The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 1, 1921, Page 2

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—_—_— ’ ROLE OF HONOR Ca OER RT Oa ey The honor. roll for t.. Bismarck public schools for tue periou ending January 21, 1921,-has been announced. (it follows: <2 High School. (Kirst honor roll, average over 95 per cent + Alta. Thompson, Edith Rupp, Gor- don ‘Hulett, Rosemary Lomas,-. Helen Brooks, Second honor roll, average over 90 per cent Zella Harris, Catherine race Cook, Hazel Lennart, Faye La ‘Barron, Mabel Larson, Alta Jones, Edna Johnson, Eva Jacobson, LaVerne Holensworth, Genevie 2, lrene Loftus, Bessie Wilson, Brace Wallace, Elsie Thrams, Edna Hupp, Dalé Pres eley, Bessie, Patera, Olson, tsorma Long, Kosert Bir Will School. First 'B, ‘Mrs. Gansz, teacher. Kenneth ‘Beltman, Arthv fveyn bise, ginie Light, Richard wsterhous, Elizaveth Slattery, Dorothy Worner, Kirst A and second B, Miss IJvish, Decuy, Cram, d Falconer, & ther Gasche, Howard 1. McCurdy, ‘Melvin’ Munge son, iBillie Bergers: Dres- back, Gardon ‘Harris, Doris (Lundquist, ‘Sthel Sandin, Marion Schwanies, Mil- er, Jack Zuger. nd grade, Mrs, Parsons, teacher. “George Cram, del ilumphreys, Jumes Johnson ine Loeurke, Mar- len Loehrke, Carol 1.000 Jeanette Norum, Idelia Olson, Clement .Smith, Goldie Strutz, Margarat Will, Ida Zerr, Third grade, Miss Andrew. teacher. Wilbur Anderson, Grani Hartley, Niemie, Merle Von flagen. B, Miss Dia- halph Ol t A and fourth mond, teacher. Jack Haliday, (Margaret Holmboe, ‘Esther Swanson, ‘Mildred Hanwell, Grant Peterson, Buell Quain, Audrey Rohrer. Fourth teacher. Luverne Bush, Ruth Gordon, Max- ine Burnsides, Robert Ward, George Kisenberg, Kermit Glitschka, _ Fifth grade, Miss ‘Peitz, teacher. ‘Muriel Bensen, Gwendolyn Jensen, ‘Francis Nuessle, Rae Taylor, Bernice Vegperman, Bernice Joship, Vera Per- son, Marion Sandin, i Fifth A and sixth B, Miss Gilliland, acher. is eTohn Birdzell, Richard Wilson, Rosé Davis, Richard Fogarty. Sixth grade, Miss Larson, teacher. Velma ‘Neupen, Marlys Lahr, Paul Cook, Vernon King. William Moore School. grade, Miss Gustavson, grade, Mrs. Casselman, Sirst teacher, : Robert Hoskins, Frederic Muir, Dun- can. Wallace, Jack Conner, William Johnson, Patty Whittey. ‘Second grade, |.liss teacher. ‘ Mildred Deitz, Grant Hopperstad, Ernest Karlfos,, ‘Emma hing, Miles Parke, Aileen Cameron, ‘Helen Retz- laff, Idel Stegner. Third grade, Mrs. Thorberg, teacher. Dorothea Gutman, John Hamre, Margaret Mowry, Elsie May Nelson, Theo \ettel. \Fourth*grade, Mies Isabel Campbell, acher. \ ‘eRosella Rauch, Grace Livdahl, Jack Cowan, Jeanette Lavvan, Mdith Ram- stad, Maynard Peterson, Mary Erick- | gon, ‘Thomas Parke, Frank Ackerman. | Seventh B—Winnefred Hugelman, | Dorothy Johnson, Lucille Prater, Ma- rion Folsom. i Seventh A—Marion Askerman, Jack Dingle, Annie ‘Hogerott, Wilma Olson. | Eighth A—Ruth Bannerman, , Doro- thy Birdzell, Robert Nuessle. Eighth A—Marion Annunson, Eve- line George, Charles Hoffman, Eve-; lyn (Martin, Wachter School. Kindergarten, (Miss teacher, , Katherine Pherrill, Elizabeth Bal- zer, Rose Brown, ‘Frances Bertch, Christie Eiselie, August Halfensteen, James Longmuir, Leuise Melville, John Robjnson, Amelia Schmidt,’ Hen- \ WWYLA /. Register, Mullaney, % , performance, enlivened by imperson:- to tl d debilitated. Hope Springs a; in the once’discour- aged mind, Strength and courage reappear and the.man once more takes his place among those who enjoy vibrant health and energy. ‘The Great General Tonic tends to put the ‘‘human machine’’ in perfect working order by help- ing. to restore the bodily functions to their normal activity. It regulates the bowels, prevents ipa- tion, increasesthe appetite, = aves ip yet n Aliygienic Remedy Lykoismanufactured in the most modern lab- oratoriesunder themost ‘hygienic conditions. them.” ing water to the city is $17.90 per 1,000 gallons, according to the report of Robert T, Jacobgon, city engineer, -! submitted to the city commission. ter was used during the month 6f De- cember, which... at, $17.90 per 1,000 gal city.,in, cents per 1,000 gallons is com- puted, in the fololwing figures Filtration. . 