The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 21, 1921, Page 7

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CLAS HELP WANTED—MALE IFIED. ADVERTISEMENTS SS a a TST WANTED TO RENT . LUMBER YARD: MANAGER WANT- ed for a good South Dakota point, German-Russian community, 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. lock box 347, Aberdeen, S. D. z 2 2-17-2wk LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its kind. Established 1893. Tims and ex- pense saved by our methods. Catalog free. Moler Barber eCoege 107 R. Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. 2-1-1mo FOR RENT—Furnished or unfur- nished rooms for iight housekeep- ing. Phone’ 183, Bismarck’ Business College. 1-17-1wk AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES ¥OR SALE—Ford Sedan, 1918 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-lwk FOR SALE—One Madison 6 car in good condition.. -Also one wont! heater, one 60 egg Buckeye incu- bator, 2 kitchen chairs. Call at 208 16th St. or phone 534-X. 2-19-31 — » MARRIED MAN WANTED ON FARM by bachelor, $75,00 per month un- til first of, November. stand farming. Must under- E. S. Coffrey, Na-. ¥ 'TED—Qual ied stock si Phone 250 or 484-R. HELP WANTED—FEMALE FEMALE HELP WANTED—Banner House. Phone 231. 2-18-lwk WANTED—Girl for general house- work. Apply Bismarck Dair —— fo ROOMS FOR RENT. FOR RENT—Furnished room in mod- ern home; gentleman preferred; close in. Call at 202 8th street, or phone 656. 2-19-5t. FOR RENT—Modera room for lady; also’ garage for auto. "Phone 916 or 907. .12 E. Thayer St. 2-19-5t ROOM TO RENT—Suitable for two gentlemen, modern. 113 Mandan Ave. Phone 637-K. 2-16-lwk y : 2-19-3t | WOULD LIKE TO BUY “A FORD * roadster, body in first class condi- tion or coupe. Write Box 275, Ash- ley, N._D. 2-18-2wk ____ WISCONSIN FARM LANDS CANDOLOGY SPECIAL NUMBER—Just out, containing 1921 facts of clover land in Marinette County, Wisconsin. If for a@ home or as an inyestment you are thinking of buying good farm latids 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 Bldg., Marinette, Wisconsin. | 1-3-8mos | = __ MISCELLANEOUS __ 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, ND. BATBwk FOR SALE—Golden Dent seed corn, germination guaranteed. Hand pick- graded, $4.25 per bushel. F. O. B., Randall Ross Boyd, ‘Menoken, N. D. 219-1! FOR RENT—2 modern furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Ap- ply 808 7th St. 2-18-lwk FOR RENT—Room in modern house four blocks from postoffice. Phone BI-K. 2-18-3t FURNISHED. ROOM FOR RENT--- Call 802, Ave. B. 2-18-lwk ___ LOST AND FOUND LOST--Pocketbook qontaining — be- tween $13 and $14. Finder please leave at Capital Steam Laundry for reward. 2-18-3t FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—Two very desirable mod- ern bungalows of five rooms and bath each. Almost new, $1,200 to $1,500 cash, balance easy terms. J. H. Holihan, first door Last of post- office. Phone 745. 2-18-3t FOR SALE-—Modern house, 3 lots, 8 rooms and bath. Steam heated. electric lights, garage, chicken zoop. Iron fence around“place. By | owner, corner 10th and Rosser. Phone 618-R. 2-18-4t FOR RENT—Furnished 6-room house in good location. 62, 2-19-30 WORK WANTED | FOR SALE Write P. 0. Box} Jacob Bull, FIRST CLASS. WCRK—Cleaning. pressing. repairing, dyeing, ladies’ and men’s clothing, Eagle Tailoring hats, Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works, Phone 58, -opposite Postoffice. Ge 1,18-tf FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE--Eight- room house, barn, garage and chicken house. Also horses for sale. Vena Payley, 1014 11th St. if a 2-1T-4t OR SALE—Good green baled hay de- livered to’ any part of city. $15.00 per ton not less than five bales to _#@ place. Phone 731-K, — 2-19- FOR SALE--No 1 Upland hay’ in stack, 3 1-2 miles from Menoken, Randdll Ross Boyd, Menoken, N. D. cee 2-19-lw Seed speltz, cleaned and graded, $1.25 F. O. B. ‘Randall Ross Boyd, Menoken, N. D. 2-19-1w WANTED—Second hand cafe. Cail Chris Martineson, Chief of Police. FOR SALE—Choice Gana Dickinson, N. D. 2-18-lwk FOR SALE—Household — furniture. 924 7th St. Call 548-K. 2-8-tf rk. by the day or hour. Phone 672-X. 2-17-1wk BETTER ROADS THIS YEAR Highways are on tap for improvements this year. Automotive engineers agree «that motorists cannot get most use or wear out of their cars while highways re- main in the condition they are today.