Newspaper Page Text
3 *ul"*t OVEMBER 11« A ENGLANDER WIT-EDGE SPRING STPAICHT IO QoHier siae? Sitli BODY FOUND IN RIVER Reedsburg, Wis., Nov. 8—The body of Norman Wood ••1 worth, 47, secretary of the Presbyterian Sunday School If ihere was found in Reedsburg river last night by a skating party. Citizens, aroused by the blowing of fire whistles, turned out en masse in the hunt after Mrs. Woodworth had reported her husband missing. Townspeople were un able to account for the drowning. vv, 'v WRANGLE'S DEFEAT IS CLAIMED Eovnc, Nov. 8—Bolsheviki authorities today claimed General Wrangle had been severed from his men in the Crimea. Capture of much booty and thousands of prison troops have driven Wrangle .back irom the neck of the peninsula and surrounded large ers were announced. Soviet troo .back irom the neck of the penii numbers of troops cf his army. "1^ Every Respect" says the Good Judge You get more genuine chew ing satisfaction from the Real Tobacco Chew than you ever got from the ordinary kind. The good tobacco taste lasts so long—a small chew of this class of tobacco lasts much longer than a big chew of the old kind. That's why it costs less to use. Any man who has used both kinds will tell you that. Put up in two styles W-B GUT is along fine-cut tobacco. RIGHT GUT is a short-cut tobacco F~ tjr.'.d.:.*. N .v JT-ie C. ct-r- S"ujd7'€rrt? Better and more pleasing than any mild Havana cigar. Jr your dealer cant supply you vrjfv up I. LEWIS CIGAR M'FiS. CO N«w»rkJU Largest Independent Cigar Factory in the'WtHd cigar ^sk your dealer &r yozzr /avoriie si?e Net Contents 15FluidDrac .ALCOHOL-3 PER AW For tfartheSteaafoandBcwebf Thcrctyftomotio^p«esto CaiceiffltoesstiidfejGJJp either Opidm.Morphme«^ iineral. froT NARCOTIC Ahelpfu Jw-SimleSi^natwrtf jmGcMMSE. VI 6i" Infants Exact Copy of Wrapper.*-.^*^ IMS Kmwm MMMV. MEW TOOK CITT s* v*. i-k 4li:\/.v r. V''\tv ..'r, -V-Jr" ,- /i.C,1 •:. .r.x. W-' -V Sii-_ .-•/••• SoMevwywhyie by furniture lores L_O F? DE: MELBA jor dlusiraieJlbookie ENGLANDER SPRING BED CO. New Yfar Brook Iyn Chicago Post. lO* STRAIGHT and Children. Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria Use Over j?*-".-': -.,, ., .'«u.. REAL TURK NOT A BARTERER Refuses to Go Out of His Way to Make a Sale* and Is Apt to Ignore Strangers. Love of baksheesh (gratuities) be trays the falsely named Turk. Eager ness to do something for you or busi ness with you is another sign of the mongrel Turk. Some real Anatolian Turks are merchants and sit 'in the bazaars. But they will not go out of their, way to make a sale and they really do not care if you buy or not Often they ignore strangers some times they rebuff them. When yov run up against this type in thfc bazaars, where all the Jews and Gen tiles are after your money with an, insistence that we call oriental, It Is like a dash of cold water in your face. Once in a little open shop I saw a rape that attracted me. I started to enter. But the crouched figure on a mat put out a long-fingered left hand, grasped firmly my ankle, and removed my foot outside the threshold. I thought there must be some supersti tion about which foot went first. So I tried the other. The same left hand proved again its strength. All the while the merchant did not speak or look up. His right hand was string ing beads ajid he was smoking a nargile. He simply didn't want to bother with me, and my shoe told him that I was a franga (European). Later I got to know that old bird, and we laughed over stories together. But he never asked me to buy anything, and I did riot want to risk his friendship by making a second try for the rug. There are other, things in life tlmn selling and buying. And mucli more important! But the mongrel Turk, like the Christian, does not understand this. It isn't in his blood.