The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 17, 1917, Page 8

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BISMARCK DAIL’ y. TRIBUNE " TUESDAY, APRIL 17,1917) 6% ORDERS ISSUED FOR FORMATION OF BC PARADE Societies and Companies to As- semble at County Courthouse Square to Form Procession. ALL GROUPS REQUESTED TO REPORT TO MARSHAL The courthouse square was official- ly designated at a conference of ‘Mar- shal W. S. Casselman and his aldes yesterday afternoon as the point of assemblage for the big Lexington day parade Thursday afternoon. All groups, companies and lodges will meet at their respective halls and the children at their schools promptly at 2 o'clock and will immediately move toward the county buildings, where the parade will form at 2:30 sharp. The head of the formation will rest on Sixth and Thayer, and it is expect- ed that each group will report at the rallying point not later than 2:15. Each section is expected to provide itself with the national colors and es- pecially with flags, large, small and intermediate. if flags are not avail- able, the executive in charge is re- quested to advise the officer of the day, M. S. Casselman, ‘phone 272, at the earliest possible moment, and in no. case later than Wednesday even. ing. Every organization in the city which is-willing to participate in this patriotic demonstration is’ requested to notify Mr. Casselman not later than Wednesday evening. The groups will, be-assigned to their place in the parade after assembling at the cits¢-halh’’ Each group will be expected to report with its own offi- cers, who will assume direct charge of that particular command. FUNERAL HELD MONDAY FOR WIFE OF FARWER WNON'S STATE HEAD Funeral services were held at Tap-| , pan Monday for the late Mrs, Wt. :J. J. Montgomery, wife of the president of the North Dakota Farmers’ Educa- tional, union, who passed away last week after a lingering illness of sev- eral months. The deceased had re- ceived treatment from the Mayos at Rochester and some of the larger St. Paul hospitals without beneficial re- sults, and her death was not unex- pected, There survive, in addition to the husband,.@ family of grown chil- dren. The Montgomery homestead is seven miles southeast of Tappan. Capital city people ‘who went to Tappan for the last rites included D, E, Shipley, secretary of the farmers’ union, and Charles Leissman, {ficid organizer. PLANS FOR NEW LAR BUILDING SOON WILL BE READY FOR BIDS Plans for the new Lahr building, to be erected at the corner of Thayer and Fourth, are being completed by F. W. Keith, and it is anticipated that es FREE TO __ABTHINA SUFFERERS A New Home Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discomfort or Loss of Time. We have a New Method that cures Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expense. No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent de- velopment, whether it is present as occasional or chronic Asthma, you should send for a free trial of our method. “No matter in what climate you live, ‘no matter what your age or occupation, if you are troubled ‘with asthma, our method should re- Neve you promptly. We especially want to send it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opium preparations, fumes, “patent smokes,’ etc., have failed. We want to show everyone at our own ex- pense, that this new method is de- signed to end all difficult breathing, all wheezing, and all those terrible peroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too important to Deglect a single day. Write now and then begin the method at once, Send no money. Simply mail coupon be low. Do it Today. ereapepaee FREE ASTHMA COUPON FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room 231 8 Niagara and Hudson Sts., Buffalo, N. Y. ee free trial of your method mn rident of the Lahr The Outbursts of Everett True By Condo MORNING, MR, TRUE, NOW, I BONY WANT ALCON ii l ae ae contracts will be let within ten days for a $40,000 structure which will add a great deal to the a iveness of Bismarck’s business rict, The building will be 50 by 140, with full basement and two stories, all of fireproof construction. In the first floor will be a show room, fifty by fifty; office rooms, rest rooms for dies, and a service garage, with n floors devoted to offices and} display; rooms for ace The second floor will ‘be uti storage, paint shops and shops. The walls will be of dark red Heb- ron brick trimmed in tera cotta. The exposures on Thayer and Fourth will be almost entirely of plate glass, supported by columns of ‘dark red brick set off with tera cotta trim. The floors of the sales rooms. will ‘be of white tile, and the flat beam ceiling will be finished in pearl white, mak- ing an abundance of light ‘one of the principal features of the building, The new structure will be ready about September 1, W. E. (Lahr, pres- Motor Sales Co. hopes, to become the permanent home of the Overland, to whose sales, assemblying and distribution it will be wholy devoted. UNITED COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS INSTALL OFFICERS FOR YEAR The Bismarck council, United Com- Mercia] Travelers, on ‘Saturday eve- ning installed officers for the ensuing year as follows: Senior councilor, C. F. Fossum; junior