| “Better roads” mean better truck- ing and riding at less trouble and ex- pense. : While automotive engineers, will work to increase the efficiency of the automobile, most of them look to road building to prolong the auto's mileage and life. A conference of automobile and high- way engineers will be held Feb. 23 at the ‘University of ‘Michigan. The University of ‘Michigan has a course on highway engineering and extensive; Undertakers mbalmers ~ Fumerai Direetors Licensed Embalmer in Charge DAY “HONE 50 NIGHT PHONES 65—887 BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distribu STUDEBAKER t AUTOMOBILES PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Embalmers in C : Day Phone 100 BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY 220 MAIN Upholstered Furnit aS CARL PEDERSON - FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Southwestern North Dakota and Southeastern Montana BISMARCK, N. D. ae | BUSINESS DIRECTORY WEBB BROTHERS FOR SALE--¥jrniture. Phone 869_ 2-19-3t transport which men already engaged’ in this kind of work are attending, The students come from all parts of the United States, from Canada, Scuth America and even China. Edward S. Jordan, of the highways commission of the national automobile chamber of commerce, urges the cre- ation of a federal highway commis- sion. “If this were done,” Jordan says, | “highways would be given their proper place as the most important single domestic phase of the government's work, and we would have a body of men whose duty it would be to look at the question from a national rather than a sectional viewpoint.” tors of harge Night Phone 160 or 687 STREET ure Made to Order There were 5287 fewer total ar- rests during 1920 in Boston than for ed ears, '$5 per bushel; shelled and} & Hat Works, phone 58, opposite | ‘ —_postoft eR SEE PRE WAR PRICES on blocking and remodeling - men’s! | Nels THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | DOINGS OF THE DUFFS” Tom Had the Right Dope— (ee eh Bee | LEGAL NOTICES NOWCE OF SALE. Notice is hereby given that that wer- tain mbreghge executediand delivered | by Earl A. Loven of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota, to C. A, Finch Lumber Company of Bismarck, Bur- ‘leigh County, North Dakota, dated the | ,sixth day of November, 1919, and re-j corded in the office of the register of deeds of Burleigh county in the State of North Dakota on the seventh j day of November in 300k 159 of Mort- gages at page 135, will be foreclosed by sale of the premises in such mort- gage and hereinafter described, at the front door of the courthouse in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota at the hour of 2 o'clock p. m, on the 26th day of March, 1921. to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. That the premises described in such mort- | gage and which will be sold to sat- isfy the same are described as foi- lows: Lots Vive and Six (6 and 6) of Block Nineteen (19) of Riverview Addition to the City of Bismarck in accordance with the plat thereof now on file in and for said county of Bur- leigh in the State of North Dakota. There will be due on such .mort- gage on the day of sale the sum of Nineteen Hundred Forty-one and 80- 100 ($1,941.80) Dollars. |“ Dated at Bismarck, North Dakot2, this 11th day of February, 1921, C. A, FINCH LUMBER COMPANY, Mortgagee. | BENTON BAKER, | Attorney for Mortgagee. | NOTICE AND CITATION. HEARING OF FINAL ACCOUNT AND DIS. TRIBUTION OF ESTATE, STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA. County of Burleigh. In County Court. before Hon. 1. ©. Davies. Judge. In the Matter of the Estate of Ole Nelson. deceased. Carin Nelson, Petitioner, vs. Nelson, Oscar’’Nelsony. Emm: Olson, Laura. Seedlund, Gust -Ne son, Rosie Erickson, Katie Barthei and. Carl Nelson, Respondents. THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA drunkenness alone in 1919. ene \SAY, OLIVIA, YOUR FRIEND Me ZIPP: UST CAMB: AND | Was DOWN “TALKING:"TO Him! WE APPEARS BE A FINE NOUNG MAN ~HE WAS SAVUG\HE LIKED GIRLS. THAT HAVE A, SUTTLE PERE GET THe CUE? , : ee | Freckles and His Friends © TO THE ABOVE NAMED Di- FENDANTS., “You, the said respondents, and all persons interested in said estale are hereby notified that the final account of the administratrix of Ole Nelson, late of the cily of Lincoln, in the county of Lancaster and state, of Ne-} braska, deceased, has been rendered to this court therein showing that the estate of said deceased is ready for final settlement and: distribution, and