The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 8, 1920, Page 7

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ue i ontense te Barber, College, (107K. jAve.. nnes pore WANT 19 summers, blonde 5 ft. weigh] 138 ibs, 5,00 Ss Geeeaed th; sth S $3400.00 ih, “West .Broad-: 35,8008 & Ave: 7 reoma and bath, iat St..$4.708.00 6 rooms ad ‘bath, Ral St., $5,500.00 7 ‘ x West rats. | sibas sal hela oun ee “$useo.ee = 1 FB, YOUNG REAL ESTATE CQ. Fi ‘National Bank, Building“ “Phone 7RR ‘Appointments made. for even-\ ings, when ‘not convenient to’ look at Bote during the day: good dre: of Klein, Joke, Bi, Y ng | mai = to: wor! WwW Be oo owiale: Auto mie. WANTED, sapere irl mi ue WO permanent - posi month, . Call Mrs, W, WANTED=Gni for Te neral une wrk. daply Dunraven. Ayre Be . Phome SALESMAN _ 4-7-8t NA. Corporation: with large’ eration In reves. wanes, ‘real tock, sales: ‘tnen. “ Real cooperation; strong ules : “board. one oer ry py WANTED-Cook, Ww: ANTED—Gini, for general, ‘Phone 415R.or call at 208, th WANTED—Second cook at noms Sanitary Cafe, Sth rn! ished room, suitable for ~garage: “by man of- exemplary “habits. Phone 767K -or 615 doth "Graduate _of. Sweeney Automobile “ativing cars ang tr at Garage rk Ghee. 1; 616 6th street. 4-5-lwk WANTED Posie Ingen ‘al young Tah 37, pe jerma mi mand wits. ST “AND. Founp et on Second street Broad way, Finder leave’ at Cov tore’. dr) call .839. aa a ing :.of bu ¥ ao ris;. “Finder evil re _réward:. 447-3t D ition im speak” German: 7 years nce; tier; mot atrald. of Hard work, state |, salary::in vfirst wetter.” of: refet . Address: H. C. gol Moat. : D=Poaition dx Shoemar: capable reg be nf eae f uying an ing; sre "Burn! ‘Clase A-1 . Class A, $1.75." Blue and | brown ‘with: and ‘without aprons, 50 dozen or each 9c. Khaki mi Be.” Hendyed ait Atm: ‘useet Wition ome ‘dozen Fs -OF eX) and hob nail erence, furnished. $3.96. | Anh: ‘class. 6'x1! Peper “fine “condition, , ach *st.00 eRe ra Officeris.:9’ x 9° wall. tents, prreny luck. each $30-and. $35.00. ee uF ‘ponies white, mare, poranded ve" Te Lite we, roa to ‘be cycles: and new, r= -6-2t NOTES-AND | ywhere. "No charge urls ‘Our ‘continuous, ‘si pl Ny NI acres, ies Tanlles heavy ee town, on sine lek hoe Uy she ore gets you" business, Write, or eal eae one: i. five thousand cash. he jen: the others party follow. the line pe ee 1st $25. pér’ t naiince con yeary from Laas agency ie I McGeerAl d =e cS ane wks Nee ee of ee, Fie racvet jrootn house, ‘. A igranary;, Ww 259 vacres “in ‘corn.-Jast. year. ediat Tent.’ — Imme Ei SALE—1 dining’ room Phone: 883R.: 1 West Brand: || 5 Fagen and ath, se rae eye maple |; "BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Come. Sioa PADDY ME new ‘ | BOUGHT, You “ronan! Beat Tp girl's shoe; dark brown, bs SEE WHAT L Do Whe: ITS COLD, PADDY? here, comes the ‘golden ‘alarm: clock: President. McCredi chy “after having Pproposals' for bonuses in the. contract ‘negotiations’ “with © Lew “Blue, first ‘baseman, pegan to x habit. too, and\ Counter bonus ‘p) pFonosal to Blue, providing that. if: the® player wasn’t’ caught off first more than 10 times: avec season he ,ghould But tell us eaten tell hind why your. Meorsss sal led, terrible! tims" Woes the door around 'Washingto: is an offer:for forty weeks’ A next winter 1f-the Senators finish in. firet ‘division.’ ‘Clark would Have to take Nick Altrock ng, Though he’s. the, mule show Ait thy the uriffs. sn: the jongs gat: them. |” qks'over the division of | rifon of third) place. money h: pf aadin to $38 per man. The Colonels. paid ‘it ta them out of thet own: Rockets../:.