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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An ladependent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) forgotten. » N. D., and entered at the postoftice at Bis-| counties. ‘atck as second class mail matter. sorge D. Mann ..--...... +.ePresident and Publisher, I ean ata tlt attest itiiaaitaalae Subscription Rates Payable in A afly by carrier, per year ... aily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) .. ally by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ...... eee ally by mail, vutside of North Dakota . in them. The + 7.20 sturdy race. substantial. ‘eekly by mati, in state, per year ..... ‘eekly by mail, :a state, three years fo ‘ tside of North Dako &, tion | their kind. Mem! Se St*t—st SYS he Mandan: are no more. Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ge for republicution of all news uispatches credited influences. grein. All rights of republication of all other mat-) wt herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE bhi b --+- Fifth Ave. Bidg. wacaco me DETPOIT ower Bidg. pc as ae (Official City. State and County Newspaper) i Lindy’s Magic in France ost-war political bickerings, economic stress, ‘nancial deflation, debt pgoblems and class truggles, was suddenly thrilled and brought! ‘ack to vivid life again by a ghostly flash | from home and arough the black night. | + great gray dove—a dove of peace—on the far} ide of Le Bourget Aerodrome. “Lindbergh!” The cry was uttered from thousands of | | labor war. icket fence and swept down police and military | nes in order to see and touch the fabric of this | turbulent. ‘istoric emissary from the New World. ‘hat n * Something new had suddenly come into the! ramifications. _ves of men. The first non-stop airplane flight} ‘ut with it came romance which revealed a/ dreams. plendid vista breaking down boundaries for the lory of mankind Paris was electrified. ne topic of conversation along the boulevards | nd in cafes. International feeling had not been | The flight was the! direct action. Fisputes, but all tad happened. Frenchmen shook the hands of|are interpreted (mericans, friends and strangers alike, and! piness. lasses were clicked in circles high and low to} iati his man Lindbergh and to Franco-American | own admission, riendship. Goodwill parties continued through- | tragic! ut the night, and everybody was strangely night, and only a very few had the privilege : peng him. The main thought was that he as here. Then the next day, when he came to e balcony of the American Embassy and on! ine as the job he had done, the epic was com- pirit which Lindbergh inspired. hent has lost none of its glory. They are nam- 9 opportunity is lost to honor him. s And Franco-American friendship remains lery much better because Lindbergh landed in one year ago tonight. flyer. Air mail week calls attention to the rapid prtation. ong mail service now is negotiated between lew York and San Francisco in less than 48 ours, a reduction of approximately 50 per cent h the time required to give the same service ty rail. : At Oakland, California, you can climb into | six-passenger, heated, cabin-type airplane at L o'clock in the morning. At midnight that ight you are in Omaha. The fare is $137. _ of air travel are steadily being inimized. The air mail service is standardized there it is effective on a basis showing that in entire year on the transcontinental system wre have been less than 3 per cent of failures. Probably nowhere are there greater ibilities for air transportation than in h Dakota. The whole state is a landing Id ready to hand. Airports are already tablished in its principal cities. | Air transportation facilities would orologists, one solve inter operation of airplanes here would offer 9 problems that daily are not being solved by United States mail ships. blizzards in the California High Sierras coun- ry, There were only one or two forced land- age and slight delay to the mail. | Air mail service is giving a distinct service business. It is making life better. And it is; ly the beginning of the wide and rapid de- t that is before air transportation. The Sea, the Mountains, the Prairie »Thousands of Americans who have attained it place in life where they seek a fixed orbit, Thome, in choosing it fix as a first requisite it it must be by the mountains and the sea. Such environment is of course ideal. But not for the prairie-reared man. } He wants to push the mountains away. He annot endure the definite limitation put upon by the sea, but he finds its less irksome the mountains, for there is breadth, big- the mystery of romance beyond its "He who has come under the spell of the tnconsciously absorbs something of its; MICTORIAN HAS HIGH r\ GE a Mou Ada, Hilborn, gen of La Moure, maintained the |*#lutatorian, Y Mc| FIREMEN ORGANIZE AT LINTON Linton.