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The Bozeman courier. (Bozeman, Mont.) 1919-1954, December 31, 1926, Image 4

Image and text provided by Montana Historical Society; Helena, MT

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86075113/1926-12-31/ed-1/seq-4/

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WASHINGTON GIRL
HERO OF RECENT
ARMENIAN 'QUAKE
A Washington girl, Miss Elsie Jar
vis, was one of the heroines of the
recent Aremenian earthquake*. Serv
ing as a nurse in the Near East Re
lief children's hospital at Leninakan,
she was presiding over an operating
table when the first shock came. In
a letter to her parents she describes
the tragic event, which cost 500 lives
and left 80,000 people homeless:
Funny how, against our wills, in»
stinct directs our actions tword self
preservation," she writes. "I was su
turing a scalp wound and the doctor
was amputating a hand when the
first shock came. We dashed out
side, to realize before the quake had
finished that we had left our pati
ents behind. So we rushed back in,
to find the operating room still shak
ing, plaster all over the table, and
the patients where we had left them.
It was all so sudden as to be unbe
lievable. But with blanched faces
and looks of determination we
4.
went on with our work, and as the
tremblers continued, we rapidly
evacuated all our patients into the
wheat fields.
"The ground everywhere was
pitching constantly. From the city a
mile down the hill rose loud cries— j
All lights
a whole city in terror,
went out and through the haze a
cloud of thick dust covered every
thing. Thank goodness our huge
stone buildings, built many years ago
as barracks for the Cossask army,
remained fairly steady—at least long
enough for us to evacuate all our pa
tients and the 9,000 children from the
orphanages.
Then the ambulances began to
come in, from the city and the vil
lages. Earthquake shocks continued
intermittently. Ai each fresh shock,
the patients would get panicky, and
we would abandon the amputation
and dressings to quiet them. In ten
days, we had nearly fifty separate
, shocks. During all that time, I had
j been snatching a few hours' sleep
» when I could.
«•
f
Sign's Wires Cross» ■
Advertisers Slandered
Anbury Park, N. J.—An electric
■ algr. in the throes of what seemed
' to be a nervous breakdown got its
wires crossed and with slanderous
!.. statements concerning the firms it
» was supposed to advertise kept a
crowd on the boardwalk laughing for
two hours.
Ordinarily it proclaims the virtues
•f some twenty-five business houses
In three 40-foot lines, devoting twen
ty seconds to each firm before pass
t? Ing on to the next. That is, it did un
til the monotony began to tell and
rime and reason was suddenly flnng
to the winds with the following :
, (Name of a well-known restaurant).
1 "Dyeing Establishment"
, It blinked, then glared down with
2 this indifference to consequences;
I (Name of a bus line), "Withered Foot
* Release."
It winked solemly and said: (Name
! of a department store). "No Cover
j Charge."
It baited Its eyes and glared In
j sanely at the crowd : (Name of an ex
; elusive grill room). "Beauty Shoppe
In Full Operation." # #
For two hours It gibbered Innumer
* able kilowatts of nonsense, then an
electrician came as keeper and
choked It off. But not before It de
* dared unequivocally that a certain
lanndry produced "Clean Sports."
i
.
1
Seven hundred men died in New
York last year from poisoned liquor.
Mellon Inspects Building Plan for Washington
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Secretary of the Treasury Mellon conferring with Représentative Elliott of Indiana, chairman pf the house com
mittee on public buildings and grounds, on the bill now before congress authorising the appropriation of $26,000,
000 for a public building program in the national capital.
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Russians Pay Honor to Leonid- Krassin in Death

