The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 30, 1920, Page 7

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, Tie Seat oi iota? ee : ey ni if p : q seek \ “BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE | “MONDAY, AUGUST. 30, 1920 TO RPREE. ie wT, FIRES. DOINGS OF THE DUFFS ‘tom es Santa Claus TAN SSS sist set maT RXSSSET WQS N | ON THE FLOOR THERE, NS ANS PLEASE AND: ILL SIGN ! i at Federal Forest © : .ife Gives List of + Precautions That Shoutd Bei ; Observed in-the Woods, ‘A COLD DRINK, OF wate é (Prepared by the United States Depart-- ment of Agriculture:) MATCHES.—Be gure -your/mateh: Is, out. Break it in two before you throw it away. fs SMOKES.—Throw > pipe :ashes * and cigar or cigarette stubs'{n the dust of the road and stamp or pineh ‘out the: fire before leaving them. Don't throw them into brush, leaves’ or needles. MAKING ‘CAMP, —-Build a ‘small camp fire. Build it’ in the “open, not! agitinst a tree or. log ‘or near brush. Scrape away the: trash-from/all around {t, ‘ LEAVING CAMP.+Never ‘leavelia HEN; GET-AWAY FROM WOWERHOWAT COT my meoicine.} sath “yere. (MANE T'S | a ‘Tue: CASE! DOC. WAS, come] *{ Mepicine ¢ Iv$ Now 0on'r Look To ME AS THouGH Nou NEEDED ‘ANY MEDICINE I modern and up to date that it would trander. ad Been There. BY ALLMAN GUESS I'LL WAVE o \ A REDUCER, You 00k Fish! -A RepuceR t! with ail improvements in. A. J. Os- -WANT ‘COLUMN take a half column to describe “it |] Heated by the very best hot water @| tem. Corner Jot, and garage. ‘Th surely a thing of beauty, 00, $1200.00 or more cash. han, Ist door east of Post-Office Portable Telephone Used to Keep ir ric Y Touch With Fire Fighters. HELP WANTED—MALE | COAL MINERS WANTED—By wintly weather or where there is the]* Haggart Building. 7-24-ff | HOUSE FOR SALE—Modern house of 9 s G ITE rooms and bath. lverything in. good slighest danger of their escaping :from| \WANTED—A man and woman, colitge roOtitiGn Lot 80x150..° Phone fr ~ control. Don’t: make fires larger than] “Sraduates, “as high school teachers. fall at 517 2nd St, 2eks. you need. Best -wages. Address Clerk of School ¢ ‘ 2 Board, Nome, N, D.__,.__8-25-1wk FIGHTING -FIRES.—If you find :@] WANTED—First class mechanic. Have ROOMS FOR RENT apacity heated and lighted. Hague Motor Co.,!” rooms for rent. Reasonable price. Un- Niiw CROP Sweet Glover Honey, by Price $5,000,-| _™Mail prepaid to any post office in N J. H. Heli-. Dak., 10 pound pail, $3.50; $1.80! case of comb, $7.50. order, Clark W., Allen, Is slumbey robe, sofa pillows, fancy pictures, hammock and notion: out quenching it with water and e earth. The last spark ts the danger Beulah Coal Co. at Beu- OUSIONEysiy a ToL lah, N. D. Steady work. Apply} garage 12x16, lot 50x150, for quick sale quilts, BONFIRES—Never-butld: bonfires.in| &t mine or at Biemiarck office in| 3900. 116 West ‘Thayer. «Tel. sists. Pine 2381, 110 Second Avenue | t ardan, N.’D. lotor Sales ponent a = a a bargain platfo 000 pouhds, d fire try to put it out. If you can’t, get} well equipped machine shop and well] ron RENT— Nice neat comfortable| write 710 Thayer, Bismarck, S word of it to the nearest United States} Chicago. 8-26-1wik aut pis Fo Hutton, 46! FOR SAT! forest ranger or~etate fire warden at} \WANTED—Two men to do loading on yOhee der new management. Mr Main S No wk Sunday work. Homa HELP WANTED—FEMALE FOR RENT—Rooms for light housekeep- ing or for four gentlemen roomers. 4 Front, St. 8 ‘Half Century as Memento to the Great Spirit. 