The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 3, 1922, Page 6

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#AGE SIX REGARDED A , CONFIRMED BACHELO ‘ By Matchmaking Mothers, Vis-) eoaies count Lascelles Now To Wed Princess Mary REGULAR LOVE AFFAIR His Contemplated Entry Into Royal Family Is Regarded With Popular Favor London, Jan, 3.—Vi ar-old fiance of Princess 3 ind slim, with a blonde mou tache. He has # soldierly hearing: always well-dr a good atter _ ‘duontly, hi tall a sportsman anit ' speaker. Cons contemplated entry into the royal family of England is regard-{ sed with popular favor. The coureship of the betrothed cou- ple, acd Wy accounts, has been real love making. They have ridden together in Rotten Row, and ha walked together through — Londo rects. Country house ties at ch the Prine has visited have included Lord) Lascelles among the He was a guest Sandring ng the recent stay of the roy- family there. He went shooting with the King and. the Princess ac companied the guns. It was the mitual regard established at earli- er meetings ripened into more Lord Lascelles approached the Ning before proposing to the Prince the royal parents, lik dered family, talked it over with thejr alaughter. Princess Mary soon showe she was as much in love as the Vis- count, whereupon the King gavé' lt eensent to Lascelles paying his mal suit to the Prince: fhe Viscount won golden epinions when fighting in France with his. regi- ment, the Grenadier Guards. One of his fello Mlicers says that Lascelles never | his cheerful smile even in the hottest fighting; the only exception when tobacco ran short. “A baby millionaire and not a cigarette to bless myself grumbled Me sfully circumvented ny de upon his single estate by ng mothers and hed come to be regarded as a confirm- not supposed to des’ man” and hi stes ran » in the direction of sport. He is rider to hounds and has lately ck .in Yorkshire, of master. rom. whom Lord Lascelles in 1916 ted nearly 2,- 500,000 pounds, was supposed to be the worst dressed man in the House of Lor The-rent roll from his Irish estates ran into 34000 pounds a year. There is . - Strength in EveryTablet One dose often helps com- mence toenrich your blood: and revitalize your worn- out exhausted nerves: Nuxated Iron is organic iron, like the iron in your blood and like the iron in spin- ach. It is so prepared that it will not injure the teeth nor distirbthestomach. Itisready for almost immediate absorp- tion and assimilation by the blood while some. physicians elaim metallic iron whieli peo- pleusually take isnot absorbed atall. If you arenot strong or well you owe it to yourself to make the following test: See how long you can work or how far you can walk without. be- jing tired. Next take two ain tablets of Nuxateit Iron—three timesperday, after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see how much you have gained. ‘Your moncy: will be refunded by the manufacturers if you do not obtain perfectly satisfactory resulis. Atall druggists. ad suCcCe; tempts ma matchmi la a estal which E Lord Clanrica AUTOS BURN! The car and garage that js not protected from fire may dollars insut- means thousands of Buy } ance here. loss. complete Hartford Fire Insurance Co. policies cover practically q every known risk. Call on this agency. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance.” Bismarck, N. ‘ount Lascelles, ILLITERACY | something | | Chesterfield House, a famous Mayfair {mansion fronted with tall columns | the headquarters of the League of Na- | tions, until the League moved to it hounAnEnt Offices at Geneva. | Harewood House, the Lascelles an- | cestral seat near Leeds, is rAmarkable | for its 76 doors made of solid mahug- | any, which were made on the family’s H in Barbados. ' Most of the wealth of the Earl of Harewood, the | prospective bridegroom’s afther, is de-| {rived from sugar plantations in the! | West Indies, |. Harewood House has a wonderfui | | collection of china, valued at $1,000,- | 000 and surpassed in this country only ! by the Windsor collection. uy arms are two. bears supporting a | motto “In solo, Deo salus” (Salvation (" God alone). i i | i NEW BEDFORD'S ~ | PERCENTAGE Among Persons 10 Years of Age} and Over Is In a Class By Itself FOREIGNERS RES ! PONSIBLE' Virtually Haif of Present Pop- ulation Was Born In For- eign Lands | | | New Belford, Mass., Jan, 3—ed-| , eral census. figures s s that this city’s percentage of 12.1 of illiteracy | umo0ng persons 10 years of age and over is the highest of any city of 00,000 population injthe country, but [the state supervisor ‘of Americaniza Vtion is authority ‘for the statement that no city in Massachusetts is doing so much for the, nation through ‘the | j education of the population from other lands. The illiteracy’ percentage for! the state as a whole is only 4.7 and/ the city long since accepted the situa}, ‘tion as a challenge to effort. | For thirty years and more immi- ! grant population hj been rolling in-; ew Bedford in a degree unparal- | leled in almost any other part ef the; | country. Virtually half the present! popwation wa with more than half