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PAGE TWO 100 COURSES - SUMMER TERM Session at State University Will Open on June 9 and July 30 different departments of 4 versity duri the! jon of 1926, according to, Joseph Kennedy, director of work. The summer June 9 and close on ill be offered in the School | of Liberal Arts, | and the music, courses aduate re. of ne = woll 2 and expression who will on include of the grad- | ity of Towa, of lectures: in eClintock, at the ch chool of the t will rive ¢ Ce waite of Northwe y, who will give a tw sin codching. In_addi- | 1 to these men a number of well | 1 city school superintendents brought here, and spec ¢ planned for the dram art departments. Purpose is Four-Fold » purpose of the ummer ses yn of the university is a four-fold to enable students to complete the four-year course in less time, | Bive teachers an opportunity to work for college degrees; help students to fill out their qin » and to e to ¥ their present Courses of instruction are off art, bookkeeping, botany economics, education, ethics, French, rman, 4 home economics, home nursing, jour- nalism, Latin, manual arts, mathe- matics, music, nature study, physical education, physics, philosophy, phy political science, p: Sociology, and :tenography writing. The graduate depart ‘university will be open a number of courses than “offered will be available for working und larger tofore those ‘d the master’s degree. Rotarians Observe - Birth Anniversary The eighteenth of March, annivers- ary of the birth of Grover Cleveland, was observed by the Bismarck Rotary lub juncheon this noon in thi ific, through a talk by R._ ‘pos: ‘ . land of the simple virtues that have charac- terized all of our great statesmen. He enumerated Cleveland's simplicity of quanner, his self-acquired ¢lucation, his high moral courage, and his faith in the common people as the character fundamentals of all our great men. He the most quotable of all our presi- dents and the only one who, out of the presidential chair for four years, was able to win again the highest hon- ~or in the hi Rose, accompanied by » Sang two old Irish mel- Paul Wright gave the charge L. W. Larson as a new me Visitors, ve in addition to cluded: E. Case of Minneapolis; of Valley City, and f Captain P. J. until the next Last Minute News Bulletins St. Paul, March 17.—(®)—Os- car Arneson, 47, chief clerk of the Minnesota houke of represen- tatives for 19 years, dropped dead in front of his home early today. He was president of tlt Dow-Arneson company, printers, of St. Paul. A widow and three children survive. Washington, March 17.—(?)— An earthquake described as “very severe” was registered on the seismograph at Georgetown University today, estimated distance of. 1900 miles from Washington. The direction of oe shock from here was uncer- ain. Jacksonville, Fla., March 17.— (M)—The case against Charles Ponzi, charged with using the mails to defraud, was dismissed by United States Commissioner Carl Noble at the conclusion of rgument in the hearing here , today. Washington, March 17.—4)— ; The senate agriculture committee agreed today to vote Friday on the cooperative marketing bill prepared by the department cf agriculture, Chairman Norris declared there was “no . opposi- tion to the bill as a whole eith- er in the committee or the sen- et ate.” Monccn’s Tire Service. Phone 944, U. S. Royal Cord Tires. GRAIN NOTES o seinonwagils Lh . Chicago, March 17,—(4)-—Canadian piners took advantage of the fairly igh price level this year by mar-| keting freely, the comparatively low mi reserve estimates of wheat in- jeate. ii is claimed. Private au- jorities estimate the reserves at 15 20 million bushels. credited with selling quite a but otherwise interest was mix- Some of the bull leaders assum- Em waiting attitude. cents raise in futures, After Maite tinlshed the spread be- bid and offers was % cents. iat ota nC, Stream, back from Cali- Wheat tyade was not heavy at any dime yesterday. One local broker subsidence of speculative in- in corn futures was indicate saya be is bullish on the fa: state but bearish o- t{ Patrick's Day | who will surely | di of Grover Cleveland: -| Auditorium Thursday evening, Mare pointed