The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 15, 1919, Page 2

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PAGE 2 UNITED: COMMERCIAL TRAVELERS’ SNOWBALL PARTY NEXT SATURDAY The annual snowball party of the United Commercial Travelers has been set for next Saturday evening, March 22, at the Elks’ temple on Main street. Announcement to. this effect was made today, by J. L. Bankston, chair- man of -the dance ‘committee of Bis- marck council, and it will be the sig- nal for‘a delving in trunks and moth- bags’ for last ;summer’s flannels and fluffy white things, The U. ‘0. T. snowball party of the prettiest and most en. me sl formal-costunt e for the occasion, as an- nounced by Mr. Bankston, will be white duck trousers and soft white shirts for the men and phain white dresses for the ladies. ‘ There Will.be a substantial fine for non-regulatio?® attire, and the com- mittee will be very rig » O’Connors oitehest: musoc, and refizeshm Invitations are; extended all U, members and their friends. | format on the social calendar. The TANCRED COMMANDERY TO STAND ANNUAL INSPECTION TONIGHT Tancred Commander of Templar, will under spection at its asylum in the Masonic temple this evening. Eminent Sir Otto Bauer, inspector gen will come over from Mandan on } and the inspection will begin at 7:30 sharp, All knights of Tancr CITY NEWS New League Banks. Advice reach fect that a new “league” bank organized at Steele, county Kidder. Colors to North Dakota. The coiors of the 42nd fi a Camp Custer contingent compos North Dakotans, o in a letter from the imi commanding the central di Miss Palmer Home. Miss Bertha Palmer, school’ admin- istration specialist on the staff of the state superintendent of public tion, returned today from S: and Bottineau counties, where conducted a number of school better- ment rallies, kas pee Woods Leave for Home. Lieut; Governor and Mrs. Howard R. Wood, who had been hei ce the close of the sesison, left last even- ing for Fargo, whence they will pro- ceed today to their farm at Deering. Mr. and Mrs. Wood were universally popular with Bismarck folk, and a number of delightful social functions were given in honor of Mrs. Wood. For Red Cross Magazine. Capt. L. E. Fiero of St. Paul the city yesterday soliciting th port of the local chapter for a cam- paign for added subscriptions to_ thé ‘ed commiandery i | Red Cross m: apitol to the ef-/ f/ of Detroit, of Marth 2: if Teraplars art Wd to re. ample in uniform before tion will consume the d the usual banquet with. ‘Templar pis al ning, 2 will be, dispensi ‘red: Commandery, tion in North Dakot strendously this week and to pass its usual good inspects which the or; its pr 10, s te make ution © publicity a Mr. a born Monday, 3 Singing School. The Comnunity Che cided to hold its old f school at the Auditorium the 2 Tub his de- uging ening Visits Daughter. Mrs. Elen Dakin has hore at Algomah, V it with her -daughte n, of the commi culture -office, urned to Home From Springs. S. H. Bergeson, the clothier, is home from the Hot: Springs, Ark., ‘where he spent several weeks taking the baths. Bergeson is greatly improved in health and is glad to get back to business again. Yeomen to Meet. The local homestead of the Brother- hood of American Yeomen will meet at the Knights of Pythias hall at 8 ‘clock Monday evening, when there will be a large class of candidates for initiation. Daughters’ of Isabiella. The local chapter of the Daughters. ja will receive holy communion body at St. Mary’s church Sunday, ; ' March instead of tomorrow, as nag “BEST ORCH! 6, EXACTLY AS ‘PRESENTED A’ (MONDAY MAT Np ‘y SHUBERT THEATRE IN ' MINNEAPOLIS, WITH ALL THF GREAT STAGE EFFECTS. lace hy a Grand/Symphony FOR TWO AND: A HALF HOURS A THOUSAND-SUCH STARTLING SIGHTS ARE DISCLOSED! TO YOUR *ASTOUNDED GAZE WHILE THE SWEETEST LOVE STORY {IMAGINABLE IS BEING TOLD TO THE‘ACCOMPANIMENT OF A SINGULARLY APPROPRIATE MUSICAL SCORE WHICH IS INTERPRETED BY. ONE: OF TRAS EVER BROUGHT TO BISMARCK. i-} ica last month, 4 DAYS Starting QW, we Evenings 8:30—55c, 85c, $1.10. © Seateom Sale Tharsday Mi ee ‘View Event Calmly Time B:/ing; Knowledge That:by. Use of Kemtrating’ Remedy wag le Avoided. Thousands of women have found by the ‘application of Mother's Friend, th trating external remc@y, prepa: for expectant mothers, that pain.and s ing at the crisis is avoided and that in tion the months preceding the crisis are tree from nervousness, nausea, .stretching* and bearing-down pains and general discomfort. Mother's Friend makes it possible for the expectant mother to herself, actually ald nature in tho glorious work to be performed, and no wo hould neglect to”give.na- t It will mean