The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 12, 1921, Page 2

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THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE: |MANDAN NEWS JUDGES DIVIDE WORK OF COURT IN 6 DISTRICT Chamber Sessions Will Be Held at Dickinson, Hettinger and Mandan | Judge H, L. Berry today made pub-! lic the schedule of work on which the} judges of the Sixth Jndicial District | . have agreed. ‘The announcement was as follows: | Judge Frank “T. ‘Lembke’ will hold the following jury terms: Sioux county on the 4th Tuesday | in May and the Ist Tuesday in No- vember. Grant county on the second Tues- day in June; Hettinger county on the 3rd Tuesday in October; and Bowman county on the 2nd Tuesday in Novem- ber. i Judge Pugh to Sit | Judge Thos. H. Pugh will hold thej following jury terms: Billings county on the 3rd Tuesday in May; Dunn ty an the 4th/ Tuesday in May the 4th Tuesday | in September; Mercer county on the! Ist Tuesda: June: Stark county on; the 3rd Tuesday in June; Oliver county on the 2nd Tuesday in June: and Charles Edquist have met. with | Bowman county on the first Tuesday in July after the Fourth of July; Mor i understood that in Dunn county and Sieux county one ot the terms in e: of said counties will probably be a court term. For the purpose of chamber work it has been arranged that Judge Lembke will attend to the chamber work for the counties of Sioux, Ad- ope, Bowman and Hettinger hambers at Hettinger. That Judge ‘Pugh will attend to the amber work for the counties’ of Stark, Billings, Golden Valley and Dunn at his chambers at Dickinson. That Judge Berry will attend to the chamber work for the counties ‘of Morton, Oliver, Mercer and Grant at his chambers at Mandan. Attorneys, however, may request that any of the judges hear any court matter if it will be more convenient for the attorn: Billings county, HIGH SCHOOL BAND GETS AID . * FROM CITIZENS Mandan Residents Get Behind Unusual Musical Aggregation and Pledge Support City Commissioners N. E. Luther plendid response in the campaign to ‘aise funds for the high school band, 2 iy, Mor) 5 ton county on the Ist Tuesday in No-| which has brought much fame to Man- vember. ~ Judge H. L. Berry will hold the fol- lowing jury terms: | Slope county on the Ist Tuesday in June; Golden Valley county on the 2nd Tuesday in June; Oliver county on the 2nd Tuesday in October; Mer- cer county on the 3rd Tuesday in October; Grant county on the 4th Tuesday in October; and Stark coun- ty on the 3rd. Tuesday in November, Subject to Changes. The above a gement will be sub-) ject to changes, however, occasioned by sickness or other causes; it being RED PIMPLES dan, The band meets tonight for a re-; hearsal and at that time a reorganiza-| Delys Bodycombe, an employe of the tion will be made upon a municipal! Standard Chemical Co., at Pittsburg, basis. BISHOP BURNS SPEAKER TODAY Give Address at Palace Theater at 2:00 Bishop Charles Wesley Burns of Helena, Mont,, arrived on No. 3 this! morning and was the guest of the con-' ,, gregation af the Methodist church un-| « til noon when he was the guest of honor at a luncheon given by the bus- iness men of the city. ; Following the luncheon, he inspect- | The above picture gives you an idea | of the amount of refined radium in the world. The tube is held by Miss | Below is Madame Curie, the discover- ‘er of radium. | nnnnbnnnrnnnn nnn nen i ; 7 jauspices of the Missouri Slope Den- | tal Association. Dr, C. C. Hibbs explained the pur- Famous Methodist ‘Preacher’ to) jose ‘of the showing of the films and istated that each child in Burleigh, Morton and McLean counties will re- ‘ceive one of the cards flashed on th2 jscreen and which urged thorough j brushing of the teeth and especially je gums. | “If this fs done,” said Dr. Hibbs. decay is not likely # take place.” | The films were all interesting ones, |sending their Igsson of cleanliness home in a manner which will not be easily forgotten. . One of the reels tells the story of 2 ‘ONLY A LITTLE, BUT—O, MY! {500,000 an, ounce—$120,000 a gram, It usually is sold in lnts af a milligrain, | or one-thousandth part. of a But a. the \Standatd Chem Co., s only a nominal profit. For sram of radium that is refined, | 500 tons of ore and 1000 tons of coal, | chemicals and water are consumed, Mining and milling forees also must) be maintained