out that Cleveland was! above, in-! there was an objection in the senate| with all kinds of offe es | of the Cleve no’ the green” today in honor of St. | cause he ha: Here are nine prominent Am No. 4—Her pin a shamrock on their lapels ahatlight. p it there until late. No. Wh» are these sons of Ol Erin? | tears To help you in this contest we'll name the Irish | looking gentleman in the center, No. 3, because, al- though he represents a flock of well known Jrish- not nationally known. er few tips tc help you. s famous Irishman spends most of his | amonds. No, he’s not a jewélers but Thousands of good Irishmen in the United St: will be “we: | paid a v | | | No. 8—He only crashin his a. ie old gentleman is one of Uncle Ne and oldest aid And he has when the Tea Pot name. ener E. J. Donahue WILL ROGERS, NATIONALLY KNOWN HUMORIST, AND DERESZKE QUARTET TO BEIN BISMARCK ON MARCH 25 Will Rogers, considered the ext humorist since Mark Twain, ppear at the Bismarck With Mr. Rogers are the De Reszke | ingers, a male quartet which has} had the advantage of having coached with the great Jean De Reszke will sing a varied number of Ame can, French and English songs. Mr. Rogers will talk about thing and everything. way he writes and wr talks. When someone ask his subjects would be he said called one “All | know is what [ read in the papers” and the other men I have me the stage door.” His+ tour th the country j has broke: ds of the concert any-| h that sudden appreciation derstanding that only an Ame {audience can gi | * No One Escapes No one, no matter how one, no matt he friendly gibes of Will Rogers, President Coolidge comes in for his ; share and so does the Prince of Wales.| movements, to see Will Rog And Congress. What he doesn‘t say| first time, one might imagine him to about isn’t w saying.| be a farmer taking in the Yet the’ comedian | Rogers een life from all angle teh the gov-| He has known princes and pauners, he At one time| has been sought after by politicians + to lend h to the reading of something I said, be-| wit to their cause. But Will Roge cause I am a professional jokemaker.| stands on his own platfoym for th As a jokemaker I am an amateur com-| truth as he sees it. Few! Americans pared to Congress. My jokes don't today have caught the faith of the! hurt anybody. You can take ‘em or American people as he has. time congress a joke.” ther awkward in his |said, “I have only to v j ernment and report faci CITIES HAVE RIGHT TO PASS ZONING | ORDINANCE, SUPREME COURT HOLDS Cities of over 6,000 inhabitants | space ‘have the power to regulate and re j tr [strict the height, number of stories, | * \and of buildings, and other j structures, the percentage of lot that {may be occupied, the of yards courts, and other open spaces, the density of population, and the loca- {tion and use of buildings, under jchapter 175 of the laws of 1923, ac- jcording to the decision handed down ‘yesterday by the state supreme court in the case of the city of Bismarck jvs. Laura W. Hughes and W. 4 ya ards, in residence di authorized 99 n by chapter ly each distr arbitrary, power granted to the ¢ islature.” Not the E. A. Hughes Apartments Because of the similarity of names, some persons are of the opinion\that the decision affects the proposed ad- dition to the Hughes apartment building at the corner of Broadway and Second street, the excavating for! which has already been done, but this is not the case. Laura W. Hughes and W. A. Hughes, the parties in: volved in ‘the action, were contem. plating the erection ‘of a residence building at the corned of Avenue C nd Seventh street, in What ix desig- nated as the “A” residential dis- trict,” and the city contended that the building had not been planned to conform with the provisions of the zoning ordinance. ‘The ordinance provides that apartment houses are prohibited in the “A residential dis- trict,” and that. buildings erected within such district must be at least 10 feet back from the property line. size y by the leg: | | Hughes. Judge Fred Jansonius had prev ity ruled in favor of the city in dis- jtrict court and the case was appealed jto the supreme court by the defend- ants. “In construing the comprehens zoning ordinance