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ow Wy GE F RIN( eciation und in } ry Giver NI e ssion it v h y ne le like the Bury, said, Bdant, find the prose Bu still b ad not old a ing: ou his up int hop t orsite pw I wish t me every t ted in . For 1 minded pe ith me in favor of the vi But e their je during » proof of oughness aw M had expec he most in ed FE] sks @ hed in a : er removed and driec it did the w . or saw m out their nin the ¢ It that the e /hopele baller m ssés that v ton, the s rt and coll of several t turn out the despa deme inde : grea nplicated a every pha But the ma lef factor i t work of st skillful as being lots. indle and y mdle of the own toget! rious mach’ sent back jut I foun ce, from t fief to the rcfully folic laundr id handled jual attenti r Kl Ho-mestir re ng. ork that ¢ finished —a ing touch How IT And thé Pr’ ded repairi thieal ravi je laundry, id left hom distressing NO GOODS On Approval ° . ~ Dresses | SILK AND WOOL DRESSES IN THREE GROUPS OF REMARKABLE VALUES. $795 $1500 $27 ALSO A SPECIAL GROUP OF AFTERNOON AND © EVENING DRESSES AT JUST 1% THE REGULAR 50 - - PRICE.~ q egins An Especially Timely Selling : Beginning of the Cold Weather an Opportunity to Buy Reasonable Merchandise at Great Savings COATS | FORMER PRICE GROUPINGS HAVE BEEN REV $1450 $2]50 $35 HEAVY MANNISH COATS AT $10.50. A FEW BEAUTIFUL MODEL COATS AT. . “i weve aes «8/2 PRICE WOOL HOSE BATH ROBES Ladies’ Blanket Robes. “Special at $2.48 Children’s Robes $1.69 WOOL GLOVES Ladies’ ‘gauntlet wrist, brushed wool gloves, $1.75 and $1.95 values $1.29 CM. C. C. M. C. crochet cotton. Dozen SWEATERS Brushed wool. sweater coats. $11.50. Clearance $4.95 Slip-on and Tuxedo styles $2.95 10¢ per ball. Value to WEBB BRO DIOMALDUN 1LHDUINE re i we? SED INTO THREE GROUPS. BLOUSES vent. Just at 00 ——_—_—_ the Odd Warner, , JANUARY 16, 1924 a ws é Re res ay MILLINERY | FINAL CLEARANCE Your choice of any fall and winter hat in our stock at $1.95 CORSETS *$1.00 and $2.48 and- discontinued numbefs — of Redfern and other models. Brassiers. Special_at . a | OUTING GOWNS Regular $1.75 and $1.95 quality. White and. colors ! $1.29 | A Crepe de Chine blouses Ladies’ wool hose. at greatly reduced $ 3 : 7 5 prices. | “Ty Paice” CRETONNES . 2 Short lengths of cretonnes and drapery materials BLANKETS: . ‘ Heavy cotton blankets. Pair Lael $2.00 Heavy all wool omen Novelty COVERALE APRONS plaids and checks Light and.da¥k:colors.: Special at $9.25 _69c _ TAR YEN ES ETON IRA RAEI LADIES” UNION SUITS COTTON POPLIN Fine wool.and, silk and. wool mixtures |. 27 inch+cottoh poplin, all colors at : ap << _ 29c price. eas | : WOOL DRESS GOODS | CHILDREN’S COTS Short, tenets and gkirtpatterns, poi Pie Foe hinaiots tn learatice 5 ad) Vp - Vo price. price: _ NO GOODS | } /-On Approval r - r Fi i g them bac \d their full buttons, n the | primarily mM ild’s EF “Califor EQUITY TOBE REORGANIZED IN MINNESOTA Will be Cooperative Concern Under Law Passed by Legislature. There 16. ixchange, Co- the Fargo, operative Piles Can Be Cure¢ Without ,Surgery Ansinstructive book has been pub- lished by Dr. A. S. McCleary, the noted rectal specialist of Kansas City. This book tells how sufferers from Piles can be quickly and easily cured (without the use of knife, scis- sors, “hot” iron, electricity or any other cutting or burnihg method, wifhout confinement to bed and no hospital “bills to pay. The method has been a success for twenty-four years and in more than eight thous- and cases. The book: is sent ‘post- paid free to persons afflicted with piles or other rectal troubles who clip this item and mail it with name and address to Dr. McCleary, D542 Parkview Sanitarium, Kansas City, Mo. Equity now’ in hands of receivers, will he reorgam- ized under a plan worked out by the receivers and officers of cern, the stockholders attending the annual meeting decided The organization already hus been perfected and it only remained for the stockholders to approve the plan | and pledge their support. Jing up the Equi The new organization is organized | going concern,” under the recent cooperat. Jaw} han, receiver, d by the Minnekota legislature. | meeting y Each stockholder becomes a member !only and the only dividends will be | patronage participation in the earn- | ings. The membership fee is to he $10. No pooling provision is involv- led, it was explained. | The net surplus of | Equity Cooperative | its liabilities amount to 000, according to an | concern | ternoon by O. | accountant, | bout, $1,800,000 of stock has been | sold which now is worth about 30 cents on the dollar, Mr. Thatcher told |the annual meeting of the Exchange stockholders here: yesterday, During the last five months Exchange earned approximately $; 000 net profits, the audit showed was claimed that the receive has gradually put the Exchange back on its feet and that the value of its good will among the membership and-grain shippers of the northwest is énestimable. Speakers at yesterday's of the Exchange, which were held in ‘get rid of your cold right no 0. BAW. building, of the federal trade the con- commerce with