died ‘tn disgrace, but It remained for King Milan of Serbla to die without a throne, with- out’ country, without @ dollar and without a friend, hated by his coun- trymen, laughed at by all who met him, and’ despised by his own son and wife. He was born in 1854, and In 1868 we find him in Paris, a blase foue of fourteen, @ho got drunk, ‘sniioked ‘cigars, associated with gimblers, street women and thieves, and already an avowed’ atheist and hater of Mine and decency.’ ‘The death of Mis second Cousin,’ Michael 1V,‘put him on the throne. He mar- ried a beautiful girl of sixteen, who loved ‘Tilt ‘and’ who bore him a son. AN went well “unttl she "caught him making Tove’ to's middle-aged ‘Atstriad’ Spy woman '‘in a royal’ for- est; After that he bared the’ élovén hoof, choked and insulted ‘the queen, hated fils son’ and’ began a énreer’ of drunkenness “wiekedness ‘ that disgusted “lils subjects.“ He’ was forced to’ ” al nee “and -aithough later ‘his “son, ‘ tak kiog; brought him’ back ‘aé*conimander tn chief’ of thé Serbian “d?my, “he ‘returned this favor by ‘attempting ‘to Kilt his’ own’ child. He" was’ ordered’ ‘out’ of ‘the country,“and @nded up as 4° hanger- on of low saloons and dives fn Vien- na, Scorned even by the waiters ard coarse women. that , frequented - the places. . tale FIRST HOUSE PILGRIMS BUILT Plymouth Venerates Site of Structure Where Settlers Modeled Civil Form of Government ~ Until they have gazed upon the Rock, vjsitors to Plymouth town de- cline, as a rule, to see anything else. Having performed that duty, they usually stroll or spin up Leyden street, which extends from a point con- veniently near the Rock, to-the fcot of Burial hill, where the Pilgrim fort and watch tower used to frown down upon the Indians. Leyden street Is} New England's oldest thoroughfare. Once it was called, quite aptly, First street. ‘ On one’s way up Leyden street one must stop to look at the site of the first house which the Mayflower pas- sengers erected in the wilderness. In. this structure the settlers had their fling at the purest form o€ democracy. Here, modeling their civil govern- been drawn up-in the cabin of the Mayflower while she was’ anchored in the harbor of Cape Cot, they dis- qussed laws for their guidance, and elected, Myles Standish, by majority | vote, captain of the Plymouth home guard, ‘ TRIBUNE WA 18 — FoR RESUTTS “but carbon, ment upon the compact which had | 7 WILBUR ee THE OFFICE. y OM, HE TOLD ME AT'NOON AND DIDN’T, HE HAD BEEN CALLED FoR JURY. DUTY. AND | EXPECT-HE WENT OVER is SEE ABOUT SHOW UP AGAIN \" ALL DAN! 1 FOOLED "EM! 1 TOLD EM | DIDN'T HAVE GOOD JUDGMENT! How DID You GET ovr oF IT? WHY SOME DYES ARE “FAST” Vegetable and Animal Compounds Su perior to Any Products of the Chemist's Laboratory. Some dyes are “fast;”-others fade either when the goods are washed or when they are exposed to the sunlight. The fdstness or otherwise of a color depends upon the arrangement of the atoms that make up its molecules, If these be closely interwoven, neither light nor water can separate them; but If they are loosely joined together light anf@ water make them disinte- grate. Most of our modern dyes are derjved from coal tar and consist of atoms of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and other elements. ~ The vegetable dyes, usually contain ho other elements hydrogen and 0 en, That is-why, being so simple, such colors as logwood and natural indigo are the fastest of all. ‘The few ani- mal !@yes—cochineal, for'-example— are fast for the same’ reason. But the so-called anilin dyes are the prod- uct of thé chemist’s laboratory ant are complex and loosely bound com- binations of the atoms of many ele ments. There are acid dyes and al- kaline dyes, and before applying them to ‘any ‘stuff one- must know whether the cells of this are acid or alkaline in reaction. “For opposites. attract, likes repel. Therefcre we must use acid dyes for alkaline materials and alkaline dyes: for acid .materials, pe Bi SNS DECISION CUT LEGAL TANGLE Point Involved in English Lawsuit Seems Hardly Worth the Time and Money Expended. On the Iast day of ‘the last “Sith Jin ‘the year ‘1809 @ very curious legal battle was fought between the English ¢rowh and a gentlemdi doe of the manor of Holderness; ie Ag W strug gle for:a ensk of wine thrown, upon the seashore on the coast of tiat: par- ticular’ manor. 