8-25-lwk convenient and modern. Phone 809, 722 eee NT—Rooms at 900 9th St, Phone naugh hills; near the Httle hamlet ot Mandan Ave, 8-30-1wk | pore R Murphy, Okla, there burns an Indian | GrRt—or middle age woman for general] 377K. camp fire that has not been quenched houge work. Wages no ob. Apply for 50 years. It is the watch fire of | Dehn’s Meat Market, .612 Pei AU'TOMOBI thé Cherokees, a fire that is kept burn | wanrep—Ry Sept. 1 girl or woman for | FOR SAL Bute ing.as a memento to the Great Spirit genéral house work, Mrs, Geo, Di ; bile $500.00. — that the Indians remember his good id; 56 Ave B. _685R, 8 Baa LVAD alt rebel ee UE \ a DLuip chaser. A_ Protectograph, ‘Todd Co. hess to them and that their hearts are} WANTED Git) —— ae acres of land, eng t front lots Ave. A house, ‘three * Model G,’ No. 41795, Phone 279¥ Hee, ‘but B. F. Abernathy, a white man who lives in Murphy, says it was burning 38 years ago when he took Mrs.-C. E, Stackhouse, Phone He FOUND—Ladieg. silver bar pin, set with| ‘Bar WANTED—Kitchen and dinin: heli Pacific Hote 8-24-tf | STORE FIXTURES FOR SALE embers that are kept alive by ihtrodue- -- —~. i ahaa u > TANTED—Kitchen help. Homa fe,| heavy oak all glass show case~ with tion of a gum that is taken from a| VANTE Feber shoreey arora 6 cee heavy Devel plate glass ton, 1, 12 tt | K % 3 5 heliev , all glass show cdse. 1 all glass case 2 tree. Many of the Ind is believe the ftxd ft. 5 ft. high. 1 Stimpson com- fire cannot die on account of it being SALESMAN puting scale weighs up to-100 Ibs.., Will i — Roll 8-30-2wks| inches, also one buffet. Address 134 Tribune g Corn Shreader, once. Keep in touch with the ranger | cars, Rate 68% cents per hour. Lucky | ror RENT—Office rooms now occupied “8-28-21 SS Gavia STRAT pis onceal Comin ay eat, S. Doe: by Keith & Kurk, front. rooms over] WIL PAY CASH—For 5 or 6 room house, fame -1Wk | Knowles Jewelry store. Apply to F. A.|" priced right. KEEP FIRE BURNING 50 YEARS WANTED—Good “all around painter.| Know'es: es 8-26-tf - . Bialon aes Bteady work. Phone | GOR’ RENT—Furnighed ight housekeep- Lm—One M a , mae ens ing rooms on Ist floor. 101) roadway. ly new. Call Wm, Watch Fire of Cherokee Maintained | WANTED—Second cook, Les. Phone 518 -25-1WK WANTED—To ase. Write,1 One of tite finest lots’on Ave, egy | peat s He mn R SALE Z } || WANTED — Competent girl for general} FOR RENT—Two rooms, all modern 3. Trite No. 128 ‘fribune. 8 Miami, Okla-—Down Inthe Spavai| Vhousework-cthree In family—everything | Light housekeeping, if desired, “713-3ra 1» SVtite No. 28 Ribune ZARD -25-1wi | FOR SALE—$15.09 cash per-acre bus 100 eras are under cul Arya | tivation, 200 acres can be put under MOTORCYCLES | cultivation, the rest Is-hay land or first Sphissanger automo-| class pasture. Has’a two room frame barns running spring water between house and barn. S eoncreted for stock to. water. miles of fence on-faym, Jocated'in Gol- rs, EF, A. Knowles, 16 Ave. - st, - gle4-Awk| deri) Valley County, four miles south of. NE |) N. 1, Railway, three miles south of Red is best suited for ik raising. Owner, George. true. Phone 1698. as N. No jone knows when the fire was| WANTRD—Girl for & I housew LOST ‘AND FOUND Ty) Trail, Place 7 A 568% Pr a > . Sm mas cows or cl Kindled,, not even Chief Charlie Tee | Call phone 968X or apply at 404 Mlgntn | ern ce hook containing about| Newman, General Deilvery, Bis 34.00 yesterday between 4 dnd 5 o'clock |. N._D. E 8 WANTED GUT for general housework.) hetween Thayer and 12th St. Pinder] FOI” SALE—Land section 12, townslitp please return to Tribune, 8-30-2t| 126, range 84, es County East. quarter, House, granary, 8 broke, all’fencel in. 3% miles from lan up his residence theres It does not ADply, Sanits ' brilliants. ‘J. H. Holiban, ‘telephone| barn and 50 acr i ‘ Apply Sanitary Cafe. _ stwk | 7E ephone |) Baymea post ottlee ase as ene ACA aE down. in WANTED—Giel for, Sengral shows ork, 5. aan sell toe i i - the cone of ashes that“has accumu Pall @t_513 Ave! A. -30- See /Max Rothman at Banner Hous " Sagi , 13) i anny lated until it is three feet high, are] WANTED —Pantry girl. Apply Grand MISCELLANEOUS Bismarck, N. D. a —————— ‘AN OLD GAME, BUT: | IT GETS. THE COIN | | | ch, Artas, SD. . Ou special occasions, such as@tomp | spark plugs én commission bas ance: hi 7 y.