The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 12, 1924, Page 7

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* 'SUESDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1924. LASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS | Classified Advertising Rates 1 insertion, 26 words or under . A 2 insertions, 25 words or under . 35 3 insertions 25 words or under ......-01....5. 75 1 week, 25 wo Ads over 25 words, 2c’ addi- tional per word. CLASSIFIED DISPLAY RATES All classified ads are cash ‘in advance. Copy should be re- ceived by 12 o'clock to insure insertion same day, WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO REJECT ANY COPY SUBMITTED THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PHONE 32 4 on No book or ‘all the NuBone Can furnish o George Room 109 between ! FOR SALE House, 5 rooms and: bath, $3000.00. House, 4 rooms and toilet, $2650.01 House, 8 rooms, strictly modern, $5200.00. House, 4 rooms, south side, $1000. House, 4 rooms, furnace heat, $1900.00. + Houses and lots in all parts of the {city at prices and terms to suit every | | purse. Fire insuragee written in good companies, 3 F. E. YOUNG. N 2-11-1w SALESMAN | SALESMAN WANTED with eoxperi- | “ence selling complete line of bank | and office supplics, printing and lithographing. Want # real hust- ler with ambition ang willing to] work. Prefer man with experi-| ence traveling fn North Dakota, address Louis F. Dow Co., St. Paul, Mi *B12-1t | SALESME who can buy samples and furnish bonds. Big money for| right party. Western Wooley & Knit Goods Company, Salt Lake i City, Utah. 2-9-lw tee PERSONAL | SUE DIGBY private instruetion in| Gregg Shorthand, touch typewrit«j ing, 208 3rd Strect. Telephone 885 21-2w ——— WANTED TO RENT | ED or six} room modern house by March. Ist. | Adults only, Write 714 in cate of | Tribune 2-11-3t Moesmer, 209 7th & \ FOUN 2-12-2t | FOUND—Metal pencil. Phone 605. FOR SALE OR RENT cnet a a HOUSES AND FLATS H LOST ao atts ein dad's Sp 8 FO | GOST= Pocketbook containing check two houses, good well, stable | of the Jewell Tea Co, and cur- house. Will divide, A bargain} yeney. Finder kindly return to J. K. Doran, 406 Third street. Bert Henderson for reward, care pes Hy 2-T-1w Bismarck hotel. 2-11-2t FOR RENT—Three modern Wouse- | LOST—Near Richholt school, black q keeping rooms, big enough for! and white coley pup, name Bum- small family, furnished or unfur~ nished, 016 Broadway, Phone if 2-11-83 FOR RE urnished apartment ‘on second floor, fitted for light housekeeping, $40 a month. Fhone 794W. Geo. W. Litile, 801 Forth, i » 2-148 OR RENT—Two-room apartment, partly furnished. Two private en- trances, adjoining bath, heat, light, and water, $35. Phone 614. 1-28-tf | FOR RED [—Warm, furnished light housekeeping rooms, also one sin- 3rd St. 2-11-3t apart- “gle sleeping 622 Phone 132-W. FOR RENT—Strictly modern men; in Rose Apartments. Murphy. Phone 852. FOR. RENT—Tw equipped for light housek WPhone 794-W. rom, FOR RENT—Five room modern npartments. L, K. Thompzon. Phone 287. = 2-6-1W R ‘urnished apartments, Phone 773. Varney Flats. _____ ROOMS FOR RENT FOR RENT—A large sleeping room in modern home. Gentlemen pre- ferred, 419 7th St. Phone 1066. 2-11-3t FO dern house. if desired. Lady preferred. Meals Phone 10683. 2-9-1w ‘OR RE ely furnished room in modern home, close in. Call at 402 5th street or phone 836J. 2-11-1w 505-3rd “St. 4 2-12-1W ‘Three good unfurnished housekeeping rooms. Call at™ 803 ith St. 117-tf FOR RENT—Furnished room in mo- dern home, 408 3rd St. dern home,’ close in. % 2-11-8t ¥OR RENT— Call at 5 Circus Animals Have Sea Sickness Hamburg, Feb, 12.—“Old Rose,”. an slephant 90 years of age, suffered inost from sea sickness of all the 300 trained, animals which sailed from- Hamburg for Montevideo , 43 part of a circus which is now on @ tour of South American countries, The animals and circus performers oceupied all of the steamship Luden- dorff, which was chartered for the voyage. There were nine other elephants beside “Old Rose,” who is queen of ge herd, and all bore up very ,well nd St. 2. indeed until the leader herself be- me ill and kept the veterinarians and trainers up every night good part of the three weeks’ trip. The elephants at. first. were kept up on deck, but sight of the wi anq the constant rolling and pitching