The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 2, 1920, Page 7

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Sn “when she sets her mind to it, ARISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE 14) e-—— The ——*. | Scrap Book ALMOST TOO MUCH TO BEAR No Wonder Maidin Fainted, but ‘Many Would Like to Know Just What Fireman Said. The flames shot upwards; the smoke curled clouds around the doomed — building; and the brave tire- men, fought. Every inhabitant, however, had been safely brought out, But, suddenty a | young woman rushed up to one of the firemen, “Oh,” she cried, “suave It for me! Save it 1f you can!” She pointed to a second-floor win- dow, and without a word the fireman rushed to do her bidding. “How old was It?” asked one of the in . cruel a month!” sobbed the dis- tressed one, “And look !"—as the fig- ure of the fireman could be seen com- ing down the ladder again. “He has failed! He's coming back without it! Oh, what shall T do—what shall T do?” The fireman approached. “I'm sorry.” he said, “but IT could find no child there.” “Child?” cried the fair maiden. said nothing about a child!” _“Then—what was it?” they asked her. “It was my b-b-bicycle!" she sobbed “T'd only had tt a month—on the In stallment system, too!” And then she fainted. HAS GOOD ADVERTISING IDEA How Librarian in Los Angeles Stimu. lates Pubiic Curiosity in Choice of New Reading. The {dea that everything should be put to some good use, wherever this is possible, has been carried out by the librarian of the Franklin high school library and deposit ‘station of the Los Angeles publi¢c library, in util- izing the covers that come on new books direct from the publishers. About two dozen of ‘these gayly-colored. covers, having the appearance of small posters, were placed’ in a row along the lower edge of the big bulletin board in the main hall of the library, right next to pictures taken from illustrated newspaper supplements, wag that a good deal of interest was given the little hibition of the Mllustrative and advertising art, many of the visitors studying the display for the purpose of making selections, In fact the librarian states that the book- cover poster row has been responsible for increasing the amount of unas- signed reading. Aunt Bertha’s Ouija Board. Just to show you what, she can do Aunt getting connected with the spirit of Disraeli—we uscd up Napoleon and the other stock characters the very first week that Aunt Bertha began to work the ouija board, and we had to go in pretty deep to think up new ones. The planchette started to move the minute Aunt Bertha put her hands on it, if you will believe me, and when she asked: “Is this Disraeli?” it im- mediately spelled out “this is him.” I tell you, I saw it with my own eyes. Uncanny, it really was. There seems to be nobody whom Aunt Bertha can- not make answer her on the ou board, There is even a pretty strong chance that she may be able to get Central, after she has had a little more practice.—Dorothy Parker in the Sat- urday Evening Po: Horse Power and Candle Power. While the horse is rapidly going into the discard as a hauler of heavy loads. his successor, the motor truck, is meas- ured by his pulling capacity—and prob- ably will continue to measured by that scale for centuries. And the elec- tric lamp, be It a tiny “night light” or a tremendous glaring affair for street {lumination, is measured by what the antedated tallow candle used to bi | able to do. Very few citizens use candles nowadays—and yet this fli ering wick is the standard for great _electric institutions all over the world. Posvcocvcccccocccroccccnceceeoeeey TOO MODEST. “Why don't you go Into pol- ities “Tried it once and didn't like it.” “What was the trouble?” “I was too modest, I guess, Anyhow I never seemed able to convince anybody, even my- self, that I could fill the office any better than the other fel- low.” Revcccrcncscvcococooccooseseseors “Harnces” the River Jordan. The Palestine Weekly, a Zionist pa- per printed in Jerusalem, brings news | of a project to develop the water pow: er of the river Jordan. Since Pal- estine is a land without coal or fuel! of any kind, industrial progress de- pends largely upon utilizing the pow- | er resources of the country to generate electricity. It is suggested that the Jordan, thus harnessed, would sup. ply not only power, light and heat, but would also work pumps to irrigate ex | tensive valley lands now barren.