4M “The lord's hailtffs-and the customs WOUL8 Vou BANS LUG To Go on DOINGS OF THE DUFFS SEE, BovS- THAT UDTUHERE iS TUE Tow ; bi dot ,AT oflicérs hoih raead to the spot aid The contending parties each laid hold of the cask. Then the officers decided to go back to the custom house for further instructions, and during thelr absence’ the bailiffs removed the cask to the cellar of the manor house. At the trial the arguments on both sides were very learned and exceed- ingly lengthy. The decision of the court was in favor of the lord on the grounds that no permit is required to remove spirits unless it has paid duty; that wine.to be Hable to duty must be imported; that wine cannot be Im- ported by itself, but requires the agency of someone else to do, it; that, therefore, wine wrecked, having come on shore by itself or without human volition or intentions was not. import- ed, and was-not subject to duty, and did ‘not require a permit for its re- moval.—Chicago: Journal. =" Trees_. Look:LikeyOstrie} Tips. Forestry associations in- “the East have developed the habit of touring the national parks and national for- ests of the West, and bringing back many interesting feature pictures Agpwell as technical data. Among the photographs in New York Forestry 1s the ostrich tree of Monterey, Cal. Asa matter of fact it would be quite as easy and far more correct to say trees in this case, for the cele- brated Ostrich tree of California is | really two trees—coast cypresses, whicliavind and weather have inter- | laced so that their foliage seems: al-| most one. : These California ostrich: trees are | ¥anguards of a grove of pictur storm-beaten cypresses not so ve! from the elty of Monterey. All isi from the freak pair, which resemble a huge ‘ostrich, stalking "long shore, they would well repay any tree-lov: er's visiting, Cultivated Rose Is English. In many countries some flower $s taken-as~the national émblem. The Kreneh claim the fleurde tis, the wr; ; oR DIDY SEE ALL THE “TALK- “THEN PAGE SEVEN SN, WILBUR, | UNQERSTAND You WERE CALLED FOR JURY DUTY! You DiON'y FOOL'EM MADE A confession! swt Know Much About Boais® DOWN WERE SH Firty-CENT ) DECK, eee oN \ ee WAS, BUT | GoT.ouT oF It! Ac! You ONLY Scoteh the thistle, and the Waffle be- longs entirely to Austritia; the maple leaf is the national emblem. of Canada, as the fern leaf Is of New Zealand. But the most familiar of all fs per- haps the red rose of England. Every one has heard of the Wars of the Noses. There Is no more typteally English flower than the rose; and yet most English roses have come from China or from the East. ‘The culti- vated rose, however, in {ts hundreds of varieties—bush roses, climbing, scrambling, rambling s, dwarf roses—is typically English. Salt Monopoly in Ecuador, The production and sale of salt in Ecuador is monopolized by: the govern- ment, which enjoys a good profit thet from, Salt is obtained from the linas in the provinces of Guayas, Ma- nabi and El Ore, The works consist of blocks of land whose surface. has been lowered a few feet, into which sea water is permitted to seep. The water is slowly evaporated: by the sun, precipitating crystals and thus forming a considerable layer of salt, which is broken into pieces for dis- tribution. It is estimated that) the; average quantity of salt cousumed by each individual in Ecuador is thirteen The Same Thing. “They are quite ordinary over there, aren't they?" “Well, they represent the refinement of vulgarity. Anything worse than that?” people “Certainly—the vulgarity of re finement.”