councilor, O. K. Olson; past councilor, J. C. Oberg; secretary, John L. George; conductor, E. V. Bergstrom; page, 'H. J. Zimmer: man; trustees, J. P. ‘Sell and: P, W. Paulson; delegates to grand council meeting, Robert Orr and J. C. Oberg. ‘A, A. Von Hagen was elected con- ductor at the annual meeting a month ago. Owing to the vacancy caused by his sad death, each officer below the rank of conductor was moved up one grade. Because of the council's recent bereavement, the installation exercises were marked by none of the social features common in other years, A sense of the loss which the council had so lately saffered tinged all of the proceedings with sadness. BISMARCK LIBRARY PLANS. ONPLETED 10 OPEN BIDS SOON ‘Bismarck’s new public library, Plang for which have been fully com- pleted by Architect F. W. Keith, and bids on which will be opened by the} library commission May 1, is to be a model of modern completeness and efficiency. The plans have met with. thé approval of Mrs. M. C. Budlong, secretary of the ‘North Dakota public library commission; the director of machine the Carnegie foundation and~ other prominent authorities. They provide for a full basement, including a work- room and. staff room, which may be thrown into one large committee- Tpom; a large audience room. 29 1-2 by 46, with a commodious stage; toilets, janitor’s room,,coal and boiler rooms. “There is an outside entranc> to the basement floor on Sixth street, as well as a flight of stairs leading from the library proper. ‘The main entrance to the Mbrary is F beyestt covered with soundless cork carpets. | The basement room will be finished in flemish-stained fir, with tinted walls. The exterior will be of dark cd! Hebron prick, laid in white mortar | and trimmed with Bedford stone. The | architecture is a modification of the colonial, giving the building unusual dignity for a structure of its size. The lot. is 75 by 100, leaving abun- s.| dant room’ for a cheerful grass plat on two sides, with ‘a’ driveway on the west and south, of the library. The library sHopld he’ completed by mid-summer , di e iy for occupancy not later ‘than. tember’ 1. Tt will be one of the 6 finest institutions of its kind in ‘North Dakota, NOTICE OF SALE. Bankable paper will be accepted on same basis ad cash at Pat’ Harvey Estate sale, April 20, 1917. PHILIP HARVEY, Executor, TAKES NEW POSITION. Miss Bthel Maddock, formerly a member of, the, state engineer's of- fice force, has’ Jaken a position as stenographer.) clerk. “in the auto- mobile regiattat department of the secretary of stale ‘office. CADMAS sl et BOUGHT NEW BUICKS Among the many new automobiles seen on the Bismarck streets Sunday were Buick touring cars just pur- chased by John Maasen, Arthur Bauer and Mrs. W. E. Butler, and a Buick roadster owned by Charles Rosen, Juice of Lemons! How to Make Skin White and Beautiful At the cost of a small jar of ordinary cold cream one can prepare » full quar- ter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lem- ons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to strain the juice through a fine cloth 80 no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo- tion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as sallowness, freckles and tan and is the ideal skin softener, smoothener and: beautifier. + Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at-any’pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up & quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands, It naturally should help to soften, freshen, bleach and bring out the roses and beauty, of any ekin. It is wonderful to smooth- en rough, red hands Van Horn Don't Miss Hearing MISS LILLIAN MAASS HOW GOOD THAT MUSTEROLE FEELS! D It Gets to That Sore Spot Like Magic A-a-h! That’s delicious relief for those sore muscles, those stiff joints, that lame back. Musterole.is a.clean, white ointment, made with the oil of mustard and other home simples; It. does the work of the old- fashioned mustard plaster, minus the plaster and minus the blister! You simply rub Musterole on the spot where the pain is—rub it on briskly—and usually the pain is gone, No muss, no bother. Just comfort- ing, soothing relief —first a gentle glow, then a delightful sense of cool- ness.. And best of all, no blisters like the old-fashioned mustard plaster used to make. . Use Musterole for sore throat, bron- chitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, ‘headache, conges- tion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chil- blains, frosted feet and colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). NO HURRY ABOUT PROCLAMATION IS FRAZIER'S IDEA “I see no occasion. for any special hurry about issuing my proclimation. I, wish to consult with the attorney general before I do anything and learn just what the-*proper proceed: ure will be,” said governor Frazier this morning when asked as to the date of his call for a special election to fill the congressional vacancy in the First. “One taing you may very definitely state is that | am not a candidate for congress and have nev- er considered it.” TO VOTE:ON CONSOLIDATION Edward Erickson, state inspector of rural and consolidated schools, is here from Mountrail-county, where as a result of a meeting held