—Li ing Age. Finland has 8720 miles of tele- graph apd 2891.miles of telephone; lines and one radio‘station. Fire losses in this country and Canada during July, it is estimated | totaled $25,135,825, The result | GIRL—Or mi DOINGS ‘OF THE DtFFS Z| Mat Wave You [Zee IN A USED-CAR | [ye Gor AULITTLE Cae HERE THAT'S CERTAINLY A BARGAIN, FoR SoMe+ BODY - Nout TAKE New PAW OVER AND ALL READY To DRWE OUT ~ THAT: car wire Take You ANY | H PLACE You WAN To “, 6O Thats Some LittTLe Bus |Z IT FRom me! T, MOTOR GONE + > You. «Av Vod WANT SIK VNDRED AND FIFTEEN DoLLars ——————_ 1x, Yes, sure! VLL GET IT- VM, GLAD “You Spoke OF SAN, ISN'T THERE ANY EXTRA EQUIPMENT] THAT GOES WITH | & THIS CARP Lot 50x150. Phone 827, 72nd St WANT COLUMN , a 2h-2v nS! (mM GLAD You MENTIONE! THAT -—t ALMosr FoRGOT (T= This BRAND NEw Tow LINE CoES WITH Tat car! er with all improvements in. A. J. _trander. TANDOL Number just out ffoUSH FOR SALE of 5 rooms and bath on each side; ating plant containing ot Clover lant in HELP WANTED—MALE and coal range, 1 block from car-line. | Marinette sin, Wf for a wt ma. > PY a Yt ae ; bargain in. the ‘ei at 00.00, home or as you COAL MINERS WANTED—By! one-half cash. J. 1. Hoiihan, Ist door tinkings of farm 9-2-2 where farme Beulah Coal Mining Co. at Beu- lah, N. D. ‘Steady work. Apply at mine or at Bismarck office in Haggart Building. 7-24-tf furnishe tores in-business cei ter and s bright cheery offic Apply at once to City Department. T marek Realty Company. 8 furnished and un- n= 1 8 EW CROP Sweet Clo FOR RENT OR house of two large nice room basement. Good’ well and barn, South Side. a7R, WANTED—Two men to do loading on cars, Rate 68% cents per hour. | Lucky Strike Coal Company, Zap, N. Phone — | mail prepaid to any pi ., 10 pound pail, $3. case of comb, $ Clark W, Allen, enger at Western Union - sty ROOMS FOR IBEN — ilton_ rug room size, -elee- ryman at Gussner’s. FOR” RENT — Nice neat ~ comfortable range, doublebed complete, and Ziwk | rooms for rent. Reasonable price. Un-{ ktichen. table, Apply. of Keith & der new management. Mrs. Hutton, 46] jJcurk, over Knowles Je Main St. 8 1 " HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTED — Competent girl for gen housework—three in family—ever: convenient and modern, Phone 809, Mandan _Ave. 8-30: FOR RE: tl : for light how 705 6th Str uple only. le age woman fo! house work. Wages no object. Dohn’s Meat Market, 512 mia rl to wait on tables Good wages pi 0 Broady or woman A WANTED— dining room. Anne f WAR —G housework. 56 Ave L. for Due FOR Phone 80) LOST AND FOUND LOST—Somewhere in. the busines: “Ford” touring c: WANTED—Girl for general hou: Mrs, F, A. Knowles, 16 Ave. A Phone 169R, 8. WANTED—Competent maid for gene tion of town Dairy co! house work. Mrs. S$. W. Corwin, 515] pon book. F eledve at" _Mandan Ave. 831s bune and reecive reward. WANTED- for general house’ a = ) Mrs. C. E, Stackhouse. Phone 54, MISCELLANEOUS Hi pater F WANTED—Girl for general house © oak all gla: heavy plate. gl all giass show case. ft.x2 ft, 5 ft. high, puting scale weigh knock down and c purchaser, A, H, Kalisch, Artas, S. SUL Sed St. Yel-tf work, v “8-30-tf antry girl. Apply Grand 1. 8-24-tf FOR SALE OR RENT leon aenis ~ Worth Lumr: 3irl for general house Ave 1 Stimy rr 4 ) 7 Case Tractor, on thre __ HOUSES AND FLATS i bottom Oliver ‘Tractor Plow, cil F o beautiful bungalows in| foot double di nmplete for $1,500, y Addition. South fronts and{ This tractor is wl as new, it was y modern. age, hot water, ne rou la. ty has only been used for let, bath, el hard wood floors, Part cash and bi ting the Anderson, eee MARCK RR City FOR S hone 1, periment rs Ue SE Tit Mi + Some as good as new, going at a One of the finest lots on Ave, i z | bargain, e 22 in. to 40 cylinder, 3. 