The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 9, 1920, Page 7

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WANT COLUMN | |DOINGS OF THE DuFFS ‘HELP: WANTED—MALE . COAL MINERS WANTED—By Beulah, Coal Mining Co. at Beu- lah, N. D. Steady work. Apply at mine or at Bismarck office in Haggart Building. » WANTED-—State and county men, active and of good personal appeararice, .ex- clusive territory, on a Vest Pocket Cheek protector, small mechanical de- vice, endorsed by bankers. “Men cap- ;,of employing others, big money ff, those who can qualify. Security oducts Co. P. O, Box 79, Chicago, 10. S-e3t MAN OR WOMAN wanted, salary $36 full time; 75c an hour spare time, Nielling pustantced hosiery to wearer. Exper: fence ynnecessary. International Mills, Norrigtown, Pa. 78-7-1 iWia! ID—A. general blacksmith at once. ‘Write to Fritz,-Schnitker, Beulah, 'N. D. . 8-4-5t. Pia ctrl DiS Eo we ee et Sot WANTED—Bright young men for “ush- ers; also boy for matinees. Apply El- tinge Theatre. $-5-t¢ HELP WANTED—FEMALE WAITRESS — Anply., headwaitress at. Grand Bane Bee RENE NAD tt PANTRY GIRL — Apply Chef at Grand Pacific, 8-9-tf WANTED=Girl or woman for ral Housework. “Call at 404 8th St. oF ‘phe e WANTED—Experienced girl for housework: Call'-802° Ave,” B. ROUMS FOR RENT . FORKS RENTTwo .apattments.. One furnished and, one unfurnished. Mai and wife, or. two business’ women, preferred, é aig. pene FOR-RENT—Room by Aug. ye peers power gose an . pwo; men only. St. 1 692K. z sate 8-7-3t ROOM in modern home. 2 gentlemen pre- ferred, Phone 432K, 306 8th St. °8-5-lw FOR RENT—Nicely furnished. rooms in \ “modern. house at 46 Maln St. oorg Tat FOR RENT—Three toom’ modern apart-} i Phone _™mént. _Cgll_ 622 1st St. 8-9-3¢ | FOR RENT—Rooms at 300 9th St. %. Phone 377 + S-41wk| FOR) RENT—Fumibbed rooms. 409" 6th St. 8-7-3t f FOR SALE OR RENT : HOUSES AND FLATS ! FOR SALE—Seven -:room modern | house, east front, ‘well located, on| very -reasonable terms; © 6-room modern ‘housé, well located for $3,200, on. terms; 6-room modern house, well’ located, for $3,250; | nige house, chicken‘ house, well an’ 5_acres of land for $3,000, On, terms, Geo. M. Register. 8-3-1wk, FOR_SALE—House, fully modern, corn- er Mandan and Ave. C. Hot water heat, double garage, sidewalks in and paid for, on paved street. House practically new and in excellent condition. House- hold furniture. for sale. Terms. Pos- session immediately. T. Broply. 8-6-1wk i i -5-1wk HOUSH FOR SALE—House of 10 rooms and bath; modern; large garage; east front; trees. A bargain. $1800’ cash. Balance on terms to suit, J. H. Holi- han, 1st dosr east of posto 2t FOR! RENT—Modern Lor house, cornen Main‘ and Mandan Ave. Phone’ 64M. &41wk. 8 FOR. RENT—A. very nicely furnished flat, including piano. No children. 807 4th’ st, 8-7.3t i FOR. RENT—6 room modern henge... In- quire at:310'9th St. 8-7-1wk — xy. FOR SALE—160 acres of land, 100 acres under -cultivation located four miles north of. Flasher, IN. D, or.will consider a trade of Man- dan or Bismarck tewn> property. Write to Harrison oks, General’ Delivery, Bismarc D. 3-1WK. [AND FOR SALE—Farm_ of $20 acres: improved; near Menoken. Also best river bottom land use south of: Bis= marck.. No crop ‘failures. .J.. H. Holl- “_hgn,_1st_door. east of post office. — 8-7-2 G10 ACRES—80, percent tillab! of. town; to trade for good information.-write, ” 255, Billings, Mont. | LOST AND FOUND _TOsT—Suly — 28,..Brown arid, white pointer dog, Nause Rex. 4, Swanson, Wilton, ‘N. D., for, -re- ward, F 8-4-5t. LOST—A ladies gold watch, T. en- . graved on back, Reward. Mrs. S, F, LAMBERT.’ Phone -407F14. ee gee 8-4-1wk. LO08T—Saturday evening, ladies’. single set pearl ee Finder. please return to, Tribune office and receive rey ne FOUND—A child’s wagon. Owner can have same by. proving ownership and paying for this ad, 223 Fifth St. 8.9-1wk 1 i 3 f 5 _s MISCELLANEOUS _ FOR SALE One ‘Advance 22_H. P, Steam ‘Traction Engine. One, Advance 36x60 Sepatator,: complete with Wind Stack- er, weigher belts and. Ruth Feeder attachment... One Advance 12-barrel wood water tank., One half round 12- bartél, wood’ water tank. One set of elght. bottom John Deere engine gang’ plows. One Avery Separator, 32x54, Qne .32-inch.Barthelomew Band cutter and Feeder,, One J. B. Farmers Friend Stacker. One