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WANT COLUMN = e—_—_—_ HELP ;-WANTED—MALE COAL MINERS WANTED—By Beulah Coal Mining Oo. ‘at Beu- lah, N.'D.: Steady work. Apply at mine or at Bismarck office in Haggart Building. 7-24-tf WANTED—Man with Ford touring car, if you haye the time, see me for a real opportunity Tuesday and Wednesday. J. Wiegele, Van Horn Hotel. 8-16-1t WANTED—€arpenters and laborers, Col- wall-Long Co., New Memorial Build- ing, Capitol. 8-16-3t WANTED—Second cook. Good wages and no Sunday work, Apply Homan’s Cafe. 8-17-3t HELP WANTED—FEMALE i WANTED—At, once first class cook, wages $75 per month, room and board. |: Dining room’ girl, good wages, and board, .Permanent places. Work not very heavy. Phone or write Hotel Underwood, Underwood, N. D. 8-10-1wk WANTED—Ginl or middle aged woman for general housework. Good steudy Position and good wages. Apply Donn’s Meat Market, 612 Broadway. _8-13-tf WANTED=—Competent’ girl for general housework, Highest wages. Mrs. W. E. Lahr, 504 Mandan Ave., or phone 657. 8- room WANTED—Girl for general house work, ‘family of three, Mrs, S, D. Cook, 220 Anderson Ave. Phone’ 403, __ 8-14-1wk WANTED—A woman to help clean house. Phone 850 between 5 and 6 p.m. _ Thursday. a _._, S-lte FEMALE HELP WANTED—Woman to help in kitchen. Apply Steward G. P. Hotel. 8-14-tf WANTED—Waitress_and Kitchen help ‘wanted at Minute Lunch on Broadway, WANTED—Exfertenced girl for general house work.’ 802 Ave. B. Phone 902. 8-14-1wk WANTED—Two experienced dining room girls.” Apply Annex Cafe, ____8-16-8t WANTED—Dining :room girls, American Cafe. ‘ 8-14-5t POSITION “WANTED POSITION WANTED—Girl out of school wants position taking care of child. Call afternoons ‘at 309 4th St. 8-18-3t ___ ROOMS FOR RE) y 'T HOUSEKEEPING room ‘suitable for two ladies. References required of strangers; 401 5th St. 8-11-iwk FOR RENT—Three large sunny rooms, front part of the house, unfurnished. Call at 409 15th St. 8-11-5t FOR RENT—Room for rent. Gentleman Good location. Call 683R, 31 _N._Ninth St, 8-13-3t FOR RENT—Light housekeeping rooms, furnished, first floor, 1016 Broadway. Phone 518. 8-17-1wk FOR RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekeeping. Call 411 bth St. or phone j-2t | i NICELY FURISHED ROOM—Close ‘in. Suitable for two. Cail at 16 Broadway, PES a ae a a FOR RENT—Modern room for gentleman only. Call 418 2nd St., ur, phone AGS FOR RENT—Furnished roums in inedern home, 320 Mandan Ave. Phone v9sL, 8-12-1wk FOR RENT—One room furnished “for light housekeeping. Call 620 6th St. etesed oi Se UES 1B 8t FOR RENT—Nice furnished room for one or two gentlemen. 309 4th St, 8-18-3t ROOM FOR RENT—Lady ~ preferred, __Phone 485L,__623-5th St. 8-18-3t RENT—Furnished room. Street. “7K. ee: FOR RENT—Furnished roo 8th St. FOR RE tooms at 300 9 317K. i FOR_RENT—Room, 409 5th St. WANTED TO RENT. 3 WANTED—Furnighed room with board in private family for two boys attending |. high school, Prefer place.where work can be exchanged for room’ and ‘board. Good, references. Apply. Tribune Box bes (i Sonate 8-16-1wk WANTED—Three or four light house- keeping rooms. Good references. Ap- ply Box 666. 6-1wk FOR SALE OR RENT OUSES AND FLAT. __HOUS ) FLATS. FOR SALE, BY. OWNER—Nearly. fiew |i fully mddern six rogm’ resi plete with every modern. Nice shade trees, lawn, ‘gol locatl near schools.. Two thousgnd dollar: cash payment will handle«the deal;, bal ance sam‘ price reasonable. A x\No. 638, City. 8-14 room ‘modern ‘hou: ee. Com- venience. ‘OR SALE: located; large garage; ance easy terms. J. _ door east of post office. LIVE IN YOUR. OWN HOME at price less than rent..T have three houses to, sell on easy: terms. C. L. Burton, Bis- marek, N.D. __ 8-10-6t FOR RENT—A very nicely furnished flat, including piano. No children, 807 4th St. Phone 404R. §-18-4t FOR” RENT—A_ very flat, Including piano. 4th’ St. . Holihan, ist 8-14-3t nicely furnished No children.