of the vessel agitated them and resulted in so much bellowing that they weze soon moved below. deck. ~ * Rough weather bothered the lions, too, and. the trainer, Fraulein Tillie Lehrmann, of Vienna, was with: her} pets day and night trying to console them whenever the sea : tossed the ship about: The, bears and - tigers roared, sometimes with the ups and downs of every .waye; the.monkeys squealed and squeaked, aa the hy- enas howled and laughed until: some members of. the ship's, crow began to think that perhaps after a} they would never reach the other side, and that the elements were set on put: ting, an eng to their existence... Writing home of their experiences, the animal trainers say the voyage: was a nightmare which. lasted. sev- eral weeks. The snakes’ were the only quiet things aboard the ship. during the storniy weather, they,said. He Wag Prepared. E—My dcar\lit's no use: for:you | to look.at' thase hats, 1 -haven’t more than a dollar in my ipocket. SHE—You might have known when we came. gut that I'd, want-to uy a few things. ~ HE-I did-—Boston Transcript, rnished room in mo- room in mo-J Large comfortable tcom.| tee ar | bles. Finder kindly return to 223 | _4th Street or call 628M. 2 LAND FOR SALE—A snap. Combined farm | and ranch of about 300 acres. Has | good improvements consisting of { house, barn, cattle shed, granary, | hog house, hen house, well and | windmill, fine grove of trees east of Missouri river, for.-$4000., on very liberal terms; the- improve- ments alone are worth about tiat. A great bargain, in a quarter sec- tion of Jand in Burleigh county, on which about 75 acres are brok- en, fine soil; see me for very low price, Geo. M. Register. 2- 9-1w Eig) acre improved farm, good buildings, three miles from county seat, half mile from Foreston MilleLacs County, Minn- esota, further information on re- quest. Carl Lindstrom, Foreston, Minn. 2-6-1w. Also .2-19-1w FOR RENT—640-acre stock and dairy farm, 5-room house and atther build- ings. 160 acres on river bottom. If interested write Geo. Register; Bis- Deeaay suit L. Scott, Baldwin. | 1 i i {FOR “Navy Poiret “Twill |’ | Spring suit’ like new. Size 38. j _$18.00.. Phone 823. 2-11-3t | HEMSTITCHING—AIl work 10 cents per yard, Singer Sewing Machine _Co., Bismarck, N. D. 2-6-1m FOR SALE OR RENT—Howard | piano, Write Tribune No. 71! : . -11-4t FOR SALE—Potatoes, 40 cents per bushel. Phone 440-M. 2-6-1w Miners To Arctic es Circle By Air | | Anchorage, Alaska, Feb, 12—Pros- |pectors, miners and trappers will be | taken. into the Arctic Circle by dir- igible next summer, if a company, whose representatives now are in in- |terior Alaska, carries out announced | Plans. | ‘Those organizing the project say! | they. believe the dirigible will prove !a solution for the placer operator, \who finds the long slow routes of waterways and dog trails a serious problem in time and financing. The “farthest north”. trappers ate con- fronted with the same difficulty. The first airship will ply, accord- | ing to the , announcement, between Fairbanks, the Chandelar and Kcyo- kuk. -It is planned eventually to ex- tend the service to other districts. If dirigible transportation is thus installed, the traveler may reach the | Arctic Circle within eight days after | sailing from Seattle. He would tra- vel by boat six, days, landing in An- chorage,.then by |train 24 hours to Fairbanks, wherice he would be whisked through the air for the last and hardest lap of the journey. With the passing of many of the famous. old placer camps south of the Yukon, the prospector has pressed over northward, into the shadow of the Polar wilderness. However, the promising fields within the Arctic Circle often require hydraulic oper- ations, and, even where a “pay dis- covery” his been made, it is a mat-j ter. of weeks, sometimes’ months, to get:a force of miners and the equip-, ment over the suow and ice truils ipto the remote sections. The company’s répresentatives de- ‘clare they can carry two tons of men i ‘and.equipment into the Arctic in a! few, hours, ;at,a cost of about one- fourth a +. entailed by dogsled tripsportation, : take: summeg tourists for “the Arctic silences,” The ahnonticétnent of the contem- plated dirigible service has stirred Ee clean towns a clamor, for m.ail thibe delivered by air to such points | aa Nonte, the