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The Bismarck Tribune : An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER i fter all, for mankind to instal! some of the internat | he has been talking about for so many ovements centuries There is this business of war, for insta Per- | (Established 1873) |haps the time allotted us by Major Bowie is none OE ISS ESI Raabe Sid OOo too ample; but there is reason to hope that before prcnaped, bp, the Bismarck Tribune, COMPANY: |i has allelapved men will have come to their sense Bismarck, as second class mail matter. | and found some way of seine their disputes wit th George D. Mann..........President and Publisher one another without resorting to force. becr! | Then there is crime. Even the most cynical musi Patty by sibling MERE tightened | admit that three million centu cught to be time . ‘ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)...... 7:20 | enough for us to make a real scientific study of this Daily by mail, per year, social phenomenon and find a better way of treating | (in state outside Bismarck)....... than our present prisons and elec! chairs Daily by mail, outside of North De ta, j afford. | Rembet Await Bureau of C And, some time before the end of this long | Member of The Associated Press | stretch of years, it is just barely possible that capi ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to | tal and labor may find some way of getting along. uae for republication of all news dis} tches| Of course, was are the Hedi problems. _ The so the $ i aie alban auc published herein. All rights of republication of a | that Major Bowie Sus, tb Oe tno: Consider, for example, the revolution in human affairs that would be ne itated even by so la thing as our trying to regulate our dail other matter herein are also reserved. lives Foreign Representatives cacg: LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY. 41. | by the Sermon on the Mount; think what the CHI | words Birotherhood, Tolerance, Democracy, Free- | Mie aay BURNS & SMIT ce Bldg. | tom and Justice really mean, and you'll agree that the time will be none too long. NEW YORK - - ritth Ave. Bidg. (arte TE A whole lot of things can happen in 300,000,000 | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) = Yeurs. It is rather odd to think that there will come a day when not one soul on earth will know that there once existed great “world powe The world, unfortunately, is far from perfect, and | "med England, France and America. It tickles there is ample reason for pessimism among the seri \the risibilities to think that some day the name ous thinkers in the corner drug store; but there are, | 2f Shakespeare and Napoleon and Washington and j DERM Chaves rays ot Hare J | Caesar will mean no more than they would have Ji ; j meant to old King Tut-ankh-amen, But it’s true. Maybe There’s Time Enough | i i i | | | ' ! i The latest ray is emitted by Major William We and all that we build or do or say, will vanish Bowie, government scientist, whu announces that ¥ fron’ the entth. | our old earth has at least $00,000,000 years of life | Well, perhaps that isn’t strietly ‘true. For we are the spiritual apeestors of those million-genera- This planet, it scems, is slowly cooling off, and tions-removed descendants of ot and every step ultimately will be too cold to support any kind of that we take forward will help them a little bit. life. But Major Bowie insists that it will be three! That's why we can have hope. million centuries before this cooling proce hes! can be so optimistic as to believe that. somehew a point where it will be uncomfortably manifest. 00,000,000 years can produce a civilization that | Heartening words, these. Perhaps there is time, |will fulfill all of our golden dreams. remaining to it. That's why we | Being Intimate Stories of the Womans Side of Offici Th There is “putting one’s |so important 2 vor! Forward n the world foot fc here, and no ¢ Mrs Hagner refuses to as she puts it t y for the social life he nono of issuin in- tions toa debutante tea, to have importance of |only the deb appear and wonder World official, w/in the world she alone will Washington, Mar have their Will H The world of eball has its | the ww Mountain Landis. | stage has its Winthrop Ames. | The blaring, blatant world of The movies use of the live in the Bagpphunes nlp ie pr gee Abeles n new to this city’s ways may [- nk up all the punch. and the world social of