that part of the, | population having its origin in non-| | English speaking countiie | | New Beeford has from,a‘day ante-| | dating compulsory evenin, ‘hool leg: | |islation maintained evening schools: | | but it did not make persuasive effort | ito draw in the adult population un- ; til the World War aroused the nation | | to the need of assimilation of the for- | ‘eign-born,. The initial movement for | reaching the problem of adult illiter- j acy was made by the L. M.C. A. In- j dustrial Department, whiih organized learly ‘in the war many study classes jwithin industrial plants. Then’ the |state provided for co-operation with ‘local communities Thd ‘the city was jone ‘of the first to accept the condi- | tions of providing a supervisor of Americanization through elementary study classes in English for adults, and to strengthen its evening schools by making a particular appeal for cli izenship through classes for prepare- jtion for naturalization. At the very {beginning of the war the school de- partment employed a field agent to | work up this department, through ad- |dresses in the foreign-speaking clubs Jand in other ways, so that a good start had already been made before the state's. action, Other agencies of influence have been at work also. The | state maintains here a branch of the !state division of Immigration and ' Americanization, and it has been ac- \tive in putting new-comers into, the j evening schools and the English study | classes within the industries. “For the children who came. from foreien lands The Evening Standard {medal for proficiency in English was |accepted by the municipality in 1917 and is annually awarded to children of non-English speaking parentage. | This medal was sented to the 1921 i winners at the Pilgrim Tercentenay ‘last summer by President Harding. | There are in, the day schools special | fGlasses in every district to teach them | English ond bring them un. to grade. | Of these 500 are now enroiled. Tven- ing | thousand youth, while in English arfd| ‘naturalization evening classes there are nearly a thousand advit students, ‘In more than a score of industrial and in more than a dagen} hurches and other places about | plan ‘club: one .bundred adult cl" or three times a week, in the noon hour or after . to wine ont, the char of illiteracy against the av- proximately 1,200 men and women en- ‘rolled. WI heer yal, 1922, at:8 o'clock e MeCa x Chureh in B . North Da- | ke for the fur nd installing ‘ofa Steam heating id chureh ae to the’ ; an Horn 1 ma’ y bidders at his office in North Dakota. ‘© bids will be opened at the ¢ aid time for installing such the Church furnishes the ma- 5 therefor. i A certified check payable to the or- der of treasurer of said’ Church in the |sum of 5% of bid must accompany each | bid jal bids. |*"pated’ December 80, 1921 Secretar} of said Ohurch, Bismarc! Nop. 42-81; 1-3-4 |AN ACT DONING DEBS IS CLAIM } (Continued from Page 1) , Sion which interpreted the law aright. i for the protection of the nation “when lassailed by foes within as well ‘as without.” {The Lascelles’ London residence, jand facing Hyde Park, was used te | ‘The fam-| shield with a golden cross, with the! born in fore'gn lands, #ture, he said, and heols have an attendance, of a)> ° sg maet two! s| Da Tho right is reserved to reject any or} OF GRACE FOR PAR.| eration by the supreme couri’s deci- A BABY whose organs function regularly is Ya laughing, happy baby. When baby cries and isfret- § | ful look for constipation. It { 7 is generally the forerunner 4. £7 of nervousness, feverishness, | ! Pare daches, colds and many other J | ressing ailments. Give half a- spoonful of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup fy Pepsin and the baby will quickly get well, A dose costs less than a cent. DR. CALDWELL’S || SYRUP PEPSIN THE FAMILY LAXATIVE ~ | Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is the largest selling liquid laxative in-the i world, used by inothers for 30 years. i It is a combination of Egyptian Senna and other simple laxative herbs with: pepsin, the safest remedy you can | || give a'baby. : i HALF-OUNCE BOTTLE FREE » { Few escape constipation, so even if zou do not require a lamutive at this moment let me send you a Half-ounce Trial Borle of my | Syrup. apse FREE OF CHARGE so that you will have it handy when needed. Simply send your name and address to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 514 Washington St., Monticello, | INL. Write-me today. Q do { | eee) | and instrumentalities within our na-! tion, which were mtial to the ‘pro-| tection, and the safeguarding of our! own form of government. Debs has | been imprisoned over two years and! eight mouths, the Jaw in question has | been vindicated and a lesson taught) which never will be eradicated Hom 'Gie pages of history.” BURBAUIS ~ CHANGED Decentralization is Going On| Within The Tenth \ District \ i a Minneapoli MOET 3.