Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
~ changed in a _ “Where the west begin: ‘NEW STRIDE Mandan citizens went on record for some pretty snappy work Saturday afternoon, when in two hours prac- tically all the business and protes- sional men in town were reached per- sonally or “by phone” and signified their willingness to adopt central time. Accordingly at midnight <0) clocks were set ahead Sunday morn- ing Mandan arose with Minneapolis, Bismarck, Fargo and the rest of the “live ones.” It is expected that ad- vices from Washington will be re- ceived in. a few days advancing the time for the local postoflice, and that Northern Pacific time tables will be sordance, DRAWS ATTENTION The use of Mandan’s new slogan. ” which the “Korum” gave a most kindly mention in their editorial column, has so tar been conffned to the Comercial club and a few of the leading firms of the city. The others, however, are only’ waiting for engravings of the newly designed trade mark for use in their advertising and business men of the city generally are enthusiastic about the slogan’s possibilities as advertis- ing matter. CHORUS REHEARSAL, The Mandan‘Musical club will pave a chorus rehearsal at the Commercial club rooms on Tuesday evening at 7:30. Mr. Gale will direct. BUSINESS VISITOR, Mr, Roy Mattson, who was for a time connected with the taxfdermy business of J. H. Allen, was a busi- ness visitor from Fargo for the week- end. FROM GATE CITY. | W. W. Fuller of Fargo, is in town for a few da: Mr. Fuller reports the Fuller family well, and business in the east end of the state flourish- ing. . ENTERTAIN NIECES, Mrs. Edward Morck of 5th street N. W.,, is entertaining two small nieces this week. The little girls, who are five-year-old twins, are the daugh- ters of Frank Hill, a former business man of Mandan, now living at Glen- dive. iB —=———— A Woman’s Way “I tried for four months to get my wife to try Mayr’s Wonderful Remedy, which I know had helped a friend of mine who also suffered from stomach trouble. -She insisted: her ease was different. I finally had to bribe her with a new dresu. The first dose pro- duced remarkable results, clearing up her complexion and restoring her ap- petite. She can now eat things she hadn’t béen able to for many years.” It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes prac- tically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or.money refunded. Sold at All Druggists. SHO-CARD NS an SIGN PAINTING Phone 669 219 Main Street Bismarck Furniture Co. MANDAN N MANDAN HITS EWS [ATHLETIC DRILL ATTRACTS CROWD An audience of twelve hundred wit- nessed a most interesting demonstra- tion by the physical department of the Miandan schools, wnder the direc- tion of Miss Katharine Smith, physi- cal director, on Friday evening. { Four hundred pupils of the grades: and junior high school took part in! the program, which included figure | marching, setting up exercises, folk | dances, corrective work, and various! drills and dram; plays. A Mavi pole dance was featured in the sec-! ond half of the program and in this,! Superintendent Love was dignitary, Harriet Burdick, queen, and Donald Maitland, crown hearer. ing was yellow and white and the flower girls, heralds and dancers ty spectacle. An interpretative dance “Joy of Spring” Lucille Dahners, six, and Muriel Larrabee, aged seven, was re- ceived with much enthusiasm, and the pyramid work by 16 junior high school Hoys had almost a professional finish, Daughters of Isabella Hold Ceremony at Lewis & Clark Hotel The initiation Daughters of Isabelia culminated Monday night in a splendidly appoint- ; ed banquet served_in the Lewis and Clark dining room. Places were laid for eighty and jon- quils were used lavshly in the decor- ations, The banquet was in charge of! the following committee: Mrs. Louis Connolly, Mrs. Harvey Williams and Miss Helen Horner. Music, was fur- nished by the Lutz orchestra and at the close of the dinner, a most enter- taining program of toasts and music was given. Mrs. Bina Kranz made a charming and witty toastmistress, and Miss Carol McClure very cleverly repre- sented the twenty candidates who were initiated during the afternoon’s meeting. Mrs. Mrs. Banno, Vice Regents of Mandan and Bismarck, respectively, gave in- teresting addresses and others on the program whose numbers proved most enjoyable were Father Clement Dimpfl, Father Schlag of Bismarck, Mrs, Percy and Mrs. Arthur Tavis, Vocal numbers by Miss Rose Fleck and the Misses Celia and Florence plause. The ladies in charge of the affair justly feel that it was a most successful one. MANDAN TEAM IN FIRST PRACTICE —_— The Mandan baseball team