| line if desired. Attractive pro: dances, one of which is going. on now. good” ontealesioe grands exclusiy the fire is allowed “to become a go0d| tory to live salesman. Advise sized camp‘ fire and then’ fhe ‘braves4 pols cover: ne (Helles Igni sit around it and smoke a peguiiar}| 22ny Cleveland’: 0. P‘pe, an act that renews the individual FOR SALE OR RENT covenant of each. But be-it,great-or HOUSES‘AND FLATS siall, the fire is kept alive by an-at-|] HOUSE FOR SALE—I tendant. the present one being George pversibenutltnls Pune ews os RBATE fl he = 8 ry way, A ai ed street.’ one 190x Porato, on whose land the ceremonies} ‘Murhyized bed’ in one . (Bhis,. finéntsresidence lots ate held. handsome little palace is So thoroughly! lot on Ave. B.-A very fi Side § ) threshing | ines. ition shing machine: Some as good as new, goihg’ at @ bargain, Size 22 in. to 40 cylinder,| ©” " all makes. Hazelton Second Hand, Some & i i} | hin! ‘0., Hazelton, N. D.. 1 Sry Coe Haze ee eee], chill ang de burner gas ____ | “stove with oven. Call No. 103 Tribune. | on Horaine 0, and one 75x140" uiding spot Pe Man 80 Years Old Father of Thirty-fifth Child El Centro, Cal.—Frank Valle, 80 years old, a nafive of: Mexico, became a father for the thirty- fifth time when his second wife, whkom-he married In 1900, gave ; birth to her seventeenth child. an eleven-pound boy. Sixteen of Valle’s children are living. ethitetetctctricinttrictrintetctrtrict i Sa Honey for Family. Janction City, /Kan.—When Dick Gcggin, a farmer residing east of this city, wants a little honey.for his morn: ing; buckwheat cakes he steps out of the front door of his*home, pnies a <bcatd fromthe side of. the -Mduse and extracts the amount he desires. Sev- ernl.years ago.a swarm of bees select: ed)the air space under the weathef hoarding for a home, entering through AoW Nou boys SKIP, OFF Yo RED ITS Too LATE FoR You To Be UP =AND TLL GIVE A NIGEL To TUE FIRST ONE “TWAT: FALLS ASLEEP. Mi a symbol of a covenant between God | \WANTED—Salesman Calling on Automo-| knock down and cyate any of above for ace bile Accessory and Hardware trades in] purchaser. A. H. ‘Kali ; hein and nan, North Dakota to séll/Reflex guaranteed | _ 8-30-1wk Clevéland, Aug. 30.The old.’ old game still is being Worked the credulous. y er and for security Pil leavé—this envelope with a $20 2 Thomas Tobin, drug store clerk i The strang- 6-24-tf} -er left aml he opened it—noth- ly_mod- | FOR BALE—Two fine corner lois on pav-| “ag usual and he was out $6. in the ovy. Also)” pribune Want_Ads Bring Results. eS OOOO FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS Freeliles Seems a Litfe Too Anxious BY. a small knot hole. Other swarms fol- lowed and now supply more than enough honey for ‘the, family’s de- mands. % } y Gray Timber Wolf -KMiled. Richmond, . Ind—A_ gray ~ timber wolf, weighing 60 pounds or more, was killed the other day by Jdines Kees, who lives east of this city,.in a woods adjoining the golf links of the Rich- mond Country clifb. The animal/had been preying on poultry in the vicinity ‘ for several days. Kees killed the ant- | mal with a rifle after several shots, | The largest club of business and professional women in the~south is located at Birmingham, Ala. Following years of agitation, Ox- ford University has finally decided to grant degrees to. woman. oe € i Ye“ | LONG PUZZLE TO SCIENTISTS Strange Work Left by Mound Builders Never Has Had Anything Like Satisfactory Explanation. Chillicothe, Ohio, the strangest earth- work left by the Mound Builders, ts. one of