—Chicago DOCUMENT HELD AS SACRED Scroll of the Law, Most Precious Pos session of the Samaritans, Is Rarely Exhibited. sV^'i I '-£*.' The most precious document of the Samaritans is their Scroll of the Law. The scroll is..some-lifty feet lonjr. and toward lb*1 end iis columns are divid ed vertically by .a small gap, often occurring between the letters of the same. word. The Samaritans assert that the scroll was written by Ahishua, the great-grandson of Aaron, in the early days of the entrance into Ca naan. Although this remote origin is not. allowed the scroll by students, it Is nevertheless believed to be the most ancient copy of the Pentateuch. So jealously guarded is this scroll that few non-Samaritans have ever seen it. and many Samaritans them selves have not seen it except as it. is exhibited on rare occasions, af feasts, rolled up and covered with a silken cloth and with but one column ex posed. The- -scroll has been photo graphed anl published for the benefit of Hebrew scholars. The photograph was made from end to end of the scroll. The Samaritans as a rule show their guests a scroll of a much later date than the'earliest one, it being im practicable to- display the fragile parchment continuously. All the pho tographs hitherto supposedly taken of the Ahishua scroll have in reality been of the later copies. Music. All true arts are expressive, but they are diversely so. Take music it is without contradiction the most penetrating, the prpfoundest, the most intimate art. Extraordinary things are recounted of the ancient music. And it must not be believed that the greatness of effect supposes here very complicated means. No. The less noise music makes, the more it touches. Give some notes to I'ergo iese, give him especially some pure and sweet voices, and he returns a celestial charm, bears you away into infinite spaces, plunges you into in effable reveries. The peculiar power of music is to open to the imagina tion a limitless career, to lend itself with astonishing facility to all the moods of each one, to arouse or calm, with the sounds of the simplest mel ody, our accustomed sentiments, our favorite affections. In this respect, music is without a rival.—Victor Cou sin. Not a Patriot. Let us never forget that we differ from others just as much as they differ from us. If, that is to say, there is something about another nation which we honestly do not like, or do rot understand, or something which we even suspect, let us put it to our selves" quite fairly that in that very case there is something-about us which people belonging to that nation with equal honesty suspect, or do not like, or do not understand. The other man, or the other nation, hits its own point of view. And a man Is not a patri ot, but a fool and mischievous w-lio wants the whole world to have his own or his nation's unqualified char acteristics.—John D. Hutton. •Z Short Story of Paper Making. The art of making paper from mul berry bast is said to have been in vented in China in the second century B. C. Afterwards bamboo shoots, straw, gpass and other materials were also used. The manufacture spread to the adjacent countries. The Arabs learned it' in Samarkand, ahd their learned men carefully kept the process *by which they made paper for their own use- The crusades made Europe acquainted with the art. and fhe firs paper mill dates from turn the twelfth cen- W rv r* LEFT RECORD AS INVENTOR English Marquis, Three Centuries Ago, Had Ideas for Projects at That Time Undreamed of. ?,'t' One of the most curious books In Englishi literature is that which bears the title, "A Century of Inventions," and whose author Is Edward, marquis of Worcester, who died April 3,' 1667. The book appears to have been writ ten 12 years before his death, and con sists of hundreds of descriptions of projects, none of them, however, so explicitly treated as to enable a mod ern adventurer to carry them out in practice. In this hook are to be found meth ods for secret writing, by ciphdr or inks of a peculiar nature telegraphs or semaphores, explosive projectiles that would sink any ship, ships that AVouhl resist any explosive projectiles, floating gardens, a method of fixing shifting .sands, a way to make a boat work against wind and tide, and many other curious contrivances. Nothing came