The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1921, Page 7

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ne HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—First class shoemaker at once. Crewsky Shoe Shop, 109 3rd St. Phone 898. 8-5-tf HELP WANTED—FEMALB WANTED—Competent girl for gener- al house work; two in family. Mrs, E. H. L. Vesperman, 513 Avenue A. aeons bY Namen aa Wy Be kOstk WANTED—Experienced girl for gen-! eral housework. Mrs. B. F. Tillot- __ son, 200 West Broadway. 8-1! WANTED—Competent girl for gen- eral housework. Mrs. Schwantes, ._ 417 Ist St. 8-19- 1 wk. WANTED—Experienced waiters. Ho- man’s Cafe, 8-13-1wk __. SALESMAN Sales manager or sole state distribu- tor for marketing and selling of King-Bee Spark Plug. A big pay- ing contract; $500 will handle deal. Call Bismarck Hotel, Room 28, ask! for L, A. Dennis, 8-18-2t | ‘i ROOMS FOR RENT FOR, RENT—One double room for light housekeeping; also ohe front room across the house on second floor as housekeeping, unfurnished) FOR SALE—One new Ford coupé in modern house. . Phone ‘132-W. 622 3rd. 8-13-Lw FOR RENT—Two of the most desir- able rooms. in the old Tribune Block will be vacant on Sept. Ist. Water and gas connections are ‘in. They are for rent. R. D. Hoskins. BATA also rooms for light housekeeping. : Business College, Telephone 183. Re ak ht oa Rt FOR RENT—Room in modern home, ‘with board. Call 517 Seventh St., _or Phone 586. 8-19-3t | FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, above the Emporium store on 5th St. LOST—$5.00 bill. Reward call 392. FOR SALE—160 acre improved farm, including silo full of feed; 8 mile’ from Capitol city; $5,000. Will take new of used cat as part payment; ; 140 acres broken. Write 268 Trib-| une. 8-19-2t FOR SALE or trade for car. Hay-| wood model 12. Vulcanizing plant fully equipped for retreading, sec- tional work, Takes size 2'% to 6} inch tire. Tubes repairing and vul-; canizing of all kinds. Located in} town population 1,500. Only shop in} town; for details and price write} to Nick Janiow, Box 8, Wilton, __Dak. _8-19-Iwk | FOR SALE OR TRADE—1920 5. pas- senger touring car, cost new $1585. | Looks and runs like new. New) tires all around. Will trade for city or state warrants, bonds or sell on time. White X—care of Tribune. 8-18-3t | om tanks and headlights; 1 ice box at a bargain; 4 second hand Ford wheels. Lockwood Acéessory Co-, Cor. 8th and Main. 8-16-5t with cord tires and other extra equipment. Will consider first! class paper.. Tel. 982 or write, P. O. Box 521. 8-15-1 wk} z Lost / | LOST—Reward of $15 for return ot | tan traveling bag lost on main roa! between Fort Lincoln and Patter-/ son farm Saurday, Aug. 13, between} 4:30 and 5:30 P.M. Return to Trib-| H 5 light frame for Dodge car. Call Gas} Co, 8: 17-1} 8-18-1t | |ZZZ\ NO, | GUESS THAT PATCH ISN’T GOING GEE, HELEN GoT SORE BECAUSE | GOT HERA LITTLE BIT WeT! @ WOMEN ARE FUNNY! LA 2 1 o—_—_—__—____.-______@ Phone 105. 8-17-1w if SHE CANT’ FOR RENT—Modern room for gentle-| MISCELLANEOUS | i men, 418-2nd St. Phone 544R. 1 FOR SALE—Household Goods, In-|| BE PLEASED | Es 8-18-21) cluding Buffet, Dining Table and) gs Oca ee FOR RENT—Room in | 6 Chairs, Library Table, Dresser, | if suftable for two. 507 Ath St. -17-3t | 8X10 Rug, Electric Stove, and) BY RUTH AGNES ABELING ROOMS WANTED | WANTED—Furnished. or unfurnished | apartment or rooms for light house-| keeping for man and wife only. Ref-; erences. 8. E. Bergeson & Son., HOLSTEINS FOR SALE—Over 100! Phone 267 or 483. 8-17-4t; head, grade and pure bred Holsteins. | | Cows, heifers and bulls. Inquire FOR SALY OB RENT ; N. Dak. Holstein Breeders Circuit, __ HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—9-room modern house, | including 5 bed rooms, screened in porch, full basement, 100; foot east frontage for $5,000, on| terms; 4-room partly modern house, : south front, hardwood floors, water, | lights, good porch, well located, 2 bedrooms, good cellar, for _Geo. M. Register... __8-16-1 FOR SALE—Modern house of seven rooms and bath, garagé and trees. One of the best built houses in the city. $1100. cash, balance easy| PRE WAR PItICHS on cleaning, re- terms. Also nice little house of 3} blocking and remodeling, men’s rooms, city water, $800. $250 cash. hats, Tailoring & Hat ‘Works, ef H. Holihan, 314 Broadway, Phone| Phone 58, opposite Poatoffice. 