Weigher, one Sattley at- tached Stacker. One Avery Gas Trac- tor 25H, P, 50.Break power. One Avery 16-bat rel route yes tank One Se a vas Drive. belt. Apply to Regan State Bank, Regan; <N: D.,. or. he City \Na- tional Bank, ‘Bismarck, N._D. 7-30-1mo FOR SALE—60 threshing machines. Some as good as new, going at a bargain. Size 22 in. to 40 cylinder, all makes. ‘Hazelton Second Hand Machinery Co. Hazelton, N. D. 8-4-2mtlis SUBSCRIBE, today to the service that tells you all about the OPPORTUNI- TIES (business and farming) “in ‘Arf- zona, California, New Mexico, Sonora and’ Sinloa. $1.00 yearly. Address, Dept. J5, Rogers-Burke Service, _son, Ariz, FOR SALE—Furniture, parlo ing and bedroom sets, also kitehen. Phorfe 688K or call Ave. A and 21st street, 8-3-lwk. FOR SALE—Toledo Scales, honest weight and no springs. The Scale of Justice. S. A: Tollefson, Waldorf Hotel, Fargo. @NED. 8-9-1wk / -~FOR SALE—Eastman kodak enlarger, Z cheap. Call Mr. Cooke. Phone 69°. © 8-9-1t FOR SALE—Some good early greyhound pups. If interested write Mr. Rhodes Winburn, Houghton, So, Dak. Box. Ge FOR SALE—One manual training bench, one 3-burner-Blue Flame oil stove, one _desk, one hammock. Call 471. _8-7-3t NEWSPAPER publisher having Diamond cyclinder power fixtures, for sale write News Wishek, 8-7 -5t SALE—Blue Flame oil stove, table, mirror, sewing machine, santitary _ eouch:’ Phone 400L or 395R.__8-7-3t FOR SALE—One steam engine, .22 horse power with new return flue. Kooreny, Ruso, N. D. 8-7-1wk WANTED -TO BUY—four. burner gas ‘stove With oven. Call No; 103 Sees LE—Roli_ top. writing desk. Phone call at 518 6th St___8-7-3t E to put up 1-2 Sec. of hay on ‘shares. Call 405_F2. __ .. 8-3-1wk FOR SALE—Four-burner gas stove, with oven, Call 236X. E 8-7-3t FOR SALE—Cow. Write 126, caré Trib- _une. $-2-1wk NEW CROP Sweet Clover Honey, by mail prepaid to any post office in N. 7-24-tf|. ” 422 Fitth street. Phone}, coe 8 11, in strict- |. 3 for one or}! Notify A.}: ‘Write Ned{) fel ARG WE GOING On! OUR: SECOND HONEY MON P/E SAY WE ARE! There Ame Te Tickers! Dak., 10 pound pail, $3, $1.80: case of comb, ‘en order, Clark W, Allen, Mont. es Sari AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SALE CHEAP—Dodge tourliig car, ‘good rtinning order, five good tires ‘and looks good.” A. bargain: at $575. Ad- _drens‘Box 244, Bismarck, N. D. FOR SALE—Overland roadster a ry in excellent condition, driven very little ‘Leaving city must sell. EnquiréPear- + “son Court Apt. 8. 8-9-1wk —— eee 2 Ba tk Aah Big Timber, 8-6-1mo Organization of the:G..A. R. The Grand Army of the Republic was organized in Decatur, IN., April 6, 1868. . Its existence is primarily due to Dr, B, F..Stephenson sind Chaplain W:.J. Ratledge.of. the Fourteenth, Illi- nois infantry, who: ¢oncetved the.iden of its formation in 1864. The first na- ‘tional encampment was inaugurated November 20, 1866. The Grand Army | has béen: organized, into departments. representing: the’ states and. territories. In. 1916. there were: 5,452. poets having a membership bf 150,863.. ‘The estab-' “Nahment: of; Mémorial day, is:,due- to: the..efforts of the G.:A, R. “Wished Water Turned Off. - Billy Hart has lHved with his par ents In. East. Thirty-sixth"street for three years, The other day his father took him “walking down to the--Me- ridian ‘street bridge over: Fall creek, | After watching the water flowing out from under.the: bridge for a time’ Billy, said: “Turn It off, pop; turn it off.” —Indignapolts’ News. ft a . 70 THB POLICYHOLDERS OF . THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA NOTICE be hereby sixes that a meeting of the flleg haloes. of THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE ‘COMPANY. OF AMERICA will, be held at the Home said Com- ny inthe City of Newark, New Jersey; on onday, the Sixth Day of December, 1920, at twelve o'clock, Been Loni he urpose of select- fen fous reans to be voted for by the policy olders* ustoe ga members of the Boerd of Directors at the annual election of Directors oh ghe Gompeny, to be held on the Tenth day ote meta policyholder of the t atch, meeting ‘ever icyholder of t! coeenon ‘who te of the age of twenty-one. eara.or upwatds and whose policy er intoree for atleast one year last past shall be entitled to cast one votein person or by prory.. FORREST F. DRYDEN; President ‘FRECKLES AND HIS'FRIENDS _ UE IS So <u UE AIN'T. WE. AIN'T EUERA; WE AINTY .and.an-expert will stop:a. cricket ball)! ~~ The Honeymoon Is Stri WHILE YourE DPSTAIRS, BISMARCK DAILY ‘TRIBUNE LAR, Tom, You'bt NOTICE I've GoT ove TRUNK ACKED WERE GOING ON OUR SECOND: 72 \ ~* > StiekFighting In Trinidad. Single conibat in yartous*forths sur- vives all over the world, and different lew. have. ;different . methods, of of Trinidad, for instance, the hatives, who speak a mixture of French patois and English, call thelr method “play-| ing bots” (literally stick fighting). The stick used, says the Detroit News, is about a yard long, and usual- ly made:from the “pule” tree, a very hard wood. This ts held, at each end @lagonally. in front of the body, and} the blows are struck by releasing one hand‘and striking with either the leff or the right. \ e In-The carnival seasoh.bAnds from the various districts are made up and contests take place whenever two bands meet, .The.stick men are ex- traordinarily clever at parrying, blows, thrown at him. Police. Unappreciative of Art. One of the best stories English the- atrical, men tell, ¢bdut Sir Henry Ir- ving {s of an occasion when he was re- hearsing for Don Quixote: at. the Ly- ceum. .The: one. great difficulty was| to find: Don Quixote's horte—sufficlent- ly quaint: starved and ‘aged. “His man-| ager, Bram Stoker, at last announced} that he had found one in the provjnces tin animal “whose ribs could be counted, whose bones stood out like hat pegs, and which had a head lke a camel. “It is on its way from Eu- ston now,” sald Bram Stoker, In an- swer to Irving's anxious inquiries. But the animal ‘never arrived. The men and benst had gét as fat as Bow strect .when the'police stopped them. The horse was ordered to7be shot, and the -man. was sentenced to a month’s imprisonment -for; cruelty to animals. SH sea Rapid Transit in-Dietant Past. “Sir,” sald Boswell, or one of the| minor fry in the service of the oracle of Fleet.street—I. forget which—“they are now busy: with a scheme of rapid transit. by, means. of postchnises.” “There,” _ You Win, Freekles! WAADDVA WANNA ARGUE FR = IRS MY Popa— Ves, Bur ANI¥ ON THE AOVERTTISIN pv “And the rate of the acceleration of velocity? queried the other. (I quote Showing:thelr, prowess. .\ In, the island aqtirely from memory.) “They talk, str, of twelve miles an hour.” “Sir,” exclaimed the sages “It would ‘be Im- possible; we «could not breathe.” comments the biographer, “that is\juét the inan he was, he could always “Yay his finger on the weak poin They. |had never thought of that.”"—Richard Whiteing, in Manches- ‘ter Guardian. \ + Measuring Our, Universe. Astronomers_are“inclined to believe that our universe with. its 3,000,000 stars.is after all but-a part of,space and.that other universes may lie be- yond. Attempts have been made to measure the size of the so-called, unl- verse, but opinions; differ very widely as to.its dimensions, It is difficult to measure it by using, go. small a.unit of -meagure'as a mile. If we take the speed of light which travels 180,000 miles in a. single second, for compari- son..we, will, begin. idea of the dimens! ons. Light speed- ing.along at this. rate will travel in an hour, 669,660,000 iniles, Itis estimated that It weuld take Slight} 30,000 years to. travel across this space.. Some as- tronomers even believe. that ft, would take ten times as long or 300,000 light years, The mind’ dan scarcely grasp, | great gain, some faint |, “Index of the Soul” Revedle. True Character. To the Initiated, the Human Eye De- notes the Workings of the Con: scious and. Subconscious, Mind, as- Nothing. Elee Can. The eye has been called “the index of the soul,” and ‘with mich truth, Yet how often is {t eonsulted, and _}'‘how many of us have sufficient knowl- edge to enable us to read it aright? In these days of unsolved crime mysteries, ability to read the charac- ter more or less accurately from the eyes Is a possession worth having, as- serts London. Answers., And this knowledge is not mere guesswork; it is based on scientific facts and com- parisons. Science has brought out facts show- ing that human eyes, like those: of animals, denote the working of the conscience and subconscious mind. Perpetrators of recent murders, if placed side by side, would