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

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J me yf a i iy * 4 ‘ Bt 4 ] i a e _uilding, ———7-24-tf LEARN . JR TRADE—At the Mole Barber sollege, Oldest institution of its . Moler Barber College 107 R. Nicollet/Ave., Minnepaolis. . 11-29-1mo HELP WANTED—FEMALE WANTBD—Good cook and oth ip in small hotel. Box 98, Medora, No. Dak. | wanTho=compe eat a Tea ompetent girl_for housework. Mrs. Burt Finney, re rey ns: 11-26-tf WANTED—Woman {0 general house- k, “307 4th streat= 112002 BR SALE OR RENT (OUSES AND FLATS NTS THIS BARGAIN—Sale by owner.,,Eight room house, partly mod- ern, ', fall basement,. garage, barn, chickep; house and ten shrubbery. A fine garden spo Dlocks ‘from new school. Located 930 lith.street. Just, the place for a fam-. ise eve a nicg h call gp-write 930,°-4) Marauitt P; 0, j|ALE—Six room modern house for sgomparatively new, on good early possession given, owner leaving..gity, Partly modern 5 roomj house a located for $1900, on terms. _ Geo. M, Register. 11-23-1wk FOR RENT—Strictly new modern bunga- | low,.5 rooms and bath, hot water heat, and EPS, in basement. For terms, see A. W. “Weisenborn, 115. West Thayer. ‘ 11-30-lwk and te born, 115 ‘Went thas er : one gi FOR SALE — Nine room modern ‘house, a e ‘B] ‘Street.. aa : ey ts ‘00 ‘barn_ atid ‘furniture. Mrs, Eppinger. 30 p.m. 11-20-tf ‘iwi! _WORK WANTED _ WANTED—Work by young lady by the hour or day. Phpne 262L. 11-30-2t WANTED TO RENT ‘Established 1893. Time and ex- red by our methods. Catalog; LFOR, SALE—A/beautiful new PAGE SEVEN ROOMS FOR RENT —Two unfurnished. rooms for usekeéping. -9t-219 (2d street, . ,11-30-3t LARGH MODERN’ FURNISHED ROOM Por” rent. Gentlemen ferred. “Phone 538, 605 3d street. 1280-1avk FOR RENT—Two unfurnished rooms, for light ‘housekeeping. Very close in. 1p. quire-at 320 4th street... _11-27-3t FOR RENT—Furnished room in modern house, 921 Sth street. Telephone: i Bt : 1+ BOARD AND ROOM—At_ reasonable price. 407, 8th street. Phoge 834 11-1 FOR: RENT —Room™ in modern_ house. Call 522 2d street. 11-8et AUITOMORELES — MOTORCYCLES FOR SAI,B—One 1917 and one i918 Chey- rolet Touring cars, very cheap if sold at on 0. -K. Garage. 11-24-1Wk SALESMAN i SALESMEN WANTED—By old reliable firm to -sell an entirely new 6c Sales rd proposition’ to merchantsi: in all towns and country stores, ‘uniim- ited territory, big commissions. Write for Salesmen's Outfit. ‘Empire Mapu- facturing Co., 114 West City Hall Ave- ‘nue, Norfolk, Va. 11-8-1) Sui vc oi LOST LEFT A WATCH —In the. bathroom at ‘the N. P. Station. Hampden 17 12 size. Initials;N. K. Return to / Street Stationery. LOST—At. Elks’ beaver hat with white lining, leave Bergeson’s store. Dr. Gordon. 1}-29-3t MISCELLANEOUS...’ | e black weight . 8. K. brand on: it front shoulder and has four white.feet meeting, one One bay |- Bik. brad Also» one single } i EY FOR SALI 0 ‘ontana Honey delivered at an fice in North Dakota, $3.00 Cai order. B. F, Smith,’ Jr. F Montana. “FOR SALE— One large iron safe; ol child's large iron bed and springs and: one. large bed springs. Inquire of H:} F. O'Hare, in Little Bldg.- Tel ie $39. FOR, SALE—One. large iron safe;, one. child's large “iron bed and springs and one large bed springs. - Inquire._of .H. F. O'Hare in Little Bidg. Tel. No. 2 ano at a sacrifice, on account of leaving for the -"West. Phone 308, or call at-824 Main street, Mandan. _ 11-30-1wk FOOD SALE: AND” LUNCH—Saturday, Dec. 4, from, 11:30'to 6:30. For benefit WANTED—To. rent furnished light} housekeeping ‘rooms in Bismarck. Small family... , Write .Box.715 Mandan, | N. D. ~~ 11-30. Bt POSITION WANTED : ae POSITION WANTED—By man to take “care. of furnace or boiler or janitor / work of any kind. Write G. S., Care Tribune Co. 7-3} POSITION WANTED—By wood chopper to cut wood or any kind or clearing a Write G. C, H% Care ‘Tribune ‘0. 27 -3t of Rest Room, at: 214 6th street, (Lar- son Bakery.) | _ 11-29-3t WANTED TO BUY—Small_ hardware, implement or tire business.“ Write for full particulars. 168 Tribune” _11-30-2t WANTED ‘TO DELIVER—Your messages and hand parcels. City Messenger Service. “Phone 953, 11-23-1wk | WANTED TO. RENT—Garage close in, |. large enough for one or two _Write 167 Tribune, 11-2 SWITCHES AND BRAIDS—Made from your own combings. Prices are reason- able, Call 713 3d°street. 