~ 807 8-14-3t FOR RENT—23 room unfurnished apart- ment with bath. 422 Fifth Street, Bis marck, S 8-16-3t FLAT FOR RENT—Phone 2e8W" after 6 t , ____ MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE—One Rumley sene enging, 30 h._p. Allis Chalméta: Di Ce horse power Romie one 49 ampere Allis Chalmers D. .' generator; two switchboards; two belt radiator tanks; kerosene tanks, A com: plete light and power outfit cheap for cash, Can be seen in operation at Zap. Address Jack Arnold, Zap, N. Dak: FURNIT! FOR SALE—Ivory ed dresser and roeker, leather rocker, coal and wood range, oil stove, small bedroom dresser, kitchen cabinet, small and large rugs, small fireproof safe, dishes and cooking utensils. Phonograph and records, half price. Jelly and pre- serves, pickles, House for sale. Phone 685Z. 51 Avenue C. 8-14 FOR SACE—50 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. ~ 8-4-2mths SUBSCRIBE today to the service that tells you all about the OPPORTUNI- TIES (business and farming) in Ari- zona, California, New. Mexico, Sonora and” Sinloa. 0. yearly. Address, Dept. J5, Rogers ‘Burke Service, Tuc- son, Ariz, 8-9-1wk NEW CROP Sweet ‘Clover. Honey, by, mail prepaid to any post office in N 10 pqynd pail, $3.50: 5 pound pail, $180! cago“Ot comb, -$7.00.. ‘Cash with order. Clark W, All Big T! Mont. __ e JUST OPENED—A new ang sec furniture store, where you get’a-square deal. S.C. Thompson, on corner Fifth and Front Str@ets. If you have*any stoves or furniture to sell, phone 593L. ot ee Ee aw FOR SALE “poleas Scales, Bonest welght and. no springs,. The Seale of Justice. 8. A. Tollefson, Walden Hotel, Fateo, N. D. EEN ATES 3 _ 8-9-1wk FOR SALE DIAMOND--Lady's ring worth $110. Need immediate cash, will sell for $60.00. Will buy same back again in 90 days if buyer is not_satisfled. Ad- dress J, C. Wall Di jsmarek. ive 6 it 8-16-3t FOR SALE—White Mountain” gallon freezer, Universal Bread Mixer, baby bed, high chair, canvas baby table, full size bed springs, heating stave. Phone _ NOY. 141 FOR SALE—My home bakery. Build- ing for sale or rent. One Kimbal! Player piano, cheap. Address 214 Sixth St., Bismarck, N. D. 8-18-1wk. IR _SALE—Toledo scales, slightly used. In perfect condition. No springs. S.A. Tallefson, Waldorf Hotel, Fargo, -1W! HONBY (finest quality);for sale in 10, 25, 50, or 100 pound lots at 30c per potind, well $00 cash. Bal- |) No More For me! VM GONG To SIT HERE ANDO DRY MV HAIR -_ Vue Take ONE MORE MITTLE DIP BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE BY ALLMAN Come MY PRETTY Brive! Do You REANZE Tus IS THe FIFTH DAY OF OUR | SECOND HOMENM: \ ra 4, Bees, $12.00 colony. win, Mankato, Min 8-11-14 WANTED—To buy g& “or 7 room house in good neighborhood. Must be priced right. Call room 231 Grand Pacifi 8-16-2t Suit- | Miss Lulu Good- R t 416 Thayer able for use as ‘stable or garage. Call! _at 121/8rd St., or phone 539. 8-i6-Iwk| T-HAVE several pieces of furniture for sale, Call 722 6th St., Wednesday aft- ernoon this week, 8-17-1t FOR SALE—Small restaurant fixtures, for sale cheap'if taken at once. House, Bismarck. 5 "OR SALE—Very cheap, Butterkist pop- corn machine in first class condition, arris & C 8-12-1wk NTED TO BU laundry stove in| good condition. Phone 838 or call .at 610 8th St. 8-17-3t WANTED TO BUY—Four burner gas; atove with oven, Call No, 103 Trib WwW CRI Sweet Clover mail prepaid to any po: FOR SALE—Household furniture, good condition. Call 116 Broadway. _8-16- FOR SALE—One of the finest lots on Avi B. Writé No. 128 Tribune. 8-1 RY WANTED. Phone 570Y. ‘ LOST AND FOUN 1q- fe ears . deere 4 LOST OR. STOLEN—Gold watch, Jewel Illinois. with two. pictures {fn crystal, and name in back af cover. Al- so gold chain and locket. r please leave at Tribune office and receive lib- eral reward. Lost Saturday night on Broadway or in Eltinge Theatre. | 19! LOs' ature evening at or near Ball Park baby’s pinkyKnitted robe. Finder kindly return ‘sgme to (12 5th Street and receive pay. for his trouble. ae] FOUND—A child's wagon. Owner. can have same by proving ownership and paying for this ad. 223 Fifth Sto *, Ww! LOST—VYoung man’s green coat on road to, Him Park. ,Finder kindly return to Tribune office. : 8-16-3t ——————— AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLES FOR-SALE—Buick 5 passenger automo- 2 east front lots Ave. A and 1-5 down. . Terms to sult pur- a Protectograph, | Todd’, Co. ‘No,"41795, “Phone 279Y. ; $-14-1wk FOR SALE OR“ TRADE—Ford Sedan run about 2,000 miles, Car is late model, as self-starter, demountable rims, large steering wheel and is complete equipped. Must sell, Will sacrifi Write 129 care Tribune. $-18-1wk FOR SALE- érland roadster and Coupe in excellent condition, driven very dittle Leaving city must sell. Enquire Pear- son Court Apt..8 «8-9-1 WK FOR SALE—Maxwell. roadster in’ first class condition, See Faunce, 802 1st St. 8-12-1wk FOR, SALE—1919 Ford Roadster, Run only.a couple thousand miles and in fine shape. First $475.00 cash takes it. interestet write P. O. Box 24, Mandan, ND. oO" 8-11-1wk AW. ‘ool FARMS FOR RENT—1. .A section one mile from .town of) Breien, beautiful land,’ 400 a, in crop this year, no build- ings. Will rent half or all. 2. 500 a. farm with buildings and cows. 300 acres cultivated. j 320 a. farm. with buildings” near immer; 160 ‘under plow. . 120 a. beautiful land 4 miles from Mandan, now ‘in stubble, no buildings. 5. 240 a. now summer-fallowed, ten miles from Steele, 5% of 90-11-74, no buildings but granary, e 1, N. Cary, Mandan, N, D. _ $-15-lwk FOR SALE OR TRADE—320 acres of land for sale or trade; worth $15 to $20 per acre. City or town property: will be considered. Cash buys | cheaper. Write or call’ at this office or to owner, George Newman, General Delivery, Bis- marek, _ 8-18-1Wk LAND FOR. SALI am “offering 26 ‘aares, of river bottom land; 3 room house; go&d well; about one-half clear- et Worth $100 per. a For quick sale $1400.00. * $500.00 ca J, H, Holi- _han, Ist door east of post offi 14-2 LAND FOR SALE—Rich river, bottom land about- 3 miles from Bismarck. Just. as good-as land: selling in lowa for $400 per acre. Price and terms to suit. J. H. Holihan, 1st door east of post of- fice. f 8-14-3t f cash, bal terest, r i N, oe = 8-16-1wk 640. ACRES—80 percent tillable; one mile ‘of. town; to trade for good hotel. . For ormation write, Louis Wang, Box 255, Billings, Mont. $-6-10t =———————— USE TRIBUNE WANT ADS nee: on time, at 5 Address 214 6th S! Wife Nagged on Trolley; _ Conductor Gets Divorce Accusing: his, wife. of annoying him while‘he went about his du- tles asa street car conductor, WiWiam L. Stockfleth obtained .a divorce from Alice V. Stocktleth in Superior. Judge Morgan’s court. in San Francisco, Stock- fleth said his wife would board his car and berate him for an- swering questions of passengers. More than that, ste never paid any fare when she. started out on & nagging expedition, SB BBRP RS ABBE Paris to London Flights Grow. Paris, France.—The Matin calls at- tention to the recent increase in aerial, navigation, saying that there were 372 filghts between Paris and London dur- ing, June, ————————————————————————— ‘FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ™* ©! ots Siw MATreRe AY CYCLE PUMP WUT SIT A PULMOTOR TO TAG TAKE A RUN AND Jump, iat THE LAKE- Where DONoV GET... “TWAT MusH? You SENTIMENTAL FEU ! BRIDES MUST GO TO SCHOOL (f | They. Are “Young Enough Mar- “plage Dogs Not Exempt Them. Sacramento, ‘Cal.—Whfle there is no provision in the school law to pre- vent; girls under: the age of sixteen accepting sals or contracting marriage, the m rringe itself does not offer sufficient, excuse in such’ cases to keep ‘the young brides away from full time classes at’ school. This is according toa ruling by Will C. Woods, state superinténderit of public instruction, In answer to @ query raised several times during the last few months, . “We have gone, Inté this question thoroughly,” Wood stated. in explana- tlon of the matter, “and while’ there is nothing in’ the school law to pre- vent girls uhder ‘sixteen from getting married, young brides of, this char- acter must go to sctiool full time the sume as their unmarried ‘sisters, un- less a cértificate signed’ by a physi- cian is presented to the school author- ities showing thit tHe physical condl- tion of