8 ‘Tribune 8-12-Uf SATA ive rool Soest front,{ all makes. Hazelton Second Hand age, for § 7 room house; Machinery Co., Hazelton, N. 3 nol, cas for $1200, on| rodm bungalow, east front, | 5 rvom house, south front, | in, fine location, for $1800; 6} room bungalow, close in, for $4700. Geo. | M. Register. ee ia the M-1-1wk | FOR RENT—Large modern house. be let to reliable parties, also for Horn during. rt Horn Regan, N, I young milch cow. Call 808 Seventh | <2 sieae a atreet. 8 wk | WANTED” TO urner gas See wei “stove with oven. . 103 Tribune. FOR RENT te ’ Gott | reliable party. Phone No, se ee dress 812 7th street, HOUSE FOR SALE— rooms and bath. nd one 75x14 Al SEE WHERE ) ‘MA GET HIM ALEK, Huu Ny ALEK! You cauet Boyt!) “TUE VERY. DEAN! TD UUST LIVE TO BE YOUR MOTHER FoR ABOUT TEN MINUTES ! AUTOMOBILES — MOTORCYCLE: s 2 ‘on coms up to 100 Ibs. Will nle-any of above for 8-30-1WK uit- J r lots on pay | @viAn -JuMBe: WONT GET SCARED OF YT. G'WAN DUT ION HIM and Hat rranteed. yey Phone 6 a $50 a day big busin Phone or wi don't. writ Jam ton Cafe, Wilton, N. ‘airbanks-Morse s Lahr Motor Si RN D. FOR and Sweep [a shape to go J. Fox. 8. SALI upacity 2000 pounds, Phone U1 Write 710 ‘Thayer, Bismarck, N. D. 8 Ol TRAL FOR propert r farm or ste . Werner, Dawson, John : bogokeepers, de: des Lucky Strik ATE new for hay purposes, ¢ ee me land in Burleigh coun- po, M -1-lwk . Lehne, -2-1WK restaurant doing | eC; One 6 ft, McCormick’ manver One Bul Traota sf —At a bargain platform scale 632 or ht ut 821 8th St. “a —Two mi 5 K or call at 896 12 SI barn and Barnes po: 1 Will sell Max " for Two Rothman at Bi N. D. ed, close Inquire Le BY BLOSSER “eon. Xi JUMBO: CON | Es NICE Dogsie-) “WS, TLL SPEAK To DAW About IT To-NIGHT } » beds, one single and 8-31-1wk ed crib YeLe3t i Bison on Increase Instead of Becoming Extinct. Yellowstone National Park Authoritles Say There Are More Than 100 Wild Buffalo in. Park, Yellowstone Park, Wyo.—Convineing evidence that the wild buffalo of Yel- lowstone national park, the last sur- viving remnant of the great herds which once roamed the’ western plains, are on the increase, instead of dying out, as was feared, has been obtained | in the discovery of a new group in the | southeast portion of the pa About fifteen animals were observed, evidently a part of the old herd, which it is thought grew so large that some cf its members were forced to break away and seek new pasturage. Definite information has been ob- tained by park authorities that there are now more than one hundred of the wild buffalo in the park. Formerly there were only about half that num- ber. When discovered, the new herd was within five miles of one of the largest hotels in the park and a snapshot was obtained of one of the animals, a fine | bull, probably the first photograph ever taken of a wild buffalo, | Ordinarily the wild buffalo never are seen by tourists and only rarely by park authorities or even by the rangers who patrol the most remote sections, The appearance of the new herd close to the main lines of travel was before the season opened, and the animals apparently had been lured down from the mountain fastnesses by the abun- dance of spring g§ on the lower levels, They disappeared into untray- eled country as soon as automobiles became quent along the highways. Forty-cight calves have been added4 this r to the tame buffalo herd of the park, which now has a population of 500. Tart of the tame herd has been placed in corral at Mammoth Hot Springs for the benefit of visitors, + HIKES 175,000 MILES Joseph I, Mikulec, who since 1901 photographed on arr in Bos ton on a new globe trotting tour. He was formerly a farmer