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Classified Advertising ‘Rates linsertion. 25 words or UNdEF ....seseeeevere’ 2 insertions. 25 words or / under veveeeeeee 85 3 insertions 1 week, 26 words or under 2.26 Ads over 25 words, 2c addi- tional per word, CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES 65 Cents Per Inch classified ads are cashes in ance. Copy should be re- ceived by 12 o'clock to ineure insertion same day. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT a TO REJECT ANY COPY 25° words oF SUBMITTED THE BISMARCK TRIBU: PHONE 32 AN SEEREESR COED ES senna nero HELP WANTED—FEMALE Competent girl for ge C. Dursem: perienced girl fo Mrs. ¢ -|A FULL STOCK of hardware and! eral house or phone FWANTE work, Girl for general house- Phone 458, 20 Ave. B. 10-5 tf ced waitress at 10-4-tf HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED, learn Barber at Fargo in new college of ‘nous Moler System. Special re- duced rate first 20 students. Big demand, Barbers $25.00 to $50.00 weekly. Transfers and employ- ment service all branches U. S. A. aad Canada. Call or write for Beau- tui free catalogue and special of- ' Moler Barber College, 216 \. D. Branch- ¢ Ave. Winnipeg, and ollet_ Ave, Minneapolis.” tD—Two young men. Steady F, Jaszkowiak, 421 12th St. 9-28-tf the Sv 107 N job. OTS FOR SALE—Choice lot West end of City. Write Tribune No. 652. 9-25-tf SALESMAN AND COLLECTOR ANT ‘dy work. Call_or write Singer Sewing Machine Co., Bis D. 10-1-2w, SITUATIONS WANTED GIRL WANTS position to help with house work and take care of baby. Call phone 279J. 10-5-3t _ ont a One new gauntlet grey kid Return to Tribune for re- 10-6-2t LOST glove. ward, BUSINESS CHANCES BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY — Store keeper leaving Bismarck on ac- count of educational reasons wishes to sell his stock of goods fifttures and home near by. He has and is doing a good business and the over-head expenses are small. Is not located down town, Write Tribune No: 657. 1w ‘~ FOR SALE OR RENT HOUSES AND FLATS FOR SALE—-A barg: 7 room part- ly modern house, including 4 bed rooms, in fine condition, all mod- ern except bath, with nearly enough furniture for whole house, includ- ing piano and fine kitchen range, with work shop and storage room in rear, well located, in western part of city, for $3000, ome half cash and balance on terms. A fine res- idence lot in west part of city for sale, east front, on water, sewer and gas, has some trees and is close in. Geo. M. Register. 10-2-3t R SALE—On very reasonable terms, 7 room house with den, sleeping porch, and sun parlor, 4 bedrooms, all built in features, double garage fine lawn and shade trees. On pavement, close in, 4 Blocks from school and post office, If interested write No. 629, Tri- bune. tf FOR | ‘ufnished apartment, fully equipped for light house- keeping, electric range for cooking, warm and cozy. Plenty of sun- shine from 5 windows. Geo. W. L&tle, Phone 794W. FOR RENT—For win’ » 8 room house, cement cellar, fur- nace. Bath room, wash room, gar- chicken house. Inquire of J. J. Jackman, Bismarck, N. D. 9-24-tf FURNISHED house for sale or rent in first class cgndition, close to new school, nice location. 413 Ray- mond St. Phone -942R or 862J. 10-6-1W FOR SALE OR RENT—Seven room modern house. =Phone 743J. 1019 ) Twelfth street. 'P, O. B, 187, Bis- marck, N. D. 10-5-3t FOR RENT—4° room furnished house, modern, ¢all 728-3¥d Street for information, a 10rd-Lw, FOR RENT—7 room house, Weat ena of City. Partly modern. Wai -" bune No. 652. he sy: 9-28-tf ‘OR SALE OR RENT—Three-room cottage, 416 South 10th St. Phone 413, a | 10-2-2 ‘Gly RENT—Strictly jnodern ?-room nished house. Call 882-R, ‘OR RENT—/ apartments, FOR RENT—Fiver Ine quire 214 Sth St. 0-8-1w AUTOMOBILE—MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE—Dodge Coupe, and furni- ture. Rose Anyone liking to rent apartment will find this furniture very suit- able. 10-4-1w FOR SALE— Dodge touring car, ly equipped. Good as new. * Ci at MéKensie’ Hotel Barber Shop. ~ = 10-6-8¢ ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—Nicely. furnished room in modern home. % block from No. ward school and 4 blocks from Capitol and High School. Phone 931W. 1009 Sth St. : 9-7-tf FOR RENT—One large room, in mod- ern house, on grafind floor, for light housekeéping. ‘ Also for sale, coal and gas range, and Universal | Range. 