The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 13, 1921, Page 4

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SOUTH AMERICA 10 JOIN MRRP OF SURGEONS College Will Gather at Philadel- | phia Oct. 24—Hospital Philadelphi —In its inter- national chardéter ‘this ° year's ‘con- gress of the American College of S geons, which opeus here Oct: 24, sur- s anything previous in the his- year of the college. Its two work to bring together the surgeons | of North and South Amrica have re- | sulted in, the attendance for the first time of a distinguished body of South Americans, wile the regents of the Royal College of Surgeons of Ireland, have broken precedent to come from Dublin to confer fellowships on eight | Americans, | Other leaders of the profession | from Edinburgh, ‘Stockholm, T he Hague and Berne occupy prominent places on the four days’ program. ; Some 200 surgeons from thé United! ‘States and Canada have enrolled for, the congress. ‘Bestowal of the honorary fellow- + ships by the Irish College will: mark | the culminating feature of the con.) gress, falling on Friday night. The: ns to receive the horor are’ Dv, George BE. Brewer of New York,! Dr. George ‘W, Crile of Oleveland, Dr. John ‘M. T. Finney of Baltimore, Dr.' rd H. Harte of Philadelphia, Dr. . Keen of Philadelphia, Dr. Charles 1H, Mayo and Dr. William J. Mayo of ; Rochester, Minn., and Dr. Robert J. ee - Ochsner of Chicago, 4 After invocation, by Cardinal : e Dougherty, the fellowships will be| By NEA Service. SHOW THE STRICKLANDS A HORSE TH » CAN'T RIDE THE RIDING STRICKLANDS, HUGH AND MABEL, IN ACTION. conferred by Sir William I, de Courcy Wheeler e-president of the Irish college of surgeons, Sir Robert Hy. Woods, past p! liam Taylor, past president, The presidential address will then be made by Dr. John B. Deaver of this city, and Sir ‘Harold J. Stiles of Ed-j will bring the congress to a inburgh s the annual fellowship ad- ar Other visitors from abroad on the program include Prof. H. C. Jacobaeus of ‘Stockholm, Dr. J.‘ Schoemaker ,of The Hague, Prof. ¥. dr Quervain of Berne. The principal speakers at the initial general session will be Dr. | W. J: Mayo, of Rochester, Minn, Papers and addresses will be, largely technical. Remi ble results obtain- im reconstruction surgery of the and_hand during the war and since are among subjects to be taken up, A comprehensive clinical pro- gram has. been arranged. spital day has been added to this year’s congress as a new feature. This opens the congress on ‘Monday, Final report on the standardization pro- gram of the American College of Sur geons, dealing with hospitals of 1°) nd more, will then be made. The college’s approved list of hospitals is to be announced at this time. ; Meee nace am | MANDAN NOTES | 800 TEACHERS ed ~~ IN MANDAN FOR SLOPE MEETING Addresses by Leading Educators are Features of Today’s Program Upwards of 800 school, teachers from the Missouri Slope counties in- cluding Burleigh, . McLean and sident, and Sir Wil-| Pendleton, Ore., Oct. 13.—‘Eee-ooey! | Ride 'em cowboy!” “ It's the call of the western round up that always has a tarill in it for | Hugh Strickland, Arizona cowboy, and his wife, Mabel DeLong “Strickland, cowgirl. Og | For the. Stricklands usually “ride \’em” to victory: ' | Was the time when Sivickland made the round-up rounds in single har- jness. He bulldogged steers, tamed | wild horses, and rode bucking bron- {cos for the sport of it. i » And, was the time when, Mabel: De- ‘PRODUCTION OF ELECTRICITY FROM | COALAT, MINES IS EXPERIMENT jremained in Athens. The King passes |, Chicago, Oct. 13.