The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 12, 1920, Page 7

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___HELP WANTED—MALEY COAL MINERS WANTED—By Beulah Coal Mining Co: at Beu- lah, N. D. Steady work. Apply at mine or at Bismarok office.in Haggart Building. 1-24-t£ LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its kind. Established 1893.< Time agd ex- pense saved bf our methods. “Catalog _ free, “Moler Barter College idl. ie Nicollet_Ave., Minneapope. _11-1-1mo WANTED—A man to work on stock fan in’ Hettinger county. If married wife can have room and board, German pre; ferred. Write or éall at Room 2,’An Hotel, » M1 SEE—Y-> M, GC. A: Auto Schoal,. 1 Angeles, None better. Start fMgh a a 11 o8 2b HELP WANTED—FEMALE ~ WANTED—High school or business col- lege girl to work for board and room, Xo stall children. Small home. Cali writ ‘0, 159, Tribune 11-12-tf WANTED—Housekeeper on farm” for widower. Qne with small child ‘con- sidered. Address C. Care ‘Tribune. f 11-1028 WANTED—Competent girl. | Apply G. R, Berndt, 104 Ave. A. Phone _ 622. 11-8-1wk. WANTED—Girl or woman for general house work, Apply Dohn Meat heriterh WANTED—A competent girl-for house® work, Mrs. E, V. Lahr, 15Ave. B. 9 y _\11-8-1wk WANTED—Cook at Chocolate Sho ! 10-26-tf | “” FOR SALE OR RENT | HOUSES AND FLATS | FOR,SALE~By owner, one 8-room house, fufl basement, 3 clothes closets, east front, porch screened.in, _BArn, garage, hen house. property: te ikisged ai termssat u y) 1014 11th ‘suf ee Will 'take” horses. Wilf hell on. easyi bargain, Sf, taken soom, interested, | 10-30-1mo RENT — Furnished housekeeping Man an@.wife pre- Phone 646W : 11-12-2t OR SALE--All_ moder five room -house and bath at 315 12th Street. Inquire at. Klein's ‘Taylor ‘Shop.: 11-6-Iwk FOR SALE—Seven-room house, thodern, on payment. Good neighborhood. “P. | O. Box 293. 10-25-tf ‘ call-at placa or phone 616X. FOr apartment modern. ferred. 1100” Broadway. Lost | TOST—A heavy black auto robe- between Dr. Schipfer's residence and _ office. Phone_residerice: or_office. 11-11-2t __y WORK WANTED WOMAN WANTS—Work, by the hour. Phone 179R. = 1y-10-3t GIRL 13 YEARS OLD—Wants place for room and hoard, while attending scheol. _Call_Bismarck Hotel, 11-10-3t ROOMS FOR “RENT FOR RENT—To men only,a‘fige raom. in strictly modern house. © Call’ 247. ermlists Marat | FOR RENT—Room suitable. for two ladies. ~ With. / privilege . of making __ breakfast. -Phone_ 713K, © ~ -11-11-3t FOR -RENT—Two unfurnished rooms. 406,.7th Street: "DyReNéinhover. Phone 29k. 11-11-3t FOR RENT——Room. in modern house, | four, from postoffice. Phone 737K. es: eM -Letwk FOR RENT=Striétly modern room, ’516 th Street. Gentemen preferred. blocks ‘{—Modern room for-one. Ave! A. pn MOBILES — MOTORCYCLES BONDS AT PAR= Will be accepted in payment. ‘of 1921: Ford ‘Touring car run about. sig’“hundred miles, Good as new and ‘price -$600:60 includes license, chains, extra tube and top dust hoed. . At present’ price of bonds you can’ save almast ‘a hundred dollars. Address, 158 Tribune > 11-8-3wks a ~ VEMBER 12, 1920. eee SALESMAN SALESMAN WANTED—By old reliable house to sell our mew, 5c punch boards to merchants in small towns and coun- try. stores, either regular or sideline salesman... UNRESTRICTED TERRI- TORY, Bia COMMISSIONS. Write for salesman: gutfit,, EMPIRE MANUFAC- TURING. “CO,, 125 W. PLUME ST., NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. 