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PAGE TWO —- BALDWIN. | Miss Mary orning to vi White turned toh hor t Bis The Misses Mathilda, Emma and edn Spitzer arrived from Wilton, here thes attend high schoot Fri the home of their aunt, ipa and family. Saturday after non they left f puntry to spend E prents, Mr. and Mrs, Louie Spitzer Messrs. Harry Higgins, Perey Free wh were business callers vital city Saturday. » Naughton district were en » Whittit of the R 2 caller here urday to spend the Easter vaca » with their folks at Turtle Lake hool was dismissed Frida tk’s vacation M. Thompson of near Wilton, e fore of the week with rload of horses which will be in the East. , The horses were ped by farmers near Bald nd Mr, Thompson will 1 in the neighborhood. dwig Spitzer, who wion Rishus of Wilton, ness calle rhere Wednesday. ad ry § on, aster services were held in the heran church on Good Friday. Graham left F marek, held last Mond Hich was. hee Mrs. Emil Bri mily Reingolt hool_nort hursday and ghth grade e: town came ion, ory to grad lyde Freem MeCullough, Richard Fri¢ke and Lil- lie Strandemo, arrived «Monday ut the home of her nele, Merl White end family. She po ae Glencoe-Livona on | returned home! 50) rindeet, tate heen visiting with her grand- | r their home in the er with their Id and William Me- Olaf Lundin, John Risch, Tra Bork- and O, B. Petersen, all of ind Clarence Cowels | Wm. Baker was a visitor at! aldwin teachers, Miss Edna last | ofrow and Mrs, Cleo Hartman left in Hazelton last 1 for a amily and the | children have been on the! The horses that were eng on the ped were the cream of all the viek Tuesday where she will spend a visiting with . > heen very his home is'slightly improved ister, | Miss Alice Lane spent the Easter | vacation with her parents at Glen- She is attending hool at Bismarck. an ohas hired out to nert of Arnold for the News of Our Neighbors R, H. Wood-} er in school No.| urer. Ruth Yetter | | S$. M. Nogel sent some very nice {day. . Bowers | who attended the} has beén on the Che Misses Ida Anderson and Wil 1y evening to t with friends and relatives ia In crossing the river to attend the al of the infant daughter of, Phillip Ludewi The Highee-Tuft and Stilwell sale y on the t here was weil ended and the chattels sold well succeeded in getting it out safely. | Mrs. W. C. Gehrke is on the sick a at Wilde’s and Burl cpp arrived Thars- - to visit at the home of her ughter, Mrs. Emma White and ttended church who attends | s reports the river not very safe. to take the s Irene Baker ‘spent the Easter at pupils took exani- nd Friday prepar- Ruth Muggy, . Ernest Rupp, [aa nderson, Glyde Monroe, Florence About thirty-six attended the open- ster and the following of- Top off your meals with WRIGLEY’S and give your . stomach a lift. It aids digestion—it provides the “bit of sweet” SS im beneficial form. Qy Helps to cleanse the 4 teeth and keep them healthy. WRIGLEY’S pays very big dividends on a very small investment. that can be made and it ers were elected: 1, superintendent; John Otterson, {| stant superintendent, secretary and trei a Holly. A much | larger attendance is hoped for in the future. Alfred J. H. Wengle made a trip jto the river bottom for wood Satur- | t |, Jess Morford was a passenger to » “')Bismarck on the stage Friday, ¢n-} jroute for his home at Fort Rice. Y} Miss Vivian Yetter spent the week- | ‘Tend with home folks at Glencoe, re-! turning to Hazelton Monday. r, Ferguson and family were en- | Phillips home : Burbage and family attended ster services in Hazelton. Chas. Sperry is finishing that corn picking, fall by the approach of winter. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE No Color Line in One black and two white non-commissioned officers in a French | company are shown here in the German planits are made by German authorities | troops in the occtpation of the Ruhr, French Army ity of Werden anist the use of black French THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1923 Bitter com- — i Wallie Kyes, Art Chamley, H. Al-| baugh and John Wilde and daughter | we | Mond Art Chamley marketed a bunch of his fine hogs, in Hazelton recently. Little Verna Burbage is spending | the week in Hazelton, at the Sabraw | home. \ . 