The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 11, 1923, Page 7

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Tinsertion. 26 words or. CT Cerner 2 imsertions. 26 words ee under Fed S insertions 25 words of 1 week. 25 words or under 1.85 Ads over 25 words, 2c tional per word. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY | RATES © 65 Cents Par Inch tdvance Caer aaglt ‘hee e. Gelved by 12 v'close to insure insertion same day. , ‘SUBMITTED ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 82 HELP WANTED—MALE WANTED—Men and boys to fill va cancies, in barber shops every- where; $25 to $60 per week; steady work; easy employment; easy to start in business. for yourself; largest demapd of all other trades combined; modern “system; we teach you in a few weeks to fill one of these big paying positions: unlimited training; enrol! now | For free catalogue and ~further particulars apply Moler Barber College, 216 Front, St.,, Fargo, N 3 107 Nicolett Ave. Minne Minn.; i Winnipeg, Molers, most reliable system of Barber Colleges in America. HELP WANTED—FEMALE FEMALE HELP WANTED—An ex- eeptional opening those desiring plain home sewing. No canvassing. City, country. To prevent curiosity sJseekers send twelve cents for sam- ple, information. Good Wear Cloth Co. Inc., Asbury Park, N. J. WANTED—Girl for general house- work, Phone 891-R.. 12-11-3t a SALESMAN, ibe FULLER BRUSH COMPANY has op- ening- for a salesman in the Bis- marek-section, Write box 19, Bi: matck, or phone after 7 P. M. to 220W for interview. 9 WORK WANTED WORK WANTED—A lady. wants work by the-hour‘or ,will do gen- eral, housework. Phone. 883, 12-8-3t |\ ‘WANTED—Kitchen work in Cafe or general heusework, Address Tri- bune No. 691. 12-10-2¢ call 278-M, Mrs. Lea. Ses ES ee Se ee FOR RENT—About 10 acre plot + within 10 miles of Bismarck, Box 381, Bismarck, N. Dak. — 12-10-3t FOR SALB OR RENT © __HOUSES AND FLATS FOR RENT—City heated farnished apartment... Also upper floor of a house, unfurnished, three rooms ® and bath. Also two gavhges for |i rent. None of these places are over three blocks from ‘the Post- office. Phone 905-212 1-2. ° 12. FOR RENT—City heated furnished apartment. Also upper floor of house, unfurnished, 3 rooms and Also 2 ~ gara; blocks from the Post office. Phone 905. 212 1-2 Main Street, ‘ 12-10-1w. R RENT—Immediate possession new, strictly modern five-room lower duplex; heated attached garage, finest location. Apply 9. W. Roberts. Phones 761 and 151. 12-3-tf FOR RENT—Large modern h hot water heating plant, garage. Immediate possession, Investors Mortgage Security Company, Phone 138. : 12-5-1w FOR RBNT—Apartment. One entire Niger fylly equipped for light jousekeeping. Electric rarige — for cooking. Phone 794W. Geo. W. Little. 12-7-tf FOR RENT—New, strictly modern 5: room bungalow, with garage. Cl in, Mgderate. rent. .O;. W. Robert: Phone 751 or 151. 12-10-tf ‘OR INT+-Fusnished oF untur- nished apartment. Bismarck Busi- ness jCollege. ;18%, : : » ay 12-1-2w FOR RENT—Five-room modern fur- nished: house. Close te high school. Write 692 Tribune. 12-11-3t Fok RENT—Two adjoining moderh furnished rooms for light house- keeping; also one separate room and piano for rent. Phone 442-M. 808 7th St. » 12-1-1w FOR RENT—One nicely furnished room in modern house, for one or ing; large dot 4th St. Phorie’ 4 ‘OR RENT—Forni Rs floor in néw. modérn: Rome. to capitdl atid acho}, 7018 4th St. _ Phone 969-K. a 12-7-3¢ FOR RENT—Nicely Tarnished ‘front room in modern cottage, thie blocks from P. Q,, 411 8rd street. “Call 923-M. = :18-10-a FO! NT—Two furnial 2 housekeeping rooms, in’ modern house; 517 2nd_ St, “Phone: 812-J. pea ol Re cae OU FOR” RENT—Two yogms furnished “fop light housekee| . Also single’ ‘ "211 2nd’ St. Phone: 83: 12,3-tf 2M. 12-11-3¢, 1 rR Nice. Post. 12-10-3t | fhooms, 924 | o} <WANTRD TO : of “apartment. “Tl Beforences ed on request. Call 989-be- tween 9 om. and 6 p. m._ ‘ le Al i first class “condition. 