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o i ; vee a ry o MANDAN NEWS| Minot, N. D. Citizen Says Tanlac} : when standing. MANDAN CHILD IN hie many friends among the traveling). Relieved Rheumatism Afier \ RO A PROJECT hate Hong, erride sis aah eit bes ’ i Ke At f NARROW ESCAPE Everything Else Failed. CiNava: Saeoitace 6 lle whe. le FROM DEATH A child was saved from what seem- ed almost cortain death Sunday morn- ing, when she was struck by an.au-' tomobile and knocked unconscious, but the car was stopped before pass- ing over her body as she lay in the road within a few inches of the wheel, To the horrified onlookers, who saw the little girl lying beneath the car, it seemed almost~a miracle that she was not killed. The accident occurred on Collins Ave., and bystanders state that no blame attached to the driver of the car, J. C. Smith, of the Custer Flats district, it being an accident pure and simple, Mr. Smith was on his way to church, and was not driving fast, as the eight o'clock service was just over and people were streaming, across the street. Owing to this fact, and also to his presence of mind in the emergency, what might have been a deplorable tragedy was narrowly averted, The identity of the child was not learned. : VISITING RELATIVES Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hintgen were the guests of relatives in Bismarck over Sunday. > VISITING IN BISMARCK Si (Mrs. Harvey Williams and Mrs. E. B. McGinness of Mandan were visit- ors in Bismarck Saturday. TAKEN TO. CHICAGO Arthur J. Kredler, former manager of the Lewis and Clark hotel, who has been ill for many weeks in Fargo, has been tagen to Chicago and is in the Masonic hospital there, under the care of a specialist. Krdler, who has been suffering from pheumonia and the effects of a nervous breakdown, is now being treated for neuritis, and his early recovery is hoped for by ————E——>———{[_~xxx— = ASPIRIN Name “Bayer” on Genuine Warning! Unless you see the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting genuine Aspirin pre- ecribed by physicians for twenty-on? years and proved safe by millions. Take Aspirin only as told in the Bay- er package for Colds,-Headache, Neu- ralgia, Rheumatism, Earache, Tooth- ache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin- boxes of twelve Bayer Tablets vot Aspirin cost few cents. Druggists also sell larger. packages. Aspirin ts the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylica- eld, OSS MILESTONES How happy are those mothers who have portraits to visualize life’s milestones. ,Chi'’ren are ever changing. Ph.. °: bring you endless joy’ and. icy never grow *SLORBY STUDIO successors to HOLMBOE STUDIO For that Thirsty Feeling Try ’ 9 No Boiling No Fussing. \ Ask Your Dealer Bismarck Grocery Co. Distributors. . BATTER SERVIC EXCLUSIVE ELECTRICAL SPECIALISTS Service and parts for Delco, Remy, Northeast and Auto Lite starters, Bosch, Eisemann and K-W Magnetos, Exide and Minnesota bat- teries, and Klaxon horns. ELECTRIC SERVICE & TIRE CO. fe Bismarck, No. Dak. ATTEND MINSTRELS John Timmermann, W, J. Sullivan and aril Tostevin were among the Mandan people who. enjoyed the-min- strel staged by Bismarck Elks Satur- day evening, ek SUNDAY SCHOOL BANQUET Mrs. L.'N. Cary tendered her Sun- day school class.a banquet in the| Presbyterian church, Friday evening.| This class was the winner in a con- test in which all classes participated. PARK BOARD STIRS INTEREST A definite interest is being already; shown in the approaching elections for the new, Park ‘Board. Various | names are being suggested, and there: seems to be a general determination t6 get the very best material possible} for this most important body. WELFARE BOARD The Welfare Board of the Salvation Army in Mandan, which is composed not of Salvation Army. workers, but! of business and professional men of} the city, will present the plans of; that organization at the Commercial! Club \ meeting on Monday evening. | Ensign L, W. Redgrove will also be! present. PAROCHIAL SCHOOL | ENTENTAINMENT The entertainment given at the pa-| rochial school. Thursday which con-' sisted of several musical numbers, be- sides the annual class play was re-| ceived by such a large and enthusi-|' astic audience that it was found nec-, ‘ess: to repeat the performance Fri-; day evening, when it scored the same! success., | a , COMMUNITY SING (Plans are being perfected for a big; community- sing which will be held} Sunday. afternoon, May 22, probably in the Palace theater. There will) be piano numbers by several students, | a short address on the value of music! by Mr. Devine, and the Musical Club/| chorus will assist in singing with the audience all of the old songs: The Aiding) will bedirected by Mrs. ‘tanma, G, Wheeler, who will devote a short time to the teaching of Man-; dan’s song, “Where the West Begin.”