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5 THE BISMARCK cK TRIBUNE 4 te Vision, ¥ Prune, 3, 0, te tormt eae, GOED URS ee hin G beg i 34 Biss OMELET, Biptins tote, YORE, ¥ Ate bye Wigs Ce Gon, Maryn WIRED, YWxtes Be; 5 SILNE, Seseanyy i UISBELLOLAS, B19 Seauetes a UEULER GE AYSSAIIED PBERE Ai khe Krenn ie AOI PLDs tH Oh Uae fubithit Wi) thew AYU WW te 4 Bh, Phat ‘ted wie Pr Th for Fp) fae De Se OE SOLE B08 eth) igi an TP ead Wl ayxciah Gaytereg basin & RULERS ADE WOLELY OF OPSUTL TION RSA NAITIOS MATS VAYAELN ad BYVAL Ee Hy by serra YE yeas > prover es y Weh yar year Un Wess ae pag 7m hon Gn Yr wth) A Wapee) y y A BN SHAM her vere perce 01 GA GUE ITS ASAE BEWSOAVER, Kimihyts 14%) / a os ae THY I AL WAYS SAME’ VO LV, SAVE OVEN AGAIN wins’ \asign ia this Waturally, 7 happened in your home: Little 4-year Ad Vivian was grandinither weve ter What Wwe “mh, everywning goes Wrong,” jue, wish I nad my whole Site Ww hive ayer again” And granting jaugnns, “My child,” grandma proibsy have your whole Site betore you, wlarting, ur if you fed thal you must live ~ new Nite, why, bewin Ih non; junk pretend Viet you wren new Vite gird, foryelling all the things thot tye nro aid try te de Tie Shings rigny”” Vivian, mayhe, bs living Wer life Wut the whiarvcem wre Uhal were several Vivian Lites dure the the nexi WW years Vivian again Wi wish she hand er whole fife ta live aver, Most human beings come to that wish; often, some only after Whey have traveled tar dows | the road of mistakes, We'd he more successful in the management of our ives, We'd do things differently; we'd do things whieh we left undone, and we'd refrain trom doing things we did, Youbs Jess the world would he thickly populated with Kockefellers, Napoleons, Wilsons, idivons, Shakes peares, If lives could be lived over again fis a pleawant dream diving our Sives aynin, Mut, listen, it is nol a dream, St van be done, Stis done atten, Men anid women do live their lives over ayvain, Yivian’s grandina was right: one's life over again, New lives, worth while lives, siecenstul happjpedivestuke daily ereded upon the ruins of raluapent lives, worthlens liver, miserable lives, Courageous men and women have turned when near the bottom of the downward path and have) come back up to suceass, honor and happiness, What was that but a new Wife? Wasn't that iy ing life over again? Nor need a person have long years ahead of hin)’ to live his life over again, he thief on pie oro lived his life over again in his last moment, « earthly existence, Viison! yates in every b fee apen daily to human beings who from that moment start diving (heir lives over again, and among} them are the tottering gray-beard and the beraud Jens youth, crying, $4 Der trouble Was whined Vivian, "S jt really was funny! “yO smiled, ane, some ONT wn! Maly shows (oo much detemmination for self, THE FAW WAVE MUCH, THE MANY LIVPLe "New York city, wlone, has something bike g00, 000 half-nourished children,” says an eastern ma thority, VE Wil be true, New York eity will, later on, have Homeldag like $00,000 defeients to care for, You cannot halfenourish any young living thing, man, beast oy plant, and produce a strong adult, | ven New York society bis recognived thin and to break mille faraine and milk trast has tried every pox wible method, wave Chat of common senne Observe how Uritain, during the war, handled {he problem of shortage in ehildven'ts staf! af lite, he Jailed profiteers and saw to it that thone mort needing mille got thei ahare of it, Wan adult conmumed aglow of mille in an eating house, for instance, he war table (oa tine of tive pounds There was leds milk in London than formerly, but more human beings needing milk got i than ever hefore, And the Rritivh Medical anioeiation re porta that for (he laat your the death rate of chil dren under five years of age waa onechall that in preawar yeara, Notwithstanding that her war rationing was almost to the brink of starvation, never in Bri tain'a history were so many people amply fed; never ko few went hungry, Diatribution! Gaya the National Geographic Magaaine; “Avmies of people in Britain are forsthe first time wearing their old clothes, and glad to do it; other armies are for the frat Aime wearing good clothes, and equally pleased." Distribution! The firat essential ia internatiqgal confidence, : UNTYING THE KNOTS OF LIFE The boy we were sorrieat for in our youth waa igh aon of the richeat man in town, In apirit, physique and mental equipment he wana oe - But he had a Sammie arm, You wre jus \pemuty ite § that ‘yor cay Miant ayein, that’s all one must do tw live p A Weuiel shew w of an arm, with a ridiculous slender fliah of a helpleaa hand at the end of it, And aaa bay he atood on the aide lines