The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 25, 1921, Page 7

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TUESDAY, JANUARY 25,1921 --. ____ HELP P WANTED—MALE WANTED—Coal miners by Beu- -slah Coal Mining Co., at Beulah, . D. )Steady work. Apply at . Mine or at Bismarck: office in} _° Haggart Bldg. LEARN BARBER TRADE—At the Moler Barber College, Oldest institution of its kihd. Established 1893. Time and ex- Pense saved hy our methods. Catalog. a Moler / Barber College “107 R. allet_Avef, Minneapolis. ./ 12-30-1mo a Y.™M. C. A. AUTO (SCHOOL, Los Angeles. None better. Sta?t right. 1-25-1t HELP -WANTED—FEMALE_ $2.50 PER DAY patd one lady in.each town~to distribute free circulars and take orders tor Economy Non- Alcoholic Flavoring. Permanent po- sition. F) £. Barr Co. Chicago, \ 1-25-1t WANTED—Experienceg girl for house work. Mrs. Burt Finney, 41). Avenue A, 1-20-tf 24 S@LESMAN \ WaNtHD—=10 salesmen fox North Da- “kota. Excellent Opportunity. / Men capable of earning trom $18 to $59 per day. Write Box 693> Bismarck. N. Dd. -25-Lw WORK WANTED mobile repairing. C. EK. Hoffman 329-R or call 26, Sixth street WOMAN. SWANTS W( WORK—E hour, washing, Phone 570-X > By day o —_——[——— FOR SALE OBR RENT Y. \__ HOUSES AND FLATS: FOR RENT—A four-room modern iar fished tage’ until April first or longer. 609 13th street Phone-706 1-22- ROOMS FOR Ri FOR RENT--Two, room: one double; rates: regs ‘No children in this house: Tnautee at 414 7th_St. 1-24-3t BANNER HOUSE—Room and beard, $10 per week. Rooms 50 and 76 cents per day; steam heated. Meals 25c._ | Phone 231. 1-20-lw FOR RENT—Room with board for two girls; $35 per month; three blocks frgm street car line. yi 184 Tri- bune. A-25-5t FOR “RENT —Latge room for, two; cdn be used for light houseKeping, 423 Front St. ~ , —~1-24-2t FOR RENT—Room in modern home. Call at 416 12th, street, of phone 441-X. \ 1-20-5t FOR REN’ T—Furnished rooms, 220 So. 6th street. Phone 936-R. 1-24-5t FOR RENT—Two furnished rooms. {Call 154. Nt 1-24-38 FURNISHED ROOM FOR | RENT, 08 Ave. B. 1-13. ZAND ‘OR SALE—The Tegchout gt grain and stock farm; the whole of section 30, near Stewartsdale, Burleigh county, North Dakota, wétl impreyed, about 400-acres of cultivated jland, about all fenced, comparatively new house of-seven rooms, including four bed- rooms, full basement, ‘hard. wood floors down stajrs, large barn, sta- He and hay rodm, good frame gran-} ary, good frame chicken house, fine well of water, pump and windmill. for $26 per acre on term! GEO. M-REGISHER., eae 1-20-3w FOR SALE OR ‘RENT—320 acres of good hay land. Inquire of R. G. Price, Decorah, Iowa. 1-25-14t Lexington, Ky.—Two. milion dol- lars’ worth of whiskey in the Old-Pep- per distillery will be guarded by an armored tower and strong search- lights. A whiskey guard Wps | ktHed a month ago. STEEL WHISKEY “athe Ht WEBB BROTHERS mbalmers Licensed Embalmer. in Charge Undertakers DAY rHONE 50 . > _ BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY _ istributors o: be ag 5 STUDEBAKER CADI Day Phone 100 ~ BISMARCK FURNITURE COM ay 220 MAIN STREET, Upholstered Furniture Made to Order ‘ . CARL PEDERSON FACTORY DISTRIBUTOR, Southwestern North Dakota and Southeastern Montana i... BISMARCK, N, Dy 1-12-tf |. VTED—Carpenter work or autos cleaning /or. sawing. | AUTOMOBILES } eee PERRY UNDERTAKING dike wipes? Licensed Embalmers in FOR WOMEN. Want ; Hemstitching :and picoting ‘ attach- ment, works.on’ all"sewing machines; price $2;\ persona): checks 10c_ extra: Light's Mail, Order: House, Box 127: Birmingham, Ala. oh 18<3t i _>_ROOMS¥ WANTED. WANTED TO RENT—Furnished room All are questions on which the\ dit- in modern house cr small apartment. Call 829X, or ‘Tribune. 