the most striking and puzzling creations that is to be found in the Scioto River valley. Over all, the mound is more than 1,300 feet long, and depicts a serpent of several con- volutions, Jaws extended, and an oval groundwork is from two to four feet In height, and from three or four to xv feet In thickness. “Within the oval, beyond the extended jaws, ‘archeolo- gists have found an altar of stones and copper ornaments. An. old indian fighter who died in the West several years ago, nearly 100 years old, declared he had heard a story in his younger days of a tribe ley who each year held a fall festival and gave a great powwow on a snake's back. He said he never could under- stand the meaning of the story until later in life when he heard of the to give them new theories on which to base their research work, He said the strange race were supposed to sac- rifice a certain ‘number of children born under the first full moon of ‘spring, For this the Mound Builders might have used the stone altar which has been found. > : JOKE ON BOTH “CHAPPIES” Some Particulars-About Their English Raiment With Which They Were Not Acquainted. It {sn’t exactly their swell brand of golf that @ntitles them to be so de- eldediy English m their apparel, but they’ve a “fawney” for the English raiment jist the same, old chap?” one of them asked. “It's a turtle, old dear, but it isn’t quite so English as mine,” the other sald. * “Oh, mine Js, quite.” f “No, not nearly.” And so they compared caps. But when they looked at the names of the makers’ it was discovered by the “dee cldedly. English” follower that his cap had been made in New York. The other bore a London label—and, of ‘course, you understand, old chap, It was.quite a “lawf.” And the funny feature of It all is that the New York cap was made to appeal to the English trade, while the London cap wa’ designed to catch the fancy of tlie Yank. .* 2 - / \ - Muscle Not Properly Applied. «Everyday evidence-appears. that the American male is physically tho¥e powerffll thi his ancestors. The bur- glars who entered an apartment on ‘Central Park West carried off not merely, the little valuables, but also a safe. weighing 400 pounds. Two. thieves who operated ig a restaurant in business hours abandoned the ‘old school method of snatching the money from the tif] and took the’ cash ‘regis- [ ter tintact. “Not sa -week spasses but some warehouse reports the theft of a dozen‘barrels of whisky‘each Of which | weighs at least 350 pounds, School playgrounds, «the ‘baseball fields. and the gymnasiims ‘seem; to have done wonders for the biceps of our youth iin certain lines. But why is it, when ; an ‘effort Is made to divert-some of this magnificent strength to common- place ‘work, that an apprrent disinte- gration of musele-ensues?—New York Sun. at Wouldn't Have Dared.'to Say It. A‘recént bride recéived many tele- grams of congratulation on the event- | ful day, but there was one in particu- Jar which was out of the ordinary, Her sister lives in New York and came on’ to Brockton for the wedding, In the evening the following telegram was received from ‘her sister's “hubby” in New. York: ~ . “Corfgratulations on having taken | my wife from me ff only for a day. If you keep her, there, will consider’ the marriage ‘a great success, Heartiest gondolences to F——in having joined the —“— family. He doesn’t know what he is up against and my great consolation is that I have a ‘fellow sufferer who can sympathize with me regularly.” te At first Mrs. M——was angry, but finally consented to have it, read— Brockton Enterprise. Japan’s Trade With North America. Japan's trade with North’ America for the first quarter of this year amounted to 201,824,000 yen in ex- ports and 276,934,000 yen in imports, | the balance being 75,110,000 yen. Compared with the ‘corresponding period of last year, the figures show an Increase of 114,343,000 yen in ex- \ports and ‘of 102,744,000 yen in -tm- ports. The principal article for ex- | port was raw silk, while principal im- | ports comprised raw ‘cotton and iron.