8-18-3t 4 room cottage furnished, the furni- ture for sale with privilege to rent house. Also’ garage, tent, and. type- writer. 416-4th St. 8-19-lwk WANTED £0 RENT—Unturnishea modern house of about five rooms on West Side. Write X—care ofTri+ dune. 8-18-3t FOR SALE—By owner six room mod- ern house also range & kitchen cab- inet. Phone 653J, 623 9th St. “4 8. FOR RENT—Strictly modern ment in the Rose Apartments 216 8rd street. F. W. Murphy. Phone 852. 3-3-t2 WANTED—Bundle washing, Imake a specialty of washing ‘silks. All washing done by hand. Phone 179W. 214 South 7th St. 8-18 3t -I make a Specialty in children’s and Plain sewing. Phone 391-M, or call at 621 Front street. 8-15-6t ring for children or doing odd jobs after 5 o'clock. 8-15-5t Call 406 9th street south, 8-17-lw close in,| HEMSTITCHING and Picoting at-| $2,300. | FOR SALE—Meat market doing good 1300. | wk | — eee eee ms BS: . Rockets. Also a nearly new $225.00! Victrola for $150.00 including rec-'thing else ords, must be sold at once. sell. reasonable. or call at 122 Ave. B. Will} 8-17-lwk If only you had brought me some- th she wailed. And he stood there dumbly, the folds Phone 724 or 510R of the frivolous silken thing slipping from his fingers. He’d been extravagant, perhaps fool- ish, but it had looked so pretty in the shop window and somehow he had wanted her to have it, so he’d gone in New Salem, N. D. Hugh M. Trow-/and endured the torture of standing _bridge, Supt. _8-16-2wks. tachment, works on all sewing ma- chines. Price $2, personal checks 10c extra. Lights Mail Order House, Box 127, Birmingham, Ala. _ 8-15-7t! business in territory where crops! are good. Two elevators to be built! in the town; must sell on account of sickness, Address 266, care Tribune. FIRST CLASS" WORK—Cleaning. | pressing, repairing. dyeing, ladies’) And men’s clothing, Kagte Talloring | @ Hat Works, phone 68, opposite | postoffice.' 1-18-tf | $-6-1m | thing for her—it was Valentine’: !—he took her a cut-glass vase and some roses to put in it. of boyish eagerness he arranged the {flowers on the table and waited for 1-18-tf her to come downstairs. there ‘between. fat women gabbling about the virtues of various cor: and reducers until finally the precio’ package was safe in his hands. How he had rushed home with it. He expected her to love it, just as he had and then— “If you’d only brought me some- thing else!” she said. He decided then never to buy her anything more to wear. So the next time he brought some- day With a sort She looked at the vase and she smelled the flowers. He hoped for at least one little word of appreciation for having done some- thing nice. But. WANTED—To buy Shetland pony: “You’ve spent all this money on a must be safe for child to handle.|yase and I had wanted a French bas- -Inquire Mrs. Wm. Baker, 919 Fitth!ket so much,” she said. __street. Phone 790. _7-18-3ts PIANO FOR SALE—Apartment size, Kimball Upright, finish. Can be seen at Public Library. fash FOR SALE OR TRADE—Con | store building, 25x60, full basement. | land. C. J. Bieber, Herreid,| 8-19-21t When spring came, and, hoping to surprise her with a garden, he went} Dull mahogany home with his coat pockets bulging | with seeds and she fretted because he rought hollyhocks instead of helio- i trope. She didn’t appreciate any of the hings he did for her. She hurt his pride by ridiculing his selection. and faa ai _2-i""*"*! made his heart ache a little by show- —Folks to watch the dis-!ing so frankly that it was the gift it- play“of hunting material at the Lo-/|self she wanted and not his thought. mas Hardware Company’s store. And so as the years passed, the 8-18-3t | attentions ceased, and she came to FOR SALE—Entire furnishings of 10, understand that he had found some- room house including piano and vic-|ofie who did like his taste and who trola. 619 6th St. Phone 619M FOR SALE—Canadian Red Fox Muff.’ Price $10. 