—Hroduction -of electricity from coal at the mine | mouth and its wide distribution \to | city, indutry and farm is. being ex- i pertmented With in Illinois. ! In one of the Illinois coal’ fields a steam electric generating plant has | been put into operation within | 201 ‘feet of the mine that supplies it with coal. It is located near \Kincaid in | Christian County.and is run by the , Central [llinois Pulbic Service. Com- | pany. : ‘ Its electricity goes to the agricul- | tural section of West Central 1Minois, | to 63 communities, to a number of | neighboring coal mines ,and’'to vari- | ous: pumping stations draining about / 60,000 acres of farming land. Coal for this plant comes | ground in electric elevator: | into a tipple and drops into | which by force of gravity are carr into the plant: There the cars auto- | matically dump into a hopper and eee ik | antl visiting friends in Bismarck yes-| | terday. , | I i Mrs..J. 1., Rovig, Mrs. Harvey Wil-| liams dnd Mrs. Charles Rowe were! |visitors in Bismarck yesterday. * ‘ Emmons, are in Mandan to attend the annual convention of the south- ‘ western division of the North Dakota es this evehing by Minnie J. Nielson, | ‘ state supérintendent and Mrs. Cord} { Wilson ‘Stewart, of Louisville, Ky., |, ~ president of the National Association for Elimination of Illiteracy. { ‘ ° The convention was called to order ,/ at ‘2:30 this. afternoon,’ Thret | separate meetings were in. progress, vocation, .. primary education and high school educational meetings. Following the addresses there will be a reception and dancing party to the ‘visitors in the ‘high school gymnasium, the Town Criers of Mandan. acting as hosts: i ithe German republic to private citi-| zens has produced a crop of petitions’ !to overwhelm the commission ‘charged with their examination. morials with suggestions for amelior-| Tomorrow. afternoon the conven-|ating they present conditions are tion will attend the Bismarck-Mandan | awaiting consideration. They run tho; f high school football game for the; entire gamut of public affairs, from} championship of the southwestern | fiscal reform to the supply of’ free | section of the state, and the Rotary| dental treatment for all. i club will entertain the visitor: h ; sitors “WitN) URCHENO automobile. ride. | a AET eS SS St. Thomas, N, D., Ovt. 1 Miss Cecile Porter and Mrs.’ Ver-| Allen 0. Birchenough who rck| in charge of the Methodist church inj non Peters were visitors in Bismarck { St. Thomas for some time will become yesterday. ENS ae aA) ‘pastor of the ~ Methodist church at | A. Shepard ang Mrs. L, F.| Larimore, as the result of the new | re on a shopping trip to| 48signments of the state conference ! Bismarck yésterday. in Valley City. Rev. F. G. Norris of Elliott, N. D., succeeds Birchenough RRED | Rev. as been M Mrs. Dave Taylor and Mrs. Jameg| here. Birchenough has ecome | McDonald spent yesterday in Bis-, Vell known through the state because 35 marek. F : ‘i j of his partitipatiog in pol: al) cam- pee UTNE | paigns as -a Mrs. G. A. Renden and Mrs, s, Dendents. Jacobson of. Mandan -vere shopping 'To Erect Monument | | ~INGROWN NAIL ee ae oe speaker for the Inde- | Peekbkill, N. Y,,,Oct. 13—A 4nonp- ;ment to the Mothers of the Revolu- tion, believed to be the first of its leipd in this country, was dedicated ; Continental Village, a few miles north of this town, Oct. 9—the 144th anni- ve y_of the burning of the village Toughen Skin and Toe } Nail ‘Turns Out Itself A few drops of {Outgro” upon the | by the-British. © skin surrounding the ingrowing nail The monument, a reduces inflammation and pain and so} boulder, was presented b: sa toughens the tender, sonsitive skin un-|Fish. A bronze tablet sets, forth that | derneath the toe nail, that it can not, the village was a military post and| penetrate the flesh, and the nail turns ,denot of supplies in the Revolutionary naturally outward almbdst over night.. war and that the, monument is dedi- “Outgro” is a harmless, antiseptie cated “In memory of the mothers of | manufactured for chiropodists. How-j|the Revolution, whu watched are jever, anyone can buy from the drug/prayed while our fathers fought that store a tiny bottle ntaining direc- | we might be free.” \ at |. Long rode in the relay races, raced in the pony express and roped steers for the thrill of it. Then they met—at : round-up. Since then the Strickiunds have won double-harness fame in almost every line of rodio sport, Ss At. the , Pendleton yeur Strickland copped the bucking round-up. this | championship and his wife raced in| {second in the girls’ relay bronco | race. Wild horses?