487-W. Call 623 7th St, or phone 10-5-1w FO RRENT—Modern furnished room. | Only three blocks north of postof- fice. Rent reasonable. Phone 322-M, with hot and cold water and large closet. 422 Fifth St. FOR RENT—Comfortably furnished room at 614 6th St. Phone 22 10-6-3t 1002- 10-6-1t FURNISHED ROOM for rent. 5th Street. MISCELLANEOUS implements, invento: bout $8,600, it, with large territory and good trade, agents for International lines for past ten » Health conditions reason for selling, No trades considered. Write Tribune No. 608, ane 8-8tf OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT—Down town, good location. Ground floor, free telephone and janitor ser- vice, Window space optional. Ready for immediate possession. Phone 565. 9-18-tf WOULD LIKE to communicate with parties going to Los Angeles tak- ing household goods or car, willing to share freight car. Rose Apts. M. Phone 792. 10-4-1w FOR SALE—A pool room, bowling alley, and barber shop in connec- tion, best pool room business in town. Box 124 Parshall, N. D. e 9-15-4w FOR SALE—Two Matphy( folding beds, one jardiniere with pedestal. Phone 275-W. WANTED—Home for boy of 16, pre- ferably in county. P. 0. Box 10-6-3t CHILD HAS NO SENSE OF PROPORTION Professor Says Children Have No Sense of Proportion Till Eight Years Old —_—- NO PERSPECTIVE Chicago, Oct. 8.—Children four years old have little or no sense of proportion, is the conclusion of Miss Stella McCarty, associate professor of education at Goucher college, fol- lowing a test over a period of three years to gauge the natural artistic impulses ef children between the ages of four and eight. More than 40,000 drawings submit- ted from all parts of the United States were examineg in the test, the result of which has been announced here by. the committee on conserva- tion and advance of the Methodist Episcopal church. Children were al- lowed a free choice of subjects, which included more than 900 topics, with a very, wide range, “The majority of the girls submit- ted drawings of houses and domestic things, while the boys drew on their imaginations more’ and constructed pretentious buildings, Carty, who also is chairman of the Kindergarten, club’ of her city. “After carefully studying all the drawings, I came to the conclusion that children four years old have lit- tle or no sense of proportion. At eight years, about one-fourth of the number had developed it. Only one- eighth of the drawings showed any signs of perspective.” “ NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Matter of the ate of Peter Clooten, Deceased: Notice is hereby given by the.uh- dersigned Chris Bertsch, Jr., Exe- cutor of the Last Will of Peter Cloo- ten, late of. city Bismarck: in the County of Burlet; nd State of North Dakota, deceased, to the cre- ditors of, and all persons havin; claims against, said LH ed, “to. hibit them with the ne v ers, within 6 months, after the publication of this notice, to ereeutge Gy his oftige. {i ee city o1 ismarck in sai ure: County. Dated Oct. 6;:A. D. 1) s CHRIS BERTSCH, JR. Executor: ublication of the 8th d RY. 1938. . A -20-8-16-29.29 First of Oct. NOTICE FOR PRO! TO Ls te Laws of North Dake Board of Managers of the kota Mill and Elevator lon, will until the hour -of 10:00 o'clock Rak on the 18th day of Jai Mi at Drake, North Dakota: 8 posals shall ‘be filed with tary. of this said B Hee de the North, Bagot 1 Grand. Fo uch pro- the Bec- at_his -yf- Mill and Apts. M. Phune 792. | 505 8rd: st. | 10) 10-6-3t { FOR RENT--Single room provided | 10-1tf | % of the amount of-the bid. All. ide shall-be marked: cpRopos. ALS TO PURCHASE DRAKE MILL AND ELEVATOR.” R The Board reserves the right reject any and all bids. ated this’ 3rd day of January A. D. 1923. K. C. NELSON, Secretary to the Board of ried m - 2 to U.S. EXCELS IN USE OR AIRPLANES America Uses Planes for Con- structive Rather ‘Than Destructive Measures OF ECONOMIC BENEFIT — Planes Used to Destroy Pests on €atalpa: Groves; Mail Service; Mapping New York, Oct.8—“While other nations are déveloping air power as | destructive weapon the United States, following its traditional non- military p! , is putting aircraft to work,” reads a report