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) ated: * ¢ Hi £ z rs . : : * ? : : : é & . OAR Stems est au 2). ft 8 8 a 2 a a w oI a w q lig lov iur, ite hemisphere, the sun escorted spring into these | latitudes yesterday. The period of the vernal of a wheel-less world, and yet one sometimes equinox is always welcome and always won-| wonders who was the first man to discover death-like grasp of winter each year is an old, | manner h ly have been embarrassed 3. Cy enemies would delight to tack some- Tithing like th 74 Hoover and Hughes have emerged goes Ka’ . friend pointed her out to me Song and Forty-second street. ste 5 ¥ a a in her mind the big electric igaigns blazed with “Ka inf | PAGE FOUR to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and! also the local news of spontaneous origin published | herein. All rights of republication of all other mat-| ter herein are also reserved, Without the Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - ~ - Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Spring Is Here | Back for a six-month stay in the northern) snow, iG derful. The rescue of the earth from the old story, but an ever new one in its beauty.| The other seasons have each their special the secret by a loveliness, but spring has youth, freshness, a) felled by his sto! not rival. wheel, , would be impossible. ccident, ne axe, Even within the stone-bound streets of the} stone of the wheel. city the hardy, rowdy sparrows become tur- bulent with warmer blood and their matings Mankind would be un.-|little i jable to utilize the power of water by means of | the mill wheel, there would be no pulley, wheel- ibarrow, trucks, carriages, bicycles, railroads,|like servants in the and motive power for most everything? sections of the same nation hold divergent] it seems necessary to have a general, | views on the subject and individuals are little|thorough, housécleaning every so i ‘ The parks simulate the annual resurrection of i The Bismarck Tribune the broader countryside and reveal to city 4 An Independent Newspaper dwellers some of the beauty with which the 4 Oe SUELO bela fields beyond the city gates are decking them- aS bier distal selves. The adventurous robin flaunts his } Published by the Bismarck Tribune C-mpany, Bis-| plumage in the squares before admiring eyes * marck, N. D., and se aat at ae Postoffice at Bis+| of urbanites, and man responds to the — | Maarck as second class mail matter. with quickened step and higher heartbeat, 4 George D. Mann . President and Publisher about his daily rpund of duty. The winter is Subscription Rates Payable in Advance dead, spring comes and there is rejoicing Daily by carrier, per year ... $7.29| among all creatures. 4 Daily by mail, per year, (in B: 7.20 S Daily by mail, per year, ae B00! Greatest Invention i : Daily Seth outside of North Dakota + 6.90 ene is the world’s most important inven- ° . 3 id T Weekly by mail, in state, per year ......+++ s+eee 1.00) 0f course, but this is a question which invites 3 Weekly by mail, in state, three years for . ....--2.50/— popular answer. Nations and geographical 3 Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako‘a, pe: . year... Soeereves as tein ig 1.59) f Circulatio: i Member Audit Bureau o mn lekrer in agesenient: Member of The Associated Press | Does not the process of elimination confer] to : The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the 3 use for Tepublication of all news dispatches credited! connected by an axle, furnish transportation THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SPRING CLEANING whitch still persists, write to me and This is the first day of spring,| lished in this column each Saturday. when already the housewives are|If you have any particular ailment Each inventor to his own invention, | Planning for their spring ae cleaning. No matter how the housekeeper is in her care of the house and its daily cleaning, The body is sometimes referred as the house we live in, but it is extent. The blood _travelii through the arteries, capillaries, an ers id modern civilization|veins carries the nutriment to the on the housetops are done to lyrical shrieks.| progress, comfort and elegance. "WASHINGTON LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer ‘ashington, March 21.