of the city of Bis marck, every presumption is indulged in favor of its validity and the qu ition, in determining its validity, i not whether the court approves the ordinance, but whether it can pro- nounce it an unreasonable, arbitrary exercise of power,” the decision states. “The ordinance in the case at bar, restricting size of buildings, P : | of old grain soon, especially if new crop. prospects continue vo favorabie,| _ MeKenzie Hotel se ig nconday lunch at 35c; eve- ning dinner 65c. Luncheons and dinners served for private parties cither in main din- ing rocm or private dining room, 35 cents and up. We can serve you any hour, day or night. y; | Mills were holding off, said a re- port from Wichita, Kansas, yesterday. There was no demand for 12 cars of | wheat which arrived there. | A delay is likely in lake naviga- tion this year, it is said. A well posted vessel ngent reports the ice 20 inches thick off the Duluth ship] canal, about eight inches thicker than apy time in 10 years at this date. A Minneapolis cash man claims that mills have been buying ordinary wheat only recently, and shipping it to Buffalo to mix with high protein grain held in the east. A Chicago firm claims, however, that mills were buying high protein wheat in Min- neapolis on Monday for shipment to Buffalo and they were bidding for more. Too Late To Classify FOR RENT—A garage. 417 Tenth St. or call 1068, S-17-3t LOST..-Rainbow Pin, Please return! to Jeane Setser, 419 Fifth St. j 3-17-2¢ wild and woolly we = a Sry our St, Patrick's din- 's Tire ce. Phone;ner at McKenzie @uteboita- U THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i ) |BUILDING UP THE; cop's fi He's usually in the New Yorker used to drive a dray. | 's right up there among the political yotables. it to the Pope in Rome. No. 7—L. 0k at that face and guess who this Irish- |man from the fightin’ family has one eye, but when it comes to ay in, this Irishman is the master mind est. He gained considerable fam Dome boiled ove The answers will be found on page 8, Annual Hobo Day Is Observed at The High School; Hobo-skip the high school featured by an assembly program this morning when the students, dressed in overells, aprons or rags, paraded the auditorium stage. Talks were given by a number of prominent students and a St. Patrick’s day pro- gram giv Thomas McLaughlin, high school janitor, played a numer of old time violin selections. At noon « dinner was members of the Junior Playmakers, the proceeds of which will be used in the work of the organization. The Squirrel club, 4 group of boys, was in general charge of the day's progr This afternoon the “hobos” paraded the down-town streets, and decidedly informal band’ con- certs on the street corners. QUIETS DISTHRENNG R. COUGHS ing pine wr, pure honey, and oothing, cough-healing ingred- zo into the making of Foley’s Honey and Tar. No opiates, justly by careful mothers, harmful and without medicinal value. Read the bottle contents as given on the package, and learn why Foley's y and Tar is the superior cough- safe for children and grown persons, and reliable for coughs, c: croup, tickling throat, nervous + ing and like irritations, Ref stitutes. ACKING sub- Try our St. Patrick's din-' ner at McKenzie Hotel night, 65c. to- Help your | stomach and liver Bnd gas pains, constipation 4 TF your Stomach and Liver are weak, your food is not digested. ‘This causes food to be held up in, your. body. The usual result is con- stipation, which causes headache and severe gas ins. For 53 years, peo- have sensibly, corrected this con- Sition by using Chamberlain's Tablets for the Stomach and Liver. They help the digestive organs stop chronic con- n, Get Chamberlain's Tablets at-any Drug Store, only 25c. PAZO OINTMENT edy for Piles is handy? eallapeibie tubes with detach- able pile pipe which makes | BABY’S TEETH |. EDITOR'S NOTE: This is .the Ifitth of a series of ten articles on |eare of the baby. .Tomorrow: Each | Tooth a Milestone, i BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING j Surgeon General, U. 8. Public Health 1 Service | When a baby. comes into world, the first teeth are lying j beneath the gums. These teetn c: tnot develop as they should if