The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1921, Page 2

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4 Lynch, Jr., South Carolina, and Geo, / rubles necessary to buy food for the PAGETWO ~ CAFETERIA IN YOSEMITE SOLVES FOOD PROBLEM Yosmite. Cal., Oct. 20—A cafeteria | in the Yosemite National Park, miles from the big cities where tray car- riers generally are found, this year apparently solved a problem of fur-| nishing food at medium prices for, tourists far from a railroad. During the last five months, approximately’ 250,000 meals were served at an aver- age cost of about 48 cents each. The cafeteria was the first ever es- tablished in any national park and it has been so successful that other; parks have written for details of its operations. It is probable that the: idea will be copied. | Secretary Fall of the Department of; the Interior, while here this summer, ecame a tray carrier at the cafeteria) and declared he thought the establish- | ment was a step in the right direc-: tion to provide good accommodations at the lowest possible prices. Food served in the cafeteria is the! same quality as that served in Yose- mite’s American plan resorts charg- ing as high as $7.50 and $10 per day. | The prices differ little from those in cafeterias in San Francisco and Los Angeles. The food is sold at cost, as employes of the Natio:ial park com- pany make up about half the cafe-| teriag patrons. i Scores of campers came to Yose-! mite this year, pitched their tents along the Mercer river and took théir | meals at the cafeteria. INDEPENDENCE SOCIETY SEEKS HISTORIC DATA: Philadelphia Oct. 20.—The Society of the Descendants of the Signers of} the (Declaration of Independence is! endeavoring to collect copies of the wills of the 56 signers. According to! a report made to John Calvert, secre- | tary and register of the society, the | wills of Samual Chase, Maryland; | George Wythe, Virginia; William | Hooper, North Carolina; William | Walton, Geargia, are still missing} from the society's collection. Wills in possession of the descend- ants include those of Josiah Bartlett, ‘New Hampshire; John Adams, Samuel Adams, and Robert Treat Paine, Mas- | sachusetts; Stephen Hopkins and Wil-| liam Ellery, Rhode Island; William Williams, Samuel Huntington, Oliver | Wolcott, and Roger Sherman, Con-) necticut; Francis Lewis, William| Floyd, Lewis Morris, and Philip Liv- | ingston, New York; Abraham Clark, John Hart, John Witherspoon, Francis Hopkinson and Richard Stockton, New Jersey; Robert (Morris, Benjamin Rush, Benjamin Franklin, John Mor- ton, James ‘Smith, George Taylor and | George Ross, Pennsylvania; ‘Caesar Rodney and Thomas McKean, Dela- ware; Charles Carroll and Thomas! Stone, Maryland; Thomas Jefferson, | Francis Lightfoot Lee, Richard Henry Lee and Benjamin Harrison, Virginia; | Joseph Hewes and John Penn, North | Carolina; Edward Rutledge, South! Carolina; Button Gwinnett, Georgia. | The following signers died intestate, H according to the report: William| Whipple and Matthew Thornton, New | Hampshire; Elbridge Gerry and John ; {Hancock, ‘Massachusetts; George Cly- me, and James Wilson, Pennsylvania; | George Read, Delaware; William Paca, Maryland; Arthur Middleton, South} Carolina. The records of Thomas Nelson, Jr., Virginia, were destroyed by fire in} 1865, and those of Carter Braxton, Vir- ginia, during the Civil War. The rec- ords of Thomas Heyward, South Caro- lina were also destroyed during the ‘Civil War, and those of Lyman Hall, Georgia, were lost in a fire in 1856. NO BOAT SONGS ON VOLGA RIVER Syzran, Samara Province, Oct, 20.