- 5 they keep on: cutting off the tl ghamrdex Iv ‘they'll haye to ‘turn ie . arhond: sidewjse:-and’ race‘her.° | Nobody “toves Henrietta, Nobody ever’ ‘tzies; at No one will ‘start detta’ for love “of her’ eguiiful: eyes. a Worried? ‘Why, nbt tory’ minute. business in a sm ad aie ings re, mane -MeKena WB Reg J. Fae stana Re indtan. Sood fe Salty, a Vi corget ofthe Ww. ‘and Sere Blanding ne Hoy and ‘Office: ma nt 200 easy Gen. Bi Br — climate, SFOpe, “Wisconsin De} valu. a, Madien Ay stil) iat the Tia old and “as” man: Boarders, as. care to. come. Mrs. ‘Coch, 4-3-5t DRA MEN—Privilege’ of | shes on low lots corner Ave. id. St. G. J. ee Of the. ew schiool site. Ba 3 caitreal Bismi ain 6th « St, ‘4-2-1wke ia ‘dampini and | FOR SALE. OR RENT’ HOUSES AND FLATS - FOR: BALE=} ble \ouse, and eat on euch side: 7. $20.00 421 12th’ St Phone. 437¥. oa 2-34. For, ‘Baled Tr aaa =e hy WAN'TED—Washing. water. the car ine. This Pro} be replaced today for. on ‘investment. «For quick, ORS Be -ENGE, D. foots. oe ts, Sle, on pa paved Ce jultation Free tree! ice cash. ‘erms bees —] on. balance. Ideal for, rooming house, Suite 9, 11—Lueas Block—Phone 260 (D. T. Owens €'Co. pr sy 4e7-8t HOUSE FOR: SALE—A-modern hi 5 rooms and bath; full‘ basement heating plant. and well located on 6th Street. dee ay of the Ae “ 0! rol im ie city at 3} Bued Senn ye Holihan, 1st: doo eaat of _Postoffice. FOR _SALE—7_roor id bath. 5 resets front, terms. neighborh: house, _ four. Hot ° water Thee ‘Nery 715x150, choice been mm house on Peat rect et, for $3300, fei focated. Modt tirup stairs Maple floors, » gk balms with ade FOR SALE—Very. Hore, yi se ex chickens and. cok. cl al Phone 48x or aryite 433 ait Be FOR RENT—Small_ house with foe _. spot. . Phone -351R. are: Jas>> Meber- ‘ . os The wife of thé ‘boss is her’ friend, She's got ‘a good job and she’s in it ‘Till time and ‘creation’ all end. There 'ish't:& need (o"be zédldus-, stick to fies job dnd’ her’ place ‘While old* Mra/ Boss 80 jealous ‘And she ‘doesn’t ‘alter her face. UIFE IN THE GARDEN “Where the hoe?” wayie change the aaile to Shamrock Hie Mi eee . Soma ‘of the boxers may he engaged | in the silent drama, but the promoters and managers talk as loudly as ever.| {8 rather raw, * ‘The ,cables- say, ‘the: population. of Viehina ‘1s going barefooted. Georges | rpentier, brought -over 75, pairs of kicks with bim (besides the kick in jis right). Maybe Geotges-has some- thing to do. with the ee ‘s ab ee , The boxing: champ: basked: in the sun At beauteous ‘Hollywood, And dreamed of things het likeo he, He, wondered if he could , Some'-day win the Dlaudits): on the ,,Sereen, » ‘And thrill’ the movie tans “ As he had’ often stirred thé hearts Of pugilistic clans. |< “T kstOw,;” he said, “that T can. hit A hard blow with my. fist) I've often swung my, right or left _ Ad ‘very seldom missed. Yes, I can lend’ a padded’ glove lost anywhere f aim, ~ gem. on the ‘nose. or. ribs. ‘To! tie it’s all the: same...’ “ ive kayoed many with’ my mitts, fame piel ‘far and wide, ot hy ‘mbition,. 