provide useful Information to the psychologist and Scotland Yard. . Eyes: cannot be Influenced In cotor by the mind. “Dark, flashing eyes can- not be made blue, any-more than the nleoholic can ‘show eyes. like the ab- ‘statner. A patient consulting his doc- tor may not think his illness can be diagnosed by his eyes, yet itis useless for him to say he sleeps soundly when his eyes show the contrary. eat Ny Looking at the eyes of. people: you know, the following charaéteristics will be found almost invariably: In man, round blue_¢ denote a good temper, eusy ‘ol free . with strangers. and~ friends, If the eye: brows do not. meet in the middle, he is free from criminal {nstinct,. but sub- ject ‘to minor crime ‘through his feel- Jpgs for others, If blue be tinged with gray, perse- verance and strength of moral char- ‘actem must be added. He keeps his word, but does not forget an injury. This. type of eye suggests sleepiness, but in reality, denotes a fertile brain and retentive memory, a.strong con- stitution,. capable of hardship, yet re- taining an active mind. * Lucky are women with blue eyes. They are sweet tempered. If married, they will prove amlability itself, and, fond of. children, their sphere is in the house, or the finer work of the drawing-room. Gray eyes are ascribed to officers of rank, politicians, and judges. Gray eyes are stern and commanding, show- ing a forceful and dominant will, with powers of persuasion. » i If the eyes be full. and prominent, with a glassy appearance, the opposite is found; this type:is.not-reliable, can- not stand a strain, is never forceful, perhaps a good workman, but useless as a master. The owner of such an eye ts usually an egotist, not liking people ‘who hold different views, With- out being Inclined to crime, he lacks determination, A little study soon defines the crimi- nal eye, which will not look anybody straight In the. facé, filekering with what Is known as a furtive glance; when doing this, he calculates his chances ef success. In ladies, gray eyes are not an as- the idea that beyond this universe le set. For beauty or love, blue, black even greater voids.—Boy’s Life. Malden Lane's Fame. In: Peril. ‘ Maiden lane, in the heart of the New. York business district, may lose its identity If the diamond and jewel- ry and allied trades there decide to move uptown. Great’ increase In rents recently caused the tridesfien to appoint a commit: to consider a proposal to shift the entire trade center, This committee, it was learned, has recom- mended several new.sites and & cati- vass will soon be taken on the propo- ot hazel have the preference, Old maids and man haters usually pos- sess. gray eyes, which, however, often denote fixity of purpose and noble- ness of character. have tlie deepset eye showing they can premeditate.a crime and gaving a strong mind can keep a secret. Dark eyed people ‘ure considered handsome and attractive. In the mati, it amounts te magnetism, the hyp- notist being in this class, Such eyes denote 1 determination, to, go through at all cost; thelr owners love with a mad passion, The woman in this sition. More than 75 leading firms, | class.is jealous beford marriage ; after, including large manufacturers, are said to be considering moving, ‘ BY BLOSSER mn | | | | she will, ruin anybody who tries to come between, them.. She delights in children and dress. Dark eyes are not stronger than other colors, as is com- monly supposed. ‘The next study requires care to Judge, or mistakes will result. This Is the small, black, beady eye, set deep in the head, never seeming to be prop- erly open. This type of man or wom- an blinks: and turns away when iooked. at, as Ifeto conce#! what they fear can be read from their eyes. This fg the criminal eye, and de notes cunning, greed, vice and decelt; no feeling for others. This is the persdn, to. avold at all tines, for though ‘he may not have any intention of evil, he lacks only the opportunity. The true hazel eye is seldom seen, This. denotes, in both sexes, imagina- tion, fickleness in love, fondness of pleasure, and no desire to rise In the world. Owners of hazel eyes have no criminal instincts, their tongue being their most dangerous weapon, Artificial Eyes In Demand. One of the odd trades of Birming- ham is that of artificial eye-making, says