—Chief Carl jade the following appointments to Linton fire department at a re- dress: charm and bigness. It gives an assurance of e Bismarck Tribune (i room that once enjoyed may never be There probably are no more colorful home {spots in America than some of those found lished by the Bismerck Tribune C-mpany, Bis-, along the Missouri river in Burleigh and Morton Aboriginal man first appreciated them as the record shows. He found happiness | villages under the shelter of the hills by the 7.20 side of the river. They developed a strong and 6.00 The happiness they found in life here was re- * 6.20 flected in their progress. Their wealth was considerable. 100 Their progress in the domestic arts was marked, -0" for they were happy and contented. They saw 1.80/ life and they lived it in the larger aspect of man who followed them is moved by the same The river is his sea. / dt of not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and his mountains and the prairie just beyond them so the local news of spontaneous origin published | ig an added attraction. If you would have a picture of the quality of | coziness at its best it is the homes nestled in the | hills along the Missouri. Some day a painter will find them. They ; will live upon eainye A ana ./ embellished affording opportunity for land- isha | scapes that have as much natural beauty as the ‘hills and meres and pastoral spots of Nor- {mandy. Every one of them is a picture superb. : | Its lights and its shadows change with the sea- One year ago tonight France, weary with) sons. But it is always a picture. Vale, Big Bill Haywood Big Bill Haywood died Friday in Moscow, far It came to rest like| bittered and probably disillusioned. As a labor leader he found his opportunity | in Idaho many years ago in a bitter and bloody He progressed until he became the head of an Aroats. Cheering men slapped each other on ultra-radical labor group, committed to direct ‘ne back, excited women wept, a formidable action and finding a field for its activities in ‘ave of humanity surged through an_iron-| certain well-recognized industrial wrongs. Haywood was an atheist, a revolutionist, a What made him so? That is a question of It is quite well established that he did not rom New York to Paris had been achieved, find happiness in that Utopian Russia of his He died at variance with the governmental | policies of Soviet Russia. Of the dead we speak no ill. How much happier Big Bill Haywood would 30 good because of the money crisis and debt | have been if he had appreciated the institutions the little pin pricks of politics of his country, the opportunities its democracy ere forgotten in the wonder and joy of what | affords, the ideals it strives to attain as they Appreciation of them came to him by his , 1 till bul ns oo news” nearly a he hero of the exploit was still a nebulous | Editorial Comment _—| igh: Sore to most everybody in Paris a year ago) Editorial Comment General Superintendent F. Scott | last war seem humane. He says na- Now (New York Times) The crossing of the Atlantic from east to|cities are awake to the prohibition|that the United States has ceeding days when the crowds were able to|west was more than a triumph of human cour- question, serve him and to learn that he was just as/age and endurance. scientific experiment. * their experiences and reveal in terms of wind, |th E The passing of a year has not spoiled that | fog. slect and temperature how it was that they |<ity reas are as follows: He is just |conquered where heroic predecessors sacrificed much loved by the French today as he was | lives we shall know more of the task that con-| cisco.” hen. In the eyes of the French his achieve- | fronts the scientist in making the air safe for transatlantic flying in both directions at all streets after him, giving children his|seasons of the ycar. We need a better system e, erecting monuments in his memory andjof weather forecasting and a nicer adaptation - of navigational principles to the needs of the|sressman-at-large Henry R. Rath- if insteCrnlegy, has thus far proved inade- auate it is because it has been systematically|a clear brain and full possessi studied OE EERETY more than a century. We all the faculties.” ” sae, Development in the Air ;must send forth more scientific expeditions like P' that Which Professor Hobbs of the University greatly matter to society whether ogress being made in the field of air trans-|of Michigan led to the Greenland icecap for the| this is an age of machines sole purpose of studying the polar origin