The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 17, 1921, Page 7

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z WANTED—Strong ‘girl or T middie age WANTED. Wonaie or girl ve ew FOR SALE—A good home, FOR SALE SALE—Six rooms, a good house =. Ew | SEER MUSIC LOVERS—These long. even- FOR SALE—A "No. FOR SALE— FOR SAL FOR SALE—Carload good solid cab- FOR SALE—Regi Sa age! motor; SS amen and automotive electricity Complete] equipment ‘in al! departments. :Na- tionally endorsed. Write for free Catalog. Sate. Auto School: Aber- deen, S. D. 10-17-1t =~ URLP WANTED. -FEMALB _ WANTED>Enperienced ‘girl, for ge! Mrs. O. W. eral housework. Apply ni Phone 751. Roberts, 117 Main St. woman. for’ general * haute work. Phone‘ 176. = LW. —Detange Phone 12, GPT YOUR STORM Windows put on now. ‘Phone .692-M. 110-18-1w | $4 WANTED—A limited numbpr of table Tos tA FOR RENT—Four room cottage .com- DRY STORAGF—Store your. furni- loa STORAGE are cores nice FOR SALE—5 room house, also 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNB* HELEN, THERE 1S ONE. OF NEW AUTOMOBILES | WAS TELLING: YOu. jadies mink fur collar, Leave at’ Lahr Motor Sales Co. for. reward. 10-14-3t beward: Se east AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES WANT TO SBLL ‘OR ‘TRADE—A Baby Grand. Chevrolet touring car, in good condition. What have you to offer, Will consider’-a Ford car: J. Blinderman, phone. 8' $10°13th st. t 10-15-1w pletely furnished. Close in. Phone 612. ture. Rates reasonable. Phone 613. Close , $2.50 per dry, place.. month. . room « house. Small payment down > balance: like rent? Real Estate 10-1 15-3t' “NO ‘INTEREST, 00 down and $40 a month for 71-2 years buys a quarter 2ection located only.one, mile from the best dairy farm at, New Salem. Millio tons ot WATCH Your STEP. HERE, HOSE * Uninteytional Gallantry, \s"'so i SUDDEN! poarders. 418 5th: St. ~-10-13=8t W. r St.. Mrs. Anderson. non SAT OR REN? FOR SALE-Moiemt Dasa. choice either busines: five rooms andy, ed and practically ‘n ment, large. inclosed: and sc porch, close. to high: and, gtade| school. Immediate pgssession gly- en. For termg and particulary call evenings at 701 Sth St., corner Ave: rooms, strictly modern, garage, gas stove; ‘let. us tell you about this home; . terms; immediate posse: sion. Phone. 961. Henry & Henry. 1 FOR ¢-SALE—North half’ Lounabur Outlet; four acres within the city sien ot Mrs. G. Mackin, 1908, 19tn NT ,| FOR RENT Furn FOR, RENT—Two rooms for, :ho) okt on Rosger, will rent $: coal thrown into the bargain. NO INTEREST! J. Henry Kling, owner. Phone 6! \ ___ 10-8-20 limits, ° broken ‘and fenced. $800. In- 10-15-5¢ Booms rox iphed, 3 light ‘housekeeping in house.’ 111 Mandan‘avénue. ‘Phony 672-LW. © Joab tw, n 14th’ bet ‘and, 15th se Fable ewed alb'weight BISMARCK GRAIN to $3.50. FOR SALE—NEW RBungaiow, “rooms annd bath, absolutely modern, warm air heat, inside finish as perfect as a new plece of furniture from the factory, screened in porch and everything complete that goes with a modern” house... Terms ‘to reliable party. Phone 28W or 843. ‘ 10-15-1w FOR RENT—Three modern furnis “high school and cavtel. 1, 339- W, cea FOR RENT: Scand light house- (Furnished by. Russell- Miller Co.) isismarck,: October 17, 1921. No.1 dark northern . No. 1 amber durum ‘No, 1 mixed-durum . No. 1 red durum Close _ to Call 907 6th 1 St In modern house. keeping rooms in modern -house. Call 417 10th. St. Phone. pee 10-17-1W seven Tooms, house about six years old, owner to leave, immediate posses- ion, $2,800; te FOR. RENT—Room in sion, $ very easy terms; big eae bargain. Phone . 