and high-salaried lab-| oratory experts paid. * Discoverer Coming. e Radium discovered in 1898 by Madame © Jorn in’ Poland, viLs e and former pupil of ye v, Pierre Cu ‘inher Th two worked for four years after Madame Curie discovered the, rays in common pitchblende before + they could disinterrate the ore and isolate the radiu rie demonstrated ‘her find to cand was awarded the Nobel fOr physics and the Davy medal S 1903. one desire in life is : to possess a gram of the radium she iscovered-—not for its value, but for — further experiments, particularly looking toward the cure of cancer. Her wish is to be gratified by Amer- icans, who are raising a fund for the purpo: Soon she will come to this _ country and be presented with tie Refining Started. Refining of radinm was started on; a large scale in 1908. The supply oi; ; pithblende ore was mined almost ex-! | clusively in Austria and when this {soon diminished, radium production} ;came to a. standstill. i |, About this time Miss Susan A. Flan-| nery, member of one of Pittsburg’s! | best known families and a leader in|- | Society, was stricken with what doc-| | tors pronounced a “fast cancer.” Doc-! tors said she must have an operation; i to save her life. Sha was reluctani. One ather recourse, was known, in hazy way, to science, That was ra- dium. | But before a quantity of the pre- | clous metal could be obtained Miss | Flannery was dead. . | JGrief-stricken, her brother, Joseph | M, Flannery, one of Pittsburg’s mil- '|. lionaires, and noted for having intro- YOU MUST G0 duced vanadium @lloy into the mak- ’ | ing of steel, went to Europe to inves- T0 PITTSBURG | tigate the infant industry of radium i manufacture. He vowed that, if at all possible, radium should be produced ! in this country to alleviate other can- | cer sufferers. He learned that radinm could bej extracted from carnolite, a low grade; ‘ “ore mined in southwestern Colorado, | Plant Tucked Away Amid Steel’ but only at great expense. Undaunt:! A | ed, the steel nate hurried back t Mills Produces Most of he steel magnate hurrie aC 0 Supply the purchase of the Colorado fields. | « He sold his vanadium interests and! rly| * th’ United States and negotiated for |p Elderly People. Need This In Medicine Chest | To relieve chronic constipation, always. keep a bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s - Syrup Pepsin hanidy. ° EARLY all people as they advanee in.age suffer from chronic constipa- |, tion, Many, however, are indifferent to | the laxative they use, on the theory that | “they are all alike.” That is a great mistake. | Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, for ‘ex- | ample, is a mild, gentle liquid laxative, and it does not lose its effect with re- peated use. It so trains the bowel muscles that in time medicines of all Kinds can be dispensed with. A sixty-cent bottle of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin will last any months, The Prescription was written thirt ears ago by Dr. W. B. Caldwell, a well- known family doctor, who is himself now in his 82nd year and can ap- preciate what chronic constipation must mean to elderly people; how it brings on headaches, ¢dlds, loss of ap- petite and sleep, heaviness and a general dull feeling. Every home that has an elderly man or woman should be provided with a well, 513 Washingtop Strect, bottle of ‘Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Monticello, Illinois. Every- Eight million bottles were bought at , body now and then needs a drug stores last year. It is a truly laxative, and itis welltoknow wonderful constipation remedy. the best. Write me today. TRY IT FREE Send me your name and ad- dress and Iwill send youa free trial bottle of my Syrup Pepsin. Address me Dr. W. B. Cald. ‘ald- This is Cleau up-and Paint up’ _ Week VALVE_IN HEAD. “ap vif / MOTOR CA ed the Deaconess hospital and con- Also Blackheads. Itching and Burning Terrible.Cuticura Heals, “T had pimples and blackheads over my face which caused disfigure- ment. The pimples were large, red, and hard, and were scattered all over my face. The itching and burning were terrible and I scratched and irri- tated the pimples,and Icouldnotsleep. “The trouble lasted two weeks be- fore I used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment. I found relief and in five weeks I was healed, when I had used ; three cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura’ Ointment.” (Signed) Miss Margaret E. Miketich, 38 Sixth St., Calumet, Mich. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal- cum are all you need for all toilet uses. Bathe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. ttaterin Dope Menten 48-Mla" “Sel ovens: ‘Soap 28e. Ointment 2 and 60, Talcum 25¢, WEF Cuticura Soap shaves without mug. UONUOUUOUUDUAOUUSCHUTEUEAUUUOUOOOUNCUOOUOAUOOONON YES! This is Clean Up and Paint Up Week. You are going to have that Clean Up feeding tor Your Home, Then after this is done you per- haps will have a MUSICAL FEELING And would you like to have a Piano or Phonograph to. make the: home mgre cheerful. You would have bought a Piano or Phonograph long ago, but always said, we cannot afford one. . With the payment plan we have in selling the Baldwin Pianos, and Wid- dicomb Phonographs, you can afford to own one, and best of all enjoy its music while paying for it. Just call gt our Music Store and look over our Baldwin Piano line and the Widdicomb .Phonograph line and see how well made they are. We will be pleased to explain these wonderful instruments: — Baldwin, Ellington, Hamilton, Howard Pianos, and the Manualo, “The Player Piano” that is all but human. Widdicomb Phono- graphs. MAYNARD MUSICAL MERCHANDISE 210 Main Street Phone 978 TRANSFER LINE 521 Broadway \,- Phone 18 Light and ‘" Heavy Hauling SAND and GRAVEL sidered plans in connection with de-| velopment of that institution. lic meeting at the Palace theater. O. E., installed officers last night..M. J.! P* Tobin is the new exalted ruler cific freight house force is'in Fargo, attending a meeting of railway station} | family which had no acquaintanceship j with a tooth brush, that went to the 'fair and was converted by Roco, the | Red Cross health clown, Another oue {told of a rookie whose regular brush- (ing of the teeth was the subject of de- sion by his buddies until he had roven his prowess ‘n a fight, which nyerted the whole company to the —_— ‘habit. This reel showed in a graphic Wilkinson In Fargo. manner the harmful results of hot tak- T, E, Wilkinson of the Northern Pa-! ing care of the teeth. This afternoon he addressed a pub- Elks Install Officers. The Mandan Lodge No. 1255, B. P. The glistening powder on hat and | gown ornaments is made from the agents, : ‘ purified refuse of old clam and. mus- Devine Has Recovered, sel shells, Supt. J. M. Devine of the State! Training School, has completely re- covered from his severe attack of pneumonia, . OO — By Newspaper Enterprise. PITTSBURG, April 12.-— Tucked away amid the mammoth steel mills here, as little known to Pittsburgers as it is to, the 1 Ho, 18 laboratory ‘that turns ‘dut seven: twelfths of the world’s supply of radium. ee The laboratory has been’operating since '1912. “‘Durine 's it has produced just’ 88.6 grams 6f radium. And a gram is not quite a thimbleful. But these. 88.6 grams .of the pre- i al represent a market value | WI Hold Meeting. | A regular meeting of the Daughters | of Isabella will be held tonight: at St., Joseph’s auditorium. A social hour) will follow the business meeting. i Miss Rosen Home. Miss Bernice Rosen, daughter of Mr.| and Mrs, M. Rosen, is home from Min-; neapolis, where she has been’ maki her home with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs, M. I. Rigler. | =, > (GED ))))> Arrive From Seattle. Mr. and Mrs, M. C. Smith have ar-! rived from Seattle to make their home in Mandan. Mr, Smith, an experiénced , tire man, has taken a position witu the Kinzel Service Shop. ay SOEs =F = Ee PSS eS Mrs. Erickson Improved, Mrs. Ericson, who has been suffer- | ing from pneumonia, is much improv- | ed. Her son, Melvin Erickson, has/ returned to Aberdeen, S. D. Her! daughter, Mrs. Albert Bloom, has re-; turned to Miles City, and her other! married daughter left with her son for her’ home in Aberdeen, KNIGHTS WILL MEET MAY 18 Grand Conclave of Templars An-; nounced For Dickinsin in | Early Summer ZF = SoS rere > yD | Little Dickinson, N. D., April 12—May 13 Children’ _ Brighten Homes VERY young couple starting out in life has visions of joyful hours spent before the fireside with healthy, happy children; but, alas, how often young women who: long for. ,000. ° Radium ‘sells at $3,- withdrew from other activities to de-| | vote his entire time to radium. | | In