had their first practice of the season at the fair grounds Sunday afternoon. All able and several! new players were out to make the team. Buck Dorfler who has_taken care of the hot corner on the team for several seasons, says he will be ready to try out Bismarck’s new ball park whenever Bismarck is willing. Manager Erickson has hired two: high class pitchers and a hard- hitting catcher. These three men will report on May 15th, PROGRAM FOR GOLDEN, A double mixed quartette composed of Misses Cecelia and Florence Con- nolly, Mrs. C, T. Sponsel, Mrs. C. C. McLean and Messrs. Scott Conyne, Bernie Regan, Arthur Peterson and Henry Dahners are preparing a short program of Irish music to be given Safety and Service THE TWO STRONG PILLARS ON WHICH WE ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS ORM MINN With our new McClintock Burglar Alarm System which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep. your’ Liberty Bonastand other valuables as well as to do your general banking business. First National Bank, Bismarck, N. D. GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW Safety First Don’t Forget the Elks Minstrels, Friday May 6 and 7, 1921. RES, CLINTOOCK CO EAPOLIS. MINN The costum- | made the dance a very gay and pret-; ceremonies of the Wm. Vallancey an‘1| Connolly were received with much ap-| of last year’s players will be avail-| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE t | By Marian Hale. New York, May 2.—''There are more j temptations than ever in’ the path of the impressionable girl,” says Miss Maude E. Miner, officer of the New York Probation and Protective Asso- ciation, whose job it is to fight these temptations. “Girls go wrong because the New- |world has an Old-world hangover. | Parents who believe in the old way ‘of training will have at least one run- away daughter out of three,” The new temptations, says Miss Miner, are these: » Ambition for an individual life. Yearning for bright lights and music. i | - |at the discussion of the Irish Ques- {tion by Peter Golden, cousin of the late Terrence MacSweeney, which will be held at Elks hall, Wednesday even- jing, May 4th. . | A MANDAN VISITOR, ' Mrs, Gradine of Bismarck was a j Mandan visitor Saturday. i | WEEK-END GUESTS. \. | Mrs. George Janda and little daugh- {ter of Selfridge are week-end guesta of Mrs. John F. Sullivan. 1 | RESUMES OPERATIONS, The local -Russell-Miller Milling Company plant resymed operations Tuesday. marning after a shut-down ‘of three days due to a break in the | main drive shaft. t ee eek | HAS. OPERATION. |. Mrs. Glen Rathman, wife of the head accountant for the Bingeheimer Mercantile Co., underwent a serious major operation Sunday evening at | the Deaconess hospital. She is resting easily today and her prompt recovery is anticipated. TO ADDRESS CONVENTION, j Miss Clara Mueller, superintendent of the Mandan. hospital, will give an address Tuesday, May 3, at the Sun- day school convention, which is to be held in Bismarck under ‘the directia” of the Chicago “Board of Methodist Sunday Schools. Miss Mueller who has just returned from an extended tour of the ‘state anid who was algo jan attendant at the nurses conven- tion in Grand Forks, will speak on oar aoe CORNS Lift Right Off without Pain WPI Magic! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting. then.shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Doesn't hurt a hit. Your ‘druggist sells a tiny bottle of | “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, te corn betwéen’ the toes, dnd’ cal- uses. JAGER TRANSFER LINE 521. Broadway Phone 18 Light and Heavy Hauling SAND and GRAVEL : House Moving Piano. and Furniture. Moving Excavating and Grading COAL and WOOD All Work Guaranteed een messes! i i | | MISS MAUDE E. MINER. $/ Spokane, Washington, Love of cheap fiction. ‘Longing to: emulate vamps. And the antidote? -Education—the education that be- gins with mother and father. | Among things which the Probation} and Protective Association is noted for is its Girls Service League, which ig a center for service work and aj haven for lonely, friendlesg and stranded girls. i Then there are an employment ex-| change, a mental clinic, which helps | girls to find the sort of work to which they are best suited; domestic sci- ence classes and outdoor training camp. movie the present day hospital conditions and the campaign for nurses, This is 2 timely subject as the. demand for nurses is so. great that there is a ser- ious shortage of trained nursing care in'every community. ABLE TO.R N HOME, | Mrs. Earl, Lotig, who, has been, ill for nearly a month has so. tar recov- erad as to return to her, own home. ON