10-19-1mo SaLESMEN. WANTED—By old reliable firm to ‘sell an-entirely new Se Sales board proposition to merchants in sm@ll towns and country stores, unlim- ited territory, big commissions. Write for Salesmen's’ Outfit. Empire Manu- facturing Co., 114 West City Hall. Ave- _nue, Norfolk, Va, * ae imo SALESMAN WANTED—To séll our line of salesboards (on eytifely new. plan) to merchants In small;towns and country stores. Unrestricted territory, double commissions,~pronpt ‘pay. . Write for LTY SALES CO., NORFOLK, 10-25-1mo pellayy supplies NO TRIBUNE | BUITggIN' VIRGINIA. NG, POSITION WANTED EXPERIENCED — ‘Stenogtapher, — with some knowledge of hapkkeeping: desires position, Address Box 211; -Biamarek, N. D. ‘ Vi-11-2t [AND : FOR SALA OR RENT—80 acres up land. Produce ‘good fruit and. otha ‘cron 300 bearing fruit trees. Fuel dn plac Fair set of buildings, water to irriga if needed. 4 miles trom R. R. Close to achoolg Good” climate and neighbors. Open Water-power site On place. No swamp, alkali; or blizzards. “At a bar- gain, cern by owner. Alva’ Hall, Porthill,_ Idaho. _-20-25-1m0 WANTED=To trade my Jequity in 160 acre ‘farm for cattle and horses, Will _ take all horses Ifthey ure good pnes and weigh 1400 or over, Box_105 MeKenzje, N. D._____11-8-10t FOR SALE 25-139-70, 2% miles “goutseast of”, Drigccll:” Write ‘owner, John By Fried, Jamestown, Noe -Iwk _ MISCRLLANEOUS- B AMD LEAVIN PY AND MUSTRSELL— ‘At a sacrifice: Ice box, hed, rugs, din- ing. room table and Chairs, dressers, buffet, davenport, parlor desk, kitchen , tables, clectric washe: other things. Must der touring this we 00 takes it. Call’ 694 or'cah be seen “at 1206 Ave B. WOR SALE—Restaurant and Confection “@ry in connection. n of 800. Fix- tures and stock willInvoicé about $1,- 400, Monthly: sales $1,500. Good money maker... Reason for selling have ather \ business, “Write or see owner, Bernt & Meyer, McClusky, ,N. 1k mo FOR. SALE—Implemént busines: nual business . “$40,000. farming community.““Coal mine employ- ing 100 men, . Stock $10,000, can be re- duced, Good reason’ for selling. .. Num ber 185 Tribune. «1-4-2 TOR SALE -OR'RENT—Two plore build~ ing. First’ floor contains fixtures Pool Hall;» Opera: House on second Good’ opening’ for barber. Write ND. eto sess 11-12-3t FOR SALE—Butcher Shop-in Bisme Sales. average: about $2,500 month This isa money maker. unless you mean,business. J. H» Holi- shan, Ist: door ‘East: of Post Office. : 11-11-2t FOR, SALE—Duroc-Jerseys, Boars and gilts.” ‘Sitg# by°Mamnfoth Maids Dis- turber,, ight 900° lbs. Also a few thied: wows. bred or open. Patterson Land Compény, Bismarck, N, Dak, t d 11-4-2wks FOR SALE —Have several pieces of furni- ture, dishes, etc., that I will sell at a hargain.for quick sale. Also'5 passenger giiupmobile car. . Sidn 2301, ar ‘call, 1020, th Street. IN| THE; MARKE car of western i ves Sutherland, South, Heart, N. D, floor. R. Kautzman, Breten, 11-11-6t Remodeling _ suits, ‘IaDehne, 423, 2d DRESS__ MAKING — coats, hats. Mrs. J. Street. Phone 165K _ _ U-9-1wk FOR SALE—Ladies new seal plush coat. Sidney Co Phone 230L) or call at 1020, 5th/S 11-12-2t eet. | +— The —+ Scrap Book HIS MANNER WAS “STRANGE” | But Under English Law Wife Wi Denied Divorce From Briton _ Who Threw Hot Tarts. | The wife of an English movie pro-; ducer, one William Thomas Wilson, became quite put out the other day by | what the London Telegraph describes as the “strange manner” of .her hus- band. She took the matter into court and asked a separatton. > te Wilson was ‘wont to throw the tea- pot at her as she lay in bed, she sald, and, .to quote the “Telegraph, “he would frequently come homé-late and | play the cornet all night long, until; every one in the house went nearly! mad. Wheptie wanted to annoy her} he always=started on one of his non- stop cornet:playing ‘episodes, first re- marking: ow I'm going to give you hell’s delight.” : Another annoying little habit of her husband to which Mrs. Wilson objéct- ed was that of throwing “boiling hot” jam tarts at her. ~Occasionally, too, when hig; Spirits were particularly “volatile,” He would .kick. her out of bed and -force=her to sleep on the floor. His financial contributions to the support of her and their little daughter were somewhat “meager—$5 and the rent. ‘ In view of these ttle oddities Mrs, Wilson thought she should be given a separation. The magistrate listened sympathetically to her complaint. He admitted “the defendant. seemed to have used a good deal of pictorial language,” and he might have been a bit hasty\in some of his acts, but his honor could not:see that the wife had een the victim Of “persistent cruelty.” Mrs. Wilson probably had suffered a good deal of “‘moral, cruelty,” but he really couldn’t see that. she was de- serving of her freedom: FEW STREET ORGANS HEARD “Talking Machines” - Have Largely Displaced the Peripatetic Musi- cian Once So Popular. ~ The street organ, like the hansom cab and the frock coat, is knocking on the door labeled obsolete. Where and| why did the,music on wheels vanish? Some say the war took back to Italy all the “organ-grimders.” Others con- tend that high wages enabled the ven- ders of popular tunes ‘to make more money elsewhere. chines gives me,a different Featon, “Girard” writes in thePhiladelphia Press. " “Everybody now. has canned music in. his own home. and ‘wants. none unvewn at him from the street. Peo- ple'stopped giving money to the organ- grinders and they were staryed into ‘otlier fields of activity.” f Judging froin’ the sounds. one ‘hears pulsating from the windows and doors of our ‘400,000 ~homes “these Summer. days, I fancy the talking\machine man khows his facts. Anyhow, music, as it Is labéled, is one of the most plenti- ful things “what Is,” so that the dis- SP] earing jh ind;piano ‘has not yet in- créased the fenana for crepe. f Rafts Protect River Banks, One’ of thie, latest developments; In river. bank. protection. is that of’ flexi- ble rafts anchored in position-but free to give with the rise and fall of the water which {s now betng tried on the east bank of the Missouri river near Folsom, Ia. ey 3 The rafts are bullt of logsyand’ are not only strong and. durable,/ bue ex- ceedingly flexible in every direction. *The handling of the rafts was simpli- were towed to the location, desired, where the ‘rafts’,were made fast _eables running from the centers and Joints to.anghor piles, each-pile hold- ing two sections\and the barges pulled out from. nder them, old boiler flues threaded son, light cables being used as rollers. Reinforced concrete piles ‘were used for anchors. It is expected that:‘these rafts will take the place “or atleast render fhore permanent the far ‘fhore expensive installations of, mattresses, strong dykes and other ° forms of revefments. “ \'A PANACEA Kathryn: It’s a shame the way those. little high school thits and sub deb flappers monopolize the men. Kittye: It’s just that. Why not form an old maids’ soviet and have It stopped? Union Soldiérs in Union Suits. _But a_man who sells talking ma- enema S i A minister was discoursing scornful- ly on the flabby people who are wn: GN, Leathers, }. An; “quickly changed -his garb \when the Responsiple for} Don’t-answer |” “{ whenever possible... “fied ‘by, building them on barges which }_ WHERE IS Tom TONKNT, NeLeN? 1 WENT To ‘The WASA'T HAY GREAT IN) The ‘SECouD.AcT WheRE WEN: Show The CouRT - T Scene » WITH THE JNirmnessed ANO | everntane P right’or for the wron “Phey remind me, Ftre'said, “of that border traitor Inthe Civil war, who put ona Confederate uniform to trade with the Confederate soldiers, and who willing to fake 2 rah ether ror tne northern soldiers appeared in- their Union suits.”