5-16tf | (i EXECUTION State of } ‘ota, County of. Burleigh, in Distriet Court, » Fourth Judicial District. i Farmers State Bank of Baldwin, a corporation, Plaintiff, vs. L. Walker, Defendant. ‘ By virtue of an execution iseued out of and under the seal of the District Court, in and for the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota, and a judgment rendered and docketed in the said Court on the 13th day of July, A. D. 1921 in an action wherein Farmers State Bank of Baldwin, a. corporation, is plaintiff and L. Walker is defend- ant. in favor of the said plaintiff and against the said defendant for the sale of certain real property hereinafter described to satisfy an “amount due from the defendant to the plaintiff in the sum of $175.87 together with the costs of said sale and the interest on such indebtedness since the date of the judgment, and whicli execution was directed and delivered to me as sheriff in an for the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota: I have levied upon all the right title and interest of the said defendant L. Walker in and to the following described real property in accordance with the judgment, and which said real property is situated in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and is described as the Southwest Quarter (SW%) of Section Twenty-eight (28) and the Northeast Quarter (NEM). of Section Thirty (30) all in township 142, North of Range’ 79 in Burleigh County, North Dakota. Notice is hereby given that I the undersigned as sheriff of the foresaid will sell the above deseribed: real pro- perty to the highest bidder for cash at} public auction at the front door of the Court House.in the City of -Bismarck, in the County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota on Tuesday, the 6th day of September, 1921, at two o'clock in the afternoon of that day to satis- fy said execution together with the in- terest thereon. Dated July 27, A. D.. 1921. ROLLIN WELCH | Sheriff of Burleigh Co. N. D. 8—5-12-19-26. 2, LE_ON =| 7—29. SUMMONS State of North, Dakota, County: Burleigh, In Distritt Court, Fourth Ju- dicial District. See ets Company A. First Regiment, North Dakota National Guard ‘Training School, 2 corporation, Plaintift, vs. The State of North Dakota, C._B. Little, Edmund A, Hughes, Mary H. Hughes, Dakota Motor Company, a corporation. } H. P. Goddard, F. A. Copelin, The Red Flame Publishing Company, a corpor- | ation, The North Light Publishing Com- pany, a corporation, Carl R. Kositzky. J. O. Hendricks, A. M. Landgren, J. Pol- lock, and all persons unknown claim- ing any estate or interest in or lien or encumbrance upon the property des- cribed in the complaint, Defendants, The State of North kota to the above named aa entitled action, which ¢ been filed in the office of ti said Court, and to serve a co} Answer upon the subscrib. : thirty (30) days after the this Summons upon you, the day of such service, and in & your failure to appear or answ Judgment will be taken against you b default for the relief demanded in th Complaint. | Dated this 4th day of August. 1921. F, 0, HELLSTROM Attorney for Plaintiff, ismarck, N. D. NOTIC To the Defendants in the above entitled | action: f TAKE NOTICE that the above entitl- ed action relates to the following des-_ cribed real property, situate inthe! County of Burleigh, and State of North Dakota, to-wit:- Lots Twenty-three (23) and Twenty-four (24), Block Fif- ty-two (52). Original Plat'of the Cit of Bismarck, North Dakota; that the+ object of said action is to quiet tith as to said property; and that no per: sonal claim is made against the de fendants. Z ae Dated this 4th day of August, 1921. | F. 0. HELLSTROM Attorney for Plainti Bismarck, N. D. 2-19, ! The Discretions of Momus. “Do “yon think that the world ‘ts suffering from a dearth of humor?” “No.” replied Senator Sorghum. | “The sense of humor is abundant, but it has to be suppresséd. You have to be careful not to laugh when you feel | Tike it for fear of offending somebody .| with political intluence.” TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS * did appreciate his thought, she used 8-18-1 wk to sit for long, lonely hours and con- peepee: Ee eNO Call 513 Thirteenth St. | __8-15-5t/_or Phone 617R. 8-17-3t} ‘ . | FOR SALE = bx8 fl Brown Rug. | Freckles and His Friends Phone 569W. S. S. Boise JHE VERY IDEA! IT-LEAVE ae PT ALONE. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS PAGE SEVEN L's So Simple to Hele: WITH THIS HOSE! IT'S BEYOND REPAIR! HELEN, | CAN sider her folly. What difference was it then whether it was a vase or'a French ‘basket, hollyhocks or helio- trope. . She was willing to confess that the hollyhocks and vases would have been better. 3 It was as if after having walked through all of the years, she suddenly went airplaning and: could see below the panorama of her life’s achieve- ments—the wreckage of love by lack cen Oats, No. 3 white, No. No, 1 amber durum .... n You GOT ME ALL WET! WELL, SEE IF You CAN FIX THE FRONT PB DOORBELL! 'T FIX THIS BELL, THERE'S A SHORT CIRCUIT SOME PLACE! WELL,HELPLESS, WHY DON’T You LENGTHEN 27 1-8 to 27 7-8 nts. Barley, 40 to 59 cents. Rye, No 2, 95 1-4 to 96 1-4 cents, Flax, No 1, $2.02 to $2.04. BISMARCK GRAIN (K ished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, August 19. 1 dark northern .. $1.28 98 of appreciation. No, 1 mixed durum . J 91 RET ee No. 1 red durum . 80 TR No. 1 flax 1.69 | MARKE' No, 2 flax . » 1.64 ? — #|No. 2 rye .. 78 PRICES SHOW STEADINESS —~ MINNEAPOL LouR ‘hica or Vex rice haste bs Dutbes eng Ngee, Aug. 19 Wheat prices) Minneapolis, Aug. 19.—Hlour 25 shows @ steadiness today then! cents lower. In carload lots $7.75 to has been the rule, of late. Country} g¢5y a py; Shipments 64,181 bar- offerings were light. Opening quota-} ois Bran unc hanged, $14 to $15. tions which varied trom unchanged to a half-cent higher were followed by a BY ALLMAN | CAN'T ‘DO ANYTHING) | SUPPOSE NOT, AFTER) DON'T Do HATs FIRST “| THING You KNow NOv'LL BREAK mode THe market held 3-4 cents higher ~; ST. PAUL South ‘St. ceipts, 1,700. steers or Common butcher and med | Butcher cows and few Seconds, $4. city butchers, $7.50 choice stockers and steady. Common 4 weak, Hog _ receipts, about 25 cents h lower. Best pig’ Sheep receipts tive lambs to pack mostly $4.50. MIN Minneapolis, Aug ceipts 3884 cars com a year ago. CG: $1.89 3-4. Septemb cember $1.23. No 1 dark norther te set back and then by a rally to afove yesterday’s finish range and closed firm, unchanged to LIVESTOCK, Paul, Aug. 19. No good or choice heet mostly, $5 to $6.50; few up to heife’ gleady, practical pac Few selected vealers to wes, mo: EAPOLIS GRAIN h No. 1 northern $1.34 3-4 to Corn No. 3 yellow, 46 to 47 cents, “See that my paint student ar’ clion to any ethe ‘ying to become fan lines of Rosa Bonheu know about the idea special picture painted you know what T mean, 0 | thing that will let the oils Know the other is reach artistic heights. many acquaintances helpful e: within a narrow care ho: sald Cattle re- she-stock here beef ¥ dium heifers largely Ker top, $7. to $8. Good and feeders nominally and medium kind almost everywhere.” Average, .75 cents Among the curious 5 Malay peninsula studie of the London ers, markable for its sudd without the aid of lis specimen to London an 19—Wheat re-|' amined It that he dis pared to 212 cars head, a kind of. nose in it, wag the leaping bent back under the ab .denly released it sent ing. er $1.24 3-4; De- mn $1.45 to $1.69. Tag's Off-Day! GOOD GRACIOUS! GET OFF MOTHER'S BREAD Box THIS <INSTANT ! quick! “Well, ige of ideas meet students who know of the idea Zoological one called the Jantern-fly, which is High Sign of Art. ure on the outside of | Gertrude, the that's my ine r student: who's ous along. . ‘There's no on the box, it + , but just some- ‘ellow tollers in striving also to In this way made and a ults. We Insect With Spring-Board Nose. of the; insects d by a member is society len leaps wings. only after the observer had carried a nd carefully ex- covered that a curious projection on the front of its with a crease organ. When domen and sud- the insect fly- By Blosser Z,) ! | ° == yar oath Ze Nd {4 on 0 az, “MY KITE ALONE = GET AWAY FRoM THERE! t \ WHEN I GET T’ HEAVEN iG fC SWUCKST T SDOSE TMEV'LL SAY, "TAG, KEEP , YER HANDS OFF THAT the | nd happens to | Stories of zie Great Scouts —reten ©, Western Newspaper Union. | OLD JIM BRIDGER, TELLER OF “TALL YARNS” | “Yes sir, up thar in the Yellowstone iT seed peetrified trees a-growin’ with | pectrified birds on ’em a-singin’ peet- rified songs,” onee declared old Jim | Bri ger, scout, trapper and fur trad- yer, He