—Brownit Magazine. Disqualified. T should get a divorce at once,” 1 Mrs. Hittem-Uppe, Jr, “but I haven't sufficlent costumes to last through the prolonged trial that my so- cial standing demands.” Optimistic Thought. Shadows heighten the bright tipts of life's pleture. By Blosser AY “THOSE. ARENT TALUING MACHINES, TAG -THOSE- ARE NENTILATORS \S “MUS DECK. Ggtirin init TRAVEL AT TERRIFIC SPEED Electrons Can Be Sent Throdgh the Air at the Rate of 60,000 Miles a Second, An airplane doing 200 miles an hour ; is considered to be a fairly speedy ob- Ject, but its fight is cumbersome com- | pared to another form of movement, | a form that has been measured, and | ane that man.can make at will, The 200 miles an hour becomes pale when it is known that man sends certain things at the rate of 60,000 miles 2 second, or more. than twice around the This world while a wateh ticks, about one-third as fast as light and if the objects mentioned could be directed they_would reach the moon in four seconds, | The units thus created are electrons, and they have been sent at the terrific | rate of speed mentioned in glass tubes: from which a. certain antount of air has ‘been pumped. They are what Crookes called the “fourth state of mat- ter,” solid, liquid and gas, having long been familiar to every one. ‘There is n theory now held by some scien that these electrons are the basic ms ter of everything in, on or under the | earth, the substance of which mole: | cules and atoms are made, and that they are in themselves force or move- ment, dhat every one of them has been: ; on or In the earth since the origin of | time millions of years ago, and they | always will be in some form or other— erhaps a diamond, perhaps a human being, perhaps a child’s toy or part of a mountain or sea, I CRADLE OF THE HUMAN RACE | Seems to Be Ample Proof That Mid- | Asian Plateau Was the Original | Emigration Point. = i Somewhere on the lofty mid-Asian | plateau, scholars tell us, was the re- | gion whence the human race i persed and was distributed. If the | theory seems to cynics a little like a | sentimental engraving; we have to | trust the authorities, At any rate, in | that now thinly populated district are | the relics of early civilizations, earlier | than any now known to history. It fs | significant that the most ancient civ- | ilized countries that we know, Baby- | lonia, Chaldea and their suce: | and rivals, the peoples of the far-off foretimes in Asia Minor, Egypt, India, | China are the frontiers or extensions | of this central area, whence wave | after wave of invasion has flowed. im- , memorially, Man in the hunting stage has to follow the game for his | food and his clothes. Therefore it Is | probable that Central Asia was the | old home whence emigrated mammals ; whose descendants now live in other | regions. Old England's Twelfth Night. Twelfth night is a time-honored fes- tival in England, the chief feature of | the evening being the cutting of * eake containing varicus small articles of special meaning. ‘The incompar- able Pepys rarely falls to make spe- | cial reference to the date in his di ise has been to see “Twelfth Night” und finds it “but a silly play, not re- | lating at all to the name or day, i another timé his wife and her com- | pany stay up all night to colebrate, | but he merely chooses his piece of | cake and goes té bed. Again he at- | tends @ great dinner on twelfth night, and as his piece of the cake contains | a clove, “the mark of the knave,” he slyly manages to stuff {t into the slice; taken by another man. A year or so! later he celebrates the date with 1 | simply gorgeous time at his own) house, his guests’ staying all day and | until midnight. He says: “In the} evening I did bring out my cake—a | noble cake—and there eut it into’| pieces with wine and good drink. | . . « And so we were mighty merry | till ft was midnight; and, being moon- | shine and a fine frost, they went home, | I lending some of them my coach to! help to carry them.” Burials in “the Abbey.” Westminster Gazette: How) many | more burials will there be In West- minster abbey? Within its walls lie! the rémains of close on three thou- + sand people, and so mumerous are the monuments and memorials that it is impossible to prevent them jostling each other without the slightest pre- tentions to artistic arrangement. Both Westminster abbey and St. Pauls’ are -excepted from the general prohibition of intramural Interments, but the time has almost arrived when, froin sheer want of space, no further burials will be possible in the abbey. It has been suggested that a national mau- soleum should be provided by utilizing | the old “undercroft” to the east of the Great Cloisters, part of which is the | Chapel of the Pyx and part of the gymnasium of Westminster schovt. | Though this is outside the abbey itself, | it is in the abbey precincts. Anxious to Help Brother. | A young woman in Denver had | sought the advice of a woman friend | with reference to the advisability of | obtaining a aivores: | “Of course,” sald the friend, after | a lengthy recital of the other's trou- bles had been communicidted to her, , “you've had your marital difficulties, just like the rest of us; but really, from what you have said, I shouldn't think you would be justified in tak- | ing this step. You have no other ground for seeking a divorce, have you S3 \ “To be perfectly frank,” said the young woman, “in addition to all that 1 have told you, I have a brother who! is a lawyer, and Tam very anxious to give-him something to dc ROSS BEATS THE GUN. Chicago, Feb. 17.—‘Norman Ross, holder of 10 world’s swinaming ,rec- ords, admits he often beats the gun in, the takeoff. If he is called back he loses nothing. If he gets away with it he has an advantage. A | See you so often. is | Tean hardly get a SOME: SMILES g Always an Eye to Business. “Some of you old chaps did a great deal of dancing. at the big party.” “Yes,” replied Mr. Cumrox. . “The next time we give one, I'm going to see if I can't get mother and the girls to. give me a concession ‘to open a little stand in the hall and_ sell rheumatism liniment to the depart- ing guests.” ‘ «Nothing Else to It. “Algernon, I cannot be engaged to you any longer.” “Why not? Some whim, I suppose,” “Because yesterday-I married Mr. ) Flubdub.” “In that case I guess T'll have to re- lease you, kid.”—Louisville Courier. Journal. : A Safe Topic. “Naughtar,” said Mr. Wimples, “that young chap who comes around here-to 3. dumb as a fish, word out of-him.” “Why, father, he doesn’t know what to talk about when you aré present.” “Then he is a fool. Doesn't he know we are having weather every day?” Tre. Jack—How did Bob come to lose Gladys? Henry—Oh, he. swore -he’d always keep her in mind.” “Well?” “Hig rival came along and took the girl herself in his arms,”—London Tit+ Bits. Going to Look It Up. ‘You can't park your car here.” “But I've already done it, fierce min- fon of the law." “Mebbe so. I'll have to take your name down, and while you are about It, just tell me how to spell that ‘minion.’ It done sound like a, polite word to me.” Of Course Not. Editor-+When you send manuscript madam, always put In a stamped en- velope with it; otherwise you Avon't ; get it back, “But I don’t want it back.”—Life. Reaction. “Father,” said the small boy, “what is a pessimist?” “A pessimist, my son, is usually an optimist who has overworked and is compelled to take a vacation.” RIGHT : Spoon: \/hat kind of bells do you refer? Mr. Bell (who has a nagging wife): Oumb belie! rs Real Money. “Tl! bet a thousand dollars!”* Announced a boastful Ben, But he changed his mind about {t When I said I'd bet him ten, Cot to Have Her. “The cook says we ™ust get another honsema! “We have two alveaty, care for the work.” “But they need a fourth at bridge.” enough to Clever. Friend—Ifowidldiyou ever get such a pl Jeasant expréssion on'that homely Passee’s portralt? Artist—I got her to telling me about men she might have married, we { Co-respondents. “My wife's alfections hopelessly alienated.” “By whom?" “By all of the handsome movie ors she sees."—Fili Fin, have been \ Fitting Food. | “That girl h sa complexion Hke peaches and cream and lips like twin, cherries.” “Then no wonder they say she is sweet enough to eat.” Its Kind. “I once saw a trunk that was Iift-| ed in the air without hands and which} could be rolled up.”. “Did it belong to a magician?” to an elephant.” One Road Left. Speeder—I tell you, wherever T go, I just burn up the road to a cinder. Victim—Well, thank heaven, you'll never set the river on fire. The Reason. “He impressed me as such a me chanical sort of man.” “Perhaps that impression is due to the fact that in business he is such a screwy and in society such a bore,” ee ee — R..S. ENGE, D. C.. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 26@