and iw the classroom: !comea pert tic tr tale naes Me teahe whi wa 4 lawyer in Neter years, OL bt hah 2 haniicay thet. wifes wrong bie mecca. wither every Vine be aibreaucn 4 mew jor Sn ali years we peard that bis orm wee O2- xa at birth. She fault wee unmmpected, ond when Gwmyvern surgery A Unite layne wae beige wae, the Nhe aay 2 ying nesgetul, aged two 28~ 4 hail, Rives head fret Af the tx, Whe he wis pitt ap whhing epyeret With, wi, later it wax wetted that ne refused arin, Wi ite G After 10 bays ne Was taken Wa wae OND Biypier whbing Wrong 7t, WH conus, Kis pares GY, CA OD Ube X-4 ahs Unere Was, Chahine a Tracture of the upper arin; a Vracture that had non separated We green nh trecvure, Yen WHE BOE a YH elras fine chame “or twisted iment Va haunt 2 san) ae Woy Daron OANA Cas 4 inte for a“ ut Withers, Se WE LAY 4 jt Hiern eurgery, With ite exactnern, ite definite f hidden hurts, ite replacements and Owavary ot FAO VHD hi % PIMA ons, We OM Of Nite, taking a of the oh And that making iwi a specialty of and replacing asta of Wey Wal makes tua enildren, wiralght, cru nes With sound les of adequate length, geling the spina) column Ww run in the cury that surgery is Heavenly, for in Heaven, we take jt, there are nitner crauked bodies nor distorted souls “ner intended ; aly Sach uy wig the Atlantic oes with flaly, nope that there is po secret treat Viven yes the Mun hopas that the league of oz- Hons Will not exclude the plague of patious, One reason Wurope respects our sdecal} By enune it keeps us from demanding @ st “pants, (prema | WITH THE EDITORS { 4 UNITED STATES “ARE” anyon, i Une 4 Cp mop eas Dh,” Bar Vritcstant Kpieropel eb oy fog the wake por Rie * Our nation,’ ls tn) isiinite rer wnby, Yb Lard, bien these “this lage f admiting that the | the qucnMy ¢ hanged j oynition of patio United Praves,” American penple constitute ~ nation,” says author, “seems extraordinary,” IW ie an interesting, and it may he a significant) clreamsance, that “President Wilson considers the United Stata ae plural, States entered the war,” he said in Paris, “they: entered tt not only because they were moved by) aconviction,” te, The more common usage would | call for « singular verb. The United States of Amerton 'is,"" just a8 Groat Britain js and the German empire is, Most writers treat it as the designation of # nation-—it, is probable that the | , mB Mpixcopal church today youdl not have changed | the form of the prayer, Never has our national! Wnity been more indisted upon or more apparent, | Centralization has been carried to unusual lengths, | even if purely war measures are disregarded, The} federal government is reaching oul to control child labor, aid road building and education, and do other things: which, when Bryce wrote, were exclusively diate functions.—New Bedford Stand- ard, A PARALL Wh, v1) YEARS SINCE An instructive if not very reassuring parallel to the present situation in Germany is to be found in the France of 1848, when the provisional goy- ernment which was in charge till the constituent addembly should meet wax menaced on the one vide by the imperialist and legitimists, on the other hy the sociallits, Kven within the govern- ment there waa a clash between the parliamentary republicans, headed by Lamartine, and the social republicans, headed by Louis Blane, « division in Many vredpects corresponding to the divishon be- tween the bourgeois and socialist elements in the German provivional government, ‘The sequel in well Known, At the elections held May 24, the moderates polled a great majority in the country at large, and even in Paris won as many deata ad the right and left together, But thin put an end to the hopes of soclalintie re- forma, which even the moderate socialists had cherished, while combining with the bourgeols liberala to support law and order, The dissatiafaction of the bolaheviki of that day Wan so great that they appealed to force, and the civil war reaulting waa far more serious than any clash which has yet occurred in Germany, Retween June 28 and 26 more than 10,000 men were killed or wounded in the street fighting in Paria, The revolt wan put down, but at the coat of a reaction which made Louis Napoleon first president and then emperor, and France did not escape thia military autocracy till Germany over- threw it in 1870, Vietor Hugo then sald he was “When the United |> glad Germany had dethroned Napoleon TI and hoped that France some day would dethrone the king of Pruaaia, Whether the moderate forces in Germany, ae compared with the militariata and the! radicals, are atronger now than they were in the France of 1848 ia one of the thinga atill to be tented, In come from uth aoa Springfield Republican from both sides,—Springfleld