—Many ‘ies have been written about the jing of the “Ohio gang” which ident Harding brought vith him fashington. But the story of “gang” Harding put in his cab- inet has Been almost as tragic. the 10 members of Harding's l_ cabinet, but threc—Mellon the Treasury, Hoover of the Com- merce Department and Davis of the Labor Department—remain, ‘cing eA ha ee arrogrids t y scandals of the flation hit the agricultural areas, Harding administration. These are| Gooding lost a er deal. Only Hoover, Davis, former Secretary of |Iately has he begun to recoup. Mean- State Hughes and former Secretary | while he has become one of the most of Agriculture Wallace. beligerent supp. ters of the Mc- accept Nary-Haugen bill. « Secretary of the Interior Fall, Sec-} “Down here,” he says, “neople curl retary of the Navy Denby and At-|t' eir lips when you tell them you're tofney General Daugherty were driv-|a farmer. ‘But that’s me!” en from office. edie lice from their service under Harding with no odor of gasoline upon their garments. The scandals haven't left the party withow honest lecders, eee Senator Frank R. Gooding of Idaho, in the national spotlight since he espoused the cause of the striking Pennsylvania coal miners, is one of those farm relief senators who knows how the farmer has been hit. Gooding was one of the big sheep raisers of the northwest, own- ing nearly 100,000 head. He was a millionaire. When the post-war de- z te ait aif i ug! Postmaster General Hays has ad- mitted receiving $265,000 in bonds from Harry F. Sinclair, the oil man all to have bribed Fall, and omitting to tell about $185,000 of them first questioned by a Senate committee. senator from Delaware, Mr. du Pont. Secretary of the Treasury Mellon| Not knowing how he would vote if has age omy receiving $50,000 of the|he were here, I withhold m; jearn- Senator Colemen du Pont ha: that they came from Sinclair industrial interests. In addition, prey has been ill. One hardly ever sees that Hays wanted him to buy that $50,000 could be en- him in the Senate chamber. Your i correspondent has seen him once in Mellon’s contributions und|the last two sessions, and that "s, Mellon has for failing to report his wasn’t this ses.ion. Meanwhile, be- ing “paired” with du Pont, Fletcher ledge until faced with a sub- Secretary of War Weeks can’t vote unless he knows how du Pont would vote. And every time mt fine $38 the roll ca’: reaches him, Fletcher revealed as accept a the bonds in order to help the Sinclair gift. must make his explanatory speech. though Mellon and Hays may These are the days when political writers are prone to recall sapi- clear consciences, they certain- by their ent words which have come down to them from departed politicians. One How Hoover’s|of those most often quoted is the oft-spoken assertion of the late Boss I, Freeman Rasin of Baltimore that “24 hours is a lifetime in politics.” Month in anc month out,’ there’s one speech that the Senate hears every time it takes a vote. It is de- livered by Senator “letch of Florida and it goes like this: “I have a forced revelations. at on him! But both cli ———___________¢ about their trade. They are actors | ref IN NEW YORK {| the tty, Set'arc o'er 4 [and there are scores among them ee who would not trade with the stars, 2 GILBERT SWAN. | New York, March 21.—“There . te.” (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) f BARBS | o Chicago business men are taking up art and plan an exhibition, ac- cording to a dispatch. They prob- ably figure that art is long and, in icago, life is fleeting. eee Jim_ Reed spoke out on the coast the other day about the danger of a foreign invasion. Jim’s a good talker. righ Professor Andreieff denies that death is so sure, after all. But then even science can’t change March 15. eee The income tax, by the way, is one of those ides sof March. Some women wear short skirts be- cause they’d be thought bow-legged if they didn’t. And some are, When an Oklahoma building was razed the other day, it was learne< that the corner stone had been stoler “Kate who?” But that’s all there is; just Kate. the years she has shambled Thirty years ago she came here a small town in central Ili- She could sing well, could lines, could dance. the street. But there were yy others who could do these a sae, Weer. ne appear perhaps a n shows in all these years—al- in a minor part. She had to minor parts to start with, fa plugging slong the the ne along with its Supposed contents of Kate is infinitely hap-| old liquor. Mo. Put hop is have to stand in your corner stones; they stay put. If Rickard’s heavyweigit elimina- tion contests in New York don’t pan out so well, Tex ought to take a hand in the Democratic convention. before (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) with ie, ra 5 i es. Fis et neral pair with the |0) kids hi have : BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES J DETROIT | automobiles, drive shafts nor power plants. Had this simple and commonplace con- trivance known as the wheel never jevolved all transportation would be by the jback of man and beast except in frigid coun- jtries where the sled could be used on ice and It is pos- ;Sible that a round stone was the Rosetta 5, 5 BS MOM ir Letters Dearest Mom: Of course the parents of those} accumulated bodily toxins. youngsters who burned the hour: are to blame. I’m tellin; r gith ors boy, or beth TH rl, or a boy, or both, I'll) the accepted time; know it if they aren’t tucked in bed | of salvation!” i Let’ at a decent hour. Boys and girls aren't really as de-|meal and take instead a meal of fiant as they seem. Just let Dad|some one kind of fruit, such as sit up and wait for them once or| oranges, apples, pineapple, or per- start worrying. awful boy or woul “rst sycholo; force of habit, . used to parental authority keep right |day in place of any cathartic or = obeying their parents from the Heaetive, as the results will be much time tl f when the curfew -ings next time, ‘The wholc truth is, Mom, that par- | fruit for each meal. ents are lax when their children are peed net no great ees comes from et 7m escal a bit. But once the kids reach the | burdened with the work of assimilat- age when they can keep their e: mn after ten o'clock, in to find-out that they’ve been using vote.” | doe: rents Now you may wonder how I come to know so much. Lean closer and| clearer, and those who have annoy- Tl whisper it, because I’m afraid I'll| ing ache: and pains will find these ance tat if s — it out Parca leaned it al mm one o se 4 books. It’s the| matters along, but I would advise Kids who p until they ankl That is IF th . No mal torennoss going to be talked like a criminal just because pa and ma suddenly wake up to find out that it’s Spring time in the lives of the younger generation. To have any influence, authority must be used constantly. The idea | of paying no attention to Sister un- | til she comes in after two a, m. ani then jumping on her with a whole calendar of crimes and misdemean- ors won’t get a parent anywhere with her. If sister had known all her life that there were rules for her she'd have obeyed the rules. If she knew that her parents would sit u, to ask her about her evening and engage in a little get-together talk she 't want to come home with much to conceal. fee authority markable changes. Even though so sparingly — health Ape mean a thing in the lives of | YOu do not know their offspring. That's when they | feel after a few been ay for the whole bod; |the principle of the wheel and in what crude| average e first made use of that principle. Perhaps some primitive man was let into through seeing a tree, carried down the moun- charm which its elder sisters of the year can-|tainside by another rolling trunk. twice with the business end of the|haps grapejuice. house slipper and they'll come home| tinue missing our regular meals for several days and just substitute X vidual cells of the body, and alsd carries away waste. The nervous system, the muscular | it system, and the bony ‘structure are own work to do, each one more or less dependent upoh the other, but in health workit should not be neces- | ly with their/for slow hearts together in har-|slow pulses. reatert good to the| fast, painful and jumpy, it is usually Dr. McCoy will gladly Se Giet, addreaved to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. this honor upon the wheel, a pair of which,|® self-adjusting household to a large|ask for a special treatise on that trouble and I will be glad to mail around |it to you. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. . FF. asks: “Should one take medicine contain- strychnine if the heart is fast, Inful and jumpy, or is it only Answer: Strychnine is usually ven to enervated patients with When the heart is because of overeating or gas pres- baty for thé body to have any defin-| sure against the heart at that par- ite time for housecleanin; functions of the bod: rai are ar- ut, because of errots in he) unsanitary surroundings, overwork, and a multitude of other causes, the|less trouble if no fruits or s person is found to be suf-|are used at the same meal. dis-}a proven fact, no matter fering from some one or more ig, as the|ticular time. Question: J. K.aske: “Is it true 80 that assimilation and ¢lim-|that we should not combine starches It is difficult for modern man to conceive] ination should be properly balanced;| with fruit or acids? What effect does it have on the body ?