5 BUTANED to say, Ag: still ‘ynsatisfied —~ If.1 could take-a pustard |pie \ And stand off. eighty. feet And ‘hit’a guy\right on the nose Devil life would be complete.” or spinning a top out’ of hear. ing,’ =willie; Bo gut and help your pa.” “Pa, what can I do?” “Well, for one thing, aeanding. on” the. Asrouns ire Another spell ‘of. silence.) ey tect! Tm going to get this lot plowed ; it’s too: hard work spad- tage “Say, pa— “Keep still; ‘you’ talk all the time.” “But—" Shut up!?" , i fee 7Well> what in, sambill do you “In: the. front. yard flower “bed, Tran?” where’ You left’ it ‘last evening.” “fT wish-you'd leave the rake’ Where } can find it.” 3 “T haven't seen it since you raked the’ adhes ‘out ‘the otter d: “Say, where jn the world are thode spade.): garden seeds I~brought ‘home last veWhere’ you put.’em, T guess. ‘They connie shave walked away: ae ion of silence, somewhat “brief, ‘Say ‘Willie 1 want her $e, Stop, run- }| ning’ over _ “And get. me: the spade.” “Where ia it-aty” »\ 3} ly. you’ Will find iti there.” Huh!" if-I’ve..got; the, .ro “L can't now; ;+b But’ who 4s he that’ \"“Mister Blinks uses a-spade. not the ‘Shovél, to spade with. “Maybe Eon iget: along faster 1 it ra did that: aa & lence cwehile by bh hunte for, “the Voice from the | house: ** guimmér isn’t here ‘until you's ‘ve geen. the ‘firgt barefooted Ler: tcher ist may profiteer ry ‘And’ skimp the'meat you Uuy. not fear.’ To. meet him eye to eye? One: longs: with: rancorous;‘affront ig ‘placid, life\to blagt,- But one does not attempt the stunt + Because one doey not dast, | / This was submitted dna spring poem contest: “te tere, love, love; loye, love, Jove) _ ‘fome,. come, come; coe, come, Past WHieTY NEARS ud ‘ Ba heed ‘some help everybody's ‘balking | quick about it, too, ¥ i how, can I work. iff’ Supper’s , L BEFORE He EVER, COT AN oventoay THAT cosT $3522 Spring spring, Mpring, spring, spring. Spring Love, love, nove, love, ilove, love. ‘There! are. many- reasons why it is just as well” that spring comes py once a year. \ A New York artist ts exhibiting a painting of a nakéd oyster, / This i &) <In Kangas ie they. had an exam- ination of Srown-ups. they fected "em on tag; hop-skip-and-jump, leap frog and other of the, friskey games of long ago. -Tag, experts assert, furnishes as‘ much exercise’ as gardening or golfing. °° i ie ale Charles Hattie,’ Pitssburg,” Pa., . is a great. stickler for accuracy. The other day his’-wife ‘had: him in police court. She-teétified \thgt he hadn't worked for 14 years. ‘Judge, that. statement is\not true,” Hattie ‘exclaimed. “It’s an insult for that woman to stfind: there and say such a thing. working.’ Ms ! i ae Teddie Goes to School ~ “Say, Ma, don’t you want the yard /:. raked 2” 2o9No}i 1, guess’ that cn ‘wait until evening.’ Hadn't I better stay honie and do some. work ‘in’ the garden” “No, it:looke like rain today.” “Don't you want me to clean _out | the basement?” “«Nod, you can do that Saturday.” “Say, Ma, aid't there anything 1 can: do, today” ' “Yes, you can go to “sinodl, dud be Mrs. ‘Abner Harpington, who never‘ ‘Could learn to run.a sewing machine, or a'washing machine, was heard. to remark that she “can run the ma- ‘ou cin stop chine, as well as my ‘husband. who I've" just has been fooling around with auto- mobiles for several years.” ~ Napoleoil handwriting “was so.-il; legible. that ‘hig letters from Germany to Josepliine were at first taken for Tough maps of the seat of war, it In olden. ‘times’ rhingceros ‘horns were employed for drinking cups by roynl personages. the notion being that ‘poison pat into them would ‘show it- sélf by bubbling. 