the nation me dress. twice and use| Tt is Mra: Hague t i F s agner who scrutinizes capital has its Helen Ray Hagner,! milk on her oa 1, but she willlher clients’ tion lists to | who in some spects wields more | hire the se. a social see- lors and the power and molds more destini |r invited ko the this city than the president him Genes, Mes, Hacer is “a moot que Mrs, Hagner draws no formal $ Whieh is ju 2. Shi 000 annually as a recognized Czar ot ae wa Society, but her informal earnings as director of Washington's famous social bureau of t her own business, and it's wager that her business pays hand Ils who to invite|Which one precedes the other ite them to. e| She is the who suggests {plans the menu and hires the check | worth catchin, butlers. And, most im s the new “woman from] ats lee that Ma eet” how to enter and leave i ink, in order that) a room and to be sure to leave hers some dividends. jeards at the White House as soon First ladies of the land and the! insult w mace Pees ~las she reaches Washington. newest, greenest” congressman's |the official host as he believes Knows Everybody's Ancestry | So No One Will Be Slightea | Stould be Who reminds cabinet wives that, She is called to the W jalthough they precede senators’ wives ¢ book” is more alendar to Wash- ite House down. to scrutinize the plac state dining room and Will get mad and go home b ; most times, they must call on the latter firs It hone a hundred ! them what to and when to go! i No one S| piece of cd r ies of a $5,000 debutante tea which | over it which hangs. in th aie as alanis): bureau's office is consulted. She may sell her very exclusive black pins are “doings.” The “invitation list” to the sponsors of | OPen spaces on the chart are a charity ball or musicale, aud the) dates. next hour she may teach a young! Most people work to get jobs. congresswoman what she should, slim, girlish Mrs. Hagner, know about such things as which,| grandmother by the works hard-| capital city’s “Cave Dwellers,” the | and how many, if any, corners of er to keep from taking them. Day] old-time Washingtonites who know her cards should be turned down, #fter day she refuses checks offered | everybody's ancestry worth knowing. what to say when introduced to the her by one of the horde of Washing: “And 1 love peo; and want to president of the United States, and ton mbers” in return for her! see them free from emburrassment,” how to refuse champagne at a dip-| services, possibly in launching a de- ee summarizes. TH lomatic dinner, if she wants to. butante daughter, 1 and ihan 5 leav Mrs. Hagner wa a social secretary in the British embassy for several years, Later on, she was in charge of the social bureau of one of the But| most exclusive hotels. Last, but not who is al] least, she by birth one of the 1G kreat | “open ee Old Masters J | God, we don't like to complain. We know that the mine is no lark. F Saint Siu 7G NEA SLAW But—there's the pools from the ‘hs Chu ig peer vain-!a blind alley,” Faith ei in al rain; y Faith and Bob, as| low voice, But—there’s the cold and the dark. i T ¢ their way toward the hought wo, «Well, don't wo station across the street] We'll gull afew. m from the courthouse, interrupted his’ this ore, aint Cherry ion with them only to pose, cripple to jean on,’ photographers. long. mustn't As Bob mancuyered hif car out of | the parking station, a limousine his) worming out of a tight pla Hocked fenders with his stunts like! won't need he chuckled.“ Ged, You don't know what it is— You, in Your well-lighted sky, Watching the meteors whiz; Warm, with the sun always by. too op- incident,”, . God, if You had but the moon but Stuck in Your cap for a lamp, Even You'd tire of it soon, Down in the dark and the damp. eyes? were aged to di . Allbright, nd Muriel b Did you : I have a une hat Banning Was wearing ‘s| ing to call your Aunt Alice to after she entered Uncle Ralph's bed-|to that Marlboro Country ‘clgb room and that she threatened to kill! fair, him if he did not let her go,” Bobi Hathaway ieee “And those! { » points are mig! important,!me dreadfully since 1 saw how this |Churehill. You're a wonder. I didn't] trial was going, since its beem ele think you had a chance to score with | that Banning intends to b! Mary Kearney, but of course we! Cherry's character xo that she ¢ expecting her to perjure her-| never hold her head up again, ev lit ” “When Cherry takes the acquitted if s stand, | - Roh asked she will testify