amiss to the mechan ical marquis neither were his projects mere dreams, for he had worked out in his own mind a clear conception of a steam engine, and is believed to have made a working model of one. His es tate was filled with all sorts of ma chines for raising water to the top of the great tower by hydraulic power, and during the war he frightened away a troop of Soundheads by a display of these unknown powers. The marquis impoverished himself by his adherence to the cause of Charles I., and when Charles II. came on the throne he was neither recom pensed for his losses nor rewarded for his lidelity. Kings' memories are often very short. MATING ARRANGED BY ELDERS Young People of Java K+ave Little to Say in Selection of Husband or Wife. Marriages in Java are typical of people in all tropical climates, in that the couples wed when they are very young. When a girl readies her elev entli or twelfth year, her parents be gin to look out for a suitable husband, and after the selection has been made the? start long preliminary discussions with the parents of the boy. The fa ther of (lie girl.then consults the "wise man" of the village, usually the only literate person in the community, fur ther nction being taken solely oh his advice. The wise man takes the first letters of the names of the prospective bride and groom and draws them together in various shapes, then meditating over the combination which is to de cide whether ilie boy and girl are go ing to be happy in their marriage. If the drawing suggests in the imagina tion of the wise man a tree with many branches:, he warmly recommends the alliance between the boy and girl as the drawing is supposed to promise them prosperity and, above all, a large family. When the selection is made to the satisfaction of all concerned, the par ents begin to discuss the dowry which, in the *iise of the Javanese, is sup plied by the groom, consisting of dresses, food, household goods and other similar articles.—Detroit News. A Manor House Find. The story of the find of 1,000 spado guineas in the press of an old Hert fordshire (Eng.) manor house is tpld in The Bookman's Jdurnal. The.bouse changed owners, and the new pro prietor. a few weeks after taking pos session, examined the attics systemat ically. In one of the presses there he found a number of tattered and stained books, among them Doctor Oroly's "Salathiel," which lie opened in casual curiosity. On a page he ciime across a penciled note, indicat ing where valuables had been hidden in the house during the crisis of the '45 rebellion. Forthwith he had the flooring of a cupboard taken up, and there in a cavity lay some thousand spade guineas, a quantity of rare! china and silver, and first editions of Congreve, "Wyclierley, Dryden and cer tain of the late Elizabethans—all care fully wrapped in silken dresses of that decade. Metals That Call for Use. Of the metals now known, more than 50 in number. Dr. E. E. Slossons notes that not one-half have come into common use. The so-called rare ele ments are really abundant enough, considering the earth's crust as a whole, though they are so third., scat tered that they are usually over looked and hard to Extract. But when ever one of them proves valuable it is soon found available. A systematic search generally reveals it somewhere in sufficient quantity to be worked. Who, then, it is asked, will be the first to discover a use for indium. gerni:i nium, terbium, thulium, lanthanium. neodymlunv scandium, samarium and others as much unknown to us of to day as tungsten was to our fathers. Unperturbed. "Ha," exclaimed the client. "You ^predicted the world was coming to an end a week ago." "Did I?" replied the soothsayer, dreamily. "You certainly did. But we are still here. Nothing has happened. What have you got to say for yourself?" ".Tust this," said the soothsayer. "I'm as glad didn't happen as you are. Mustapha." he continued, mo tioning languidly to his dark-skinned assistant "show the gentleman out nnd admit the next seeker after truth." —Birmingham Age-Herald. Jas.L.Fullerton, Joplin,Mo., says: "My 5-ton White truck makes a round trip of 63 miles each day. This truck was using 17 gallons on this trip. Iin stalled Zelnicker Ever-Tyte Rings and this truck makes the ssune trip on 12 gallons. 