1S — oases nhl NoInternal m0: Oa eth by olziome microbe be _ Science: bs discovered th that fe sacle like. iise cranberry a stroyegbe tint faba, an ithe cael * oe hid becrifr oe ee Returned 1 itst Batefiod hy: ‘When Politeness Didn't Pay ‘Dotine. Yo dud. § WEN FATIERIS READING You MUST MAT TILL T aN FINISHED. the. bureau drawer atid going-;to a “| stuck in her : fir’s skin is so tough It cai” staid the |How the States Stand It has ‘been only—|- ‘let me see—12, years sitice I stopped | BY. EDWARD... THIERRY, | With Smithsonian Universal “African Expedition. . 4, Johannesburg — Mrs. Wife, | just think what a terrible think it would Ve if you had ‘to wear,a sign:. “I'm married !” No thore of. the spicy little adven- ture of leaving your wedding ring in tango tea with \that. charming, chap you met in the elevator the -other day. i There's nothing. like the latter among dusky African wives. When a woman's married everybody kpows it, How ‘would you like to be a’ Zulu woman with cone- shaped mass of hair as.a sign that you’ré married? Just as soon ds they are marrted or betrothed they begin to train the hair (see picture), red’ @lay and. oll helping the process, She's got a bone “handkerchief” crown ‘of glory, It’s ‘a pleve of bone uséd tb scrape: olf perspiration, Kaftir men are just. as Vain about their hair as women. Young dandies | get théir friends to plait their: hair into strands, sometimes wrapping then -with grass, making them stjck out like quills on a porcupine, metal comb or two stuck/rakishly into the hair, gives added beauty in the na- tives’ eyes. Some native ‘married\ men’ have the “I’m mmurried” “mark as well as the women, This isa ring worn on top of the head. Its made of wood’ high- ily polished, beeswax or a ‘mid-rib of | ya date palm, twined into the hair, mixed with dried insect juice and pow- | dered charcoal and polished. Often the | rest of the hair is shaved off—with a plece of broken glass ora sharpened hoop iron, 3 Soap isn’t, used in shaving. Ss Kaf- She’s married! scraping. liv some tribes children’s headsare shaved like society poodle ~ dogs... oddshaped | patches of hair be- ing left. Women have: their hair cut by 2 hairdresser who places a’strap around the head ‘and ‘then cuts the I with a knife. -Then it’s plaited junto strands. After.a woman's hait has been dressed and clayed’ and oiled—such a tedious process as..to be possible only about * once a month—she sleeps with a block _ of wood under her neck to protect the = work of a on Woman Suffrage - \ | |) the Constit | the amendmfnt in the order nam | the amendment in the: order of |. not acted: f; ‘ 1—Wisconsin 2—Michigan 3—Kansap 4— Ohio 5—New York 6—Illinois 7—Pennsylvania 8—Massachusetts 9—Texas./ 10—lowa 11—Missouri 12—Arkahsas 4 Z 15—Minnegota” * 16--New Hampshire 17—Utah ‘ f 18—California 1—Alabamay 2—Georgia 3—M jastasippi 4—South’ Carolina 1—Conhetticut 2—Flotida a, boulsiags: “L Subjoined is the status of the Susan B. Anthony, amendment” jon’ of the United States, the states which have ratified to éd, the states which have rejected Beton. and. the states which have STATES | RATIFY ING AMENDMENT 19—Maine 20—North Dakota ‘21—South Dakota 22—Colorado Rhode ‘Island. |\—-Kentucky 25—Oregen ~¢— Indiana Wyoming. 28—Nevada 29-—-New. Jersey 30—Idaho 31—arizona 32—New Mexico 33—Oklahoma 34—West Virginia an Rey Weshington . STATES REJECTING ‘AMENDMENT Vine ia and slaware STATES STILL TO TAKE ACTION —North Carolina 5 nhneeoe Gie\ crmonty BY MILTON BRONNER, Butopean Manager N. E.. A. Glasgow, Math 31.