last week a vote will be.taken on tha es- tablishment of. a congolidated school STEELE 10 HAVE BiG CELEBRATION LENGTON DAY Kidder County Seat Will Stage Patriotic Program on Eve of Anniversary Glowing reports received from county chairmen indicate that Lex- ington day, Thursday, April 19, will be fittingly observed in every county in the Sixth judicial district. Plans have been in progress for some time in a number of the county-seat towns, and the entire district will be ablaze with patriotic enthusiasm when the an- niversary of the first battle of the American revolution rolls ‘round. Big Day at Steele. John F. Robinson, president of the First National bank of Steele and chairman of the Kidder County Mili- tary Training Camps association writes: “Next Wednesday evening the citizens of Steele plan on a patriotic meeting in observnce of Lexington day. (It was thought best to hold an evening meeting, and Wednesday ev- ening seemed better than Thursday.) Speakers have been arranged for, and ‘we hope to have a rousing meeting.” that Steele ‘s prepared to do every- thing in its power to encourage en- listment and to arouse the people to the importance of doing everything possible to support our government at this time. Napoleon Is Ready. Sheriff George Laney of Logan county reports that Napoleon is ready to do its share. State’s Attorney Geo. J, McKenna has been asked to as- sume charge of the work in_ that county, relieving. Sheriff Laney, whose official duties take him away from home so much that he fears the patriotic campaign -might suffer. Sheridan, Emmons and McLean county are yet to be heard from, but there is no question as to the nat- ure of the response which will come from these counties, nor that the Sixth judicial Wistrict will not be outdone by any other state in its display of true Americanism and loyalty to the flag. Your visit to the Twin Citles will be more enjoyable if you stop at this Famous Hosteiry. Excellent ine. Hotel Radisson, Minneapoli 409 Rooms—$2.75 at $1.50 to $2.50, at Coulee. A gimilar meeting was held in Rolette ‘county Friday. Fresh. strawberry shortcake. and tarts at the Sanitary Bakery today. idon’t make the fatal mistake of \garding it as.a trifling matter. Auv-| \thorities agree that Catarrh is an fection of the blood. Consequently, “sprays, salves tions can a! ford only temporary: relief, because they do not reach the source of the disease,—the blood. When you depend on these temporary remedies alone your case is likely to grow steadily Worse untll a becontea, chronic and) pos: at 1e. 13 But even if the infection does not go this far, the continuous dripping of mucous in the throat, the constant oration are e # Tonight O RPHEU THEATRE if You Suffer From Catarrh| spitting and hawking and is odor of the breath will’ not o cause misery to you, but will make your presence obnoxious to others. 8. S. 8, which has been the standard. blood medicine for fifty years, will relieve your catarrh, because it will purify your blood and relieve it of the ac- cumulated poisons. S, S. 8. contains no mineral or habit-forming drugs. 8, 8,8. is on sale ists and the advive:of our is at your disposal, ffee of chatge. Specifie Co, 302:Switt: Building, ist A ent Swift Atlanta, Ga, how Your Colors The Bismarck Committee on Dec- trying to earnestly peti- tion every business man and house- holder of this city to exhibit the } American Flag. If any one is unable to secure the National Colors, I wish ‘ to advise that I can furnish same any size desired from 24x30 in. up to 6x12 ft., as I have over 1,000 pieces on hand. Wm. Wasley — PHONE 375X ott 314 4TH ST. - ESSANAY’S MULTIPLE ACT FILM SENSATION _ “The Truant Soul” In 8 Acts, Featuring “The Biggest Man in Pictures” HENRY B. Star in “The Birth of a Nation,” “The A Screen’s G - AT 7:15 P.M. ae Judge Your Baking Powder By Its ActionsandResults— Don’t allow misleading statements or advertisements to influence you. Calumet Baking Powder is appreciated most by those who know it best. Before you form an opinion, give Calumet atrial, watching every process of the mak- ing and the baking from start to finish. Calumet will prove that it is pure, whole- some and economical—that light, fluffy biscuits, muffins, doughnuts, cakes, griddle cakes, etc., always result from its use. That’s Why We Say— Go to your dealer — ask for, buy and try a can of Calumet Baking Powder. If you are not perfectly satisfied after a thorough test, return what’s left and get your money back. Award Workdi’s Pure Food Chi 03 Grand Prize and Gold Medea Pas Paris Exposition, 1912. Calumet Baking Powder is guaranteed to give satisfaction in every particular, and tobe as represented in every respeo'. Conscience,” test MiB Style... Ts quiet elegance and “‘made-to- maasure’’ fit of The, Florsheim Shoe offers the well dressed man the utmost in style value. Flor- sheims are for particular men, men who appreciate the ease of a scientifically built shoe com- bined with the best ideas in de- | tigning. Fi unquestionable correctness in ; footwear select, your shoes.at-thiggry,.:)»: store—we feature The Pe Shoe in the season’s new shapes and leathers. ROSEN’ CLOTHING SHOP omorrow e ea, ALTHALL THEATRE Successes ISMARC

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