— East and West Nefvs. New Insulating Material, A new insulating (material, is being made from a kind df kelp which is found in the Australian waters. The ; moist precipitate. is subjected to pres- + sure, after which it is hardened ‘by ‘a treatment with formalin and then it {fs shaped in a lathe,, The material takes the place of slate and marble, which is largely in use for this pur- pose, and is much less expensive.— Exchange. ; R. S. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. Chiropractor Consnitation Free The Serpent Effigy mound, near. within the grasp of the huge jaws. The of strange Indians in the Scioto val-| Mound Builders. His recollection oft the story, had it been given to stu- | dents ofthe mounds, might have served { “How do you ike my English cap, | ; to insure the return of its pr BEAVERS DO MUCH MISCHIEF Property. Owners in the Adirondacks Are Uneasy Over the Situation They Have Created. Because the limited intelligence of the beaver goes no further than its own immediate purposes, owners of property in the Adirondacks are wish- ing that the beaver was less indus- trious and: seriously wondering what is to be done to stop the increasing number of these willing workers from decreasing the ,value- and beauty ‘of this famous region. The forest rangers of the conservation commission, says a writer in the Albany Journal, last summer estimated the undesirable. re- sults that had followed the building of nearly 600 beaver danis, and found that an area of about 8,681 acres had been flooded, and something like $51,- 000 worth of good merchantable stand- ing timber was being destroyed. Con- sidering that the number of beave now estimated at about 18,000 is be- lieved to be increasing about 3,000 a year, the damage bids fair to become a serious problem. Not only do they de- stroy valuable timber, but they are steadily changing the character of the Adirondack~ scenery along the water courses and altering the shore line ‘of the lakes; yet the region without any beavers at all‘ would not be the Adi- rondacks as nature made it and ‘as those. who now go there to enjoy its beauty like to find it. Time ~vas when the beavers seemed likely to vanish, and the state took them under its pro- tection; now~the danger seems to be that they, are~so well protected that they will eventually “come back” in numbers ‘out of proportion to the normal population of beavers when the Adirondacks were ‘subject to the conditions of life ina wild ‘country. ie eae NUMBERS IN EAST -AND WEST Cifference of Opinion as to Whether Odd ‘or, Even Figures Are Lucky or Unlucky. We are pleased to term thirteen an unlueky number, observes London An- swers, but in Japan the unlucky num- ber-is four, and in Burmah even num- bers are all considered less lucky than odd ones. Our lucky numbers,, or what are generally considered so by supersti- tious folk, are three and seven. If you ask the reason you are told that God is*Three in One, and that God made holy the seventh day. As for seven, this number jis sup posed to be lucky either hy itself or in its multiples. As an old writer says, a ‘boy sheds his’ teeth at 7 years old; at 14 he becomes a-youth; at 21 a man; while hé reaches his grand climacteric at nine times 7—that is 63, The figure three is extraordinarily prominent in the Bible. | Noah had three sons, and’ Job ‘three™ friends. There were three patriarchs, Daniel's three companions wete thrown into the flery furnace, and He himself was } three daystin the lions” den, Had