The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 17, 1917, Page 6

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sIxX i BISMARCK EVENING TRIBUNE MONDAY, DECEMBER. 17, 1917 i WHUT TH’ DICKENS FUNNY PART OFN FEY TOBY_HAVE. © THE OLDONE- ISTH’ BIG IDEA THERIOT LONG ITISHEISON HA MECHANIC CONNECT JMNM | Doc'UseD to TO DOC-HE PHONED, yl } rR OVER AN ORDERS 2 HIS WAY OVER TE THis ENGINE To MY ALLHISTIRES (AC a HERE NOW HF CAR AN’ CRANKIT! ; 4S \F RUBBER AN’ GAS TAKEN OFF AN’ . HISGAS DRAINED.’ SAID THEN B'LONGED YO TH’ Gov’MENT! IS WAR NECESSARIES, (WAR WAG AGAINST { thing German. It is an endeavor to' NO FURTHER MOVE to deliver an address under the oe ubstitute high intellectual calibre for| the St. Paul association an ED the feelings “ot the soul. In this re- IN RAILROAD: SITUATION te ae here tonight. n TUR | spect it Jocks horns witn Christianity. UNTIL AFTER CHRISTMAS penibacriist arabic kaen ‘ 3 seth th the spir: itual life if > Kreps 2 ur regular leg espe | To this life the soul must be cated today that President Wilson will ment 2 iS- Kultur theref mater-|™make no further move in the railroad Rev. L. R. Call Discusses Chris listie to he pat Te ae a none! Situation until congress reconvenes al- tianity vs. German Kultur | of the principles for which Jesus lived. | te” the Christmas holidays. 14 ‘“ It has not place for justice or right; | USED CAR BARGAINS at Morning Service. [ites sympathy or love; for brotherhood | 7 ORES Se SUELO CHRIST MAR! or sacrifice. Germany would cover a the world with it for it is the thing! oe stores tile) evening; the various e the Germans worship Kultur andj ¢, ing. ...-$700 of the First Baptist church yesterday | (hristianity cannot both live on the The managements of| Dodge Bros. Touring. $ spoke on “Christianity versus Kultur.” same elobe- dentin’ One aust fall: phe {the atbres have added additional help Chalmers Touring, 7 Pass 500 Mr. Call declared that among the | American people and her allies will | wae shomenate the Christ:| Ea imers Touring, 5 Pass 325 many things for which we as a nation] answer.” z ne 4 fight Christianity stands out as’a par- eH ranean tmas re as eur only Bee Chalmers Touring, 5 Pass 600 amount issue, and among the things as i 18 istomers are asked to shop BISMARCK’S NIGHT SCHOOL RECEIVES OFFICIAL SANCTION George F. Will, p marck board of educ structed Sut! Maurice Martin to withdraw public support to the night school which has been conducted since the beginning of the year in the basement of the Will school and to make plans for the opening of an au- t of the mn, today. in Preaching the third of a series of} war time messages, the Rev. L. R. Call thori: a public a pa ee against which we fight the German To ae Repalgl 9 Sti Gi the back as early ie possile oes Beat til antl 2 fee 250 the city with the opening of the mid- monche sald a smooth surface and prepare a piece ATIONS ichigal ing, winter semester, following the Christ- mas holidays. The present night school was open- |“ ed two years ago by a number of pub- lic-spirited Lismarck women and it had during its first year an excellent corps of teachers, emb ing some of the most competent instructors in the city. This year the school has been almost solely in charge of Miss Emer- ita Yegen, many of iho original spon- sors having for one reason or another withdrawn, Under an act ‘fathered by Rep. Harry A. Mackoff of Belfield, night schools in North Dakota now have le- gal sanction, and it is required that} they be conducted under the direction of the local board of education and that they be financed in the same man- ner as the public day schools, and that quadified teachers, possessing first class certificates, be placed in charge. Such a night school, under the di- rect supervision of Supt. J. Maurice Martin, and with an enrollment of probably 100, will be opened after the first of the year. a 7 e . St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 17.—Secretary “Some declare that the two mighty of ea mack scaauels a poet ae of Labor Wilson, and members of the Maxwell Touring, 5 Pass. - boa powers who are contending on the pe feaiiie pateliin posidansilig federal mediation hoard will begin| Velie Truck ......------- field of battle are the Allies against ace. ate B » "| their “informal investigations” .of the German Empire. Others declare |® sheet of paper over it and put on it | twin City labor difficulties this after- All cars worked over and in bcs that it is democr against autoc-ja weight having a perfectly flat sur-| noon by first interviewing Governor| running order. Free storage to racy. Lubin declared that it is Juda-jface sand he enough to pr it | Burnquist and learning from him the ay |, 1918. ism against Paganism. It is all this/down tightly. Let the ‘mirror be in| position of the safety commiss,ion and even more. It is Christianity |this position for a day or two and the | and the history of the controversy,| MISSOURI VALLEY MOTOR co. against modern German Kultur. foil will adhere to the 3. which led to its order prohibiting the i : Phone 234. Modern German kultur is different wearing of union buttons by street 7th and Main St 4. \trom the German kultur of a few] ae Sin MEGAN Gnd Match car employees. Mr. Wilson has agreed Phone years ago in ‘that while it was worthy = = —-—— of great praise and had many envy-| A cement for making metal and able characteristics, the German kul-| Marble adhere consists of 30 parts of tur of today is only a crude and shal-| Plaster of paris, 10. parts fron, filings low imitation. I say, crude and shal-]and half’ part of sal ammonfac and} | low because it has been confined to} acetic acid added to make a thin paste, an appreciation of all forms of Ger-' which must be used immediately. man art, bad as well as good. Ger-t ? many’s rage of giants in literature and art npveigted pauw ith, hem, bas. led “You have not fulfilled every duty their places. Kultur today is a pseudo-| unless you have fulfilled that of being appreciation of, and allegiance to, any-| Pleasant."