The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 24, 1921, Page 2

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Fr. Dimpfl; Mandan, Celebrates 30th: .: Anniversary | Mrs. Lyman N. Cary entertained at) MANDAN NE WS Te | MRS. CARY ENTERTAINS FRIENDS AT LUNCHEON | , i i i | ! | ‘a charming luncheon at high noon to- Reverend Fr. “€lement: Dimpfl of | day at her home on 3rd Ave. N. W., in St. Joseph's Church received magy|honor of Mrs. Thos. G. Winter, of congratulations yesterday from friends | Minneapolis, and parishopers on the occasion -of | the 30th anniversary of his accession /-this afternoon. to the priesthood. who Will address the! Federated Clubs of the 7th District | Mrs. Winter is National President,;| A special program of music was | Mrs. Cary State President of the Fed- | prepared as a sufprise for him by the/|erated Clubs, and the personnel of the | children of the parochial school, and ‘juncheon party included only state of- | the altars of St. Joseph’s were beau- | ticers of the 7th and 8th Districts. tifully decorated with flowers for his | anniversary services. Pink and white tulips beautifully | |decorated the table and rooms and | Moreover, on Sunday, May 22nd, the | covers were laid for nine. The guests | Reverend Father celebrated the end of; were: Mrs. C. S. Buck of Jamestown, | a quarter century of his pastorate in| presidents 8th district; Mrs. Mark; the slope country, coming 25 years, Jones of Beach, president 7th district; | ago to Bismarck, where he. presided | Miss Minnie J. Neilson, chairman de- as parish priest until 1910. the death of Father Collins and has| press; Mrs. A. H, Peterson of Mandan, | been in charge of this parish since; chairman of public welfare; Mra. .F.,L. then. PATIENT AT ST. ALEXIUS Mrs. Charles Hermann of Beulah, is a patient at the St. Alexius Hos- 3 pital in Bismarck. Mrs. Hermann is} En Route From Spokane a niece’ of L. A. Tavis and Herman | Tavis of Mandan. MOTORS TO CANNONBALL During! partment of applied: education; Mrs. | that year he removed to Mandan at|F. R. Smythe of Bismarck, chairman of | |Conklin, of Bismarck, state. corres- |ponding secretary, and Mrs. Blewett ! {of Jamestown, chairman of legisla- tion. | Harold Middaugh is in Mandaw’ for ; a few days greeting friends and look- | {ng after business affairs, Mr. Mid- | daugh is,en route from Spokane, | “KNOT | S THE BISMARCK: TRIBUNE * MEDIUM INJECTS “SPIRIT VOICE MURDER CASE ee ” INTO | play jazz on: a player piano tp drow: | the: gruesome: noises’ of the killing, The children, Ruth, 13, and George 11, now live with Miss Dalamater,) who. iis only 20: and a friend of Mrs. Nott. i Ruth plays religious. hymns which ;Open the spiritualistic seances. The vorites seem to be “Nearer, My God, |to Thee,” and “Lead Kindly Light.” ; Nott’s son acts as usher to the long ; line of people who attend the seances. } Later he stands: during, the ‘collection | at the plate at tho head of:the stairs. | Another figure at the, trafce ses- ;slons is Mrs. Matilda, Hutchins, of| Chelsea, Mass.,~the aged mother of Mrs. Nott. From an arm: chatr placed the seances are held, She watches the + medium, attentive to every word and Peet, K \"“} am sorry, 1 am sorry.” This wail} jariges again and. again during the} }sewnce, which deals with commdn- | z {pies questions of those in the ¢ir-| cle; , | Phe wail 13 the voice of Nott's spir- | iit, Miss Dalamater asserts She says} she Teceives _ other messages from | Nott’s spirit, but will not reveal them! i because they might’have a bearing on! | the trial of Mrs. Nott. ya | The medium’ interprets this wailing | ‘as a confession by Nott that “he was; ! responsible, for his own murder. | Regular attendants at the medium’s |, ;seances say that in a trance she fore-| ela Nott’s death and the manner of) t | “at a recent trance, Miss Dalamater | grew very weak. When she recovered she said. “A spirit is trying to kill) | i It permitted, Miss Dalamater says | she will take the stand at Mrs, Nott’s |in a room opening on thie parlor where; * Millions of Mothers find Dr.Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin safe for infants ‘ HAT young mother has ‘not WY often asked herself the ques- tion, “What is the best thing I can “give my baby for constipation?” It is a very important question, as con- stjpation is the basis of most ills of infancy and childho Give half a teas; ‘ ination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin. You can obtain it at any drug store under the name of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin. Itisa mild, gentle medicine that children willingly take, and a bottle that costs only sixty cents is enough to last an average Taspily several ae p. Caldwell’s S epsin 1 and We millions of mathers. for the pre- tury ye has been soldin stores for nful of a com- “thi ears. It is the same tion Dr. W. aC dwell, whois now in his 2nd * year, used: in his extensive ice for alfa century. It is the largest aellin liquid laxative inthe world, Last yeareigh' million bottles were bought in drugstores. You can make no mistake in giving Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin to your baby. Here Is a Fine Laxative’ For a Little Baby “tS UESDAY, MAY 24, 1921 it is well t0 know the be:t. , WRITE ME TODAY. trial to tell of messages she received trom the.spirit world before and after | | Nott’s death. | ing hogs of the razor-back variety, al- | ~ He killed a lean, lanky hog, }: | John Edward Johnston, a milk ped-i lowing them to run at large over his | week and declared that all he got v . |dier employed by Wade's father, will| pasture land and. giving. them no at-|two gallons of lard and a quart of face a murder charge after Mrs. Nott's | tention at all. turpentine. 5: trial: —— 00 The First National Bank Nott home a few minutes. before the Wishes to Announce murder and that he hetped carry The Organization Of Percy Goodwin and William Stuts-) where the family’ is now located, to man of Mandan motored to Cannonball | Minneapolis, where he will remain for Saturday and played for.a dance there} some weeks. on Saturday night. cE Motor to Stanton The Misses Carol and Grace McClure, Miss Mary Timmerman and Miss Mc- Clusky motored to Stanton on Sunday and witnessed the Stanton-Mandan game. ix From Minneapolis, i | Mrs. Wm. Cummins and. Mrs. Jack Kasper returned Monday from Minne- apolis, Accompanying them was Mr. T. A. Cummins, who has been in, Los Angeles since February. a: Mandan Club Meets. Returns Home There will be a meeting of the Man- Miss Florence Lechtleuger has re-|dan Myeical Club chorus at the Pres- turned to her home in Glen Ullin after |pyterian church Tuesday evening for a short visit with ‘relatives in thisja final rehearsal. city, away. the trunk containing Nott’s body. From Our York Correspondent By Newspaper Enterprise. York, S. C., May, 24.—Bob White- sides, farmer, has learned that it pays to raise only pure:bred hogs, he says. Whitesides heretofore has been rals- INGROWN NAIL | Toe Nail Turns Out Iteelf if You Toughen Skin ~ A noted authority says that a few! drops of “Outgro” upon the skin sur- rounding. the ingrowing nail reduces! inflammation and pain and so tough / From Harmon . ‘ Peter Fristad whose home is at Har- | * mon is in Mandan on business matters zine Bibel append eet as for the fore part of this week. | Sry, er, OF NOE aus: | hands finest B, Wate, (left), Mrs. . | Nott’s Paramour; ‘and John Edward uM Ell ody am Satem | Johmston, farmhand, witless of the spent Sunday and Monday in Mandan crime. : on a business trip. By Newspaper Enterprise. * Visit Bismarck Bridgeport, Conn., May 23.—A “voice fr to Mrs, Joseph P. Hess and Mrs. J. H. rom spiritland” enters into the case of Mrs, Ethel B. Nott, who faces trial McGillic were Monday morning’ visit- | May 24 for the murder of her husband, ors in Bismarck. , i George B. Nott. Greeting Mandan Friends A Bismarck: Visitor “A battle is going on in spiritland,” J. H. Drewelow of New Salem was| Mrs, John Tavis was~a Bismarck |S#¥8 Miss Dolly Dalamater, a trance greeting Mandan friends on Monday. | visitor from Mandan on Monday. Guests at Hotel Mrs. Stebbins and Mrs. Ferguson of Shields are guests at the Lewis and Clark for a few days. Visiting in Mandan ~+ Miss Gertrude Hess of Glen Ullin is visiting in Mandan and Bismarck this week, The Burleigh County Boys’ and Girls’ : Purebred Pig Club. for the crime’and that is why he was used as an instrument of spiritland,” |.Miss Delamater asserted. In fact, Wade's attorneys introduced alienists at his trial to prove that he was mentally, deficient. 