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z | =<Bagin to visualize it as a thing of years and strug- PAGE 4: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ostoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as sec Class Matter. GEORGH D. MANN. - - - G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, Special Foreign Representative NEW YORK, Fifth Ave. Bldg.; CHICAGO, Marquette Bldg.; BOSTON, 3 Winter St.; DETROIT, Kresege Bldg.; MINNEAPOLIS, 810 Lumber Exchange. MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED 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 herein. | ‘All rights of publication of special dispatches herein are | also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADY. NCE Daily by carrier per year Daily by mali per year (In Bis Daily by mail per year (In State outs! smarck ) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota.......:+++++ THO STATH’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1873) cs —— = ——= THE DAY OF ROMANCE. Are we ready for the epidemic of matrimony? First symptoms are appearing as soldiers are mus- tered out in American camps. i It will increase as shiploads of American veterans land on home shores. Thousands of American maids are waiting the lads who marched away. Thousands more are dreaming of the hero-husband, not yet seen but soon to come marching in with the dawn. Editor for Matrimony means homemaking, nation.and soci- ety building. We're all agreed that it is to be en- couraged, That an epidemic of romance and weddings is just ahead nobedy doubts. Nobody thinks of, try- ing to prevent it. As well try to sweep back the tide with a feather duster. But for all that a word or two of caution may ap.) propriately be ‘apoken, today. Many a soldier boy has had his romance with eamp and hospital nurse and_ visitor. These ro- mances developed quickly in the electric atmosphere of war. Now that peace has come many of them will wither before the practical airs of common life. The maid who a few weeks ago saw only a hero in uniform will now begin to see a breadwinner in civilian clothing—and if she is shortsighted her mother and father may supply spectacles for her. Many a man who in the excitement of wartime thonght only of life as a momentary thing will now eglesand to think of his maiczof-romance as helper “jn the contests ahead rather than as the girl to clasp for a moment and then to bid farewell per- haps for an eternity. This is the Afterwards Era. Of course many lasting, lifelong and beautiful ro- mances have been born in and of the wartime. Men and women have married without thought of the practical side. They have thought only in spiritual terms.” More will do And many of them, living in the world of their own ideals will know .only happiness. But for others such steps spell sorrow and trouble. cS So much depends on the.d: eg-of spiritual devel- opment of individuals, One‘woman-may marry an fall but helpless cripple and be happy ever after even though she must be the chief breadwinner. But it may not be so with a sister, whose mind is tuned to practical, common things. After all it’s a matter for individual suffrage, this of being spiritual and romantic or of missing some of the exaltations of the sacrificial life for the plain placidities of the practical path. the same. Lives there a man with lungs poor that he pro- élaims no plan at all for reconstituting everything in sight? WHAT DO YOU WANT? Eddie Rickenbacher, American air-hero, says he doesn’t want any more auto-racing or high-flying } travel across the continent by mulepower at a rate of speed not to exceed 5 miles an hour. Contrasts always are attractive to the mind of man. ‘ | Most of us want to be not what we are but what! we are not. As a rule we waut to be not. where we are hit somewhere else, gathering poppies on “the green hill, far away.’’ or present Few of us are satisfied with past lachievements and most of us feel the stirrings of am- hitions for higher attainments. It is the urge of “the divine unrest.’ run away from it. All the 7 cant kill it. It is an irresistible foree. You can’t achers and standpatism in the world But it, needn't make you or your neighbor do any- thing rash. : Electricity, steam, gas, these forces are harnessed and directed to great uses, So “the divine unrest’? can be made to serve if wisely directed to outlets of beneficial achievement. There's plenty of change, of variety, of new op- portunity in the world today, You can find what you are looking for. Save your sympathy for the vietims of the Huns. They still need it. Holland seems oblivious to the fatd:! ‘obstinacy brought on Germany. Too many reconstruetion plans all at once might give us indigestion before Christmas. ~ British didn’t crow when Germans surrendered U-boats. They left that bird to the Tputons. Germans in saying their navy wasn’t worth much may be trying to take the sting out of the surrender. And then there's the big job ahead for the flag- makers when the makers of new nations take a rest. Yet most any leading politician anywhere would be willing, after a little, very little, persuasion to become Chief Magistrate of the World. sion sees meee nmryee mand anes WITH THE EDITORS’ | WILSON TO EUROPE. Why should not the president go to Europe to confer on the basie principle upon which peace is to be constructed? No other statesman, nor all the statesmen put together, has done as much toward bringing about a healing, lasting peace. It was he who sensed the popular aspirations, and put into words an ideal that inspired the people to preserve to the end, Jt was he who quickened the common imagination, until the vision of the new order was caught by the leaders a8 well as by the people. He has thus becomésthé Speeial spokesman. of the 1iew order, and shoyld present it in person. True, he could send a printed speech, or he might delegate others to speak for him; but neither would produce the effect of his personal presence. As for the ob- jection to his leaving the country, that is childish. The wireless will keep him in constant touch with Washington. And as for its being undignified, that is stupid. Democracy has no use for the sanctity that attaches to royalty. The president did not lower the dignity of his office when he walked down Fifth Avenue at the head of a street procession for the Liberty Loan. Rather did he make the chief magistracy seem a very part of the people. The coming peace conference will be the most important political event in all history; and its chief import- ance will lie in the formation of the league of na- tions that is to perpetuate“arid make permanent the for some time to come. His greatest ambition, right now, he says, is to KOFFEL MAKES peace there established. By all means let the pres- ident attend the peace conference.—The Public. ment -ig.the long, logked for attempt | mined, formerly reported missing, BISMARCK DAILY TRIB REPLY TO TALK* OF INSURGENCY (Continued From Page One.) accounted to the joint campaign com- mittee for this list. After the fall election, and on the 9th dayyof November, Mr. Nelson and others @btained my consent to use my name as secretary to call a meeting of the executive committee of the In- dependent Voters’ association at Far- go on the 13th. At this meeting there was nothing said about insurgency. The Independent Voters’ association must of necessity conduct more or less of an educational propaganda, ané if Mr, Nelson can make a success of his so-called Griggs county move- ment, it should be looked upon as an aid or auxiliary to the Independent Voters’ association, and I, for one, wish him all possible success in or- ganizing that county. This seems the only conclusion I can arrive at if Mr. Nelson is sincere in his appeal to avoid a multiplicity of organizations and a duplication of work. Or is it possivie tnat tne Griggs county move by Townley and his followers to break the efficiency of the fndependent Vot- ers’ association by creating divisions among the members? THEODORE KOFFEL. ——————— oy | Fallen For Freedom | . $$$ — a Killed in Action. Private John P. Bauer, Hankinson, Private Ernest J. A. Erickson, Wil- ton, N. D. Died of Wounds. Ernest L. Moore, Raton, N 1. Missing in Action. Private Alro Clark, McKenzie, N. N. Private Alvin DeForest, Devils Lake, N. Dak. Died of Disease. John B. Weidner, Golden Valley, N. Dak. Wounded, Private Beint R. Kleveland, May- ville, N. D. Private John W. Ogle, Fairmount, Private Arthur T. rous, N. D. Meadows, Wat- Wounded in action, degree undeter- Do Not Get Careless With Your Blood Supply _— ing. A few bottles of S. S. S.. the Impurities Invite Disease. | great vegetable blood medicine, will — ‘ new aire and heat Vigorous ‘You should pay particular heed to} vitality. 