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Class Matter. pity GEORGE D. MANN ‘G. LOGAN KN-PAYRE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative nW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHICAGO, Marquette Ale? BOSTON, 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresege Bldg.: MINNEAPOLIS, 8) umber Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOC: ED PRESS The Asociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published ae iehta of publication of special dispatches herein are ‘also reserved. MBMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN y. Daily by carrier per year Daily by mail per year (In Bisma: Daily by mail per year (In State outs Daily by mail outside of North Dakota THE STATE'S OF DEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) ITINITEDQTATES nconditional urrender Editor $s Bismarck) 5.00 6.00 | THE UNSEEN QUALITY. You wonder why the man who see ary to you wins honor and positior you are so much better than he, you compelled to take a minor place. It’s hard to explain, but ope reason is that his; personality and experience probably At him peculiar way for the job to be done. ‘Aid u it’s because he understands and appie€lates thet strength and weakness of others. i The things that equip men for life’s work are, so varied that it’s impossible to standardize the r2- quirements for the big jobs. We may talk in a general way about faithfui- a ness and loyalty and hgnor and the other qualities which are so necessarf ‘in the ideal man, but one mut have these—plus! And it’s the “plus’—the thing added—that | makes the difference. And usually you can’t de- fine what this “plus” may be. You feel it, it in-} while you—} ay jeffort no matter what its nature. ‘dedicate the major part of two decades to inten- _sive work, purposeful application. |the foresight and vision which chose and planned ms so ordin-!the career. think—are needs each and all should be considered in the {selection of one’s lifework. ‘when the die is cast let nothing deflect you from :departures only after mature deliberation. the compliment. How hard he shall work is a question every man unconsciously answers and dismisses from mind. His decision is determined by the depth of his ambition and the height of his aspirations. A sense of duty to dependents or a feeling of obligation to family may also be factors in the formation of his policy. But before these ele-| ments enter into a man’s life he should have clear- |ly shaped in mind a goal, a well defined objective | toward which his energies will be directed. It may mean the accumulation of a certain sum, the attainment of a coveted position, the accom- plishment of noteworthy vocational or profession- |al prowess—but it should be based upon individual Everyone of us should cheerfully and eagerly | The degree of success resultant depends upon Talents, inclination, education and pecuniary But once the field of endéavor is decided upon, he charted course, hew straight to the line, make! Pay attention to your business and it’ will re-| turn the compliment! A REGULAR MOTHER. There is plenty of sentiment about motherhood! '—but little romance. Essayists and editors who write about mother-' hood with a capital M and a tremelo tone grandly (call it a “profession.” Actual mothers know it is a job. There are picture mothers—attired in lacy neg- jligees and bending tenderly above pink babies in fluences others, and it’s what wins in competition! | silk-lined baskets. with others—but you can’t classify it. | Or poem mothers with silver hair gracefully It may be something that was handed down by |disposed under white caps, sitting, testament in a man’s grandfather, or that came to him through | hand, by cheerful firesides or windows with sun-' a life-time of experience, or that came out of anjs inspiration—or shall we call it a vision—which | opened his heart'and mind ‘and make him differ-/ ent, mostly in his inner life. It’s chiefly this inner, hidden life, which no man | can see, that gives the apparently ordinary man | the place of superiority. But fortunately, this road to power is open to us all—if we will but seek it. For the development} of the inner life depends not upon wealth or} learning, but upon the cultivation of open-minded- ness and warm-heartedness, upon our willingness to understand others and principally, perhaps, upon our readiness’ to permit others to win the; bigger places if they deserve them. | CONQUERING THE PRIMITIVE. ~~ The hairy caveman has a place in the rogue’s gallery of every man’ 's mind. Loathsome savage, half gorilla; fierce, formid-} able and filthy; convention flings the skin of a, beast about his repulsive form. Philosophers say much with regard to the asso- ciation of ideas. | Brutal fist grips gnarled cudgel. The heft of it,} the clutch of horny fingers round it spurts the hot | blood through his veins. It excites the primal lust | to slay. Cruelty becomes his predominant obses- | sion. plete; the association of ideas instantaneous. Man's geneological progress down the centuries | has not yet eliminated all the traits of his ante-} diluviar: ancestor. Today’s applications for divorce reveal to amaz ing extent, charges of cruelty against. American | husbands. ot the cruelty of neglegt} but the| physical a use that bespeaks the carnal, beastly | shadow of the prehistoric. A wife-beater should have short shift at the law’s mercy. Before civilization possesses a single man-made merit of which to boast, the bestial, the vicious, the savage within must not merely be held in check but throttled and cast out. We must adopt an attitude toward all women that is sincerely respectful, it must border on obeisance. Woman is