1-24-3t —__ WISCONSIN HARM LANDS AWDOLOGY SPECIAL NUMBER—Just ntaining 1921 facts. of clover land in Marinette County, Wiscbnsm. if tor a home or as an‘investment you are thinking of buying godd farm. lands where farmers growyich, send at one for this. special nyffber of Landolo It is free con reduest. Address Skid more-Riehle’ Land “Co., 435. -Skidmore-/ Mehle “Bhlg., Maringtte,, Wisconsin. 1-3-3mos, LOST AND FOUND. LOST—Suit_wra ned in package ad- dressed, Come ith, ward fori return to Klein the Tailor: at 1-22. i f MISCELLANEOUS _ $40.00 FIVE THOUSAND BARREL} WELL—Five’ acres for $50.00, new! lease. completely shirrounded by, production or wells drilling. An in- | vestment,of $50.00 may mean-rich } to you, it-has to others, Reference First National Bank. 0. J. Green! & Cow Pec Texas. -25-1W | $8,000, LAND CONTRACT—Wil pay | out in six” yeirs, secured by 610 aercs ‘and 260 acres initproved nor ‘th | of Bismarck, to trade for a good ho-! tel. For particulars, write Louis; ~ Wang, Box 255; Hillings, Mont, 1-20-1w} takes 8 8. white! leghorn heus and one rooster, from prize winuing stock. PorCed to-sell, jack of room. Call evenings or Sun- days. 925 8th streets or write Box __e Bismarck. 1-20-1w FIRST. “GLASS — WORK—Cleaning. | pressing, repairing. dyeing, ladies’ and menks clothing, Eagle~Failoring & Hat Wor! phone 58, opposite _ postoffice. 1-18-tf PRE WAR PRICES-on / cleaning, Te- blocking * ‘and. ~remodeling “men’s hats, Eagle Tailoring & Hat Works, Phone S8; opposite Postoffice. \ 1-18-tf A NO 10 PAIL of Pure Montana Honey delivered at any post office in North ‘Dakota for $2.50 cash with order. B. F. Smith, Jr., Fromberg, Mont. . 1-15-1 mo. Dressmaking, up to date work, ~re- modeljng, convert qut [e date gown \ in to date gown,/ coats, hats. 423 2nd St, Ave. A. Phone 772U. ny 1-10-2w PAINTING, PAPRR HANGING, decor- ‘ating and -auto finishing; first ‘class work guaranteed. Geo: Baker. Phone 534-X. 11-20-1w FOR .SALE—Two, 4-8 pool tables, complete; very reasonable. Inquire 120 6th. street. 1-24-3t FOR SALE—Two 4x8 pool tables com: plete: Very -reasoyable.” 123 6th St. ere} 1-24-3t DIES—We clean and “peg 98 8 accord- - jan pleated skirts. Klein, the tailor. > 1-22-1w FOR SALE—Five-room house, to be moved off the lot.\$400. Call 714-X \ Z 1-20-1w BARGAINS on used sewing machines. ‘ Singer Sewing Machine Store. FOR’ SALES ing stock: Box 533, Fargo. WANTED TO BUY—jBaby buggy. Call 154. 1-24-3t 1-25-' nt WHAT WORRIED YEG@ Chicago—“If. I passed up a dark house at night without robbing it I'd worry so I couldn't ’’sleep,” That's what Worthier McGrath, 20, Said. He confessed to 200 burglaries with $50,- 000, loot, Funeral] Directors NIGHT PHONES 65—887 ee LAC : ‘ Charge Night Phone a or 687 MAIN STREET. The pigmy swine of Australia are| the smallest known species of the. and dow. hog. No larger than a good-sized house rat. There's New York, went, The Salsedo eastern Vanzetta, They are charged with robbing a payr' killing a man at South Braintree, Mass. Sacco and Vanzetta were friends of Salsedo. were. charged _ a cad BISMARCK DAILY. TRIBUNE aay, BOSS, | THINK INE PROZEN MY WELL,) Guess THEY'RE FROZEN ALRIGHT laé ie Be Ae Stati Special.) Christianshaab, Greenland, Jan. ~-Wanter, an American dentist. Greenland hangs.out the sign. a fine opportunity for a good dentist, or maybe two or three dentists, to clean up a fortune. For ‘an Eskimo society queen will pay any price for a good set of teeth. There's practically no sale of rouge lip-sticks among ‘the Eskimos. When youth fares forth to seek a mate, he doesn’t consider beauty. Or family wealth. Or good temper. ONLY ONE WITNESS| Story, of Salsedo’s. Death to ‘Be Told in Palmer Suit (N. E. A. Staif Special.) ecretly held happened during » the, t /Salsedo's case Massachusetts, ‘oll and When first arrested with being 25 Jan, -24.