11-29-1wk, SICILY SCENE. Has Been Battle Ground of East and West HELPED MAKE MODERN EUROP Many Races Have Fought and Ruled in. Sunny Sicily. From 735 8. C. Un- ‘til This Year of Grace—in Sicily May Be Seen Greek Temples in Nearly Perfect Grandeur—Rich In Mythology, Tradition, History, Ar- ” ghaeology and Poetry. 7 \ In-connection with the reported seiz- ure by peasants of large estates‘ in Sicily, Owned by absentee landlords, the National Geographic society has issued. from, its Washington, D. C. head@iarters: the following bulletin concerning the largest island of the Mediterranean: Land beloved of.the gods and bat- tle-ground of West and East, the later history of Sicily has had much to do ~in.making the history of modern Eu- rope,” says the bulletin, which is based on a communication to the so- clety by Mrs..George C. Bosson, Jr. “It is as peaceful now as its bil- lows of._gray-green olive branches typify—but @-are the fires under Et- ; snowy mantle, hoenicians, Greeks, Carthaginians, Romans, Vandals, Saracens, Norntans, | Spanish, Savoyards, Bourbons, Gari- baldi, Italians—these have fought and ruled in sunny Sicily from 785 B.:C. until this year of grace. Is it any | wonder that Goethe deciared-‘Steily tobe ‘the key to all'—of mythology, tradition, history, of.;@rehaeology,4 poetry, and. Nature's perfect béauty? Perfect Greek Temples.’ ‘ “The Parthenon at Athens has been wrecked and crushed by earthquakes and Turkish bombs, but in Sicily one may see Greek Temples in nearly per- feet grandeur. ix » “But Greek or Roman matters bt when one ascends that old hill of Taurus (hence Taormina’s name),and ameng’ those Corinthian columns stands in a univérse of blue! Blue heaven and blue sea, and to the right Etna in its’ majesty, a pearly cone against the dazzling azure; tawny rocks and a gray old town, splashes of pink where almohds bloom, and glossy green of lemon trees for miles and miles and miles. i “There is perhaps no place in Eu- | rope which has such a-distant indi- viduality as Syracuse ‘possesses. It is.s0 easy, when one sees it, to un- derstand its history, since so many important incidents occurred from its geographical peculiarities. Fourteen miles in circumference, it contained four. separate towns. Facing them lay the island of Ortygia, and south came the great harbor and the marsh of. Syraco. But the towns are now gray ruins on the hillsides, and the jstand-is Siracusa today. .'Here came Diana’s nymphs—Arethusa hiding as @ fountain in the goddess’ groves, MANY WARS: iL Cyane ‘changed to ‘a pool of: ark blue water,’ as the poet sings, by Pluto when she tried to stay him in his fight with Proserpine. ~ “The pltice ‘is eloquent with history. ‘What hosts have marched by! Mar- cellus broke the heart of Syracuse, when she was Athen’s rival, and then to Greek and Goth, Byzantine, ‘Sara- cen, Norman, Teuton, and~ Spaniard she feli an easy prey. The great hills took on the harbor and the harbor looks to the sky; the Spanish walls glitter now in the sunlight, and the portcullises of Charles V rise where stood the:many-gated citadel of Penta- pyla. oo s Planned by. Archimedes. “In the great galleries and under- ground forts of Euryalus castle the two years’ siege is easily imagined; spacious quarters fof trdops, great courts for horses! here still the holes for hitching them, the great stone mangers for feeding. Stations for cat- apults and magazines, subterranean galleries, and. long walled passages. Not .a stone. 4s. missing in the long flight of steps; the apertures through which the Grecian argows flew are perfect : still. Archimedes himself planned those cunning sallyports—one high’ for a mounted trooper, one low for afoot seldier. “Pglermo ‘la -felice’ is.a gem of the city, to me second only in ‘beauty to the pearl of Ceylon, Colombo. Ap- Proached from the harbor,, the Concha d'Oro Hes in front, that shell-like plain, ‘like a gigantic garden, with Monte Pellegrino’s red crags on the tight, Capo Zaffarano's wooded heights across on the left, while Monte Griffone’s dark range fills the back- ground. Modern Palermo is a medley of. dark old streets and wide new ones, of ‘Moorish domes and modern ai’ble- mansions, of labyrinths. of. al- leys and:;a ‘broad, beautiful Marina, wifileno other city of Its size pos- sesses such splendid parks and public and private gardens.” LAnt! “Rede” Riote in Petrograd. Serious anti-Bolsheyik. rioting is. tak- ing place in Petrograd. Six of the Bol- shevik: commissionrs . -have’: been drowned in the Neva river, while the others have:been compelled to seek places of refuge. The riots followed news of the defeat of the soviet forces. Ohio Sheriff:Chose Woman Deputy. When Miss Leona Yeazell of Spring- field, O.. was appointed deputy sheriff by Sheriff James L. Welsh, she was believed to be the first woman to fill that office in the history of the state. rtrd Slight Saving. “The upkeep of an automobile {s ex- pensive.” “But there is one. advantage,” -said the optimist. : “What is that?” “In the old days you had to feed a horse, whether you used him or not, but now when forced to economize you can at least feep your flivver-in your garage and patronize a trolley car.”