4 Wade shot Nottfour times Aug. 1920, in Mrs. Nott’s. presence sin the .Nott home. | It ig charged Mrs. Nott con- spired with:Wade::to have: him com- Business Visitors Mr. nd Mrs, B. G. Collis were b':sl- ness visitors in Bismarck Monday. “ per ‘Conforming to ‘a general) movement in our great Northwest to promote the raising of Purebred Livestock, the First National Bank of Bismarck has procured at medium who holds seances here every _ | night, y ' “Soon the world will realize that a ‘lit they are ‘adopted: in sumptuous | One person lost his life because he was | mit the crime, As: Noth lay groaning | ens the tender, sensitive skin under- i i sow-pigs which it. will . FEZ NO LONGER homes of New York society. in used by the spirits -ds the instrument | on the floor, Wade stabbed him with neath the toe nail, that it can not Weaning, time twenty purebred Ow: P bo hich ene “ i Throagh’theingi f the Nation- |*0 Tight & material condition,” the me-} knife. 19 times, ‘to stop his squeal- | penetrate the flesh, and. the nail turns place in the hands of twenty Burleigh County Boys and ‘ al A Pitch ‘So. fete at F ver ad dium says. ing.” } , I naturally 8 rd almost over night. Girls. j er ? ! Wl Ame: ieeat coat bles: ha chat jan bo She referred to Elwood B. Wade,| ‘The body was :garriég’ to'an attic) | “Outgro” is a harmless, antiseptic eps ‘ ieee th Si aa at t thn - | paramour of Mrs. Nottgsentenced to| room and packed’ Jo -9 Later | manufattured for chiropodists. : How- 7 : x é i Wlaaat<) ‘+ |xears intcberitst ed fa the of a fee: die May 20 for his part In the, murder | it was.buried in'a quicksand bed. ever, anyone can, bey tein hig! drag The pigs will be allotted’ by an impartial drawing to i ‘ —__: / ‘ socia ~ of Nott. v f dt wasttest¥ied at #g:trial that | store a tiny bottle containing diree alc = . ‘oh. ' Jister, instead of fighting an up-hill ‘“Wade was not mentally résponsible | he order ‘two N nitdren te | tions. * boys and girls not under fen years of Age Hor aver, eigh: : jconetantineple: «May ae ules Ne Late sn ea slums. | anes : SAS KURI Tio j teen, subject to the usual rules governing the formation onal Assembly in Angora, has dec! A number of. governmental immi- i ed that the fez is no longer to be tne| gration regulations hafl to-be abrogat- of such’clubs. A copy of these rules and suggestions for Ravouel ae of the pak eh od ws aw ine as te take some \ the conduct of the club-may be had on application to the ainanimous vate it wag agreed that ‘the ge in America. Through. the a r : big . - “kalpak” should replace it, as the uut-| Department of Labor the literacy test First National Bank. Applications for pigs will be reg- o 7 at Ellis Island: was: eliminated, there istered at the First National Bank and } 3 ™ form covering for the head of all ; being no mention of baby talk in the troops, officials and Turkish subjects generally. The principal argument in favor of this reform, which eliminates one of the most characteristic and picturee- que features of Turgish , attire, was an ecomonical one. The Turks have literacy. law, and members of. the committee deposited bonds against. the likelihood .of their, becoming. public charges. za | The chairman of the American Com- mittee of the adoption society is Miss DRAWING WILL BE HELD ON JUNE 2ist.- Excavating and Grading — | Only expert mechanics employed. COAL and WOOD | All Work Guaranteed fy never ben able to manufacture fezes|Clara B. Spence, of New York, who @ that compared in price or quality wich | as been instrumental fo obtaining r) . those manufactured abroad, especially homes for several hundred foundlings. im. Austria, where there were several|Other members of the committee are large factories which turned out mil- | iss Charlotte Baker, Bishop William lions of these articles. T, Manning, of the Episcopal Diocese The “kalpak” can be manufactured |f New York; Dr. and Mrs. Henry in Turkey, but it can \hardly be con- peat chap ae sneezes ig suereil an. linprovemient, on; the old has bzeen associated. with the London | \ se It ts made of black cloth or felting, headquarters: of: the: mectets: Wan i 6 < - and is much the same shape.as the . > Ok es i SP. Siegel fez only flatter and broader, as it does} 1, he CHEAT, FOR SHORE: NV i by ¥ ANN —— 5 \ | not taper. Neither is. really a very | ¢, an se ay ere. roid: H; Joauer, ry abe i =| ‘ 4 practical form of head-gear, because favelne Prom Nictonta to: Hove''gn a VA 5 Geka cae : they-are warm, and afford little pro- ee ee train, was dy’ ng fora smoke, | a _ bd i 35 \, tection against rain and none. from autora: dawn the. “Ladies: only 9185 I. i t " , er ‘the glare of the sun. The fez was on ‘9 compartment;,.and lighted nie et ea iY a4 to) bright and lent color to-any assembly. Ls Leas pidge: aned- him $2. 