—Yeuth’s Companion, . | SITE OF ANCIENT CITY. FOUND | Workimen Unearth Ruins Believed to Be Those of Tiberias, Says Jerusalem Dispatch, London.—The ‘site of ancient Ti- berias is believed to have been un- earthed, says a Jerusalem dispatch to the London Times, : The alleged discovery of the ruins of the city, which played a notable part in Jewish and Christian history, was made* by Jewish workmen who weré buifding a government road near Tabarjyeh, the modern town. When the remnants of old walls and columns -began-coming tolight the:gov-- ernment ‘ithmediately stopped the work. The directer of the depart- ment» of antiquities then visited the ‘spot, accompanied by'two members of the Jewish Exploration society. The society has been given permission to conduct further excavations. i i Sy i MONKEY YEAR; BABIES SLAIN Japanese Authorities Are Alarmed by Infanticides Caused by Old Superstition. Tokyo.—So reany cases of infanti- | cide have been reported in Chica pre- fecture that the authorities have been greatly disturbed, 4 This year being the monkey year in the Japanese calendar, an old super- stition makes the mothe®s believe that children born in that year will meet with misfortune. Special orders have been isstied” by the police that all Prospective mothers ri ould, be regis- tered and watched, antf that ‘the “mon- key” superstition should be eradicated “DOINGS OF THE DUFFS __ o : he WAS Gone TO Te TeaTeR! Av THE GRAND AND IT WAS SucH A WONDERFUL. PLAY THAT ) ToM AND MADEHIM gg SECOND ACT? Yes - You Magy Where THEY Ate Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. . WEATWE WAI. COMES OUT LIKE, “WAT, We HAST - : \ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE Oy MATINEE ‘To DAY CALLED, ’ snow ? ta AR * a so . STANK - Now | Dive IM ‘The HCL IS NOT NEW PROBLEM 1,600 Years Ago Citizens of Rome Were Tormented by Same Plague. DEFIED THEIR MiGHTY RULER Diocletian's, Edicts Have Familiar Ring—His Edicts and Curses Do- ing No Good,"He Advised Resort to Boycott. Rome,—Let those who can draw comfort’ from the fact know that H. Cc. L., is no newer than many other plagues which poor humanity suffers from. In facet, the éitizens of Rome, ‘now tormented’ with’ ther leaps and bounds in prices, ate'trying to console thetfiselves with the discovery, made by those’ who fead“ancient books, that this city was bothered with the prof- iteer 1,600 years azo. Ruler Fixed Prices. In the reign of Diocletian, who flourished in 300 A. D., the emperor was so.disturbed by his subjects, who suffered Krom the H. C. L,, that he fixed the prices‘of foodstuffs and drew a schedule for workmen's wages! To read his proclamation fs to read the many long-winded documents which food controllers, mayors and other public functionaries! have perpetrated inthe past three or four years. The condemning of the profiteer, “moved by a greed for profit which is out of all proportion to the real value of the goods he sells,” and the Imperial wish that his “fixed prices should be re- spected throughout the empire,” have a familiar ring which makes glad the hearts, of historians who want to make history popular. But relief, comfort’ and joy do stop there. For it is enough to read a lit- tle further to discover that the good Is Quite Up on Shows. , oad BY ALLMAN WELL ote DID YoU LiKE It Tom? DIDKy YouTH THAT WAS A WONDERFUL ° OLD FIBBER You Never WENT To . % THAT GHOW- HERE ISYou SEAT 4 ——,'' CHECK FoR ThE BURLESQUE. | Hionaire, emperor’s laws and curses against newly rich and profiteers were as use- 1 ee 1. Does Look That Way. , VRE! Wud wie WoL ARE You DOING —== Let ME Tei. You Mats SOME SHOW. one OF ‘Tue BEST. OVT: THAT. WAS, A FING CAST Too") ENJOYED IT MUCH, KNOW - SAW You | ~ less46 