— Birmingham Age-Herald. Coffee Imports. > Nearly, .1,500,000,000. pounds of cof- fee were tmported during the. fiscal year ending June 30, 1920. | paper fMAVATAUALUREAUNEDOUOBENEUGOGNOUQNREOLOONNLOOUONONOL RECOVERS VIOLIN STOLEN YEARS AGO Alter more tan a ypar of fruitess search for -his $2,500 violin, during which time his only thought was that “it. would return. for it-had a soul,” Harold Stern, orchestra leader in the Park Avenue hotel, New York city, hugs once more the cherished ‘instru- ment. Ip March, 1919, the violin was stolen frem ‘Stern while dancing with a party of friends. Every effort to re- cover it was in vain. DOINGS OF THE BUFFS | WLast night in the hotel_dining room 9 avenue and Miss {Blanche Berger of Lancaster, Pa., ‘stopped for 2 mement to chat. with. the-orchestra leader. The former asked the leader where she could purchase a bow for a fine instrus ment. Mr. Stern consented to inspéct the violin at Miss Wal!ner's home. He whs shown the violin and as he drew the bow across its strings he immedi- ately recognized /it as his own, At po- lice’ headquarters he told his story to the lieutenant. Miss Wallner told de- tectives that she had bought the violin from a man living on East 183rd strect. - ‘ou-say violinsdhave no.soul. Bah?” exclaimed the leader, when he was as- sured by the lieutenant that the in- strument would be returned to him. He is shown in the photo with (he violin. LOOSE BUTCHER'S TONGUE aid Sanat Mace-te“Posbte-tor-Htaltan Sing His Popular Airs.” ; Phe surgeon's Knife; applied to the fastened‘ tongue of: Arduino. Muzzi, in the Manhattan Eye, Ear and Throat hospital, in New York city, has made it possible for the music-loving Italian to sing hts beloved arias. Before_he entered the hospital Ar- duino cguld be found-Swinging a heavy utente knife in the basement of the Hotel Pennsylvania. His tongue had been tied since his birth in Italy and this prevented him from pronouncing clearly »the avords of the operas he knows and: sings and loves. Now Muzzi plans to work and stifdy until he climbs the rungs to the grand opera stage. - CHINA’S FINANCES LOW Peking Government Losing Financial 3 Strength Monthly. The Chinese goverfiment is running behind financially $10,000,000 to $12.- 000,000 monthly according to a report made by an attache of the cabinet. The adinii debt of. the ‘Surge Miss Sadie Wallner of 152 Muaison | SS SO WRONG * aumeer! weeks So om Sa = totals $270,000,000, of which $180,000,- 000 represents loans by Chinese banks, The monthly budget aggregates $18,- 000,000, with only, $6,000,000 to &S,000,- 000 available from ordinary sources of revenue. Of this, monthly expendi- ture more than 70 per cent. goes for military upkeep. To meet the monthly deficit drastic retrenchmont is said to be contemplated. “Meanest Man” Sought by Sheriff. »The sheriff of Muskogee, Okla. i: hunting for the “meanest man the cits ever saw.” He took his wife's cloth. Ing while she was bathing, and pawned them to get ey to entertain anoth- er woman, the sheriff said. “Snow-Burnt” Rails Dangerous, A curious cause of railway accidents is brought out in a Ur@ged States interstate commerce .commission re- port on the derailment of a passenger train, The derailment was caused by the breaking of opposite rails which had been “snow-burnt,” this condition apparently resulting from the friction of an engine's wheels slipping om ac- count of being stalled in the snow The report states that “the means of distingpishing between safe and un- safe rails of this type unfortunately has not been’ made known as yet. These “snow-Blitnt” rails are somewhat common. : , Movies the Biggest Industry. The motion picture business now tops the list of California industries, according to a booklet just published by a Los Angeles bank. With more than $150,060,000 invested his’ indus- try is nearly twice the size of its near- est competitor, oil, with $87,000,000. Expenditures in California last year by the motion :picture industry were more than $120,000,000, and were con- fined almost exclusively to Los An- geles and vicinity. San Francisco has attracted lite attention in this line ag yet, though one concern is now pre- paring to locate at San Mateo. WE-RE-D-T AV! Sas! t von'r ware nie TRouBLE, FRECKLES -—cetT Nasr 1S WEREDITaRy, Pop? UEREDITARY, 7 USE LEPROSY REMEDY ‘TO FIGHT TUBERCULOSIS Government Public Health Serv- ice to Use Chaulmoogra Oil in Tests. Refined chaulmoogra oil, which ex- perts of the government public health service say has arrested the progress of leprosy, is soon to be used by them in the fight against tuberculosis. , The experiments with tubercular patfents | will be conducted in Hawaiix Dr, J. T. MeDonald, superintending physician of the leprosy investigation station ‘ht Kalihi In Honolulu, with Dr, A. L, Dean;“éhemist and president of the Upivérsity of Hawaii, will start the fight against tuberculosis, at the same time continuing their work against ‘leprosy, No @oncrete result of the use of the chaulmoogra, oiIn tuberculosis cases has yet been reported to the head- quarters of the public health service -here, but from their investigations with tubercular bacilli isolated from a patient, Drs. McDonald \and Dean have hopes of successful treatment of patients themsely The bacilli of leprosy and tuberculo- sis, according to government scientists, have been found to have similar char- acteris and the fatty acids of chaulmoogra oil seemingly have proved poisonous to the leprosy bacillus. This is the basis for the scientifle hope that these acids likewise will be dead- ly to the germ of the “white plague.” Dr. MeDonald has not yet made any formal report of his work with the tubercular germs to: officials here, but unofticial reports from Honolulu quote his as saying that scientists at the University of California have, discov- ered that the fatty acids of chaul- moogra oil are bactericidal to an acid fat bacillus, in which class are the lep- rosy and orf bacilli, The in- ference, accordipg to the doctor, is that’ what has een done to end the dread of leprosy may possibly be re peated to relieve the world of tuber- culosis. The public health service maintains 0 tubercular, hospital in Hawaii sep- arate from its leprosy stations, and the experiments with tuberculo: are | to be conducted at the former. Health officials here refrain from any predic- tion of results, but express the hope that chaulmoogra oil will prove a spe- cific for curing tuberculosi CUUNSUEENUUEN COANE TOON ATTEMPTS TO CROSS CHANNEL ON CYCLE AEUESUUEUOLUOTRUSUOCSUCUUEOLOSUSESOTNSETEOEESOUUUE Miss Zetta Mills, who recently at- tempted to cross the English channel ! on a water cycle, is shown on her machine MW the Thamas, England, while the mayor of Richmond christens her cycle. THIEF “BEGS PARDON” i | Proofreader Led Him Gentl: to Door and Told Him to Go. Instead of shooting him ‘or treating him rough, Reyben K, Fulmer, proof: | No Reason Why the United States Should Be Behind Europe in Matter of Beautification, One of the pleasant impressions which our soldiers- brought back with them from ov Ss was of miles of}. country roadways beautified ~ with magnificent trees, In this country a shade tree by the roadside is so rare as to cause comment. Once in a while during a trip of .many miles one will come toa place where some wise man of the past has set out in a row along] the side of the road maples. or oaks or elms. But an even commoner sight are the stretehes where somebod, E eut down the trees and left the road- way bare and unsightly. Not infre- quently telegraph or telephone com- panies have gone backing their way thronzh a stretch of fine old tre Tt xppears that a land owner resid- ing on any country road may cut down trees along the hivhway for cord wood and plow the land to the very edge of the road without interference, and that the law has permitted him to set, out saplings in the spring and get 25. cents hin reduction of taxes, Pub- lie service corporations, ft is. stated, also | certain rights under the law which seem to work to the disadvan- taxe of private citizens seeking — ta beautify the highway adjoining their pronerty by planting valuable trees. The © Forestry association Will submit prope gu to its entire membership this fafl by letter ballot, with