| TO ENDORSE~ADVERTISING The Town Criers have caused to be printed and sent out to every firm: in town the following card: “Adver-| tising Solocitors—this firm will not! consider any advertising proposition, ' which has not the O. K, of the Town. ‘Criers;” ‘Merchants have agree to post these cards when received. This} is an excellent plan and one that} works both ways. Advertising so-| licttors who have something worth while will welcome it and the others will be gently but firmly weeded out. CHARMING PARTY A charming’ party * was “tendered Miss Onetta Ferguson Saturday at the Hotel Lewis and Clark by Mr. and Mrs. Charles ‘Hughes of Fourth Ave. northwest. ‘Mrs, Hughes, who was assisted by several intimate girl friends of Miss (Ferguson, chose cards and dancing as the amusement of the evening, and lovely refreshments were served in course of the event. About ten cou- ples were present to énjoy the splen- didly planned little party. iss Fer- &uson, who has been with the Bing: enheimer (Mercantile company, will leave Thursday evening for Yv in Minneapolis. ASSISTING IN WORK 'Mrs, Emma B. Wilkinson, Supreme; Mount picture which comes to the Deputy, (W. B.A. of Port Huron, Mich.; ‘Mrs. Anna .De Mars, State Deputy; and Mrs. BPlizabeth Dow of Mandan, District Deputy, spent two days of last week in Dickinson, where they assisted in the initiation ‘cere- monies of the Dickinson lodge. The AMickinson ladies banqueted the visit-| ors, provided automobile trips for! their entertainment and in general proved themselves charming host-) esses. Mrs. Wilkinson and Mrs.’ De Mars! left. Saturday night for Jamestown, where they will put on another big meeting. Mrs. Wilkinson, who is Supreme SSS USED H() YEARS AS A TON iC Sw arta Ga © BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Kaowh ell over the Northwest for ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS © |in my shoulder so bad that I couldn't | Picket as well as Supreme Deputy of ; The numerous confident challenges [Stunning Costumes in {CONTROL BILL TRE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. BLANDING IS BACK ON JOB_- FEELNG FINE) “Thanks to Tanlac, I'm on the Job now every day and feeling just fine,” said Emmet Blanding, 614 Third street N..W., Minot, North Dakota. “For two years I had rheamatism sleep on my side. I-also suffered with it in my knees so I finally had to knock off from work, When I began taking Tanlac I was almost desperate, but I am like a new man now.. Al- though at times I have an occasional twinge in my shoulder it doesn’t bother me: enough to interfere with my work or keép me from ‘sleeping. “I am sleeping better than in years, have a fine appetite and am never bothered with indigestion. When it comes to fixing a: man up right Tan- lac has them all beat. It did tge work for me after everything else hud fail- ed,to help. me at all.” Tanlac is sold in Bismarck by Jos, Breslow, in Driscoll by N. D. and J. H. Barette, in Wing by H P Homan, in Strasburg by Strasburg Drug Co. E Stratton & Earp, Regan, Advt. the Port Huron lodge, and who has been in thé work ever since the lodge was started, will leave on May 19 for California, where she will make .ar- rangements for the Marathon to .be held in 1923. y POSTPONED BY RAIN The baseball game scheduled to be played Sunday between the Fats and the. Leans. was postponed by reason of the rain until Sunday, May 1. which have been hurled back and forth have aroused a keen interest in! the: event, and a large turn out of; fans is assured next Sunday. Harvey Williams, the Babe Ruth of the Fats says they will win, because the law of averages is in their favor. There will be less space between tho Pfayers, ‘and the poor old pill can never sneak past the heavy weight; infield. patrons preeeeine MUSICAL CLUB REHEARSAL The rehearsal of the Mandan Musi-| cal Club chorus, which was held Sun- day afternoon in the Commercial Ciuo rooms was well attended, and the choruses which they are planning to give for the Endowment Concert on May 25 are progressing very: nicely. The “full program for this occasion has not as yet been given out, but Mrs. Arthur Peterson, chairman of the general program for the District Fed- eration meetings, and Mesdames &. R. Griffen and Thane Sponsel, program! committee for the Musical Club, have secured from the St. Cecelia Club of Dickinson several numbers, and at least oné from F. G, Gale. of Bis- marck, who is directing the gencral chorases.” : Elliott Dexter in Best Role of Career Well Known Leading Man Has Steller Part in “The Witch- ing Hour” ; Elliott Dexter, for spveral years famous leading man in Cecil B. De- Mille productions, was specially en- gaged by William D. Taylor to play the leading role of “Jack Brookfield” in “The Wiching Hour,” a new Para- Eltinge theater today and tomorrow. “Jack Brookfield” in “The Wiching Hour” is a part made to,order for the cultured, restrained art of Mr. Dexter. It is believed that this interpretation will stand as the greatest of all bis screen and stage work. As the man! of strong will he has an unusual op- portunity. i To support Mr. Dexter angexcep- tional cast has been chosen. Included are ‘Mary Alden, Winter Hall, Ruth Renick, Robert Cain, Edward Suther- land, Fred Turner, Genevieve Blinn, Charles West, L. M, Wells, Clarence Geldart and- Jim Blackwell. Julla Crawford Ivers wrote the scenario, while James Ven Trees is respontible for the photoplay. “Paying the Piper”, Dorothy ' Dickson’s Gowns Are} Shown to Advantage in Film A wild debutante with a penchant; for clothes of the most stunning kind! —that is the role that Dorothy Dick-; son has in the George Fitzmaurice production of “Paying the Piper,” which comes to the Bismatck theater tonight, and in order to act the part! convincingly, the actress wears a suc-| cession of gowns that constitute a veritable fashion show. Among the costumes is a smart sports Air Chanel production that has only refently been sent over from| Paris. It js a straightline model, the; material being a rough cloth of a dull; rust color barred off in great squares! with narrow lines of gray duvetyn | couched in cross-stitch with black} thread. Gray duvetyn is used for the high crush collar, Lewis of Paris has! made the hat that Miss Dickson wears | with this coat, one ofthe off-the-face' modified ‘Napoleonic shapes with up-| turned brim formed of a fabric madc, with white baby ribbon run through! rings cut from brilliant tin. ‘| farm gate in the state and the highway GOPHER STATE LAUNCHES BIG - ‘St. Paul, Minn., May 9.