—Hoot mon, Scot! land’s: going drty!, Qi:so. the ‘drys SAY. ‘Ana their confidence Woes. not appear groundless. : } To the. average Briton this’ seems }as improbable .as several years fig seemed the prediction that Kentucky would go practically déy under a ‘local | option Jaw ‘before: the nation did. But.the' conditions‘in Scotland close- ly paralle] thosé in Kentucky, my na’ tive pine, ‘ Keytuck made ‘the whiskey for the /nation; just as Scotland makes the whiskey for Great | Britain. Z The Scotch, like Kentyckians, are supposed to be so ‘wedded to thei: wee drappie that they will no gie ic Qon for onny mon. Ah weel, we shall see. Under local Sion out of 120 coun- ties ‘in Kentucky, 1113 had gone dry before —metional prohibition ‘Under local option.“the Scotch drys expect to do something of the, same sort. i, Seven’ years ago, after. a lengthy battle, the British, parliament_ passed a bill known asthe Scotch temperance ‘act, to come into effect June 1920. Scotland is made up. of some 1300 voting areas—couutry parishesy towns of less than 25,000 and.wards in larger cities, ; After. August 15, one-tenth of the yoters in any such area can demand an ‘election upon “three | points—no change, ‘a Jaw limiting the number of saloon’ liceusgs to be issued, or no license at all. 1f/55 per. cent of the ‘votes recorded in an hrea are in favor of no license and these number not Jess than 35 per cent. of the voters in the area, tl ‘no license” becomes the law and'n’ more. saloons. can, operate in that , area. £ Tf a,.mmajority;.of the votes, are in favor of a* limiting resolution and ‘these votes number \not-less than 35 uper=¢ént of the voters in the area. H Scotland Gding Dry? Case Parallels Kentucky i then the measure is ie and after that ~ loons an that ‘district must ibe - ced by 25 “per cent. P t “We ay ‘ana jority, yote, in favot ef no change ‘or if thé other ‘resolutions;* are defgated, then'there is no change in the’ area. It, Wi “be noted that’ the Jaw. ts a copy of the ones so successful in Kentucky’ and elsewhere. It enables the drys to pinch oft bits of territory. When F visited, the ‘dry; headqyar: ters here I found: everyone ¢onident. They have, divided Scotland, ihto three sections’ and have no, license committees backed by the Scottish: Temperance league, the Permissiv Bil} agsopiation, ‘the British Women's Temperance. association—and similar - organizatipns. ~ They. afe. sending: dut speakérs. and organizers all over Scotland and. many of them are, Americans... Also they are flooding the mails with liteyature and cartoons and many of, these are copies from Aterican. propaganda. ‘Che liquor men pave taken alarm, | They have formed a Scottish LicenseT~ Trade Veto: Defense fund, have opened big headquarters heré/and are also- preparing to send out Mterature® and pleas) ‘Earnshaw, in yeneral earn of the wet tampaign, told) me ~ frankly, that 1920 Would be a fatefil year for the liquor trade in Scotland. * There is one thing in which the Scotch local option Taw differs from ours. If all Scotland were to vote itself dry would merely “close the. saloons. It*would not close the whis- y distilleries. DThese could _ still ate and shij: their | product to other countries, A new record for ‘low-powered. wireless. appartus ‘was. maderecently when the Pacific Mail Liner Vene- auela,...With . two-kilowatt... wdreles: communigited WIth the naval ‘station at Inglewood, Cal, a distance of 5600 Kmiles across the ‘Pacifi¢. 3 BY RLOSSER

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