that she remov hing for her gl Cluny 1 her thetically, back Cie Capen oe papers that you | nd that she did not! got Alexander Cluny-you} ain until she had en- ember ‘that Ch Nothing but blackness above, Pac je. MER, t And nothing that moves but the} abe cars— God, if You wish for our love, Fling us a handful of stars! “Caliban in she went on fearfully, U something that has been worrying -—Louis Untermeyer: the Coal Mine: | BARBS ly oe LET THEM BE FIREMEN A woman can dress in six minute: faster than a man, according to a Tecent. test. Again we point with shame to the collar button... But then women’s clothes these days consist more of what they do not wear than what they wear. . . The boys will have one advantage this summer, though. There’s still something left for hem to take off. . . Women these days spend most of their time dressing on their faces. We wonder how a woman in this rougeful day really looks. . A married man used to have to wait for his wife to dress when they were going out. Now it’s she who does the swearing. Women certainly been emancipated, as far as are concerned, snr npa-| | from know the blackmail letters and Pete | ‘hurchill com-| Gonzales’ report to Alexander on his | n. “But of shadowing of Cherry. Ch | it was in her now, sinew | nt through her, ey ransacked it the night of the murder, you know, before I y is now a. partiaily s that she did not|the detec: ent eaten to kill him. Just wait until! room. I get you on the stand, young fellow,” he added jovially, “I'll get those foot-| got home, prints into the record. I want the| “If they try jury to be thinking of foot prints! suid grimly, “they may find’ it's 1» in connection with that open window.! hoomerang.. I hope to God they do’ And I want to hammer it in, by every | Churehill can twist all that so ii or witness I can lay hands on, that that | discredit everything Aunt Alice and vase on the bookease was within easy| Alexander testify to, show them up reach of anyone crouching in the|as plotting to Prevent Cherry's mar- window. Found 2our cripple | yet,| riage to Uncle Ralph.” Miss Faith added jocularly, TOMORROW: Banning proven | turning to the is oe girl on Pips eg You can't buy gasoline in South ‘Me Thawell 8 clever prosecutor by doing “No, Mr. Cl Wi Carolina on Sunday. What in the| "7 Mf Churchill. We ran into] th oe, do the people drink down me A THOUGHT ee to use that,” Bob tence for it. But we know mer eee smarter than Harry Sinclair wh The radio commission is Aine only answered one. for si ations: ae aeere So) = ees ent je situation. e < wish pe menbine Suet wa ret a ae horse again. Di | Bat the day of {he Jord will some Pk: MS cg Sa se. tists. Ht 2 g 7" ‘the \Ford asta the . butlders of oe : Peear es enacts jition-dollar home’ not to tén ‘thie ieez, Sinclair refused to answer|its exact cost. He must be a ricl @uaatinns..and...got. 2 dail heme 8H. > ————————— _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE All Matrix Shoes $6.95 Former a style and everyone, two 214. 59c a Set, These s Bungalow Cretonnes In many new combinations, suital of different uses; 36 inches wide; 22c a yard, or 5 yards ... This is a weight, beautiful new 86 inches wide; at only, a yard values but some number for all One lot Marqui ts include two: 2%-ya valance und two ruffled tie backs Terry Cloth good duplex up to $12.00. Not e in every number for and size in a style PANEL CURTAINS dows. We have just received a % yards long be a heyy ei ‘inch silk eee 95¢ a Set patterns and color for a score Quaker line. $1.00 45 inches wide quality, heavy terry, in| many designs and colors; a yard, 12%c. a yard st ‘i OT cn Spring is the time to think of your win- new shipment from the famous Quaker Mills. eee panels are new spring designs, ome are scalloped; all One Lot Shadow Nets, 36 inches wide ................. $1.69 each These must be seen to be appreciated tte Curtain Sets, piain and barred patterns, includés -yard ruffled panels, 27 inches wide, and two ruffled tie backs 2 Sets, $1.00 COLORED RUFFLED CURTAIN SETS «ruffled panels, 27 inches wide, one ruffled in blue, rose or gold Curtain Nets u Blazers ~- $ 8 to 16. One lot of checked and plaid jazers, medium weight, pet the thing for ng 48,00 value, but le These nets are from the famous The designs are new 29c a yard ...-89¢ a yard Marquisettes his is a good quality, 36 inches Thi: d lity, 36 hes wide; plain and barred patterns, Fancy colored an 9c ruffled patterns, and very beautiful. 