1B 2 the change,” says Miss Marion Roth: child, associate editor o! Wear,” : nine population has. been struggling to get into smaller and smaller cloih- EXIT 36! ENTER 34! Grandmothers~{Are' Squeezing into. Misses’ “16” ; \ (N. E, A. Staft Specia.) New York, Feb, 1—Qxit the per- | fect 3s. Mnter tne perfect 34. Dame Fashion is yesponsjule. Dressmakers ‘have filled the local: papers’ want ad columns with calls for services of the 34 manikins. And still further they specify that| she must he within the precincts ot | the, misses’ “16."., This is because grandmothers want wear granddaughters’ clothes., Specifications for -the manikins call for: Symmetry, Slenderness, Small hips. Slender. biceps, Trim ankles. . “Woman herself is responsible for to. “Woma “For’ nearly. three years the femi ng. Naturally, they get what pleases WATER SOSTS HIGH, Fargo, Feb. '1.—The cost of supply- A total of 67,780,945 gallons of wa- Mong cost the city the sum of $11,- 4.79. . he cost of supplying water to the 4 i i . CHAR: NOT A'S BAD AS PAINTED—An- other American lifted ‘himself to a place among the of . music, nen Charles Marshall, tenor, wn the house’ his nee with the Co. in “Othello.” Not Ni-Curci won fame overnight has a new singer been so well re- ceived in this country. Water main: (Meters Accounting Interest Insurance Bonded debt Pumping AX PICTURE, EWING WILL PRIZE—President-elect Harding made a delightful new friend carly on his vacation in Florida: Master Ewing E.. Kaster, Jr., seen here in the, arms of his mother, at St. Augustine. -Harding said Ewing was his idea of a fine boy, and Ewing, by way of returning the compliment, indicated his approval of the next president by clutching Hard- ing’s forefinger in his tiny fist and hanging on for dear life., Mrs. Easter is keeping acopy of this picture for Ewing when he grows’ | up. ry Harte, Clementine Schantz, Eliza-| beth Senger, Helen Marie Webster,! Jack Webst adeline Costello. ‘First grade; Miss Bauer, teacher, Edith Bolton, Humphrey, Hill, Lucy | Brown, .Marie Costello, Charles Tolli- ver, Marion Pellen, Elizabeth Moll, Annette Gold. ’ Second grade, Miss Voves, tecaher. Nina Melville. Third grade, ‘Miss Voves, teacher. Orpha French, Marion Longmuir. Fourth grade, Dalleir, teacher, | Rosie Volk, Madge Webster: i Fifth and sixth grades, Miss Huber, | teather. | ‘Dorothy Bolton, Grace _We)ster,| Lou Hall, Olive Hall, Arline Schroeder. | a hn~ NN Ne ~ RR RAR AARR AR ARAL AAR Richholt. School. First grade, Migs Vetter, teacher. Wilhelm .Bredy, Alpha i) Weisenberger, Bernice, Wigton, Elea- nor Norling, Gladys Barth, Raymond: Evans, ~ Second A, Miss McGettigan, teacher. Depreciation Total .. is the }: ae Within many has delivered to France 000 sheep, 90,600 cattle. Do YouKnowa Baby Sick ‘With Constipation Tell the mother to give half a teaspoon: ‘ful: of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. N° thou ghia mother with children © in the house will risk being without a good, rejjable laxative.) It will save many a sérious illness, many. a doctor’s visit. When the baby cries and is fretful, when the boy has no appetite and won’t play, when the girl is listless and fever- ish, when there are complaints of headaches and colds, the mother can suspect constipation. Give Dr. Cald- well’s Syrup Pepsin in the small dose prescribed on the bottle; when you put the child to bed, and with morning the ailment will have disappeared, ~~ Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a popular compound of Kgyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics, It acts gently end, mildly, and children take it without objection. A sixty-cent bottle is enough*to last an average fam- ily many months. The ingredients are endorsed in the U. S. Pharmacopoeia, and last year American