51. 0. We . a, ing f housewWbrk.; Stéhdy work ad winter, ‘wantéd. For in- rmation,’ eAll: photre .No. pe >. ‘ (2-11- SEND_A COPY of Crawford's Bad J Beoncho Trails to your friends. They'll not stop with ore reading. $1.50 a copy. Capital Book Co., 20 Ave, A., Bismarck, N. Dak. . 12-10-2w, FOR SALE—Mutiple typewriter, one burner Perfection ‘oil stove, Flor- ence ofl stove “éven. All in’ good condition, Cheap if takef at once. Phone 686-Rz or call 417 10th S A 12-8-3t FOR SALE—Corn fed baby beef by the quarter, 8c for front, 13c fer hind, » Quarters selgh bout. 1 Ibs. Phone- 028W. or write 20 W. Broadway. John MeClusky. ps ry, 2-7-1W FOR SALB—Set of 64 books with railway traffic maps, of Interstate , Commerce and railway trafite course complete, for $10, at 323 street North. 12. we ne coal range with wa- large electric range; both in finé coftdition. O. W. Roberts, Tel. 151 or 751. 12-10-8t FOR RENT—New tore, with two unfurnished rooms upstairs on Broadway, acroag from auditorium. See Frank Krall, the Tailor. 2 12-8-tf R SAI # ir” Detfoit v: por oil gange, 7 1-2 x 8 velvet rug, and refrigerator. May -be‘eeen at Bismarck Food cet, Mi 12-5-17 FOR SALE—Beautitul set of brown furs, satin lining. Like new. Will sell Speen. Phone 682-J. ~12-10-8t riiture, and many miscellangéous household goo Phone 3843. 2 v2 FOR SALE—Oxi2 Whittel,rog. One ladies desk and center table: Calt | 472-R. - FOR y bed. - Phone? 603, FOR SALE—Household furniture, 508 3rd street. 12-11-1w 12-11-8t ind child’s 8: Rosser St. | NOTICE. OF MORTGAGE . #0RE-| GlostRe BALE Default having occurréd in the Conditions of that certain mortgage fter described, in that neither the interest nor the principal me tioned therdin has beer, paid when due according to the term# and con- ditions thereof, and further that. the taxes on the property destribed here- inafter have not been paid ed in said mortgage, anti y days Nor ee ‘of intention 6 iereeleee Bey. ing nm given ‘as prov! jaw, ‘Now Therefore noticé is hereby given that that certain mortgage executed ‘and delivered by Charles T. Wyn- koop ang Christine Wynkoop of Bi marck, Burleigh County North. D: kota, mortgagors to Charles A, Swe son, mioregag 1» di thé 19th day of July. 1919 and filed for record in ‘th ce of the Register of Deeu. id for the County of Burleigh, of ‘North Dakota, 8th day of Augt 1919 at 4; lock in the ‘afternoon of agid day, and then and there: duly recorded in Book 159 of Me on Page 85, will be fore- closed by a ‘aale of the ptemises in such mortgage, and hereinafter des- eribed at the front door of the County Court House in the uty of Bismarck, County of Burleigh nd State of North Dakota at the hour of 10:00 o'clock A. on Friday the 11th dey of January 1924 to satisfy the antount-due upon such mortgage on the date of sale. The premises ‘di bed in, m age and which will be sold to 'y the same are situated)in the urléigh ‘and “State oi the sum of $2,900.00,, besides the at torneys fees, taxes paid, costs di ‘bursemeénts ahd expetibes of this sale and foreclosure. Dated this 3rd December aoe Joseph Cogtiian ~ — - ‘Attorney’ for Mortghgee Bismarck, North Dakota. (Dee. 3rd-10-17-24-31.. Jan. 7th) eet * NOTICE’ OF MORTGAGE - Cronk ae TOR Notice is: hereby. given..that, east | certain mortgage executed and de- livered: by Jolin :-Rukela, a widower, mortgagér, to Unlori Investment Com- ‘pany, of Minneapolis, Mitnexots,. corporation,, mortgagee, dated the 16th day of October, 1917, and. filed for bay we the’ aes ‘of tie Regit- ter of Deeds of County. of Bur- leigh and State o¥, North Dabots on 26th dey, of October, 1917- at 10 jock, A, M., ind’ ¥etorded in Book ot: tional Bank of ation, dited the 3rd 1918, and- filadwfory record én office of the said- ir on the 18 of: i recotded in Book 175 of Ausighments lerecloned bys in=such ‘mart- GOIN’ FOX HUNTIN'? WELLE WHOT IN DE LANS NAME 1S YO t! A i bs wei 7, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE BY STANLEY 2 CIGARS ERNIE HICKS HAS CARRIED CKET THE PAST WEEK I To THE SHOW CASE TODAY WORSE FoR WEAR- mPa OUT OUR WAY: YO 6A YO ALLS, © /DESE BOADS? WHY Boy , DESE BOADS 15 SO AH KIN GIT DIS HAWSE. OVAH DE FENCES. Waterville. Dated at Bismarck, N. Dak. this| 8th day of November, 1923, First National Bank of/ Assignee of Mortgagee, oe SOME OFTHESE FOXES WILL HAMETO SPEED UPA LITILE SINCE WASH FUNK 1S USING HIS BRIDGE SYSTEM Township One hundred férty-one| dollars together with the costs of|G. Olgeirson, (141), North, of Range Seventy-six | foreclosure. (76), West, and situated in the Coun- ty of Burleigh and State of North M.| Dakota. .There will be due on such mortgage on the day of sale the sum lof Eight ‘hundred eight and 88-100 Attorney for Assignee of Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. (11-13-20-27 12-4-11-18) ‘Trfoune Want Ads Bring Results BORAH HARD WORKER AND AVOIDS CLUBS BY HARRY B. HUNT NEA Service Writer Washington,” Det. 11.—Should the delegates to the Republican conven- tion next June decide to pick a workingman for president, then dol- lars to doughnuts their choice will be-~ William Edgar Borah, United States senator, just now of Boise, Idaho, formerly of Kansas and.origi- nally from the great state of Illinois! For when it comes to work, B can give a lot of-men in public clubs and spades and beat them baré- handed, Is Horse For Work What to the average senator or congressman is a heavy day's work, Borah tosses off as a before-break- fast appetizer. Whew other states- men are driving to ‘Ke country club for a game of golf to refresh their fagged-out brains, Borah is ordering up another truckload of Matisties and a few more tomes on economics. and international law and settling down to some really concentrated study. If the presidency is a man-killing job, as has been claimed of late, no man is better fitted by training and experience to fight it to a standstill for four or eight years than Borah. Work, study, the gruelling. grind of long, close application, is pie for him. Because gf Idaho's meager nu- merical representation among the delegates, Borah—-us a matter practical politics—carries a he handicap, Should Lowden, of Ili- nois, forego a chance at the nomina- tion, however, Borah might properly be picked up as the “favorite son” of that state. For it was in Wayne county, IIL, June 29, 1865, that Borah was born. He learned his ABC's at the little red school house there and then went to the Southern Illinois Academy, Enfield, Il. Later he studied la Kansas State University, was ad- mitted to the bar and first hung out hts shingle in Lyons, Kas., in 1890. Born In Ilinoi: ™ In 1892 he moved to Boise, Idaho. Playing then, as he does still, a lone hand, he sought no partnership, but set up a law office by himself. With- in the next five years he had estab- lished himself os one of the rising young lawyers of the state and had won Mary McConnell, the daughter of the governor, for his bride. . Being a poor man, chiefly depen- dent-on his senatorial salary, he sold his Boise home and his “legal resi- dence” in the state is at 2 Boise hotel, where he stays on his trips back home. His Washington resi- dence is in an unpretentious apart- ment house on a quiet side street. Is Poor Man Borah belongs to no clubs. He joined the Elks and the Knights of Pythias years ago in Idaho, but has not maintained contact with his fra- ternities in Washington, He doesn’t smoke, chew,drink, dance, play poker or mah jongg. He never swatted a golf ball, swung a tennis racket or paddled a canoe. His sole recrea- tion—outside of work—is horseback riding, His daily morning canter through Rock Creek Park is as fixed an event in his existence as eating or sleeping. And he just loves work! It’s his |only interest, outside his wife and jhorse. If it’s a worker—a courage- ous, two-fisted, conscientious work- er the Republicans decide they want —then Borah’s their big bet. Making Teachers Happy Sheffield, Eng.