% Answer: Starches digest with are This is what orders which come becaune the body,| theories are formulated to account for some reason, is not able to keep|for it. The simple reason seems to itself clean, be that starches are digested in an There is great hope that in the| alkaline medium, and that fruits future men will live so carefally|and sugars only stimulate more of that there will pe a proper balance|the acid digestive fluids of the and coordination between all of the|starches, and appears to interfere bodily functions. does today, But there is so much to be known | ju " Man will then| with it. In some such manner was born an idea tollive in health much longer than he which civilization is indebted for much of its Anxious asks: “Are Prescription tablets in- If not, would it be harm- and we must admit that we know|ful to take four tablets per day? 80 little today about the care of the| What is there in them to reduce body! ~ As we are experimenting without| give a health problems, sometimes getting results and sometimes finding we| Answer: one? If they are harmful, can you prescription not injurious to Feduce one?” I do not recommend are making mistakes, would it not|any medicinal preparations in this wise to occasionally use some|column, but can assure you that so simple measures. which will bring|far as I know there are no reducing i about a good bodily housecleaning| pills which are harmless, «Perhaps and so help all of the bodily forces to|the least harmful ones are those @ new start? This may seem to| which the reader to be a sensible idea.|simple, safe plan are only laxative. is to The reduce But just when are you going to|through diet and exercise. start following this plan? You made good resolutions on New Year's Day. Suppose you start very day, which is the “first day of spring” and follow a careful regime for the next few days which will give your body a chance to eliminate No, I don’t mean tomorrow—or ig you, Mom, the | next» week—but Today! If I ever As the Scriptures say, “Now is now is the day all miss our next regular Then let's: con- When taking this fruit diet the| body has a better chance to throw ental eye | Out accumulated wastes while not| : ing food. Four or five days of the fruit diet will dae © about very re- appear to be in jow good you can of such re- stricted dieting. become more elastic, 1| symptoms will disay ppear like magic. You can take a lesative to help you to use one or two enemas a ter. NFLUENZA As @ preventive, melt and Over 21 Million Jars Used Yearly SSeS ‘our step will | ? your mind | ° ‘After a few days of the fruit | ¢ ing | fast, start following the menus pub. =e — — —————— : Morton County Herds Are Being Tested For T.B. by Veterinaries Eighteen head of stock taken from five different Morton county herds were shipped Tuesday from Man- dan to the North Dakota agricul- tural college where they will be in- spected for tuberculosis. R. C, Newcomer, county agent, B. K. Bjornson, state veterinary, and other members of the veterinary de- partment, are reid tuberculin tests of all cattle in Morton county at this time. Cows in four town- ships have already been tested and it is Fe tained that every other town- ship in the county will also have the tests made, The tests of herds are conducted free of charge to the farmer or dairyman, the costs coming from a fund created for that purpose by the state. Animals found to be infected are destroyed after a fair valuation has been placed on them and an in- demnity paid. Attempted Attack Is Frustrated by Woman ‘The description of an attacker who Monday night seized a Mandan young lady on Second street near the residence of Judge B. W. Shaw has mn furnished the police of Bis- marck and Mandan and an arrest is ‘rightened when a man jumped from a bunch of shrubbery, the young lady screamed and broke away and ran into the J. D, Allen home. The attacker escaped. The man is described as being short and stocky, about 30- years old, wearing a khaki-colored shirt and overalls and a fedora hat. | Personal and A Social News of eee Mandan Vicinity ' eee Mrs. C. A. See and baby will eave this evening for Bridger, Mont., aft- spending the past three months in with Mrs. See’s parents, id Mrs. H. L. Henke. Miss Katherine Stephens has re- turned from the University of Min- nesota to spend the spring vacation ° WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1928 ‘with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Stephens, ‘ Mrs, R, W. Shinners has as her house guest Mrs. R. M. Winner a d children of Dicki Earl W. Grosgel to Glendive after a few days’ visit in Mandan