in Croatia and started out globe trotting 19 years ago. During that time he has collected 50,- 000 autographs of prominent men and women in every section of the world. He bas the signatures of al in Europe and A autographs of Ameri- of President Wilson most every rule and among th ci are thos { had been | somed, IS GAPTIVE 71 DAYS IN CHINA Tells of His Experiences With the Outlaw Gang. SUFFERED AWFUL HARDSHIPS Dr. Shelton, Medical Missionary, Sta- tioned for 17 Years in China, Is Cap- tured by Chinese Bandits and Held for Ransom—Finally Escapes and for 40 Days Underwent Most Terri- ble Travels—Tortured by Tumor. Dr, A. L. Shelton, a medical ,mis- Sfonary stationed for seventeen year 1 at Batang, China, on the Thibetan bor- der, arrived in New York recently after undergoing surgical treatment at the Mayo hospital, Rochester, Minn, made necessary by his sulfer- ings while held captive for ransom by the bandit, Yang Tien Fu. “We left Batang in November, and I was bringing my wife and daugh- ters to the coast on their way home,” said Dr. Shelton, telling his story, “I was going back to the interior. coming toward the coast for 47 days, when all of a sudden bandits began firing at us from a cliff. Soon they swooped down and took ev- erything we had, including myself. hey asked me to go up the road and see their chief. Supposing he merely wanted to talk to me, I went. They tried to take my wife and chil- dren, but soldiers came from = the “The bandits kept me seventy-one days. We are greatly indebted to Father Bailly, a French Catholic mis- sionary, who has lived in Yunnan thirty years, and who took Mrs. Shel- ton and the girls to Yunnanfu while I was carried off through the country constantly on the move, until I es- caped, Ransom Demanded. “The bandits wanted to get the governor of the pravinee into trouble. | There were grudges and political rea- son They knew I was coming through and waited for me, They demanded $50,000 worth of arms and ammunition in exchange for me, but I talked the chief, Yang Tien Fu out of this, saying I would not be ran- because it would get every the district into dan- ger, Then he demanded a_ blanket pardon for himself and 800 followers, I was in favor of this, for in his band were many good fellows who wanted to get back to civil life and honesty. Everything was ready to be signed up on this plan when the gov- ernor tried to surround them in the night to put them to death. in the first month of our wanderings, “They escaped with me, and for , forty days thereafter, I underwent tie most terrible travels, with soldiers after us, sleeping out on the moun- tains, forced marches, and all the time undergoing torture from a tumor that j began growing on my neck. At the end of the second month IT was so ! weak that T rolled off my mule unless tied and held on, Then they carried me another five days on two poles; at the end of which T was so nearly dead they left me in an old hay barn with four guards and instructions that If T died my body was to be secreted. If I got better, they were to be notified and would come back after me. “For five days T lay in a hole In the rice straw and rested. Then came a report that soldiers were coming, and the whole village fled except an old man who brought me rice. His Escape. missionary in and the lite Colonel Roosevelt. He! “The soldiers did not come, but a has picked up eight different lan- small official went through, and In the guages during his 19 years of hiking. PROSPERITY WAVE IN JAMAICA Planters Become Wealthy as Sugar Brings $600 a Ton and Bananas Are High. Kingston, Jamaica,-—There has ; never been so much money in Jamaica } as now, i The sugar and banana planters are | fast becoming wealthy, and if the pres | ent wave of prosperity continues for a few more years the island will have at least a dozen millionaires. Before the war sugar brought only | $30 per ton; today it is bringing $600 per ton in the English market. ‘The island's