4 i indication that your blood supply oa ree tha sytem pape Abed is becoming singeish or that there tion. Go to your drug store and get @ lessening in its strong vital a bottle to-day, and if you need any Henry Clevens, Hillsboro; returned tu duty, previously reported missing, Clyde Knudston, Hillsboro. Only One “Bromo Quinine” To get the genuine, call for full name LAXATIVE BKOMO QUININE Tablets. Look for signature of E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. 30c. NOTICE OF SALE OF CATTLE TAK- EN AS ESTRAYS, Notice is hereby given: .That I will sell at the farm of George Clooten on SW 1-4 Section 20, Township 140 North of Range 79 being in Naughton Township, Burleigh county, North Da- kota on the 11th day of December, 1918, at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon the following describeu live stock, to wit: One white heifer with red spots, i year old. One black heifer, one yea rold. ‘one black heifer, one year old. One light red heifer, one year old. One light red bull, one year old. J. 0. VARNEY, - Justice of the Peace. Let this notice be given by publica- tion in the Bismarck Daily Tribune three times, once on the 26th day of November, on the 3rd day of Decem- ber and on the 10th day. of Decem- ber, 1918. J. O. VARNEY, Justice of the Peace. 11 26; 12 3 10. Protect your loved ones. The Broth- erhood of American Yeomen now put- STOMACH UPSET? Pape’s Diapepsin at Once Ends Sour- ness, Gas, Acidity, Indigestion. When meals upset you and you belch gas, acids and undigested food. When you have lumps of indigestion pain or any distress in stomach you can get relief.instantly—No waiting. As‘soon as You eat a tablet of Pape’s Diapepsin’ all the indigestion pain stops. Gases, acidity, heart- ‘burn, flatulence and dyspepsia van- ish. Pape’s Diapepsin tablets cost very little at drug 5! S Zhe oo. * GERMANY AND AUSTRIA io. CONSPIRED TO BRING |. ABOUT WORLD WAR i this demand must be peace conference, it is agreed vy ally authorities in Bel, a ‘Some extremists say that Belgium's national frontier in the east is the left bank of the Rhine; while a more mod- erate group would be satisfied with Nhe cession of Luxumbourg. ; FOCH’S HEADQUARTERS. i Luxembourg, “Nov. 26.—Marshal Foch has established headquarters here. He arrived in Luxembourg yes- terday with his staff. ADOPT PROGRAM. London, Nov. 26.—The German ‘gov- érnment has adopted the program framed by the late Albert ‘Ballin, di- rector of the Hamburg-American line and shiping unions, binding Germany to build ships for the allies at fixed prices and retain her merchant fleet, says an Amsterdam dispaich today. ARRIVE IN CONSTANTINOPLE, Constantinople, Nov. 26.—There were ‘5 British, French and Italian battleships, cruisers and destroyers in the allied squadron which anchor- ed today in the Bosphorus. The news- papers and population acclaim the al- lies as deliverers. The headquarters o the British and French contingents have been estab- lished in Constantinople. : Food prices in Constantinople have risen 20 times above those ruling be- fore the war. Disorganization of the railroads in Asia Minor today compet in Asia Minor today compel the gov- ernment to abandon the ration. of cheap bread which it issued through the war. Of the 59 officers and men which re- mained with the U. S. gunboat Scor- pion, in the Golden Horn, since diplo- matic relations were severel, 25 mar- ried Levancine women: Another Theory Shattered. Fat people don't.really laugh louder than thin ones, Itj$ast’shakes ’em up (Cgntinued From Page One.) y made at the * 1 Tord You we'p WIN THE WARS AMERICAN GIRL DESCRIBES THE COMING OF HUNS TO BRUSSELS BY. BEATRICE YOUNG. (Secretary to M. E. De Billy, of the French High Commission. Miss Young Was in Brussels when the Germans entered it.) All day long that dreadful sound continued, and late into the night. I do not know how late, for I fell asleep still hearing it, though I had shut my windows tight, trying to deaded the sound. In the morning I was awak- ened by music, At first I thought I had awakened from a horrid dream; that there was music and happiness in the air, and that all that nightmare about The Belgian soldiers are about to re- enter Brussels, their