Upper Kuskokwim and the Kobuk country.. At. present this y,.doge and requires va we ‘a month after it Teaves the Alaska’ Railroad. The parcel. post, busi as. grown. to such ensions that it is costing the government a héavy sum to sup- visits to j4e overthrow the government and | reforms would be foreed on the Zayas The dirigible elso may be used to | - | ply points that are cut of modern transportation, eamers reach Nome in summer, but the Ber-| ing Sea town is. ice-locked and de- pendent on communication by over- land traik most of the year. Velez, Fugitive, | Has Longer Leave Havanna, Feb. ~The case of Carlos Gracia Velez, veteran ot Cuba's. war of independence and of several of her subsequent revolu- tions, presepts an anomaly unpar- allelled im Cuban politics. Although ¢ was indicted Inst fall for seeking legally is a fugitive from justice, President Zayas recently signed a decree extending his leave of ‘ab- sence from his post as minister to London, and Velez remains in hiding |- still talking revolution. Velez came home last spring on his first leave in 2. years of service as minister to Mexico and Great Brit- an and went to South America to represent Cuba as a Pan-American conference. . On returning to Havana he became dissatisfied and helped or- ganize the Veterans’ and Patriots’ Agsociation. Having been elected its president, he drew ap demands far government reforms similar to those made by American Ambassador Crowder in his famous “moralization program,” and ‘announced that the government by- revolution if neces- ‘osident Zayas formally announc- vd that he was sympathetic toward reforms shown to be necessary, but that congress was tho one to act. Activities of the veterans and patriots stirred the government to cxtraor- dinary precautions for .a time last fall and finally resulted in indict- ments being returned against Velez and a dozen other “leaders. All put up bonds except Velez, who went into hiding and issued a proclamation calling on his followers to be ‘ready for what might come.” Meantime the revolutionary talk is not so pronounced. The secret police REASON, YouU'RS THE ONLY ONE THAT CAN THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ttt eee NO! ~_NO YOU'RE YOU'RS ALL --- ——_ IF NOISE NOT tte Acc ,WRONG I! (iS A Svestitete FOR MAKE (Tt No. 1 Geese per Ib No. 1 turkeys, per It Live Poul Hens 4 Ibs, each and 0 Hens under 4 Ibs. eae ngs, per Ib. s and stags, per Ducks, per Ib. ... Geese, per Ib... MARKET NEWS NO GRAIN MARKETS Today being a legal hol grain exchanges Chicago Minneapolis were closed. the and CHICAGO LIVESTOCK oe a BISMARCK ( No. No. le per pound dise Ear Corn (72 Ib. in under shell. to $8.00. Early s Canners he-stockvopening weak. mostly $3.50 to §¢ nd cutters active and firm. Bulk $2.50 to $3.26. Bologna bulls uneven. kinds in healthy de- mand at strong pricey Common and medium weights slow. Bulk early sales $4.00 to $4.25, Stockers and feede nerally steady, Calves re- ceipts to 50 cents lower. Best to packe y $9.00 to $9.50. Julk and down. Bloomsburg months with the mo i and these are due to 5. Bulk feeder Strongweight butchers quotable up to ing s mostly $6.7 perform marriage cer supposition is genera ages ate located adjac s, but in Bloomsburg three of -15 churehe true, ang the other block or two fro The result is the next to the churches Sheep ree tive lambs and heavyw to $8.00. pts 2,000. Bulk fat na- .00 to $13.50. ight ewes mostly $7.7 0 fed westerns offered ES a t WHOLESALE PRODUCE (Furnished by rthern Produce C: ear to have ceased looking for Velez and the indictments have not been'pressed. One government offisial it a position to know said he be- lieved President Zayas granted the I a clever way of indicating that h 8 did not take Vebez’s activities seri to! cusly. {the extension because legally he was entitled to it. | request for an extension of leave a9 | Tondon when his le: Velez declared he demanded 1 f£ Velez does decide to go back to | ve is up March | pass within a d- Now he will have to ne’s throw of secret police hea decen that uo afety matches at last—! quarters to get to the state depart- ment for his final instr ctions. Cream—Butterfat per Ib. ...... Eggs—Fresh, canMed per doz.. Dressed Poultry couples gulore G, Edward E adjoins the ™ Ss 25, ; No. 1 D. P. Young Tom turkeys Is from prinee has] ee