inhabitants’ are experiente- | ing great difficulty in getting adequate supplies, and it is only through the action of the food controller that 8 per cent of the output is kept for home consumption, The prosperity of sugar nters has led to large sums being ed in the purchase of the most | up-to-date, machinery for the manu- facture of sugar, Kentucky Shoat a Sulcide. Georgetown, Ky. — Cavanaugh Hughes had no {dea of butchering a 100-pound shoat, but the plg pieked up a butcher knife in its mouth and ran. 7 Hughes pursued, and when the shoat | dropped the knife the weapon hit the ground butt end first and the blade en- + tered the p throat at the potnt where hogs are stuck for butchering. Hughes fin oD. A Considerate Young Hero. Cevington, Ky--James Bayless, aged fiv le hero. When he cut his foot so badiy he could hardly «he didn't want his mother to be |! so he red) himself to the ned from} where he blood, R. S. ENGE, D.C. Ph. G Chiropractor Consultation Free *§ulte 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 200) 000 tol excitement I got out of the bam and | made my way to the nearest Christian village, where I got a small pony, and the church elders he'd me on him for twenty hours until, the middle of the next afternoon, [ reached a place where there was a magistrate and sol- diers. “Three days later, with an escort, J was met by Dr. FE. P. Osgood of Chuchow, sent by our mission, and J. P. Thornton of the Stancard Oi company, who had been ap: ointed special representative of the United States to negotiate with the bandits for my releas Dr. Shelton was operated on at the Freneh hospital at Yunnanfu, united with his family and sent to America for surgical treatment here. tablish in New York city $3,000,000 service clubhouse as.a pe manent memorial to the more than 3,000 American officers who died in the World war. The military record of every officer will be preserved in the building for future generations, Ic ig proposed not only to make the jena will ¢ Hudson, but also to establish a great j center for general patriotic activitic with meeting rooms for patriotic or- gauiaitions and an auditorium for, large public assemblages. Prefers Electric Ch Preference for death in the clectrie | chair over life imprisonment has been j n, sentenced to j expressed by Joha die for the tnurder of Louis Kleia. Ean has a wanden leg andl. he said. | life in priven would be torture on ae: count of the wit noted 10,000,- | yon Gruber, that from Professor \ hygienist, declares sa result of struction of indus- | tries, seizure of Germany's natural re- | sour and the taking over of the} colonies and fleet by the allies, ' We) alw town anf saved them. { This was { new building of national significance, | on the order ef Grant's fomb on the | j centratio ee ST ‘BUBBLE FORCE MAKES BILLIONS Fortunes Extracted Daily From | Froth by Treatment of Low- Grade Ores. | GREAT SAVING of COPPER Knowledge of Colloid and Organle Chemistry Necessary for the Flo- tation Millman—Skil'ful Work for a Profit. New York.—Billions are being added to the world's wealth by the forces at work in the soap bubble. ‘The flotation method of mineral separation, by which every day in the year fortunes are literally extracted from froth, ts now exercising so powerful an influ- enee on mining operations in this and other countries that, according to Co- [Tmbia university authorities, the fu- {ure of copper production, and there- fore of the electrical industry, largely hinges on bubbles. | The process of ore concentration has ys been considered Important in mining engineering schools and the flo- tation process: i leading factor In laboratory practice at Columbia, where the ore dy ng laboratory is now un- dergoing considerable expansion, According to both Dean George B. Poegram of the Columbia hool of gineering and Chem Taggart, professor of ore the advent of flotation has revolution in mining meth- ods. “The word ‘bubble’ used in connec- tion