of| mobiles, he explains, and of mass north temperate weather; conduct more ex-| Production and plorations of the upper air with mechanical hands and senses that rise in free balloons to heights of fifteen miles and more and write the story of what they experienced in dispassionate graphs full of meaning to the scientist, and en-|"ePorts, among many other thi courage more study of the sun’s activities and their effect on our atmosphere. A stupendous Oe grege me undertaking confronts physicists and mete-|cattle were tested for tuberculosis] » late Robert Bacon included the following: A Bostonian birthright; education at Harvard; member of J. P. Morgan & Co.; credit for found- ing the International Mercantile Marine; as- ny of its winter emergency travel problems. | sistant secretary of state in the Roosevelt * cabinet (full secretary from January to March in 1909) ; ambassador extraordinary and pleni- potentiary to France (1909-1912); a major on F Several times last winter aviators were lost| the staff of Gen. Pershing in the A. E. F. When Maj. Bacon died in 1919, he left his widow one more distinction, seemingly one that would last. Their distinguished home in dis- tinguished Manhattan was at the unique ad- “One, Park avenue.” In 1924, however, the city fathers of Man- hattan voted to make Park avenue longer by smoothing the cobbles in front of the Vander- bilt hotel and rechristening two blocks of low- ly Fourth avenue. Park avenue thus began at Thirty-second street instead of at Thirty- fourth street, and because counting begins at “one,” the city fathers told Mrs. Bacon that her number must now be “five.” Mrs. Bacon objected, Mrs. Bacon sued, but all to no avail. Last week the court of appeals regretfully told her that, while it was only natural she should feel annoyed and vexed, the city fathers had acted legally. she was no longer, “Number Five” she must remain, unless one way or another, the U. S. supreme court can be persuaded to overrule the highest court of the state of New York. son, daughter of Mr. and Mra. J.J.|cent meeting here: Jake Ki Johnson of near La Moure, with an|captain of hobe cart No. we average of nearly 95 per cent, is/Bosch, captain of hose ‘cart No. 2; Thompson | M ONDAY, MAY 21, 1928 The Hookey Worm’ll Get You If You Don’t Watch Out se AND WHEN Mandans chose sites for their NOUVE FINISHED ’ Their villages were = PUT UP THE SCREENS ; CLEAN Duy THE ATTIC--- AND APTER THAT 1 WANT YOU TO Fife But the white The hills are I + AND --CARRY OUT an ALL THE RUBBISH IN THe BASEMENT, AND BURN (T---AND CLEAN They are art un- friends, an exile by choice, em- | See ce | LETTER | He wanted more By RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, May 21.—Either and cotton was necessary in the’ south. It looks like a bumper, potato crop and the department there are more press agents than | Warns that it may be big enough to! ever or they are working harder.| break the potato market if farm-| The bulk of the great mass of pub-|¢Fs aren’t careful... . As for cattle, | licity material whieh they fire at| 30,000 out of the million were found editors and correspondents to be| to be tuberculous. printed in the newspapers grows| A publicist writes to recommend larger and larger from month to| perusal of recent magazine articles: |to understand us—the modern gef- month. The Paradox of Peace,” by Pro-|eration, I mean, because you can't It is only human for a correspond. | fessor R. G. Tugwell and another by| do it, All your natural ent to take advantage of this huge|General William Mitchell, promoter|:°, ,. +. Your natural sympathy wad. Here are a fae of the mena ef aviation. is for those who are unlike us. Take interesting bits picked from a pile| Professor Tugwell concludes that |Florence and Betty for instance. loot oe onset aud bound to lead| You're entirely on Betty’s side. sar—and one that will make the/you think she’s wonderful because McBride of the Anti-Saloon League] tional armaments are larger than| he is willing to make the same sac- says: ime armaments ever were be-|rifice for a while that everybody “Whether prohibition will win or|fore, that “exploitation of small|expects Florence to make as a mat- lose will depend upon whether the| nations was never so flagrant,” and|ter of course. sup-| If you really had any use for Fifteen years from now| Planted Germany as an imperial|flappers you would accept us at our the city will be in control. There is| military power challenging Britain|own valuation of ourselves. | We today a greater population in the|and France. He urges a moral andj think we're crusaders, and I ask seven city areas than resides on all|an economic equivalent of war. |you, Mom, do you think the older the farms