the pupil is such as to render attendance inadvisable, or that there 18-no school within ‘reach.”, AVIATOR SEASICK IN. THE AIR Italian’ Flyer Encounters Rough Ale Conditions on Trip to ‘Fokyo. Tokyo,—Lieutenant, Ferrarin, one of the two Italian airmen who flew from Rome. to, Tokyo, encountered such rough air conditions while crossing Korea thet he became seasick. “In my entire flying experience,” he sald, “I had never before encountered such conditions, The machine pitched like a small boat in a heavy swell, and for the first time in my life I knew what it was to be seasick. “The most exciting part of my trip occurred in Asin Minor,” he added, “about 10Q miles from Aleppo, where I was subjected to heavy muchine gun fire by the Arab rebels.” , In -1870 there were only .3400 farms ‘in the United States of more than 1000 acres each. BY BLOSSER LOOKED LIKE WELL, HIS BINCLE GOT” (OUT OF BREATH, AN’ HE'S GIN fr Some MAN SAME: FOR “MILLION YEARS ey Anatomy Reaches Stage Where Tt will Never Change. ONLY CULTURE THAT CHANGES National «Museum's © ‘Paleontologist Discounts Civilization’s Effects on Body—Through All the Ages Neither. in Body. Nor Mind Has Man, Made Any. Real Progress—Popular. Idea That, Man, ls Evolving Is Wrong. ; | Although you may never have, sus pected the fact, you ‘are a finished and perfect product of evolution.» The next time you have a cold or a bunion or a toothache, or your mechanism. fa otherwie on the blink, comfort your. eelf, if you can, with the reflection, that. -you are. nature’s masterplece, | writes. Frederic J. Haskin, in Chicago }-Daily News. AML of..which ts a way of saying that, according to J. W. Gidley, pale- ontologist of the National museum, F man’s anatomy has reached g stage where it probably will_ never change ' any more—or at least not for about a mjllton years. Nelther in body nor in mind bag man made any real progress in that time. It 1s only his culture— the accumulated result of all the ef- forts of many generations—which really changes, and which. makes man appear to change. The popular idea that man ts evolving 1s all wrong. Biologically speaking, human progress ended a million years ago. The Theory of Evolution. According to theories of evolution, {f an animal eats nothing but grass {ts teeth will in time be modified in shape so that they are efficient for nibbling, but they will probably not be much good for tearing flesh, In the same way, a bird that does rot use its wings will In a few geologic ages lose all power of flight. But this principle holds good only so far. When an animal has become specialized and adapted to his environment as far as his structure will permit without en- | dangering the balance necessary to existence. he usually stops changing and finally, it 1s supposed, loses power of development. ; There Js a difference of opinion as to, whether man has reached the point where he is ‘best adapted to his sur- roundings, or whether he will continue to evolute. Mr, Gidley says that man’s present mechanical arrangement 1s permanent. He refutes the suggestion that man’s jawbone will shrink and ‘| his teeth drop out because’ he eats more soft foods and does not chew'so vigorously as his cave man. ancestors, Man knows enough about chemistry to. understind what kind of foods are necessary to insure health, and there 1s, little prospect of his jaw disap- pearing on a balanced ration. = — Our Toes Also Are Safe. Nor does Mr, Gidley think we need worry over the prophecy that-our de- | scendants’ heads will be all brain— not by present indications. We have been further warned by some men of science that our toes, all except the big one, are already use- jess from lack of exercise, and that eventually they will grow shorter and “disappear altogether, Hke the horse’s long discarded toes. This fear, too, Mr. Gidley regards as groufdless, for while the muscles of the shorter digtts are not particularly flexible in’ mod- ern shoes, yet we do use them in bal- ancing.. Statues of the old Greek gods and athletes show that they poised themselves on the inside