Lots of Pluck. . George -Thibault, proprietor of ‘the summer hotel at Outlet, a village a, few miles from-Picton, Ont., was driv- ing his car towards home recently when he chanced to meet a herd of cattle, The owner of. {he auto slowed down to allow the animals to! pass without undue. excitement. All :went well till le met the. leader of this large bovine family, a’ splendid: young roan ; bull. The latter: resented the pres- ence ‘of the“mechanical contrivance bearing down through the herd on low gear. Lowering his massive head, he charged, resulting in only a few bruises to himself, but a twisted axle, a badly bent fender and a smashed j headlight to the unfortunate motor. As Mr-Thibault inspected the damage he remarked emphatically: “tcertain- ly admired his pluck, but he: showed poor judgment.” Ice Cut With a Gas-Driven Saw. For the purpose oi cutting ice ex- peditiously during the last winter, there was devised a saw of: an auto- mobile type power plant and a circus! “lar saw at the end of an adjustable ‘arm, ‘so that the saw can be raised and lowered to the desired degree... 'The saw is pushed along on steel run ‘ners, the operator behind “furnishing | the motive power. A double lever arrangement just over the’ handle bars serves to control the raising and lowering of the saw. The /portable saw in question ‘cuts the ice into 20- foot squares. These squares fre guided through the water to a gang of four circular fsaws, which’ cut the squares into the regulation s cakes, The Airplane in Politics. Mr, Holinan,' the former New South Wales premier, rejoices in the huge electorate known euphoniously Cootamundra. On the eve of a very warmly contested election, Mr. Hol- man ‘recognized tliat Cootamundra had 18 large centers, each of which required a personal canyass in order nt-able «representative. He annoynced, there- fore, that he would use an airplane to cover the electorate. Not to be out- done, his labor opponent at once made plans to drop prepaganda by airplane | over Mr. Holman's route. zo Heat-Insulating Material. A new heat-insulating material com- posed of a mixture of a special clay and cork has been discovered by _a Norwegian engineer.” The clay’ and cork mixture-is burned and the result; is the formation of a very light sub- stance that is said to be eminently suitable for all heat-insulating ~pur- poses. JAFFA GATE IN JERUSALEM Passageway Through Which General Allenby Entered Is the Real Article,-Writer Soye. Jerusalem has seven gates and a stransportation problem handled at present, as of did. glong purely Kast- ern ‘lines. There are donkeys, horses, camels—even = carriages and — the ubiquitous: filyver and all that ‘traffic. concentrates ‘naturally ‘at the gates, just as,,to increase Its fore used to be made to flow through a small opening In the old- shidned tide mills at home. As for telephones, who that can shout from roof to roof and down the echoing street should trouble ++ himself to whisper Into a funnel? ! My windows are well placed, for 1 can watch the crowd thronging in and out of the Jaffa gate, writes Wiiliam D. McCrae in Asia. Thip is the widest opening th has, sinee William II of Pru to permit . his spectacular ' symbolical pageant that he staged ‘to represent his taking possession of the} holy city by ugreement with the sul- tan in Constantinople But wide ts the gate which leadeth unto destruc: tlans- The real Jaffa gate is a narrow’ one at the side of the wide pu ge: way; and. this was the one used by Gen. Allenby fvhen he entered Jerusa- lem after its capture, modestly, on foot, carrying the cane that the Brits) ish ‘officer affects as his only scepter of pow This gate is now closed with heavy iron bars and will not be reopened until the exact political stutus “of Jerusalem has been