_ Bucking broncos? “Trot ’em out,” ‘says Mrs. Strick- Jand. “If I can’t ride ‘em, my hus- band@an.” sz ‘Hee-ooey! Ride ‘em cowboy!” from it the coal is fed by automati gtokers into the furnaces. Labor costs are sharply curtailed and coal freight rates lare eliminated. Phe big problem is to obtairf suf- ficient water. for condensing pur- poses. When sufficient water supply is available the establishment of such plants is practicable, according to C. R. Richards, dean of the college of engineering and director of the en- gineering experiment station at the Unive: “water supply is imperative and -must be abundant in sufficient quantities to provide: for the condensing pro-' cess or else a. plant can not be economically run. f ‘ “It is conceivable, provided the necesgary water be had,” Dean Richards. added, “that this whale central western country may be link- ed upin one great system by the de- velopment of a “super-power line” similar to that found in the New Eng-, land states.” ‘ichols Fish, clad in sant Fish and buff and. blue imitations of the Con- |‘ tinental army uniforms, unveiled the monument in the presence of a large assemblage, made up of townspeople iand representatives of patriotic soci- ‘eties. The dedicatory address was de- ‘livered .by, James Sullivan, state his- | “Foreign Smugglers “Paris, Oct. 13--Smugeling by: :air- Plane of imitation American counterfeit safety razor blades. and pencil cages into. Paris, where street ‘to the Reichstag which is threatening | 2@wkers sell them for one-half the: jPrice of the genuine, article, { The police have had no difficulty. in: | More than 10, i Hy _ idscertaining that the goods were made | }ore than 10,000 petitions and ame ‘in Germany but have been unable to | locate the airplane landing: fleld use: by the smugglers. - With an area of 975,980 square miles, western Australia has a popula: tion-of only 329,920. - 2 There are nearly 100 ways Of Bay- ing “my dear” in the Manx language. ‘OR forty years Sloan's Liniment' has been the quickest relief for neuralgia, sciatica and. rheuma- tism, tired muscles, lame backs, spraiz and strains, aches and pains. Keep Sloan's handy and apply freel; without. rubbing, atthe apply toca > Ht eases and brings comfort surely hon-skin-staining. Sloan’s Liniment {s aay Thetérture ofckinitch DrHobson'abcsemaOint: ment. Oneof Dr.Hobsen’s tions, Re Ale Mr. Fish's grandsons, Peter Stuyve- -|ventures outside the y of Illinois. “But,” he said, | woods | from Germany into France is being} Berlin, Oct. 13—The right of initia “nvestizated hy the French’ police. tive accorded by the constitution of | Germans are alleged to, be. smuggling | and readily. You'll find it clean and |° pee THE BIS RCK TRIBUNE GREEK KING "JOINS BUDDIES ON EQUALITY |Discards all Luxuries and Lives | Life of a Common) | Soldier | Eski-Shdhir, Anatolia, [thé Associated... Press | Constantine depafted from Athens fer | ; the Asia Minor front he left behind! ; Whatever “Inxuries, pleasures ‘and di-; {versions belong*toa monarch. ‘Today, jhe is living in a. mud house in this an- | | cient) Turkish settlement, with only | his aide-de-camps as companions. His . | living room, which is adorned with ; quotations fiom, the Koran, was until | By m his’ army and reading American ang foreign hooks and newspapers. Being a soldier, Constantine doesn’t ‘gem to mind the lack of comforts and the little hardships he has tio contend with here, ‘He is essentially demo- cratic and simple in his tastes. It is | this: demo¢racy and. simplicity. that have endeared him to his soldiers. That is why they call him “patera” (our father). the field, He still has traces of’ his old pleural trouble. b HIGH MILITARY © MEN OF GERMANY NOW IN POVERTY Berlin, Oct. 13—The financial plight \/ recently the harem of a prosperous Of some former high army Officers, | The King's health has not permit-/ ted him ‘to take actiye command, of } | | | \ i { ; | | ‘local Turk. “Hig-bed is a modest ‘iron | who, deprived of ‘government pay! ‘affair that» might be found | American lodging’ house. { The King eats the-same coars® food | | as his soldiers; chefs were | jeft in Athens, Eski- + | Shehir affords little