—Minnesota’s $100,000,000 good roads project, to per- manently improve highways connect- ing the principal towns and the ten thousand lakes for which the state is famous, was launched this week. Charles M. Babcock, state highway commissioner, has organized a main- tenance force of more than 1,000 men, with a patrolman for cach 5-mile sec- tion and. special gangs to keep the gravel roads in. best condition until paving is laid over the entire 7,000- mile gystem. Actual operations start- ed May. 1.: Contracts for additional hard-surfacing will be xwarded soon, accoring to the -highway ‘department, which will spend approximately $10,- 000,000 on highways this season and [pereaaine, amounts each year there- after. i The Babcock good roads plan wis adopted at the last election and put, into effect by the legislature which has just adjourned, Improvements will be financed with | the proceeds of a2 per cent tax on the} list price of motor vehicles, in lieu of other levies, A state advalorem tax levy of 1 per cent: and local levies will, be continued to provide funds for im-/ provement of lateral or feeder roads. Minnesota already has long stretch- | es of paving on arterial routes and/| hundreds ‘of miles of smooth gravel! roads. Completion -of the Babcock | plan will mean @ good road to every| department predicts that the most im- portant lines will be hard-surfaced within five years. 3 | ADVOCATES USE OF HIGH HEELS London, May 9.—The mothers who train their children to walk with toes pointing qutward ‘and counsel their little girls never to wear high heels when they grow up, have been told! they were,all wrong, by Dr.. W. H. Trethowat, orthoepaedic surgeon, in| an address at the Institute of Hygiene. i DYEONLY WITH | ' “D)TAMOND DYES”) Unless you ask for “Diamond Dyes” | you may get'a poor dye that streaks, spots, fades and gives that dyed look, | Every package of Diamond Dyes con- tains simple directions for home dye- ing or tinting any new, rich, fadeless color into garments or draperies of any material. No mistakes! . No fail- “To walk properly,” he sald, “the feet shbuld .be kept absolutely par- rallel, The ‘quarter to six’ attitude is one of the big mistakes of physical training. Three minutes to 12 and three minutes past’ is what. you want turning his toes in unless he has an acthal deformity of the foot. He is probably trying to cure himself of knock-knees or weak ankles,” Reasonably high heels are very ex- cellent things, the surgeon said. Low heels are all right for children, or for adults with a perfect foot, but un- fortunately no foot was perfect. “I advise, unhesitatingly,” he add- ed, “the use of high heels. I do-not mean by that the silly three-and-a- half to four-inch Louis heel with its curved mechanical shape and ineffict- ent support, The height of the heel for remedial purposes should not ex- ceed two and a quarter inches, and in house shoes should not be less than one and a quarter inches, In cases of overstrained feet, slippers must be avoided,” WHISTLE Wrapped in Bettics Ie ‘helps you make the world go round. Always the same the world over. Phone 427 ures! F. COURSE, you would enjoy your Ford more if it were free of shocks and bumys. And you «tn make it ride smoothly, com- fortably, over all roads, if you equip it with Hassler Shock Yet at the same time your car will be costing you less, for Haselers mean definite savings of one-third of tire and up-keep expense. And they"make it last a third longer. The added comfort alone is worth while—is something very much to be desired. The unusual economy Enjoy your Ford more— at less cost! is something you cannot afford to overlook. We will put on Hasslers—no matter what mdliel of Ford passenger ear of truck—and allow a 10 day trial. Money sefunded in full if you're not pleased. ON PACKERS IS__| REPORTED OUT ‘Washington, May x.—Favorable re- | COPELIN MOTOR CO. ‘i Bismarck, N. D. Here is welcome news for all tire users. Just when old, worn-out tires with new ones, Diamond answers the call of the times with a Generous & Sweeping Reduction in Prices of all Diamond TIRES These 5 did high-mileage tires are now aes at i following prices: SQUEEGEE Now is the time to invest in Diamonds THE DIAMOND RUBBER COMPANY. INC. Akron, onto , port was ordered ‘on the Norris-Mc-; | Laughlin packer regulation bill today! by the senate agriculture committee.’ Opponents of the legislation in its! | original form were successful in ob ; taining abolition of the proposed fed- eral livestock commission, the bill| TRADE MARK REGISTERED providing instead for a livestock com-| missioner to be appointed by - the! Shock Absor | CAR WASHING {GCORWIN AGTOR CG,