Republican, | Some. n SATURDAY EVE NING LETTER By justice LZ Bohinson a “a, Cased Lam joe es, Pg Sey Topic hes cena oe seilen Wee, be se ieee thet ia many Ways S ei goumes, Lergsite my VAR Kes VOOR thy EA RE OTL he th teat oh the AS Bd 19 gfe i custom of wy for ev- OW a iarehas in the (Con. 100m, hoe, pomp or geten- tation, the judges walk in, take thelr | on ie moss, wihout regan to form-"'A me weal: gay the court ie opened, and cas) the case sed for argument, The pene £0 and come an they pleas ang there bee never been the least oc- cashon i reprove or CaS) any person | }19 order, There la no erying: ie comamnded on. penalty of Smprizon- | 0 2. Mt is sue that by practice and precept J do insist that during the, pusiness hours of every day the judg should give #)) their time to the du- ‘ew of the office, that they have no axouse for laying off, stealing their ‘ime and Jeaying the work undone— | no excuse for failure to promptly de cde every appeal, Under the constl tution i 16 the sworn duty of courts to administer justice without dental or delay, yet nearly every appellate court, Incliding the United lates sur preme court, jg from one to two yea opind with ity work, hecause the judges do often pore as lords of ores Hion, and not merely a8 publle serv- ants, Weagurdiess of the work on hand, they tnke long vacations, work. short hours, or not hours, and go afishing when they please and too of- fen they bind men with burdens that are grevoun and heavy to be borne, The judges work without any puy: Nelly or secguntabiiity, without any supervision or control and each one isn low inte bhinsell, Two years ago when our present fudman took office, they found on hand the work of one year, Wut when hig year expires they must hive @ clean plate or tell the season why 4, ‘To expedite the business of the court J give to the press a weekly bet fern thing ouite pecuilar, Maybe yon nover heard of an annellate judge giving the press a weekly report on the doings of the court, tha time that each judge is almant from the court and his manner af writing decisions, Ag J maintain, when a Judicial decta fon ia properly weitan, It dogs not con: inin a nesdiens word nor a Bramaticnt error, In one or two short paragranhs, in proper consecutive order, It does SSS RHEUMATIC PAIN Liniment before it gets dangeroue | eee Apply a Hay jon't rub, fet It poner rater Chg ‘a Site external aches, palna, etraln: fe of jolute or muscles, lameness, bruisca, Instant relied shit it mula or soiled clothing, we ore inlment ite me tantnate y i sn «it ips the “Bence | ppeare that J Ung decis- of decid- @ hear- te con- ry decision , With the Ssely ptated, and signed -and of course that is Lae reported, J’ap- i Dear ty favor 2 decision of every vax) Ir fg true nee have lite e or erron- e fer de Seions is, rdance with law, | | just Ido ne Mike ronting Vilate—waeh my hands and ame the law or a precedent. or party 4) for an unjuat decision. 1 do not} feve in building error upon error. Thus, though the state constitution provides that the right of trial by (Jury shall remaln inylolate, we have! an old decision that for @ certain of-| fense againat the Mquor Jaws, a per- son may be convicted in a summary sanner upon the affidavits and gent fo the penitentiary for two years, | without atrial by jury. (5 .N. Dj) And | |i 14 followed in w recent case, We |, have a decision that in a sult or pro- | ing for the destruction of Hquor, 1} @ Justice of the peace has urisdiction, rAKirdlens of the value of the prop- ‘orty, and yet by the voustitution, in @ AV or criminal agtion the jurisdic \ ton of a justice of thepeace may not exCGRd, $200, These, | consider, band- wagon decisions and bold them fn con- fempt, [am so peculldp as to believe in due process of law and in the in- herent and constitutidnal right) of! levery person to pursue and obtain} | mately and happiness, and to acquire, PORKEAH and protect property without; doing injury to the right/of another, | h, You wish to know ‘on what) ground J justify the writing of an opin: | fnon hefore hearing the argument of counsel, That 1 do only in rare and} plain cases. In every case T alm to }look over the pleadings, records and to know the Jaw and the material points in advancé of the argument. | Then, when it f4 argued, Tam in a hatter ponition to state concisely the fanues, the facts and the law and to Minit, (he argument to material points. Occasionally, when looking over the récord in advance of the debates, when ff appears that the case is clear be- yond reasonable dispute, T formulate 4 concise tentative opinion and mail a copy to the attorneys for each par- ty and save them the expense of a trip to Bismarck if they concur in the opin- fon, Surely that does no injury to