unfair trade r and ordering the chamber to tinue these practice: erday. aid James in sterday afternoon. A COLD GON of the} irs read yesterday : 3 | | | In a few hours your cold ii head and nose clear, no-fever headache, or stuffed-up Druggists here guarantee pleasant tablets to break up Never Sickens! the nines. They never make you uncomfortable. Buy a box of a, o.weN. tiling se~otet MRS, JOHN BURKE, PIONEER OF N. D. [days in the state, commi | charging the Minneapolis chamber, of | Exchange addressing IN FEW HOURS “Pape’s Cold Compound” Acts Quick, Costs Little, jor the grippe quicker than nasty qui- sessions |Cold Compound” for a few cents and methods) DYES AT SHELDON | discon- patie SEB Judge E. T. Burke of this city ha “| gone to Sheldon, having been ci ited | p, a| there ,by :the death of his mothcr, | Mana- | Mrs, John Burke, one of the pionzers the| of North Dakota, who died at her} | home the age of 73 on Sunday Funeral services will be held in the | Catholic church at Sheldon on Wed- and burial will be in Lisbon. } Burke is Judge Bur Tchn | Thomas | E jand_ two Bu daughters, tru: Miss y, Alberta, Canada. North Dakota since Born in| &} Ireland May 2 to Amer tling at Pt. Doage, Towa. There she was married ¢ | John H. Burke in 1870 and the s j year she and her husband’ came to rgo. The latter engaged # con struction work on thé N. P. railroad, later, freighted between Fargo and ishness,| Winnipeg and in the spring of 1882 feeling, | they took up a homestead in High- these|land township, Cass county, residing ‘a cold| there until they moved to Sheldon in 1892 where Mr. Burke bought the 1870. ame | w n gone, ed ick or| Sheldon, Enterprise, whieh he edited Papes| until 1905.’ Mr. Burkéd died seven.| 1; years ago. Mrs. Bul we wonderful memory -and*could- rebite many stirring incidents of pioneer stock now at auction. —————— | GIRLS! A GLEAMY by three | 85-Cent “Daénderine” so Im- Burke had been a resident of iant-hair full of 1851, she emigrated | and life follows a genu- : ine toning up of eglected: scalps }| Falling hair, itching. scalp and the dand- ruff is.correct- fading’ hair is quickly invigorated, taking on new outhfal beaut: f. ‘ +) stinval Was ‘possessed of u) greasy!’ Ahy drugstore, LecakJutists, > < « Lawyers Named Séveral Bismarck jurists and law- yers are named on the 1924 commit- tgs of the state har association by | LE-R. Nostdal, of Rugby, "yen C. Rosen’s’ bankrupt, 2 and 7 m. daily until all is sold: R. of the association. R. E. Wenzel of Bismarck is secretary. They in- clude: Jurisprudence and law re- form—L, E. Birdzell, chairman; Mor- gan memorial, A. M. Christisnson; revision of‘ constitutional atid by- laws, Theodore Koffel; legislation; Theodore Koffel; legal education, C. L. Young; comparative law, H. A. Brofison; judicial, Sveinbjorn John- sen; public. utilities, John Thorpe, Alfred Zuger; uniform state laws, H.-A. Bronson, chairman; bénch arid bar ethics, W. L. Nuessle; office supplies and printing, L. L. Butter- wick; Newton C. Young, memorial: gular meeting Tancréd Commandery. 1, Thurs: day evening at 7:30, All members urged to attend. MASS OF HAIR proves Lifeless, Neg- lected Hair oss, ety th depdnda- « Shoes and clothing for men and-boys. A-lot of new qual- ity piece gopds-—now; at ,aue- tion’ 2 ant! 7 p. wi. daily until ‘all is.sold. .Make .your own price...» + : Le a Loss éstivyated at $8,600,0008000: 45 | sed anhually by iron and steel ust in the United States. , oy \ immediately. Thin, dry, wispy or ength, color and én the hair’ a ng not refreshing, sticky 0 + tonic - WILD DUCKS \ district. week. Mather! Fletcher's been in use for ‘over 30 years’ to relieve cbabies and:children. of. Con+ “Wind . Colic and, Diarrhea; aMnying” Feverishness | arising’ therefrom, avd, by régufating | the Stomach and’ Bowels, ‘aids the’ stipatién, Flatulency, Castoria has LIKE WINTER ee Jamestown,:N. D., Jan. 16.—Wil- lard Pierce, farmer living northwest of Jamestown, reports that 18° wild dueks are wintering in that vicinity. He sees them nearly every day as they fly to and from the James dnd Pipestem rivers and cornfields in that They were in his cornfield on Déc. 26, and again one day last Mr. Pierce says that there is always some open water on both the Jamies and:the Pipestem rivers about the springs and he believes the ducks stay in that and feed in ‘the corn- fields. He does not know the variety but says that they aré a large duck. He hits been in the state a long time and once shot a duck on the’ James GHELDRERER A Harmless: Substitute tae sndsBeathing river after Christmas but thinks that that one was wounded ang left be-* hind in the southward flight. This is the first flock he has ever heard of that wintered here. R. C. Rosen’s stock of men’s and boys’ clothing, shoes, etc., now being auctioned Everything must go at once. 2 and’7p. m. STHMA No jure for it, but wel « “relief is often ‘brought tyne yisks POR “CASTORIA” —_—_—— for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops Syrups _ No Narcotics! assimilation of Food; sleep without opiates, bears signature of giving natural The genuine off. 4