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MANDAN CLUB WOMEN ENTERTAIN SEVENTH DISTRICT FEDERATION | AS i Inspiring speakers and a splendid|ers from the “Mandan Musical club| attendance marked the first day of the] gave two numbers with piano and pipe| annual convention of the Seventh Dis-} organ accompaniment, trict Federated clubs, on Tuesday. Delegates are here from every town in’ the Slope, arriving Monday and Tuesday by morto or train. A fine representation of the Eighth District Club Women'‘were over from Bismarck | Girls Glee Club. for the afternoon and at 7:20 transpor- tation was provided to take delegates to that city where Mrs. Thos. G. Win- ter, addressed a joint session of the] yrs, Myrtle Gleason Cole, State Lead- | two districts. The program passed off without a - hitch, the central feature being an ad- dress by Mrs. Winter, the national president. A most forceful and logi- cal exposition of the aims and pur- poses of the federated clubs. Mrs. Bernard L, Wilkinson welcom- MANDAN NEWS| which were most enthusiastically. received.’ , The program for today follows: 1:30—Business. i i 1:45—(a)—Blow Winds. Abt. (b)--- Voices of the Woods, Rubingtein, H. Commynity singing | led by Audrey. B. Miller, superviso: | of music, public schools. 2:05—Home Demonstration Work— er Home Demonstration Agents, Far- go. \ 2:25—Our Greatest Asset, The Child. | Dr. Alice Conger Hunter, Dickinson. | 2:50—Cyclé._ of Bird Songs, the Woodpecker, the Yellowhammer, the | Owl, Liza Lehman, Audrey B. Miller. | 2:00—Press and Publicity, Mrs. 1. | ed the delegates and visiting club] R. Smythe, State Chairman, Bismarck. | ‘women very harmingly and a fitting response was made by Mrs. Mark Jones of Beach, Mrs. Dickinson, who was to have respond- ed at this time, received news of the unexpected death of a sister by drown- ing just as she was leaving for Man- dan. Dr. L. T. May of the Dickinson nor- mal wh most complimentary to the work accomplished by. women’s clubs inj his address, and-‘Mrs. Mark. Jones outlined in a practical way the spe- cific things which might be accom- plished by concerted action. Mrsfl Lyman N. Cary of Mandan, state president, gave a brief but in spiring message and 4 group of sing- r { ERECT BANDSTAND Voluntary workers under .driection| 12:15. The meeting was presided over of, Agaton Larson sawed lumber for| by C. R, Robertson, vice president, ow-| This} ing to the absence of President J. M. the new bandstand’ Tast ‘night. afternoon at foury pf¢l the stand will be erected just south of the Meth- odist tabernacle. It is intended to be used as a stage for the Chautauqua which opens June 28th. The tent can be placed so that the stand -will be in position or if necessary it can be moved, ROTARY HOLDS FIRST MEETING. The first regular meeting of the] sioners will make efforts to further newly organized Rotary Club was held) improve the grounds. MURDER PUZZLE Sociologists Study Murder Case of 13-Year-Old Wife By Newspaper Enterprise. Farmington, Mo., May 24.—A ,mar- ried woman is on trial on a murder charge in juvenile court here. She is Mrs. Letta Parsons and is only 13, LETTA ‘PARSONS She shot her six-year-old step- daughter to: death in their home in Iron Mountain, Is environment to blame for the WARNING Unless ‘youl see the name not getting genuine ‘Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years, and proved safe by millions—Say “Bayer”! \ Lillebridge of ern \[act ‘of the chitd-bride?, | vexation. SAFETY FIRST! “Accept only an “unbroken package” of genuine “Bayer ‘Tablets of Aspirin,” which contains proper direc- tions for Headaci:e, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu- matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a few conte—Larger packages. ‘Aspirlaje the jyade 124k of Bayer Manutacture of Monoaceticscidenter of Malcriionsé 8:10—Applied Education, Miss Min- | nie Jean Neilson, State Chairman, Bis-) 3:50—Report of Resolutions Com- | mittee. Star Spangled Banner, 4:00—Auto ride for delegates and | visitors—Visit to the State ‘Training | School and Northern Great ‘Plains | Field Station. | 6:00—Federation banquet, Lewis & Clark hotel. | Wednesday Evening. eel 8:30 O'Clock. Benefit concert, given under the auspices of the Mandan Musical cub. There will he a benefit concert Wednesday evening at the Presbyteri- j an church, 5 today at the Lewis & Clark Hotel at Hanley. f et PUT cowaueehe SIGNS Welcome signs and additional mark- ers leading to the tourist camp at the chautauqua grounds will