petitioning that her account ne allowed, the residue of said estate be distributed to the persons thereunto entitled, her administration closed and she be discharged; that Tuesday, the 15th day of March, A. D. 1921. at 10 o'clock in the forenoon of that day at the court rooms of tbis court in tb ourt house, in the city, of Bis- marck, county of Burleigh, and state of North Dakota, been duly ap- pointed by this’Court for the settle- ment thereof, at which time and place any person: interested in said estate may ‘appear andmtile, his exceptions, in writing, to said account, and peti- tion and contest the same. And you the ie named respond- ents, and each of yous'are hereby cit- ed and required then and there to be and appear before this court, and show cause, if any you have, wh said account should not be allowea, the residue of said estate Qistribut- ed, the administration of said estate closed and said administratrix be dis- charged. Dated the 4th day of February, A. D. 1921. By the Court: I. C, DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. Let the foregoing citation be servea by publication in the Bismargk ‘Tri- bune, once etch week for four suc- (Seal) *. DAVIES, Judge of the County Court. MILLER, ZUGER & THLLOTSON, Attorneys for Adininistratrix, Bismarck, No D. Feb. 1-28) The mucilage on the back of a postage stamp is made from the sirup of sweet potatoes. Eight and one-half percent of al) feaths in this country are attributed to heart disease. Ly | | night during the whole winter. | | i 4 Looked That Way to id gerepeea ns \, WIPING THEIR, | Von, Bos! So GLAD TO seeYoul! ouvial Come TO mE! HERE, You EARNED THE BOQUET LIKE A GIRL WITH AMTTLE LIFE! Salt Superstitions, Hnperstitions concerning salt are among the earliest known to mankind. There is miich evidence in holy writ for the cereinonial uses of it, and the old Mosaic lew commands that every sacrifice of a meat offering shall be soned with it. ne, and many races looked on shiped at them. uperstition seems to be tha since salt cannot corrupt it should be regarded as a symbol of immortality. Novel Dance. The word “ball,” as applied to a ne to be used in the man ancient “ball given in church by the dean and choir boys of Naples during the Feast dancing pa first instance fr play of Fools at Kuster, At subsequen pa ree in Naples ine sees cially the masculine public, toward the ‘ eae At one another to the | grtist’s model,” said the secretary sad- sound of their own singing: ‘They ly, “is much the same as it is toward whirled about in measured time, and ; the short consisted in loosening hands in time to catch the ball. OLD WOMAN SWIMS Was at One Time President of an Athletic Club. Mrs. El burgh is swimme than 80 y Four ye into the Steiner a the country, sold. imming world. She but soon became an exp Last winter she walked a mile to ¢ swimming ppol and miss pyoning. the class lacked its usual en- a yon ‘ een Nes, Ine ee Wen) Bo, You know her? ‘Too thin? 1 thusiasm and spirit. ‘The deficieney was traced to the old lady. Inquiry at bi the answer that there w and euchre purty Until last! year the athletic club school. She declar swimming this winter, at the M = 4S. SMS CHICKENS ARE FEET ON. OUR BY ALLMAN | PAGE SEVEN HAVE CLUB FOR — ARTISTS’ MODELS “Magazine Cover Girls” Ask to Be Taken Seriously. MATRON DELIVERS LECTURE Hands a Few Remarks to Broadway Don Juan Who Has Followed One of the Girls—Posing Is Hard Work and Models Are Not Given Much More Consideration Than Formerly —Not All Models in Greatest De- mand Are Beautiful, But All Are Distinctive. To have the artist's model taken riously is the purpose of an intere ing club which has its headquarters in an old-fashioned house on West eighth street, New York. Pass house at any hour during the day, | and, if you are lucky, you are apt to see its anc door creak open and the original of your favorite magazi cover girl trip sedately down the steps. For the house ig, asyally full of them. It has about 150 such enchanting dam- sels on its membership list. But they are to be taken seriously. Don't forget that. The other day,’§ Broadway Don Juan, bewitched at the sight of his fa- vorite bathing girl picture actually walking down Seventh avenue—not in a bathing. suit, you understand, but recognizable, nevertheless—proceeded to accompany ber at'a discreet dis- tance as she turned down Fifty-eighth street. When ‘she left the pavement and ran up a pair of steps, he stopped in his tracks and stared in deep pre- occupation at the door where she had vanished. Suddenly the door opened a second i MARKETS | o—-—_—__-+-—___—_———_* BISMARCK GRAIN, (Furnished by Russe}!