4 Meas ud : q i ef. Its successor is sombre, uninteresthhg bith Wath Bota esl chaz vs’ : | ni and on the whole rather depressing. | \s erry 15 BABY PILGRIMS . q L i AND AT NEW YORK ! Ren ~ ; Sou New York, May 24.—Plymbuth Rock © maintain a happy home the housewife must keep in good be Ee EL ls aah wth | health. , Herduties are many and various, and: it seems as Pilgrims—each "Ions than a yeariolde- | | if every other member of the family depended very much on her. 5 land here upon an, America as bewild- ¢ c y a . “Where is my hat?” cries the boy |) Drep a litle “Freezone” on: an. ach- | F erie . or Ae: to (Ube perhaps aa'to thelr ab; | img corn, “instantly tliat corn stops| , ff - What did you'do with my coat?” asks the daughter. . ship, Mayflower on the New England hurting, pote Leotard bird | “T can’t find any handkerchiefs,” yells the husband. these {fant advebturers, however: ag QUt druggist sells a tiny bottle of i The housewife is usually the advisor and general manager care not suffering from the aftermath | .5 move en e%, conte, .saficient Hl of the family, ' < - 2 fave bes tenderly syeidied Revcattey | or corn between the toes, and the cal- ~ Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ne, ere Compound ee women to > of the luxurious steamship Aquitania luses, without a particle of pain. | ~ maintain a happy home by keeping them in good health. ‘ es AU poy nurses who will care for them un- Brossiazon, Il.—“T Have taken six > nte, So. Dakota.—‘J.would have . < : 5 F bottles of Lydia, E. Pinkham’s « pains and cramps every month ‘You cannot say that your hore is modem and! comfortable if your QUIT TOBACCO | Sereiiierese ee ea eater reecee bah tm re re nell Meke as \ ( mea wonderful sight o! was no! B ; P . peste never very. stro! nd female trouble often had to £ to bed. I went toa ing and fractal equipment, not brid oa gs home: healthy and . So'easy to,drop Cigarette Cigar, kept me weak so that I had:nointerest physician, but he did not_do me much comfortable but incresses its selling value as well. i eh mente » y for. my) housework: Thad mich a beck geod and sald Lwoukd hate:to: bare an wf” plumbing fixtures are the most durable and sanitary = or in 4 ache f could not cook a mealor clean operation. I read a R ay eins ewine: t TRANSFER LINE |! upa room without raging with pain. I Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoundin the ba a made. We handle horton Seah add our own Suarantce . | would rub my back with alcohol and it newspaper and thought I would give to’ the mariufacturers.’ ‘We combine skilled, experienced labor with ‘No-To-Bac has helped thousands to - 6521 Broadway would ease for a few hours, but after _it.a trial. Now I feel lots better aad Teasonzble prices and prompt service. ° Points worth knowing when you . al row Tonging’ for a smoke or chew, just. leave me. Now'I am_as_stroi and these facts asa testimonial, and I will- . pleas a harmless INGTo-Has isblet in a healthy ad any women and I five my anstrer with pleasure an [eer 1 ire The days are coming when the Bath Tub and shower our ‘mouth instead. fesire stops. ~thanks inkbam’s - ceive, and ‘you ma ‘ i ‘| ; j Shortly the habit is completely. broken Light and ble Compound for my health.”— Mrs. raise your ‘wonderful, medicine. ”— aaa Shi emia dy ae night time finds us ‘apd you-are better off mentally, physi- Heavy Ha J. A. McQuirry, 610 W. Walnut St., Anraur J. Kabr, Box'1, Dante, Fed, sticky, ang uncom eats \ cally, Anancially: Tes so easy, £0 aim. vy Hauling, Bloomington, IL ‘South Dakota. : ae Give ey, member of ue family a chance to enjoy ple: Get a box of No-To-Bac an > | J A a refreshing, invigorating bath as often as they feel it doesn’t rel from all ‘eravin 1 Thousands ‘of women owe their health to , ng, they feel - Moe achacce tad auge-formh i aed eae: SAND and GRAVEL : seiaie AN «like it.during the hot weather. The cost of having a well isp. will refund your money without House Moving ‘ C Haare: : cee a) Silas crap fiona in your home is probably less than uuestion. 402 | 4 u imagine. £ ; M! Piano and Furniture Moving | y' : a e I ams Ask us for prices. a » , ; } : ‘ “Up to date Plumbing, Hot Water and Steam Heating. i ASK Yout~Grocer Hempty Dimpty Bread. sPreducet by” AARKER BAKERY etable Compouns LYDIA E:PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN, MASS, : Veg .. Frank. Bismarck, N. D: Grambs | Phone 561

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