beautiful capital, with rejaicing in their hearts. They left it four years ago at the call of duty, knowing that their own little xrmy could not stem the German in- vasion, HOW » France and England did help, but RHEUMATISM alos! too late to save lovely Brussels. The German hordes armed into? it on the 20th of August, 1914, like long lines of fiendishly industrious. bees, IT was there, and I watched them from my little roof garden that over- looked the Avenue Louise, the broad, 1 shaded street along. which — they marched, Every Belgian heart was paralyzed. The brave and wise mayor of the city, <, Whom the Germans haye just The excruciating agonies of rheu- matism are usually the result of fail- ure of the kidneys to expel poisons from the system’: In a majority of cases rheumatism is an indication that uric acid has pervaded the sys- tem. If the irritation of these uric acid crystals is allowed to continue, Mr. M: released after keeping him in prison |i@curable bladder or kidney disease four bong yeurs, had begged the peopie}™MAY, result. Attend to it at once. Don’t resort to temporary relief. The sick kidneys must be restored to health by the use of some sterling remedy which will prevent a return to stay in their houses, off the streets, as the Germans came in. ‘The people obeyed. Not a soul could he seen out- do or even at the windows, for ev- ery window was covered by its Wig} of the disease. auétal shutters that slid down Hike] a Get some GOLD MEDAL Haarlem rurtain frem above. The city lookpd | Oil Capsules immediately. They are ‘ie if.it had a million eyes, ‘all shut |@ standard world-famous medicine in s not to see the horrid sight. use for over two hundred years. They But closed windows and drawn shut-, have brought back the joys of life to ters could not keep out the sound of all; countless thousands of sufferers from those iron heels click-clicking ulong|keumatism, lame back, lumbago, 3 street: sciatica, gall stones, gravel and other German affections of the kidneys, liver( stom- ach bladder and allied organs. They will attack the poisons at once, clear out the kidneys and urin- ary,tract and the soothing healing oils ‘and herbs will restore the inflam- med tissued and organs to normal health. GOLD MEDAL is the original Haar- Jem Oil imported direct from the home laboratories in Haarlem. Hol- land, by. the Genuine Haarlem Oil Mfg. Co., Haarlem, Holland, Ameri- can office, 116 Beekman St., N.’ Y. All others are imitations. Ask for GOLD MEDAL and be sure the name GOLD MEDAL is,on the box. Three sizes, at all good druggists. The nates, shaped like horseshoes, around soldiers wore iron the edge of their hootheels. Most of the streets in Belgium are paved with little stone blocks, a dozen inches long, rough and jagged, but hard as flint. The regular thud, thud, thud of those iron heels on the pavement was one of the most awful, terrifying sounds of all the war. It seemed to typify the forces that were contending—the iron heel of Ger striking regularly, in- differently, mechanically, on the little, motionless, white cobble stones of Bel- gium, ‘whose surface they never dented, and whose occasional ‘s of fire as steel struck flint, see: to speak the pent-up anger of the nation. EVERETT TRUE more. % “ i a ting on a big campaign for member-| ship. Largest fraternal organization in the world, taking in men and wom- en on equal terms. 250,000 members, | ’ BEGINS Spanish Influenza Do Not Fear When Fighting a Germ- : an or a’ Germ! By Dr. M. Cook. The’ cool fighter always wins and so there is no need to become panic- stricken, Avoid fear and crowds. Ex- ercise in the fresh air and practice three C'¢ A Clean Mouth, @ an Skin and Clean Bowels, To carry off the poisons that accumu- late within the body and to ward off an attack of the influenza bacillus, take a good liver regulator to move the bowels. Such a one is made up of May-apple, leaves of aloe, root of jalap, and is to he had at any drug store, and called “Pleasant Purgative Pellets.” If a bad cold develops, go to bed, wrap up well, drink, freely of hot lemonade and take a hot mustard footbath. Have the bedroom warm but well ventilated. Obtain at the nearest drug store “Anuric Tablets” to flush the kidneys and control the pains and aches, Take an “Anuric” tablet every two hours, together with