at the home of his pat- Kd Mr. and Mrs. William Grosge- auer. eee Mrs. William Grosgebcuer and Mrs, Anton Grosgebauer will leave this evening for Minneapolis, where they will be the guests of relatives and friends for a few days. Flower and Garden Lovers Will Meet Many Bismarck citizens took first steps yesterday toward the planting of flowee and vegetable gardens—rakes and hoes were much in evidence as the*balmy air brought forth men and youths armed for war on the rubbish and filth collect- ed during the winter. Other steps towards planting of gardens will be taken Thursday night at the Association of Com- merce when a_ public meeting sponsored by the flower and garden committee of the Association of Commerce will be held. at which time a club will be organized. The meeting is called for 8 o’clock and all lovers of gardens are ' urged to attend. Following the organization of the club, plans for several iden shows will be tentatively made, WINS WOR! D TRIP New York.—Alexander Kasari- nonn, Moscow student, is going around the world for 25 cents. He invested ‘50 kopeks, about a quarter in United States money, and was one of three fortunate ticket-hold- ers to win a trip around the world. STOPS COUGHS QUICKLY —HEALING, DEMULCENT “I was bothered with a hard persistent cough, but found no oth- er remedy so good and so quickly relieving as Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound,” says E. Boggess, Po- mona, Calif. Coughs and throat irritations, hard bronchial coughs, lingering “flu” coughs, almost in- stantly Soe It combines the curative influence of pure pine tar and the mollifying dentulcent action of fresh clear honey with other {healing ingredients. A boon to those who suffer from troublesome night coughs. Ask for Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound.—Adv, Mott Waterworks Bond Issue Wins Mott, N. D., March 21.—(Special to the Tribune)—By an overwhelm: ing majority, the citizens of this village yesterday voted to issue $55,000 worth of bonds for the se of installing a new water- works system. The vote was 242 29, Bids on the work will be asked soon. A city sewer system will be installed at the same time on the special assessment plan. LIBRARY CLOSED FOR WEEK The adults’ reading room of the public library closed toda’ for re- decoration and will remain closed for about one week. The children’s room will be open as usual, Too Late to Classify FOR SALE—Typewriter desk, 2 aa $10.00. Dr. Enge. Phone 0. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room in private home. 113 Washington. Phone 730-M. PARTY wants to buy a satisfactory bungalow with three bed rooms if ossible at reasonable price. rite Tribune Ad. No. 12. | FOR RENT—Furnished room, city heat, front Apt. Catherine Grif- fin, 314 1-2 Main, i FOR RENT—Five room modern house available April first. Phone 1404-J or call at 305 Twelfth street. Dr. Enge Chiropractor Drugless Physician Lueas Blk. Pitney N. D. WATCH REPAIRING Any, watch, regardless of make or condition, repaired for only $1 plus the cost of necessary mate- rial or parts All Work Guaranteed Mail Orders Given Prompt - Attention ROYAL JEWELRY C0. 408 Main ‘Ave. — Bismarck, N. 1. GENUINE GRIMM ALFALFA Per Ib. 33¢ r CERES WHEAT—A new rust re- sistant variety very highly rec- ommended by State Experiment Stations. Per bu. $3.75. Get my new seed list— It is full of bargains W. R. Porter, Fargo, N. D. 9 4 or ry > % % ia Soy blame. NEXT: ‘here wouldn't be much parents who fall asleep at nine p. m., while their youngsters are just waking up, who are to With all my love, MARYE. sleep, thinks “Mom.” (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) There are more grapes raised in Fresno county than in any other comparable area in the world. ‘DANGER | (ee, | Your is the best barometer of your leondition. Look at it every breakfast. If itis coated and: weaclean tod appearaats ve a you are and not well. Menez to Loan on Real Estate ihe 3-3 SURANCE AGENCY C.F Steme Leila Phone 398 fer appolatment — The — 11 Broadway, Farge, N. D. Offers 3 Investment Plans: » Paying Write For Circulars this extraordi: $ 1 95° Correct style, good taste and variety so wide that no one style inary collection of new Easter Frocks. Georgettes, and novelty silks, all in a host of new styles and colorings, such i . for Miss or Matron. Ask About the New Phoenix“Profile Heel” Hosiery WEBB BROTHERS “Merchandise That Reflect Every New Trend in the Mode Flat Crepes, Printed ® of Merit Only” $9950 is too often repeated—those are the ita of as were never gathered together before, Styles on ‘ re geaees: es