—None of Joseph Newton’s six children ever has miss- ed a day in school since entering kindergarten. And all have been at- tending for periods ranging from 8 to 10 years, Sir William Clegg, in behalf of the Sheffield Education Committee, has publiely congratulat- ed Newton and his wife on their sons’ and daughters’ record, WHY INDUSTRY IS MISUNDERSTOOD Geo. E. Roberts Tells How Co- operative Character of Cor- porations Is Obscured. RADICAL AGITATION RESULTS Maintenance of Present Industrial System Necessary to Maintain Present Standards of Com- fort for All the Peo- ple, He Says. The modern industrial system is at bottom a co-operative organiza- tion, but this fact 1s obscured by the complexity of huge enterprises, George E. Roberts, noted authority on business and finance, declared in a recent speech before the Amer- ican Bankers Association Conven- tion at Atlantic City, N. J. “The primitive man knew that the harder he worked the more he would have,” Mr, Roberts said. “When @ man exchanged work with a neighbor he had the whole transaction under his eyes. But When a man works with thousands of others for a great corporation he doesn’t see any definite rela. tlonship between what he does and what he gets. He doesn't know} whether he is getting a fair share of the industrial results or not, and he suspects not. “The modern industrial system fs ecsentially co-operative, but you cannot have effective co-operation without understanding. Becuuse people do not see the industrial or. | ganization as a whole we have the} tendency for society to break up {nto groups and blocs amd unions and organizations of one kind ond | avother, many of whom are uying | to advance their own interests at the expense of society as a whole. The population of this country to | day could not be supported in the state of comfort to which it is ac | med without the modern, spc clalized organization Belehevism in Russia “The extremity of social disor. ganization has been seen In Russia where has been enacted the grea est tragedy in the history of the! world. What happened there will! happen everywhere unless there is a development of the capacity 0? people to work together and under- stand each other. ‘In its final form the revolution in Russia was against what is called the capitalistic system, or the private ownership of property and direction of industry, The re- wults of the revolution are 30 ‘calamitous in Russia as to give a check to revolutionary tendencies fa other countries. “Yet the eco- omic principles of Bolshevism EEE Asks Support In Fight On Pittsburgh Plus Support bf North Dakota citizens to the fight against the Pittsburgh Plus plan of the steel industry, whereby freight is figured as from Pittsburgh although the steel may be produced at Gary, Indiana, or else- where, is urged’Dy Tovernor Nestos. A hearing on the plan began today before the Federal Trade Commission in Washington. “I have just been informed today by the secretary of the Associated States Opposing Pittsburg Plus, with which the attorney general and I have been co-opérating for some time, that the hearing in Washington has commenced,” Governor Nestos said. “This organization désires the co-operation of all the individuals and organizations that believe in the abolition of the iniquitious Pittsburg PAGE SEVEN are influencing public epinion more or leas everywhere. “The motive behind all this egt -. tation is the desire: to establish ~~ equality. The social struggles of the past have been for political equality. Now the demand ip for equality in possessions, equality. in incomes, equality in the manage- ment of industrial affairs. There is no argument aginst the aspira- tions of men for better” social con- ditions, but radical tdeas result from certain econortic fallacies, One relates to the employment and service of private capita). Men reac gbout vast