deter: mined, if MAYOR NOT LIGHTLY CHOSEN Chief Executive of City of London Is Called Upon to Fulfill Many Requirements. Sir William Treloar, in ‘his recently published book, “A Lord . Mayor's Diar points out that the chief mag- istrate of the city of London is chosen in quite a different manner from that adopted by any ‘other municipality in the kingdom, remarks London An- swers, Instead of being elected by the mem- bers of the corporation, or council, who may, and often do, for politi party onus, choose meone who has never done suit or services to the town, London's lord mayor can be chos only) from, ‘those who lave served an apprenticeship of some years. to the corporation, He must first be elected an alder- man by the ratepayers of his ward, and accepted and sworn in by the court of aldermen; then, he mast have 1 the office of sheriff, to which sition he has to be elected by the rervinen, and afterward approved y the savercign. Then, and not till then, Is-he eligible to‘ask the ‘Kverymen to elect him! as i lord mayor; the court of aldermen aft erward again having the power to re- » approval of the sovereign se New Idea ‘for Pictures. Tt is not often that an entirely new method of producing pletures Is ais. yered, and an Oregon artist {s at: traéting Gorisiderable ye 'ention: with 1 process as pleastig as Ht Is ortginal, | Instead of ustng fluid pigments ‘of any | kind, bits of colored‘eloth: falnstaking- ly cut to> particular ‘shape and size of exch detail of the work, are pasted tiponihe canvas haekgronnd, whieh Is | stretched overs thin hoard. Some of ‘he almost infinitesimal particles of fabric are shredded ont to mere threads to get the desired effect, while: the bulkier objects of the scene are built of suys ‘Popwar Mechanics fs A osharp-pointed« stick * ‘ acbrush ‘for this curions art. finished pletu exemp the remarkable regr'ts attained when pa- Hence ‘and the artistic sense are co- ordinated: { Y Industric! Fat‘sue. An Investigation of the subject of Industrial fatigue conducted in the government ‘dhans oy fe English gov- ernment resaled In ¢oraining a great deal of ‘valuable information, Tt has j heerothe means in many enses of ‘a + ourney inerense of the output, and these investigations are about to be extend: eds ally to all oF estabshments by a Nehed — indu ‘ifhe ' I cnedient research committee, ‘Phe duh = Ses cf the boar' will le to initiate, nize and promot [oants or otherwise, Inv CVereng Industries woh the view of fang oat of Mechours off labor, spr _ rest paases, ete, Policewomen Now Established: { Polleéwomen have become an estab, lished factor of Thunicip'’! law enforce- ment in recent years, butt motoreyele policewomen still area novelty.) Lon don now bas a squad of them, how . and they are doing very ‘effective sa¥s the Popular Mechinics azine, ‘The women have been members of the police force for some time, but have only recently acquired their machines. His Choice. ‘Fhe ex-gob, now the father of trip lets, proudly displayed his offspring to his hashfil buddy. “What do you think of them?” he chortled. . “Well,” replied his buddy doubtful- ly, “if I was you 1 think I'd keep that one there."—The American - Legion Weekly. South American countries have There are now 1089 women in AUS-/ sent out appeals for 500 nurses to tria for every 1000 men, according to a census just completed. The Mormon temple. in process of: erection since 1914, at Calgary, Al-j| establish nurses’ training _ schools in their larger cities. According to Lloyd’s, the gross*ton- nage of ’U. S, shipping vessels has berta, will cost $1,500,000 when com- Suite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 2¢@/ pleted. increased 500 per cent since 1914, mais 5 water 5

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