worthy of man’s homage. Woman’s influence is man’s uplift. Woman’s tendency is naturally toward the ideal. Man’s code of conduct is crude; he responds to the brute rather than to the things which would sever that * last tie to the dark ages. ; The reward for his conquest of self will be found in happiness brought to others in the heri- tage of love bequeathed to posterity and in the additional sense of self-respect that will accrue. | The affinity betw: gen hand and brain is com | | We hope we get that Turkey in time for Thanks- giving. Our new allies will prove a Czech, so to speak, .on the duplicity of the Hun. Since Ludendorff has resigned in defeat the Hun -militarists must be resigned to defeat. And now America shows the German army what a real long-range bombardment can accomplish. \ Too bad all our=political mouthers of all parties | can’t be given a shiont visit to the Fabesd i They'd 8 great Lot Ate gett jgrandma gave her. \because we have had a REGULAR mother—and |bad tooth, Austria, will be removed. eae cron set. Or popular song mothers whose whole business: is to be “waiting day by day” for some ungrateful ' |son who is invariably repentant and invariably “far away. But what is a “REGULAR” mother? A regular mother is the capable lady who sends son John off to the army, and Mary off to her! typewriter, and father down to the shop, and little |Bill.away to Sixth Grade, A—and generally! |makes the world go round and stay in its tracks. A regular mother hasn’t any time to “look the! part.” No silk negligees, or white caps, or wait-/ ing-day-by-day for her! Generally the regular mother’s hair isn’t silver | white at all. It’ 's that pepper-and-salt mixture of} brown and white that signifies strength, common; sense—and “the best wearing qualities.” Nor,js| it smooth and soft—it’s usually a4ittle rumpled ; \by the rush to “get the family off to work” or i“get dinner on the table.” Nor are the regular mother’s eyes “dim with | jtears” or “soft with memories!” Please tell us} | what a regular mother’s eyes would do with tears | and memories when she’s got to see every’ thing | |from the hole in Bill’s stocking to that new blush | | Mary wears when Jim calls up to make a date! | And when it comes to dress there’s mighty little |silk and lace about a regular mother. 1 She’s satisfied with a clean white shirtwaist | with its crocheted edge on the collar (to save the| ‘cost of lace), with a fresh apron over her “dura-| ble” serge skirt, and for jewels, only her scratched | vedding ring, and the little old gold brooch But she ALWAYS LOOKS | |BEAUTIFUL—that regular mother! | So if the sentimental “Mother” of the cheap ;Picture and the poem and the popular song brings | ithe quick tears to our homesick eyes—it’s only | ( know her as a thousand times more wonderful than these! Foch’s pincers are again being applied, and the| Berlin says the people rule, but Kaiser Bill still holds the rank of emperor. ’Twon’t do. Germany retreats. Drive on Austria progresses. Constantinople menaced. ' Place your bets, gen- tlemen! As so well pointed out in the Paris press, Aus- tria’s recent notes might well be- called her posthumous works. "Smatter? No reformer has yet blamed the flu epidemic on the low cut waists and silk stockings of the fool wimmin folks. ' The Hun notes keep getting shorter and shorter.|_ When their words become as few as their ideas, this diplomatic exchange will cease. Another of the “and” family among the victims of war! Liver and— succumbs to Herb Hoover’s heartless “no more bacon as garnitures.” —$_$___— *_“It’s a grand thought, ” says, Harden, “that the ’s fate is in the hands of Wilson.” It’s a much gt of William the Patton deta than to see it in the hands| (Politica aera) PAGE 2 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE SATURDAY¢ NONGQ 19482 YOUR BUSINESS. THE : BISMARCK TRIBUNE Pay attention to your business and it will return D tert A SUGGESTION How to Vote Against SOCIALISM Mark an X opposite the name of each candidate on the DEMOCRATIC State and Congressional ticket. Mark an X after each of the three candidates for the Legislature in the 27th legislative district on the REPUB- ‘LICAN TICKET. |Mark an X opposite “No” if you wish to repudiate the proposed Socialist amendments to the State Constitution. (Separate Ballot.) VOTE FOR CHARLES J. FISK FOR JUSTICE OF THE SU- VOTE FOR MINNIE J. NIELSON FOR STATE SUPER- PREME COURT (on Separate Judicia] Ballot.) INTENDENT. (on Separate School Ballot.) Office to be Voted Democratic for Republican oc SS GEORGE M. YOUNG L. N. TORSEN IN CONGRESS PPE If you li he Ist di o and District Fred Bartholomew if in the bid, Hal eel yor L, Halverson. LYNN J. FRAZIER | | ‘| S.J. DOYLE X ia L) LJ HOWARD R. WOOD _J.P, SMITH LIEUTENANT = GOVERNOR THOMAS HAUL” ° elk SECRETARY OF A (STATE CARL R._KOSITZKY -@ OBERT A, OLSON coM. Fy STATE AUDITOR. _ HEGGE,,-- I< STATE TREASURER G. 8. WOOLEDGE a0 WILLIAM LANGER ATTORNEY GENERAL. | x S. A. OLSNESS *. B. SCHNELLER | COMMISSIONER OF INSURANCE led 7 | DAVID GORMAN ES JOHN N. HAGAN 5 lz COMMISSIONER OF AGRICULTURE AND LABOR ‘ : ] J. AANDAHL [| 1 J... HARVE™ * COMMISSIONERS OF RAILROADS M. ‘J. JOHNSON Ls C.F. DUPUIS (Vote tor Three Names Only) FRANK MILHOLLAN ADAM G. LESMEISTER \ O t Mark X After Names to be Voted for and Cross Out Names not Desired. L CL STATE SENATOR (Vote for Three) MBER HOUSE OF J. M. THOMPSON REPRESENTATIVES ( Vote for Three Names Only) 27th District Mark X After Names to be Voted for and Cross Out Names Not Desired. + Mark the Small Separate SCHOOL BALLOT Ee VICTOR MOYNIES Es F. O. TELLSTROM Mark the Small JUDICIARY BALLOT Minnie J. Nielson , [XI Superinténdent of Public Instruction. . For Judge of the Supreme Court £