FIELD TRIP. | Superintendent Stevens of the Great Plains statiof is absent on a combin- ed business and field trip. Captain; Robt. Wilson is acting superintend- ent; pending hig return. RENEWING ACQUAINTANCES, Chas. F. Kellogg of Detroit, Minn., is greeting Mandan acquaintances, be- ing here on business. matters. Mr, Kellogg. was formerly a resident of New Salem and Mandan and still keeps in touch with his interests here. | OCCUPY SHINNERS’ RESIDENCE, | Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dow, who have been gueats at the Hotel Lewis and Clark for some time are moving to- day to the Ray Shinners residence on! First avenue N. W., where they will live for the summer. Mrs. Thomas Sullivan and_ son, Miles, are leaving Tuesday for the summer season. They will visit ‘en route in Fargo with relatives and friends, and from there go to Winona and other Minnesota lake resorts. | CHIEP’S WIDOW VISITS MANDAN, Mrs. John Grass, widow of the well known chief, and Miss Vivian Gatun of Solen are. Lewis and Clark guests, for some days. ‘Mrs. Grass is con- valescing from a recent severe illness, being but recently discharged from} the Mandan Deaconess hospital. LEAVES FOR SPOKANE, Mrs. R. W. Shinners left Sunday for She was ac-| companied by her son Jack, and in- tends: remaining the entire summer | in Spokane. Her plans include anj| extensive western trip and a return TUESDAY, MAY 3, 1921 ie Most prescription in 1892 Kis cularly pleasin, the bi Lhe oft th age treatments is, sixty cents last a family several months. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Address FREE 65 POLICE ARE SLAIN IN YEAR Tribune Survey Shows igh Hazard of Public Protectors A survey made by the Tribune in; America’s 25 largest cities show that during the past 12 months 65 police- men in 16 of these cities have ‘been killed in line of duty. Many times that number have been wounded and incapacitated. Most of those killed met their deaths in gun battles with criminals. They died for YOU—just like our soldiers who went across the seas died for you. The fidelity of the policeman to his! hazardous duty is illustrated in this table, : showing’ the number of those who in 12-months have paid with their lives in combats with crooks: Police Police Born Shelbyville, Mo., March 27, 1889 Began the mailufacture of his famous to me to know that ose eight million bottles were bought by mothers for themselves and the chil- dren, though Syrup Pepsin is just as valuable for grownups. The price of a bottle holding 50 aver- Ihave never. made a secret of what is in Dr. It is a compound of Egyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs with pepsin and pleasant-tasting aromatics. These ingredients are endorsed in the U. S. TRY IT Sidney Lives to See the Prescription __ ~ He Wrote in 1892 the Worlds _ . Popular Laxative Remedy Founder of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, the largest selling liquid laxative in the- world, long past Biblical old-age, but hale.and hearty—Still . sees patients daily—Wonderful achieve: ment of a “country doctor.” Istarted to practice medicine, back in 1875, there were no pills or tablets or salt waters for the relief of constipation, and no artificial remedies made from coal tar. ulant as Syrup Pepsin. of their children. Pharmacopoeia. I in the serious 82n house for the ; such a bottle will fevers, B. Caldwell, 513 Washington Street, and then needs a laxative, and it és well to know the best. Write-me today. _ St. Louis .. 7 1,665. Detroit .... 6 1,92 San Francisco 5 990 Kansas City . 4 < 500 Seattle .... 4 530 New York . 3 11,000 Cleveland . 3 1,189 Washington, D. C, 3 949 Denver .... 3 350, New Orleans 2 500 Boston .... 1 1,400 Los Angeles . 1 768 Minneapolis . 1 378 Portland, Ore, 1 267 PLAN TOUR. Grand’ Forks, May 3.—The three state divisions of Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana of the Theodore Roosevelt international highway as- sociation are making preparations for a tour from Duluth, to Glacier Na- tional Park, leaving- Duluth about the middle“of July, over the T. R. I. high- way, passing across each of the states Killed. on Force. 12 634 9 4,475 with healthy, ha; ti mother to a heal . | The following give the experience of two young women and prove the value of Lydia to Mandan sometime during the early autumn, H My JOINS FACULTY. 