the face of ridicule from his bus- | iness associates he organized the! Standard Chemical Co., and began the! mining of carnolite. ! Medical men buy most of thé radi-' um, Some is used in manufacturing} | tuniinous articles. | +LAW FIRM DISSOLVES i » DICKINSON, N. D., Apnik 1: al law partnership of Starke and Murtha | | has been dissolved. Mr. Murtha Will} retain; the present suite of rooms, | while Rep. Starke will open: an office| across the.street. | ry Ga SE Ey Cesar CO Eee CES y< and 19 are the dates set for the 1921; grand conclave of the Grand Com-; mandery, Knights Templar, which wili ' be held in Dickinson according to wo! received this week from W. L. Stoc well of Fargo, grand recorder of the order, who stated that the dates had been decided upon at a recent. meei- ing of the grand council. Knight | Templars from every commandery in the state are expected to make the Pilgrimage to Dickinson for the con- clave and local Knights are busy with plans for their entertainment. The visitors are expected to arrive! in the city in special Pullmans attac! ed té train No, 3 on Tuesday morning | of May 17. Upon. their arrival the visiting Knights will be the guests of W. L. Richards, high eminent com- mander of the grand commandery, for the day. Among his plans for enter- tainment of the delegates, many >t whom wil be accompanied by their la- dies. .Mr. Richards has arranged_a trip through the Bad Lands. { The conclave will convene Wednes-; day morning and will remain in ses- sion until the evening of the follow- ing day, ee children are denied that happiness because of some functional derangement which may be corrected by proper- treatment. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is just the medicine Emblem of. Satisfaction Py, Everybody is Getting the Clean Up Feeling RIGHT NOW-- - is the time to repair.your car and get it in shape for the good old summer time. WE HAVE A complete line of Buick Car parts and we can make immediate delivery. Out of town vorders filled and shipped same day order is received. ~ Bismarck Tire and Auto Co. Distributers ~~ 211 Broadway Bismarck, N. D. WHEN BETTER for these conditions, as the following letters show: } Mcmoneld, Ohio.—“Estiffered from a displacement, a weakness, and a great deal of pain. The doctor said nothing would help me but an operation. He said I could never have any children because I was too weak, “Thad often heard of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, so [tried it and it helped me. NowI am inthe best of health, do all of my own work, and have a lovely boy six months old. recommend your medicine to my friends and you have my permission to use this letter.”— Mrs.. J. C. Eacrxson, 426 Garfield Ave., McDonald, Ohio. ‘ ‘esa, Colorado.“ Ever since I was a young girl I suffered from a great ‘deal of pain every month. I tried different medicines; but only got relief for a short time. Thad been married seven years, and wanted a child, but -was not well enough. My mother advised me to try Lydia EK. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound as it had helped her, and Tam happy to say it restored my hgalth, my pains disappeared, and [ have a fine little girl. I advise all women who suffer as I did to‘try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound.” — Mrs. F. C. Wiurr, Box 94, Mesa, Colorado. Many such letters prove the reliability of BUICK WILL Safety and AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUILD » THEM Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE ARE BUILDING, OUR BUSINESS With ow new McClintock Burglar Alarm System’ whi House Moving Piano and Furniture Moving Excavating and. Grading COAL and WOOD All Work Guaranteed GOOD AUDIENCE { 1 i Many to Auditorium | ‘A good audience attended the show ing last night at the Auditori | movie films, “Come Clean, SEES PICTURES Dental Association Film Attract not the} ander the!’ Ly Fe B22 = dia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS. we receiitly installed, our bank is a safe place to keep yous Liberty Borus and other valuables as well as to do your e eo2eral banking business. . First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. . GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW : .* Safety First j ss A RECS ri, REC ERSTE BORE EAE ER AE DOA DE TEEN CBSE /

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