mothers bought well’s Syru world, and without it. the past six months Ger-| NewVictorRecords Leon iBenser, Roy Dingle, Evelyn’ 8 Ode, Eleanor Weinberg. Fifth grade, Mis Effie teacher. Gladys Hanson, Lief Nelson, Frank Blinderman, Elmer Benser, Perry Nelson, Frances. Sperry, -Flor- ence Taft. : Sixth grade, Miss Boyle, teacher. Raul, Mowry. , Weinberg, Lawrence Campbell, | GREENWICH VILLAGE REVUE PLEASES CROWDED HOUSE AT THE AUDITORIUM One who saw the Greenwich Follies of 1919 at the Auditorium las night might sound one ‘note of disap- | pointment in discussing the show. If cne wentthere expecting to see some- thing of the long-haired artist type or the bobbed-haircd Bohemian girl that | are drawn on the magazine covers a3 typical of that little section of Man- hattan composed of old-fashioned, musty houses, tearooms and studios just off the main artery of trade oi/ a busy city and called Green lage, one assuredly was disapp | For conventionless Greenwich Vil-: lage contributed oniy the name to the type of “remusical revue” that jump- ed into the limited arena of top-notch musical revues in America with such a splash that it was heard ‘all the way up to the Broadway white lights There is about ‘the, revue all. tha’ which makes it casy to undersian why the Greenwich Village ‘ollie fame spread far beyond New, York's | Latin quarter in a very short time. | There is the note of the artist in the; gorgeous gowns, the stage effect, the tions and vaudeville acts of high oz; der... It is-a typical Broadway pro- duction. y James Watts is the leading light of the Follies, but Ted Lewis, of talkits machine fame, welcomed the majov applause of the evening here. Watts studied for grand opera, but drifted into impersonating, at which he is av artist. He was quoted as saying while in Minneapoli ing frankly that an actor had to mix some vulgarity into the pesformance. to “get the hand.” Perhaps he, was apologizing, when he remarked at the begining that “you've got to go slow in Bismarck.” It is to be hoped not, for it is difti- cult to feel-that the side-splitting im- personations he “gave ‘last night should require anything unsavory to bring the applause over the foot: lights. Little was seen. of Verna Gordon, whose dancing has carried her nacne among the stars of the cast, but the em 4 2. | i SUPERSTITIOUS? ! ITS CONSIDERED UNLUCICY, FoR Pare ‘5c TO MEET a CROSS EVED MAN UNEXPECTEOLY ; Herman, i disorders common to women |.all ages of life. Sold by druggists little she gave was recelved with an appreciation that recognized real mer- | it. Sylvia Jason, petite little miss sang “I'm Such a Little Queen” and) the audience quite agreed with her.! rene Olsen's songs added . to show, which has such song hits as “TI Want a Daddy.” “My Little Javanese,” land “The Message of the Cameo,” to- gether with Ted Lewis’ songs. Al “The Blacix Laugh,” and! el brothers furnished vaudeville divertisement of high order. ide from dedging some curtains which fell at the wrong time and some} 8 ving scenery the company of 40 seemed to enjoy playing before the! wded house that was at thg aud- itorium. The show came to Bismarck | direct from the Twin Cities and is! oing through to the coast. | Bismarck has two other shows billed for the near future, “Bird of Paradise,” on Feb. 10 and “Nighty| Night” on Reb. 14. The average annual tax per capita in France is now. 420 francs. The Needless Misery. That Women Bear HEN the house- hold cares and the, worries of: everyday life have drag- } there ‘is nothing, in life but @ headache, back- §f ache and worry, turn to the right prescrip tion, one gotten up by Doctor Pierce over fifty years ago. Dr. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y., long -since found out what. is naturally best for wom- en’s diseases, He learned it all thru. treat- ing thousands cf cases. The result of his = studies was a medicine called’ Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. This medicine is made of vege- table growths that nature surely : intented for backache, headache, kening pains, and for many in we: t and liquid form. Send 10¢. for trial age. the! i new and delightful numbers.in this list of Victor music. for February Though Heifetz and McCormack are abroad, both arc heard in And here is Kreisler playing the favorite ‘‘Love Nest,’ investing it with a new and exquisite charm. Added to this month’s program are the first records by Sothern and Marlowe whose dramatic achievements parallel the musical triumphs of the great singers and instrumentalists who. ‘rake Victor Records. A Dream The Fountain (Jeux d’Eau) Passepied (From “Le Roi s’amuse”) Piano Violin Si j'étais Jardinier (Were I Gard’ner) Come Ye Sicilienne and Rigaudon Love Nest Disconsolate Violin Violin *Tis an Irish Girl I Love and She’s Just Like You Romeo and Juli Oh Gee? r Broadway Rose, Mother's Lullaby Uncle Josh in a Cafeteria Uncle Josh and-the Honey Bees ‘You Ought to See My Gee G: ta beMide te, My Home Tow: Margie—Medley Fox Trot Palesteena—Fox Trot Just Snap Your Fingers at Care—Dar! ‘There's a Vacant Chair at Home Sweet Home Pm a Lonesome Little Raindrop For Every Boy Who's onthe Level Victor Roberts and Harmonizers Quartet Henry Burr and Peerless Quartet Say Ge @ One Horse Town (March Sone) Geraldine Farrar John McCormack iet—Balcony Scene—Part 1 E.H.Sothern and Julia Romeo and Juliet—Balcony Scene—Part II E. H. Sothern and Julia Marlowe Eighth Symphony in F Major—AllegrettoScherzando Philadelphia Orchestra Spinning Song (Mendelssohn's "Songs Without Words”) Piai O Primavera (Spring Time) Deep in Your Eyes Once Upon a Time ‘When You're Gone I Won’t Forget no Sergei Rachmaninoff . Lucy Isabelle Marsh Lambert Murphy 1 Look over this ist and you will appreciate the wealth of new music and entertainment presented. would like to hear and have any Victor dealer play them Mark the numbers you for you. Number, Six: 10 § 12, 10 10 Enrico Caruso Alfred Cortot Mischa Elman el Garrison Jaicha Heifetz Fritz Kreisler ‘lowe BAAUIITARAI AWS Renato Zanelli aso Peerless Quartet) |... Charles Henent as70s Victor Rob: ictor Ro! mae 3709 Sterling Trio (28710 Cal Stewart} Cal Stewart | 18711 Billy Mazra: pital 51374 Victor Roberts and Harmonizers Quartet Twelfth Street Rag—Fox Trot Dotty Dimples—Onc Step . | Tip Top—Medley. Fox Trot Uf a Wish Could Make It So—Medley Fox Trot If You Could Care—Medley Waltz Happy—One Step My Isle of Golden Dreams—Waltz Let the Rest of the World GoBy—Waltz Frank Ferera—Anthony Franchini Original Dixieland Jazz Band) Original Dixieland Jazz Band {18717 ling—Medley Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Caresses—I’m a Lonesome Little Raindrop—Medley Fox Trot Six Brown Brothers) , Six Brown Brothers) Joseph C. Smith’s punting a4 Joseph C. Smith's Orchestra [15715 Blue and White Marimba Band All Star Trio) __ All Star Tae} 38719 18714 hers 35704 Paul. Whiteman and His Orchestra, Any Victor dealer will gladly-give you an illustra- ted booklet describing these new Victor Records and play: any music you wish to hear. New Victor Rec- ords.on sale at all dealers on the 1st of each month. ‘Victrolas in great variety from $25 to $1500. ictrola Victor REG. U-S.1PAT. OFF Talking Machine e. Camden, New Jerscy ; Ya TRY IT FREE Send me yeu name and ad- dress and will send-you.a free trial bottle of my Syritp Pepsin. Address me Dr. W. B. Cald- weil, 5£3 Washington Street, Manticello, Illinois, Everye body now and then necds a luxarive, and itis welltg know the best. Write me today, This trademark and the trademarked word ‘‘ Victrola’ identify all our products, Look under the lid! Look on th VICTOR TALKING MACHINE COQ, Camden, N. Ji Co. N e label? r Fortunes are being made from @ andj machine. for stampjng .nails out-of Belgium a total of 30,000 horses, 125,-| the barbed wire left on the battle« | elas of Belgium and France. Sp: sputhock sade baen V5 SS eee ee ae

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