—Interesting tes- timony will be presented in the suit brought against Atty. Gen. A. Mitehell PaThiet ‘hy the’ widow of Andrea «Sal- sedo, who died in a plunge from the fourteenth story window of the pas Row building. Salsedo had~ been prisoner ‘for two mo: agents. They were grilling -Salsedo abou “Red” plots. + What months’ inquisition was witnessed by: Roberto Elia, who had. worked as a printer with Salsedo. After hs by Palmer's} death Elia was quickly and quietly deported. Bilt Elia told his story before he He has put in affidavits what he saw and knew about the imprison- ment of Salsedo before the latter’s nlunge from the fourteenth story win- is linked with prosecutions of two other Italians in Sacco. and HOW DID Nou HAPPEN TO Come Nort, Young Dentist, Is Greenland’s Plea |; He wants ‘her ka be fut —and have good ‘teeth. hat’s the use of having a wife af she cawt chew hides until they are pliable ‘and ready t6 wear? Chewing hides, season in and sea- son out, 18 rather tough on the teeth. When a wife has chewed hides until her teeth are gene, she is no longer useful. That’s the unyritten law. of / the Far North. The husband, by the same tradition: is aHowel to search for another set of teeth—including another wife. and healthy. Thefr arrest occurred after tliey. cane to New York and attempted to. find put why Salsedo was kept so myster- 4ously a prisoner. When Salsedo's death became public the authorities -charged Sacco. with Vanzetta with a payroll robbery. The Italian embassy in Waskington and the Italian consulate in New York are takig ‘an ,active interest in these cases. i Vienna Hard Pressed to Feed Her Citizens BY BARRY C. SMITH ~ (Editor's. Note—Barzy,.C. Smith has just returned from a) two ‘manths’ rip through France, Austria’and Ser- bia for ¢he purpose off studying ithe work of American relief agencies,’ a I have just ¢: ome “trom Vienna, once ihe world's famous center of art, of music, of pleasure, of joy and happi- ness. Or™Dec. 5, the American Relief Administraticn was feeding 30),000 children every day. ‘Hundreds were in the hospita‘s suffering from fright- ‘ful cases of rickets and other hunger. diseases, The famous stockyards -of~ Vienna, a model plant through which -thou- sands of cattle passed every week, are now absolutel, empty, except for a amall part where an American relief agency keeps its cars and suppl milk supply reach- ing the city has been for a year about one-fifteenth of normal. The. average educated man in Vi- The Prices May Have Caused! It Do IF MR. Durr? BY ALLMAN } FROZE "EM STANDING IN FRONT OF A SHOP WINDOW WITH MY WIFE LOOKING AT SPRING oe wars! ae gs manpully to sup- port his family on income of from | three to six thousand crowns a month, six to twelve dcllars) in American money. ‘Potatoes cost 225 times their pre-war price. Boots have gone up 1:C00 per cent. had not been in the city 24 hours before the depression which I face after face chilled me. It is a city without coal, with hardly, any food with a paper currency worth 1-150¢h of its-normal value, with a govern- ment whose credit is less than that of & prosperous business man in New York. Declares Bolshevism Is Impossible Here Davenport, Ia., Jan, 25.