centuries ago as they are. to- days And, in despalt, ,the good old Roman tyrant implores nis’ “honest | and patriotic subjects” to resort to! the one and only remedy, boycott of high-priced goods, With this ruler's history fresh in their minds, the modern citizens of an- cient Rome are now “being informed, , that the following goods are to go up: Aluminum goods, 500 per cent; nickel, copper goods and utensils, 500 per cent; goods for household use, such as knives, forks and spoons, 500 per cent; iron goods of all kinds, 600 per cent; locks and bolts, 700 per cent; earthenware and china, from 400 tofstart at Lareao, G00 percent. All these increases are on present prices, which are from 300 to 1,000 per cent above pre-war prices. N Drives Bull to Harness. August R. Berg-of Auburn has an Ayrshire built nearly twe> yer old that he drives to harness like 1 horse. | In Sweden, Mr. Berg~used to train cattle and horses for the government. Ne calls, the bull. Rosenberggand, when he drove him to Worg¢ester one @ily e- cently the bull threaded his way peace’ fully among the automobiles, hnt, Mr. Berg was delayed in getting home be-: cause so many photographers wanted to take a shot.—Boston Globe, | Eminently Qualified. First Artist—Well, old man, how's business? g Second Artist—Oh, splendid! Got a: commission t morning from a mile Wants his children painted very badly. First Artist (pleasantly)—Well, my boy, you’re the very man for the Job. —Stray Stories. : J A Pessim “What de you think of this univers sal peace movement? Do you think human beings will ever give up_ fight ing with one another?” y “‘Gourse I don't. Ain't i married?” Baltimore Ameri Timber waste each year inthe ubited States could provide 40,000 tons of paper, 300 tons of Pesin, 600,- 000 gallons of turpentine. BY BLOSSE ‘TH’ MANGE ‘Teo, Pop? 4 MEXICAN BORDER LITTLE KNOWN No Region in All North America More Widely Misunderstood, “| Says Writer. No Section of Borderland Has Seen So Much of Adventure, Tragedy and » Turbulent Activity as State of Texas. ’ | -—~ Washington, D. C.—“No region in all North America is more frequently mentioned or more widely misunder- stdod, perhaps, than the Mexican bor- der,” writes Frederick Simpich, for- merly American consul at Nogales, elety. v “From the Gulf of Mexico up to El ! Paso, ;along. the Texas frontier, the Rio Grahde forms the boundary be- tween the United States and Mexico; thence to the Pacific const the line is marked by stone or iron monuments (save a short break at the Colorado), so set that one is ‘siipposed to be vis- ible from another. By this plan a soldier, miner or cowman (yes, and a smuggler, too) can always tell which side.of the line he is on; or, if Wholly lost and he comés suddenly oma mon- | ument, he can soon get oriented. “Adventyrous, colorful and full of contrasts as-it Is, the 1,800 mile trip along .this crooked, Mistorie Hne Is rough and difficult, and has been made by few people. “The Rio Grande part of this bor- der has caused both Uncle Sam and Mexico much work’ and fental an- guish. During bad, floods the line as formed .by ‘the river squirms around In so astonishing and lively a manner that what Is Mexican soil one day may he in Texas the next, and vice versa. Bigness of Texas. “Railroads cut this long border line at Rrownsville, Laredo, Eagle Pass, and El Paso, Tex.; af Douglas, Naco and Nogales in Arizona, and at Cal- exico and Tin Juana, in California. Only four of these railroads, however, are main, hice .* through traffic that penetrate th interior of Mexico; these fagle Pass, El Paso 9 aay and Nogales, “You visualize the bigness\of Texas when you look at the length of its side that boyders on Mexico.