961. Henry. Henry. & 10-17 -3t FOR RENT—Fu ished oe sehen ed rooms for light housekee “MINNEAPOLIS GRAIN Biemarck Business Colle Minneapolis, Oct. .17—Wheat _re- orn | shouse, | ceipts: 898 ‘cars compared to 752 cars post ‘Office. Phofie| a year ai 832-M,_or.311 2nd: St. HOUSE FOR RENT—Small furnished | FOR ; RENT—Warm, ‘well fara J. D. McDonald 211 2nd. St. __10-17-3t house. Phone 634-M. 10-35-3t| ‘Cash No. 1 Northern $1.27 38 to .80 818; Dec. $1.20 3-3; May $1.20 ia. IRIE Corn ‘No.'3 yellow, 37 cents. room in. modern. hi Phone 482-LR.\ = ROOM=FOR’ REN’ FOR RENT—Six room modern house ish housekeep! si tr > 2 on twelfth street. Inquire at 822 ‘Main St. 10-13-5t an b6 ikea tor| . OatsNo. 2 white, 25 7-8 to 26 5 Call at 118: 3nd cou. fi A0AdIw arley 31 to 51 cents, Rye No. 2, 80 to 80 1-2 cents. FOR RENT—Two or three room un-| FOR RENT-Roota in abaya furnished flat. Call at 801 7th St. Flax No, 1, $1.72 to $1.77. five ‘bi RE NOSES tA 10-11-f) in nice, location, all: modern~except hath, .at $3,200; terms, $600. cash, balance.to suit. Phone 961. Henry & Henry. : 10-17-3t ‘ings you want new music. Why. 2 exchange your old reco! sell. the -non-scratch © Phonograph | 415 Broadway. Record 1 combination, |, kitchen: stove for gag, coat or wood. Also one Singer sewing machine, new. Must be sold on account of leaving town, 404 11th are ifty direct current Dui can meters, \5.amp., best ‘condition or will exchange for 5, amp. al nating current meters, Write vil- lage clerk, Zap, N._D. i—All my ‘furniture, beds, rugs, ete., in my house out at the bridge. Will also sell house. See Mr. Cubbage. Phone 952; home. out at the house at all times. 10. $1. by bage delivered at $3.50 a hundred Pounds. . Bismarck Hide & eae Co. Phone 73 Spring male pigs ena he Hy Write for prices. E. Hurr. Sterling, N. D. 10-14- ik FOR SALE—E£lectric Light Plant FOR SALE—2 ruj in town of 700 population. For infor- mation write to Beulah Electfic Co., Beulah, _10-111W gs, baby carriage, riage, oil stove and oven small Victrola See Mr. Deal at tho Bridge or cal 952. 10 15-3t 35 25 FOR SALE—Hard coal heating stove and Oliver Typewriter. Rembrandt Studio, 119 1-2 qt 1-2 Fifth St, 10-14-3t FOR SALE =MGieaue range with ‘water. front, in gaod condition. Call at 518 5th St. FOR SALE CHEAP—Lignite heating FOR SALE CHEAP-[liree good poul FOR: SALE—Upright piano, for $75, Ue Day Phone 100 Stove, size 19. Phone 510-W. /Call at 628 2nd. St. 10-15-2t tables complete. Sixth St. Pool Hall. to Phone 320. 10-17-2t if taken a once. DAY PHONE 246 * PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS © Licensed Embalnet in‘ ~ BISMARCK FURNITURE COMPANY ‘ fern house at 300 Sth oth FoR: RENT—Room a aia home; __ Close in. Phone 439-J. FOR F RENT—Modera room, 219 7th a & gall |e a MATERIAL SETBACKS. tN WHEAT: Chicago, Oct. 17--Material setbac ‘owing more-or less to the threatened 10-17-1w| Seneral strike of railroad employes. Opening quotations from 5-8: to 2-12 cents lower with De- cembey $1.14 to $1.14 3-4, a 17 1-2-to $1.19 were follows slight supplemental losses -and Minneapolis, .W } changed, red eres China | ‘Bran $12 to $13. ; Chicago, Oct. 26,000, Slow to lower. ‘ iHog receipts 31,000. Mostly 25 to|/~ erage. Sheep receipts 44,000. Fat lambs cents higher. ae ‘South St. Paul, Oct. 17—Cattle re- ceipts 13,000. Generally strong. Grass beet s‘eers $3 to $6. Best butcher cows and heifers bulk $3.25. to $4.75. mostly $2.25 to $3.00. 