that could be gall- ‘five to ten marks. Only a few df. the \pd luxurious. | 50,000 inhabitants is coarse, j bread and ‘soup milk (yout). ‘not -Constantino's regimen, but often | his meals have’ consisted only of the ynative Turkish bread, a can of sar-} \dinessand’a fraginent of goat’s cheese. have little cause to complain, when I | There is:no ‘wine: to be had here. ‘Vea, think of the many wounded men who | coffes, and water are the universal| have even leas than 1. {shaquid ga.to help them.” ‘ beverages, ; ; When the King received The Ass- | / ciated Press correspondent, he apolo- |} jgized for the poor, surroundiggs and |expre3sed.the hope that the reporter had found better accommodations, reountry ‘Hike: Asia,” said Constantine | indulgently, rooms tolerably clean. I've encountered every form of insect and bug ‘ihat natural history speaks of. My ‘greatest desire is to get .a jreal bath”* «(':! Apart from the rather severe living | | conditions that confront the King, hei, {has few or no diversions. ‘He seldom walls of his hamely Turkish domicile. , It pnobably would be unsafe to do so. Except for officers of the army, he has few or no visitors, His’personal admirers and the habitues’of ‘the court, of course, , much of ‘his’ time- perusing | reports | | i | ssYour bowels), may seem regulars- move every. day—yetgour thirty feet | of bowels ‘miady De lined with poisonous | waste which is being sucked into your blood, keeping. you: haif sick, nervous, S Whether you i ntnacegacgacaeasty {| LUIS WRIGLEY'S Z JUICY FRUI Cit WING GUM t SHWETA > DS SS $ {/ ‘The palace cooks and ‘among former soldiers to help them The chief diet of the | needy officers, however, have consent- , ‘black | eq to accept such charity. Former! This is; Field Marshal Conrad von ~ Hoetzen- jdorf declining a donation of 4,000 marks wrote: | compelled to leave: Germany Yor Aus- | “but I wouldn’t mind ittria and Poland, where their German only the houses’ were clean. This! marks have a greater purchasing {Place wasn’t fit for habitation when I; power. Others have taken low-sdlar- |came here ‘first. “But now after many | ied positions in the German provinces jdays of sweeping, scrubbing and disin- | where the cost of living is low. - fecting, we’ye managed to, make the ‘Considerable sympathy for those Me ¥ ‘men recently has been manifest even ‘Since I came to Anatolia I think‘ jn jiperal, socialist, y { monarchistic. quarters, 2 papers have been advertis' jousness of their situation. cf a deckhand of the steamér Caistor Castle, after the ship had been wreck- e* off the cliffs near Here, saved seven wf the crew of nine. Wood Miller, climbed the cliff with a rope, and then had each of the crew climb-up. Two were wreckage. — aaa BOWEL, POISON MAKES You SICK usually from bowel poison. night will clean your bowels. right. By morning all the constipation poison and sour bile will move out—thor- oughly! Cascarets will aot sicken yous, —they physic fully, tbut liever gripe or inconvenience aie “in daily tasks — and sports as well.. for WRIGLEY'S gives you comfort - and poise—it adds means success. SEALEO TIGHT _ KEPT RIGHT - ww “iw in’ any; which was their only imcome, have| been reduced to straitened circum- stances, has caused a moyement by Conations of sums ranging from “I am not complaining, and feel I This money Von Hoetzendorf and his wife are iving at Innsbruck,.occupying a small Many former high officers have been radical, and anti SAILOR RESCUES SEVEN Linny Head, Eng., Oct. 13—Courage The man, named lost. in the Hurry! One. or two Cascayets to- Lf Aazards disappear and hard he zest that A great deal for 5c UUcuapureecarurmauuuenamaadenvontasnnnenenscensuoncasccvavsuosnanirnoasanea % \\) . { | room in’ which their meals aré prepar- | - “Life ed on an electric stove. The former ie |field_marshal’s income amounts to less ||P suppose. we must expect some | than 1,200 German marks monthly. _\discomforts ahd “inconveniences in a | A Dangerous ‘Period Through Which Era Woman Must Pass Practical Suggestions Given by the Women Whose Letters Follow ham’s Veget ‘A friend advi table Compou: low when I me ‘ood. would tr: will do them Afton, Tenn. Vegetable to carry women safely through the Change of Life. “It is, with pleasure that I write to you thankin; 1 medicine has done for me. had a displacement and weakness so that I could not stand on my A friend told me about Lydia E. Pink-~ wonde: feet and other annoying symptoms. I was passing Lydia E. Pink Afton, ‘Tenn.