be placed in| a few days. Several improvements | will be made at the camp grounds at | once. After the park board election | it is presumed that the new commis- | That's the; feature of the case sociologists are| interested in. She was orphaned’ when a baby. She grew up in the mining town of Tron; Mountain, almost like a weed. There she lived -until last year. Then she married John Parsons, a young widower with two children, a boy of nine and a daughter, Lily, Household drudgery was not to the girl-bride, but mothering two children only a few years younger than herself was a new problem and Last’ March she was combing the little girl’s hair. The. child fretted, and ‘ran from the house. ° Mrs/ Parsons picked up a shot- gun standing in the kitchen and shot the girl. to death. Was this act the result of childish temper? Or was it due to a mental condition caused by a Mfe that had contained little of childhopd’s joys? These are the. things the state of Missouri and sociologists are trying to determine, 4 PRESS SENATE FRAUD CHARGE —. Washington, May 25. The senate elections committee voted to presa in- vestigation of the charge that Senator Newberry obtained his electing ‘by im- Proper methods. ELEVATOR COMPANY BANKRUPT. Crosby, N. D., May 24.—With Nabill- itles acheduied at $82, 242.86 and assets At $36,753.34, the Farmers Co-operative Elevator & Trading Co. of Crosby, Di- vide county, was adjudged bankrupt in the United States district court re- cently. In the schedule of Mabilities, the firm claims $30,000 in secured claims and the sum of $51, j claims. Taxea are Msted at. $641. 62. | No exemption is claimed. The first. meeting of the creditors will be held at the office’of Lewis & Bach in Minot, at 10.a/m. on May 27. FE SERVICE «> BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © |! ®MAIL US YOUR FILMS © “Bayer” on tablets, you are. ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE fi You-d know them for thelr mothers’ sons:.. Above, lett, Theodore Roose- velt and methers right, Richard Barthelmess and mother, Below, left, Ro- bert Taft and mother, Mrs. William H. Taft, and right,;Jackle Coogan and his mother. BY GERTRUDE C. DAVENPORT, Of the Carnegie -Station for Experi- mental Evolution. * ‘The fact has long been known that The mother herself may not show these traits; nevertheless, she will transmit them to her sons, provided jamples of sona whdvhave fisen ‘through § their maternal inheritance to emi- fi {mences never attained/before in their | jfather’s family. Horatio Nelson, the great English admiral, is one such illustrious ex- ample.‘ On his péternal side Nelson came from a logg line of:easy going clergymen. Hg inherited from that ‘Mine piety, a found sense of honor jand duty and intellect of a high order. | His mother is said to have had “some |force of character.” His mother’s brother, Maurice Suckling, was an am- bitious navgl fighter. Another kins- jman, William Suckling, was a rear ad- i miral and a cousin, Murice, was in the | royal navy. | “Moreover, Nelson’s great-grand- |mother was Mary Walpole, a sister i of Robert Walpole, England’s great | prime minister. Some of the Walpoles \were also gallant naval officers. | Hence on the mother’ 3 side there was \ tras, then he son. Bi double . Given by . rrwsbapapon. ; N chance of a good inheritance; where: Some pervect sa his sister’s chances are only even, asp elatar a, chaueg ara only, Atea: Bismafek Thursday Musical Club the father and the mother. ~ atthe — Y - Because of this exact mechanical’ nrocedure eirls, in the long run, are more like their fathers than are their wrothers, Sons, therefore, have more to gain | or lose in the choice of the mother than do the daughter i FOR SALE CHEAP ) ‘Biographies are crowded with ex-/ a1 A rst Annual Concert Auditorium, Friday Evening, May 27, 1921. Curtain at 8:30 P. M. Tickets $1.10, including War Tax. Out of town ticket orders given prompt, children get some of their traits from the mother’s and some from the fath- er’s family. Only lately we have learned these her father has them. Two new one'and one-half, attention. Theretire tia oh may be doubly ton Trucks G or : lesser in iS, Mater! -. . heredity, If the dominating and re- Corwin Motor Co. Seat Sale oes Harris & ‘Co. — Bismarck, N. D. ceding traits, a8 well as the. sex- traits: are not. transmitted in haphaz-| linked traits..of: the mother,.are good ard fashion.