of the country. The Mitchell article forecasts} women would be as free as they are Boston, | what the next war would be like, as-|if the kids hadn’t led them? New York, Philadelphia, Detroit,|serting that Europe is “armed to|threw away corsets, the long skirts Chicago, Los Angeles and San Fran-|the teeth” and able to hit New/and got rid of long hair? York, Boston or Philadelphia with} Yes, I know that girdles are worn Prohibition, McBride explains,|s# devastating aerial torpedo pro-/and hair is growing again, but never “came up from the rural sections.” | pelled from western Europe. while there is a free soul to ring the Bic ———— Dearest Mom: in the terms of human hap- You might just as well not try when it was too late. How the Turn of Science It was also a_ great When the flyers report Other Anti-Saloon blicity i —__ teal style peprcgaericontey i keg r Anti- publicity in-| #———__ 4 land horse tails be without their foe. cludes a digest of a speech by Con- BARBS | Yet, all we get is abuse. elas I know a lot of girls who are Clara Bow was struck by a bul-|Jetting their hair grow but not ofe let the other day. But it was onlyjof them is willing to go back to ‘a stray shot—very disappointing. |hair so long that they can sit on ese it. When nearly everyone is it 1, More reinforcements have been|the agony of getting the neck hair it didn’t] ordered for marines in Nicaragua.|to stay with the rest, the leaders Sandino must be getting lonesome. |0f fashion will start bobbing again. . ° ‘The way a woman dresses alway M. Loewenstein, who stabilized| will be mostly a matter of prevail- the franc in Belgium, comes to{ing style, but, thank goodness, no and takes 22 rooms in ajone who has broken away from the lew York hotel. Stabilizing quite|rule-of-thumb slavery ever will let a few francs in this country, too. silly “conventions” grow again. oe © But even our new freedom en- It’s Daylight Saving Time again.|tails obligation. We admit that. Got to fool ourselves some way,|One of the first, and really the most and you know the country’s dry. important, is to know life. We must. si lheviabionsh learn how to live. So long as we Whatever else may be said about/are on earth we are living. Why the oil business, it’s one game where | not know what it’s all about? beginner starts from the top. Naturally Florence doesn’t know * 2.8 just how she can use the experiences bone of Illinois, who says that “ hibition is demanded by the requi ments of civilization, which requires Once, says Rathbone, a man drank liquor or not. But and auto- efficiency. Each of us must be on his toes to keep up with the parade and avoid losing legs and arms in machinery. ° The Department of Agriculture that bad cold waves and seney. ins sea- son and that more than a million which calls for international|during March. Field work and tion, Py ry 1, |growth of early crops was retarded,| If the e on the level and education she has gained here in cooperation, one in which the finest scientific [ira considerable replanting of cern| you Zaye hein the world” [the city but we goth thanks thes wil A House Number in Court ne OUT OUR WAY, Distinctions enjoyed successively by the Take $t BACK-lo-THE PosT OFFICE, PMR. CASEY, 1o BE RETURNED “To “He * SENDER ! ~ SORRY “THAT OLD CHUMP OF MINE MAKES-Mis EXTRA WORK FOR You!«1TS SusT ONE OF SAOSE SET OF BOOKS OFFERS, SENT MEECT, AND IF NOT SATISFACTORY, BTURN IN THREE DAYS -To THE PUBLISHERS, AND MONEY WILL BE REFUNDED! ~< (T'S AN OLD TRICK OF His, ~~ HE READS “THE SET, AND REMRNS IT ANYWAY! = i HERE'S A PARCEL POST PACKAGE FoR-TH’ gz MASOR, MRS. Ho: E “ITS SEAT 4 $165! — HATE “To HAVE “To ASK Fé = TH” CASH, BUT \'TS ONE OF “THEM KIND ‘Number One” 3 Joe F. August Vinroth, captain of the chemical engine; John Meier, treas- urer. Carl Thompson, J. O. Spen- cer and E. g. Englerth were ap- pointed Seleasies A) the state fire- men’s convention at Langdon June 6, 7 and 8 HooPLe = | S-2te~ P56. VU. 8. PAT. OFF, O 1020, BY MEA SERVICE. INC Wont A CURE FOR HICCUPS Occasionally we read of some prominent individual dying of hic- cups, after practically every remedy was tried without success. Most cases of hiccups are only of short duration, however, and usually the nervous system can be restored by taking a long drink of cold water, or breathing in and out deeply aj} number of times. This disorder often comes on aft- er a hearty meal which causes a pressure on the diaphri Itisa spasmodic contraction of the muscu- lar Cee 8 which we use for breathing. This contraction is either nervous in origin, or is caused by irritation or pressure on the dia- phragm. When too much food starts the contraction, this may continue until the stomach has become empty, which may require