10-17-3t. | $2.75, bulls up to $4.50 or better. Veal calves opening steady. Bulk of bost lights; $9. Stockers and feeders strods, bin | $4.00 to $5.50. (Hog receipts’ 11,500. * wane $6 to $8.10. Bulk $6.75 to $7.90, Sheep receipts 16,000, Mostly cents lowes. Bulk desirable native: “WEBB BROTHERS Embalmers » - Licensed Embalmer in Charge - SES NIGHT PHONES 246-887 or at“lehat ‘mike sudden movements, 10-14-3t have long been the subject of un- scientific, curlosity. It 1s explained “1o-14-3¢| that: thelr mative power is; as in the hos | case of; the’ famous: ‘Mexican “jump- a tiny worm—the larva of whose quick’ turns disturb the gall's center. of gravity and cause ft. to, “jump.” arm modern Foo: ae ing bein, Many’ Native Negro Languages. Natiye Negro languages are a mar- us| ele There. are about eight hundred, and more than one hundred have been reduced; to writing, said a missionary who hag just returned. from three years’ travel over Africa, We know varied} not for how many generations these nguages have been passed from lip ear, from parent to child, and from to tribe. the price of wheat took place today: which something of a reaction. MINNEAPALIS FLOUR , Oct, .17—Flour un- Shipments 83,804 barrels. __More than two million acres of na- tional forest lands were burnel by forest fires in 2210. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK 17—Cattle . receipts cents higher. than Saturday's av- MMM GEE, BUT to 50 cents lower. (Fat sheep 25 ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK ‘steady to fanners. av) eutters Bologna bulls. to $2; Medium tu .vus vege ‘Mostly steady strong with Saturday’s average. sitable pigs mostly. $8.25. a 5 > Twish b-MAONT EATEN WAT PIECE Funeral Directors Charge’ : Night Phone 100 or. 687 paad-Dakota lambs $7.50. ‘Bulk desire. | Freckles and His Friends : T LIME CHOCOLATE, WHY- iT DIONT: “VAMPS” WHO: oon ‘MADE HISTORY By JAMES C. YOUNG.” WHO TRAINED A TYRANT. XE of'the most dangerous women in the ancient world was» Pop- paea Sabla, wife of Ne Under her tutelage he emerged from youtlr'as @ profligate and tyrant. History shows. that before? their, meeting, tio other Roman enine; sever had ‘a, better chanée of making good on his imperial |' job, and Wnty ir failed 's0 miserably. When Nero fete into power at the age of sevente Rome was just be- coming acquainted with the;luxury of Greece and jthp, Orignt.- But he had been’ ralsed! Mie ‘a/Sparten. by his mother Agrippina, who made him em- peror Alinost single handed. The rig- orous discipline ‘of his ‘mother pre- sumably should, have. made. Nero a brave, simple-living man, like the Ro- mans of old,” . Instead, he quickly turned to luxurious, ways of life. Then he met and toved Acte, an Asiatic woman. Agrippina forbade him to carry.on the affair. Nero balked. He was emperor and not a mere boy any more. 5 The love affair with Acte estranged Nero and his wife, Octavia, whom he had married as.a matter of statecraft. Then ‘he fell under the sway of Pop-j paea- Sabina and quickly abandoned Acte. Poppaea also was married, but as mistress to Nero she chided him for subjection to his mother, Nero lost’ his head and set about doing whatever Poppaea bid. She was older than he, but beautiful and seductive— vampire in very truth. And she meant to make herself empress. Agrippina stood in the way, and Poppaea lost no chance to rub salt upon the wounds in Nero’s pride. Her promptings led him to his first and perhaps his great- est crime, the murder of his own moth- He’s Never Satisfied. © er. When ‘this deed Octavia still remained. Jong., She was banished, « de Poppaea became. empress. BY ALLMAN CONTRIVANCE TO. ‘Tad beén done, | But not for) then’ mur- ; Nero, a prey to excesses of every kind, began to verge upon madness, He had«many of the most prominent men executed, including even Seneca, | the philosopher gnd tutor of his child- hood, Then Rome was burned and the whole of the ancient world whis- | The