- Based on their hereditary behavior most traits fall into two great groups. One, group dominates. the othe Brown eye color, for example, ig one of these dominating traits; for, if one of the parents ahts inherited ‘brown eyes from both sides of his family, all of the children will haye some grade of brown eyes, egen though the other Parent has blue eyes. ‘he blue eye color that has receded from view may reappear again in sub- sequent. generations, under favorable -e6mbinations. These two great groups ot traits are transmitted equally either by the father or the mother. Another Class. There is still another class of traits transmitted to the sonsthrough, the mother alone. They are called sex-linked traits. ———— Foley’s | Honey and T ‘ar IT 18 JUST WHAT CHILDREN ought to bave for feverish colds, coughs, | “‘snuffies,’”” and that tight, wheezing breathing. It stops croup, too. It eases and checks whooping cough, meaces | cough and bronchial coughs. aanaane uence natn 1) 4 t igang “Pe? Howard Modello and Monarch “My, lit the croup | haw Sights, oo 1 began, “a fees of Folry'e icy and Mier store twe oe it she slept well, never gene." igo Neb. cael Utes Tee i om used for more thas thirty years in thousands of homes for sellehioms coughs, cole, | epeomodic croup, tickling throat, hoarse- ae, whooping cough, bronchial coughs — ead the coughs that follow influcsze or Je arippe. " Outside Icing + Convenience and:26 other Herrick features described in free booklet $22.00 $75.00 Frank Kral | ‘ TAILOR LE: WAYNARIFS MUSICAL MERCHANDISE 214 Main Street, Phone 978 “Tho House of Baldwin Pianos ; Terms for Those Who Do Not Wish to Pay Cash Fianos, String Instruments and Phonographs Repaired \ Last. Word in Pianos iz . “The Player: Piano That Is; All- But TIuman” =| EF anananucnnscancovaniennoncany CAs Fresh h Da sil code Fruits and’ vegetables’ keep their original This ore food-saving feature of the prizes winning Herrick is alone worth much. Any. Herrick dealer can tell you ether facts. Herrick RerricErator.ComPANy FRENCH & WELCH HARDWARE co. | - Main Street . | : : “The Winchester Store.” \ pt Sheet Music ‘a Player Rolls Phonograph Records Washington Strength of Character uo.anaevnneueanoneunenenetONUneS Generosity _ q / freshness for days and cya t in the Herrick them for the future, as Washington Refrigerator. : built. They build them on the policy There’s no decay, no taint and -no mould. that every single tire must givefull . There’s no interchange of flavors or odors. ’ value-in actual mileage. 5 ‘The dry, cold air in constant self-purifying ees ger cireu‘ation is the reason. Try a set of Brunswick Tires. Or Waterloo, lowa = Seis i May 25, 1921. 'HGcN Washington's admirers would have made him a king he had the good’sense and gener- ‘sity of soul to refuse. He'is one of the few great men whom ambition did’ not tempt into ‘some impossible task, As the Father of His Country bo sane is now secure beyond! all Teprosch. Are'built of the best materiale, with a generous measure of value in every tire, Their makers build try one tire. Keep your own record of Brunswick performance. And _ you will soon use all Brunswicks, ; CORWIN MOTOR CO. ... +.Wholesale Distributors —_. _ Bismarck, North Dakota. / ” WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1921 - ambition, capacity, ‘Grive, a love ot travel and adventure, alt of them traits that seem to have been handed down to Horatio Nelson. ‘TRE WOMAN CITIZEN. . How is it possible for the woman of today to meet the requirements »! a home-maker, mother, and voter, with all her social'and political activ- ities, if she ‘is to go’ om suffering the pain that comes from ailments pecu- liar to her sex? Check the malady at once by a,con- scientious treatment of Lydia IE, Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound at the first sign of backache, and dragging-down sensations, so common to, women. who suffer from female diseases, j Ady. TRIBUNE: WAN | Be Sure to apie Blood Pure -- - ‘ In Summer it intended all creatures to that will drive the impurities cu! Heent the normal changes of and leave your blood stream nour- | ‘the seasons. You never saw a wild | ishing and robust. | arsimal collapes from hest, did you?| 8.5.S., the well known heris alter- | People woubén't got “Knocked out” ative,” i too fe this; get pers | the druggist . | pacino arg get from Then write us about your | \ thet: blood. : addressing Rich, wholesome blood gives bodily lens, and if Hig fort “hot weather lays yon om ACC tart to fortify your \ Uu your in- | Sitality with a rood tonic : wee 1 Coees tacit Wednesday, S— FOR RENIA,TS