made public by | the- Aeronautical Chamber of Com- | merce, | “The Forest Service is utilizing planes in timber patrol in Oregon and California. The Coast Guard jhas aviators in its employ. The | Coast and Geodetic Survey is remap- |ping sections of coastline from the air, The Smithsonian Institution has found that aerial scientific studies of fisheries can be made admirably. The Jair mail of the Post Office Depart- |ment has operated with increasing | efficiency for the last three and one- jhalf years and only recently began ‘night flying experiments which will j reduce the time of the transconti- nental trip to 30 hours or less. In all of these activities aircraft figure solely as a vehicle performing con- structive service of economic bene- | fit to the nation, | “Considerable interest attaches to experiments now being conducted by the Bureau of Entomology, Depart- ment of Agriculture, in collaboration |with the army air service. In 1921 specially equipped itary planes were utilized to scatter insecticide over a valuable cétalpa grove in Ohio which has been all but destroyeg by caterpillars. The pests were poison- ed by the dust which was sifted down from above and the grove was saved. Early this summer the air service lent _a motor balloon to the Bureau of Entomology and hovering flights were successfully made over gypsy- moth infested orchards ang forests in New Hampshire. “Of even greater significance is the aviation work carried on by B, R. Coad, in charge of the delta labora- tory at Tallulah, La. The south loses rhillions of dollars through the damage wrought to the cotton crops by the boll weevil and other pests. Trials have been going on for more than a year and are proving very satisfactory.” OPENS HEADQUARTERS ae AT DICKINSON Dickinson, Oct. 8—D. J. Price, for the past dozen years engaged. in the furniture and undertaking business at Killdeer, with a branch at Halli- day, will establish headquarters in Dickinson, Nov. 1. Mr. Price an- nounced the change after closing a deal covering a lease of the MGinley building on West Villard street and the purchase of the A. T. Forsyth brick residence on Sims street. He will move his family to Dickinson shortly before November 1, SE earvese ee ay SOLDIER SCARECROW Dymehuxch, England, Oct. 6,—A farmer near here, noticing the crows eating his crops, found the clothes on his scarecrow gone. They were later discovered being worn by a former soldier, who was arrested. AIR SERVICE ~~ TNENGLAND| Suggests That All Lines. Be Connected td Increase Speed of Transportation SHIP TO TRAIN LINES London, Oct. 8—Air transport, land transport and sea transport are all to be linked together by Great Britain, says Sir Samuel Hoare, Brit- ish Air Minister, Four years exper- ience in the operation’ of commercial irways, he says, has led to the con- ction that three things are neces- s to insure the prompt transpor- tation of passengers and mail through the air. “One is the opening up of long, interconnected trans-European air in which the speed of the ane can be fully employed. “Another is a greater id closer cooperation between airways, rail- ways and steamships; and the third is the concentration of national ef- fort in a single corporation. I have every hope that British air enter- prise will become focused in such an undertaking. “Our new service of flying-boats between Southampton and Cherbourg will, for instance, connect at Cher- bourg with incoming liners, so that Atlantic passengers can travel by air from that port to Southampton. “It is intended, also, in develop- ments impending with European air- i that the time-tables of day- ng airplanes and night railway expresses shall both be part of a general scheme. “Take, for example, a long trunk- route across Europe. The airplanes, after carrying mails during daylight hours, will alight before darkness at points where loads can be transfer- red to night mail-trains. It will be possible next morning to divert mails again from earth to air. “It is by such means that airplane transport, and particularly air-mail transport, can be made a far great- er convenience to the public than is the case today.” FUTURE FOR RGYPT LOOKS VERY BRIGHT Observers Say Country Is Tranquil Under Govern- ment by Natives ENGLAND WATCHING Cairo, Egypt, Oct. 8.