the London Daily Mail. It has never been more thriving than now. Some makers have’three months’ work ahead. The war added to the de mand, and there are thousands of ex- service men who can not: possibly be supplied for a considerable time. The variety of artificial eyes Is surprising. They differ in, the size of the’ iris, shape and. the color of the “white.” Ne two.eyes are alike, and the artifi- cial eye has to match the remaining one, a matter of nice judgment. For- merly the Germans competed In the trade, but thelr “eyes” had many faults, im oR. S. ENGE, D.C. Ph. C Chiropractor Consultation “Free Sulte 9, t—Lucas Block—Phone 200| USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS | certain tood. Women criminals |: PAGE SEVEN + ‘MA ° Macy Isa well-known “movie” favor: Ite throyghout the country. She liket to ride ‘in an airplane. This picture was taken as she was about to take z Jaunt to attend an aeronautical exhi bition near the studios in which she ir working out West. 0. ow (Copyright.) THE REASONS One time I met a chap who said I'd fall Since then I've camped along ambition’: trail With clenching fists and grating teeth to show That chump there were some things hi did not know, A lot of times, too; I met kindly folk ‘Who satd—and made me think they dic not joke— | __ That I was destisied for a better place Than then I held in life’s uncertain raee For tneir dear sakes who thus bellevec in me I am compelled by gratitude to be All that I might have been upon thi: earth = Had ‘fortune smiled: her sweetest at m) birth, Now those two reasons, and some mor: that. 1 Can't. now recall, explain succinctly why I do the best I can to make success Of my small part in this great mundant mess; e706 Red Hair, Some people admire red hair, anc others have It. Red-headed people are better look Ing, than other people, if they are, Sonie are ugly as mud fences. , -The horse’ dealer’ calls red-header people sorrel. 2 The cattle men call them Devons o: Durhums, The hog-men, cati them Durocs, Ornithologists call them woodpeck ers, : ‘the dog men call them Irish setters The poultry men call them Rhod Island reds, ‘The artists call. them Titians, And theie you are. But all the time there are a fow peo ple around town, including the posses sor of the pink foliage, who know the; are pluin red-heads. We once knew a girl who was so red headed that the underwriters raisec the insurance rate on her father’: frame dwelling. ‘ We also knew a young man wh couldn't: use anything but asbesto: pillow-cases, And once when he tried to take ar egg-shampoo the odor of scorchint omelette was almost unbearable, Arnis boy finally got a Job in.a large city, standing ina gas-ditch in a busy street at night and letting his heac stick out. s Ned-headed people are supposed tt be quicker-tempered than other folks Our observation Is that this Is ab solutely true, except for brown-huirec or black-haired, white-haired or bal or tow-headed people. We do not know why red halr Ist Joke. But it 1s. Otherwise we should never have written this ee@ you wouldn't have read it. Sucker! / MAMA! Witt You BRING VP MY LITTLE RUBBER BALLWITH THE HOLE Wanted: Girls or boys over 16 years of age to learn press feeding. Apply Tribune office. RY McLAREN | a OLD BATTLE LI Evidences of War Thick in Vicinity of Ypres. 7 Shell Holes Beginntrg to Grow. Green, but Battered Tanks Are Every: where in, Evidence on. the Scenes of Slaughter. Leaving Zeebragge the first day’s journey by motor takes the visitor something more than a hundred miles, with Ypres as the turning point and every variety of> war-stricken lands and recovering countryside on the way there and back. _ It was a point moot- ed with wearisome frequency in the real days of the placé—when it was “functioning,” a8 one woulg:have sald —and among front-line troops in the, { salient, whether they would ever care to come back and see that foul ‘place under a_ peaceful aspect. Agreed,| there were those at home who might be taken, not without profit to them-| selves and the world in general, over the low ground under Kemmel, or| where Passchendaele looked down on| | the swamps, and there were not | few of the armchair gentry whose instant presence would have been wel-| comed. ‘But, for himself, it- was the| common verdict of the man in the mudhole