the body is not supplied with a suffi- jetenut amount of the necessary build- ing material. . | It, therefore, follows that in the \food of the child we should look the | {especially to that part which builds jbony structure of which the tooth| lis a type. The two most important jof these substances cot ituting the} \necessary building material are phosphates and lime. | Mother's Milk There is, of course,’ no better {source of supply for these important elements than milk, mother’s milk, | i nd clean cows milk j later, | After infancy the diet of eagh! j child should inchude a glass of milk! jwith each meal and in addition to this there should be other sources | of mineral salts such as fruits, green! vegetables and pure water. | Teething in a healthy child is a ‘normal function. Only when teeth- | jing is associated with outside dis- | turbances, especially those due to in- Idigestion or other abnormal condic| tion, does it become a source of} serious truble, or when the teeth |xrow faster than the overlying tis- Disturbances cases there the e ere disturbances from the! ssure of the tender and swollen} on the growing teeth. If ' {is sick or has fever or intestinal dis- | ‘turbances do not attribute it to] ‘teeth, but go at once to your doctor.! Sometime at about the end of the xth month, if the baby has been| jthriving normally, the first teeth, usually the lower front teeth that! are lodged in baby’s little jaws wheni |he was born, will appear. - | These will be followed at more or less regular intervals by the uppe incisors, than by the back teeth and lastly by the cuspids or, as they are generally called, the stomach and the eye teeth, , Cynthia % | | 3 BY CYNTHIA GREY She was only 20 or so, this sweet young thing with whom I lunched! yesterday. Looking at her over my} coffee cup I sang a hail to glorious girlhood, youth. i What a full cup of bliss was hers! {--young and full of joy to the brim, jenthusiastic, hopeful, full of jenergy—sheer, glorious yout! | Margie had told me about her new) | job, her little flat, her new fur coat jmade possible by the new job. Then ‘she sobered down and timidly began | on another tack. i |. “I wonder if I'm awfully old-fash-! ioned and provincial, Cythnia. I'm in such an in-between mood these days. I don’t get shocked at things I know are going on, and yet I quite accept them. I’ just haven't the moral courage to cut loose from the iway I was brought up, and I don't know that I want to, but I-wish I jcould make up my mind about things -” Then, gaining courage as I showed Who Is To Blame? Ifyoung people are prought up in ignorance of the temptations and pittalls of life, who is to blame if they fall into error? Is 1] itnot better that they be taught the truth, so that they may avoid the mistakes which so often spell tragedy? a This is the mission of True Story Magazine. By publishing the actual experiences of others, it not only reveals the influences which are always at work to blind and deceive the innocent, Out it drives home the eternal truth chatonlyrightthinkingand right living can ever bring hap- piness. . If you like to read stories that grip ons imagination, tug at eart-strings, and leave you ed and feeling better for you have read, you will not want to miss the 16 absorbing features in April True Story— now on all newsstands, ; Refinishing ‘| Latest moder. method. We f do automobile Top and \f Curtain work as well as all kinds of Upholstering-; Work Guaratiteed. 4 - PAINT. SHOP WEDNESDAY, of its permanence would \make the e of furniture tndesirable— 's just the point,” went on | “They’re not all tied up for | life by the pressure cf the law. They jean walk out, quit any time they. | vant to.” | Yes, they can! And this very argu- (ment for free love is the very bi | gest one against it, as I see i can quit, walk out, any time. What then for the one who I wonder if she -or he-~won't come to believe that “the law’s pressure” is rather a sat ing thing? ‘FRAZIER WILL NOT BE MADE A RUBBER STAMP (Continued from ne comment when told of Fr ‘s pub. |die announcement, : (FRAZIER SAYS PRECINCT ‘ MEETI HAVE BEEN HELD ! onpartisan leaders. here continued to maintain silence today in regard to the announcement