—Egypt, was never so tranquil or so full of prom- ise for the future as it is today, in the opinion of disintetested observ- ers in this city, Great Britain's de- cision to “stand clear” and give the Egyptains a fair chance “to run the country themselves has proved a wise measure, it is averred. It has allayed anti-foreign feeling, put an end to the subversive activities of revolutionary organizations, and created generally a much clearer po- litical atmosphere. Meantime General Allenby, the British High Commissioner, is keep- ing a vigilant eye on the course of events. If Egypt finds the task of administering the country and pro- moting its progress and prosperity too great a task, England will again step in and guide the forces of the nation, The most ardent Egyptians, even Zagloul Pasha himself, who is now returning to Cairo after an absence quae i we. Xa MARSHAL OTEY WALIKER CAUGHT ONE OF THE MEDICINE SHOW TROUPE IN THE ACT OF REFILLING THE FAMOUS BLOoD TONIC BOTTLES AT BOB HOLGATES PUMP. : Z STANLEY A NEA SERVICE UT OUR WAY . BY WILLIAMS TTS IN GOOD SHAPE NOW! ALL IT NEEDS 1S PLENTY OF NOURISHMENT? SHAKE WELL, AN GIVE IT THREE HEAPING, SHOVELS FULL EVERY WO HOURS AN' DOUBLE TH DOSE AT ANN \S) SSE | appear to have confounded him. He | asked to array all of Egypt’ o construct and not to de mitted by all that he k before him, in France, never envisaged England| the ground from under’ him by re- giving way as she has. It was Zag-|leasing him from his loul’s ambition to constitute himself | Malta and virt y p a great heroic figure in Egypt’s his-| ture of Egypt in his tory. The British Government cut! den capitulation of E 1 bondage in| is now cing the fu-} s, ds. The sud- “/ ym GOING To TAKE HER “To THE FOOTBALL GAME - DOINGS. OF THE DUFFS HOW Do You DO, MRS.DUFFP \ 1-CAME FOR MISS OUVIA-”. LONG? BUT 1 CODLON'T’ WE’LL MISS PART OF TH OH YES, COME IN+| 1 DON?T THINK SHEIS QUITE READY YET- VLL HURRY DID 1 KEEP YOU WAITING \ " PAGE THRER § ’"* Early Dealings Show a Con- tinned Upward Trend Chicago, Oct. 8—With continued talk current regarding — government measures for agricultural relief wheat averaged higher in price to a material extent tod during the early dealings. May equalled — its previous top figure for the season, || On the upturn, however, selling in- creased and brought about reaction, he opening which varied from the turday’s finish to 8-8 with Dee. $1.09 3-4 to 8 to 1-2 was tins before any cents highe $1.10 and setbacks took Subsequently ed a new high for the nd July touch= _ mn. Then + y purchases tended to Prices cosed unsettl 3-4 cents net hig! to 1-8 and May $1. 7-8 cents. Cattle receipts 30,000. Fed steers predominating. Slow, cents lower, ly top ma Fairly aes to 50 cents higher; sheep generally steady. APOLIS FLOUR Minneapolis, Oct, &.—-Flour uns changed to 10 cents higher. In car= i patent quoted at barr Shipments D0 to $28.50. Paul, 8——Cattle re= Slow, grass-fed steers nts lower. Other htly lower. aleable) from Bulk under ock $3 to $0. Canners and Stockers and Calves re= ive to 50 lights largely, ing ¢ Gra around $6.70. Bulk cutters, feeders ceipts, 1,500. cents lower. $9.25 ang $9.50. Hog receipts, 11,500. 25 cents lower. bo. beeves ) to $7. -fat she and down, to $3. Twent Best 0 Mostly 10 Range, Bulk butcher and $ Packing sows, $6.50 to $6.7 Bulk good pigs, $7.10, Sheep receipts, 6,000. Lambs fully 2 Scents higher. Bulk desirable na- tive and Dakota lambs Culls, $8 H to $10. and Dakota feeding lamb $11. Fleshy ewes to pack to $9.50. Run includes 3 ern going through. to $ $10 to $3.5 BISMARCK GRAIN, (Furnished by Russell-Mi Bismarck, Oct. 8, » 1 dark northern, No, 1 northern spring . 1 amber durum » 1 mixed durum . 1 red durum. » 1 flax’... . 2 flax No. 1 rye POLIS GRAIN, Oct. 8.—Wheat 29 cars, compared with year ago, h No. 1 northern, $1.181-8 + $1.23 1-8; No, 1 dark northern i choice to fancy, $1 £00d to choice, $1.221-8 to ordinary to good, $1.2 $1.22 1-8; December, $1.19 1- $1.23 1-4, Corn No. 3 yellow, 95 cents; oats | No. 3 white, 8 to 401-8; barley 50 to 63 cents; rye No, 2, 681-8 to oa cents; flax No. 1, $2.51 te 2.54. MIT Minneapolis ceipts cars re- Olivia’s Idea of Football fim AFRAID WELL BE ie LATE “THE FIR ’M SORRY, HELP 1T- Ee BY ALLMAN RST HALF } @ 1S OVER- IT WELL,WE a DIDN'T MISS ANY THING THEN-