was one of the first white }men to visit the natural wonders of ; What is now Yellowstone — National | park. After his return he gave an account of what he had seen to an eastern | | magazine writer. ‘Two of the writer's articles were published. ‘Then the édi- | | tor refused to print any more, saying | | that his readers would not believe | | such Baron Munchausen tales, Ev- | ‘thing the old trapper had told the] magazine writer was true, and when | Bridger found that his stories were no longér believed, he began telling oth-| er yarns which did not always stick | so closely to the truth, One day in the Yellowstone, he said} he ‘came upon an elk grazing within | easy gun range. He fired, but the elk neither dropped nor seemed alarmed | by the shot. The scout reloaded and fired again—with the same result. Then he became angry. Picking up a he threw it at the animal. The; rock struck some invisible barrier and dropped to the ground, When Bridg- er reached the place where it lay he; found that he had been shooting at! the elk through a mountain of pefectly transparent crystal! Bridger was the first white man to | see the Great Salt Lake in Utah, This was in 1824, and he told some won- devful stories about the lake. One of them was about the great snowfall in the winter of 1880, which covered the whole t Lake valley to a depth of 70 feet. All of the buifalo perished. “When spring came, all IT had to do was to tumble ‘em into the lake an’ 1 had enough pickled buffalo for my- ‘self an’ the whole Ute nation for years,” Bridger declared. / Bridger was known as “Old G tor “The Old Man of the Moun by his fellow trappers, and the Crow Indians called him | Blanket Chief.” | “Gineral, whar you don't see no Tn! | juns, thar they're sartin to be thiek- est.” he once told Gen, Heury Carring- ton, and the general found it good ad- | vice, When the engineers for the Union Pacific railroad were uncertain j about the easiest route through the | Rocky mountains, they sent for Old] Jim. He took a piece of old brown paper and with a piece of charcoal marked the route whieh they were to follow, Later they found that he had not made a single mistake In mapping the route. Bridger died in 1881, and s City. | | | i | | | | rock, { {s buried in Ka Stories Of > Hino Great Scouts etn ©, Western Newspaper Union. OLD JIM BAKER’S DUEL WITH A FRENCHMAN Next to Uncle Bill Hamilton's duel | with the Englishman, the strangest one in frontier pry was that which Old Jim Baker, friend of Kit Carson, ; Jim Bridger and Uncle Dick Wootton, fought with a Frenehinan in the early days of Wyoming. Baker had estab: lished a trading store where the Ore- gon tra sed the Green river. He was doing a good business with th emigrants passing over the trail until a Frenchman opened up a rival store nearby. A quarrel between the two men soon resulted. The quarrel ended a challenge. Both men ran to their seized pistols and from the doors of their cabins, which were only 100), yards apart, they began firing at each other, Neither was hurt at the first shot, for both the Frenchman and Old Jim had been drinking heavily and their aim was unsteady. j Then the duelists retired rooms, loaded their guns vin’ and, | taking another drink to keep up their} courage, they opened fire once more, | The bullets flew wild. For several hours the duel continued, each man becoming more unsteady all the time. At last, finding themselves unable to hit each other, they gave it in disgust, and the oddest duel in his- tory ended. Baker was born in Illinois in 1808.) tind went west with a fur-trading| party about 18: Old Jim was a mighty hunter, At one time he was attacked by two full- grown grizzly bears. The old scout was armed only with his long hunting knife, but after a téerrifie struggle, in whieh. he was almost torn to pic | he killed both bears, Jn 1857’ Baker was 4 ghide ‘and scout for Gen, Albert Sidn Johns- ton on his expedition against the Mor- mons in Utah.