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Scene In the Red Square, Moscow, when thousands of Russians paid tribute to Leonid Krassln's memory as his
funeral cortege passed. He was the Soviet representative in England and one of Russia's best diplomat»,
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How to Make Fortune:
Plant Black Walnuts
Washington.—Planting a bushel of
black walnuts this toll the Agriculture
department declared, would make a
good Investment for farmers In upland
and hill sections of the South, tbo
Ohio river basin and the central Mi»
slsslppi valley.
Walnut, one of tbo finest cabinet
woods known. Is worth about $200 a
thousand feet and a bushel of nuts, of
which there is a large crop this year,
numbers about 1.S00. Planted In idle
corners, waste strips and along fenco
rows, a bushel In time should return
a huge profit.
Mountain Honnit at 83
Learns to Read Bible
Asheville. N. C.—After living for 83
years without being able to read. Brig
man Keith has learned the mysteries
of the printed word.
Three years ago Keith, who makes
his home In a mountain cabin near
here, decided that if he was ever go
ing to learn to read he had better be
gin. Now he has achieved consider
able success.
Hla reading is confined largely te
newspapers and the Bible.
I Slip Him tRe Prize
as Cheekiest Person
Buenos Aires.—Juan Marti- i
nez gave a display of sheer |
cheek" here recently that must j
I stand unrivaled. Twenty-five |
I years ago he deserted his wife
a In the greatest state of Indi
! gence to pursue the charms of
» another lady. i
k The wife want to work, and ]
0 even succeeded In amassing a <
* small capital. A short time ago
T she died and then the errant
«
0 spouse appeared upon the scene
and demanded his share o t the
0 estate.
ä But even the highest court
0 he appealed to ruled against
I him.
Prices in France are estimated
be seven times higher than before
the war.
For stealing to buy a dance dress,
an English girl was sentenced to
ito bed at 10 o'clock every night
three years.
peal Happenings
Word has been received here of the
death, November 2 at Atascadero,
Calif., of Mrs. C. S. Taber, formerly
a resident of Bozeman.
The public and other schools of the
city will re-open next Monday morn
ing, after a week's Christmas vaca
tion. ■*■••*.*
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Sears and
little son, Thomas, Jr., spent Christ
mas in Livingston with Mrs. Sears'
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Quinn.
u.
S. Commissioner George C.
Davenport and Mrs. Davenport, who
have been visiting relatives at Chi
cago and Waukegan, Ills., for three
weeks, are expected to return to
Bozeman today or Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Carson Bechtel of
Livingston were here Tuesday On
business. Mr. Bechtel Is an insurance
man, and is widely known in the Gal
latin. While in Bozeman Mr. arid
Mrs. Bechtel visited with Miss Grace
Mc Vick er of 202 Lindley Place. '
î
1
Kars^'
Pete Karst, proprietor of
Cold Springs resort, has gone to Chi
cago to confer with Milwaukee rail
way officials regarding tourist pros
pects for 1927. Mr. Karst made the
trip at the invitation of the road's of
ficials. He expects a record-breaking
tourist business next summer.
's
A small blaze at the home of Wil
liam Maxey, 614 South Sixth avenue,
last Friday evening resulted in a call
for the fire department. The blaze
was set by a lighted candle coming
in contact with a curtain. When the
firemen arrived, the flames had al
ready been subdued. No particular
damage was done.
>
to
A record-breaking crowd—627 per
sons—attended the Christmas night
dance and party at the Bozeman Hot
Springs, Gallatin's well known resort,
it is reported by Manager Sam Col
lett. A' big masquerade will be held
at the Springs tomorrow night
celebration of New Year.
go
for
Wednesday and Thursday the mer
cury rose above the freezing point
for the first time in 10 days, although
recent temperatures have not been at
all severe. Only a half inch of snow
was added to the coating already on
the ground during the week. Thurs
day was partly cloudy with indica
tions of unsettled weather to follow.
Mrs, A. E. Wimmer, mother of
Fred Bennion of Bozeman, died last
Friday at her home in Los Angeles,
Calif., after a brief illness with
pneumonia. The body was taken to
Salt Lake City, Mrs. Wimmer's old
home, for burial. Mr. and Mrs. Wim
mer left Saturday morning for Salt
Lake to attend the funeral.
Extradition papers for Otto Rader,
under arrest at Sheridan, Wyoming,
accused of having passed a fraudulent
check for $50 on Bovee and Paddock
the day before Christmas, have been
j issued by Governor J. E. Erickson,
Rader will be brought here for trial
upon a complaint filed in Justice ot
the Peace W. H. Axtell's court.
George Darlinton, Robert J. Dunn
And A. E. Westlake, who next Mon
day will be sworn in as Gallatin coun
ty's members of the lower house of
the Montana general assembly, will
leave Saturday for Helena so as to
get "the lay of the land" before the
Mr. Darlinton and
sessiort begins.
Mr. Dunn are Republicans, and Mr
Westlake is a Democrat.
During the absence at the legisla -
tu re of R. J. Dunn, proprietor and
manager of the Baltimore hotel, Earl
McNutt of Waveland, Ind., will be
in charge of that hostelry. Mr. Me
Nutt was formerly for six years clerk
at the Baltimore, and is consequently
Having
business interests at Whitehall and
being obliged to make a trip out
here to look after them, he consented
to prolong Mg stay in Montana and
take care of Mr. Dunn's hotel busi
ness until March 1.
J. H. Harris, Gallatin county clerk
and recorder, is at his desk again af
ter several days' absence due to ill
no newcomer to Bozeman.
Harris, while still feeling
the effects of his recent indisposition,