—Rolshev- ism is impossible in America.” This is the decision of Dr. C. L. Parewuld, elected mayor-on’ the So- clalist ticket, who has resigned from the Secialist_party. Barewald is. bent on makin, Daven- port a bad town for Bolshev and their sympathizers. “I've been ” he canes for six year explains, reférring to his association with the Socialist party, “and I’m mighty glad to get back on earth. ‘ “Pye been educated. i “I've learned that red is all right in a flagp.but it must have the white and-blye-with it. Red, white and blue -~that's the only flag for America. “Whe principles.ot Lenin and Tretz- ky have no place in American doc- trine. But the worst thing ‘about Social- ism and bolshevism are the leaders who get control under such regimes: “Don't worry about bolshevism and | socialism becoming a dominant force. They can’t, for the men in'thg-van of these may enon are not worthy of the confidence of the masses, and can’t keep it even if they seem to have won it for a time.” Barewald, a physician with a large practice, went into office backed by one of the largest majorities ever rex ceived by a mayoralty candidate. Five of his colleagues were elected to’coun- cil, this giving them a majority. From almost the ‘start the mayor disagreed with the councilmen, the open break following. a | Now Dont You HGP {Dick Any ORANGES H {OFF OF UNCLES” Au On TWAT SS Let ny RieuTs JUST K/ 4 fh if cS z \7 BRAWN av aware es, An Electric Fan Run By Wind pa Dop-Lock \ ATH BIG ELECTRIC a | 7 FAN UNCLE WAS ; WW WIS Bacie. By Blosser HAVE KEEN EYE FOR DANGER ss Asserts That it Is Practicaliy impossible to Surprise the Mountain Sheep. “The mountain sheep fs one of the, most dificult ofall our Amefican game to approach in the open,” says Charles L, Smith in-an article on the “Rocky Mountain Sheep” in Boys’ Lite, “ft has éyes like a telescope tor keenness and can discover and make out a man farther away gan any other animal ‘of which I huve any knowl edge, and where any considerable herd have been feeding one will sce usually ane or mol wding on Some prom- nent polnl where the, geta view of the surrounding country, 1 know of no more inspiring sight than one of those old rags with his tassive horns outlined the sky, standing as. motion asa stadie, And itis a wonder to the hunter how ther get aeross the rock slopes with suet und grace, ‘There has beenguuch writ- Len-of the mountain sheep, af its won- erful s of springing from ledges and lighting apo its bead and tierns, Whieli is Wwhthour founds tdon in fet. While itis t they. qin stand an itae mense shock in batile, yet if one of WW pounds i ight and tand on lis head Hix week would be broken, 1 spent’ @vernt years in the sheep country in he Canadian Rockies aud was ne the sheep or among them during all of the year and they seen to he legs sensitive te the rigors of win- ter antd-the ever-changing elements of he high altitudes than any other ant matt & pt possibly the mountaha ¢ mid of these animals Ethiavk they have ensons he qhvantage. because 1 have a num | ver oof Thies found mountain goats nitded in the deep snow hb places where fuod was scarce, but TP have ever yet found yrountain sheep it his conklition.” BOARDING HOME FOR BABIES Institution in England Had Its Incep- tion in the Shortage of Housss and Housemaide. A smaltyprivate hotel for ae the latest idea of douiestic life, The ‘aby gets a change and the mother Lets A rest, ‘She baby's hotel or boarding house s the product of the shortage of houses and mursemaids, Parents have heen forced Anto ‘hotels and futnished apartments, and as many hotels have not the conveniences’ of the nursery, the bub hotel, where he or she may be received as a paying guest, is mak- ting if uppepra There is, of cou accommodation for the baby earrlage, Two Certiligd nurses conceived the od a nursery idea. ‘They have establis! in’ Hampstead. Londen. he walls are fecorated with due and exch ttle gue: wih curtains, A me