- Returning from that trip, he wandered back to Colorado und became one of the first settlers to their up of Denver, Later in life Old Jim drift- ed to northern Colorado. On the banks of the Little e river he built a block house, which became a rendezvous for all of his old trapping companions and a place of refuge when the Indians went on the war- ath, ker died in 1898 after a life that had been filled with more adventure} than that of any other man of his} time, excepting possibly. Old Jins| Bridger, whose close friend he was. From 50 to 150 ban ‘from 40 to 109 pounds, may be found bunch. . weighing | growing in bank one A Philadelph state of Pennsylvania year on its property. rreerecnrerne: BETTER ROADS & eee GIVE CONCRETE ROADS CARE All Contraction Joints Should Be Cleaned and Filled With Hot Tar Twice a Year, With the increase and use of con- crete roads and pavement the prob- lem of proper maintenance becomes. one of prime importance. All cen- traction Joints should be given atten- tion at least onee a year, and where the traffic is very heavy, this be done at least twice eve . The months of April and October will usually be found to be suitable for this work. All joints should be en lly cleaned and filled with hot Splendid Type of Concrete Road. tar, whose melting point, as deter- mined by the “cube in water” method is about 105 degrees Fahrenheity: It is important that tests be made‘ to determine the melting point of the ma- terial to be used. If the melting point is found to be too high, it may be re- duced by the addition of creosote; if too low, it may be brought to the de- sired Consistency by the addition of tar of a melting point higher than 105 degrees, DEATH TRAPS ON ROAD SIDES Highway Authority Gondemns Present Type of Construction—Not Suf- ficiently Wide. The present type of highways is equipped with death tr on each side, says George ©. Diehl, chairman of the good roads board of the Amer- ican Automobile association, ih an article in| Motor. Tle condemns the present ditch em of drainage and advocates a system of underground drain pipes, making ditchless roads of our highw “The highways of the future,” Mr, Diehl, “must h roadw: of sufficient width not merely for safety, but for the comfortable confidence of the driver, A car owner may come through alive at the end of day's run on a popular thoroughfare, but the condition of his nerves after he has balanced himself 0 times an hour yawning ditch at his right ing cars at his left, thing that need not be dese the average driver, because he has been there. “Fear of an open ditch breeds over- caution that drives men to the other extreme and brings about col On fairly: wide roadwa with deep ditches drivers are reluctant to use only one-half of the roadway, since A momentary slip means disaster., Al- lowance for a two or three-footsmar- gin of safety by dr between their ears and the ditch reduces the effec- tive width four or five fe Safety and comfort demand the discontinu- ance of deep ditches. i “On a pleasant Sunday afternoon in the touring season, probably most of these people on the read, Every effort should be nade to e for their fety. ‘The roads ought to be made afe as liman ingenuity can make ays as them, instead of being fitted with death traps on each side,” he con- cludes, FARM-TO-MARKET HIGHWAYS Definite Plan Inaugurated by Ilinois Agricuitural Association for Better Roads. The roads and Ie; Ative commit- tees of the inois Agricultur tion have started on a defi imi to get more aad be roads for Tir The assor ¥ors the adoption of the patrol system of maintain@mg roads on a large scale. Farmers want good roads to their markets and th Pai them now, A trip to Wisconsin, studying their pa- trol system of maintaining roads, re- veals the fact that they surpa TH nois and Iowa on good roads and at less expense than we are building a few miles of concrete roads. Detriment to Rural Progress. We need more food roads. There is no one factor which retards agri- cultural development more, or which more detrimentally affects a rural spirit of progress, than the present al- most intolerable roz Dollar Per Foot. Pennsylvania is spending $5,000 a mile—almost a do! a ronning‘foot— for maintensace. 00 per mile, or about $12 per runt ‘oot, for the construction of st RS TRIBUNE WANTS—FOR RESULTS —————————— R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C, Chiropractor Consuhation Free Buite 9. 11—Lucas Block—Phone 268

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