eight or ten hours. By this time the diaphragm is apt to be sore and irritated and keep on with its spastic jerks unless a remedy is employed. Hiccups may develop in the course of wasting diseases or from brain irritation, kidney stones or pelvic disorders. In any of these condi- tions, the principal disease should, be cared for, but a great relief will result from stopping the hiccups. have been able to stop every case that has come to my attention within a few minutes by the simple treatment of -pressure upon the central cervical plexus. This is a collection of nerve bodies located on each side of the spine about the middle of the neck. The patient may administer this treatment himself by placing the fingers of each hand firmly on the sides of his neck, pulling forward and, at the same time, bending the head back as far as possilfle. The reason is that this pressure inhibits the nerve impulses of the phrenic nerve which is one of the important nerves supplying the diaphragm. This nerve may also be deadened temporarily by the application of ice to each side of the neck. Should this self-applied treatment not be sufficient to stop the trouble, it would be well to call in an osteopath or chiropractor who, by making pressure at exactly the right spot, will stop the spasms al- most instantly. Of course, you realize that if there is a chronic cause, the hiccup is apt to return in a few hours, and every effort should be employed to HEALTH“DIET S'Dr:Erank Mc sd ¥ halle % ascertain and cure the original cause. After dinner sufferers should re- member what I have said about avoiding eating too much food, eat- ing too rapidly, or using food that Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and dict, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. produces too much stomach gas. By acting accordingly, they can avoid having future attacks. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. Jas. W. writes: “T have been paralyzed for several months from high blood pressura, It first started in two fingers on the left hand and finally went up in the arm and all over the left side. Have taken electric treatments, and have done everything I know, but get no better. Can you help me in any wey?” Answer: Your high blood pres- sure can be reduced to practically normal through fasting and dieting. The paralysis will disappear as "Yoon the blood-clot has been ab- sorbed, but you can only accomplish this by living on the most rigid diet. The D’Arsenvol high fre- quency treatment will temporarily reduce your blood pressure after each treatment, but does not have any permanent effect. Question: Housekeeper writes: “I am very interested in your health |column, and am being greatly bene- fited, but am having difficulty in knowing which foods to combine. Will you please give some kind of a rule to go by?” Answer: Proteins, which are the meats, cheeses, nuts, etc., properly combined with non-starchy and salad vegetables, such as string beans, spinach, celery, etc. are ex- tremely easy to digest. The starches, such-as potatoes, maca- roni, rice, should also be combined with the non-starchy or salad vegetables but never with the pro- teins. Just remember this, and study the menus given in this column each week and it will soon become very easy for you to select good foods and combine them cor- rectly. I have prepared a special article on “Food Combinations” which I will be glad to send to you on receipt of a large, stamped, self- addressed envelope. prove of value to her at some time or other. You really gan’t know too much. Deepest love, MARYE. TOMORROW: Marye's jealousy Who|® Fe is aroused when Florence steps out with Norman, a | IN NEW YORK 6 | $$ _____—¢ New York, May 21.—Manhat- tan snapshot . . . The sad-faced young Israelite who spends his noon hour and after-work leisure parad- ing City Hall Square wearing a sandwich man’s sign which calls up- on the world to halt war. his parade is ended and his circu- lars have been distributed he returns to the little haberdashery store where he earns his livelihood. In the Wall Street belt they call him “the Wandering Jew.” It seems he got a taste of warfare during the “big war.” One day he “felt a call”—however one does—which bade him spread to the world the Peace message of the simple man of Nazareth. And so he goes daily among the bums and the lunchers on the park benches, taking his mes- sage. Ironically enough, he passes within a stone’s toss of a street corner army recruiting station. ... And there’s a five-year-old young- ster they call the “singing kid.” ... His repertoire of selections is headed by “Show Me the Way to Go Home.” . » + He has found that when he warbles’ them pennies and nickels come