-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Feb. 21. No, 1 dark northern. No. 1 amber durum No. 1 mixed durum No. 1 red durum. No. 1 flax .. No. 2. flax ... No. 2 rye ST. PAUL pts, 7,300, slow; 50; bulk. $8.25 tc attle receipts, 1,500, kill er; fat steers, $7.00 to $7. and heifers, $4.00 to $6.00; calves 50 cents higher. SOUTH rece range, Sheep receipts, 4,700, steady to higher; lambs, $8.00 to $8.75; ewes, $4.00 to $4.75. Minneapolis, Feb. 21.—Wheat _ re- ceipts, 358 cars compared with holi- da. SS a year ago. Cash. No. 1 northern, $1.68 7-8 to $1.72 7-8. Corn No, 3 yellow, 58¢ to 59c. white, 40 7-Se to 41 3-Sc. to $8, 21.—Flour un- ie Shipmerts, to $9.50. Minneapolis changed to 40 46,62 Rye No. Bran, $ 2, $1.47 1-4 to $1.48 1-4. AA PPP RPDS looks more like a drawing room thaa a clubroom, and the casual stranger would never guess from the frivolous repartee and engaging manner of its that serious business was being cted. Yet it is at these teas ind their of models, On the third floor of its large, old- fashioned home, tHe club: maintains costume department, which contains costumes of every period and national- ity. These are often rented at a nom- inal fee with the model. For instapee, while the reporter was visiting the club the other day, a wealthy artist, who lives in a suburb of New York, came in and told the seeretary he was tinve, and a gray-haired, sweet-faced matron came out. Matron Delivers Lecture. “Young man, what do you mean by following one of our girls?” demandec Homer calls it di- of the old ‘Teuton alt springs as holy The origin enbeis of Pitts- probably the oldest: woman She is more 's ago marked her entrance could just paddle around a little at that time, mitning fascinated her and she ed bat one One absenee of the spry ome brought <a dinner ushter | she will continue the lady, quietly but firmly. “Now, suppose you just run along back to Brondway, where you belong. The girls in this club are nice, quiet, re- {| fined girls, and they don’t want to be annoyed, and, furthermore, we ate not going to have a lot of idle, gaping men standing out here in‘front of our house.” Thus did the secretary of the club, as she later explained to the reporter, nip in the bud a movement on the part of the male population of New York to give the club its enthusi: indorsement. t “The attitude of the public, espe- s, ic the chorus i—entirely frivolous. It 1s also incurably romantic People seem to have an idea that an artist's model is a gay young thing, who earns an easy, if not luxurious, living by ‘posing for fascinating artists with long hair or oriental fezes, if they have bald heads, Now, as « matter of fact, posing is hard work, and until recent- ly the average artist's model has been poorly paid and has been given about as much consideration as a table or chair.” Getting Jobs for Models. Here the telephone on the secre- ta desk burst noisily into her con- fidence avd she grabbed a notebookeand pene just a minute,” she said, taking up the instrument. “Yes, I think we have just the girl you need—Miss don't believe we have anybody plump- er. We consider her one of the plump: est girls we have. About 150 pounds, 1 should say, but tall and well pro- portioned. Yes, I think you might be able to use her face, too. She's a good Spanish type. Well, she lives | right up in your neighborhood—sup- | pose T have her come in and see you, anyway. If she doesn’t suit, per we can get you some one else, Miss M » Whom you had before, will be back from Havana Friday.” he secretary then explained that for its membe! fered and class Is somewhat like priv 4 girl never knows how long: her is going to-last or how much wor it ts going to pay her, Some i take a long time to complete work, and others work very fast. can afford to a high rate fer ay model, and others can scarcely atford to employ one at all. But conditions in this respect are better for posers } than they have ever been before, thanks to the persistent mercenary ef- forts of the club. A good model can now demand and collect a dollar an hour for her work, at which rate some of them make as much as $8 a day. Besides its employment bureau, the Art Work club, as it is called, op- erates a restaurant on the first floor of the house, which serves excellent