infinitely hours at the crisis will by ericd is one of calm repose and ul nights, . y the use of Mother's Friendythe skin ft and natural, and. experienced hat it is mueh better to keep your health and good looks during the pe- dof expectancy than to tr: regal Aem after rae ie " ap ‘rite the Bradfield Regulator Company, Dept, G, Lamar Building. Atlanta. Georgio: for interesting: Motherhood Book, and obtain a bottle of ‘Mother's Friend and be- gin ite uso at once, | —_———— a originally. planned. This announce- ment was made today, and all members of the chapter are requested to take notice, z Edgar Throdah| ‘Home, gar Throdahl is here for a brief |. Throdahl, school boy; eo rom his classes into the inarines, with which he went through two of the most -exciting drives in. which these fighting sons-of-guns par- ticipated over there. The Bismarck boy got to 'rance in July, just in time for the real fun. He returned to Amer- This evening he will leave for Minneapolis for a visit with his mother and other members of the family. MINNEAPOLIS MARKETS, Flour unchanged, shipment 51,665 barrels. Barley 77 to 88. Rye No. 2.91.46 1-4 Bran 38. Wheat, 196 cars compared with 102 cars a year ago. Corn $1.37 to 1.38. Oats 58 5-8 to 59 3-8. Flax $3.68 to 3.69 1-2. FOR RENT—Two pleasant rooms suitable for light housekeeping. 320 -4th street. 3191 wk Dance at K..C. Hall Saturday night. O’connor’s Orchestra. to 1.46 3-4. — > a Orchestra THE | \ BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE GOVERNOR ON. LAST LAP OF Midnight ‘in Order to Be- come Effective * " eh Te ae / Governor Frazi was putting in a busy afternoon with’ the burget’ bill when his office was conferred with at press time. ‘The omnibus apropriation bill this r carries about $4,100,000, or the lent of all general appropria- two years ago, when the budget itself was some $600,000 smaller than it is ‘this year, Whether the governor will veto any important items could not» be learned this afternoon... Two years ago he Was not at all‘sparing with his blue, penell, fi = > The governor also has for pleasant coinpanions this aftérnoon the Brinton newspaper graft billS~awhich he must either approve or disown. Mr. Frazier! does not appear to relish doing either.. At press time he had .done-neither. FRAZIER NAMES NEW SECRETARY That Covernor Frazier is to be chairman. of the industrial commission in fact wes proven Thursday evenirg when he gave to, the league -press ne- tice of the appointment of-Oliver S, Morris of St. Paul,.editor of the Na- tional Nonpartisan Leader, as secre- tary of the commission, at a salary of $3,600, Commissioner John Hagan tempo- rary secretary of the commission, had sdvised press representatives only 2 few hours befor@ that n6 secretary had been named, and that it probably would be several days before anything defin- ite coult be given out. © It has devet- oped since that it had ‘been agreed by the commission that tlie job be tender- ed the ‘Townley newspaper man at St. Taul at a salary which ws $1,400 iss than that which Morris had. becn originally led to expect. See Violet Mersereau in “The Nature Girl”. at the Orpheum Theatre tonight. ‘ SHIRTS—Made to measure. (THE GREAT EFFECT WAR HAS HAD ON MEN’S STYLES and .Waists - of Gar- ments A Common point of. discussion among’ soldiers who are returning from the Old World is the element of style which played such an important part in the clothes’ worn by the officers of Euro- pean armies. . Upon the arrival of our men’ in France there was a noticeable rise in demand for Tunies having more swank and better fitting: pow The privates no less than the officers were quick to notice that in the European armies mot regagd was given to the set-uprof the uniform. ‘This condition has ‘without. doubt made a marked impression. on all men] who hay@-returned and the influence is felt among all men of all classes who have an appreciation for style and its needfulpess.: In the larger cities the custom tailors have, adopted stright up shoulders and flat back, high waist- lines and deep vents: ‘The origin of all these features can be directly traced to military uniforms. ‘The ten- COWAN’S _ CANDY SPECIAL —for+- Zi Saturday & Sunday WE WILL SELL LOWNEY’S. “ MIXED CHOCOLATES Regular price 80c_ per pound f fOF ie caa's x, 60¢ COWAN’S Drug Store Klein, Tailor and Cleaner. N ¥Dem:) reminds us The Atlanta Consti League <\. Schools: End of the C The Futureof ‘Republican Senators had tions in the form now proposed should not pb that the “leading Repub tution (Dem.). ‘Deeds: and Misdeeds of Congress Europe Hoping We Will Join the ee Gur Enemies.Can Pay the War Living and Dead’ Science in the The World’s Weights and