1 Miss Elsie Stark left Monday for, Fargo, Miss Stark, who until recent- | ly was Home. Demonstration Agent | for Burleigh county with headquar- | ters at Bismarck, will now be direct-| ly connection with the Agricultural | college, working out of Fargo to all, corners of the state. FORTNIGHTLY CLUB. There will be a business meeting of the Fortnightly club at the residence of Mrs. B. S. Nickerson Tuesday. This is the last meeting of the sea-/ son and matters of importance are to; be decided; also final arrangements | to be made.concerning the club's part | in the District Federation meeting | this month, | > | —— i PATIENTS DISCHARGED. H Patients discharged from the Man-/ dan Deaconess hopsital Monday in-: cluded, Frank Lee, Mandan; Pauline Berringer, Hebron; Otto Hencxel, | Fort Rice; Mrs. Earl Long, Mandan; | Mrs. George Jarda and little daughter Selfridge. Received Mrs. Glen Rath- man, Mandan, BURTNESS COMMITTEES, Washington, D. C,, May. .3.—Cong | O. B, Burtness of the First North Da-/ kota district has been given the fol-| lowing committee assignments: pub-: lic lands, Indian affairs, and traffic in alcoholic liquors. | Com; Charm of 7 Motherhood. Ty? ERE are many homes once child- less that now are blessed den, because Lydia \E. -Pinkham’s Vegetable Ney ~=Compound restored the | mal physical condition. E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound in stch cases, mentioned. Enroute Minot will be visited. SSG POW ee eee SU SLES iO Sees ppy chil- thy, nor- letters but an operation would help ‘arinette, Wis.—“I was in a very nervous condition, was irregular, and M could not have any children. I took doctor’s medicine without suc- cess, and he advised an operation, became regular, and Vegetable Compoun LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE Co. my practice, and which I put in drug stores in 1892 un- der the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, is a liquid remedy, and I have never had reason to change it. I intended it for women, children and elderly people, and these need just such a mild, safe, gentle bowel stim- Tan gratified to say that under supsspstal management: my ¥ scription has proven its worth and is now the largest selling DR. W. B. CALDWELL TODAY jiquid laxative in the world. The fact that over eight million bottles were sold by druggists last year proves that it has won \ the confidence of mothers whose chief interest is the health 1892, the best remedy a family can have in the fe relief of constipation and its accompanying ills, such as headaches, bilious- ness, flatulence, indigestion, losg of appetite and sleep, bad breath, dyspepsia, colds and Millions of families are now never without Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, and I believe if you will once start using it you will aso always have a bottle handy for emergencies. and address and Twill send you a free trial botde of my Syrup Pepsin. Ww XE. lhicago, Tl.—“ Iwas always tired, my head always ached, and ba C ached until I- could hardly ined the pain. T« i andl my back: the doctor said nothi not have children. A T doctored for years, and iend asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkhamn’s Ve table und. _I took six bottles. of it and it helped me wonderfull ts now have a fine baby boy, thanks.to. what your medicine did for me in re. storing my health. -I can highly recommend the C 4 who suffer from female ills.”—Mrs. Wx. Reiss, 304 V y husband brought me one of your booklets and asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Comper I soonfelt benefitted by its u ne pout baby girl after having been married nine years. I am always glad to recom. mend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound to my friends who suffer from such troubles.” Mrs. H. B. Hexp, 330 Jefferson St., Marinette, Wis, These letters should induce others to try ? Lydia E. Pinkham's LYNN. MASS, I it The prescription for constipation that I used early in \ consider ‘Syrup Pepsin today \d year of my age, as I did in Monticello, Illinois. Everyoady now They Laugh, Then Cry and Then Laugh Again at New Chaplin Film They laughed and cried! Then cried and laughed! And left the theater with every emo- tion from hysterical gales af layghter to the stifled sobs of sympathy com- pletely exhausted. That was the experience of the au- dience at the Eltinge theater last night who went to the opening of Charlie Chaplin’s new film, “The Kid,” widely advertised as First National's six reais of joy. “Six reels of joy’ tells but half of it, for while the comedian has never been so mirth-provoking in any previous production, the story which is, unfolded contains more real heartthrobs than many a picture that has built up reputations for emotional actresses. Charlie is himself, but he has in- jected himself into a story of heart | interest that has seldom been ejualled. GD) =; s § | 22» press fe? me, and that I could nd I und to all women. W St., Chicago, I, now we have a fing