with mining properties formerly referred to a kind of financial manage: ment whieh could hardly be tolerated lin these dry and sober days, but in the; last few years bubbles have taken on a’ new and more important significance for reer part of the mining In- dusty id Dean Pegram. “The most important problem of the mining en- inecrs is usually how to concentrate | the mineral in low-grade ore to such Jan extent t ing of the ore ANH he pr has been developed applies particularly to all sulphide ores, and these include I most of the copper, zine and lead ores, in whieh the ores may be beautifully concentrated by the action of fine bub- Mes 0 ing themselves to the parti 1, finely ground and , mixes with water, Separate Sand and Froth, “The bubbles with the sulphide min- eral then rise to the top as a thick froth while the sand and other worth- Tess mater t© the bottom of the This flotation process has not only made much moré profitable the working of the hetter grade of copper, zine and lend ore, but has also made very profitable. the working of ores which previously could not have been hendled without aetual loss. “The whole secret of the bubbles of alr gathering up the mineral particles and leaving the saad depends upon treating the finely ernshed ore in water with one of various chemical sub- stinees, among them oleie acid and pine ofl, ‘Only a very sieall amonnt of the oil is necessary, less that 1 per ‘ont hy welght of the amount “of min- ceral that fs in the ore, “Aftor the proper reagent has been added to the water and. the finely rushed ore, air is introduced Into ft Fatther by heating It in with a: stirrer wr by forcing it in through fine pores n the bottom of the vessel, or any way tm owhich to bring fine bubbles ef the Ur into i te contaet with the fine particles of the ore, The separation 1s marveleusty complete, the mineral go- , 'y othe top in bubbles, forming a th rath, whieh Is collected by suit: able comments, While the sand and ather material settles quite elesn of any valuable mineral to the hottom of the vessel. ' “Of course the procese Is mate to run continuously, anil in seme mills as much as 4,000 tone of nineral in froth Is separated ¢ Altogether in JOIS there were €2.00° G00 fons of ore trented by the flotetien process, 's Future Depends on Bubbles. romoay truty be said that the future tion, and therefore of | Tidust y largely [dependent on the same forces that are : fin the soap brbblos do thet the + dressing design vessel, inee ener pror Te ater at wo Prove: wt for (8 ith exvort = | one ope satton of ne array MEMCRIAL FOR OFFICERS eee ee eee nat et ene Fiosp he Htored te fer the ne Three Million Dollar Service Club!" LOE es house for New York City Planned “Ore doossins is an ind’snensable ¢ The Army and Navy club of Amer) took hetvoon min wand metallurgy present-day practice in the ext tof Is from the earth,” fexsor Tag: “Tt consis chemical concentration ef the valu: part of an ore into a bulk much i smaller than that of the original ore, and at the same time rejection as waste of the worthless portion. “Until about fifteen years ago most mills we small as compared with present-«: dards and the ores were reiatively high grade. The ore treatment problem was 2 simple one, and as a result the technical as well as the executive direction of the ore dressing plant could be and was inel- to Life Term. | dental to the direction with which the concentrator was butt. “The services of a specialist in con- were considered unneces- sary. With the development of the large, low-grade, disseminated copper deposits, the Importance of ore dr ing took a sudden jump. These depos- | ea The Rey. G. W. lor, a Baptist minister to Hiawatha, Kansas, says that of 227 couples he has married, 000,000 Germans will die out} only two have sought divorce. The Atlantic liner Imperator is the first steamship to be equipped with a full-fledged bank.

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