of the foot, a method which gave «both the appearance and feeling of lightness. Had the Greek ideal persisted, the outer toes of nan might by ndw be al- most atrophied, probably to, the im- provement of human posture. If such q change were taking place, and a few scientists iisist that it is, we would not be aware of it, so slow- ly does nature progress, For instance, At fook the horse a few million years to grow hoofs, which he needed for speed.. As the horse was hot built for. fighting, he had to be always pojsed on the tips of his four toed feet, resdy to. escape when an armored dinosaur or a megatherium came lumbering on him, If you go into almost any big museum you can see. the bones of the horse's foot at different stages of his development. Geologists have un- earthed the, bones of horses that lived 4,000,000 years ago. These horses were about the size of a/dog and bad four toes. Before that it is believed that there must have been five. Three millfon years later there were only three, and the middle digit had by that time become large and resembled a hoof, whiJe the bones of the toes on each side had shortened until they did not reach the ground, Man Is Weak Animal. Because he. specialized in speed, the horse can now run as fast as thirty- two miles an hour, while man at his swiftest” can make only about ten. Man Is not a specialized animal. It has been pointed out to his confus‘on that a flea can jump 1,000 times its height, whereas a man needs a pole to go only twice his six feet. In pro- portion to his size, man has not as much lifting power as an ant; he can- not walk so fast as a fly. He has sot learned to see in the dark like the vat. But it is lucky for the man that his ancestors did not concentrate on beat- ing the monkeys at tree athletics or the horse at foot racing. If they had, we should not today be much farther advanced than the animals we wight have emulated, BR. §. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor \ Consultation Free ‘Quite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 Man's progress is supposed to be @ue ‘to his use of his brain and t! fact that he developed two hands and two feet instead of four of one or the other. The oldest clews ‘to -ancient a skull, a thigh bone, and two teeth. Thése were found’ in Java, and, judg ‘ing by the stratum of soll in which they were lying, geologists decided that the man lIlved 500,000 years ago, Pithecanthropus, as the scientists call- (ed the antique Javanese, was a fully developed man, though with rather ‘ ape-like features. The Javanese man of a half million \ years ago, Is a mere modern compared with some of the animals whose skele- tons have been du; man so far discovered are part of | GREATEST PLANE ‘MOTOR IN WORLD. Most Powerful Airplane Etigine Ever Built in United States-. Made in Detroit. INTENDED FOR GENERAL USE Capable of Driving Mackine at 200 IB up and classified. Six million years/ago, in the age of reptiles, flourished the armored dino- saur, which to most people is the sym- bol of prehistoric times. But even the dinosaur !s young as the age of the world goes, Dr. Walcott of the Smith- sonian institution estimates that anti- mal life started qn the earth 41,140,- 000, years ago. “Somewhere between then and the very recent Javanese gentleman man got his start. Father Pithecanthropus. Science is still looking for the an- cestors of Pithecanthropus, but It is not.looking for a missing link between man and the modern monkey, because anthropologists do not think man is descended from apes. Darwin Is of- , ten misquoted on this point. What Darwin said was that- man and apes evolved from a common ancestor. Some scientists hold that there were probably a number of early animals which branched off from the unknown ape-like ancestor and that any one of them might have developed tnto a su- perior being, but that somehow. all except man failed to make the most of themselves, or became the, specialized beings of the jungle. Mr. Gidley explains that In the far off times man was not the husky giant we Imagine, but @ smaller creature; that he lived In trees and used his hands to cling by, and his voice for vague chatterings. Then for some un- known reason, possibly because the forests disappeared through some change of climate, this prehistoric man came down from his trees. He was curious, and so he picked at things and examined and explored. Then. he ‘showed his fellow citizens his re- markable discoverings, thus develop- ing communication, which is one of the greatest aids to progress. His fellow men, crude as they were, prof- ited to some extent by the researches of the early investigators, Gradually Intelligence grew, grunts and squeals Were organized into speech, and in, the coursé of a million years or so) the superior creature of: today was’ evolved, The Citizen of A. D. 1001920, ~ This is the story of man as pieced together from the bones that science has dug up ‘and the bones -it hopes some. day to find. It {8 to most scien- tists the only plausible theory, though there are still some people who hold out that seeing is believing and that, when they see the animal that man’ descended from they will put more faith in evolution, ‘ Meanwhite, if man has no tmmediate. | prospect of growing a third ‘leg or second crop of hair, he is said to be changing in another way. Professor Gidley says that the tendency is for the races .of fhe earth to blend as ¢lvilization spreads, The Bushmen and Igorots mfy fn the next few aeons develop into. desirable mates for races now far in advance of them in clvili- zation, and finally, in the course-of the next million years, it 1s thought pos- sible that all the-races of the éarth may be merged Into one composite type. It is ‘an exciting thought—until we reflect that none of us will be here to see the world citizen of A.’ D, 1001920, | BEAT BABE TO DEATH | Farmer Pounded Housekeeper’s Child With Harness Tug. A beating with a harness tug in the hands‘of Josiah Botktus, a farmer, 50 |, years old, of near Defiance, O., caused the death of Arthur, three-year-old son of Mrs. Ida May Bullock, housekeeper for Botkins, Botkins, according to the police, sald that he did not realize how hard he was beating the boy. Leaving the un- | conscious child in the care of lis | Mother, he drove away with Peter Kintner, a neighbor, where he was ar- rested, Earl, seven years old, Jesse, five, brothers of Arthur, the dead child, declared to the police that Botkius always held their heads under v.ater. when he beat them so they could not cry, “He beats us with our heads in the water always,” Earl said. “I have not been beaten for a long time, but the last time he ‘made this,” Indicating a large scar on his forehead made by a strap. The back of little ‘Jesse also shows marks of violent beatings, Alas, So Can We! “Have youy seen that marvelous mental calculator work?” “Huh! I can do some stunts along that line myself.” “You can? What, for example?” “T can tell exactly how much money I will have left from my salary at the end of next month.” “Oh, it wouldn’t be possible to cal- culate every cent of your expenses that far ahead.” “Don’t need to to tell just how much Tl-have left.” Drunken Hogs Revealed Still Site, A drove of drunken hogs led two, prohibition officers, on a still hunt through the headwaters of the Cum- berland river in Kentucky, to the site of a huge, modern still, hidden in a dark ravine near the mountaintop, There are more than 600,000 de- ' positors in the postal savings banks of tHe country. The Smithsonian Institution main- tains a scientific library which num- bers 260,000 volumes, Miles an Hour, Says Designer, One of Liberty Motor Cre- ators—Is Fireproof, Detroit.