— (On board-vessel on the Volga River) —There are no boating songs on the Volga this, year. The balalaika is not ringing from the few boats. which are floating along this once mighty river whose shallow waters are affording a poor avenue of escape ‘from the parched grain fields which mock the peasants to -whom they formerly yielded a bundant bread. Pawnbrokers have long since re- | ceived the balalaikas in exchange for starving families, Samovars no longer sing merrily on the hearths of the peasant cot- tages. They too have been exchanged | for bread. Together with the family ikons and the bright brass candle- sticks that once adorned every mantlepiece, they are exhibited in the! second-hand shops of villages andj cities while their former owners are huddled together in miserable camps along railways and rivers waiting for somebody to take them to a land of | food. Priests who are as miserable as their parishioners have set up alters} in the wayside camps and are bury- INGROWN NATL NAIL Toughen Skin and and. Toe Nail Turns Out Itself. A few drops of “Outgro” upon the | skin surrounding the ingrowing nail} reduces inflammation and pain and so toughens the tende-, sensitive skin un- derneath the toe nail, that it can not penetrate the fl and the nail turns naturally outwa Imost over night. “Outgro” is a bhavmless, antiseptie manufactured for ¢! podists. How- ever, anyone ca! rom the drug store a tiny botile containing direc- pions. puieeit Adv. THE: BISMARCK TRIBUNE ' CITY IN ARMS AGAINST EVICTION ORDER | BY SHIPPING BOARD THE FEDERAL HOME BUILDING COMPANY Lorain. Ono Octe 17,1921 0. B. Rea, 415 Kanaas Ave., » Lorain, Ohio. Dear Sirs - We are enclosing herewith | notice to vacate the premises you occupy. This js in accordance with Anatructions received:from Phila- 4 delphia office,and we trust you wil) comply. with same at once or pay: the amount of rent you are is | Instruction here. ; ninety teachers are listed as present- | ing high school work in E + ject: MATHEMATICS TAUGHT MOST IN. ND. SCHOOLS More teachers ‘in the high schools | of North Dakota. are instructing in ; Mathematics than in dny other one subject, according to statistics issued by the State Department of Public Seven hundred and Of this number nin ers. of . mathematic: training’ rank next with eighty-four teachers while languages and manual training rank next with eighty four each. The combinatfon of History, Civics, Economics and Sociology is ac- } corded inety-eight ‘teachers without a division being made in the four sub- jects. ee THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, ’21 The subjects, and the numbers of teachers listed as special instructors | in each follows: Agriculture Manual Training Commercial Subjects Mathematics Expression ... Music ‘and Art . History Civics, sociology Normal Training Physical Education Language Sciences Home Econom Economics and é 9: 84 BANDIT ROBS | EXPRESS CAR Moose Jaw, Sask, Oct. 20.—A ndit today held up an express mes- senger on the Van Couver-Torontq express rifled the safe and dropped} from the ‘moving cars. Railway of- ficials are checking to determine how Complete November List, : NOW ON SALE ~ 44. 66 6 in the United States'decreased 1.7 per cent from last May to September, ana ch loot the bandit got away’ with. | \the steel industry wa the: arrears, Your: By NEA Service. Lorain, Ohio, Oct, 20—Lorain. looks o President Harding to set a good example to repacious landlords through the agency of the Shipping Board, which owns 232 houses here. The Shipping Board made a bad start by sending eviction notices to more than 100 families behind in their rent. The heads of these families have been able to make only meager wages since shipbuilding was stopped and curtailed. (Mayor William F. Grall of Lorain i appealed to the president to stay the evictions. The president intervened and ordered an investigation. “It seems to me this action comes vith bad grace from the Shipping Board which has let millions’ slip through its fingers” said Mayor Grall. The mayor pointed to the fact that ; the Shipping Board this year, by one nA SY SN ar ing the dead and praying for the half-dead who kneel submissively be- fore the cross and. intone ‘their \peti- tions to heaven at sunrise and sun- set. Fortunately, the sun does not fail them often. The autumn has been dry so far and the glorious Indian summer has made their lot less intol- erable than’ it will be when autumn rains add to the misery of the un- sheltered, poorly clothed, hundreds of thousands. A few families are still floating down the river in frail rowboats stacked high with children and. bat- tered