a view to détermming whether codification and revision of the state's shade tree s shall be ene of the objectives in the campaign for neces- sary forestry lexi The associa- tion is appealing for ghe support of all citizens tnterested, ‘This is something which may well ul our favorable attention, The movement should provide not only for the protection of such roadside trees iM exist, but should also make Jon for the replacing of those at- Tr BACKYARD ORCHARD AN ASSET Can Ge Depended Unon to Pay Divi- dends of Pleasure and Health for Many Years, The orchard behind the village home always heen an asset of great We knew. one once that had . pears, plums and-apples for the entire tyr ‘eason-—early and Inte und it yielded enormous dividends of pleasure and health for a full quarter of a century, A few fruit tre may be grown with profit in the back yards of cities not too closely built, One exists ina near- by city, where ten years ago a wise dinan planted fruit trees in his and for ornament set out ose apricots and dwarf quinces in tris fyont yard, From its trees he now has two crops, one of surpassing beau ty dari blossom five and an- other of palatable anc althful fruit later There are » berries on his lot dn abundance, and a wild goose plun free that i prodigious Crops. lt may be stated as a fact that no ” man ever planted fruit trees who did hot thereby become a benefactor. There is room for thousands of them rear of Omaha homes.—Omaha Roads of Remembrarie The trees planted at the technical high school’ were, i hohoy of! former pupils in the ve and notafor the ‘ad. Women’s ciybs, highway asso- jons, state and the American Forestry are taking an active interest 4 No more beautiful way of 's who went movement, «tribute to the be could be devised than the of trees, and it is an’ under- to he encouraged. Memory rees, singly or ta groups, or along rads of remembrance” will be known for what th are quite as well asa eneved nontunent rod may be v reader on a newspaper-at Norristown Pa., led a burglar gently to the door | and told him to begone. Then Ful- | mer telephoned police headquarters | what he had done and if a policeman was sent the burglar might be caught! coming down ‘the street. That was at 3 o’clock in the torn- ing. Fulmer’s wife had discovered a man on the second floor of their home, 1318 Main street. Fulmer sprang from bed, believing the man when he said | he had made a mistake and apolo- sized. - Later it was discovered the burglar had broken into the house through a window. Nothing was taken. Stimulants Affect.Plants, By a wonderful self-recording device Sir J. C. Bose has found that plants | have the bad habit of never going to sleep until morning—at least in India. Plants grow on an average one-hun- dred-thousandth part of an inch in a second. He found, for instance, that some substances supposed to be poi- sonous to plants. if administered in small doses stimulated growth, All plants seem to like stimulants, said | Sir J. C. Bose; in fact he goes consid- | erable d re toward altogether tak- | cters | Oldest Thing on Earth. The big dinosaur now being uncov- ered at Steveville, Alberta, has cer- tainly been ly!ng in the rock since flood, possibly for many cen- longer. It-wonld take the food y cows at least to winter him, were he living today, trees aré planted along a countPy road- more beautiful. —ladi is Start Vacant-Lot Gardens. cording to C. OQ. Davis of the MIL arden comission, more than ni lois ate now under cultt> One of the benefits of the of ns is that if ‘stops 2 the vicant dots as dumping grounds for theajr garbage and rubbish, The heaps of refuse often form breeding places for files and mosquitoes. Yer greater benefits are kealized in the profits derived from the garden produce, and the healthful exercise gained in caring for the tracts, people Now for Tree Planting. Trees for city street planting may be of the same kind for a dozen blocks and must be evenly spaced, says the American Forestry association of Washington, whit will send a free tree planting guide ‘to any one. When side it is better to have them in groups of a few kinds and informally lo- cated. Well to Remember. Well-kept back yards pay better div- idends than well-kept cemeteries, SSS B. 8, ENGE, D. C. Ph. C Chiropractor Consultation Free Sulte 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phene 900 TREES NEEDED ON ROADWAYS i

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