—A new 500-600 horsepower airplane engine, the “most powerful ever built in this country and the most powerful in the world except for a few racing freaks, has been completed here. It is expected to develop speeds far greater than anything yet achjeved. In gddition it ts fireproof, and It can be started “cold” after a long dive, thus ending two of the greatest dangers that aviators have had to face. This announcement was authorized by Col. Jesse G, Vincent, designer of the engine, who Is known as one of the creators of the Liberty motor. The new engine, in spite of its great, power, is noefreak. It is intended for Steady, long-time service, elther for heavy duty or for great speed, and is designed for American quantity. pro- duction methods, i Made for General Use, While the.men who are ‘handling the new engine expect that it will push a plane at feast 200 miles an hour, the engine was not designed for this pur: pose alone, and is capable of wide and general It welghs only 1.04} pounds per horsepower. The lessons which Colonel Vincent, learned during the war In his study of} the actual performance of the Liberty) motor, as well as of the best makes} from, both allied,and enemy countries, are embodied in this design, and as @ result there are seyeral, notable ad- vances. Most important Is that the motor ts dreproof for all civil, purposes, This has, been attained by, putting the car- buretor below, and outside-of the crank vase, with all vents outside the cow: ling yo. that “here Is no possibility of* ‘onflagration from aback fire, This arrangement also has the advantages that it gives gravity feed, thereby eliminating the weight of extra piping ‘and of+'the feed pump,.and that it makes ‘thé carburetor ‘much more ac cessible, Exhaust Valves Changed. Another change bas been In, provid- Ing two inlet and two exhaust valves for euch eylinder, Instead. of one. ‘The, result has been a, bigger and steadier flow of gas to the -cylinders, and @ very high mean effective pressure even at great speed, A double finger valve lift is used, and this permits changes la the’ cam-shuft and rocker-frm me- chanism which make this engine much superior to any pre@ecessor In the , troublesome matter ‘of leakage from the cam-shaft housing, A third change Is In the use of an single ‘duplex carburetor, Instead ‘ot the usual. two carburetors. The diffi- culty of synchronizing the throttle and altitude controls of two carburetors has always been a bugbeur to aviators, but it hud been felt that two or more were necessary to give the requisite flow of gas. It has been found in the tests. however, that this single duplex gives splendid economy and other de- talls which, in the opinion of Colonet Vincent, fully justify the design, He predicts that it will promptly. become a universal practice with alrplane en- gineers. Hogsaveasegcsecoscgscosoooooooorsy Long tslan4 Society Girl Becom:s. Motorcycle ‘Cop’ Southampton, L. 1.—Anuounce- ment was niade that Miss. Zella de Milhau,. society fave: veteran of the world (war, been sworn in as motore, policewoman jn eftolk county, In France Miss de Milhau won the € de. Guerre, with star, and received citations, from the town of Verberie ‘And from three front Hne hospitals. At the opening of the war she equipped the ambu'ance donated — by Southampton s citizens, und then drove it herself in’ France, if Cpeaeeesoeeneesssse teres eee seers Monster H2‘Istones. O.= Penort: from various} per Ye covntry ine e thatthe Ir gest be Istones on re ad fell in this d@atrict Curing a storm on Thursday, Ndr Weaver's Corners two hailstones, each said to be as large as a croquet ball, penetrated the roof pf a farm house. Finds Freak Corncob, Muscotah, Kay.—A “freak” corncob, one half of which nature had painted a deep red and left the other half white, was found here by Alex Wills while selecting and shelling seed corn, The ear was of Reed's yellow dent va- riety, was mature imd well developed, The two colors blended perfectly. Where the Dead Exceed the Living. Wilmington, ©.—Witmington’s city of the dead has a greater population | than Wilmington’s city of the living, according to census figures. There are 5.071 sleeping the long sleep in Sugar Grove cemetery while Uncle Sam’s enumerators counfed ouly 5.087 persons living in the town. Approximately $5,000,000,000 have been paid by the government in pensions since the Civil war. Congress has passed some 50,000 special pension acts from the begin- ning of the Civil war to date,