- You realize its r tiness, too, when you: travel throiigh some of its,,border regions, where the population fs less than two per square mile, { -“No section of the border: hag seen’ so much of adventure, tragedy and tur: hulent activity as Texas, The flags of France, Spajh fnd Mexico have waved Yver it;-for a time ft flew {ts own } Lone! Star.and also: the Confederate flag. “In Brownsville ‘you hear more Spanish than English, because most of the 8,000 people who live there are Mexicans. \ “Up the river from Brownsville les Laredo, most, important border town in south Texas, even {f an old m; does call this vicinity ‘a wilderne: filled with wild horses.’ “Engle Pass, on up the Rio Grande, was a favorite camping spot for the California gold hunters in ‘49. “As you follow the border west, oaks, pines and underbrush decrease, aridity increases, and cacti lft their thorny heads. ‘Border counties Ike Brewster, Presidio Ps El Paso are of amazing area‘larger than some of our small .eastern states. Windmills are everywhere—big ‘electric fans to keep the cattl§ cool,’ a waggish cow- hoy syste explained to a London. ten- derfoot. Largest Irrigation Reservoir. f “El Paso is the only large city from ‘San Antone’ to Los ‘Angeles, a ride of 1,500 dry, dusty miles, “The largest reservoir anywhere {s the great. Elephant Butte dam, which stores morg ,water than the worldyfa- ‘mous Assuan.dam on the Nile. ‘This big dam, built in the Rio Grane above El Paso'at a point in New Mexico, Diolds enough water, we are told, ‘to fill a standpipe 11 feet In diameter: reaching from E) Paso to the moon, or to cover Massacpusetts to avdepth of six inches!’ “From the point at monument No. 1 where the boundary line crawls out of; the Rio Grande (at the southeast cor- ner of New’ Mexico), It strikes west into a wilderness of singutarly dry and} empty aspect. For 40 miles along this march the traveler must carry his own water. "To the west lie the rough, hostile; foothills of the Dog mountains; near here, In the. San Luis rangé, the line reaches a point of 6,600 feet above the sen, marking the continental divide. “In the San Bernardino vailey the line strikes the first running. water after quitting the Rio Grande—192 miles to the east. Here rises the fa- mous Yaqui river, that long, crooked stream tliat meanders through the vast Mexican state of Sonora and through the turbulent Yaqui’ Indian zone, final- “fy emptying into the Gulf of California below Guaymas. “In the Avhole 700-mnile stretch. from the Rio Grande to the Pacific, this line crosses only five permanent run- ning s{reams, and the average rain- fall throughout its length is ont: eight inches. “Save the hamlets of Columbus and Hachita, the New Me: in section of this border is almost uninhabited.” 3 Order a load of Black Diamond Coal, Give it a trial, and you will always use it. More heat for the money than any other coal,’ F. H. Carpénter Lumber Co., Phone 115, > : . ‘ . TRIP FULL OF CONTRASTS) Mexico, to the National Geographic s@f —_ PAGE SEVEN _ Triplé Followed: by Double and Single 1 Louisville, -—“Bank" Jones was pacing te floor as pros- t pective fathers are. wont. “Triplets,” wos the announce- hient. “Bunk” Jones pace the floor, as grandfatiters are hour’ ad. continued — to prospective wont. An In ~ Jones did Wot alter “Bunk” ais course. He still paced the floor. Another hour passed. ~ “A granddaughter.” x: And there are six howling good reasons) why = “Bunk” Jones, farmer near Murray, Is “all. smiles.” Before his wife, who Is forty- -two, gave birth fo triplets, Mrs. Willie ‘Jones, daughter-in-law, wag sent for, An hour after vival of the triplets Mrs, Jones ented = “grandaddy” — with Meantline /Mrs,Asiah Parks, a duughter, “had been: called In 16 attend the (wo mothers, With- in less than an hour, she too, hid become a mother, a\daugh- ter completing the sextet: born in the same house within three hours, ‘ —————— BARS GIRL UNABLE TO TALK Child, ‘Eight, Who Lacks fused ‘Entrance at Ell by Authorities. eegb,. sland New. York.