rums of wealth Lelonging to Individual’, and think of these sums es devoted exclusive- ly to the owners. In fact wealth employed {in production for the public market is rendering service to the entire community, no matter who owns It. ‘ “Thes whole radical argiment te Mike claiming that nobody ever got any benefit from the development -of the steam engine but the owners of steam engines. Of course, the theory only needs to be stated for the. fallacy to be apparent. The man who works for wages is ben- efited by every investment of capt- tal which {ncreases and cheapens the supply of the things for which his wages are spent. The Service of Capital “It is a fundamenta) truth that all productive property, although privately owned, {fs part of the equipment of society, by which its 8 are supplied. ‘he progress of the~past has been accomplished under the indi- vidualistic system. The theory of this system {s that every one shall ve for his own, as nearly as may fe, that which results from his own efforts. It is a system calcu. lated to stimulate the initiative, call out the energies and develop the abflity of each individual. He {a free as to his undertakings; there are no r&trictions except that he must seek his own gains by activities that are serviceabla to the community as a whole, and he fs Inspired to labor, not simply by the desire for personal advan- and by the desire to provide fur loved ones, by the impulee to selfexpress'on, to realize and de velop hfs natural abii{ties, and by ("> gmbition to achieve, to wim divtinetion and to render service, “It does not promise equality. Unless there is equality in produce ton, in service, in effort, in resolu- tion and in self-denial, why should there be equality in the division of resnits? “The justification of individual- ism, however, ig not merely ia what it allows to the superior ‘n- dividual, but In the results that in- ure to all, It Is in-the interest 0% all to secure the most effective or- ganization, the most effective man- agement and the largest possible production. These cannot be had by adopting the fiction that all have equal ability for any position, or by any other system than that which judges men by their indt- vidual qualifications.” Plus. They have prepared a booklet entitled Pittsburg Plus which gives a comprehensive statement of the case and presents the claims and argu- ments of both sides and any individ- ual or organization desiring any of these may obtain one by writing to the association at 1305 City Hall Square building, 189 North Clark St., Chicags. “The Pittshurgh Plus practice int eel, as in gasoline, has cost our te much money and this practice should be abolished in steel as it has already been abolished in gasoline in this state.” Too Much Tipping VIENNA—Excessive tipping "is driving tourists away from here. Dr. Siegmund Munz, international writ- cr on economics, blames the three- waiter system wherein food, drinks and the bills are brought to each pa= tron by separate waiters, And Dr. Munz also charges hotels are charg- — ing foreigners exhorbitant rates. :| DOINGS OF THE DUFFS 1 THINK SLL HAVE To REVISE MY CHRISTMAS f) wNST THIS YEAR- 6 IT’S GETTING Too | LARGE ANY WAY- HERE 1S MARY CLOSE- J} | SHE SENT ME & TENCENTA Eom COMB LAST YEAR WELL, THAT LIST: OF NAMES GO IN THE BASKET RIGHT NOW - TAKE THIS CHOICE LITTLE VANITY CASE THAT 1 SENT RUTH TWO YEARS AGO AND THEN SHE SENT IT TOME LAST YEAR- IT GOES. BACK To HER | AGAIN THIS YEAR WITH A PRETTY LITTLE CARD- “~. NEVER MIND- AND GET MY WATCH FOR ME - 1 FORGOT TO WIND You DOING WITH ALL s THESE BOxES, RUN UP STAIRSI OLIVIA P ee . BY ALLMAN (ney DON’T ( YOU WAIT A LITTLE WHILE ANDIT 4 WILL RUN DOWN aL __No Voice in the Matter ,Pob! says cor 6 WELL! WELL! So YOU MANE A BABY GIRL UD AT YOUR HOUSE! WASN'T Thar WHAT You WANTED? By ITSELF! ALL=T WANTED A BROTHER, BUT IT CAME WHILE T WUZ.IN SCHOOL!

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