Measures Rest as a Business: Proposition ensor’s Reign of Terror Mary Garden A Catholic Predicament in Alsace-Lorraine Striking Illustrations, Inc juding Maps and Cartoons “The Digest” In ‘High-Class Hotels Managers.and owners of high-class hotels through- out the country are making THE LITERARY . DIGEST a necessary part’ of the equipment of. their reading rooms. The average family of guests in a big hotel is drawn from every section of the ~ country and in selecting the “Digest” as the‘favor- . ite magazine shrewd judgment THE LITERARY DIGEST, “all the magazines in one,” is a real economy and being neither local nor ‘March 15th Number on Sale Today—All News-dealers—-10 Cents is-exercised because dency war training has had to straight- | ~ ~The Kind of Peace League _ While. the-New York Sun (Ind.) says that “President Wilson’s plan is dead,” after thirty-seven signed a round robin declaring that the Constitution. of the League of Na- e accepted by the United States, the Baltimore Sun (Ind. lican critics of the proposed constitution have not put them- elves on-record as opposed to any League of Nations but merely to the’ particular plan.now before the ace Conference. And Senator Capper, (Rep.) of Kansas thinks that “the cuffing and buffeting Presi; dent. Wilson’s League of: Nations plan is getting, is a good thing for the President and for the country,” and in the end “the League of Nations is-coming as certainly as daylight follows darkness,” Read THE LITERARY DIGEST this week for a comprehensive survey of editorial opinion throughout the United States as to the Republican opposition to the League in its present form and the suggestions made for its revision. S Other articles of very great interest are: Must’ Lady Nicotin follow ‘A Press Summary of the Organized Efforts Being: Made to Prohibit or Limit: the Use of Tobacco. \ j, those authoritative view-points that he requires. en up a man’s figure, increase-the de- velopment, has also induced men's fashion designers to produce a new set of indoels to fit this new figure. ‘That the men of all ranks in the army felt ; there should be jnore style in the uni- Noticeable Change in. Shoulders |, form is evidencéd by the commandeer- ing-of the designing rooms of a well known Rochester maker of ready-to- AST ot "SATURDAY, MARCH'15, 1919 ~ ed so suddenly the next: few months would have found a very definite im- provement in ‘the fit of all uniforms for the reason that the garments cut along mose scientific lines with greater attention glyen to style have given more soldierly character which had the tendency to'improve the posture of the saldier and at the sume-time lift pua-on clothes. Hadthe war not end- | up his morale. > ‘ SSS SINISE SEE AED The Kini You Have Always Bought, and which has been “in use, for over thirty years, has borne the signature: of: e and has been m: le under his pere Ly On Sonal supervise) nc its infancy. lo * “Allow no one to feceive-you: in the. All ‘Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just.as-good”’ are but Experiments that trifle witir and endanger she health’ of Infants and Children—Experience. against Experiment. s y 7 ~™ What is CASTORIA . Castoria is.a harmless substitute-for. Castor Oil,. Paregoric, Drops and. Soothing Syrups. It is* pleasant. It: contains: neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. ‘Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it-hes been in constant. use for the relief of Constipativa} Flatulency,_ Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and*Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALways Bears the Signature of ~ Tn Use For Over 30 Years ~ The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. New voRK CITY, according-¢o John Barleycorn? E ! The Church in the Present Discord Best of the Current Poetry News. of Banking and Finance - Doubts About Our “Labor Crisis” - England’s Housing Plans The Bolshevik Fiasco in Argentine ~ European Hunger and Prejudice A: New Electric-Heating Record German. Academic Prestige Lost England’s ‘Strange Undergraduates’ Welcoming Home.Our Soldiers The-Y. M. €..A.’s Mistake Nations in Rebirth—“Greece” Personal Glimpses of Men and Events . \ ~ sectional in its appeal, “fills the bill.” Every. hotel guest who reads it, no matter whence he came, is sure to find it-suited to his needs. It gives the casual gearcher for information just that crisp, newsy, condensed summary of national and world events of the moment that he‘needs. At the same time it gives the careful student of events just As it i8 neither biased nor parochial it suits every- body and pleases everybody. ar

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