—Charles Buxton. | Tcedom ! The birthright ‘of the race, Td many losb in the mad chase , For pelf made by a soulless few, Freedom, thy time is sorely due! Tor all! The chance to live ,to dare,¥ } To each shall come as free as air. | Each mortal from his hour of birth Forever! Death to biG6d-red’ Mare N Shall end the clang and boom of wars. Freedom and peace the world shall swa Night's berrors er Awake the mt Most Important Duty. HERSE “WEAT “DIET POPULAR} Demand in Cincinnati Increases Week. + IyeeIndorsed by the City t Health Officer, Madeline — Berl. “There is no reason in the world why archild should not learn to swim be- fore it is five years old. Infact, there ig ‘every reason why it should, The children of savage tribes in the Islands cf the Pacific learn even before that age. Some of them learn to swim be- fore they learn to walk, which clearly shows that all our civi! fon is Wrong in assuming that y dl knowledge are necessary to ability to swim.” Cincinnati—Health Officer J. H Landis, discussing horseflesh as food, says: ;. “Cincinnati’s initial experiment in the use of horse meat has been a pro- pounced success. The only trouble has been a failure to meet the demand, ¢ {Two horses were slaughtered the first jweek, four the, second, and eighteen the third. In all about 14,000 pounds haye been consumed. “Like many, other cities in the United, States, Cincinnati has many persons who learned to eat horse meat before becoming residents of this coun- try, They do not share the prejudice Bank with the Cloc Too Much. Tuman life is often painted as pain- fully meager and pinched, but-one cf its most common shadows is regret bred by lack of self-restraint, Eating too much, talking too much, drinking of. Americans against this valuable too much, playing too much, tempting food. ssn fate too much Ly various forms of “Ta its ability to supply heat and en- i ERALDINE FARRAR gambling—all these forms of excess ergy and to repair waste horse meat ../asky-Paramount and others also contribute prodigally is.on a par with meat of other ant mite MA oin evi to the sum of the world’s pain and < You may be debating in your mind the question as to what is the best means for you to employ in attaining Success. Unless you already possess u large sum of money there is_only one answer, and {pat is save and be ready for opportunities that are sure to come. | MR. BUSINESSMAN | mals used for food purposes.” Adina eine sorrow and multiply its misfortunes.— . =e ~ — _|rihy oF both the operas ant the oeeee, | SCONE. What you save will be the factor which will fin- | if you want Help of any Experimenting. who appears in the spectacular photo| , —_—______—_ ally end the debate in your favor. ! On dntering Milliken’s room one day |drama, “The Woman God Forgot” at LAUNCH ATTACK. Kind Just Use a Want ad his friend Pingley found him thumping |the Bismarck Theatre, Thursday and| Berlin, Dec. 17.—British troops on| the piano with all his might and draw-|Friday of this week. the Wallan front, yesterday launched TK t N ti ] B k st discord: so fr ast a. he Austro-German , —~. inggteent erie si rm MG] ont stand rept, _| nest ot Monte pina Sree e 1 st National Ban IN THE TRIBUNE all, that is good are you playing?” Never repeat a poor excuse, It may| but it broke down before the Teuton | asked Pingley. “I am trying to play| be better than none the first time, but| Positions, the German war office an- that score of Wagner's,” replied Mili-| the second time it is much worse Nounced today. BISMARCK, N. D. The j The |} | | Model | | Model | i We Close This Secure Forever] | liken. “I had it the other way up at Uses of the Howitzer. first, but cowldn’t make head or tail} Howitzer is the name given to a par- $7000.00 worth of men’s and Boys Suits, Overcoats Shoes, Hats, Caps, Underwear, Shirts, =) and Mackinaws at a sacrifice. BUY NOW— | “sca THE MODEL sss] | Main St. | North Dakota ” great value in sieges. It is a small, barnane light gun, which fires a shell at a small velocity but at a steep angle of de- scent. This makes it valuable as a!| means of bombarding trenches and in attacking low-lying defenses. Oldest Inhabitants of Europe. Albania, the population of which ap-| Proximates 1,000,000, is inhabited by a! race that has nothing in common with the Ttaliaz Nine-tenths of the Al- Danians are Moslems, and only half the rest, are Roman Catholi They speak, a language which i mixture of Slavonic and Greek derivations, en- gage in primitive occupations and lea a more or less primeval social life. The Albanians are considered the old- est inhabitants of Europe, their history = going back to times immemorial. Answer: They Were Not. One thing we know f@ sure. Our grandmothers, who accomplished such miracles. of baking, brewing, spinning and weaving, while bringing up fami- lies of ten or a dozen or more, didn’t have the telephone to keep them dis- cussing the affairs of Tom, Dick and Harry, their wives, mothers, sisters and sweethearts, half the day whiie dishes went unwashed and beds un- made. Weren't those the good old days?—Whitmore Times. $i Duty and Pleasure. ‘fhe path of duty looks ered than it 1s; that of pleasure is harder than At the Orpheum Tuesday only, mat- Ze it looks.—Youth's com _.. linee and night. Z ca

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