—‘‘I want Other suffering women to . know what Lydia BE. Pink- / le Compound * ha& done for me. During the Change of Life I was in bed for eight months and had two good doctors. treating me but theydid me no good. ised me to take Kiem Meger: , which T did, and in a short time I felt better. [had all kinds of bad spells, but they all left me. feel weak and nervous I take the Vegetable Compound anditalwaysdoes T wish all women it during the Change of Life for I ‘now it . Tf you think it will induce some one totry the Vegetable Com- und you may letter. x —Mrs. ublish this . KELLER, Mrs. Mary Lister of Adrian, Mich.,adds her testimony to the value of Lydia 'E. eunkhamis Compo She say you for. what, your rough the Change of ham’s Vegetable Compound and the first bottle helped md, so I got more. It cured me and I am now doing my housework. Your medicine is certainly~ woman’s friend and you may use this testimonial as you choose.’’—Mrs. MARY. Lister, 608 Frank Street, Adrian, Mich. owing to modern methodsof Jiving not one woman ina thousand passes through this perfectly natural change without experiencing very annoying symptoms. .... Thosesmothering spells, the dreadful hot flashes that send the blood rushing to the head/until it seems as though it would burst, and the faint feeling that follows, as if the heart were going ta stop, those sinking or dizzy spellsare all symptoms of a nervou$ conilition, and indicate the need for a special medicine. Lydia E: Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is a root and herb medicine espe- ‘Cially adapted to act upon the feminine system. It acts in such a.manner + @8 to build-up the weakened nervous system and enables a woman to pass this trying period with the least possible annoying symptoms. ~~ ‘ should remember that most of the commoner ailments ~ Women everywh: ‘of women are not the surgical ones—they are not caused by serious displace- ments or growt! ch the symptoms may be the'same, and that is why go many apperently ious ailments readily yield to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comyound, as it acts ds a natural restorative and often prevents serious troubles, 5 Lydia E. Pinkhain's Private Text-Book upon “Ailments P liar to Women” be'sent to you free upon request. “W to The Lydia E. Rinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts, ‘This book contains ve luable information, Makes a specialty of. / training young men and young women for the best : BOO REET ING ‘ - and. STENOGRAPHIC POSITIONS B. B. &. grfduates are expert, and’experts are always in demand. +A B. B. C. graduate never ,had to shop-for a posi- tion. If you aspire to get a good start in -BUSINESS) ~- or BANKING p ean Tet us plan a course for you, and what we have done for thousands of the most successful ‘business.men and women throughout the United States, we ean do for you. x 4 ENTER AT ANY TIME~ No entrance examinations, any deficiency in the:common branches © can be made up while pursuing the special course. For particulars write ‘ } It is ‘said that middle age is the most. trying period in a woman’s life, and ~ {TR Bismarck ae ‘Safety and Service “i “THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE. ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS G. M. LANGUM, President N. Dak. BURGLAR GET A SA MCCLINTOCK CO With our new McClintock Burglar-Alarm System which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your Liberty Bonds ard general banking business, ( First National Bank, Bismarck, N.D. — FETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW éther valuables.as well’as to Safety First do your plouey sere Se a rene ee stem ema IBUNE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS

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