-During the eight years of her life Marin Marangou,.a Greek, never lerrnerL+ talk. Y But at Ellis island, where she dis- cerned from the grin countenances of the menthers of the board of Inquiry that they were listing her as a defee- tive, she uttered her first words, They we “manmie’ and “papa.” The appeal, however, failed to deter the oftielals from: decid: to deport her to rehitives In Gree er mother and two-older sisters were admitted. ‘| They wére Met*by Michael Marangou, Maria's fa oral yer ther, who has worked sev- fit the Gary (Ind.) steel plants, The gt tdimitted were Themelina, elghteep. ‘and Aphrodite, fourteen. Their father told the officials his. son, Etas, now’ twenty-one, was ten years old before he spoke. He also is em- ployed at Gary.» 3 OXYGEN' FOR GAS VICTIMS Chamber’ ls Eqilpded in Hospital at London. to Give Special Treatment. *London—An oxygen vhamber has heen, completed: at Guy's hospital at Wieost of 88000, ° | It is qn air-tight chuunber of, glass framed in tediks méasuringy 20. feet square and TY feet high. Tt wilh he need ‘principally for the ctreoof men -gitssed in the war, The treatinent devised hy, Prof. Joséph Bareroft of Cambridgg uofversity and Dr. ‘GQ. B) Aunt of Guy's: hospftal, is SUI tn the expertinental’ stage, but doctors are hopeful ef idood results, . Men who Fave béey) gassed and swier from ytliMentty of breathing show great improvement after. lying: In the chamber for five cays or. more and breathing. o&ygen continuously. The chamber will contain three beds. and each patient will breathe 8 cents’ worth of oxygen a day. YANKS ROUT YELLOW ROGUES American; Guniroat ‘Pursues Chinese Brigancs in Upper Reaches of “Yangtsze River.’ / Shanghal.—Brigginds who have ter- rorized_ the vpper reaches of the Yang- tsze river In recent months found a sudden check put upen their activities when American and British ‘gunboats were dispatched Into the upper river from Shanghai, aveording to reports. The gunboats were sent up to Chun- king after outlaws took possession of the Robert Dollar 71 of the Robert Dollar company nt Shanghal at Wan- hsien in Szechuen province, and were shrebed tivity only by AREA MERSApY peurunce’ of the America® gunboat Patos. which cant in response to dis- tress signals. Messages 40 Sh:inghai‘sild the ban- dits vanished info the hills on the ap- Unboy PLAN AIR SERVICE IN EUROPE Planes Will Opsrate From Copen, hagen, Hamblirg AmSterdam nd. London. j Establishpent? of -a Washington,— regular air e between Copen- hagen, Hambtirg-Amsterdain, find Con- don pr Hy heen -ggrvell aon by Ditnish. Gerniag. Batty nero coinpanfes: coreg, 10° advices ‘from Berlin today. ‘tothe department Sof coniniereé, ‘Rink eripsa eek Aire planned. Bids{for-aertat posthl! serv ide liefweell] ig ath Yfeland pave fed Forv-by. fhe heen’ utch dite of poRtHand selep Ainsierdatt stated: aes fe for “Yeats.: + Philadelphia. Paes A pastearil w has heen traveling 13 senrs from Wild- wood, N.oJ.. arrived -here the ‘other days It was-tpatled in August, 1907, In the’ Mail iy] The postcard was addressed to Thom- fs Stnith, a policeman of the Fourth and York ‘street. station. It was re- cajved in first-class condition. Smith hag been dead for five years, i , Eee N B. 8. ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. 3 Chiropractor ‘ Consultation Free Guite 9, 11—Lucas Block—! Wniteh ©

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