36 inches wide... Pillow Slips, 25c each, : pg pillow. case is an exceptional value at our regular. price of tor $1 Women’s: House Frocks, Sizes 34 to 54, 95 A very large assortment of women’s gingham, percale aon print house frocks, in many different styles and patterns, at 95c each. Boys’ Overall Pants, 6 to 16 years, The famous Globe Buster Cowboy Pants, made from the best heavy weight white back denim; riveted and triple stitched throughout; watch pocket. Men’s Overalls, 34 to 44, each Made from 2-20 weight white back pti triple stitched and bar tacked at all strain points; extra full made to stand the wear and tear of hafd work. ’ Sweaters, Sizes 6 to 14, each One lot of children’s wool and cotton coat ‘sweaters; our regular $1.59 value at only $1.00, Shopping Center RMA Ee emcee i mene wm TUESDAY, MARCH 29, 1927 ——_—_____—+. Bismarck’s Wednesday} At a Price Concession That Sho Water Damage Shoe Sale 150 Pairs —" Shoes “¢ 1 49: Values to $4.95 Owing to the breaking of a water pipe we offer you this opportunity to fill your shoe wants at a great saving. The shoes that are damaged will give you just a8 good service as if they had not been wet. To make this an outstanding shoe we will add others from our regular stock. In this lot you will find oxfords, str and step-in pumps. (Basement) La France Ginghams A full line of plaids, checks and plain colors in all the new colors, suitable for women’s and children’s dresses; this cloth is fast ~19c color and very durable; a yard..... Extra Heavy Bath Towels A real bargain in a very large double thread extra heavy bath towel, 24x50 inches; a towel + that will give extra service and 5c wear and is very absorbent; each. Odd Numbers in All: Linen Lunch Cloths " With Napkins to Match These are slightly soiled, but can be easily laundered to look as good as new, They come in all white with yellow, lavender or blue borders; also in solid colors of, tan, rose and green, hand-em- broidered— 36-inch Cloth and 4 Napkins, $1.95 and $2.95 a Set. 55-inch Cloth and 6 Napkins, $3.50 a Set. 27-inch Unbleached Muslin ii Medium weight, suitable for curtains, a WO aio Oc §f Percales, 19c a yard, @ yard .....seeeeeee 86-inch fine count percales in many Combinations terial for house aprons. One lot to close out that were $2.00, in Ginghams, 18¢ a yard. 9 sizes 36 to 42; have inside abdominal ‘support; each .. $1 49 pact assrunpat of 36-inch dress color com! ations. Back Lace Corsets Fine Quality Crepe, a yar Low bust and long skirt ..........0c005 $1 .49 A very ‘fine quality plisse crepe, in n, is a guaranteed permanent crepe. - Reduced Prices on Brassieres Brassieres that formerly were 69¢ and $1.25, now are 59c and $1.00. Bandeaux Brassieres in lace, jersey and fancy bro- This is a very fine grade of Rayon, English Chintz Prints, a This is a very soft, bright finished clot: different patterns and colors. All colo thing for house or street frocks. Apron Prints, 18¢ a yard, terns. is cloth is 36 inches wide ar This-crash is half linen and part blea), red or blue borders. (Basement) cades; the Longer Line Brassieres come ‘ts sta: Sart dimen: crash; ble ached he in fancy batiste with elastic diaphragm pal pei bloc Tacky c wi Bleached Muslin, a yard, A good quality 36-inch bleached muslir Oileloth, 48-inch, Yd., 25¢ In plain white, blue and white, or: brow? or summer; a we got a price on them us sell them at $1.25 Men’s Leather Coats Elves a and 42. All in one lot to close them out; values to : $5.75 $11.95, each Pepe biases! ‘Base! it, 9c Pj ee Made from Amoskeag blue race seams; sizes 6 to 14. Krinkle Bed Spreads, . 803 4 This is a good, hea it through. rs vy quality beg si Bed Spreads, 80x90 Inch’ A medium weight Krinkle bed spread, regular 98c value at only 79c. 6 for $1.25 but we are offering it at this sale at only 25c nah or $1.19 A good, heavy weight, bleached, seamk filling; our regular $1.29 value. 95c P. & G. Soap, (Limit 10 bars ty Old Dutch Cleanser, ” (Limit 6.cans 4 Saniflush, a Can, No Phone Calls or Mail Orders: off thes: cut—an overall that is ‘$1.00 (Basement) Busy Where Every Purchase Must Be WwW. LU Where You Expect More foi Rayon, Plain Colors, 35c Y. spring shades; a real money-saving valv- A good abe soft finished» clothy in © Half Linen Crash, 1214¢ 4 Bleached Crash, 10-yard Wy Boys’ Shirts, each 4 Of fancy madras and percales, also s Boys’ Chambray Shirts, 5’ Bed Sheets, 81x90 Inches, \' k Offering Seasonatl id 3 it pat q } 36 SB al