7 3 point expantion Right-Angle Interlock. Jttf uston wno ron AU. Ever-Tight Puion Ring Co., St. Louii •ak forZelnicker Bver-TrtePtaton Binga at any garage or repair ebop or get them Iron ua, GRASWICK GARAGE If $ Made Right Cod-liver oil is as delicate as butter, it must be made right to assure palatability. SCOTTS EMULSION is decidedly palatable and easy to take. It contains purest Nor wegian cod liver oil that is made right from the start. Scott & Bowne, Bloom field. N. J. 20-65 I Chief E. H. Swanson is about the happiest man in the town. During the big fire at the fibre mill in September he lost his gold star which had been presented to him by the Retail Mer chants Association and searching par ty after searching party looked for that star without any result, but yes terday the chief discovered the lost star among the ashes of the ruins and is correspondingly happy over the .find. The Times-Record and the chief's friends congratulate him upon finding this much prized gift. FREAL BARGAIN SELF-REDUCING iORSET WOMEN LIGHT BUT STRONG & Last Saturday was the birthday— the eightieth—of Mrs. Lois Dalrymple Trevett, who lives on the Platov farm near the Soo depot. In order to prop erly observe this big day in tho life of Mrs. Trevett a number of friends went out to help her, among tho mem ber being Rev. C. G. and Mr*. Fox, Gen. and Mrs. A. P. Peake, Mrs. J. R. Kennedy, Cuba, Lena B. Homes, Fin gal, and others. The afternoo* was very pleasantly spent with the (vest of honor and a real birthday vat en joyed by the lady. The guests apon their departure extended the hope and wish that Mrs. Trevett might enjoy many more celebrations of her natal day. RMIOIDS (GRANULES) E2LINDIGESTION Diaaolve inatantly on tonfae, or in hot or cold water, I PIONEER RADIATOR CO. We are equipped to recove or repair any make of auto or tractor radiators. All work guaranteed. 24 to 36 hours service. Old radiators bought or tak en in exchange. Second hand nwin tors in good condition for safe. We are agents for the S. J. Radiatoxa and Cores which we absodutely ganraatee NEVER TO LEAK FROM FMEZ ING. I 515 W. Main St., Jamestown, N- D. WE SPECIALIZE in EXCHNGES What have you to trade for MIN NESOTA LANDS? Large or small deals considered. Box 1172 Thief River Falls, Minn. Dr. C. E.Johnson DENTIST Office over Middlewest Bank Btdg. Phone 73. Valley City, N. D. E. A. PRAY, M.C\ Physician and Surgeon Offi. Phone 175 Res. Phone 2*i3 Office in Pray Block Professional Cards Pbone: Office 206-J. Res. 206-L J. VAN HOUTEN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon' Offices in Gray Block VALLEY CITY N. D. Res. Fifth Awe. N. Phone 36 E. A. PRAY, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Graduate Univ. of Pennsylvania Office in Postoflice Block WINTERER & RITCHIE LAWYERS VALLEY CITY N. O. THEODORE S. LINDLAND Attorney and Counsellor at Law Office in Farmers' and Merchants' Bank Building VALLEY CITY N. D. MODERN DENTISTRY painless extraction of teeth by N a a in a an Crowns and Bridgework. Artistic Artificial Teeth. DR. J. E. FEATHERSTOME American Exchange Bank Don't Be Discouraged! It isn't necessary to buy anew pair of shoes. Your old ones can be re built and give, you much service still. Comfortable old shoes are like your old friends. You want to keep them as long as possible. Come in and let us show you how we make "New Shoes from Old Ones." SWAN SON'S SHOE SHOP The Goodyear Shoe Repairer American Exchange Bank Building Valley City. N. D. M*l. ft* a .. PAGE THREE •& PAGE THRBF or •ichy. Try at soda fa QUICK RELIEF! ihTTablet"FORM ALSO MADE BY SCOTT BOWME MAKERS OP SCOTT'S EMULSION file Better Way I Neva disobey Nature's warn ing. It's far better to forestall weakness with nourishment that protects. ScotfsEniulsioi after meals for child or adalt,ii a wonderful helo in