his way. This discovery causes him to play return engage- ments. He’s quite the pet of the street crowds, thanks to his red hair and little blue denim overalls. And there’s the lane of cherry blossoms that now nod their fra- it boughs over the Central rk driveway. The countryside may have its apple blossomed open fields, but Manhattan boasts once a@ year of its great rural stretch between 70th and 79th streets ca Fifth avenue... . Clive Weed, the artist, shooting 1 at the Players’ Club... . And ine Larrimore, the actress in a smart new brown outfit at the Colony club. . . . The Colony club, by the way, is where they have the best French cooking in the world, including France. . .. But it costs you $2 just to sit down... . after getting the check, scriveners like mysclf have to be supported when trey stand up. . But still, all the “important people” go there. . + Bertha M. Clay is still a best seller in a Fifth Avenue 5 and 10- cent store... . And “juice harps” are dispisyed in a Broadway window. Fritzi Scheff playing the role of a program seller at the Lambs’ club show. ... And the cir- cus has left town. ... Saw Courtney Riley Cocrer, who writes tales about the “big tops,” standing sad- ly by as thcy packed up... . This was a jinx circus year in Manhat- tan, they tcil me... . Twenty-six members of the big acts were suf- fering from flu, pneumonia and way i lealegy iad they pore’ Aa nae Robert irmont, who m: ‘a lion “on the Reet bat whe writes poetry in a garret jus' same. . H. Handy, who is credited with elie! the “blues,” finally crashed effete Carnegie Hall, which ustomed. aeasaky was waiting at a little rail- town ein Eton + ee old wi a negro crooning to himself by the (rat Hendy listened in’ and heard the first “blues” theme. After that came “The St. Louis Blues,” When | ¢ “The Memphis Blues” and the “Beale Street Blues.” They tell me he sold out his “St. Louis Blues” number for a couple of hundred dol- lars. Someone has probably made a fortune from it but not Handy. Oh, yes, and the college boys from Yale, Harvard and way col- leges have been cutting up in the Broadway resorts the past week. ... And they smash nearly a hun- dred guitars a week in a comedy act of a Broadway musical comedy. . «. The drama critics are starting for Europe, thus sounding the knell of the drama season. ... And our guess is that “The Bridge of San Luis Rey” will get the Pulitzer prize. « « Which will be the first time this committee ever gave the award to a Book that everybody had read already, anyway. GILBERT SWAN. [ ‘cxoP Report _| Seeding of all spring wheat was practically completed and barley and oats seeding well over one-half done on May 15, according to a large number of reports received in the agricultural _statistician’s office from all sections of the state. These reports were received in response to the regular mid-month inquiry. Where wheat seeding was not com- pleted, durum varieties were being sown. Some durum remained to be seeded in the western third of the state as well asin the north cen- tral and central crop reporting dis- tricts. Oats seeding began a few days earlier than barley seeding. ‘or the state two-thirds of the barley acreage and three-fourths of the oats acreage had been seeded up to May 15. Recent rains, though not general, have enabled flax seed- ing and potato planting to begin under very favorable conditions in many sections. : i No reports of deficient moisture were received from the western two- thirds of the state, but up to the 15 of May about one-fourth of all reports indicated poor moisture sup- ly in the eastern fhird of the state. Rainy weather since May 15 has im- rroved moisture conditions in these istricts, oN Tame hay and pastures conditions have shown a marked improvement since May 1, In general, the North Dakota agricultural situation has shown a decided improvement where precipitation has occurred, and con- ditions are favorable generally, throughout the state. Malaria remains the most de- structive disease of mankind; it takes a yearly toll of 2,000,000. Girls! Tell This to Your Skinny Friend Tell him that the quick ea.y way to put pounds of solid flesh on his bones is to take McCoy’s Tablets. Tell him that besides helping him 's make him strong and Pest Miss Alber tal Tablets or 2 One Dolls. thin, underweight doesn’t gain at leas! F boands and feel completely satisfied with the health— mar! improvements in your ist is authorized to return the purchase The name McCoy's Cod Liver Oil Tablets has ask for McCoy’s Tablets at Sowan’s and Finney’s Drug Stc:es or any drug store in America.—Adv, i E i t a a ' ee A, eiketie, ieetea! el a caneee on out > - a eae ~< th. a a ee a eae in seit saiaaandes ye ee a row os