iby lumber eee No, 1 D. P. Hen turkeys, me fe, ADAM AND EVA (© You ASk ME,ADAM, 1 THINK (T'S PERFECTL ZA RIDICULOUS EVA , TO INVENT EVERYBODY [IS HAVE MILLIONS HOUSES AND Ev! HT TAKES SACRIFICE. BUT, JUST THINK , WHEN IN BUBBLE HOUSES WE'LL! AND YACATS AND COUNTRY, Real Money DIRT ALL OVER. THE HOUSE ITS BY CAP HIGGINS To BE— MARRIED TO AN 1 INVENTOR? Sa ADAM WELL. ANYTHING ' 1 TO RUN THE LIVING OF DOLLARS ERY THING 5 y WHAT— WANT IS REAL MONEY House ‘y RIGHT Now AND NQT } BUBBLE MILLIO! yy THE OLD HOME TOWN You SAY Docs HAT MAKESA GREAT TARGET?) YP Wie Mir ‘GON MAIN STR WW Snow BALL FIGKT- Uneven. Few ear! sales in line} | New Shell with Mondays close. Best fat steers | No. 3 yellow 56 Ib. test . early had bids of $9.00. Bulk $7.00 No. ellow Life Has Many Interruptions Hog 1 18,000. Ten to 16! burg residents of cents higher. y bulk lights and [churches declare life butchers $6.50 to $6.65 trietly | terruption after anotl choice medium and aay and ecaraee young persons sceking: ministe Ml, whose residence thodist church here, EET HAD THENe ANNUAL am PAGE SEVE case they were informed that the par- sonage is two blocks away. DISPUTE OVER CHILD'S NAME try ver per Ib, h, per Ib. Chicago, H1., Feb. 12.—Hog receipts RAIN Ludwigsburg, Wurttemberg, Feb. 54,000. Active, Mostly 15 cents| (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) j 12. This little town, which, in its higher than yesterday’s general] Bismarck, February 11, 1924, | of the old trade, Top $7.15. No. 1 dark northern . «$1.08 | f Wurttemberg, has been Cattle receipts 11,000. Shipping] No. 1 northern spring 1,04 in two by a dispute among the demand fairly active. For well-con-|No. 1 ambde durum -86 | residents“and Is over the ques. ditioned matured steers at steady to} No. 1 mixed durum 84] tion of So far as strong prices, Top matured steers|No. 1 red durum .. Ludw, y is concerned $11.35. No. 1 fh there is a little girl baby here who |; Sheep receipts 17,000: Slow. Early | No. 2 fl has no first name et all because her bulk fat wooled lambs $14.25 to g14.-|No. 1 rye ..... 00. ..... 51 | parents insisted upon registering her 86. We quote but donot handle the] as Mz This name the town re- 5 Sua Ree followih gistrar refused point blank to accept . PAUL LIVESTOCK Oats 00.6... + on the ground that it was of French So. St. Paul, Feb. 12. ttle re-| Barley ....-......0005 ori nd inacgeptable to him on ceipts 2,000. Run late in arriving. |Speltz, per ewt. -.... that account Corn The mother and father have refus- ed to change the baby’s name mere- ly to suit a whim of the registrar, and all their friends have rallied to support them in what has been refer- red to as Ludwigsburg’s warmest town row in several generations, The parents contend that residents of the free town of Ludwigsburg may name babies ax they sce fit, am that such a personal matter is none of the bus- of the city fathers or any of clerks who “apparently don’t know the war is over.” On the other hand, the registrar has been upheld in his stand by the burgomaster and the majority of the town deputies and their political followers. Minnesota) 5e 12. Blooms adjoining is just one in- re the two interruption the numb Pepper Comes Down in Price Pe Feb, One of the neces- sities of life, after dint of hard dig- wing by the statisticians, has been remonies. 1 that parson- ent to chureh- the wh pastors live a heir churches.| found to cost less in 4 than in families residing | 1914. Pepper is the odd commodity. are v i price now is seven frances as nst 14 francs before the war. ds in the United car arly two billion pas- last y figures the Bu- reau of Railway Economics., BY STANLEY, couples during | Sts to per-| sengers WHEN IT WASNT” z, 4 WHY ALBERT YOU KNOW (TS YOUR TURN O-FILUTH wood Box! DIDNT ELLIS FILL IT NESTERDAN ? COURSE HE DID- IMeSURPRISED AT YOU ACTIN THIATAWAN $ 7S uve QVERK NOUR TURN. ANN GOSH - HE ALWS HAS iT TH EASIEST. WEN Ik HIS TURN T' SHOVEL SNOW “THEY AINTT NEVER MUCH-AN WEN ITS MY URN 11S ALLUS DEEPERN ANNCTAING ms FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS 4 YA HEARD WHAT PoP SAID HED Do T’ You WHEN HE CAME HOME THIS EVENING, DIDNT YAP CHEWIN' GUM IN ONE OF HIS RUBBERS New Name Wanted ‘CAUSE POP SAID HE WOULD WHIP AE WHEN HE GETS HOME, AS SURE: AS.AY NAMES TAG!

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