anyone, Then there is no law to pre- vent an appellate court deciding an appeal without oral argument, and in small cages, {t ig common to deny oval argument, The oral debate of counsel ia far from being desirable in all cares,’ It is often a.great waste of time and’ a cause of needless delay and [expense and it often tends only to mislead the judges. It is most bene- ficial, 1 think, when one<or more of the judges have looked well into the) cage and are able to turn the debate into-a conferonce and when the judges decide the case while it is fresh in thetr memory. The judges double their work by de- laying it. There is no reason why the U, 8, ‘supreme court or, any appel- _} late court should be three months be- Wind with its work... It is time for ap- Pellata judges to get-out of the old rutn and to be more peculiar. Yours, » | rea von’ an which paved the w: respond. evening. when a s at whi of the state. Seattle, W: is ended. Catasauqua, 'P: PEOPLE’S FORUM i ROOSEVELT DAY. ation. >| 2 cents a day, elt was al ; But what; betting $198,000, celebration commem- | our great men, Teddy) 5 @ patriot from h Til the end of his glorior he fought for true American a few hours before mis e wrote, that there is room in and something else at the same time. ig not and cannot be a true American. If our governors and state authorities | O——EE——— would wipe out the little Ruslands,|! Polands, Scandidanvian lands, Erins and Canadas from our midst and force the foreign clements in the United] s to adopt our American ways, and break their , Svilization and tong! | dual or treble allegiance and make ev- ery man, woman and child think) n, speak American and love an, then our great men, like; Rosevelt would be truly honored and then a commemoration day would be} ja sincere homage paid to the men inj their virtues, ideals and examples that endeared them to the present and fu-| ture generations. MARION THOMPSON. DB: Amer veo sina, N, ‘JUST SEE HOW POSLAM HELPS SKIN OVERNIGHT Poslam sdothes, refreshes aid heals | suffering skin, with never a possibil- ; ity of harm. A brief experience with voslam will prove its value. For in- stance; apply a litle on some affected part at night. In the morning, your own eyes find evidence of its heal- ing work. If the trouble was slight— a pimple or inflamed spot—the chan-'- ces are that it hag disappeared. If a - virulent eruptional disorder, it should be subdued, somuch that you will want Poslam to keep right on. | Sold everywhere. For free sample write to Emergency Laboratories, 243 West 47th St., New York City. i) Poslam Soap is.a daily treat to ten- Contains Poslam. | ~ The bod: der, skin, sh., Feb. time set for. calling off the general Military forces will remain on ty here until all danger of disorder CONVENTION TO OPEN TOMORROW ‘Delegates to Annual Meeting of Great Farmers’ Organi- zation Arriving The annual convention of the North Dukotaz Danity societ, an organization lor the Nonpart- isan leegue, wa large extent, BA op club. President Walton probably wid The apopintment of a committee on mamittees will follow, and the con- ention, in honor of Lincoln's birth- way, probably will then adjourn until sion may be held, ch Governor Frazier will vel- come the Equity delegates on behalf GENERAL STRIKE TS CALLED OFF W1.—Today was Novel Memorial Plan. —Catasauqua has a novel plan for a $125,000’ monument that it plans to erect for the heroes of the European war. is to be financed and built by the Catasauqua Memorial Community asso- It is proposed to incorporate | with a capital of $200,000 with 2,000 subscribers at 1 cent a day, 1,500 at 500 at 3 cents, 500 at cents, ull for five years, this plan The memorial a | Get Rid of That Persistent Cough ®top that weakening, persistent cough’ t r p oe 4r, cold, threatening throat or lung reg eth one flag’ and se if Effections, ,with Eckman's | Alterative, , and that a man on these!’ the tonic’ and upbulldgr of 20 years’ = pretending {6 be an: americ Fuccessful nse, Sd emid “4.50: Loitles ECKMAN LABOIAZORY, Philadelpbte The all steel body) and its beautiful finish are peculiar to this car, and the one is made possible by the other. If a wooden frame were used it would not be practical to apply the enamel which gives the body its lustrous finish. ly is electrically welded intoa unit. Then the enamel is, baked ron at a high’ tonpundd) | oe Donce BrotHers » MOTOR CAR M. B. Gilman Co. Bismarck eee LOANS TO FARMERS This bank stands right behind the farm- ers in any way that‘will be helpful'to him in bringing about necessary improvements or in purchasing seed, livestock, etc. ‘ When you need additional capital’come in and let’s talk it over. low and terms of payment liberal. - Bismartk, N. D. Our’ rates’ are aw re | | |