yesterday by R. W. Frazier, chairman ‘of the Republi- state central committec, that he ill not rescind the call for a state Republican convention to be held there March 31, Frazier said he has received re- ports from a number pf counties in {the western part of the state that hae: conventions, set for yester- Peter Ki Sheridan, Wyo., is against, Gov. Nellie T vubernator:al campaign e is an out-and-out w cent newspaper pol! have strengthened hi this will not hurt hi no alarm, she dared use the real words: ay, had been held. Precinct meet- ‘ as en : ings occasioned no inconvenience to It seems it was this “free love” | voters in the rural districts, he said, business, Margie herself had no spe-; since they met yesterday to elect cial yen to do any “free loving,” but | township officers. she had to make up her mind about| Alfred §. Dale, Nonpartisan cam- some girls she knew who did. itch Manneee, sald be hadsno. gate. “You remember V president?” asked. M had the courage of h She and Phil had been engaged for about five years. But he was a med’ | Couldn't affor “So Vie got ing his int flat togeth: and thing of it, and wh: finished Margi “But,” sa morals of how do they e unmariied than ma: They ably eat and pay and clothes and use 4 ectr anda telephone just the same, don’ they? Of course, he might not f so obligated to take out insurance j for her, and perhaps the uncertainty | aply prob- rent s Electric and Acetylene * Welding BISMARCK WELDING WORKS 208- 10th St. Phone 776 ‘an't 7 ment té-make' but that! He! "| one within the next few day: No “cure”—but helps to re- duce paroxysms pf coughing. \yrigaeie coucn VIS&S »H. B. LOVE D.C. PHL CG. , Doctor of Chiropractic. EXAMINATION FREF. Eltinge Bldg. Phone 174 When 72 hours old, give them Sterling Chick Mash with Buttermilk dry, in It contains the elements necessary to the growth of 2 j straight, strong legs. on Malt Syrup proof posizive of its purity. Fifty-one years’ experience in malting are behind this 100% pure Barley Malt Syrup. Three types—light, dark and hop-fla- vored. Packed in handy 2% lb. cans, sterilized and pasteurized. in the crop. Sold By All Grocery Stores BISMARCK SHOE HOSPITAL Henry Burman, Prop. Shoe Repairing. Special Attention Given to Parcel Post Orders. Bismarck, No. Dak.’ Its granulation is just the proper size to prevent “lumping” Its animal and vegetable proteins gan all be assimilated by the digestive organs---no waste Keeps digestive tract in excellent condition, its lactic acid aiding in preveating white diarrhea. Guaranteed To Satisfy ASK YOUR FEED DEALER NORTHRUP, KING & CO.. Fecds and Seeds, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN, When pe see a dispatch “BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS” Do you know what it means? It means, if you are an investor, you are reading accurate reports of the market prices of your stocks and bonds. W. E: PERR Bisniarcl’s Exclusive Fanéral Director. reported. It means, if you are a farmer, you are reading accurate reports of the markets of the world. It means, if you are a fan, you are reading accurate reports of baseball games. It means, if you are interested in golf, tennis, polo, swimming, boxing, football, and all ath- letics, you are reading sport news accurately It means, if.you are interested in civic activi- Parlors 210 Fifth Phone 687W from everywhere. ties, you are reading accurate reports thereof It means, if you are interested in religion, you are reading accurate reports of religious activities in all parts of the world. Ms It means, if you are interested in politics, you are reading accurate reports of the doings of all UNDERTAKING PARLORS i » Ligensed Emmbalneer 1 Day Phone 100 s Night Phones 100 or 484K Parties. It means, if you are interested in the affairs of the world, you are reading accurate reports of the doings of governments; activities in the fields of science, education, researcit, transporte: tion, communication; and, whether by flood or field, you are reading news as accurately as it is hu- manly possible to portray it! Know the news when and as it happens Read the Name of Local Paper which publishes: daily’ the dispatches ‘of THE ASSOCIATED PRESS and all the news of local I