is glad to be at work again. Word
from Miss Bess Fowler, his chief
clerk, who has been in a hospital
Savannah, Mo., for medical treat
ment, is that she is leaving there for
Iowa, where she will visit friends be
fore returning to Bozeman. Her
health, it is said, is much improved.
J. H. (Harrison) Dawes arrived
Wednesday morning from Los An
geles, Calif., and remained here for
a few hours before resuming his
journey to Biljings, where he will
visit his daughter, Mrs. Arthur Sea
mans, for a few days. He expects
to return to California by January
4. Mr. Dawes appeared in excellent
health and spirits. He reported hav
ing encountered snow on the trip
north only 65 miles out of Los An
geles and that the entire route from
that point to Bozeman is well covered
with it. Although Montana weather
is not severe, Mr. Dawes said he
keenly the change from the "land
sunshine" to this climate.
Fog Poisoning
London fogs contain ail the add and
Irritating Ingredients of poison gas and
affect the delicate membranes of
throat and respiratory organs In
serious manner, according to a promi
nent London specialist In nervous dis
Many children hist w lutes
contracted "fog poisoning."
Ad a preventive of goiter, choc
okte-iodine tablets are furnished
pils in public schools of Plainfield,
Wis., by the local parenlt-teacher
n $ n a u »«««««»a
COURT HOUSE NOTES «
X s *
n
« « » « « » » « « « » « n
«
licenses to wed: Calvin Clarence
Chalmers and Mary McLean, both of
Livingston. They were maraied Dec.
24 by the Rev. R. P. Smith.
William Valentine Davis and
Blanche Stevens, both of Great Falls.
Henry Joseph Ellingson of New
Orleans and. Marie Brandenburg of
Bozeman. The ceremony was per
forme4 Christmas at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. A M. Brandenburg, the
bride's parents.
Joseph Edwin Jackson of Miner,
Mont., and Helen Grigg of Bozeman.
John Alva Rees-of Big Timber and
Genevieve Hall of Bozeman. They
were married Dec. 29 by the Rev.
William Friend Day, rector of St.
James' Episcopal church.
Fred Sines of Entiat, Washington,
and Beatrice Wortman of Salesville.
Neuter Possessive
Originally the pronoun "his" served
as the neuter singular possessive.
About the Sixteenth century this be
gan to be replaced with "It" Thus
Ben Jonson wrote, "It shall fright
all it friends with borrowing letters,"
and Shakespeare, "Go to It grandam,
child." About 1600 this form, in turn,
began to be • replaced by "It's," with
the apostrophe,
speare, and not to be found in the
King James Bible of 1611, this form j
became the common literary one by I
1623. Later In the same century the '
apostrophe was dropped, conforming
to the possessives of the other per
sonal pronouns, and since then It has
almost always been written "Its.**
Rare In Shake
Mysterious Spleen
There Is still one bulky organ In
the human body about which we know
little—concerning whqt its function
Is, at least That organ is the spleen.
The English physiologist Barcroft,
pointed out recently that Its use Is
a mystery to us even now.
The ancient Greeks, he said, are
said to have Improved their athletic
prowess by cutting out the spleen,
their argument being it was the cause
of the stitch In the side that some
times stops the best runners. This,
however, does not appear to be justi
fied by the records.
Mended " Busted 99 Egg
What the old story-book legend de
clares "all the king's horses and all
the king's men" could not do by way
of repairing "Humpty Dumpty," has
been accomplished by an expert of the
Field museum of natural history In
assembling the fragments of an os
trich egg believed to be some 6,000
years old. It wag found in the an
cient ruins of Klsh>-Popttlkr Mechan
ics Magazine.
When You Go
Skating
1
at
for
his
An
felt
of
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SECURE THE GREATEST PLEASURE
WITH A PAIR OF
Alumo Skates With Shoes
ALL HOCKEY PATTERNS
$ 6.50 - $ 7.50 - $ 10.50 - $1250
These prices are low enough to enable you to buy a pair
for every member of your family, including yourself.
We also sell the
NESTOR JOHNSON SKATES
With shoes at $7.50
Hockey Sticks 75c to $1.50
FLEXIBLE FLYERS AT 30 PER CENT DISCOUNT
and
and
the
a
dis
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choc
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haul-rees wedding.
Miss Genevieve Hall, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. A Hall of Bozeman,
and John. Alva Rees, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John E. Rees of Big Timber,
married Wednesday morning,
were
at 10 o'clock. The ceremony was per
formed by Rev. W. Friend Day, at
St. James' Episcopal church; and at
its conclusion, the bridal party went
to the home of the bride's parents to
partake of a wedding breakfast. The
bride wore an artistic gown of mul
berry crepe and carried Ophelia roses.
Both bride and groom have been re
siding in Missoula, where she was
household art supervisor in the Mis
soula junior high school and he was
à lawyer, associated with Attorney
E. C. Mulroney and teaching in Mon
tana State university. They will now
go to Washington, D. C., where Mr.
Rees is employed in the income tax
division of the United States treasury.
Parachutes are now used in drop
ping mail bags from airplanes.
About 17,000 people were killed In
accidents in homes , last year. Half
of those killed were mothers of fam
ilies.
'
"Worthy of Trust in Time
of Need"
DOKKEN-GETCHELL
Funeral Home
Funeral Directors and
Embalmers
Prompt attention given to all
city and out-of-town calls
Ambulance Service
Lady Assistant
Phone Day or Night 122-W
19 West Babcock
iiü'ï/si
a
u/h
It
XI
GROCERIES
We have them—the very
best. Just call 266
West Side Cash Grocery
410 W. Curtis
Phone 266

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