—Pursu- ant, to the prey isions of, the Sweet Bill which has passed © Congress, decen- tralization af the Veteran’s bureau going on within the Tenth “District, which comprises the states of Minne- | sota, North and South Dakoth and | Montana, it is announced by ©, D. Hibbard, district manager of the bu-} reau, who has headquarters here. ' Disability files are to be shipped} from the Washington office of the Vet- erans’ bureau in the immediate fu-j they will be dis- | tributed among the fourteen district | offices within the next three months. From this time on, the sub-district | offices will handle. all communica- | tions with reference to claims, | “We have not received the files | from Washington as _ yet,” Manager. Hibbard said, “but our information is} that they were shipping them from the central office as fast as is human- receive them in ‘a shoré time. > “We are, however, going ' ahead| with the decentralization plan within. the district, ‘and after’ January 1, 22, the sub-district” offices. will] handle all the correspondence hy ap- pilcants with reference to claims filed with the bureau. Contact officers will be stationed at. these offices to give prompt and. courteous treatment to| all pei wblying.” = Sub-district offices witfftn the tenth distrit are located at Duluth, St. Paul, | Mnneapolis, Sioux Falls, ‘S. D., Fargo, N. D., and Helena, Mont. Individuals who have claims for the Veterans bu- reau in the entire. district should as- certain to what subdivsion they ‘be- long and take up with that office their applications or cases, Mr. Hibbard said. This information, he said, may be obtained from any of the Yeteran’s organizations or from the Red Cross. 100 LATE TU CLASSIFY D--A woman cook, one who try baking. Frank . Sth and Broadwa ay FOR SALE--1920 Cle tun about 1,200 miles; car and tires in| good conditions Qwiter leaving city. Bargain if taken at onc all E.G anselman, Grand Pacific ‘hotel. Saturday and Sunday. 1-3-5¢ | PROFIT AND SERVICE FOR YOU, in ail unlisted securities. For your name we offer’ free map and story Mexia millicns made every week Write Curtis’ Brokerage Co., Fort Worth. Tex. FOR RENT—Nice wa isned rgom. Clpse in. ard St. A 1-8-1 wk D. B.C. MEN HEAD 24 FARGO OFFICES’ go, N. D., ‘“D. B. C.”” » things—Dakota Business and Doing Better Constant- aduates of this successful old . i dy. Gri | school certhinly are ‘‘making gocd’ | in their home town. Managers of 24 large firms were trained here. Swanson, who began with | the Fargo ble & Grani but a year ago, is now office man- ,ager. Beatrice Whitson was recently | employed by the same firm. | D. B. C. graduates are trained to think, to progress—and they do. Follow the SucceS$ful.”” Write F. L. Watkins, Pres., 806 Front | St., Fargo, N. D., for terms, ‘etc. ee MORE MONEY If You Ship Us Your HIDES - FURS Write Us FIRST For Special Information DEAL DIRECT pi the LARGEST and OLDEST HIGHEST PRICES. a if | Weite for price list, tazeand full Information Works, | 4 . j i 9 7 | : ssex ANNounces . . Effective December 24th = | . | : Prices of all Essex Models, including the New Coach, are reduced as follows: ~ : ss ite ee / , cee ~ Touring:....... $1095, a Js _ Sedan ......... 1895 °° Hes 4 t (f. 0. b. Detroit) é . . * as aa i : : i s : 4 R. B. Loubek Motor Co. ; 214 Main Street : Distributors _ Bismarck, N..D. q 5 a o A it i dient side is most health: 0 lie hillippines regularly export }-frs Matinee. at. 3) n, m.:~.Rialto| during the day and 15c in the s n / } re Theatre. _ BE SAAR evening. et aly ee j EE | ly possible, and we are expecting to! =, h D.BERGMAN 8 (CO. “Victory has come, not only to the in the field, bul to the powers} ST.PAUL -MINN. LL Frank Everts has taken charge of the business known as.the-Blue Bird Con- § oo fy fectionery Store, located at 5th:and § Broadway, and will conduct it hereafter | Ul q as a restaurant and confectionery A store. Also will handle all kinds of { : j i Bakery goods. : ‘ - WARNING! Say ‘‘Bayer’’ when you buy Aspirin. ; i | - Unless you see the name ‘‘Bayer’’ on tablets, you are | | A not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians i PTO TREES RT SBC TERT TR PRED Ere over 22 years and proved safe by millions for - | : : x ‘ Colds Headache Rheumatism pile! j <== . Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis °° : Tani 5 ain, Pain : . : $. -. Earache Lumbago fap He Safety and Service © Accept only ‘‘Bayer’” package which contains proper directions. ‘THE TWO STRONG PI PL EC .LARS ON WHICH Hiya bases O61 ae A emoeetares a oe WE ARE BUILDING OUR BUSINESS « - 1922 . ae u ¢ » ‘ Like an artiat sketching in the faint out- lines of a new. masterpiece, we all stand. ~ brush: in hand, before the untouched canvas _ of 1922. ui The old year is gone and in its stead we have 12 new months in which to paint the picture of our achievements for 1922. 4 ’ Let the brushes tell the successful story of ambition realized and opportunity seized. Let them also record financial preparation. Open an account with us now. 3 With our new McClintock Burglar Alarm System which we recently installed, our bank is a safe place to keep your Liberty Bonds and other valuables as well as to do your general banking business, First National Bank, Bismarck, N. Dy * GET A SAFETY DEPOSIT BOX NOW Safety First Bismarck Bank __ Bismarck, N. D. 2

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