household utensils. The condi- tions are about as bad down the | Volga as they-are here, but the mere | restless refugees say they feel better to keep moving. Some families still have a horse or ox which has | managed to live on parched stuble. and are dragging along behind their ri¢kety wagons until the time when the faithful beasts shall drop dead. ‘Cemeteries surrounding the quaint churches which line the entire course of the Volga are crowded with re- fugees. But there is no shower of manna. The drought and the grasshoppers have robbed them of bread. Their prayers have been of little avail. Their priests have not been able to get them food. Their Little Father, who formerly looked after them in famine times, is no more. Yet they have not utterly lost hope and still devoutly cross themselves and feebly voice petitions are they slowly merge into the dust to which they are so soon to return. The French administration has built more than 1200 miles of roads in. Mo- Tocco, most of them with camel-drawn rollers. HAIL TO THE PRINCESS! ~- The Zeeland peasant girls, clad i 8 truly, deal, lost more than a million—or ; enough to pay the rent for 15 years) of the 232 families living in its houses here. ‘The Shipping Board nas offered the| 950,000, for sale, it got was $450,000. Twenty tenants moved before the| president received Maycr Grall’s ap-) peal. One of these families moved to; a barn—and the ‘house from which | they. moved is still vacant. Mrs. Norman E. Reigel and her two children, shown above, have been threatened with eviction from their home in‘Lorain, 0., by the U. S. Ship- ping Board. ‘Below is a fac-simile of one of the eviction leiters sent to close to. 100 residents of the Shipping | Board reservation in Lorajn, and in-| set, Mayor W. F. Grall, of Lerain, who protested to ~ President Harding | against the proposed evictions. JAZZ DEVILS ARE. INVADING MEXICO, Mexico City, Oct. 26.— American} “Jazz devils” have come to Mexicoj City and have made their syncopation | popular but theater-going Mexicans | have failed to appreciate an Ameri- can musical comedy as recenly pre-| sented by a company of “girly-girly. gius directed from Boardway,” to use ; the words of the inspired press agent. The company appeared here as one of the attractions of the Centennial celebration. Advertised as a bit of} Broadway transplanted to Mexico, the | girls were intended to add a bit of} pepper and zest to thg month of! fiesta, but, after a few nights, inter- est lagged and the show concluded its run without breaking any attendance | records, | It was not because the attraction! was. beldw the standard of any similar { show in the United States. Old-timers | in the American colony here have long:dectared that American’ musical comedy will not pay in Mexico and their predictions dppear to have been substantiated in the recent attempt. NEVER WANTS ANYTHING ELSE The season of coughs, colds, croup and bronchial troubles is at hand. ‘Every mother will be interested in this | letter trom Mrs. B.‘K. Olson, 1917 | Ohio Ave. Superior, Wis. “I tried | ; Many different kinds of cough medi- | {cine, but now I never avant anything | else. than Foley's Honey and Tar. 1} used it for my children when I lived in Iowa and also for my grandchildren n Duluth, and it has always done good work.” Contains ng opiates, Adv. in. their quaint costumes, gave a royal welcome to Juliana, Holland’s 12-year-old princess royal, on her recent visit. houses, which cost approximately $1,- i but she highest bid) Columbia Records > Dante _ Records Bij Sweet Lady. Medley Fox-Trot cl, t The Cotunbion South Sea Isles. Medley Fox-Trot The Happy Siz Ina Boat. Medley Fox-Trot. The Happy Siz Emaline. Medley Fox-Trpt Yerkes Jazarimba Orchestra Sally, Won’t You Come Back, od edly Fox-Trot Lewis and His Band Second Hand Rose. Medley erattoe Ted Lewis and His Band 3467 85c 3468 85c 3453 Wang Wang Blues. Fox-Trot Ted Lewis and His Band \ A-3464 Home Again Blues, Fox-Trot Ted Lewis and His'BandS 85¢ Molly O. ’Fox-Trot Art Hickman’s Orchestra) A-3458 Good-bye, Pretty Butterflies Art Hickman’s Orchestra ! I