copious drinks of lemonade. If a true case of influenza, the food should be simple, such as broths, milk, butter- milk and icecream; but it is import- ant that food be given regularly in order to keep up patient's strength and yitality. After the acute attack has passed, which is generally from three to seven days, the system should be built up by the use of a good iron tonic, such as “Irontic”, tablets, to be obtained at some drug stores, or that well known blood-maker an‘ herbal tonie made from roots and ‘barks of forest trees—sold every- where as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, ——OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO war and invading armies was unreal. But in an instant I realized that it was a German band that was playing, leading soldiers who were singing ‘Die Wacht am Rhein!” I stayed in the house nearly all day, watching from my little roof-garden the gray lines of German troops that still kept, marching ‘along the Avenue Louise, varied at times by huge supply wagons and kitchens on wheels, whose canvas coverings were faintly sugges- tive of the prairie schooners that cross- ed American plains in the days of our grandfathers. Late ijn the afternoon the chain of troops'seemed broken. Ouly occasional groups of them were coming, laggards, I suppose, who liad not kept up with the main body. I could wot stand. any longer to re- main in the house, with no news as to what was happening. I ventured out, having promised to come back if I en- countered riots. The: Belgian people knew themselves, and were constantly uw d of disorder due to un os of their anger, which would lead to tlm gomplete \destruction of ‘their ait The: streets were empty. I turned corner after corner without seeing a soul. Finally, as I approached the Grande. Place, the big open square in the center of the city, I found a few seattered Belgians, moved evidently by the same desire to know what was hap- pening that had ‘brought me out, look- ing silently, sadly, into the big Place. They could not go too near, for Ger- man -sentries, flonrishing saw-toothed bayonets, motioned them back from the narrow. streets that led into the Grande Palac I, too, was pushed back un- ecremoniously, without a word. I cowd sce, however, that hundreds of German soldiers, with their ba wagons and their rolling kitchens filling) the immense square, ma them. sleeping on the hard epbble stones of the pavement... The German flag hung from the staff on the Hotel de Ville, lifeless and. drooping as if it knew the ignominious fate that was finally to overtake it. I walked farther, German soldiers were everywhere in the center of the city. They were in the royal palace; their wagons and horses filled the Parc Royal across the street frem it; they swarmed over the steps,of the wonder- ful Palace of Justice, one of the loveli- est buildings in Europe; they were set- tling themselves in the offices of all the Belgian. ministers: ji, Since that imeliioor Brussels has been undér the iron™heel. of. that dread- ful German army. But. now her day of deliverance has come. I can picture the joy, the relief and gladness and fervent thanksgiving that will sweep over that long-saddened city, as Bel- gium sees once more her own dear flag flying from her pubH¢* ‘buildings, and her brave and undaunted soldiers com- ing back into their own. fy Useful Insects, Hf addition to’ the insects which hdlp man by. their: warfare against his enemies and those that are: useful to him in medicine, there are many oth- ers that serve useful purposes in a commercial “way. Most familiar of these are the honey and wax obtained trom the bee, There is a Chinese bug which secretes a_ kind of. grease on trees, This hardens:tnto wax and is collected, melted and ‘purified when it becomes White, and glossy in appear. ance,.and when mixed with oil it can be made tnto candles.—Chicago Her- ald and Examiner. Tribune Want Ads Bring Results. DARTING,, PIERCING Give way before the pene- trating. effects of Sloan’s Liniment —_— So do those rhe ic twit the loin-aches of lumbage immation of neuritis, the wry neck, the joint wrench, the ligament in, ie muscle strain, and the thr. bing ise, The ease of applying, the qui of reich, the poste reat Jiness, and the economy. of Sloan's Liniment make it universally preferred, ae sat Pain