4 morning at i short illness The remains will WING Farl McVelien left st Tuesday morn- {burial will take place, He ‘married and little is known of his immediate reJatives. Mr, and Mrs. for Peoria, Ill, Ink, | complete his training. County Commissioner Axel Soder ‘went where the commissioners will hold a few days session. Harry Mutchler drove across to McKenzie last Tuesday where he took the train for Bismarck, fternoon at 3 o'clock St. Joseph’s church, burial t - place in the ¢ © cemete Rev. Schmidt, of Tuttle, was here claimed thi Joe Fogerty, Tuesday, last Sunday and held Easter services ‘ came near losing a in the church north of here. . r Geo. Duemeland, of Bismarck, was|drowned last summer in the Heart transacting busi- The company thrashing rig is re-'ness for the Patterson Land So. ported to be in operation again, in| Livona vieinity here John Sharpe, left last Friday for Sexton, N. D,, to spend a week vis- called iting his daughter. owly eseaped y when he ‘oss the broken spent Easter Sunday with her parents at Wilton, . Edgerton acted as cen- tral while she was away. and he believed it was. sufticiently strong enough to hold him but he 1a plank with him as a pre- about in the middle he broke through and |! y through the icy awa. ter to the other side. Mrs. Vinton Heaten spent Easter Sun-} day with his parents at Bismarck. G. A. Hubbell, Frank Werdene, and | Axel Soder drove to Pettibone last Friday on busin ROTARY ELECTS DIRECTORS At a meeting of the Mandan Ro- noon — meeting rectors clected at the A. Renden, s, J. M. Hanley, Joseph th Hintgen, John F. and Otto Bave Sid Harris, of Tuttle, was trans-|ta acting business here last Friday. | meeting included: of Regan, was call-!H. 1. ing on friends here last Friday. Evans is now traveling for Dyrample Grain Co., of Minneapolis. Percey Evans John Mueller spent last Sunday siting his daughter ™ tha, who is in the hospital there. Buehler, two yea Anton Buehler, CKester and Claude Christgan of |died* here yesterda Dexter, Minn., brothers of Mrs. Ar- thur Kopplin, spent several days last ing before going to hall, N. D., where they have bus: | fatally. were taken to St. ) y and the funeral held from the church at that week here vis who has been lo- Axel Soder has accepted a position go for the past two with the Boynton Land Co., taking the place of G. A. Hubbell who re- |morning for a short v arents, Mr. and Mrs, Otto Bauer, On his return cast he will be lo- . where he $ 1 as instructor the Wisconsin state university Jack Davis was in town Tuesday | transacting business. Farmers are very busy these days getting ready for spring work. They all seem to think we will have an- other bumper crop this year. indications certainly point that way. Unusual Truck -Per- formance Praised By Oklahoma Owner owner reports that a 1%-ton Graham Brothers Truck re- cently astounded Oklahoma inhabi- tants by carrying a load of 3,500 pounds a quarter of a mile, through 18 inches of mud. The owner ig J. A. Lotz. February, 1922, he sa: hauling lumber and buil over the unimproved regions of the Osage country, Oklahoma, at a sur- prisingly low cost of operation. Cov- eriwg 5,300 miles in the last year, the total expense for up-keep, with the exception of gasoline and - oil, has been the cost of one fan-belt. Speaking of the particular achieve- ent referred to above, Mr. Lotz local hardware dealer and son, Michael and L. Ross An enthusiastic ag ‘ ee! Are-You: A Mother? Thig Mother’s Advice Is Most Vital to You Minn.—‘Dr. Pier- ce’s medicines are excellent, espe- cially the ‘Favorite Prescription.’ With my two youngest children I took the ‘Prescription’ and the re- sults were marvelous; it just kept me in a perfect state of health. { did not suffer with weak or ‘had spells and just felt fine during the And I had much less previously. Also both these babies were very strong Pierce’s Fayor- is an. excellent tonic for ‘the expectant mother to N. Ross, 511 Tenth | y' “While hauling 3,500 pounds on a I encountered a stretch of deep gumbo mud from 6 to} 18 inches- deep and a quarter of a mile long, into which. had been thrown several loads of rock. Team- sters working on this stretch assured | me that I could not get through with a load, and were waiting expectantly with two teams to pull me out when Minneapolis, trip to Shidler, whole period. “I went through this quarter of a mile without assistance, and the per- | and healthy. formance of the truck under these | conditions was most favorably com- mented on by several present. passed several loads which had been hauled to this lace and thrown off because of inability to pul] the load through, but I made it with my truck, with a full load of 3,600 pounds, without difficulty” Graham Brothers Truck is sold in \wonndetion with Dodge ite Prescription take.”—Mrs, E. The use of Dr. Pierie’s Favorite Prescription has made many wo- men happy by MANDAN NEWS Pneumonia Claims Edward Synan a pioneer assed local where was un- Helen, two year old daughter of el Knoll, F d yesterday morn FARMER ALMOST DROWNS a Butler, farmer living south- of the city, 1 drowning on Mon¢ tempted tow: jee of the Heart rive his home. ver again The di- ers dure old abscess of esterday with his representative of the yompson company, they will spend seve for the Frede- Acks hardware store which is to be opened on Collins avenue in the St. Joseph building: Fred Wiegmann jr, t for his new by New Salem. in the fori of a and will be situated on the lots adjoining the former Wieg mann residencs A iarriage license was-_ issued by Judge B. W. Shaw to Ernest Elleson of Mandan and Gina Holen of Lenda. Members of the Episcopal Guild will mect at the B. Wilkinson Fr home of Mrs. day afternoon at 2:30 johnstone has as assistant cashier of | weeks. nts National Bank. He cepted a position in the twin left the edn- blast Satur rd, con The Grow Your Own Flowers FLOWERS are easy to grow in the home garden and every home can be made more enjoyable ‘by them. It is surprising how many packets you can select, for a little money, from the Sterling Seed Box. No_better seeds obtainable at any price. ’ Make Your Selection Early At Local Dealers Norturvp, Kinc & Cos S EEDS vec: Try Some Of These Popular Annuals Excellent For Cut Flowers Cosmos, Aster, Sweet Peas, Nasturtium, SX] Zinnia, Phlox, Gypsophila, Poppy, Stocks, Marigold, Verbena, Sweet Alyssum. gned | ¢! and will move there in a few ing of the bishop and coune Rev. F. H. Davenport, rector of |} expects to return to the city Friday. Christ Episcopal church left yes. for Fargo to attend a making them Get it at once from your neagest druggist, in either. liquid or‘tablet form. Write Dr. Pierce, president Invalids’ Hotel in But- .' falo, N. Y., for free medical advice. Cigaret smoking by blamed for the greater increas: of fire during the s in the United States. Time is the - Real Test of its Value If you pay a thousand dollars for acar and have to buy a new one each year, it is at least twice as expensive asa fifteen hundred and fifty dollar car that looks like new at the end of three years. : Webelievea StudebakerSedan is good for five to ten years of ‘useful, satisfactory life. We are not positive as to the real ‘life because none has yet worn out. If, when you trade in your car, you learn that you can get only three or four hundred dollars for it because there is no second- hand market for that make of car, then you must add this extra depreciation to arrive at the real cost of the car. The trade-in price of Stude-~ baker carsshows avery small de- preciation, in many sections the smallest of all makes of motor cars. And there is always a ready market for used cars of Stude- baker manufacture. Motorcarvaluesfindtheirprop- . e levels in a car salesrooms. isit one compare Stude- baker second-hand cc tt with others. The result will be illumi- nating. The built-in value proves itself each thousand miles of use. Four wide-opening doors. Bight-day clock. Quickaction cowl ventilator. Attcactive coach lamps. Hester, Mohair velvet plush upholstery. Glare-proof visor and windshield cleaner. ‘Thiet proof transmission lock. Dome BISMARCK MOTOR COMPANY Distributors. ¢ N ‘Bismarck, N. D. x 1923 MODELS AND PRICES—f. o. b. factories Touring « ~ $1a75 Roadster G-Pass) °978 wheat Roadster (2-Pass.) 1250 Coupe-Roadster (2-Pass.) Coupe (4-Pass.) iis edan . . 1 Sedan... . - 50