that, once out of it, Wipers} and he could be the best of frignds— at a distance, says a writer in the Manchester Guardian, Riding into the place from which rises the battered tower of the Cloth hall, in the high day and under .a. burning sun; coming, too, unscathed and unfearful from what was unmis- takably the direction of “No. Man's Land,” one had to question such a verdict, and finally, under the stimu- lation of a hundred quickening..memo- ries, allow the appeal, _ For the in- terest of Ypres and of all the ground in front of it would not be denied. The place was like ftself—in a degree ‘hard to credit. And if only some mimic had been there to reproduce the shrill crescendo of an: approach- Ing shell one would. undoubtedly have taken cover, Going out by the way of the Menin gate and turning up into the high road to Poelcapelle, with first Hooge and then St. Julien, with Pas: schendaele rolling up to the skyline as a. background, is to pass into the field of an endless battle from which noth- Ing has. been cleared. but the, dead; and though elsewhere something has already been done of that “concentra- tion” of graves which Is to give our dend an orderly and lasting memorial, they still Me here, for the most part in. the scattered. restng places “to which the hurried hands of their com- rades ‘consigned them. The shell holes begin to grow green, but fis only-a beginning, and !f the frenches are’ almost unseen, as one goes down the road, were they’ ever very clearly defined here? Itis a long. time before a place is reached from which no battered tanks can be seen, and now and again they stand three or four fleep on the very edge of the rond—dftched in their first attempt at the mud. To look back on war at its worst, with almost all its evidences but ‘present slaughter, one .could searcely better the viewpoint of this road. A few miles farther, and the murdered’ forest of’ Houthulst, with its acres of stricken trees and not & live one, gives a néw ed:e to terror. There Is something suund tn the notion that one can see the battle fields in a day; the repetition would give no new tone, but intrinsically the same Inipression, As a lesson Ypres and Its province could not be sur- pissed. Coming out at Dixmude, be- hind what was an almost permanent boche line,the car returning to Zee- brugge comes again into a country ‘| which is alive, For the hinterland of Belgium has returned quickly to it- self. The army huts which serve in the broken arcus 18 shelter for those who ‘have returned’ to the, shattered villages, givé. place here to cottages already substantially repaired, and the frugal cultivation of the soil goes forward with an ¢nergy and resource- fulness typical of no class In, the world so much as the Belgian or French peasantry, SELLS SPERI Siler 2 aly Avoiding Lily Embatgo. A new and curious industry, it 1s predicted, is soon. tg be born in Van- couver, B,C: hWecause of the embargo placed this by the United States department of agriculture on all Jap- uneSe nursery stuck packed In Jap- anese soil, This decree was intended Ifo stop the importation from the ,is- land of Formosa of lily bulbs, ordi- narily brought into this country at the rate of $25,000,000 worth a year, “at the trade will net be suspended, crsekymien Of Vancouver declare, ‘She bulb traffic will be deflected north- ward to this *seaport, Just above the boundary; and here the bulbs will be removed from the soil in which they crossed the Pacific. They will/then be repacked in Canadian loam, and so, free from “Japanese soil,” will be qualified for entrance into the United. States.—Popular Mechanics Magazine. a Oxygen Device Texted. Because of\the possibje\ disastrous. failure of an alrian’s oxygen supply: ” | apparatus at great altitudes, the. - United States bureau of stihdards has: © devised a’ reliable method of testing the equipment In the laborhtsry. All the conditfons of high-altitude flights are accurately reproduced, says Pop- ular Mechanics Magdzine In an illus- trated article appearing fn Its July is- {| gue. Decreased pressure is obtained by. inclosing the equipdrent-in/a bell Jar connected to an air pump. Among the wild Tauregs of the Tripoli desert woman’s sway is ab+ solute. noise with the mouth when eating Ge

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