em- | pered that Nero had fired it. peror began reconstruction on a grand Seale. and actually accomplished much in that way. But his race was run. His last supporters fell away, andy one nighé the praetorian guard de- |, sérted its post, leaving the palace un- guarded. darkness, alone. Nere crept away: in the| The senate met and| forfeited his life, when he committed suicide, at the age of thirty-one. [t-was not Poppaea who laid him) Which acted gs a bumper to prevent at rest, but the gentle Acte, who alone! the wheels running off the back of the claimed his body. The egg dance, now confined chiefly to Spain, among the people of Vii-,, lencla, was a once popular diversion l¢ Holland and | in’ England, - Scotland, other parts of Europe. A number of eggs: were arranged in a_ prescribed form upon the dancing floor, and among them a blind-folded dancer moved as best he might, to music, the @bject being to execute an intricate dance without breaking the eggs. The music, like the arrangement of the eggs, also was prescribed. Great Desire for Understanding. I believe that. the greatest. desire of every human -heart in the world Is just this: that is at the root of all the great religions in the gvorld—of all great emotional activity; swhate tinual hunger of’ the hil f neat get even with its own empertancey 14 | put it straight and orderéd, so’ that it can understand instead of being be- | wildered.—John Drinkwater. THE NO; BUT IF T HADNT: ~ MAKE You'SiCK, MTEN 1(T 1 COULD “STi sea rT o WHY, FRECKLES: WHAT ON EARTH IS MATTER ‘The desire to understand ; its own experience, That is a hunger | very ting con-:! it 4 STRAP-IROW WORK UNDER CAR Runway Is. Easily Put Together and It Will Pay for Itself In Very Short Time. ‘MACHINE QUICKLY ELEVATED ‘incenvenienes of Crawling Under. neath Automobile Is Done Away With and Work Done With Minimum Amount of Labor. When trouble occurs either with the under side of the automobile motor, or the rear end of the car, It is some- j what Inconvenient to work without a | pit. To partially overcome this condi- ‘ tion a garage man built a sort of run- way, a8 illustrated, by which the’end ; of a car could be quickly elevated i about two feet off the floor, thus al- | lowing fairly easy access to the parts. Two wedge-shaped pieces. were con- | structed of heavy spruce timber, five | feet long by. two feet high In the rear, | The inclined ends of’ the timbers were fastened together by lag screws and the vertical backs secured to each other by a length of strap tron, The horizontal’ surface of the uppermost | timber was hollowed out to receive the ; tire and the strap iron was continued | | CROSS-MEMBER el Run Your Car Up the Incline and Work Beneath It. With Ease, The Contrivance. Is Easily Made and Pays for Itself.in'a Short Time. outward {n a corresponding curve | support. i Much ‘Time Saved. The car can. be run up this Incline either by power or by hand, and the necessary work done with a minimum int of inconvenience and labor. course it ig not necessary to men- tlon that It saves the repair man’s back and nerves.—Thornton Hallett in Popular Science Monthly. } DON'TS TO MOTORIST IN SUMMER SEASON Don’t park yuk: car over night under trees, for the follage, ald- ed by night mists, has a deterior- ating effect and stains the finish. Certain trees throw off a dew which, if allowed to remain on an unprotected surface, will ruin the varnish, Don’t allow any grense, oll, Forts ro maronst | “| GARELESSNESS WILL LESSEN TIRE’S LI 4 ii Motorists Continue to Disregard Simsle Rules. iy Undsrinflation, Scraping Along Curb Stones and Bumping Into Curbs and Obstructions Are Among Common Abuses. Tires