dentist are in atendance ix-about $13 a week, ‘The little gues tay a week, a year, or merely for shile their parents go erse hunting oF holiday making, young war widow, who hag re- do her former post as secretary. brought her baby to the fursery, and Saturday afternoon and Sunday they, nd happy hours together, while an- er worn left her ttle one in our ree wh foined her husband in the tropic ‘ontinental News, The tarit may si the week end, aah aa For European Children. . neighboring ~ countries, at the énd of aly and especially Switrerhind, October held at Milun a conference welfare to discuss, more spe- on chil aside and country homes. children, place: foreéian countrie and inter- of child welfare; cial workers en- ed Aa child ervice, and Hnproveinent of technique generally. The public welfare department of the city of Mil which called; this con- févence, is especially concerned over the duplicatioh of efforts, the lack of proper care in’ the ‘smaller -communi- ties and interaction between town and eodantry. One definite aim is that of making Juternational co-operation tv this fleld Sa means of encouraging cluser relationship between the peo- ples, ua atonal orguniznt hetter training gf Immense Herds of Caribou. Late arrivals at/Vancouver, from the Yukon report that wande herds of caribou are appearing in im @ense numbers on the penks of that viv ‘They decture there are millions of the animals, Two amen who tried to | vet down the river just at the time of the first ice were held up for three hours by a multitude of caribou which were crossing the river below them. How long the migrattgn had been go- ing on when they Were ‘stopped they did not know. The stream of animals —————_— PAGE SEVEN KNIFE USED 10: CURE WRINKLES gery Demonstrated, New York Doctor Gives Exhibition Be. fore French Scientists and a Num- ber of Doctore—Ccommon Safety. Razor Blade Plays Important Part in Operation on Woman Fifty Years of Age—Success Lies in Technique, j ® Beauty doct@ring us a modern sci- Yence was demunstrgted to doctors and newspaper men when Dr. Leroy Re Stoddard performed aw operation Tor the removal ean wrinkles In New York, with Dr./ Julien Borguet, the 1 French plastic surgeon, as Witness and j commentator, A common safety razor blade played an fmportane role in the operition, which was performed on a gray-halred business won presented under) the fictitious nai of “Mrs. Arthur Man- ning.” ‘The operation Ductor Stoddard nt the outset characterized as “untnys: terlous and a practionlihpplication of wellJnown methods of searless sure gery. Talked as He Worked. ‘ As he made tneision# aud stitehed the operator indulged tua rdaning fire roument. he suce of the operation is a | question of technique only."he said, us he “injected a small quantity of 2 per cent cocain in ber eyelid. “The et’ of ccurtess surgery fs fn the first move.” He made {it as he spoke--a swift snip of sharp sci@or Mades yevoss the wrinkled lid which lifted a’ ricul oval strip of skin tissu “Judgment of the exact quantity of tissue to be removed must be made first,” he continued, “and if the jud: ment and subsequent execution have Ween correct the. wound will close of Itself. The skin will fall rather than be drawn into place.” . As he spoke the ‘incision closed, ” seemingly by natural action of the weight of the lid, and It was seen that the wrinkle had fallen at the clip of the doctor's instrument as long nails fall at the, clip of a manicurist’s seis sors. ‘To hold and mend the “seulptur- Ing of flesh” which had been accom: plished, the doctor drew about twenty fine stitches in the wound, ‘Thro:gh- out, the woman, conscious of every- thing but pain, conversed