mealy at cost, while five o’clock tea 1s served every afternoon asolutely free. ‘To this artists, as well as mod- els, are invited since, as the secretary explained, the chief effort of the club is to bring the two factions together for the promotion of a better under- standing. Where Models Are Engaged. ‘Tnus, on a rainy afternoon, the big tlubroom fs filled with models draped about the furniture in graceful atti- tudes, while they chat and drink te: with -sociably-inclined The room, with iis artistic draperies ynd eomfortatte couches snd easy chairs, artist OOOO R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor | supple mus in search of a Duteh type and a Dutch costume of the kind n by a certain group of peasants living on an island in the Zuyder Zee, The artist was told 1] to go up-to the clubroom and make himself at home, while the secretary found him a model, In a remark- ably short time, a flaxen-haired girl, with broad cheek bones and a robust figure came in the front door in an- swer to the secretary's telephone sum- mons, and was rushed up to the third floor to be fitted for the peasant cos- tume, The same afternoon she was out at the artist's suburban studio, regdy to pose. Once, every February, the club has a model’s review, which is considered one &# the most important events in artistic circles. ‘To this review all of the known artists in the city are invited. ‘The clubroom is turned into a small auditorium, with rows of chairs to accommodate a larged-sized st audience, while in the center of the room is an elevated platform for the exhibition of the models. The girls appear in the most. beau- tiful costumes that the costume de- partment fs capable of turning out —costumes representing everyqhing from the early Greek and the Italian renaissance periods to the latest frock and chapeau coming from the Paris huusengy, By reviewing these models, artist: often gets the inspiration of ‘his Tifé, so we are told, while the model gets a well paid job. | Fashions in Mocels. Not all of the models in greatest demand are beautiful, but all of them are distinctive. Types are what the wants—not nece: pretty year girls of the Spanish » much in demand. While last y there seemed to be a general preference for French girls, A few of the models, who are kept very busy posing for mural decorations and char- ry poses, are middle aged and gray haired, but as a rule the life of the rt. Youth, firm, verage model is only t th its nering In and , is the chief rec ment in the posing prefession, so when a model enters her thirties, she also begins to look for another kind of employment, Sometimes: she herself tries poster or commercial art de- return from whence hentrical profession signing, and othe: they came the bu Knowing hoy tragically short is the or of filet pover, the Art) Work- elnb endeavers to persuade its members to study for auother. pro- ssion while Coing their ular work According to the secretary, most of | them are now follow this advice, noexiremely busy and Which keeps th ; to indulge in all the jcertainiy a “made gatrety ho whieh the public credits them, “Of course.” she ex-| plained casually, “the majority of) them marrg—either the artists they pase for, or millional no trou- Die for an art model te marry, The mere fact that she part model has a tremendous fascination for men.” Not Always So Popular. “Then it seems to us that the art model does not require much help,” said we, “so why did you start this club for her? She seems to be the last kind of female in-need of charity.” ‘Then the secretary. explained that art models have not always been se popular, There was a time years azo when no one paid ‘much attention to them. When Miss ‘Helen Sargent, now Mrs. Hipley Hitchcock and founder of the club, was studying at the Art Students’ league some years ago, for example, such was the ea: One af- ternoon a young girl posing for her class fainted from fatigue, and ac- cording to Mrs. Hitehcoek, it was ten minutes before anybody went to her assistance. “Oh, it’s only a model,” they said indifferently, “They are always doing that!” It was then that Mrs, Hitchcock de- termined that things should change, that an organized club should he start- ed for their benefit, and that the time should come when artists’ models Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 268 would be looked upon as human beings amd treated seriously,

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