have improved so much in qual- Ity in recent years that even when abused a good tire gives such a good mileage that the motorist is. usually, satisfied that he got kis money's worth, But motorists continue to show dis- regard for a few simple rules, and their carelessness greatly increuses thelr tlre bills. The three ways in which this carelessness manifests It- self chiefly are underinflation, scrap- Ing along curb stones and bumping Into curbs and obstructions, accord- ing to the observations of the service department of one of the largest tire Improper inflation costs more that all other faults put together, By thc simple expedient of taking the troubl. once a week to make sure that ead! tlre Is suffictently inflated, a ca: owner will add amazingly to the mile age he gets from his tires. , Under this head it is well\\to repedi the old admonition the tires should be pumped to the same figure in summeé f° as In winter, The expansion of the ait in the ‘tires in hot weather ts so in finitesimal that It should be entirely disregarded, and the tire pumped. uj to the prescribed figure, Scraping along a curb Is an exceed- ingly common form of tire abuse, An evidence of the commonness. of this practice may be found by noticing the number of tires that are peeled or scraped on the outer side of the tire while the inner side is in perfect con-. dition, Bumping a tire Into a curb, particu- larly when underinflated, is one of the most serious forms of mistreatment, for It causer breaks In a fabric founda- tion which quickly bring the tire’s use- fulness to an. end, AUTOMOBILE | @GOSSIP.B , Motor vehicle registration in Al» glers exceeds 11,000. ey In British India, there is, at present, an oversupply of automobiles, oc @ Shanghai leads ail other cities in China with the registration of 5,000 motor vehicles. os 8 Seven different kinds of steel are used for the production of American- made automobiles, eee In Tokyo, the capital of Japan, with population of 2,700,000. souls, there are only 5,000. automobiles, se 8 The Wnited States government is now receiving more than’ $6,000,000 in automobile taxes every 30 days. eee Most prominent of motor clubs in Brazil is the Associaticno Automo- billsta Brasileria of Rio de Janelro. eee Since January 1, 2,200 automobiles were stolen in New York city. This is at the rate of about fifteen cars a day. see The federal government provides au- tomobiles for the departments of state, interior, labor and the attorney general. for, aided by the heat of the sun, they will dry and crack the finigh, Don't allow mud spots to stay on the finish for any length of time for they will leave a mark that cannot be removed without injury to the varnish, 00 OO OHO nO orton erorte ie i; ¢ é i jete., to remain on surface of car $ Co Oe terOeOnes leneeenen ROPE STEERS FROM AUTOMOBILE eee? Since January 1 permits have been issued in Pl:iladelphia for the erection of 566 garages, at au estimated cost of about $1,000,000, eee Motor garage repitirmen in Norway must be experienced in the construc- tion of American, Dutch, English, French, German and Italian ears. The wild and woolly West is no longer so wild nor so woolly: Nellie, the star mount of Deadwood Dick, is no longer a horse, but an automobile. i photograph shows a cowboy roping steers en a ranch near Marfa, Texas. The The territory of Hawaii consists of jmine, inhabited islands, besides a number of smaller ones, ( During 1920 sapphires were the most j favored gems. Most sapphires come from the state of Montana, \New York has a boarding house for blind men. ————————— RS ENGR D.CPAG. |.

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