Ain't Nobody’s Darling. Song Fox-Trot i es } J aBe age. Prince’s Dance er J abe he Jae Frankie and Johnny Biese Trio and Crumit Dy hh J Canoe. Med Wal A S1e8 in My Sippy Canoe. ey tz, Prince's Dee Orchestra $1.25 2 * “TM Keep on Loving You * Guido Deiro A-3451 Crooning |_| d Guido Deiro Solaiee & feletarreeh 8 ie athe Cold, Cold Ground ~ Wi ie Straw ley ol By tine Yellg GAO Bee see) LAL gese Jock Tamson’ 8 Hornpipe (Medley of Jigs and and Reels) on, Richardson, | Danse. Arabe i Oriental Orchestra E-7258 i]. Danse Oribntale ~. , | Oriental Orchestra Sorig . Hits My Sunny Tennessee Tuck Me to Sleep in My Old Kentiicl Broadway Quarta Home ale and Reardon I'm Hooking fora Bluebird (to cua My Blues, agreed ) ‘arion Bernal Ae 3457 Sweet Cookie Marion Harris In the Old Town Hall Van & Schenck) A-3461 What’s-2 Gonna Be Next Van & et Be Who'll Be the Next One (to Cry Over You) vous If You oe Knew Edwin Haran} 208° Dale and sake sata 3450 , Sleepy Hea ; ‘hee Wel, Love, Fare Thee Well Colmes St Stellar. Quartet A-3460 T-Ain’t Givin’ Nothin’ Away Sweet Mamma (Papa’s Getting Maa) 7 ‘Ondea and Concert - Because \ Ghartes Hackett} 7°90 ia | t | * La Forza del Destino (Pace, Pace Mio Dio) 49859. Rosa: Ponselle § $1.50 Samson and Delilah—Love, Lend Me Thy Might 49740 Jeanne Gordon Gentle Annie Oscar Seagle Ol’. Car'lina Oscar Seagle and Male Quartet} $ ‘Those Songs My Mother Use@ to Sing Carmela Ponselle i} eal | een 3448 |$ta0 Thinking of You $1.00 Carmela Ponselle A ancatal Music . + Paraphrase on Tschaikovsky’s Flower Waltz +6192 Perey Grain, a Wedding Day at Troldhaugen Perey Grainger $1. 50 Solveig’s Song ~ Eddy Brown) A-: 3449 }, Serenade Espagnole Eddy Browns $1.00 Monastery Bells, Key of “F” Sharp Major | Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra | A-6193 | "Intermezzo Sinfonico—from Cavalleria Rusticana ($1.50 et Gino Marinuzzi and His Symphony Orchestra | y March Boccaccio Prince's Band) A-6195 | ‘When the Grand Old Flag Goes By Prince's Band $1.25 i i world his music. f porer of Faust, was in Jove with Mendel ‘rand vind } wd sobn’s sister, that | The Lure of Music { Nes Roa hhe nearly became a ete ' as. ee nC bates ‘monk; and that an- J err aac ee t ‘other woman, agreat Ma} Dealers the 10th and 20th of Every Month * COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE COMPANY, New York the bureau of labor statistics. The figures showed the cost of live ing in September to Le i. 3 per cent higher than the average’ for the year The iner were itemized as : (Food, 53.1 per ‘cent; cloth- t; fuel and light, 80.7 COST OF LIVING FALL IS SHOWN’: | Government Makes Public Statis From 32 Lakge Cities Seven th d five hundred wor is the av number spoken by a public speaker in an hour. Washington, Based on sta- tistics for 32 cities the cost of living 18.1 from Jue 1920, to September, ac- | There’s Christrees Photographs A Christmas Gift should be something : value — no matte?’ how much or little it costs. It should be a tangible expression of the affection or friendship of the giver. Photographs, because of their oersonal sentiment, make ideal gifts. Butler Studio - 31414 Main Street. Phone 249 Makes a specialty of training young men and young women for the best BOOKKEEPING and STENOGRAPHIC \ POSITIONS B. B. C. graduates 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 BISMARCK Bi aloe My d Ure tad: b Les let 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 can do for you. 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 Bismarck G. M. LANGUM, President N. Dak. Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS O0.B MCCLINTOCK CO MINNEAPOLIS. MINN, With our new McClintock Burglar Alarm’ Soe which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your Liberty Bonds and other valuables as well as te do your feneral banking business. First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW Safety First ee MINNESOTA BATTERIES GUARANTEED FOR TWO YEARS (Free replacement for eighteen months) Electric Service & Tire Co. 215 Main Street ee ee cording, to figures announced today by. y

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