with the sure geon and the nurses. How hg Came to Use Razor Blade. The safety-razor blade eame into play on the other eye, which had been operated on four days ago and was now so nearly mended that thi itches ; could’ he withdra Holding the thin flake of steel between thamband fore finger, the doctor rapidly severed: the white silk knots, He explained that one day, hampered ‘by the fatlure of any surgical instrument to fill the dell- cate requirements of this!) work, he threw an awkward surgical knife on ithe floor and picked up a razor blade. He has used one ever since. Doctor Stoddard has practice) plas: tie surgery twelve years. Only in the Jast five, he said, had ho solved the problem of scarless work, which he i jhas -applied not only to cases of beauty-njourning women™ but to the disfigurements of soldiers, ent hy shrapnel and shell splinters “and hustt- ly sewn together in, Dattlefield jos- pitals, \ 4 With Doctor Bourguet he discussed the application of their science to cases of mefital disorders originating in the self-onsclousness of men and women afflicted with facial disfigure- ments. Doctor Stoddard told of a law- ybr who had hecome so conselous of 0 facial oddity resulting from — the growth of masses of skin tissue aronnd his eyebrows that he had finally’ re- fused to face a jury. An opesation was performed to eliminate the hang- ing brows and the JawyerWas cured of his obsession, Commenting on the operation, Doe tor Bourguet said Loctor, Stoddard's work Included Anethods different from those in use in Taris. He intends to make bis prvations: the subject of reports to the Parts Academy of Medi. cine, Cooze in Teddy ear and Water Bag. Revenue officers who searched the_ steamship Morro Castie at New York clty disGovered that the stomach of tt Teddy hear contained four pint bottles of whisiy, and a hot water bag con- tained two bottles of sin. Cans Patnted Faces and Bare Knees. Painted faces, bare knees and ex: tremes in style of dress will no longer be permitted in a class room, says an order Issued by Principal H. H. Gads- blackened tke water on a space one- half mile wide and continued uninter- ruptedly uring the period the men were held up. | Egypt to Have Finest Hospital. Tie Egyptian government hus de- cided to build what is officially de- scribed as “the finest and most com- plete medical school and hospital in the world,” in Cairo. “It is to contain 1,225 beds; and will have accqomo- dation for 3,000 out-patients a day. Attached will be a completely equipped | medical school, which will be connect- ed with the projected university, a dental department, ayd depart. for every branch of medical and R. S, ENGE, D. C. Ph. C. face, sides and ear. i by*of_Drury high schol, porte Adams, Mass, —— 1 Man, 74, Held for Slaying Youth, 21. Police of Muskegon, Mich., rested William Bishop, seventy-four years old, on a charge of murdering Cheries Iamlia, twenty-one, Standard Oil engineer, whom it ts aleged stabbed through the heart during @ quarrel. ee Whipped Pursuing Dog. rabbit which Harr; ree of Wile iteton De¥, had driven into the un- dergrowth while hunting, turned on the hunter's pursuing dog and, after a short, fierce fight. sent “the animal ister with cuts on its ease Oe \ BROKE! STAY AT TOME. Chicago. Jan. 24.—Two bandits held up Antoine Hanzel, ripped his coat howling to iu Chiropractor | , Consultation Free Suite 9, 11—Lucas Block—Phone 260 linigg and tore off his shoe soles. “You're a fine citizen you are!” they exclaimed. “Waddye mean, appearing on the streets without mongy?” Latest bara RE in: Facial Sure. OPERATION LEAVES NO Ec / .

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